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Genesis Chapter
Thirty-Five
Genesis 35
Chapter Contents
God commands Jacob to go to Beth-el, He puts away idols
from his family. (1-5) Jacob builds an altar, Death of Deborah, God blesses
Jacob. (6-15) Death of Rachel. (16-20) Reuben's crime, The death of Isaac.
(21-29)
Commentary on Genesis 35:1-5
Beth-el was forgotten. But as many as God loves, he will
remind of neglected duties, one way or other, by conscience or by providences.
When we have vowed a vow to God, it is best not to defer the payment of it; yet
better late than never. Jacob commanded his household to prepare, not only for
the journey and removal, but for religious services. Masters of families should
use their authority to keep up religion in their families, Joshua 24:15. They must put away strange gods.
In families where there is a face of religion, and an altar to God, yet many
times there is much amiss, and more strange gods than one would suppose. They
must be clean, and change their garments. These were but outward ceremonies,
signifying the purifying and change of the heart. What are clean clothes, and
new clothes, without a clean heart, and a new heart? If Jacob had called for
these idols sooner, they had parted with them sooner. Sometimes attempts for
reformation succeed better than we could have thought. Jacob buried their
images. We must be wholly separated from our sins, as we are from those that
are dead and buried out of sight. He removed from Shechem to Beth-el. Though
the Canaanites were very angry against the sons of Jacob for their barbarous
usage of the Shechemites, yet they were so kept back by Divine power, that they
could not take the opportunity now offered to avenge them. The way of duty is
the way of safety. When we are about God's work, we are under special
protection; God is with us, while we are with him; and if He be for us, who can
be against us? God governs the world more by secret terrors on men's minds than
we are aware of.
Commentary on Genesis 35:6-15
The comfort the saints have in holy ordinances, is not so
much from Beth-el, the house of God, as from El-beth-el, the God of the house.
The ordinances are empty things, if we do not meet with God in them. There
Jacob buried Deborah, Rebekah's nurse. She died much lamented. Old servants in
a family, that have in their time been faithful and useful, ought to be
respected. God appeared to Jacob. He renewed the covenant with him. I am God
Almighty, God all-sufficient, able to make good the promise in due time, and to
support thee and provide for thee in the mean time. Two things are promised;
that he should be the father of a great nation, and that he should be the
master of a good land. These two promises had a spiritual signification, which
Jacob had some notion of, though not so clear and distinct as we now have.
Christ is the promised Seed, and heaven is the promised land; the former is the
foundation, and the latter the top-stone, of all God's favours.
Commentary on Genesis 35:16-20
Rachel had passionately said, Give me children, or else I
die; and now that she had children, she died! The death of the body is but the
departure of the soul to the world of spirits. When shall we learn that it is
God alone who really knows what is best for his people, and that in all worldly
affairs the safest path for the Christian is to say from the heart, It is the
Lord, let him do what seemeth him good. Here alone is our safety and our
comfort, to know no will but his. Her dying lips called her newborn son
Ben-oni, the son of my sorrow; and many a son proves to be the heaviness of her
that bare him. Children are enough the sorrow of their mothers; they should, therefore,
when they grow up, study to be their joy, and so, if possible, to make them
some amends. But Jacob, because he would not renew the sorrowful remembrance of
the mother's death every time he called his son, changed his name to Benjamin,
the son of my right hand: that is, very dear to me; the support of my age, like
the staff in my right hand.
Commentary on Genesis 35:21-29
What a sore affliction Reuben's sin was, is shown, "
and Israel heard it." No more is said, but that is enough. Reuben thought
that his father would never hear of it; but those that promise themselves
secrecy in sin, are generally disappointed. The age and death of Isaac are
recorded, though he died not till after Joseph was sold into Egypt. Isaac lived
about forty years after he had made his will, Genesis 27:2. We shall not die an hour the
sooner, but much the better, for timely setting our hearts and houses in order.
Particular notice is taken of the agreement of Esau and Jacob at their father's
funeral, to show how God had wonderfully changed Esau's mind. It is awful to
behold relations, sometimes for a little of this world's goods, disputing over
the graves of their friends, while they are near going to the grave themselves.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Genesis》
Genesis 35
Verse 1
[1] And
God said unto Jacob, Arise, go up to Bethel, and dwell there: and make there an
altar unto God, that appeared unto thee when thou fleddest from the face of
Esau thy brother.
Arise go to Bethel —
Here God minds Jacob of his vow at Beth-el, and sends him thither to perform
it, Jacob had said in the day of his distress, If I come again in peace, this
stone shall be God's house, Genesis 28:22. God had performed his part, had
given Jacob more than bread to eat, and raiment to put on; but it should seem
he had forgotten his vow, or, at least, deferred the performance of it.
And dwell there —
That is, Not only go himself, but take his family with him, that they might
join with him in his devotions.
Put away the strange Gods — Strange God's in Jacob's family! Could such a family, that was taught
the knowledge of the Lord, admit them? Could such a master, to whom God had
appeared twice, and oftner, connive at them? And be clean, and change your
garments - These were ceremonies signifying the purification and change of the
heart.
Verse 4
[4] And they gave unto Jacob all the strange gods which were in their hand,
and all their earrings which were in their ears; and Jacob hid them under the
oak which was by Shechem.
And they gave to Jacob — His servants, and even the retainers to his family, gave him all the
strange gods, and the ear-rings they wore either as charms, or to the honour of
their gods. Jacob took care to bury their images, we may suppose, in some place
unknown to them, that they might not afterwards find and return to them.
Verse 5
[5] And
they journeyed: and the terror of God was upon the cities that were round about
them, and they did not pursue after the sons of Jacob.
And the terror of God was upon the cities — Though the Canaanites were much exasperated against the sons of Jacob
for their barbarous usage of the Shechemites; yet they were so restrained by a
divine power, that they could not take this fair opportunity to avenge their
neighbours quarrel. God governs the world more by secret terrors on men's minds
than we are aware of.
Verse 7
[7] And
he built there an altar, and called the place Elbethel: because there God
appeared unto him, when he fled from the face of his brother.
He built an altar —
And no doubt offered sacrifice upon it, perhaps the tenth of his cattle,
according to his vow, I will give the tenth unto thee. And he called the place,
That is, the altar, El-beth-el, the God of Beth-el. As when he made a thankful
acknowledgement of the honour God had done him in calling him Israel, he
worshipped God by the name of El-elohe-israel, so now he was making a grateful
recognition of God's former favour at Beth-el, he worships God by the name of
El-beth-el, the God of Beth-el, because there God appeared to him.
Verse 8
[8] But Deborah Rebekah's nurse died, and she was buried beneath Bethel under
an oak: and the name of it was called Allonbachuth.
There he buried Deborah, Rebekah's nurse - We
have reason to think that Jacob, after he came to Canaan, while his family
dwelt near Shechem, went himself to visit his father Isaac at Hebron. Rebekah
probably was dead, but her old nurse (of whom mention is made Genesis 24:59,) survived her, and Jacob took her
to his family. While they were at Beth-el she died, and died lamented, so much
lamented, that the oak under which she was buried, was called Allon-bachuth,
the oak of weeping.
Verse 10
[10] And
God said unto him, Thy name is Jacob: thy name shall not be called any more
Jacob, but Israel shall be thy name: and he called his name Israel.
God now confirmed the change of his name. It
was done before by the angel that wrestled with him, Genesis 32:28, and here it was ratified by the
divine majesty, to encourage him against the fear of the Canaanites. Who can be
too hard for Israel, a prince with God?
Verse 11
[11] And
God said unto him, I am God Almighty: be fruitful and multiply; a nation and a
company of nations shall be of thee, and kings shall come out of thy loins;
He renewed and ratified the covenant with him,
by the name of El-Shaddai, I am God Almighty. God All-sufficient, able to make
good the promise in due time, and to support thee and provide for thee. Two
things are promised him. 1. That he should be the father of a great nation:
great in number, a company of nations shall be of thee - Every tribe of Israel
was a nation, and all the twelve, a company of nations: great in honour and
power, kings shall come out of thy loins. 2. That he should be master of a good
land, Genesis 35:12. The land that was given to
Abraham and Isaac is here entailed on Jacob and his seed. These two promises
had also a spiritual signification, which we may suppose Jacob himself had some
notion of: for without doubt Christ is the promised seed, and heaven is the
promised land; the former is the foundation, and the latter the top-stone of
all God's favours.
Verse 13
[13] And
God went up from him in the place where he talked with him.
And God went up from him — Or, from over him - In some visible display of glory, which had hovered
over him, while he talked with him.
Verse 14
[14] And
Jacob set up a pillar in the place where he talked with him, even a pillar of
stone: and he poured a drink offering thereon, and he poured oil thereon.
And Jacob set up a pillar — When he was going to Padan-aram he set up that stone which he had laid
his head on for a pillar; but now he took time to erect one more stately, and
durable, probably inserting that stone into it. And in token of his intending
it for a sacred memorial of his communion with God, he poured oil, and the
other ingredients of a drink-offering upon it. This stone shall be God's house,
that is, shall be set up for his honour, as houses to the praise of their
builders; and here he performs it. And he confirmed the name he had formerly
given to the place, Beth-el, the house of God. Yet this very place afterwards
lost the honour of its name, and became Beth-aven, a house of iniquity, for
here it was that Jeroboam set up one of his calves. It is impossible for the
best men to entail so much as the profession and form of religion upon a place.
Verse 16
[16] And
they journeyed from Bethel; and there was but a little way to come to Ephrath:
and Rachel travailed, and she had hard labour.
She had hard labour —
Harder than usual.
Verse 17
[17] And
it came to pass, when she was in hard labour, that the midwife said unto her,
Fear not; thou shalt have this son also.
Rachel had said when she bore Joseph, God
shall give me another son, which now the midwife remembers, and tells her, her
words were made good. Yet this did not avail; unless God command away fear, no
one else can. We are apt in extreme perils to comfort ourselves and our friends
with the hopes of a temporal deliverance, in which we may be disappointed; we
had better ground our comforts on that which cannot fail us, the hope of
eternal life. Rachel had passionately said, Give me children, or else I die;
and now she had children (for this was her second) she died.
Verse 18
[18] And
it came to pass, as her soul was in departing, (for she died) that she called
his name Benoni: but his father called him Benjamin.
Her dying lips calls her new-born soon
Benoni, the son of my sorrow. But Jacob because he would not renew the sorrowful
remembrance of his mother's death every time he called his son by name, changed
his name, and called him Benjamin, the son of my right hand - That is, very
dear to me; set on my right hand for a right hand blessing; the support of my
age, like the staff in my right hand. Jacob buried her near the place where she
died. If the soul be at rest after death, the matter is not great where the
body lies. In the place where the tree falls, there let it lie. The Jewish
writers say, The death of Deborah and Rachel was to expiate the murder of the
Shechemites, occasioned by Dinah, a daughter of the family.
Verse 20
[20] And
Jacob set a pillar upon her grave: that is the pillar of Rachel's grave unto
this day.
And Jacob set up a pillar upon her grave — So that it was known long after to be Rachel's sepulchre, 1 Samuel 10:2, and Providence so ordered it,
that this place afterwards fell in the lot of Benjamin. Jacob set up a pillar
in remembrance of his joys Genesis 35:14, and here he set up one in
remembrance of his sorrows; for as it may be of use to ourselves to keep both
in mind, so it may be of use to others to transmit the memorials of both.
Verse 21
[21] And
Israel journeyed, and spread his tent beyond the tower of Edar.
Israel, a prince with God, yet dwells in
tents; the city is reserved for him in the other world.
Verse 22
[22] And
it came to pass, when Israel dwelt in that land, that Reuben went and lay with
Bilhah his father's concubine: and Israel heard it. Now the sons of Jacob were
twelve:
When Israel dwelt in that land — As if he were then absent from his family, which might be the unhappy
occasion of these disorders. Though perhaps Bilhah was the greater criminal,
yet Reuben's crime was so provoking that for it he lost his birth-right and
blessing, Genesis 49:4.
And Israel heard it — No
more is said, that is enough; he heard it with the utmost grief and shame,
horror and displeasure.
Verse 27
[27] And
Jacob came unto Isaac his father unto Mamre, unto the city of Arbah, which is
Hebron, where Abraham and Isaac sojourned.
And Jacob came unto Isaac his father — We may suppose he had visited him before since his return, for he sore
longed after his father's house, but never 'till now brought his family to
settle with him, or near him. Probably he did this now upon the death of
Rebekah, by which Isaac was left solitary.
Verse 28
[28] And
the days of Isaac were an hundred and fourscore years.
The age and death of Isaac are here recorded,
though it appears by computation that he died not 'till many years after Joseph
was sold into Egypt, and much about the time that he was preferred there.
Isaac, a mild quiet man, lived the longest of all the patriarchs, for he was
one hundred and eighty years old: Abraham was but one hundred and seventy-five.
Isaac lived about forty years after he had made his will, Genesis 27:2. We shall not die an hour the
sooner, but abundance the better, for our timely setting of our heart and house
in order. Particular notice is taken of the amicable agreement of Esau and
Jacob in solemnizing their father's funeral, Genesis 35:29, to shew how God had wonderfully
changed Esau's mind, since he vowed his brother's murder, upon his father's
death, Genesis 27:41. God has many ways of preventing
ill men from doing the mischief they in tended; he can either tie their hands,
or turn their hearts.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on
Genesis》
"THE FORGOTTEN VOW OF JACOB"
Genesis 35:1-7
INTRODUCTION
1. We begin our study today with a reading of Gen 35:1-7...
a. Where we find God telling Jacob to go to Bethel
b. In which he is to build an altar
2. Why did God command this?
a. Nearly thirty years earlier, Jacob had made a vow
b. But he seems to have forgotten about it, and God is now calling
him to fulfill it
3. There are several lessons that can be gleaned from "The Forgotten
Vow Of Jacob" which can easily be applied to our service as
Christians
[But before I point these lessons out, a little more historical
background might be helpful...]
I. THE HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
A. THIRTY YEARS BEFORE, JACOB HAD MADE A VOW...
1. It was made as he was fleeing the wrath of Esau (for Jacob had
stolen Esau's blessing from their father Isaac)
2. Leaving Beersheba , he headed toward Haran (consult map)
3. On the way, he stopped at what is now called Bethel (consult
map) - Gen 28:10-15
a. There he had a dream, in which he saw what we commonly call
"Jacob's Ladder" (angels ascending and descending on a
ladder between heaven and earth)
b. In this dream, God promises to be with him and safely
return him to his home
4. The dream prompted Jacob to make his vow - Gen 28:16-22
a. To make the LORD his God if God carries out His promise
b. To sanctify the stone upon which his head had rested and
which he has set up as a pillar
c. To give God a tenth of all that God will give him
B. FOR THE NEXT TWENTY YEARS, JACOB DWELT IN HARAN ...
1. As God promised, He was with Jacob
2. Jacob prospered both in family, and in gaining wealth - Gen
29-30
3. Upon Jacob's return, God kept him safe...
a. From Laban, who was pursuing him - Gen 31
b. From Esau, who was coming to meet him - Gen 32-33
C. BY THE TIME OF OUR TEXT (GEN 35), JACOB HAD BEEN LIVING IN CANAAN
TEN YEARS...
1. He had settled near the city of Shechem (consult map) - Gen
33:18
2. But he had not bothered to go back to Bethel , where the Lord
had appeared to him and where he had made his vow
[So it appears that Jacob had forgotten his vow, and for this reason
God commands him to return to Bethel - Gen 35:1
What lessons or principles of truth can we learn from this? There are
several...]
II. THE APPLICATION
A. FIRST, GOD EXPECTS US TO KEEP THE VOWS WE MAKE...
1. He does not take vows lightly, and neither should we - cf. Ecc
5:2-5
2. So let's be sure to keep any covenant or vow that we make with
God; for example...
a. The "vow" we made when we became Christians
b. I.e., to turn from sin, and to follow Christ with all our
heart
-- Are we faithfully keeping this "vow"?
B. SECOND, WE ARE PRONE TO FORGET OUR VOWS WHEN GOD HAS FULFILLED
HIS SIDE OF THEM...
1. We saw where God fulfilled His side, but Jacob had not
2. This "forgetfulness" seems to occur most often when vows are
made in times of trouble
a. Like those made in a foxhole
b. Or those made in an airplane during extreme air turbulence
or mechanical problems
c. Or those made in an effort to solve marital problems
3. But such vows are just as binding as those made upon careful
reflection!
C. THIRD, WE ARE PRONE TO FORGET OUR VOWS WHEN THINGS ARE GOING
WELL...
1. In the case of Jacob...
a. He had a nice family
b. He had become extremely wealthy
c. He had settled down in his home country
2. The same is often true of many Christians...
a. Many obey the gospel at times in their lives when they are
troubled
b. But later, especially if they enjoy financial security,
they forget their commitment to God and Christ
3. But consider God's warning to Israel against forgetfulness
after they entered the "promised land" - Deu 8:11-20
D. FOURTH, WE ARE PRONE TO FORGET OUR VOWS WHEN WE HAVE ALLOWED
OURSELVES TO BE INFLUENCED BY THE WORLD...
1. Note that Jacob's family had accepted the foreign gods of the
people around them - cf. Gen 35:2
2. In similar fashion, many people do not live up to the vow they
made when they became Christians - cf. 2 Ti 4:10 (Demas)
a. E.g., many teen-age Christians
1) Zealous at first
2) But when influenced by...
a) Their peers
b) Popular music
c) Humanistic teaching in the schools
...they often lose interest in spiritual matters
b. E.g., many adult Christians, who are influenced by the
materialism and immorality of our society
3. But again, this is no excuse for "forgotten vows"
E. FIFTH, IF WE HAVE FORGOTTEN OUR VOWS, WE NEED TO GO BACK TO THE
BEGINNING...
1. We noticed that Jacob was told to go back to Bethel
2. In a similar way, Jesus told the church at Ephesus to go back
to the beginning - Re 2:4-5
a. They had left their "first love"
b. They were told to "remember...from where you have fallen"
c. And to "repent and do the first works"
3. For Christians who have left their "first love", they too need
to "do the first works" (the fundamentals, such as Bible
study, prayer, etc.)
F. FINALLY, WHEN WE FULFILL OUR FORGOTTEN VOWS, THERE ARE RENEWED
BLESSINGS!
1. When Jacob fulfilled his vow, God appeared to him and renewed
the promises that had been made to Abraham and Isaac - Gen 35:
9-15
2. So it can be with us!
a. It may be that we have forgotten the original commitment we
made when we first obeyed the gospel of Christ
b. But if we will just return to Christ...
1) In full repentance and prayer
2) And fulfill our vow of service and devotion to Him
...all the spiritual blessings that He has to offer can be
ours again! - cf. 1 Jn 1:9
CONCLUSION
1. Are you a Christian, but not living the dedicated and committed life
that God expects?
2. Then, like Jacob, you have forgotten your vow...
a. And you need to come back to the Lord in full repentance
b. The blessings of heaven await you if you do!
If you are not yet a Christian, these same blessings can be yours if
you will only accept the gospel of Jesus Christ - cf. Mark 16:15-16
--《Executable
Outlines》
35 Chapter 35
Verses 1-15
God said unto Jacob, Arise, go up to Bethel, and dwell there
Jacob’s second journey to Bethel
I.
IT
WAS UNDERTAKEN AT THE CALL OF GOD.
II. IT WAS
ACCOMPLISHED IN THE SPIRIT OF OBEDIENCE AND CONSECRATION.
III. IT WAS
ACCOMPANIED BY THE DIVINE PROTECTION.
IV. IT WAS
FOLLOWED BY INCREASED SPIRITUAL BLESSING.
1. The old promises were renewed.
2. He has increased knowledge of God.
3. His religious character is purified and raised. (T. H. Leale.)
The second journey of Jacob to Bethel
I. REFRESHING OF
EARLY RECOLLECTIONS.
1. Respecting this pilgrimage to Bethel, observe, first, that it was
done by Divine direction--“God said to Jacob, Arise, go up to Bethel.” Let us
not imagine that a voice spoke articulately. There were simple modes of
thinking in those days; men had not learnt to philosophize on their mental
operations. They strongly felt an impulse within them. They knew that it was a
higher one, and in the simple poetry of thought they said, “God is speaking.”
The voice that spoke to Jacob was the voice within him, the voice of
conscience--the same voice that speaks to us.
2. Observe, secondly, Jacob’s preparation for this act of
remembrance. He puts away the strange gods from his household.
3. The third thing we mark here is the consecration of the place (Genesis 35:1). It is not in reference to
God, but for a help to our own feelings that we consecrate certain spots of
earth and buildings. There are sacred places, not sacred for their own sake,
but sacred to us. Where we have loved and lost, where we have gained new light
and life, the church where our forefathers worshipped, the place where we first
knew God--these are by instinct hallowed. Hence we are told that God met Jacob
in Bethel; not that He came down from another place, for He is everywhere, but
that Jacob experienced a feeling of awe, a feeling that God was then specially
near to him. In this meeting of Jacob with God, there are two facts to observe.
II. THE GATHERING
OF HIS DISFORTUNES.
1. The first of these was one not so keenly felt--the death of
Deborah, Rebekah’s nurse. He buried her at Bethel, under an oak (Genesis 35:8), and the story gives us an
interesting view of the ancient relation between master and servant.
2. But Jacob’s second blow was of a different kind--Rachel dies, his
early and youthful passion, his beloved wife, the only one whom, with all his
strength of affection, Jacob loved, and whose children were dearer for her sake
to him than all the others. Even his father and fondly indulgent self-sacrificing
mother he seems to have regarded with coldness. From this moment he becomes a
mourner for the rest of his life; and yet we can see the infinite good of this.
Jacob was a selfish, comfort-loving man; these sorrows drew him out of himself
to think of something higher.
3. The last blow was the death of Isaac. (F. W. Robertson, M. A.)
Jacob’s return to Bethel
I. GOD REMINDS OF
HIS BENEFACTIONS. “God, that appeared to thee,” &c.
1. An incident of the past brought to mind.
2. The place of future dwelling indicated.
3. Continual worship required for continued favours. The altar
should not be absent from the home.
II. THE
BENEFACTOR’S WILL OBEYED (Genesis 35:2-3).
1. An immediate response. “Then.”
2. A proposal for preparation. “Put away”--wrong thoughts, desires,
purposes, practices.
3. A summons to Divine service. Self-devotion first, then concern
for all whom we can influence.
III. THE
BENEFACTOR’S GOODNESS ACKNOWLEDGED.
1. He declared God’s supremacy.
2. He owned God’s kindness.
3. He realized God’s presence. (M. Braithwaite.)
Lessons from the life of Jacob
I. EVERY
SPIRITUAL HISTORY HAS ITS SPECIAL PLACES, WHERE MEMORY LOVES TO LINGER, AND
WHERE SPIRITUAL POWER PERTAINS.
II. SPECIAL
MERCIES DEMAND SPECIAL REMEMBRANCE.
III. THE TEXT MAY
BE APPLIED TO A DEVOUT REMEMBRANCE OF THE TIME AND CIRCUMSTANCES OF OUR EARLY
CHRISTIAN LIFE.
1. Diligence in searching the Scriptures.
2. Fervour of private prayer and devotion.
3. Careful cultivation of the public means of grace.
4. Ardour of Christian zeal and work. The strong man grows stronger
by exercise, so the robust Christian is always an active one.
IV. BETHEL WAS THE
SCENE OF “VOWS” WHICH HAD BEEN PARTIALLY NEGLECTED AND FORGOTTEN. Prosperity
has turned more heads than Jacob’s.
V. “DWELL THERE.”
A picture of a man of activity and business retiring to spend the leisure of
age amidst the contemplations of religion and the memories of its power. (G.
Deane, B. Sc.)
Jacob sent to Bethel
I. GOD’S COMMAND
TO WORSHIP.
1. This intimates that God places man in the most favourable
circumstances to obey His commandments.
2. It intimates the employment of man’s highest and noblest
faculties.
3. It implies the necessity of having the consciousness of God’s
presence.
4. It suggests the spirit of entire dependence upon God.
II. THE NECESSARY
PREPARATION TO OBEY THIS COMMAND.
1. A willing heart.
2. A determination to have all obstacles removed.
3. A sincere love for the pure.
III. THE RESULT OF
POSSESSING A WORSHIPPING SPIRIT.
1. A manifestation of Divine power.
2. Safety in the midst of foes. (Homilist.)
Forgetfulness of God’s goodness
I. HERE IS A
REFERENCE TO JACOB’S PAST EXPERIENCE OF JEHOVAH’S KINDNESS. “The God that
appeared to thee.”
1. His fleeing from the wrath of an enraged brother.
2. The manifestation of God to him as his Friend.
3. His consecration of himself to God.
II. HERE IS A CALL
FOR GRATITUDE TO GOD FOR HIS PAST KINDNESS. “Arise, and go to Bethel.”
1. God was peculiarly kind to Jacob. He had given him more than he
asked--two wives, ten children, and large possessions (chaps. 29., 30., 31.).
2. God had subdued the anger of his brother, even though Esau had
kept it up twenty years.
3. Jacob returned to his own country, but forgot his vow. He settles
down for eight years before he visits Bethel, and not then until visited by a
domestic affliction, and God thereby reminded him of his neglected duties; then
he and his household went up to Bethel, and paid his vows, and had a renewed
instance of God’s favour.
III. HERE LEARN A
LESSON OF GRATITUDE TO THE GOD OF ALL YOUR MERCIES. For this is recorded for
that purpose.
1. How many mercies have you to be thankful for! Not only common,
but special mercies.
2. Many a place has been a Bethel to the Christian’s soul.
3. Think of your vows and resolutions, and carry them out, and you
will have renewed seasons of enjoyment, and fresh instances of the Divine
favour. (The Evangelical Preacher.)
The forgotten vow
I. THE VOW MADE.
II. THE VOW
FORGOTTEN. A common occurrence.
III. THE VOW CALLED
TO REMEMBRANCE.
1. The Lord is never at a loss for means in order that His ends may
be gained.
2. Mark the way in which He acts here.
3. Has not the Lord brought your vows to your remembrance?
IV. THE VOW PAID.
Lessons
1. How soon the influences of the most impressive scenes may pass
away.
2. God’s forbearance when the performing of the vow is so long
delayed.
3. By acting rightly ourselves, we influence others.
4. Bethel was to Jacob the house of God, and he went there. So it is
right for you, in a particular place and in a marked manner, to perform your
vow. (A. F. Barfield.)
Jacob returning to Bethel
I. JACOB WAS NOW
IN A MOURNFUL STATE OF MIND, AND YET A VERY COMMON ONE.
1. Forgotten mercies.
2. Forgotten vows.
II. Let us look
now at THE COMMAND GIVEN TO JACOB IN HIS FORGETFULNESS.
1. The Lord remembers our promises and vows.
2. The Lord often reminds His people of their forgotten mercies and
vows. He did so in this case again and again.
III. We come now to
our third point--THE OBEDIENCE THE PATRIARCH RENDERED TO THE DIVINE COMMAND.
1. Here is something to surprise us. There were strange gods, we
find, in the house of Jacob at this time; yes, idols in the house of almost the
only man in the world who worshipped the true God; and he knew they were there,
and tolerated them. Well may we ask, how was this? We must go back for an
answer. The Rachel whom he so tenderly loved, and for whom he had so patiently
waited and laboured, was an amiable and affectionate woman; but she wanted one
thing, and that one thing was a decided love for the Lord God of Israel. She
had been brought up in an idolatrous country, and she herself was half an
idolater. Accordingly, when he married her, he introduced a worshipper of false
gods into his house; she had her secret idols, and she brought them with her.
Here began, perhaps, Jacob’s own forgetfulness of God, and here undoubtedly
began much of the ungodliness and wretchedness of his children. Shall I say
that we may learn here the vast importance of the connections which we form in
the days of our youth? that there is a loud warning given here to the pious
young never to let their affections wind round one who does not plainly and
decidedly love the Lord? to let the heart break rather than give the heart to
an idolater? I had rather speak to men like this patriarch, men who have
households, children, and servants. I would say to them, Dear brethren, look
through your houses” and ask, “Are there no idols here? Is there nothing here
that takes God’s place in our hearts or our children’s? Is there nothing here
that is opposed to God’s will and law, and tends to God’s dishonour?” Bad
books, bad company, dangerous amusements, practices which the world does not
condemn nor even some of those who profess to live above the world, but such as
will not bear the trial of Scripture for one moment, such as you would see the
evil of in a moment did they not in some way or other fall in with your taste
or interest--these are all idols; these will lead to irreligion and ungodliness
in your houses: these will bring down on you God’s displeasure and judgments.
Mischief will rise up in your families from these things, and through your
families God will smite you for them.
2. There is something also here to instruct us. It is the
promptitude and decision of the patriarch’s obedience. (J. Bradley, M. A.)
A call to religious observances
I. JACOB CALLED
TO SERIOUS CONSIDERATION. Bethel was forgotten. How often is it forgotten by
us! Time wears out the impressions of mercies received. Afflictions come upon
us, public calamities, and the approach even of pestilence; we are alarmed and
distracted, but we never think of our vow, and of raising our altar, and
beginning a thorough, speedy downright conversion to God as the God of mercies.
Brethren, we should often turn back the book of our lives. We are fond of
reading many books, but no book would be so profitable as the book of our past
history.
II. THE PROMPT
OBEDIENCE TO THE DIVINE ADMONITION WHICH JACOB RENDERED. The pious man, the
conscientious master of a house, loses no time when Providence concurs with his
own conviction of duty, in rousing him to religion, and in reminding him of his
past neglects and family derelictions; and, therefore, we find Jacob addressing
his household, and all that were with him, thus: “Put away the strange gods,”
&c.
1. Jacob addresses his household as one who well knew that he was
answerable to God for it.
2. He exhorts them to put away the strange gods that were among
them. Alas! idols will enter the best family, in spite of Jacob, because they
are the creatures of the human heart, and they regard not Jacob’s prohibition.
Therefore, when providences are moving, when conscience is awakened, when every
heart trembles, then Jacob must say to his family--and every head of a family,
every master, every parent, must say unto his household--“Put away the strange
gods that are among you.” For whatever takesthe place in our heart of the Lord
God, is a strange god and an idol; whatever takes the place of God’s name is an
idol; whatever takes the place of God’s revelation, God’s truth, is an idol. A
strange god! “Covetousness, which is idolatry.” A strange god! The world is the
strange god of the worldly-minded. Talents, beauty of person, dress, pleasure,
are the strange gods of the young.
3. But besides putting away their strange gods, Jacob called his
family to purity of heart. “Be clean, and change your garments.”
4. Family prayer. The preceding led up to this.
At Bethel again
I. THY ADMONITION
FROM GOD. How common a fault it is, to put off some religions duty to what we
think a more convenient season! Then, oftentimes, God reminds us by some
affliction--some loss--some calamity--of our want of earnestness, and bids us
do what we had long left undone in His service.
II. THE
PURIFICATION OF JACOB’S HOUSEHOLD.
1. The strange gods were to be given up and put away.
2. They were, moreover, to cleanse themselves and to change their
clothes. Outward signs of inward consecration and cleansing.
III. THE FULFILMENT
OF JACOB’S VOW.
IV. THE RENEWAL OF
GOD’S PROMISE.
1. God reminds Jacob of his recent change of name.
2. God reminds Jacob of His own Almighty power.
3. God renews the Abrahamic promise in its threefold form of--
Family reformation; or, Jacob’s second visit to Bethel
There are critical times in mast families; times when much
decision of character will be needed on the part of the father to guide things
aright. Even the heathen outside began to smell the ill savour of Jacob’s
disorganized family, and the one alternative was--mend or end. If you notice,
Jacob himself was in a bad way. His business was to remain in Canaan a mere
sojourner, dwelling in tents, not one of the people, but moving about among
them, testifying that he looked for “a city that hath foundations, whose
builder and maker is God.” He expected to inherit the land, but, for the time
being, he was to be a stranger and a sojourner, as his fathers Abraham and
Isaac had been. Yet at Succoth we read that he built booths--scarcely houses, I
suppose, but more than tents. It was a compromise, and a compromise is often
worse than a direct and overt disobedience of command. He dares not erect a
house, but he builds a booth and thus shows his desire for a settled life; and
though it is not ours to judge the purchase of land at Shechem, still it looks
in the same direction. Jacob is endeavouring to find a resting-place where
Abraham and Isaac had none. I will not speak too positively, but the patriarch’s
acts look as if he desired to find a house for himself, where he might rest and
be on familiar terms with the inhabitants of the land. Now the Lord his God
would not have it so. Children of God cannot mix with the world without
mischief. The world does hurt to us and we to it when once be begin to be of
the world and like it. It is an ill-assorted match. Fire and water were never
meant to be blended. The seed of the woman must not mix with the seed of the
serpent. A stand must be made. Something behoves to be done, and Jacob must do
it. The Lord comes in, and He speaks with Jacob, and since the good man’s heart
was sound towards God’s statutes, the Lord had only to speak to him and he
obeyed. He was pulled up short, and made to look at things, and set his house
in order, and he did so with that resolution of character which comes out in
Jacob when he is brought into a strait, but which at other times is not
perceptible.
I. First, then,
WHAT WAS TO BE DONE?
1. The first thing to do was to make a decided move. God said to
Jacob, “Arise, go up to Bethel, and dwell there.” You must hasten away from
Shechem, with its fertile plains, and make a mountain journey up to Bethel, and
dwell there. You have been long enough near these Shechemites; mischief has come
from your being so intimate with the world. You must cut a trench between
yourselves and the associations you have formed, and you must go up to Bethel
and remain there awhile. Every now and then we shall find it necessary to say
to ourselves and to our family, “We must come out from among worldlings, we
must be separate. We are forming connections which are injurious to us, and we
must snap the deceitful bonds.”
2. Now they must revive old memories. “Go up to Bethel, and dwell
there: and make there an altar unto God, that appeared unto thee when thou
fleddest from the face of Esau thy brother.” A revival of old memories is often
most useful to us, especially to revive the memory of our conversion. Then you
must come back to your first hours of communion. Where you lost your joy you
will find it, for it remains where you left it. Then go back mourning and
sighing to Bethel, and pray that the old feelings may be revived in you.
3. But now, again, Jacob must keep an old vow. I do not quite
remember how many years old that vow was, but I suppose some thirty or so; yet
he had not kept it. Be very slow to make vows, brethren--very slow. They should
be but very seldom presented, because all that you can do for God you are bound
to do as it is; and a vow is often a superfluity of superstition. But if the
vow be made, let it not wait beyond its time, and complain of thee to thy God.
An old and forgotten vow will rot and breed most solemn discomfort to thy
heart; at first it will gnaw at thy conscience, and if thy conscience at last
grows hardened to it, others of thy powers will suffer the same petrifying
process. Moreover, a vow forgotten will bring chastisement on thee, and perhaps
the rod will fall upon thy family.
4. It appeared to Jacob, next, that if he was to fulfil his vow, it
was necessary to reform his whole house; for he could not serve the Lord and
worship other gods. He said to all that were with him--to his sons first, and
then to his hired servants and the rest--“Put away the strange gods that are among
you.” Yes, it must come to that. If I am to get back to my old position with
God I must break my idols. And then next he said, “Be clean.” There was to be,
I suppose, a general washing, indicative of purgation of character by going to
God with repentance and seeking forgiveness. Jacob also said, “Change your
garments.” This was symbolic of an entire renewal of life, though I fear me
they were not all renewed. At any rate this is what was symbolized by “Change
your garments.” Alas, it is easier to say this to our families than it is to
get them to do it. And do we wonder? Since it is so much easier for ourselves
to say than it is for ourselves to do. Yet, beloved, if your walk is to be
close with God, if you are to commune with the God of Bethel, you must be
cleansed.
5. Well, then, the next and last thing which they were to do was to
celebrate special worship. “Let us arise, and go up to Bethel, and I will make
there an altar unto God, who answered me in the day of my distress, and was
with me in the way which I went.” When we get wrong and feel that there must be
a decided change, we must set apart special times of devotion. Family prayer is
the nutriment of family piety, and woe to those who allow it to cease. I read
the other day of parents who said they could not have family prayer, and one
asked this question: “If you knew that your children would be sick through the
neglect of family prayer, would you not have it? If one child was smitten down
with fever each morning that you neglected prayer, how then?” Oh, then they
would have it. “And if there was a law that you should be fined five shillings
if you did not meet for prayer, would you find time for it?” Yes. “And if there
were five pounds given to all who had family prayer, would you not by some means
arrange to have it?” Yes. And so the inquirer went on with many questions, and
wound up with this: “Then it is but an idle excuse when you, who profess to be
servants of God, say that you have no time or opportunity for family prayer!”
Should idle excuses rob God of His worship and our families of a blessing?
Begin to pray in your families, and especially if things have gone wrong get
them right by drawing near to God more distinctly.
II. And now I come
to my second point--WHAT HAPPENED IN THE DOING OF IT? Well, several things
happened, and one or two of those were rather surprising.
1. The first was that all heartily entered into the reforming work.
I am sure they did, because the fourth verse says, “They gave unto Jacob all
the strange gods which were in their hands”--all of them--“and all their
earrings which were in their ears.” He had not said anything about their
earrings. Was there any hurt in their earrings? For a woman to wear an earring
is not such a dreadful thing, is it? Perhaps not, but I suppose that these
earrings were charms, and that they were used in certain incantations, and
heathenish customs. Now, as soon as Jacob speaks they all give up their idols
and their earrings. I like this. It is a blessed thing when a man of God takes
a stand, and speaks, and finds that his family are all ready to follow. Perhaps
it was the fear that was upon them just then, the fear of the nations round
about which made them so obedient. I am not sure it was a work of grace; but
still, as far as outward appearance went, there was a willing giving up of all
that could have grieved the Lord. And you will sometimes be pleased, Christian
friends, when things get wrong and you determine to set them right, to see how
others will yield to your determination. You ought to take courage from this.
2. Another circumstance happened, namely, that protection was
afforded him, immediate and complete. “They journeyed: and the terror of God
was upon the cities that were round about them, and they did not pursue after
the sons of Jacob.” “When a man’s ways please the Lord, He maketh even his
enemies to be at peace with him”; and now that Jacob has determined to set
things right he walks unharmed. You do not know how much of personal trouble
which you are now bearing will vanish as soon as you determine to stand out for
God. You do not know how much of family difficulty that now covers you with
dread will vanish when you yourself have feared the Lord, and have come forth
decidedly and determinedly to do the right.
3. In the next place the vow was performed. They came to Bethel, and
I can almost picture the grateful delight of Jacob as he looked upon those
great stones among which he had lain him down to sleep, a lonely man. He
thought of the past, rejoiced in the present, and hoped for the future, for now
he had come to be with God and to draw near to Him.
4. But what else happened? Why, now there came a death and a
funeral. Deborah, Rebekah’s nurse, died. Her name means a bee. And we have had
old nurses ourselves, have we not, who have been like busy bees in our
household. The good nurse died when they seemed to want her most, but it was
better for her to die then than that she should have departed when Dinah’s
shame and Simeon’s crime had made the household dark. It was better that she
should live to see them purged from idols and on the road to her old master
Isaac, for then she would feel as if she could say, “Now lettest Thou Thy
servant depart in peace, according to Thy word: for mine eyes have seen Thy
salvation.” The moral of the incident is that the Lord may heat the fire all
the more when He sees the refining process going on, and we must receive the
further trial as a token of love and not of anger if He smites us heavily when
we are honestly endeavouring to seek His face.
III. Now we close
with the third head, namely, WHAT FOLLOWED THEREON. All this putting away of
idols and going to Bethel--did anything come of it? Yes.
1. First, there was a new appearance of God. Read the ninth verse.
“And God appeared unto Jacob again, when he came out of Padan-aram, and blessed
him”: this was a new appearance of God. It is worth while to have been purged
and cleansed, and to have done anything to be favoured with one of those Divine
visits in which we almost cry with Paul, “Whether in the body or out of the
body I cannot tell: God knoweth.” A clear view of God in Christ Jesus and a
vivid sense of Jesus’ love is a sweet reward for broken idols and Bethel
reformations.
2. The next thing that came of it was a confirmation to Jacob of his
title of prince, which conferred a dignity on the whole family. For a father to
be a prince ennobles all the clan. God now puts upon them another dignity and
nobility which they had not known before, for a holy people are a noble people.
You that live in God’s presence are in the peerage of the skies. Such honour
have all the saints who follow the Lord fully. God help us to keep close to
Jesus, and enjoy daily communion with Him.
3. And then, next, there was given to Jacob and his family a vast
promise, which was, in some degree, an enlargement of a promise made to Isaac
and to Abraham before. “I am God Almighty: be fruitful and multiply; a nation
and a company of nations shall be of thee, and kings shall come out of thy
loins.” I do not remember anything said to Abraham about a company of nations,
or about kings coming out of his loins, but out of the loins of Israel, a
prince, princes may come. God puts upon His promise a certain freshness of
vastness and infinity now that Jacob has drawn near to Him. Brethren, God will
give us no new promise, but He will make the old promises look wondrously new.
He will enlarge our vision so that we shall see what we never saw before. Have
you ever had a painting which hung neglected in, some back room? Did it one day
strike you that you would have it framed and brought into a good light? When
you saw it properly hung on the wall did you not exclaim, “Dear me! I never
noticed that picture before. How wonderfully it has come out”? And many and
many a promise in God’s Word will never be noticed by you till it is set in a
new frame of experience. Then, when it is hung up before you, you will be lost
in admiration of it.
4. I will not detain you except to say that you may also expect very
familiar communion. Notice the thirteenth verse, “God went up from him in the
place where He talked with him.” Talked with him! Talked with him! It is such a
familiar word. God talking with man. We say “conversing” when we are speaking
in a dignified manner; but “talking!” Oh that blessed condescension of God when
He speaks to us in the familiar tones of His great love in Christ Jesus. There
is a way of converse with God which no tongue can explain: they only know it
who have enjoyed it. (C. H.Spurgeon.)
The revival
1. Observe, a season of prosperity is too frequently a season of
religious decline. The religion of the Gospel, though it is a scheme of mercy,
is a system of discipline. An undisturbed enjoyment of the goods of this world
has, at the best, a sensualizing tendency. Now it is in these circumstances of
repose--of gradual yielding to allowed indulgence--of lethargic sinking into
spiritual self-complacency and inactivity, that men are apt to forget the vows
of their distress, and, even within the sphere of their own influence and
authority, to suffer sin around them without marking it with that holy
indignation with which, at one time, it would have been reprobated and
discountenanced. Without meaning to justify any thing decidedly wrong, the
declining Christian, from the consciousness of his own listless and
unprosperous state, and from a false application of the very principle of
justice, deals more leniently with the faults of those around him than he would
have done formerly, and remains silent when he ought to administer reproof. In
the midst of comforts and indulgence we lose something of that holy jealousy,
circumspection and activity, to which the heavy pressure of affliction and
temptation had given birth.
2. But observe that God will not suffer His people to sink
habitually into this state of spiritual sloth. He will, in His own time, deal
strictly and retributively with the true Israel. We see this in the case of
Jacob. Painful and humiliating as was the visitation to which he was exposed,
yet the whole evil might easily be traced to one source. The disgrace of his
daughter, the fraud and cruelty of his sons, the dishonour and danger of his
whole family, and the stain brought upon the cause of God and truth, might be
all fairly attributed to his incautious sojourning among an unenlightened and
careless people, at a time when he should have hastened to Bethel for the
performance of his vow. The more we are enabled to look into the history of
individual Christians, the more we shall find that their respected afflictions
are especially calculated to correct the prevailing evil of their characters;
and that they may be traced to close connection with some of their prominent
moral defects. The naturally proud man is frequently touched in the very core
of his pride. The covetous man is often annoyed by worldly anxieties and
losses. Still even the afflictions which are permitted to arise out of a
Christian’s errors have a merciful intention. Their specific object is the more
ample sanctification of his soul and body. They are to work out for him “the
peaceable fruits of righteousness.”
3. But observe, that when God really calls a man to a review, and a
cleansing of his ways, He makes him serious and in earnest. Any attempts at
reformation which originate in merely human effort, are in their extent
partial, and in their duration transitory. And it is indeed a beautiful sight
when we see the soul of a sincere Christian thoroughly awakened by the
dispensations of providence, and by the quickening power of the Spirit of
grace, to renewed devotion and activity for God. When the command comes with
power into the soul, “Arise, and go up to Bethel,” then there is no more
parleying, delaying, or excuse. The same spirit is shown in the conduct of
Jacob. He appears at once to have been roused to aim strenuously at the revival
of religion both in himself and his family; and he addresses himself without
delay to the confession of his neglect, to the performance of his duty, and to
a close inspection into the state of his household, that they also, in whatsoever
thing they had sinned against the Lord, should be thoroughly reformed and
corrected. Such a work of revival is the work of God; and wherever it occurs,
it will be marked by certain characteristics which cannot easily be mistaken;
for they savour too strongly of that heaven from whence alone grace and
holiness flow, to be fairly attributed to any other source. The call of God to
renewed devotion produces a sincere surrender of all idolatrous attachments,
either to the things or the persons of this world. “Put away your strange gods.
And they gave unto Jacob all the strange gods that were in their hand, and all
their earrings which were in their ears, and Jacob hid them in the oak which
was Shechem.” The call of God produces a cessation from all impurity of the
flesh and of the spirit. The reviving call of God will appear in an honest
endeavour to repair those breaches which negligence has made, and to remedy by
greater effort the evil of time wasted, opportunities lost, evil habits
acquired and strengthened, and vows unpaid. “Let us arise, and go up to Bethel,
and I will make there an altar unto God, who answered me in the day of my
distress.” The call of God to a revival of religion will appear in a renewed
and faithful application, in the means of grace, to God, as a reconciled and
covenant God; and this one of the most prominent features--one of the most
satisfactory indications of a sincere revival of religious hope and devotion.
Again; a sincere revival of religious influence in the heart leads to renewed
endeavours to produce a gracious change in those connections over whom we have
any influence. It is not sufficient to a gracious spirit to serve God alone. If
we feel His love, and value His salvation, we shall be anxious for others--both
for the honour of God, and for their eternal welfare. The unfailing mercy of
the Lord extended yet farther; for we observe that when the humbled and
penitent patriarch presented himself at last at Bethel, and built his promised
altar there, “God appeared unto him again,” in unchanging faithfulness and
grace, “and blessed him, and renewed with him there His covenant and His
promise.” The subject addresses itself especially to one class of hearers--to
those who, by experience, can sympathize with Jacob in this part of his history.
It speaks to those who have “felt the powers of the world to come, and tasted
of the heavenly gift.” (E Craig.)
Put away the strange gods that are among you
The putting away of idols
I.
MANY
CHRISTIANS ARE SUFFERING FROM SPIRITUAL DECLENSION. They hardly realize it, it
has crept on them so quietly; but they have drifted far away from their Bethel
and Penuel. Gray hairs are on a man before he knows. Summer fruit is beginning
to rot within long before its surface is pitted with specks. The leaf’s
connection with the branch is severed, even when it looks green. The devil is
too shrewd to make Judases at a stroke; he wins us from the side of Christ by hair-breadths.
II. IDOLS ARE THE
INEVITABLE SYMPTOM OF INCIPIENT DECAY. Go at autumn into the woods and see how
the members of the fungus tribes are scattered plentifully throughout the
unfrequented glades. All through the long scorching summer days their germs
were present in the soil; but they were kept from germinating by the dryness of
the air and the heat of the sun. However, there is now nothing to prevent it;
nay, the dank damp of decay is the very food of their life. Where the shade is
deepest and the soil most impregnated with the products of corruption, they
love to pitch their tents. Wherever, therefore, you find these fungus growths,
you may be sure that there is corruption and decay. Similarly, whenever there
has set in upon the spiritual life the autumn of decay, you will be sure to
find a fungus--growth of idols--the sorrowful symptoms that the bright summer
time has passed, or is passing away from the soul.
III. THESE IDOLS
MUST BE SURRENDERED BEFORE THERE CAN BE VICTORY OR PEACE. The reason for
Jacob’s flight before those alien tribes was, of course, the censurable and
merciless action of his sons; but above and beyond this lay the fact that Jacob
had been giving some measure of countenance to the existence of idolatry in the
camp. I always find in Christian experience that failure and defeat indicate
the presence of some idol somewhere and the need of more complete consecration
to God. It may be a hidden idol; and it may be hidden by the Rachel of your
heart, lovely and beloved: but if it be there it will be the certain cause of
disappointment. You say that you do not find yourself able to overcome
besetting sin; that you are tripped up before you look to Christ; that you are
sometimes hot as juniper-coals, and then cold as ice; you talk about your
experiences as if Christ had failed--no such thing! Get down on your knees,
search out the idols, ransack all the camel baggage in spite of all that Rachel
may say, bring out the accursed things, and bury them. (F. B.Meyer, B. A.)
Buried idols
Jacob did not break or burn the idols, but hid them. Jacob’s
besetting sin was double-dealing, and it appears to us the text is another
example of the patriarch’s special failing. He was not altogether weaned from
his idols, he had a lingering regard for them; he did not, even yet, yield
himself fully to Jehovah. Let us show--
I. How WE MAY
STILL BE GUILTY OF THE EQUIVOCAL CONDUCT RECORDED IN THE TEXT.
1. We are thus guilty when we retain privately those evil practices
we have renounced in public. Iniquity is iniquity to God, whether done in the
eye of the sun or wrought in thickest darkness; whether coarse or refined;
whether called by its true name or wrapped in glozing gilded speech. Burke
tells of that “sensibility of principle, that chastity of honour which ennobled
whatever it touched, and under which vice itself lost half its evil by losing
all its grossness.” This is rhetoric. When vice is divested of all grossness it
has not lost a particle of its evil in the judgment of heaven; the secret idol,
the idol skilfully veiled or richly adorned by taste, is equally hateful to God
with the open and gross idolatries of inferior civilization.
2. We are thus guilty when we practise partially the evils we have
renounced as a whole. In the days of the English Reformation, the reformers
finding the coloured windows in the churches to be objects of reverence to the
people, ordered them to be broken and replaced by plain glass. But where the
authorities had a love for the beautiful they contented themselves by taking out
a few panes here and there--a saint’s head, a martyr’s nimbus, an angel’s wing,
and having thus mutilated the figures, trusted they would do no harm. Somewhat
after this fashion are men apt to renounce the world and sin. We deal
delicately with things, habits, associations, pursuits, pleasures, employments,
which ought to be utterly sacrificed, and sacrificed for ever.
3. We are thus guilty when we retain mentally what we have renounced
in action. It is possible that the idols of life which have no longer any
concrete existence may find asylum in the heart and brain, and be most steadily
worshipped there. This is true--
II. We must feel
the importance of COMPLETE CONSECRATION TO GOD. This secret clinging to sin is
a source of weakness, unhappiness, and peril. The apostle writes to the Romans,
“ye are dead to sin.” How completely this idea cuts us off from the world of
evil! how utterly it separates us from all godlessness and wickedness! We once
heard a converted Persian relate that when he was converted to Christianity his
angry kindred considered him a dead man, and celebrated his funeral obsequies
accordingly. They were not far wrong. When one is converted to Christ he has
absolutely renounced sin, the world may justly count him dead, and all the
vices follow his bier. (W. L. Watkinson.)
A needed reformation
No sooner is Jacob admonished to go to Bethel, than he feels the
necessity of a reformation, and gives command for it. This proves that he knew
of the corrupt practices of his family, and had too long connived at them. We
are glad however to find him resolved at last to put them away. A constant
attendance on God’s ordinances is dwelling as it were in Bethel; and it is by
this that we detect ourselves of evils which we should otherwise go on in
without thought or concern. It is coming to the light, which will manifest our
deeds, whether they be wrought in God or not. Wicked men may reconcile the most
sacred religious duties with the indulgence of secret sins; but good men cannot
do so. They must wash their hands in innocency, and so compass God’s altar.
Jacob not only commands his household to put away their idols, but endeavours
to impress upon them his own sentiments. “Let us arise,” saith he, “and go up
to Bethel; and I will make there an altar unto God, who answered me in the day
of my distress, and was with me in the way which I went.” He is decided for
himself, and uses all means to persuade his family to unite with him. His
intimating that God bad heretofore “answered him in the day of his distress,”
might be designed not only to show them the propriety of what he was about to
do, but to excite a hope that God might disperse the cloud which now hung over
them on account of the late impure and bloody transaction. (A. Fuller.)
Lessons
1. Grace keeps hearts close in obedience unto God’s call.
2. It is the duty of conscience in all governors of families and
others to enjoin all with them to obey God’s call. It is no violence.
3. It is rulers’ duty in order to reconcile God, so much as they
may, to bring souls to repentance.
4. The first part of repentance is to depart from evil.
5. Governors are bound to turn all under them from outward evils
which they may prevent.
6. Images and relics of idolatry may not be suffered in the families
of Jacob’s children.
7. Repentance requireth not only negative but positive cleanness.
8. Typical repentance in outward washings was in the Church before
the law was written.
9. Real endowment with righteousness unto God’s likeness was
intended by it (Genesis 35:2).
10. It is Jacob’s work to rouse his family to move towards God (so
good rulers will do) when he himself is roused by Him.
11. Not only preparation but motion must be in penitents to God’s
house.
12. Repentance is then complete when men are brought fully home to
God.
13. God is reached unto when His true worship is entertained by men.
14. God may and doth use some eminent minister to set up His worship,
that others might know 2:15. God is known to Jacob and his seed to be a God
answering prayer.
16. All good providences to Jacob are mercies truly to his family.
17. Mercies of God to our fathers while we enjoy them bind us to own
and worship the same God (Genesis 2:3). (G. Hughes, B. D.)
Lessons
1. When rulers obey God’s call, He maketh subjects obey theirs.
2. Where God overpowers, souls freely and fully part with their
desired jewels of vanity and superstition.
3. Good rulers will execute as well as enjoin sentence against false
gods.
4. In bringing false worshippers to God, it is good to bury the
monuments of their sin out of sight.
5. Jacob-rulers will not be content but in the destruction of all
means of false worship.
6. Monuments of idolatry must die at Shechem, and not live at Bethel
(Genesis 35:4). (G. Hughes, B. D.)
Verse 6-7
So Jacob came to Luz, which is in the land of Canaan, that is,
Bethel, he and all the people that were with him.
And he built there an altar, and called the place El-beth-el; because there God
appeared unto him, when he fled from the face of his brother
The obituary of a name
“Jacob” is dead; “ Israel” still lives. I want now to pronounce
the obituary of “Jacob.” There are just two classes of lessons to be learned
from the story of Bethel and Penuel, for there were just two persons in contact
and conflict in this thirty years’ war. The type of all is found in the early
vision of the ladder. At the foot of it lay Jacob on his pillow of stone: “And
behold, the Lord stood above it.” Hence one class of lessons will instruct us concerning
God, and one concerning man. One touches on doctrine, the other on duty. So
everywhere “ The Scriptures principally teach what we are to believe concerning
God, and what duty God requires of man.”
I. We begin with
the lessons of DOCTRINE. The same Divine Being, with all attributes and
characteristics unchanged, rules to-day as then. It is wisely worth our while
to note how He is wont to deal with a free-willed human creature, and how He
manages a world of such.
1. Mark, for one thing, how independent God is in choosing His
especial agents. He chooses whom He will for His purposes; and He chose this
man Jacob.
2. Now let us learn a second lesson, and possibly we shall derive
some slight help before we get through with that. See how wise God is in discriminating
character. Why did God choose Jacob rather than Esau? Because he was the more
serviceable man of the two. The long run in those days was a more desirable
thing than the short cut. Patient steadiness was more serviceable for the
Divine ends than mere executive rush. James would have been better than Peter
to go on Old Testament errands.
3. But we pass on to a third lesson: indeed, we feel the need of it.
Mark here how persistent God is in preparing men for a better life by means of
His choice. Just tell over the old fable as you used to tell it to your little
children, for there is an illustration of Divine truth in it; I mean that about
the coward whose cure was effected by an enchanted sword put in his hand. He
was timid enough, but the trusty blade was of itself belligerent. He could not
drop it, for it clung to his hand. He could not run to the rear, for the sword
remained steadily at the head of the attack. He could not surrender, for the
moment he got his foolish lips ready to cry for quarter, the weapon had already
leapt from the scabbard and was fighting like a thing of life. So at last he
began to understand it, then he began to obey it, then he began to watch it,
then he began to trust it; and then he began to be a new man under its working.
And home from the campaign he came, the welkin ringing with praises of his
prowess. There is fine truth in that little tale. The sword of the Spirit is
the Word of God. It converts the man who carries it. And before you go any
further in commenting on the singular choice God made of Jacob, thoughtfully
consider that the choice was the exact force which made Jacob Israel.
4. One more lesson under this head; see here how perfectly satisfied
God seems to be with the result of His election.
II. Lessons of
DUTY.
1. One is concerning the recognition of God in even the personal
biographies of men.
2. Another lesson is concerning what are sometimes called hard
cases. “All the wood-carvings in God’s temple have been made out of knots!”
3. A third lesson is concerning the value of even one high
attainment of grace. You see in some true Christians the glory of superior
meekness; in others the beauty of unusual zeal. So on: these excellencies are
costly. They are rare; they have used up labour; they have been found with
pain; but they transform and transfigure the whole character. The little child
asked its aged grandparent as it laid its tiny finger in the furrow of his
forehead, “What made that wrinkle?” He might well ask, for an artist would have
said it alone was the old man’s feature of beauty. But what made it? An early
sorrow first cut it, deep, sharp, painful. Then a time of generous success
rounded its edges somewhat. Then a loss went over the line and made it plainer.
As life rolled on, that wrinkle became one of the permanent institutions of the
countenance, so that things gladdening and things saddening all went into it.
And by-and-by there came to be fixed this quiet, resigned, gentle line in the
face, to give it all its character. The Italians call Time “an inaudible file.”
It took fifty years to smooth and fashion that one exquisite expression. So
there are lines on the soul which do not come at conversion or grow in an hour.
It is better to begin early to work for such. Any one may miss his chance by
being careless and getting behindhand.
4. Our final lesson is concerning the folly of losing thirty years
of time. (C. S.Robinson, D. D.)
Jacob back at Bethel
I. THAT MEN ARE
LIABLE TO SUFFER LOSSES IN THIS WORLD EVEN WHEN OBEYING GOD’S COMMANDMENTS.
II. THAT WHEN
OBEYING GOD’S WORD WE MAY EXPECT TO MEET GOD HIMSELF.
1. Meeting God is to have a greater knowledge of ourselves.
2. Meeting God is to have a clearer revelation of Him.
3. Meeting God will increase our usefulness.
4. Meeting God gives us an assurance of the future.
III. MEETING GOD IS
A MEMORABLE EVENT. (Homilist.)
Lessons
1. God securing His by His terrors upon enemies, they come in safety
where God calleth them.
2. Names of places old and new may be indifferently used without
superstition.
3. God’s providence brings all with Jacob into the place of His
security (Genesis 35:6).
4. Jacob is working to honour providence, even as that worketh to
save them.
5. Double indigitation of God’s name do His saints make upon
continued goodness.
6. The revelation of God by Himself or angels requireth worship from
His saints to the utmost (Genesis 35:7). (G. Hughes, B. D.)
Grateful memory
In the midst of his greatest prosperity George Moore never forgot
“auld Cumberland.” His mind was always turning back to the home of his birth
and the scenes of his boyhood. The very name of Cumberland had a charm for him.
When any Cumberland lad called upon him at his office, he welcomed him
cheerfully, asked him to his house, and often got him a situation. (S.
Smiles.)
Past scenes
The early childhood of Dean Hook was spent at the rectory of
Hertingfordbury, and to this, the house of his earliest recollections, he ever
looked back with the loudest affection. A very few years before his death he
made a journey with his youngest son specially to see it: to pace once more the
pleasant lawn and garden, and to see if the names were still legible which in
his boyhood he had carrel upon some of the trees that shaded the path by the
river-side, the names of himself and of his friend William Page Wood, together
with the names of Shakespeare and Milton, both of whom they loved with passionate
devotion.
Verse 8
Deborah, Rebekah’s nurse, died
Lessons
1.
Sad
providences in the loss of dearest friends may befall the saints when they are
in duty with God.
2. Parents’ friends should be dear unto, and accepted with their
children also, especially gracious ones (Proverbs 27:10).
3. Death and burial are the events of providence unto the holiest
and the oldest and dearest friends.
4. Burial places are of natural and not religious consideration, any
fit place pointed out by providence.
5. Old gracious friends, as they live desired, so they die lamented.
6. Lamentations for good old friends, deceased, is a duty beseeming
God’s church, yet not without hope.
7. Saints mourn for the loss of friends for goodness sake, not for
gain. Jacob had no gain by Deborah.
8. Monuments of said providences, and lamentations over them, are
not unbeseeming saints to make. (G. Hughes, B. D.)
Death of Deborah
“But,” continues the narrative, “but Deborah, Rebekah’s nurse,
died”; that is, although Jacob and his house were now living in the fear of
God, that did not exempt them from the ordinary distresses of family life. And
among these, one that falls on us with a chastening and mild sadness all its
own, occurs when there passes from the family one of its oldest members, and
one who has by the delicate tact of love gained influence over all, and has by
the common consent become the arbiter and mediator, the confident and
counsellor of the family. They, indeed, are the true salt of the earth whose
own peace is so deep and abiding, and whose purity is so thorough and
energetic, that into their ear we can disburden the troubled heart or the
guilty conscience, as the wildest brook disturbs not and the most polluted
fouls not the settled depths of the all-cleansing ocean. Such must Deborah have
been, for the oak under which she was buried was afterwards known as “the oak
of weeping.” Specially must Jacob himself have mourned the death of her whose
face was the oldest in his remembrance, and with whom his mother and his happy
early days were associated. Very dear to Jacob, as to most men, were those who
had been connected with and could tell him of his parents, and remind him of
his early years. Deborah, by treating him still as a little boy, perhaps the
only one who now called him by the pet name of childhood, gave him the
pleasantest relief from the cares of manhood and the obsequious deportment of
the other members of his household towards him. So that when she went a great
blank was made to him: no longer was the wise and happy old face seen in her
tent door to greet him of an evening; no longer could he take refuge in the
peacefulness of her old age from the troubles of his lot; she being gone, a
whole generation was gone, and a new stage of life was entered on. (M. Dods,
D. D.)
Rebekah and her nurse; or, friendly counsels to employers and
employed
Here is a servant remaining in the same family through four
generations, leaving Laban’s house with Rebekah, when a young bride, going with
her into a distant country, living and serving in that family till one after
another are conveyed to the grave. First, the elements of character in
servants; second, the elements of character in the employer that would help to
form and lead to the appreciation and honour of such a character in the
employed.
I. I will begin
by detailing SOME OF THE MORE IMPORTANT ELEMENTS OF CHARACTER IN SERVANTS.
1. There must be in the servant a sense of responsibility to God.
2. Then you have another characteristic, that of willingly and
cheerfully doing her work.
3. Then servants must be truthful.
4. Then faithfulness--just let us look at this. Faithfulness is to
action what truthfulness is to word.
5. Faithfulness also implies frugality.
6. Then with regard to the influence on little children; as, you
know, nursery rhymes and nursery talk cling to the child, when it has forgotten
things that he had acquired in maturer life.
7. Then another thing is obedience.
II. Now, a few
remarks in regard to THE CHARACTER OF EMPLOYERS.
1. He too must have the fear of God in his heart, as the ground of
all his obligations, not only to God, but to his fellow-creatures.
2. Then there must be justice done by the employer to the employed.
3. In the next place, there must be order on the part of the
employer.
4. Then next there must be right example before the servants on the
part of the master and mistress.
5. Benevolence should be another part of the master’s character.
Finally, I would direct the employer and employed to that world where the
faithful servant of God will receive an inheritance that will never pass away,
and a crown that will never perish, and where both masters and servants, who
have followed the Lord in their lives, will become priests and kings unto God
for ever. (T. Thomas.)
Verse 9-10
God appeared unto Jacob again
Lessons
1.
God
useth to knit comforts unto griefs for His saints. When creature comforts go
out of sight, God cometh in.
2. God’s appearance is enough to countervail the disappearance of
any comfort.
3. In various ways God hath appeared to His saints, but now only in
Christ.
4. Repeated manifestations of Himself doth God afford to the
necessities of His saints.
5. All God’s gracious appearances are to bless His people.
6. God’s blessing for this life and that which is to come is effectual.
(G. Hughes, B. D.)
Lessons
1. God makes good His general blessing in special effects to His
saints.
2. God minds His saints of their own mean name and state in changing
2:3. God alone removeth the lost estate and name of His people.
4. God alone bringeth His saints to a higher name and state.
5. God’s sanction alone settles the name and glory of His saints.
6. This sanction God repeats at His pleasure for His people (Genesis 2:10). (G. Hughes, B. D.)
He called his name Israel--
The Divine culture of a human life
I. THE WAY IN
WHICH ALL JACOB’S PREVIOUS CULTURE TENDED TO THIS ONE RESULT OF MAKING HIM AN
ISRAEL.
II. THE WAY IN
WHICH ALL JACOB’S SUBSEQUENT EXPERIENCES IN LIFE TENDED TO THE CONFIRMING IN
HIM OF THE CHARACTER OF AN “ISRAEL.” Even to the end of Jacob’s life, God did
not wholly remit His discipline. Loss of Joseph, famine, anxiety respecting
Benjamin, &c.
III. WHAT A
GLORIOUS ISSUE IT WAS TO A LIFE SO UNTOWARDLY BEGUN, THAT, BY THE DIVINE
CULTURE, IT SHOULD BE THUS TRANSFORMED FROM THE CHARACTER OF A “SUPPLANTER”
INTO THAT OF AN “ISRAEL.”
1. It is a glorious thing for a man, by means of a Divine discipline
of life, to be made acquainted with the characteristics of his own nature.
2. It is a glorious thing to have life enriched with manifold
experiences.
3. It is a glorious thing to be made conscious of moral improvement
and advantage.
4. It is a glorious thing to be brought into intimate fellowship and
communion with God. (W. Roberts.)
Verse 11
I am God Almighty
God’s arm sufficient
In like manner God has spoken to Abraham: He had said, “I am the
Almighty God; walk before Me and be thou upright.
” The declaration of almightiness is, according to the sacred narrative, the
first declaration of God concerning Himself. A sense of power is one of the
first endowments to which we awaken. Almightiness is power without limit. God
cannot lie, He cannot be tempted with evil, He cannot act contrary to His own
nature, but He can do all that He wills to do.
1. God can create. He can create what He wills, when He pleases, as
He will, and for His own pleasure. He has created all things--all matter, all
spirit.
2. God can create, and He can make, that is, adapt, fashion, mould,
and organise all these materials. We can make, but we cannot create; God can do
both.
3. God can control all He makes and creates. God can over-rule; He
can create, and make, and control, and He can over-rule. For example, He can
permit His image on earth to be broken, and then repair the ruin, and make the
ruined image much more glorious than the primitive likeness. This is
over-ruling. He can allow sin to enter the world without Himself being
chargeable with the entrance of that sin; and He can take it away by an
all-sufficient sacrifice. He can suffer all nations to walk for a time in their
own ways, and then He can restore them to the paths of righteousness.
4. God can destroy. He can blot out all races and classes of
creatures, as He has done on our planet. He can reduce the world to chaos, or
burn it with fire, and resolve it into its original elements. He can cause them
to fly as vapours through space afterwards. Often has He destroyed cities, and
their memorial has perished with them, and perhaps has He destroyed worlds.
5. God can retain His own life from everlasting to everlasting. “I
am,” saith He, “that I am.” There is no limit put to God’s power by decay or by
death, or by any prospect or fear of such dissolution. No plan is contracted,
no work is interrupted.
6. Every attribute of God is a power. His infinity is the fulness of
power; His eternity the continuance of power; His spirituality the highest kind
of power, power inexhaustible and incapable of weariness. There is power in His
knowledge. If there is power in our limited information, what power there must
be in the knowledge that embraces all things. There is power in His wisdom,
power in His love, power in His blessedness, power in the happiness, and power
in the peace of God. There is power in God’s own sense of power. There is power
in all that constitutes His goodness. God has no weakness, or shadow of
impotency; none from the presence of any evil, and none from the absence of any
good; no fear, no remorse, no doubt, no hesitance, no suspicion, no
imperfection. To God all things are possible. Is anything too hard for Him?
7. God can redeem. Such was the sufficiency of God for this work,
that He so loved the world as to give His only Son, that whosoever believeth on
Him should not perish, but have everlasting life. And in the application of the
provisions of this redemption, what do we see? We see men born again; so great
is God’s power, that we find in connection with the Christian dispensation,
there is new creation--old things passing away, all thing becoming new. This
dispensation finds men dead in sin; it leaves them quickened. It finds them
grovelling on the earth like wounded worms; and it fits them to fly in the
heavens as with the wings of the eagle. Brethren, fear to rebel against this
God Almighty. How vain is your resistance and your defiance. What if you set
Him at naught! You may judge as to the issue; who will prevail--you, a mortal,
dust and ashes, or this God Almighty; (S. Martin.)
Verses 16-20
Rachel died, and was buried in the way to Ephrath, which is
Bethlehem
The death of Rachel
I.
IN
ITS SOLEMN AND MELANCHOLY ASPECT.
1. It was death upon a journey.
2. It was death in the time of travail.
3. It was death just when his old fond desire was accomplished.
II. IN ITS HOPEFUL
AND PROPHETIC ASPECT.
1. It teaches the doctrine of victory through pain.
2. It teaches that death is not annihilation. “As her soul was in
departing (for she died)” (Genesis 35:18). Death is here
represented, not as the complete extinction of all thought and feeling, but as
the separation of soul and body. It is not a sinking into nought, but only a
change of state and place.
3. It teaches us what is the characteristic mark of God’s chosen
people. Israel of old had the portion of affliction, and thus became the time
of the Messiah, whose peculiar and distinctive mark was, that He was “a Man of
sorrows and acquainted with grief” (Isaiah 53:3). Rachel was theancestress of
the suffering children of Israel.
4. It teaches a lesson of encouragement to all mothers dying in
similar circumstances. (T. H. Leale.)
Rachel’s death
Thus she that had said, “Give me children, or I die,” died in
child-birth! Several circumstances which attended this afflictive event are
deserving of notice.
Her words, if reported to Jacob, with the recollection of the
above prophetic hint, would raise his hopes, and render his loss more
affecting, by adding to it the pain of disappointment. They appear to have no
influence however on Rachel. She has the sentence of death in herself, and
makes no answer; but turning her eyes towards the child, and calling him
“Ben-oni, the son of my sorrow,” she expired!
Lessons
1. Providence ordereth the saints below no long settlement, but to
move sometimes from desired places.
2. Motions from Bethel to Ephrath, from God’s comforts to God’s
chastenings are ordered to God’s saint’s by himself.
3. Providential afflictions may betide God’s dearest servants
unexpectedly in their ways.
4. Souls exorbitantly desirous of children, may have them from God
with bitterness enough (Genesis 35:16).
5. The bitterest pains in child-bearing may befall the best of
women.
6. It is the midwife’s honour, with God’s Spirit, to be pitiful and
comfortable unto women in travail.
7. God doth add sons to His in their earnest desires sometimes,
wherein they may take little delight (Genesis 30:24),
8. Providence sometimes brings living children out of dying mothers
(Genesis 35:17).
9. Killing pains in child-bearing may befal souls to much longing
for children.
10. Dying mothers in their passions may name children their griefs
and not their joy.
11. Souls die not, but go out of bodies to God who gave them Ecclesiastes 12:7).
12. Tender affection in fathers name their children more dear which
they have with loss of wives (verse 18).
13. Rachels may die when Leahs live, the beloved before the despised.
14. Comely interment is a duty to relations in all places, where providence
calleth them away.
15. Places notable for births and burials are sometimes noted by
God’s spirit (verse 19).
16. It is suitable to nature and not contrary to grace, to set up and
keep memorials of deceased relations.
17. Durable monuments of providences may be useful for posterity.
18. It is not unlawful to leave monuments of the dead, only vanity
and superstition avoided (verse 20). (G. Hughes, B. D)
Verse 18
Ben-oni
The marks of a Ben-oni
These words were spoken of Rachel, Jacob’s wife.
Her youngest child had just been born: she was very sick, and was going to die.
The little child was lying by her. She called to see it; she kissed it, and
called his name Ben-oni. Ben-oni means, “the son of my sorrow.” This child was
about to occasion the death of his mother, and therefore she gave him this
name. She was sorry to leave her husband, her family, and her friends; and this
feeling of sorrow led her to call his name Ben-oni. “But his father called him
Benjamin.” Benjamin means, “the son of a right hand.” Our right hand is a great
comfort and blessing to us. What could we do without a right hand? Now, every
child that is born into this world will be either a Ben-oni or a Benjamin.
There is not much difference between these two names, but there is a great deal
of difference between the natures which they represent. Now, the great question
for us to consider is, What are the marks of a Ben-oni or of a Benjamin? We shall
mention four things which may always be considered as the marks of a Ben-oni;
and the opposite of these, of course, will be the marks of a Benjamin.
I. The first mark
of a Ben-oui--“a child of sorrow”--is ILL-TEMPER. Suppose you had to walk four
or five miles with a pebble in your shoe; or suppose you had to wear a coat or
dress with a pin sticking in it; or suppose you had to lie all night in bed
with a porcupine by your side, sticking you with his sharp-pointed quills--what
an uncomfortable thing it would be! But none of these things are so
uncomfortable as to be connected with an ill-temper. All peevish, cross,
ill-natured children are Ben-onies--children of sorrow to their parents and the
families where they dwell. There was a rich nobleman in England who had a
little daughter named Anne. They were very fond of her; for she was a fine
little creature, very lively, and merry, and affectionate, and exceedingly
beautiful. But she had a very ill temper. When anything vexed her she would fly
into a rage, and turn and strike any one that provoked her. After every fit of
anger she would be ashamed and sorry, and resolve never to do so again. But the
next time she was provoked it was all forgotten, and she was as angry as ever.
When she was between four and five years of age, her mother had a little son, a
sweet little tender baby. Anne’s nurse, who was thoughtless and wicked, loved
to tease her, because she was so easily irritated, and so she told her that her
father and mother would not care for her now, because all their love and
pleasure would be in this little brother, and they would not mind her. Poor
Anne burst into a flood of tears, and cried bitterly, saying, “You are a
naughty woman to say so! Mamma will always love me; I know she will, and I’ll go
this very moment and ask her.” And she ran out of the nursery and hastened to
her mother’s room. The servant called after her: “Come, miss, you needn’t go to
your mother’s room; she won’t see you now.” Anne burst open the door, but was
instantly caught hold of by a strange woman she had never seen before. “My
dear,” said this woman, “you cannot see your mother just now”; and she was
going on to tell that it was because she was very sick, and could not be
disturbed. But she was too angry to listen; and she screamed and kicked at the
woman, who was obliged to take her by force and carry her back to the nursery.
When she put her down she gave the servant a charge not to let her go to her
mother’s room. This added to her rage. But the thoughtless, wicked servant,
instead of trying to soothe and quiet her, burst out into a laugh, and said, “I
told you that, miss. You see your mamma does not love you now.” Then the poor
child became mad with fury. She seized a smoothing-iron, and, darting forward,
threw it upon the baby’s head as it lay in the cradle. The child gave one
struggle, and breathed no more. Anne’s mother died that night of grief, Anne
grew up in the possession of great riches. She had every outward comfort about
her that money could procure; but she was a very unhappy and miserable woman.
She was never known to smile. The thought of the terrible consequences of that
one outburst of passion pressed upon her like a heavy burden all her days. Ah!
what a Ben-oni this girl became! She was a child of sorrow to her parents. Her
ill-temper made her so. If you give way to such tempers, my dear young friends,
you will certainly be Ben-onies; but if you strive and pray against such
feelings, and try to be gentle, kind, and pleasant to those around you, then
you will be Benjamins--children of the right hand to your parenta. See, now,
how differently such children will act. A gentleman was walking on the Battery,
in the city of New York, one day, and, as he passed a little girl who was
cheerfully rolling her hoop, he said to her, “You are a nice little girl”; to
which she replied, patting her little brother on the head, “And Bobble is a
nice little brother too.” Here was a good-temper, which would make this dear
child “ a child of the right hand” to her parents, and cause her to be loved by
all who were about her.
II. The second
mark of a Ben-oni is IDLENESS. Idle children love to lie in bed in the morning;
they love to do nothing all day, if they can help it, but play. It is a great
trouble to get them to study, to read, or to work. Now, idle children always
make idle men; for the habits which children form while they are children will
surely remain with them when they grow up to be men and women. Now, we are to
remember, dear children, that God is busy at all times, and almost everything
that God has made is busy. Look at the sun; it is always at work, shining and
shining and shining from one Fear’s end to the other. In the daytime it is
shining in our part of the world, and when it is night to us it is shining in
the opposite part of the world. And so it is with the moon--always shining in
one part of the world or the other. So it is with the sea; its waves are
rising, and falling, and rolling, and flowing continually. So it is with the
rivers; they are continually running, from the fountains where they spring, on,
on to the ocean. And so it is with the little birds, and little fishes, and the
bees, and the ants--none of these are idle. A gentleman in England had an
estate which was worth over two hundred pounds a year. For a while he kept his
farm in his own hands, but at length found himself so much in debt that he was
obliged to sell one-half of his place to pay up. The rest he let out to a
farmer for several years. Towards the end of that time, the farmer, on coming to
pay his rent, asked him whether he would sell his farm. The gentleman was
surprised that the farmer should be able to make him an offer for his place.
“Pray, tell me,” said he, “how it happens that, while I could not live upon
twice as much land, for which I paid no rent, you are regularly paying me about
one hundred pounds a year for the farm, and able in a few years to purchase
it?” “The reason is plain,” answered the farmer; “it lies in the difference
between ‘go’ and ‘come.’” “I do not understand you,” said the gentleman. “I
mean,” said the farmer, “that you sat still and said, ‘Go’; I get up and say
‘Come.’ You lie in bed, and enjoy your ease; I rise early in the morning, and
attend to my business.” In other words, this was an industrious man; there was
no love of idleness about him, and this led to his success in life.
III. The third mark
of a Ben-oni is PRIDE. Some children are proud of their clothes. This is very
silly indeed; for the butterflies have much more beautiful clothes than we, and
yet they are never proud of their dress. Some children are proud of their
families. This also is very silly, for we have all sprung at first from one
father. Some children are proud about their houses. This, too, is very silly,
for, by-and-by, they will all crumble into the dust, from which they have been
taken, while the grave is the one house to which we must all come at last.
Proud children feel and think themselves better than others, and are often
unwilling to engage in honest and honourable employments. Listen to what I am
going to tell you. Chief-Justice Marshall was a great man; but great men are
never proud. He was not too proud to wait upon himself. He was in the habit of
going to market himself, and carrying home his purchases. Often he would be
seen returning at sunrise with poultry in one hand and vegetables in the other.
On one of these occasions a fashionable young man from the North, who had
removed to Richmond, was swearing violently because he could find no one to
carry home his turkey. Judge Marshall stepped up and asked him where he lived.
When he heard, he said, “That is in my way, and I will take your turkey home
for you.” When they came to the house the young man inquired, “What shall I pay
you?” “Oh, nothing,” said the Judge; “you are welcome; it was all in the way,
and it was no trouble to me.” “Who is that polite old gentleman who brought
home my turkey for me? “ asked the young man of a by-stander. “Oh,” said he,
“that was Judge Marshall, Chief-Justice of the United States.” “Why did he bring
home my turkey?” “He did it,” said the by-stander, “to give you a rebuke, and
teach you to attend to your own business.” True greatness never feels above
doing anything that is useful; but especially the truly great man will never
feel above helping himself; his own independence of character depends upon his
being able to help himself. The great Dr. Franklin, when he first established
himself in business in Philadelphia, wheeled home the paper which he purchased
for his printing-office upon a wheelbarrow with his own hands.
IV. The fourth and
only other mark that we shall speak of is DISOBEDIENCE. There is nothing on
which the comfort and happiness of parents and families depend more than on the
obedience of children. My dear children, if you want to plant thorns on the
pillows of you parents, and plunge daggers into their bosoms, be disobedient.
If you want to make them as uncomfortable as they possibly can be in this
world, then be disobedient. This is the chief mark of a Ben-oni. I remember
reading not long ago of a gentleman in England who had two sons. He was a kind,
excellent, pious man, and did everything for the comfort of his children that
he thought it right to do. But sometimes the boys were anxious to do things
which their parents were not willing that they should do. One Sunday, the
eldest boy went to his father and asked permission to take the carriage and go
riding in the afternoon, instead of going to church. His father told him he
could not, because it would be breaking the Sabbath. The boy was very much
displeased because his father would not let him go riding, as some of the boys
in the neighbourhood had been allowed by their parents to do. He was so wicked
about this that he determined no longer to stay at home, because his father
would not let him do just what he wanted. So the next day he persuaded his
brother to go with him, and they went down to Portsmouth, a town by the
seaside, intending to go to sea. Before going, however, they called on the Rev.
Mr. Griffin, to assist them to get a situation on board a man-of-war. This good
man, perceiving that they were not accustomed to the mode of life in which they
were about to enter, inquired of them their object in going to sea. The eldest
boy frankly told him they were going in order to spite their parents! Then he
told him the story of what had taken place at home--of his father’s
unwillingness to allow him to ride on Sunday--and said he was going to sea in
order to make his father feel sorry for refusing to gratify him. The good
clergyman tried to show them the guilt and folly of the course they were about
to pursue, and to set before them the unavoidable consequences that would
result from it. The younger son was impressed by the counsels and advice of the
clergyman, and went home; but the elder son resolved to go on in his evil
course. Some twelve or fifteen years after this had taken place, this same
clergyman was called to the prison in the town of Portsmouth to see a sailor
who was condemned to be executed, and who was going to be hung in a few days.
When he entered the cell of the prison he saw a wretched, miserable,
squalid-looking creature sitting by a table in the cell, who looked up to him
as he entered, and said, “Do you not remember me, sir?” “No,” said the
clergyman; “I do not recollect that I ever saw you before.” Then the poor man
recalled to him the story of the boy who went from home in order to spite his
parents. “And are you the miserable man,” said the clergyman, “who did this?”
“Yes,” said the poor culprit; “I followed out my own plan; I went on the course
which I had chosen, contrary to your advice and to my own convictions; I
plunged into all sorts of wickedness and sin, and finally became involved in a
robbery and murder, for which I am now about to suffer the penalty. And all
this in consequence of my disobedience to my parents!” The clergyman wrote to
the father of this unhappy man, who came to visit his son in his last hours,
and who had the unspeakable anguish of standing by and seeing him suffer the
penalty of the law, and reap the bitter fruits of his disobedience. What a
Ben-oni that son was to his father! Let us look, now, at one or two examples of
an opposite character. William Hale was an obedient son. He was spending some
time with his mother at the Saratoga Springs, and had become acquainted with a
number of boys of his own age there. One day some half-dozen of the children
were playing on the piazza, and one of them was heard exclaiming--“Oh, yes,
that’s capital! So we will; come on, now! Where’s William Hale? Come on, Will!
We are going to have a ride on the circular railroad. Come with us.” “Yes, if
my mother is willing,” said William. “I will run and ask her.” “Ah, ah! so you
must run and ask your ma!--great baby-boy!--run along to your ma! Ain’t you
ashamed?” “I don’t ask my mother,” said one. “Neither do I,” said another.
“Neither do I,” said a third. “Be a man, Will, and come along,” said the first
boy, “if you don’t wish to be called a coward as long as you live; don’t you
see we are all waiting?” William was standing with one foot advanced, and his
hand firmly clenched, in the midst of the group. His brow was flushed, his eye
was flashing, his lip was compressed, his cheek was changing--all showing how
the epithet “coward” rankled in his bosom. It was doubtful for a moment whether
he would have the true bravery to be called a coward rather than to do wrong;
but, with a voice trembling with emotion, he replied:--“I will not go without I
ask my mother; and I am no coward, either. I promised her I would not go from
the house without her permission; and I should be a base coward if I were to
tell my mother a lie.” When Wiliam returned to his mother to ask her permission
to go, and told her of what had taken place, she threw her arms around his
neck, and exclaimed: “God bless you, my dear child, and give you grace always
to act in this way.” Ah, my dear children, he was a Benjamin--a child of
comfort--to his dear mother; and doubtless he grew up to be her support and
comfort all her days. After the surrender of Cornwallis, and the victory
achieved by the American arms, George Washington, when the war was over,
returned in triumph to his mother’s home. Everybody was homouring him and
praising him as the saviour of his country and the greatest man of the age.
When he reached the place of his mother’s abode a large concourse of the people
had met to greet him and welcome him to his home. In the centre of the
assembled crowd stood his mother, and, pushing his way through the crowd around
him, he hastened to pay her his respects; and, as she threw her arms around his
neck and kissed him, she said to some who were congratulating her upon having
so noble a son: “George always was an obedient child.” He was indeed a
Benjamin--a son of comfort--to his mother, and a blessing to the country and to
the world; and the spirit of obedience early learned and early practised was
that which went to make him what he was. And now, in conclusion, my dear
children, let me ask you, Which of these two do you desire to be? Will you be
Ben-onies--children of sorrow and grief--to your parents? or will you be
Benjamins--children of joy and comfort and blessing--to them? If you would be
the latter--Benjamins indeed--then you must watch and strive and pray against
all the evils of which we have been speaking. Watch against these four marks of
a Ben-oni; watch against ill-temper, watch against idleness, watch against
pride, watch against disobedience; and pray God to enable you each to overcome
all these evils--to erase these marks of a Ben-oni as they are beginning to
fasten themselves on your character, and to earn for yourself the character of
a Benjamin indeed. (H. Newton, D. D.)
Verses 22-26
The sons of Jacob
I.
SIGNIFICANCE OF NAMES. Proper names had among them (the Hebrews) a deeper
meaning, and were more closely connected in men’s thoughts with character and
condition, than among any other ancient nation with the history and character
of which we are acquainted. This is apparent from the care taken in the sacred
writings to record the origin of so many names of individuals and of places,
from the frequent allusions to them as significant, and the remarks made upon
their meaning, and from the peculiar employment of them on important and solemn
occasions, when given or changed, to mark some great transaction or event, to
form titles of honour; or to record a promise, or threat, or prophecy.
II. DIVERSITY OF
CHARACTER. Among these twelve sons of one man no two precisely alike. Dark and
bright traits of character strangely intermingle in this household. Joseph
seems to have served the Lord from his youth, and Simeon appears to have been
the darkest character of the twelve. As children often differ in complexion and
stature, &c., so do they also in taste, moral character, &c. Often less
like their immediate progenitors than their remoter ancestors; pointing far
back to past times in their moral and physical portrait. How far back we point
to the source of the evil there is in us. Diversity of bodily, mental, and
moral qualities a blessing, when under the influence of Divine grace; otherwise
a source of mischief and sorrow, engendering rivalry and strife.
III. WAYS OF
PROVIDENCE. How marvellous the history wrought out in the world by means of
these twelve men and their descendants! How wonderously Providence blended
these unlike characters for working out His purposes! He maketh the wrath of
men to praise Him. While imagining they were working their own will, their acts
were subordinate, by the power of God, to high and gracious purposes. Yet the
good, in the end, attain to the most honourable places, and the widest
influence. The youngest, and most despised, and helpless, are in the end
advanced. We often spoil the best instruments, and turn but sorry work out of
most refined materials. God brings good out of evil. A world of beauty out of
chaos: a great people out of these twelve shepherds. Think of another twelve
whose work it was to lay the foundation of a still greater and more enduring
kingdom. They also were shepherds in another sense. Learn:
I. Among all
names there is only one whereby we can be saved. “Thou shalt call His name
Jesus, for He shall save His people,” &c.
II. Natural
differences of character may be purified by Divine grace. The worst may be
saved by Christ, the best need His salvation.
III. Cast yourself
upon the bountiful care and inexhaustible wisdom of Providence. He who of such
material laid the foundations of a great nation, can make all things work
together for our good. (J. C. Gray.)
Jacob’s grief at Reuben’s sin
Moses expresseth not how Jacob grieved when he heard this, but
only saith, “It came to Israel’s ears” that it was done. Surely the reason was
this, that we might thereby conceive that the grief was greater than could be
expressed, to have his bed defiled by his own son. So read we, the painter that
portrayed the intended sacrifice of Iphigenia, painted her father Agamemnon’s
face covered, because it was not possible to express well the countenance of a
man so plunged in woe. Think we then earnestly of Jacob’s sorrow, but know that
we cannot think how it was. And what crossing griefs the Lord sends us, let us
strive to patience by these examples. Yea, let us grow by these examples to a
Christian strength against worldly scandals and offences, not moved by them to
waver up and down as some do, condemning truth, and judging persons by faults
and offences that do happen. As if one should say, See the religion of these
men; can it be true, can it be good, when the professors of it have such spots?
Simeon and Levi cruel bloodshedders, Dinah wanton and wantonly defiled, and now
Reuben an incestuous person, defiling his own father’s bed. How should the
religion of these men be good? Surely the idolatrous ignorance, and ignorant
idolatry of the Gentiles, of the Canaanites, Perizzites, Jebusites, or such
like, was the good religion, and not the way that Jacob served God by. But let
us be wise, and learn by this to take a surer course to judge both of men and
of religion. Jacob and his family had the true religion, though their sinful
flesh offended sometimes. All were not evil in such degrees, though some
offended too much. Bewail the falls we may of those that profess the truth,
nay, bewail them we ought with a sighing heart; but forsake truth for them, or
condemn truth to be no truth, we may not, we dare not, we ought not. Let God be
true, and all men liars. Let truth be truth, and all men sinful; yea, such
great patriarchs as these were not ever free. (Bp. Babington.)
Lessons
1. God carrieth His Jacobs sometimes from Ephrath to Edar, from one
affliction to a worse.
2. The Church’s journeys and stages are appointed and ordered by
God.
3. Israel is willing to pitch his tents where God allots him.
4. The Church and its pastor sit down by the tower of the flock;
shepherds and sheep have their tower (Genesis 35:21).
5. The Church’s habitation is not free from affection and affliction
in the land of its sojournings.
6. Providence ordereth the permission of the foulest crimes
sometimes in His own Church.
7. The chiefest in outward privilege in the Church may fall into
greatest sin. God’s wisdom orders it.
8. God will not suffer the blots in His Church to be wholly covered
or silenced. Others may learn by them.
9. Great is the fascination of lust which makes a son and wife
conspire to pollute the father’s bed.
10. Deep impressions the tidings of such wickedness in the Church
makes upon gracious men, to consternation.
11. Providence distinctly notes the genealogy and number of the
Church’s beginnings, to observe God’s making good His promises. Now Jacob was
come to twelve (Genesis 35:22).
12. God doth not always cast out of His visible Church for greatest
wickedness. Reuben is numbered.
13. The twelve first patriarchs were ordained of God’s grace, not for
their worth.
14. Scripture useth figurative speeches, warily to be opened by God’s
ministers (Genesis 35:23-26). (G. Hughes, B. D.)
Verse 28-29
And the days of Isaac were a hundred and fourscore years.
And Isaac gave up the ghost
The character of Isaac
The lives of Abraham and Jacob are as attractive as the life of
Isaac is apparently unattractive. Isaac’s character had few salient features.
It had no great faults, no striking virtues; it is the quietest, smoothest,
most silent character in the Old Testament. It is owing to this that there are
so few remarkable events in the life of Isaac, for the remarkableness of events
is created by the character that meets them. It seems to be a law that all
national, social, and personal life should advance by alternate contractions
and expansions. There are few instances where a great father has had a son who
equalled him in greatness. The old power more often reappears in Jacob than in
Isaac. The spirit of Abraham’s energy passed over his son to his son’s son. The
circumstances that moulded the character of Isaac were these.
1. He was an only son.
2. His parents were both very old. At atmosphere of antique quiet
hung about his life.
3. These two old hearts lived for him alone.
I. Take the
EXCELLENCES of his character first. His submissive self-surrender on Mount
Gerizim, which shadowed forth the perfect sacrifice of Christ.
2. His tender constancy, seen in his mourning for his mother, and in
the fact that he alone of the patriarchs represented to the Jewish nation the
ideal of true marriage.
3. His piety. It was as natural to him as to a woman to trust and
love: not strongly, hut constantly, sincerely. His trust became the habit of
his soul. His days were knit each to each by natural piety.
II. Look next at
the FAULTS of Isaac’s character.
1. He was slow, indifferent, inactive. We find this exemplified in
the story of the wells (verse 26:18-22).
2. The same weakness, ending in selfishness, appears in the history
of Isaac’s lie to Abimelech.
3. He showed his weakness in the division between Jacob and Esau. He
took no pains to harmonize them. The curse of favouritism prevailed in his
tent.
4. He dropped into a querulous old age, and became a lover of
savoury meat. But our last glimpse of him is happy. He saw the sons of Jacob at
Hebron, and felt that God’s promise was fulfilled. (S. A. Brooke, M. A.)
The death and burial of Isaac
I. IT WAS THE
OCCASION OF FAMILY REUNION.
II. IT WAS A TIME
FOR REVIVAL OF MEMORIES OF THE PAST,
III. IT WAS THE
BEGINNING OF ANOTHER AND A HIGHER LIFE. (T. H. Leale.)
The death of Isaac
I. THAT HIS DEATH
WAS PEACEFUL.
1. Because his spirit was given up to the rightful owner.
2. Because the soul’s earthly activities had come to an end.
3. Because his soul’s temporal purposes had been gained.
II. THAT HIS LIFE
WAS WELL SPENT.
1. His soul’s interests had not been neglected.
2. Society had been benefited.
3. God had been served.
III. HE WAS BELOVED
AND HONOURED BY HIS FAMILY. This is intimated to us--
1. By his being buried with his people.
2. By his sons attending his funeral. (Homilist.)
Lessons
1. God brings at last His Jacob and Church to their desired place in
their pilgrimage.
2. God makes good His word in making Jacob successor to Abraham and
Isaac in their sojourning (Genesis 35:27).
3. The blessing of long life God grants to His servants, when and
where it may be beneficial to His Church (Genesis 35:28).
4. Expiration and dissolution are the appointed conditions of saints
in order unto glory.
5. Saints in dissolution go out of the world unto their own people.
6. Old age or fulness of days is given here sometimes to God’s
saints, i.e., days full of work, as well as many.
7. Nature and grace agree to evince and perform the duty of burial.
8. It is piety to parents deceased so to order their burial and
interment that it may be comely and honourable.
9. The death as well as the life of saints God recordeth for His
Church’s instruction, and to point out distinct periods (Genesis 35:29). (G. Hughes, B. D.)
Esau and Jacob at Isaac’s deathbed
The tenderness of these two brothers towards one another and
towards their father was probably quickened by remorse when they met at his
deathbed. They could not, perhaps, think that they had hastened his end by
causing him anxieties which age has not strength to throw off; but they could
not miss the reflection that the life now closed and finally sealed up might
have been a much brighter life had they acted the part of dutiful, loving sons.
Scarcely can one of our number pass from among us without leaving in our minds
some self-reproach that we were not more kindly towards him, and that now he
was beyond our kindness; that our opportunity for being brotherly towards him
is for ever gone. And when we have very manifestly erred in this respect:
perhaps there are among all the stings of a guilty conscience few more bitterly
piercing than this. Many a son who has stood unmoved by the tears of a living
mother--his mother by whom he lives, who has cherished him as her own soul, who
has forgiven and forgiven and forgiven him, who has toiled and prayed, and
watched for him--though he has hardened himself against her looks of imploring
love and turned carelessly from her entreaties and burst through all the fond
cords and snares by which she has sought to keep him, has yet broken down
before the calm, unsolicitous, resting face of the dead. Hitherto he has not
listened to her pleadings, and now she pleads no more. Hitherto she has heard
no word of pure love from him, and now she hears no more. Hitherto he has done
nothing for her of all that a son may do, and now there is nothing he can do.
All the goodness of her life gathers up and stands out at once, and the time
for gratitude is past. He sees suddenly, as by the withdrawal of a veil, all
that that worn body has passed through for him, and all the goodness these
features have expressed, and now they can never light up with joyful acceptance
of his love and duty. Such grief as this finds its one alleviation in the
knowledge that we may follow those who have gone before us; that we may yet
make reparation. (M. Dods, D. D.)
──《The Biblical Illustrator》