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        BIBLE PEOPLE: RACHEL - Love at first sight          BIBLE PEOPLE: JOSEPH - Jacob's favorite son

 

BIBLE PEOPLE - THEIR STORIES

 

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                JACOB

          JACOB, OLD TESTAMENT, BIBLE    
          

 

                                       LIES, LIES, LIES.....

    At bottom of page:

  PEOPLE IN THE STORY

  FAMOUS QUOTES

  BIBLE REFERENCE

  INTERESTING WEBSITES

  ACTIVITIES/QUESTIONS

 

                 

     

 

THE BIRTH OF ESAU AND JACOB .

Rebecca, wife of Isaac, bore twin sons, Esau and Jacob. When they were born they seemed to be scrambling for first place: Esau came first, but Jacob came out holding onto Esau's tiny heel. They were in competition from the start.

But they were quite different in personality. Jacob was a thinker, a man who preferred to stay close to home. Esau was a man's man, a hunter and farmer. As the old saying goes, one was an 'arty', the other was a 'hearty'.

THEFT OF THE BIRTHRIGHT AND BLESSING

Jacob hated being second in line. He always wanted the birthright - the eldest son was entitled to twice the inheritance that any of his brothers got when their father died. One day when Esau came in from the fields, famished with hunger and exhausted, Jacob refused to give him the food he was cooking unless Esau renounced the birthright of the eldest son and gave it to him. Esau probably didn't take him too  seriously, and when Jacob insisted he gave in, to get his hands on the food. He swore an oath that Jacob would have the birthright of the eldest son.

Their father Isaac loved Esau better than Jacob, but Jacob was his mother's favorite. She decided that he, not Esau, would be a better leader of the tribe, and she primed Jacob on how to steal the Blessing from Esau - the Blessing of the tribal leader had ritual and legal significance, naming the next leader of the tribe.  

Rebecca waited until Isaac's eyesight was failing badly, then she disguised Jacob so that Isaac mistook him for Esau. Jacob was a willing partner to the trickery, disguising his voice, skin and clothing so that Isaac would think he was speaking to Esau. The old man then gave the Blessing not to the son he favored, but to Jacob.

JACOB'S DREAM

Knowing that Esau would be enraged by what he had done, Jacob fled. He took his mother's advice and set off for Padan-Aram, where her family still lived. On the journey he stopped one night and lay down to sleep, laying his head on a flat stone. While he was asleep he had a strange dream that affected him deeply. He dreamed he saw a ladder reaching from the earth up to heaven, and angels were going up and down the ladder. Then God stood beside him and spoke, telling Jacob that this land should be his, and that he would have innumerable descendants. Then Jacob woke up, and was afraid. God was in this place, and Jacob had somehow stumbled on a place that joined heaven and earth. 

Next morning he took the stone he had used as a pillow and set it up as an altar, pouring oil on it to sanctify it. He called the place Bethel.

MARRIAGE WITH TWO SISTERS

Then he set out again on his journey to his mother's family. He came to a well where some shepherds were watering their flocks. A young girl wanted to draw water from the well, and Jacob learnt from the shepherds she was Rachel, a cousin of his, daughter of his mother's brother Laban. He was smitten. He rolled the stone away from the lid of the well for her and she took him to meet his relatives.

Laban had two daughters, Leah and Rachel. Jacob wanted to marry Rachel, and said so. But he had no bride price, and Laban demanded that Jacob work for him for seven years to pay the bride price for Rachel. This Jacob did, and at the end of the seven years he prepared to marry Rachel. But Laban tricked him into marrying Lead instead - the face of the bride was hidden during the wedding, and once they'd had sexual intercourse in the darkness of the wedding night, there was no going back. 

Of course when Jacob found out he'd been tricked he was white-hot with anger. He had tricked his father Isaac but now had been tricked in turn by his uncle. He demanded to be given Rachel, and was so threatening that Laban agreed - on condition that Jacob work another seven years for her. This he did - but the anger inside him rankled, and he planned a way to get even.

ESCAPE FROM LABAN

Jacob now had four wives - two full wives in Leah and Rachel, and their two maids Zilpah and Bilhah. He loved Rachel, but she did not seem able to conceive. Leah on the other hand was fertile. She had six sons and a daughter, Dinah, in rapid succession. Zilpah had two sons, as did Bilhah. Finally Rachel had a son whom she called Joseph.

Meanwhile, Jacob and Laban had worked uneasily together. Neither trusted the other, with good reason. When the full bride price had been paid, Jacob asked Laban if he could leave and return to his native country. Laban prevaricated, but they came to an arrangement. Laban's flocks would consist of all the animals who were white. Jacob could have all the animals who were spotted or dark - these were not as valuable as the white animals. Laban thought he had made a bargain, but Jacob took steps to stop the white animals breeding, and put the strong male animals with the spotted or black females, so that he bred a stronger and more numerous flock. He had outwitted Laban.

One day, without any farewell, Jacob gathered up his wives, children and flocks, and left. Rachel, who had never forgiven her father for tricking Jacob into marrying Leah, stole the household gods - small statuettes that represented the spirit of her family, similar to the lares and penetes of the Romans. This might seem a petty action, but these statuettes guaranteed legal title to all Jacob had taken from Laban. Jacob did not know she had done this.

When he found out three days later, Laban pursued them - to get back his flocks and the statuettes. When they met each one accused the other of cheating - and each one was right. But they agreed to a truce, with each one staying on his own side of an agreed landmark. Laban looked for the statuettes, know they must be in Jacob's camp, but Rachel hid them in a saddlebag then sat on them. She had her menstrual periods, she told her father - and by tribal law this meant he would be unclean if he touched the place where she had been sitting. He could not search the saddlebags, and so she had her revenge on her father.

 

 

 

'On one of these visits Jacob's daughter Dinah was molested by the son of the local ruler, Shechem son of Hamor. Molested is too gentle a word. 
The young girl was raped. 
Strangely, Shechem seems to have fallen deeply in love with her.... '
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WRESTLING WITH THE ANGEL

Jacob moved on. As he approached his home territory, he knew there would be a confrontation with Esau, his wronged brother. He heard that Esau had set out looking for him, and was afraid. Cautiously he sent flocks of animals as a sweetener to appease Esau, then waited to see what would happen. He also sent his wives and children away, so that they would be safe. 

That night, standing alone by the River Jabbok, a solitary man approached Jacob and began to wrestle with him. They wrestled and fought all night, but neither could get the upper hand. Then the stranger struck Jacob in the hollow of his thigh, and Jacob's hip was dislocated. But Jacob held on. The stranger told him to let go, but Jacob demanded a blessing before he would do so. 'What is your name?' asked the stranger. 'Jacob'. 'Now it is no longer Jacob, but Israel', said the stranger.

Jacob knew that he had seen God face to face - and lived. 

But Esau was still coming, and Jacob had to deal with that. He prepared for the worst, but to his amazement Esau ran to meet him, embracing him and welcoming him. He held no grudges - in fact, throughout the story he is consistently more likable than Jacob. They wept together, and were reunited as brothers, Esau having forgiven his brother completely. 

THE RAPE OF DINAH

Jacob continued on to the city of Shechem, where he bought land. His family began the process of settling there, and the women began to visit the local women and make friends with them. On one of these visits Jacob's daughter Dinah was molested by the son of the local ruler, Shechem son of Hamor. Molested is too gentle a word. The young girl was raped. Strangely, Shechem seems to have fallen deeply in love with her at the time - the Bible says 'his soul was drawn to her'. He persuaded his father Hamor to ask for her hand in marriage. Nowhere in this story is Dinah's reaction described.

Jacob knew what had happened, but his sons did not - they were away in the fields at the time. When they heard about it they were very angry, but Hamor met with them and told them his sons wanted to marry Dinah, and that this could be the beginning of friendship between the inhabitants of the city and the new settlers. There could be intermarriage, trade and friendship between the groups.

But Jacob's sons held onto their anger, and made a condition: that Shechem could only be accepted by them if he was circumcised. Not only Shechem, but every male among Shechem's people. 

Probably to their surprise, Shechem was more than willing to fall in with their request. There is something rather plaintive in his desire to please Dinah's brothers. He seems truly to have loved Dinah. He persuaded all the men of the city to accept the newcomers as equals, and to be circumcised. He himself led the way. 

But a few days later, when all the men of the city had been newly circumcised and were in pain with the wound, the sons of Jacob attacked them and the city, killing and looting, stealing the wives and children of the city and taking all the loot they could. They killed Hamor and Shechem and took Dinah out of Shechem's house where she had gone to live.

Jacob was aghast.  He himself has been a trickster, but not a murderer. Now the tribe was in real trouble, with a whole new set of enemies. His sons' grisly acts had destroyed the harmony that might have been. Hastily Jacob pulled up roots and fled, taking his family and all they could carry to Bethel where they would be safe.

THE SALE OF JOSEPH

After they had been in Bethal awhile they set out again, but Rachel was heavily pregnant, and not strong. She had a difficult labor, gave birth to a son called Benjamin, then died. Jacob had lost the woman he loved more than any other.

Her son lived on - Joseph, and Jacob loved him more than any of his other sons. He favored Joseph in many ways - there is a hint of this in the mention of the long-sleeved coat Jacob gave to Joseph. Heavy work cannot be done in a long-sleeved coat, so the fact that Joseph gave him this article of clothing meant that Joseph was not expected to do any of the heavy, tedious work of a tribesman or farmer.

Unfortunately Joseph's sons were well aware of this, and grew jealous of Joseph. One day when they were well away from Jacob and the rest of the tribe, Joseph's brothers saw a chance to kill him - to get rid of him permanently. Only one of them spoke out against the plan - Reuben, the eldest son of Leah. He suggested that instead of killing him they imprison Joseph in one of the empty water cisterns - he meant to come back later and free his brother. Eventually they ended up selling Joseph as a slave to a passing trader.

Jacob was heartbroken when they went back and told their father that Joseph had been killed by a wild animal. Only many years later did he find out the truth, when he and his sons went to Egypt and met Joseph, not dead at all but doing very well indeed for himself. Jacob died happy, knowing that his son Joseph was successful and respected. His final request was that Joseph return him to his homeland, to be buried with his ancestors, and Joseph honored this final request.

Ruth Beloe, Jacob and the Angel, BIBLE PEOPLE: JACOB

Ruth Beloe, 'Jacob and the Angel'

 

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BIBLE REFERENCE
Genesis 29-35

 

   

PEOPLE IN THE STORY
Jacob, son of Isaac and Rebecca, twin brother of Esau, husband of the sisters Rachel and Leah, and father of the twelve sons who became the ancestors of the twelve tribes of Israel
Rachel, his beloved wife, mother of Joseph and Benjamin; she died giving birth to Benjamin
Leah her sister, also married to Jacob. The unloved wife who bore her husband six sons and a daughter.
Joseph, favored son of Jacob
Labin, father of Rachel and Leah

 

   

FAMOUS QUOTES
'Jacob was a quiet man'. Genesis 25:27
'I am weary of my life.....' 27:46
'And he dreamed there was a ladder, the top of it reaching to heaven....' 28: 12
'I have seen God face to face, and yet I life.' 32:30

 

   
 

 

INTERESTING WEBSITES - stories, pictures, information

THE STORY OF JACOB'S ONE TRUE LOVE
BIBLE WOMEN: RACHEL

LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT: A SHORTER VERSION OF THE STORY OF RACHEL
BIBLE PEOPLE: RACHEL

MARRIAGE AND CHILDBIRTH IN THE ANCIENT WORLD
WOMEN IN THE BIBLE: MAJOR EVENTS

PHOTOGRAPHS OF THE SORT OF TENT JACOB AND HIS FAMILY LIVED IN
BIBLE ARCHITECTURE: HOUSING

THE STORY OF JACOB'S FAVORITE SON - A CAUTIONARY TALE FOR PARENTS
BIBLE PEOPLE: JOSEPH

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ACTIVITIES AND FOCUS QUESTIONS

Telling Lies
The trouble is, once you start telling lies, it's hard to stop. Jacob's life begins with lies, and continues with lies. Even so, God loves him - loves him enough to let him suffer the punishment that comes with lying: his children tell him a terrible lie about the supposed death of his beloved son Joseph, and Jacob suffers greatly.
Tell the truth now: have you ever been guilty of lying? To others? To yourself? How easy (or difficult) is it for you to tell the truth? What times was it most difficult for you to face the truth? Spend a little quiet time thinking about your life. It can't hurt.

The importance of dreams
The story of Jacob places great importance on the dream he has about a ladder leading up to and down from heaven. Have you had dreams that have been particularly significant, or that have affected you deeply? Significant dreams often happen when we are stressed about something. Has this happened to you? If so, write a description of the dream, then share this with a learning partner. Can you see any significance or symbolic meaning in what happened in the dream? 

In depth study of one person's story
Choose one of the people whose stories are told on this site and develop a PowerPoint presentation about them.
The presentation must be at least 10 slides long and should include 
 *  a supporting image/picture/painting of each person 
 *  a map of Israel showing the cities and areas where the story took place.  
You may call up other websites to support your ideas.

In your presentation (approximately 10 minutes), answer the following questions:

1. What are the main events of the person's life? Tell the story.

2. What were their main qualities? What made them stand out from the crowd?

3. What obstacles did they face? Did they overcome them, or go with the flow? Explain.

4. How did they use their abilities to do God’s work?  

5. Which part of their story appeals to you most? Why?

You must include three short quotations from the Bible texts to illustrate the points you are making. 

 

Focus Questions
1. Choose one of the stories from the Jacob saga. What are the most interesting moments in the
story? 
2. In the story, who speaks and who listens? Who acts? Who gets what they want? If you were in the story, which person would you want to be friends
with? Which person would you want to avoid?
3. What is God's interaction with the main characters? What does this tell you about the narrator's image of God? Do you agree with this image?
4. What is happening on either side of the story, in the chapters before and after it? Does this help you understand what is happening?
5. The narrator/editor has chosen to tell some things and leave other things out. What has been left out of the story that you would like to know?
6. Are the characteristics and actions of the people in the story still present in the world? How is the story relevant to modern life, especially your own? 

 

 

   

  

 

 

 

   
   
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Bible Stories: People of the Old Testament: Jacob, Leah and Rachel
Bible Study Resource