God the wrestler? That’s exactly who Jacob needed to tested by.

By mmayer
Genesis 32:22-32

Then Jacob instructed the first one out: “When my brother Esau comes close and asks, ‘Who is your master? Where are you going? Who owns these?’—answer him like this, ‘Your servant Jacob. They are a gift to my master Esau. He’s on his way.’”

He gave the same instructions to the second servant and to the third—to each in turn as they set out with their herds: “Say ‘Your servant Jacob is on his way behind us.’” He thought, “I will soften him up with the succession of gifts. Then when he sees me face-to-face, maybe he’ll be glad to welcome me.”

So his gifts went before him while he settled down for the night in the camp.

But during the night he got up and took his two wives, his two maidservants, and his eleven children and crossed the ford of the Jabbok. He got them safely across the brook along with all his possessions.

But Jacob stayed behind by himself, and a man wrestled with him until daybreak. When the man saw that he couldn’t get the best of Jacob as they wrestled, he deliberately threw Jacob’s hip out of joint.

The man said, “Let me go; it’s daybreak.”

Jacob said, “I’m not letting you go ’til you bless me.”

The man said, “What’s your name?”

He answered, “Jacob.”

The man said, “But no longer. Your name is no longer Jacob. From now on it’s Israel (God-Wrestler); you’ve wrestled with God and you’ve come through.”

Jacob asked, “And what’s your name?”

The man said, “Why do you want to know my name?” And then, right then and there, he blessed him.

Jacob named the place Peniel (God’s Face) because, he said, “I saw God face-to-face and lived to tell the story!”

The sun came up as he left Peniel, limping because of his hip. (This is why Israelites to this day don’t eat the hip muscle; because Jacob’s hip was thrown out of joint.)

 

God as wrestler – someone who chooses to meet us when we are stuck, who chooses to keep grappling with us until something changes inside us for the better. None of us would dream that image up for God, and yet it is in Scripture, and it was Jacob’s lived experience.

I think God chose to engage up close and personal with Jacob, because nothing else would work. There was Jacob, coming back home 20 years later, to meet his much stronger twin brother Esau who he had ripped off, and who had wanted to kill him in response. That is a lot of unsorted stuff, and Jacob, being the character he was, (grabbing, using cleverness and trickiness to get ahead no matter the cost to others) was never going to ask for mercy and forgiveness.

Jacob is very successful business and familywise, but he finds himself literally stuck, unable to cross the creek to go and meet his brother, coming to meet him accompanied by a great force. So God lets go God powers and wrestles him as a human. Jacob keeps struggling, and finally, as daybreak comes, refuses to let go until blessed. He receives the blessing of a new name (Israel – God wrestler), and something has changed inside him. He limps off, moves to the front of all his people and possessions, and meets Esau one to one, being humble and vulnerable, and the meeting goes well.

There are times in our lives when we need to keep grappling with situations, and not let go. Blessing does come from faithfully holding on. Changes do happen, inside us, and in the situations we face. Jacob id no role model for us in his character. But we can learn tenaciously to hold on to God in whatever tricky situations we find ourselves in. In the holding on to God, we receive life-changing blessing.

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