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JACOB AT PENIEL
Genesis 32
"Humble yourselves in the sight of the Lord, and he shall lift
you up." Jam 4:10
JACOB had a double reason for wishing to leave Padan-aram. He
believed in the promise of God to give him Canaan: and he saw that
Laban was a man with whom he could never be on a thoroughly good
understanding. He saw plainly that Laban was resolved to make what
he could out of his skill at as cheap a rate as possible-the
characteristic of a selfish, greedy, ungrateful, and therefore, in
the end, ill-served master. Laban and Esau were the two men who had
hitherto chiefly influenced Jacob’s life. But they were very
different in character. Esau could never see that there was any
important difference between himself and Jacob-except that his
brother was trickier. Esau was the type of those who honestly think
that there is not much in religion, and that saints are but
white-washed sinners. Laban, on the contrary, is almost
superstitiously impressed by the distinction between God’s people
and others. But the chief practical, issue of this impression is,
not that he seeks God’s friendship for himself, but that he tries to
make a profitable use of God’s friends. He seeks to get God’s
blessing, as it were, at secondhand. If men could be related to God
indirectly, as if in law and not by blood, that would suit Laban. If
God would admit men to his inheritance on any other terms than being
sons in the direct line, if there were some relationship once
removed, a kind of sons-in-law, so that mere connection with the
godly, though not with God, would win His blessing, this would suit
Laban.
Laban is the man who appreciates the social value of virtue,
truthfulness, fidelity, temperance, godliness, but wishes to enjoy
their fruits without the pain of cultivating the qualities
themselves. He is scrupulous as to the character of those he takes
into his employment, and seeks to connect himself in business with
good men. In his domestic life he acts on the idea which his
experience has suggested to him, that persons really godly will make
his home more peaceful, better regulated, safer than otherwise it
might be. If he holds a position of authority, he knows how to make
use, for the preservation of order and for the promotion of his own
ends, of the voluntary efforts of Christian societies, of the
trustworthiness of Christian officials, and of the support of the
Christian community. But with all this recognition of the reality
and influence of godliness, he never for one moment entertains the
idea of himself becoming a godly man. In all ages there are Labans,
who clearly recognise the utility and worth of a connection with
God, who have been much mixed up with persons in whom that worth was
very conspicuous, and who yet, at the last, "depart and return unto
their place," like Jacob’s father-in-law, without having themselves
entered into any affectionate relations with God.
From Laban, then, Jacob was resolved to escape. And though to escape
with large droves of slow-moving sheep and cattle, as well as with
many women and children, seemed hopeless, the cleverness of Jacob
did not fail him here. He did not get beyond reach of pursuit; he
could never have expected to do so. But he stole away to such a
distance from Haran as made it much easier for him to come to terms
with Laban, and much more difficult for Laban to try any further
device for detaining him.
But, delivered as he was from Laban, he had an even more formidable
person to deal with, As soon as Laban’s company disappear on the
northern horizon, Jacob sends messengers south to sound Esau. His
message is so contrived as to beget the idea in Esau’s mind that his
younger brother is a person of some importance, and yet is prepared
to show greater deference to himself than formerly. But the answer
brought back by the messengers is the curt and haughty despatch of
the man of war to the man of peace. No notice is taken of Jacob’s
vaunted wealth. No proposal of terms as if Esau had an equal to deal
with, is carried back. There is only the startling announcement:
"Esau cometh to meet thee, and four hundred men with him." Jacob at
once recognises the significance of this armed advance on Esau’s
part. Esau has not forgotten the wrong he suffered at Jacob’s hands,
and he means to show him that he is entirely in his power.
Therefore was Jacob "greatly afraid and distressed." The joy with
which, a few days ago, he had greeted the host of God, was quite
overcast by the tidings brought him regarding the host of Esau.
Things heavenly do always look so like a mere show; visits of angels
seem so delusive and fleeting; the exhibition of the powers of
heaven seems so often but as a tournament painted on the sky, and so
unavailable for the stern encounters that await us on earth, that
one seems, even after the most impressive of such displays, to be
left to fight on alone. No wonder Jacob is disturbed. His wives and
dependants gather round him in dismay; the children, catching the
infectious panic, cower with cries and weeping about their mothers;
the whole camp is rudely shaken out of its brief truce by the news
of this rough Esau, whose impetuosity and warlike ways they had all
heard of and were now to experience. The accounts of the messengers
would no doubt grow in alarming descriptive detail as they saw how
much importance was attached to their words. Their accounts would
also be exaggerated by their own unwarlike nature, and by the
indistinctness with which they had made out the temper of Esau’s
followers, and the novelty of the equipments of war they had seen in
his camp. Could we have been surprised had Jacob turned and fled
when thus he was made to picture the troops of Esau sweeping from
his grasp all he had so laboriously earned, and snatching the
promised inheritance from him when in the very act of entering on
possession? But though in fancy he already hears their rude shouts
of triumph as they fall upon his defenceless band, and already sees
the merciless horde dividing the spoil with shouts of derision and
coarse triumph, and though all around him are clamouring to be led
into a safe retreat, Jacob sees stretched before him the land that
is his, and resolves that, by God’s help, he shall win it. What he
does is not the act of a man rendered incompetent through fear, but
of one who has recovered from the first shock of alarm and has all
his wits about him. He disposes his household and followers in two
companies, so that each might advance with the hope that it might be
the one which should not meet Esau; and having done all that his
circumstances permit, he commends himself to God in prayer.
After Jacob had prayed to God, a happy thought strikes him, which he
at once puts in execution. Anticipating the experience of Solomon,
that "a brother offended is harder to be won than a strong city,"
he, in the style of a skilled tactician, lays siege to Esau’s wrath,
and directs against it train after train of gifts, which, like
successive battalions pouring into a breach, might at length quite
win his brother. This disposition of his peaceful battering trains
having occupied him till sunset, he retires to the short rest of a
general on the eve of battle. As soon as he judges that the weaker
members of the camp are refreshed enough to begin their eventful
march, he rises and goes from tent to tent awaking the sleepers, and
quickly forming them into their usual line of march, sends them over
the brook in the darkness, and himself is left alone, not with the
depression of a man who waits for the inevitable, but with the high
spirits of intense activity, and with the return of the old
complacent confidence of his own superiority to his powerful but
sluggish-minded brother-a confidence regained now by the certainty
he felt, at least for the time, that Esau’s rage could not blaze
through all the relays of gifts he had sent forward. Having in this
spirit seen all his camp across the brook, he himself pauses for a
moment; end looks with interest at the stream before him, and at the
promised land on its southern bank. This stream, too, has an
interest for him as bearing a name like his own-a name that
signifies the "struggler," and was given to the mountain torrent
from the pain and difficulty with which it seemed to find its way
through the hills. Sitting on the bank of the stream, he sees
gleaming through the darkness the foam that it churned as it writhed
through the obstructing rocks, or heard through the night the roar
of its torrent as it leapt downwards, tortuously finding its way
towards Jordan; and Jacob says, So will I, opposed though I be, win
my way, by the circuitous routes of craft or by the impetuous rush
of courage, into the land whither that stream is going. With
compressed lips, and step as firm as when, twenty years before, he
left the land, he rises to cross the brook and enter the land-he
rises, and is seized in a grasp that he at once owns as formidable.
But surely this silent close, as of two combatants who at once
recognise one another’s strength, this protracted strife, does not
look like the act of a depressed man, but of one whose energies have
been strung to the highest pitch, and who would have borne down the
champion of Esau’s host had he at that hour opposed his entrance
into the land which Jacob claimed as his own, and into which, as his
glove, pledging himself to follow, he had thrown all that was dear
to him in the world. It was no common wrestler that would have been
safe to meet him in that mood.
Why, then, was Jacob thus mysteriously held back while his household
were quietly moving forward in the darkness? What is the meaning,
purpose, and use of this opposition to his entrance? These are
obvious from the state of mind Jacob was in. He was going forward to
meet Esau under the impression that there was no other reason why he
should not inherit the land but only his wrath, and pretty confident
that by his superior talent, his mother-wit, he could make a tool of
this stupid, generous brother of his. And the danger was, that if
Jacob’s device had succeeded, he would have been confirmed in these
impressions, and have believed that he had won the land from Esau,
with God’s help certainly, but still by his own indomitable
pertinacity of purpose and skill in dealing with men. Now, this was
not the state of the case at all. Jacob had, by his own deceit.
become an exile from the land, had been, in fact, banished for
fraud; and though God had confirmed to him the covenant, and
promised to him the land, yet Jacob had apparently never come to any
such thorough sense of his sin and entire incompetency to win the
birthright for himself, as would have made it possible for him to
receive simply as God’s gift this land which as God’s gift was alone
valuable. Jacob does not yet seem to have taken up the difference
between inheriting a thing as God’s gift, and inheriting it as the
meed of his own prowess to such a man God cannot give the land;
Jacob cannot receive it. He is thinking only of winning it, which is
not at all what God means, and which would, in fact, have annulled
all the covenant, and lowered Jacob and his people to the level
simply of other nations who had to win and keep their territories at
their risk, and not as the blessed of God. If Jacob then is to get
the land, he must take it as a gift, which he is not prepared to do.
During the last twenty years he has got many a lesson which might
have taught him to distrust his own management, and he had, to a
certain extent, acknowledged God; but his Jacob-nature, his subtle,
scheming nature, was not so easily made to stand erect, and still he
is for wriggling himself into the promised land. He is coming back
to the land under the impression that God needs to be managed; that
even though we have His promises it requires dexterity to get them
fulfilled; that a man will get into the inheritance all the readier
for knowing what to veil from God and what to exhibit; when. to
cleave to His word with great profession of most humble and absolute
reliance on Him, and when to take matters into one’s own hand.
Jacob, in short, was about to enter the land as Jacob, the
supplanter, and that would never do; he was going to win the land
from Esau by guile, or as he might; and not to receive it from God.
And therefore, just as he is going to step into it, there lays hold
of him, not an armed emissary of his brother, but a far more
formidable antagonist-if Jacob will win the land, if it is to be a
mere trial of skill, a wrestling match, it must at least be with the
right person. Jacob is met with his own weapons. He has not chosen
war, so no armed opposition is made; but with the naked force of his
own nature, he is prepared for any man who will hold the land
against him; with such tenacity, toughness, quick presence of mind,
elasticity, as nature has given him, he is confident he can win and
hold his own. So the real proprietor of the land strips himself for
the contest, and lets him feel, by the first hold he takes of him,
that if the question be one of mere strength he shall never enter
the land.
This wrestling therefore was by no means actually or symbolically
prayer. Jacob was not aggressive, nor did he stay behind his company
to spend the night in praying for them. It was God who came and laid
hold on Jacob to prevent him from entering the land in the temper he
was in, and as Jacob. He was to be taught that it was not only
Esau’s appeased wrath, or his own skilful smoothing down of his
brother’s ruffled temper, that gave him entrance; but that a
nameless Being, Who came out upon him from the darkness, guarded the
land, and that by His passport only could he find entrance. And
henceforth, as to every reader of this history so much more to
Jacob’s self, the meeting with Esau and the overcoming of his
opposition were quite secondary to and eclipsed by his meeting and
prevailing with this unknown combatant.
This struggle had, therefore, immense significance for the history
of Jacob. It is, in fact, a concrete representation of the attitude
he had maintained towards God throughout his previous history; and
it constitutes the turning point at which he assumes a new and
satisfactory attitude. Year after year Jacob had still retained
confidence in himself; he had never been thoroughly humbled, but had
always felt himself able to regain the land he had lost by his sin.
And in this struggle he shows this same determination and
self-confidence. He wrestles on indomitably. As Kurtz, whom I follow
in his interpretation of this incident, says, "All along Jacob’s
life had been the struggle of a clever and strong, a pertinacious
and enduring, a self-confident and self-sufficient person, who was
sure of the result only when he helped himself-a contest with God,
who wished to break his strength and wisdom, in order to bestow upon
him real strength in divine weakness, and real Wisdom in divine
folly." All this self-confidence culminates now, and in one final
and sensible struggle, his Jacob-nature, his natural propensity to
wrest what he desires and win what he aims at, from the most
unwilling opponent, does its very utmost and does it in vain. His
steady straining, his dexterous feints, his quick gusts of vehement
assault, make no impression on this combatant and move him not one
foot off his ground. Time after time his crafty nature puts out all
its various resources, now letting his grasp relax and feigning
defeat, and then with gathered strength hurling himself on the
stranger, but all in vain. What Jacob had often surmised during the
last twenty years, what had flashed through him like a sudden gleam
of light when he found himself-married to Leah, that he was in the
hands of one against whom it is quite useless to struggle, he now
again begins to suspect. And as the first faint dawn appears, and he
begins dimly to make out the face, the quiet breathing of which he
had felt on his own during the contest, the man with whom he
wrestles touches the strongest sinew in Jacob’s body, and the muscle
on which the wrestler most depends shrivels at the touch and reveals
to the falling Jacob how utterly futile had been all his skill and
obstinacy, and how quickly the stranger might have thrown and
mastered him.
All in a moment, as he falls, Jacob sees how it is with him, and Who
it is that has met him thus. As the hard, stiff, corded muscle
shrivelled, so shrivelled his obdurate, persistent self-confidence.
And as he is thrown, yet cleaves with the natural tenacity of a
wrestler to his conqueror; so, utterly humbled before this Mighty
One whom now he recognises and owns, he yet cleaves to Him and
entreats His Blessing. It is at this touch, which discovers the
Almighty power of Him with whom he has been contending, that the
whole nature of Jacob goes down before God. He sees how foolish and
vain has been his obstinate persistence in striving to trick God out
of His blessing, or wrest it from Him, and now he owns his utter
incapacity to advance one step in this way, he admits to himself
that he is stopped, weakened in the way, thrown on his back, and can
effect nothing, simply nothing, by what he thought would effect all;
and, therefore, he passes from wrestling to praying, and with tears,
as Hosea says, sobs out from the broken heart of the strong man, "I
will not let thee go except thou bless me." In making this
transition from the boldness and persistence of self-confidence to
the boldness of faith and humility, Jacob becomes Israel-the
supplanter, being baffled by his conqueror, rises a Prince. Disarmed
of all other weapons, he at last finds and uses the weapons
wherewith God is conquered, and with the simplicity and
guilelessness now of an Israelite indeed, face to face with God,
hanging helpless with his arms around Him, he supplicates the
blessing he could not win.
Thus, as Abraham had to become God’s heir in the simplicity of
humble dependence on God; as Isaac had to lay himself on God’s altar
with absolute resignation, and so become the heir of God, so Jacob
enters on the inheritance through the most thorough humbling.
Abraham had to give up all possessions and live on God’s promise;
Isaac had to give up life itself; Jacob had to yield his very self,
and abandon all dependence on his own ability. The new name he
receives signalizes and interprets this crisis in his life. He
enters his land not as Jacob, but as Israel. The man who crossed the
Jabbok was not the same as he who had cheated Esau and outwitted
Laban and determinedly striven this morning with the angel He was
Israel, God’s prince, entering on the land freely bestowed on him by
an authority, none could resist; a man who had learned that in order
to receive from God, one must ask.
Very significant to Jacob in his after life must. have been the
lameness consequent on this night’s struggle. He, the wrestler, had
to go halting all his days. He who had carried all his. weapons in
his own person, in his intelligent watchful eye and tough right arm,
he who had felt sufficient for all emergencies and a match for all
men, had now to limp along as one who had been worsted and baffled
and could not hide his shame from men. So it sometimes happens that
a man never recovers the severe handling he has received at some
turning point in his life. Often there is never again the same
elastic step, the same free and confident bearing, the same apparent
power, the same appearance to our fellow-men of completeness in our
life; but, instead of this, there is a humble decision which, if it
does not walk with so free a gait, yet knows better what ground it
is treading and by what right. To the end some men bear the marks of
the heavy stroke by which God first humbled them. It came in a
sudden shock that broke their health, or in a disappointment which
nothing now given can ever quite obliterate the trace of, or in
circumstances painfully and permanently altered. And the man has to
say with Jacob, I shall never now be what I might have been; I was
resolved to have my own way, and though God in His mercy did not
suffer me to destroy myself, yet to drive me from my purpose He was
forced to use a violence, under the effects of which I go halting
all my days, saved and whole, yet maimed to the end of time. I am
not ashamed of the mark, at least when I think of it as God’s
signature I am able to glory in it, but it never fairs to remind me
of a perverse wilfulness I am ashamed of. With many men God is
forced to such treatment; if any of us are under it, God forbid we
should mistake its meaning and lie prostrate and despairing in the
darkness instead of clinging to Him Who has smitten and will heal
us.
For the treatment which Jacob received at Peniel must not be set
aside as singular or exceptional. Sometimes God interposes between
us and a greatly-desired possession which we have been counting upon
as our right and as the fair and natural consequence of our past
efforts and ways. The expectation of this possession has indeed
determined our movements and shaped our life for some time past, and
it would not only be assigned to us by men as fairly ours, but God
also has Himself seemed to encourage us to win it. Yet when it is
now within sight, and when we are rising to pass the little stream
which seems alone to separate us from it, we are arrested by a
strong, an irresistible hand. The reason is, that God wishes us to
be in such a state of mind that we shall receive it as His gift, so
that it becomes ours by an indefeasible title.
Similarly, when advancing to a spiritual possession, such checks are
not without their use. Many men look with longing to what is eternal
and spiritual, and they resolve to win this inheritance. And this
resolve they often make as if its accomplishment depended solely on
their own endurance. They leave almost wholly out of account that
the possibility of their entering the state they long for is not
decided by their readiness to pass through any ordeal, spiritual or
physical, which may be required of them, but by God’s willingness to
give it. They act as if by taking advantage of God’s promises, and
by passing through certain states of mind and prescribed duties,
they could, irrespective of God’s present attitude toward them and
constant love, win eternal happiness. In the life of such persons
there must therefore come a time when their own spiritual energy
seems all to collapse in that painful, utter way in which, when the
body is exhausted, the muscles are suddenly found to be cramped and
heavy and no longer responsive to the will. They are made to feel
that a spiritual dislocation has taken place, and that their
eagerness to enter life everlasting no longer stirs the active
energies of the soul.
In that hour the man learns the most valuable truth he can learn,
that it is God Who is wishing to save him, not he who must wrest a
blessing from an unwilling God. Instead of any longer looking on
himself as against the world, he takes his place as one who has the
whole energy of God’s will at his back, to give him rightful
entrance into all blessedness. So long as Jacob was in doubt whether
it was not some kind of man that was opposing him, he wrestled on;
and our foolish ways of dealing with God terminate, when we
recognise that He is not such a one as ourselves. We naturally act
as if God had some pleasure in thwarting us-as if we could, and even
ought to, maintain a kind of contest with God. We deal with Him as
if He were opposed to our best purposes and grudged to advance us in
all good, and as if He needed to be propitiated by penitence and
cajoled by forced feelings and sanctimonious demeanour. We act as if
we could make more way were God not in our way, as if our best
prospects began in our own conception and we had to win God over to
our views. If God is unwilling, then there is an end: no device nor
force will get us past Him. If He is willing, why all this unworthy
dealing with Him., as if the whole idea and accomplishment of
salvation did not proceed from Him?
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