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Youngs
Literal Translation
King
James Version
The 1599
Geneva
Study Bible
American Standard ASV-1901
Historical Book
Flavius Josephus
Philip Schaff
History
of the
Christian Church
8 Vol.
Keil & Delitzsch
OT Commentary
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What We Believe
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Sola Scriptura: The
Scripture Alone is the Standard
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Soli Deo Gloria: For the
Glory of God Alone
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Solo Christo: By Christ's
Work Alone are We Saved
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Sola Gratia: Salvation by
Grace Alone
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Sola Fide: Justification by
Faith Alone
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World Without End Ministry
P.O. Box 177
Cagayan de Oro
Central Post Office
Cagayan de Oro 9000
Mindanao, Philippines |
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"It is enough for good
people to do nothing, for evil people to succeed."
12 Little Things Every Filipino Can Do To Help Our Country
by Alexander L. Lacson
Keil & Delitzsch
Commentary on the Old Testament
(Genesis 31)
Gen 31:1-5 -
The Flight. - Through some angry remarks of Laban's
sons with reference to his growing wealth, and the evident change in the
feelings of Laban himself towards him ( Gen_31:1,
Gen_31:2),
Jacob was inwardly prepared for the termination of his present connection
with Laban; and at the same time he received instructions from Jehovah,
to return to his home, together with a promise of divine protection. In
consequence of this, he sent for Rachel and Leah to come to him in the
field, and explained to them (Gen_31:4-13),
how their father's disposition had changed towards him, and how he had
deceived him in spite of the service he had forced out of him, and had
altered his wages ten times; but that the God of his father had stood by
him, and had transferred to him their father's cattle, and now at length
had directed him to return to his home.
Gen 31:6-8 -
אַתֵּנָה : the original form of
the abbreviated
אַתֵּן,
which is merely copied from the Pentateuch in
Exo_13:11,
Exo_13:20;
Exo_34:17.
Gen 31:9-13 -
אֲבִיכֶם : for
אֲבִיכֶן
as in Gen_32:16,
etc. - “Ten times:” i.e., as often as possible, the ten as a round
number expressing the idea of completeness. From the statement that Laban
had changed his wages ten times, it is evident that when Laban observed,
that among his sheep and goats, of one colour only, a large number of
mottled young were born, he made repeated attempts to limit the original
stipulation by changing the rule as to the colour of the young, and so
diminishing Jacob's wages. But when Jacob passes over his own stratagem in
silence, and represents all that he aimed at and secured by crafty means
as the fruit of God's blessing, this differs no doubt from the account in
Gen 30. It is not a contradiction, however, pointing to a difference in
the sources of the two chapters, but merely a difference founded upon
actual fact, viz., the fact that Jacob did not tell the whole truth to his
wives. Moreover self-help and divine help do not exclude one another.
Hence his account of the dream, in which he saw that the rams that leaped
upon the cattle were all of various colours, and heard the voice of the
angel of God calling his attention to what had been seen, in the words, “I
have seen all that Laban hath done to thee,” may contain actual truth;
and the dream may be regarded as a divine revelation, which was either
sent to explain to him now, at the end of the sixth year, “that it was not
his stratagem, but the providence of God which had prevented him from
falling a victim to Laban's avarice, and had brought him such wealth” (Delitzsch);
or, if the dream occurred at an earlier period, was meant to teach him,
that “the help of God, without any such self-help, could procure him
justice and safety in spite of Laban's selfish covetousness” (Kurtz).
It is very difficult to decide between these two interpretations. As
Jehovah's instructions to him to return were not given till the end of
his period of service, and Jacob connects them so closely with the vision
of the rams that they seem contemporaneous, Delitzsch's view
appears to deserve the preference. But the
עֹשֶׂה
in Gen_31:12,
“all that Laban is doing to thee,” does not exactly suit this
meaning; and we should rather expect to find
עָשָׂה
used at the end of the time of service. The participle rather favours
Kurtz's view, that Jacob had the vision of the rams and the
explanation from the angel at the beginning of the last six years of
service, but that in his communication to his wives, in which there was no
necessity to preserve a strict continuity or distinction of time, he
connected it with the divine instructions to return to his home, which he
received at the end of his time of service. But if we decide in favour of
this view, we have no further guarantee for the objective reality of the
vision of the rams, since nothing is said about it in the historical
account, and it is nowhere stated that the wealth obtained by Jacob's
craftiness was the result of the divine blessing. The attempt so
unmistakeably apparent in Jacob's whole conversation with his wives, to
place his dealing with Laban in the most favourable light for himself,
excites the suspicion, that the vision of which he spoke was nothing more
than a natural dream, the materials being supplied by the three thoughts
that were most frequently in his mind, by night as well as by day, viz.,
(1) his own schemes and their success; (2) the promise received at Bethel;
(3) the wish to justify his actions to his own conscience; and that these
were wrought up by an excited imagination into a visionary dream, of the
divine origin of which Jacob himself may not have had the slightest doubt.
- In Gen_31:13
הָאֵל
has the article in the construct state, contrary to the ordinary rule; cf.
Ges. §110, 2b; Ewald, §290.
Gen 31:14-16 -
The two wives naturally agreed with their husband, and
declared that they had no longer any part or inheritance in their father's
house. For he had not treated them as daughters, but sold them like
strangers, i.e., servants. “And he has even constantly eaten our money,”
i.e., consumed the property brought to him by our service. The inf.
abs.
אָכֹול
after the finite verb expresses the continuation of the act, and is
intensified by
גם
“yes, even.”
כִּי
in Gen_31:16
signifies “so that,” as in
Deu_14:24;
Job_10:6.
Gen 31:17-19 -
Then Jacob rose up, and set his sons and his wives upon
camels; Jacob then set out with his children and wives, and all the
property that he had acquired in Padan-Aram, to return to his father in
Canaan; whilst Laban had gone to the sheep-shearing, which kept him some
time from his home on account of the size of his flock. Rachel took
advantage of her father's absence to rob him of his teraphim (penates),
probably small images of household gods in human form, which were
worshipped as givers of earthly prosperity, and also consulted as oracles
(see my Archäologie, §90).
Gen 31:20-21 -
“Thus Jacob deceived Laban the Syrian, in that he
told him not that he fled;” -
לֵב
גָּנַב
to steal the heart (as the seat of the understanding), like
κλέπτειν
νοο͂ν,
and
גָּנַב with the simple accus. pers.,
Gen_31:27,
like
κλεπτειν
τίνα,
signifies to take the knowledge of anything away from a person, to deceive
him; - “and passed over the river (Euphrates), and took the
direction to the mountains of Gilead.”
Gen 31:22-25 -
Laban's Pursuit, Reconciliation, and Covenant with
Jacob. - As Laban was not told till the third day after the flight, though
he pursued the fugitives with his brethren, i.e., his nearest relations,
he did not overtake Jacob for seven days, by which time he had reached the
mountains of Gilead ( Gen_31:22-24).
The night before he overtook them, he was warned by God in a dream, “not
to speak to Jacob from good to bad,” i.e., not to say anything
decisive and emphatic for the purpose of altering what had already
occurred (vid., Gen_31:29,
and the note on Gen_24:50).
Hence he confined himself, when they met, “to bitter reproaches combining
paternal feeling on the one hand with hypocrisy on the other;” in which he
told them that he had the power to do them harm, if God had not forbidden
him, and charged them with stealing his gods (the teraphim).
Gen 31:26 -
“Like sword-booty;” i.e., like prisoners of war
( 2Ki_6:22)
carried away unwillingly and by force.
Gen 31:27-28 -
“So I might have conducted thee with mirth and
songs, with tabret and harp,” i.e., have sent thee away with a parting
feast.
Gen_31:28
עֲשֹׂו : an old form of the
infinitive for
עֲשֹׂות
as in Gen_48:11;
Gen_50:20.
Gen 31:29 -
יָדִי
לְאֵל
יֵשׁ:
“there is to God my hand” (Mic_2:1;
cf. Deu_28:32;
Neh_5:5),
i.e., my hand serves me as God (Hab_1:11;
Job_12:6),
a proverbial expression for “the power lies in my hand.”
Gen 31:30 -
“And now thou art gone (for, if thou art gone),
because thou longedst after thy father's house, why hast thou stolen my
gods?” The meaning is this: even if thy secret departure can be
explained, thy stealing of my gods cannot.
Gen 31:31-32 -
The first, Jacob met by pleading his fear lest Laban
should take away his daughters (keep them back by force). “For I said:”
equivalent to “for I thought.” But Jacob knew nothing of the theft; hence
he declared, that with whomsoever he might find the gods he should be put
to death, and told Laban to make the strictest search among all the things
that he had with him. “Before our brethren,” i.e., the relations
who had come with Laban, as being impartial witnesses (cf.
Gen_31:37);
not, as Knobel thinks, before Jacob's horde of male and female
slaves, of women and of children.
Gen 31:33-35 -
Laban looked through all the tents, but did not find
his teraphim; for Rachel had put them in the saddle of her camel and was
sitting upon them, and excused herself to her lord (Adonai,
Gen_31:35), on
the ground that the custom of women was upon her. “The camel's
furniture,” i.e., the saddle (not “the camel's litter:” Luther),
here the woman's riding saddle, which had a comfortable seat formed of
carpets on the top of the packsaddle. The fact that Laban passed over
Rachel's seat because of her pretended condition, does not presuppose the
Levitical law in Lev_15:19.,
according to which, any one who touched the couch or seat of such a woman
was rendered unclean. For, in the first place, the view which lies at the
foundation of this law was much older than the laws of Moses, and is met
with among many other nations (cf. Bähr, Symbolik ii. 466, etc.);
consequently Laban might refrain from making further examination, less
from fear of defilement, than because he regarded it as impossible that
any one with the custom of women upon her should sit upon his gods.
Gen 31:36-39 -
As Laban found nothing, Jacob grew angry, and pointed
out the injustice of his hot pursuit and his search among all his things,
but more especially the harsh treatment he had received from him in return
for the unselfish and self-denying services that he had rendered him for
twenty years. Acute sensibility and elevated self-consciousness give to
Jacob's words a rhythmical movement and a poetical form. Hence such
expressions as
אַחֲרֵי
דָּלַק
“hotly pursued,” which is only met with in
1Sa_17:53;
אֲחַטֶּנָּה for
אֲחַטְּאֶנָּה
“I had to atone for it,” i.e., to bear the loss; “the
Fear of Isaac,” used as a name for God,
פַּחַד,
σέβας
=
σέβασμα, the object of Isaac's fear or sacred awe.
Gen 31:40-41 -
“I have been; by day (i.e., I have been in this
condition, that by day) heat has consumed (prostrated) me, and
cold by night” - for it is well known, that in the East the cold by
night corresponds to the heat by day; the hotter the day the colder the
night, as a rule.
Gen 31:42 -
“Except the God of my father...had been for me,
surely thou wouldst now have sent me away empty. God has seen mine
affliction and the labour of my hands, and last night He judged it.”
By the warning given to Laban, God pronounced sentence upon the matter
between Jacob and Laban, condemning the course which Laban had pursued,
and still intended to pursue, towards Jacob; but not on that account
sanctioning all that Jacob had done to increase his own possessions, still
less confirming Jacob's assertion that the vision mentioned by Jacob ( Gen_31:11,
Gen_31:12)
was a revelation from God. But as Jacob had only met cunning with cunning,
deceit with deceit, Laban had no right to punish him for what he had done.
Some excuse may indeed be found for Jacob's conduct in the heartless
treatment he received from Laban, but the fact that God defended him from
Laban's revenge did not prove it to be right. He had not acted upon the
rule laid down in Pro_20:22
(cf. Rom_12:17;
1Th_5:15).
Gen 31:43-54 -
These words of Jacob “cut Laban to the heart with their
truth, so that he turned round, offered his hand, and proposed a
covenant.” Jacob proceeded at once to give a practical proof of his assent
to this proposal of his father-in-law, by erecting a stone as a memorial,
and calling upon his relations also (“his brethren,” as in
Gen_31:23, by
whom Laban and the relations who came with him are intended, as
Gen_31:54
shows) to gather stones into a heap, which formed a table, as is briefly
observed in Gen_31:46,
for the covenant meal (Gen_31:54).
This stone-heap was called Jegar-Sahadutha by Laban, and Galeed
by Jacob (the former is the Chaldee, the latter the Hebrew; they have both
the same meaning, viz., “heaps of witness”),
(Note: These words are the oldest proof, that in the
native country of the patriarchs, Mesopotamia, Aramaean or Chaldaean was
spoken, and Hebrew in Jacob's native country, Canaan; from which we may
conclude that Abraham's family first acquired the Hebrew in Canaan from
the Canaanites (Phoenicians).)
because, as Laban, who spoke first, as being the elder,
explained, the heap was to be a “witness between him and Jacob.” The
historian then adds this explanation: “therefore they called his name
Gal'ed,” and immediately afterwards introduces a second name, which
the heap received from words that were spoken by Laban at the conclusion
of the covenant ( Gen_31:49):
“And Mizpah,” i.e., watch, watch-place (sc., he called it), “for
he (Laban) said, Jehovah watch between me and thee; for we are
hidden from one another (from the face of one another), if thou
shalt oppress my daughters, and if thou shalt take wives to my daughters!
No man is with us, behold God is witness between me and thee!” (Gen_31:49,
Gen_31:50).
After these words of Laban, which are introduced parenthetically,
(Note: There can be no doubt that
Gen_31:49
and Gen_31:50
bear the marks of a subsequent insertion. But there is nothing in the
nature of this interpolation to indicate a compilation of the history
from different sources. That Laban, when making this covenant, should
have spoken of the future treatment of his daughters, is a thing so
natural, that there would have been something strange in the omission.
And it is not less suitable to the circumstances, that he calls upon the
God of Jacob, i.e., Jehovah, to watch in this affair. And apart
from the use of the name Jehovah, which is perfectly suitable
here, there is nothing whatever to point to a different source; to say
nothing of the fact that the critics themselves cannot agree as to the
nature of the source supposed.)
and in which he enjoined upon Jacob fidelity to his
daughters, the formation of the covenant of reconciliation and peace
between them is first described, according to which, neither of them (sive
ego sive tu, as in Exo_19:13)
was to pass the stone-heap and memorial-stone with a hostile intention
towards the other. Of this the memorial was to serve as a witness, and the
God of Abraham and the God of Nahor, the God of their father (Terah),
would be umpire between them. To this covenant, in which Laban, according
to his polytheistic views, placed the God of Abraham upon the same level
with the God of Nahor and Terah, Jacob swore by “the Fear of Isaac” (Gen_31:42),
the God who was worshipped by his father with sacred awe. He then offered
sacrifices upon the mountain, and invited his relations to eat, i.e., to
partake of a sacrificial meal, and seal the covenant by a feast of love.
The geographical names Gilead and
Ramath-mizpeh ( Jos_13:26),
also Mizpeh-Gilead (Jdg_11:29),
sound so obviously like Gal'ed and Mizpah, that they are no
doubt connected, and owe their origin to the monument erected by Jacob and
Laban; so that it was by prolepsis that the scene of this occurrence was
called “the mountains of Gilead” in
Gen_31:21,
Gen_31:23,
Gen_31:25.
By the mount or mountains of Gilead we are not to understand the
mountain range to the south of the Jabbok (Zerka), the present Jebel
Jelaad, or Jebel es Salt. The name Gilead has a much
more comprehensive signification in the Old Testament; and the mountains
to the south of the Jabbok are called in
Deu_3:12 the
half of Mount Gilead; the mountains to the north of the Jabbok, the
Jebel-Ajlun, forming the other half. In this chapter the name is used
in the broader sense, and refers primarily to the northern half of the
mountains (above the Jabbok); for Jacob did not cross the Jabbok till
afterwards (Gen_32:23-24).
There is nothing in the names Ramath-mizpeh, which Ramoth in Gilead
bears in Jos_13:26,
and Mizpeh-Gilead, which it bears in
Jdg_11:29, to
compel us to place Laban's meeting with Jacob in the southern portion of
the mountains of Gilead. For even if this city is to be found in the
modern Salt, and was called Ramath-mizpeh from the even recorded
here, all that can be inferred from that is, that the tradition of Laban's
covenant with Jacob was associated in later ages with Ramoth in Gilead,
without the correctness of the association being thereby established.
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The name Bethel comes from the Hebrew beth,
meaning house,
and el, meaning God. Bethel means "The House of
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