Genesis 31
The time has come for Jacob to return home. There is
trouble in the extended family in Aram, but more than that, God has
said, “Return to the land of your fathers.” That needs to be
enough for Jacob, but the Lord has also added this word of
encouragement: “I will be with you.”
Because of the way that Jacob has prospered, his
father-in-law's family is increasingly against him. If he is to
leave, he concludes that it must be done with some measure of
secrecy. He makes the case to his wives, noting that their father,
Laban, has cheated and deceived him. But there is more to Jacob's
words than a recounting of the abuse that he has suffered at the
hands of a man who should have been on his side. Jacob says, “God
did not permit him to harm me.” That is a wonderful statement of
spiritual awareness for Jacob. Jacob's flocks increased not through
schemes or magic tricks, but through the hand of Almighty God. God
directed him in dreams, and blessed his pathway in the land of a
father-in-law who only wanted to take advantage of him. Jacob
reminded his wives that the God of Bethel, the God he had met on the
way to Paddan-aram, the God who had blessed him during all those
years of working for Laban, was the one who had commanded that this
was now the time to return to the land of his father Isaac.
What would be the response of Rachel and Leah? Would
they be loyal to Jacob and to Jacob's God, or would they display a
greater loyalty to their father Laban at this critical juncture in
the history of salvation? In their united response to Jacob they
recount the facts about their father. “Is there any portion or
inheritance left to us in our father's house? Are we not regarded by
him as foreigners? For he has sold us, and he has indeed devoured our
money. All the wealth that God has taken away from our father belongs
to us and to our children. Now then, whatever God has said to you,
do.” They will stay with Jacob and go where he goes.
So they left. Just like that. They left Paddan-aram and
headed toward the land of Canaan without taking the risk of even
saying goodbye to anyone. But Rachel, Jacob's most beloved wife, took
something with her that was not hers. How disappointing that she
would steal Laban's idols!
When Laban found out what had happened, he came with his
kinsman after them as if he were leading an attacking band of
raiders. But this time God spoke to Laban in a dream and warned him,
“Be careful not to say anything to Jacob, either good or bad.”
When Laban finally overtook his son-in-law's camp, he
still accused him and spoke against him, but he also acknowledged the
Word of God pressing him to watch his step in this encounter. He
said, “It is in my power to do you harm. But the God of your father
spoke to me last night, saying, ‘Be careful not to say anything to
Jacob, either good or bad.’”
The disappointing fact of the stolen household gods
remained between them as a matter that Laban was unwilling to ignore.
Jacob unknowingly put Rachel's life in danger by promising the death
of anyone who had stolen these idols. Rachel's further deception and
the Lord's protecting hand enabled this important woman to live who
would yet be the mother of the final son of Jacob, Benjamin.
Both Laban and Jacob expressed their anger and
intransigence at this moment of conflict. Laban really wanted those
gods, and Jacob was very indignant at the suggestion that someone
among his household had stolen them. What a story! God carried His
people again through this web of danger. Jacob says, “What is my
offense? What is my sin, that you have hotly pursued me? For you have
felt through all my goods; what have you found of all your household
goods? Set it here before my kinsmen and your kinsmen, that they may
decide between us two.”
For Laban's part he offers this obnoxious claim like a
slave owner who has sold his human wares and still has the nerve to
think that he retains perpetual ownership over every last servant he
every counted as his own. “The daughters are my daughters, the
children are my children, the flocks are my flocks, and all that you
see is mine.”
Jacob's word is better, but it is still very sad when a
family has come to this fatal divide. “If the God of my father, the
God of Abraham and the Fear of Isaac, had not been on my side, surely
now you would have sent me away empty-handed. God saw my affliction
and the labor of my hands and rebuked you last night.” The two men
are able to make a pact to stay away from one another, neither
crossing a given point between them with the intention of harm for
the other.
Is that the best we can expect? But Rachel must live and
not be found out. And Jacob must return to Canaan. Generation must
follow generation until the gift of Messiah comes. God will protect
the people of the promise.
There will be a future day when the sword of the Lord
will come against His own perfect Son for our offenses. Then the
protection of God must be put away, and Labans, Rachels, Jacobs, and
many, many other sinners all over the world will be saved by the
trouble that comes upon Jesus for us. Israel would yield a Messiah,
and that Messiah will bring forth a whole new world.
Jacob made a pillar with Laban in order to celebrate and
remember a truce. We have the cross and a meal of bread and wine, and
we rejoice in the achievement of a perfect eternal peace. Eat, drink,
and live in Jesus! In Him, God is with us for the greatest of
blessings forever.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home