Tagged with " Jacob"
Jan 11, 2007 - Bible Study    No Comments

Genesis 31-33: Jacob (AKA Houdini)

Jacob again tries to do the right thing in the wrong way. This time it is his departure from Laban. He doesn’t want to solve the problems with his father-in-law; he simply wants to escape them. The two men never did agree, and their problems were not solved. Instead, they declared a truce and made a pile of stones the boundary beyond which neither would pass. It was called “the heap of witness” to remind Jacob and Laban that God was watching both of them. (The word Mizpah means “watchtower.”) The two deceivers could only stop by saying they would not come near each other and by reminding themselves that God was watching their actions! How sad!

Genesis 32 still finds Jacob trying to escape – this time he is still trying to escape his brother Esau. If you don’t deal with problems, they rarely just go away! They will be waiting for you when you come back. One minute Jacob prayed for God’s help, and the next minute he devised some new way to appease his angry brother. He reminded God of His great promises and then acted as though God had never spoken. This is the conduct of a believer who needed to be broken before God. He prayed to be delivered from Esau (Genesis 32:11), but his greatest need was to be delivered from himself. Jacob was broken to be healed and weakened to be strengthened. When he surrendered, he won and became a “prince with God.” His limp would be a constant reminder that God would be in control of his life.

In spite of God’s hand obviously at work in the life of Jacob, he trusts to his old scheming to deal with Esau. We find Jacob bowing (Genesis 33:1–7), bribery (Genesis 33:8–11), outright lying (Genesis 33:12–16), and then moving off in another direction (Genesis 33:17–20). Esau went south and Jacob went east! It would still be some time before Jacob goes to Bethel where he needed to be…

Jan 10, 2007 - Bible Study    No Comments

Genesis 28-30: Between a Rock and a Hard Place

When Isaac realized that God had overruled his scheme to confer the God-ordained birthright of Jacob upon Esau, he “trembled very exceedingly” (Genesis 27:33). He called Jacob back and blessed him, charging him not to marry a Canaanite woman (Genesis 28:1-3). Esau was quick to blame Jacob for his trouble (Genesis 27:36). Esau is typical of sinners who irresponsibly blame someone else for their failures.

Jacob was literally between a rock and a hard place. He discovered that God was with him and working for him and had a perfect plan for his life. Jacob may have been separated from home, but he was not separated from heaven.

Jacob’s family and fortune were built by the house of Laban. Laban tried to trick Jacob and make him poor, but God overruled and made Jacob a very wealthy man. In fact, God even blessed Laban because of Jacob, and the old trickster admitted it (Genesis 30:27)! It was God’s blessing and not Jacob’s schemes that increased the flocks. God was keeping the promises He had made at Bethel (Genesis 28:13–15). When we are in difficult situations, we can trust God to care for us.

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