GOD MEETS JACOB AT BETHEL
 
Genesis 27:1-28:22      Lesson 13a
Key Verse: 28:20
 
"Then Jacob made a vow saying, 'If God will be with me and will watch 
over me on this journey I am taking and will give me food to eat and clothes to wear..'"
 
* JACOB GETS ISAAC'S BLESSING (27:1-46)
 
1.Why did Isaac think he would die soon? (His death is recorded in 35:28,29) 
What did he want to do before he died? How did he instruct Esau to prepare to 
receive his blessing?
 
2.What was Rebekah's counter-plan? What did she believe about Isaac's blessing? 
What did she tell Jacob to do?(5-10)
 
3.How did Jacob respond? Of what was he afraid? How did Rebekah push him? 
What did she risk? Why did she think this was so important? (13-17) What were 
the good and bad things Jacob learned from her?
 
4. How did Jacob take advantage of his father's blindness and deceive him? 
What was the blessing Isaac gave Jacob? (18-29) Was this the covenant blessing?
 
5.When Esau came in and identified himself, what did Isaac tell him? What did 
Esau say about  Jacob? Was this correct? When he pled with his father, what blessing 
did Isaac give him? Why did this blessing anger him? What did he resolve to do? (32-41)
 
6.Why did Rebekah decide to send Jacob away? How did she suffer for what she had done? 
How did she persuade Isaac to send him to Paddan Aram? How did God use her actions 
in accomplishing his will? 
 
* THE GOD OF BETHEL (28:1-15)
 
7.What instructions did Isaac give Jacob? What blessing did he give him? 
Where did he send him?  What does this reveal about Isaac? How did Esau interpret 
his father's actions? What does this show about him?
 
8.How might Jacob have felt his first night away from home? (10-11) Describe 
what he saw in his dream. How did the Lord identify himself? What did he promise 
Jacob? What part of the promise was the original Abrahamic covenant and 
what part was especially for Jacob at this time? 
 
* JACOB'S VOW (28:16-22)
 
9.The dream was so vivid that Jacob woke up. What was his reaction to what he 
had seen and heard? What did he do the next morning? How does this show his sense 
of history? 
 
10. Describe Jacob's vow. What does it show about his anxieties? 
Why didn't he mention the covenant promises? What did he decide to give God? 
On what condition? Why does he suddenly change to the second person("you") 
in verse 22? What does this suggest about him? Why was this vow important in 
Jacob's life?
 
 
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     GOD MEETS JACOB AT BETHEL
 
Genesis 27:1-28:22                                         Lesson 13a
Key Verse: 28:20
 
    "Jacob made a vow, saying, `If God will be with me and will watch
     over me on this journey I am taking and will give me food to eat
     and clothes to wear...'"
 
    God called one man Abraham, gave him great promises and made a
covenant with him.  He raised Abraham up to be the father of many
nations and the source of blessing for all people.  God blessed Isaac's
family and renewed with Isaac the Abrahamic covenant. God helped Isaac
in many ways. Especially, he gave him a faithful woman of prayer to
help him maintain the covenant life and its blessings. The third
patriarch in the trilogy of patriarchs is Jacob. The nation of Israel
bears his name. More chapters in Genesis were written about Jacob than
about any other person. When we take a superficial look at Jacob, we
don't like him much. (Maybe because he is like us!) His name came to
mean "deceiver", and in this lesson we see why. But when we take a
closer look at Jacob, we are amazed to discover that he was a truly
great man. His strong human character made it difficult for him to
become an ancestor of faith. But God chose him from his mother's womb
to be the bearer of the covenant, and a patriarch of faith.
 
    Jacob also had some great strengths of character from which we have
something to learn.  He was a faithful and hard-working man. He was
faithful to his first love, Rachel; he worked hard--first for Laban,
then for his own family. He learned how to be faithful to God. Jacob
did not wait passively for God's blessing. He used all his human guile
and skill and ability to take blessings by any means. So he made many
enemies, and suffered needlessly. His human priorities, however, are
worth learning.
 
    First, he sought honor; then he sought love; then, wealth. In each
case, he got what he wanted, only to discover that none of these things
could really satisfy his soul. So he struggled with God until God
changed him into Israel.
 
    In his later life, he confessed, God...has been my shepherd all my
life to this day." (48:15) The God of Jacob is great. He patiently
trained Jacob until he could be changed from Jacob the deceiver to
Israel, the man who struggles with God. (32) Then, he continued to work
in Jacob through his 12 sons, who became ancestors of the nation of
Israel. The God of Jacob can change any sinner into a useful man of God
and a blessing to the world.
 
    It is ironic that Jacob sought the honor of being the firstborn
through deception. He wanted to be number one, so he took advantage of
Esau's weakness and bought the birthright for a bowl of stew (25). In
this lesson, we meet Jacob the deceiver. He suffered for his lies and
deception. But God met him at Bethel, and made a personal relationship
with him that lasted throughout his life time. We want to meet the God
of Jacob.
 
1. Jacob gets Isaac's blessing (27:1-46)
 
    Isaac had become blind. He felt sorry for himself, and felt that he
would surely die soon.  Actually, he did not die until he was 180 years
old--around 60 years later. Perhaps his blindness made him feel that
death was near. So he asked Esau, his favorite and eldest son to go
hunting, and bring and prepare some wild game for him. He would eat it
and then give Esau his blessing.
 
    Rebekah overheard Isaac speaking to Esau. She respected her husband
as God's servant, and knew that the one he blessed would indeed be
blessed. She believed that the blessing of the firstborn belong to
Jacob, not Esau, for this was God's word to her when the two boys were
in her womb. So she coached Jacob to pretend to be Esau and get his
father's blessing. In order to do this, Jacob risked being discovered
and receiving a rebuke and even a curse from his father, so he was
hesitant. (11,12) But Rebekah was determined: She said, "Let the curse
fall on me. Just do what I say..."
 
    So Jacob dressed in Esau's clothes, put goatskin on his arms and
neck (Esau was hairy), took the delicious meat dish and bread that
Rebekah had cooked and went to his father Isaac.  He lied to Isaac.
Isaac was a little suspicious, but he believed Jacob's lie and blessed
him. This was not the covenant blessing--that would come later--but it
was a promise of abundance; it was a promise that nations and peoples
would serve him; and it was a promise that he would be lord over his
brother.
 
    As soon as Jacob left, Esau came in with tasty venison steaks for
his father. When he learned what Jacob had done and heard the poor
blessing that his father had left for him, he was furiously angry. He
decided to kill Jacob. Isaac was not angry at Jacob or Rebekah--perhaps
he knew that it was right for the blessing to go to Jacob.
 
    Rebekah had no choice; she must send Jacob away. She decided to
send him to her brother Laban for a while. Then she talked with Isaac.
She complained about the Hittite women Esau had married, and suggested
that they take a hand in finding a wife for Jacob. So Isaac called
Jacob and blessed him and sent him to Paddan Aram, to his mother's
people, instructing him to find a wife among Laban's daughters. Rebekah
taught Jacob the supreme value of God's blessing, but she also taught
him to lie and deceive. Lying and deception are never good, and the
means are not justified by the end. She paid dearly for what she did.
Because of Esau's wrath Jacob had to leave home and live as an exile in
a foreign land. Rebekah lost the son she loved--as far as we know, she
did not see him again, for she died before his return. But God is
sovereign. He used these difficult things to train Jacob and
ultimately, to bless him.
 
    Before Isaac sent Jacob away, he gave him the blessing of Abraham.
"May God Almighty bless you and make you fruitful and increase your
numbers until you become a community of peoples. May he give you and
your descendants the blessing given to Abraham, so that you may take
possession of the land where you now live as an alien, the land God
gave to Abraham." (28:3,4)
 
    (Esau revealed that he was an animal man, with no spiritual
understanding when he married a daughter of Ishmael--in addition to his
two other wives--to please his father.)
 
2. The God of Bethel (28:1-15)
 
    Jacob left Beersheba and started for Haran. The sun set and it
began to grow dark. Jacob was tired, and his heart was full of sorrow,
for he was leaving home for the first time. He found a rock for a
pillow and lay down under the stars to sleep. He was fearful. He was
leaving because his brother wanted to kill him; he was fearful about
his future and now, out in the wild open country all alone at night, he
was afraid about the present reality.
 
    From a human point of view, he was worthless; he had become a
wanderer because of his sins; he didn't even have a roof over his head.
But that night the Almighty God, the Creator and Possessor of heaven
and earth, came to visit him. God did not wait until Jacob surrendered
and came to God.  God came first. That lonely wilderness became the
gate of heaven. Jacob saw a stairway resting on the earth, with its top
reaching to heaven and the angels of God ascending and descending on
it. Above it stood the Lord. He spoke to Jacob. He introduced himself
as the God of Abraham and the God of Isaac. He promised him the land,
and descendants like the dust of the earth. He promised, "All peoples
on earth would be blessed through you and your offspring." God went on
to solve Jacob's immediate problem. He promised the lonely wanderer
that he would be with him. Verse 15 says, "I am with you and will watch
over you wherever you go, and I will bring you back to this land. I
will not leave you until I have done what I have promised you." God
came to Jacob and planted a great hope and vision in his heart. He
promised to go with Jacob to Paddan-Aram and bring him back home
safely.
 
3. Jacob's vow (28:16-22)
 
    Jacob woke up. He couldn't sleep the rest of the night, for a
awesome fear of God filled his heart. The next morning he took the
stone he had used for a pillar, poured oil on it  and called that place
"Bethel." Then Jacob made a vow. He said, "If God will be with me and
will watch over me on this journey I am taking and will give me food to
eat and clothes to wear so that I return safely to my father's house,
then the Lord will be my God and this stone that I set up as a pillar
will be God's house, and of all that you give me I will give you a
tenth." (28:20-22)
 
    Jacob was not interested in God's plans. He did not think about
God's calling Jacob to be a source of blessing in God's redemptive
work. He was only concerned about his own urgent security problem. He
promised God that if God would indeed do as he said and solve Jacob's
immediate problems, then God would be his God and he would give him a
tithe. His faith is self-centered and worldly, but is real. He knew
that God is a living God. This vow became the handle by which God could
take hold of Jacob's life. It meant that Jacob had begun his life of
faith. He began his vow-prayer talking about God in the third person,
but he concluded by talking to God--"And of all that you give me I will
give you a tenth." He no longer lived on the borrowed faith of his
parents. His own faith was weak and small, but it was his own, and it
would grow through God's training. Someday he would become a man who
could bless others.
 
    There has to be a point in everyone's life when he meets God for
himself and makes his own personal promise and commitment to God. For
some people, there must be more than one such time. Abraham had made a
decision to leave his homeland according to God's word of command;
Isaac had decided to obey God and stay in the land of the Philistines.
Jacob made a conditional vow. God accepted them all. He helped Jacob
keep that vow.