As Jacob faces the consequences of His past and the threat of Esau, the Lord brings Him to the end of His self-reliance, confronts Him personally, and transforms Him through weakness into Israel, the man who clings to God for blessing.
Jacob Prepares to Meet Esau, Wrestles with God, and Is Renamed Israel
As Jacob faces the consequences of His past and the threat of Esau, the Lord brings Him to the end of His self-reliance, confronts Him personally, and transforms Him through weakness into Israel, the man who clings to God for blessing.
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As Jacob faces the consequences of His past and the threat of Esau, the Lord brings Him to the end of His self-reliance, confronts Him personally, and transforms Him through weakness into Israel, the man who clings to God for blessing.
Genesis 32 teaches that covenant heirs are transformed not merely by receiving promises, but by being brought into humbling, God-dependent encounter where self-reliance is broken and blessing is sought from God alone. The chapter opens with reassurance as angels meet Jacob, showing that the unseen heavenly reality still surrounds His path. Yet divine reassurance does not remove the felt terror of earthly threat.
Jacob hears that Esau is coming with four hundred men and immediately moves into a familiar pattern of calculated response. He divides the camps, arranges the gifts, and plans carefully. These actions are not presented as wholly faithless, but neither are they sufficient. The heart of the chapter is Jacob’s prayer and then Jacob’s wrestling. In the prayer He does something profoundly important: He grounds His plea in God’s word, God’s command, God’s past kindness, and God’s promise.
He also confesses His unworthiness. This marks genuine spiritual maturation. Yet even that prayer leads into an even deeper encounter. Left alone, Jacob is met by the divine wrestler. The encounter is mysterious, bodily, and humbling. Jacob is not merely informed, He is overcome and marked. His hip is struck so that His strength is permanently compromised, and yet in that very weakness He clings for blessing.
The question 'What is Your name?' forces Jacob to face His identity as Jacob, the grasping heel-holder, before He receives the new name Israel. The new name does not celebrate autonomous power, but a life forever marked by striving that now ends in dependence on God. The limp becomes a sign that true covenant strength comes through brokenness before God, not through cleverness before men.
Thus Genesis 32 argues that God’s people must move from strategy to supplication, from self-protection to surrender, and from grasping blessing by deceit to receiving blessing by clinging faith.
Genesis 32 stands at one of the great crisis points in Jacob’s life. He has now departed from Laban’s house and is moving back toward the land under the command and promise of God, yet the unresolved threat from Esau still hangs over Him. More than twenty years have passed since Jacob fled after deceiving His brother and receiving the covenant blessing, but time has not erased the moral and relational weight of that past.
Within the structure of Genesis, this chapter functions as a threshold narrative. Jacob is no longer merely the fugitive leaving home, and He is not yet the reconciled brother entering peace. He stands between promise and confrontation, between God’s assurance and the fear of human retaliation. The chapter is therefore shaped by tension, prayer, strategy, vulnerability, and divine encounter.
It culminates in one of the most mysterious and theologically rich events in the Pentateuch, Jacob’s wrestling through the night with the divine man and His receiving the new name Israel. This chapter is foundational not only for Jacob’s personal transformation, but for the identity of the covenant people who will later bear His new name.
As Jacob goes on His way, angels of God meet Him, and He names the place Mahanaim because He recognizes it as God’s camp.
Jacob sends messengers ahead to Esau in the land of Seir. They return reporting that Esau is coming with four hundred men. Jacob becomes greatly afraid and distressed, and He divides the people, flocks, herds, and camels into two camps so that if Esau attacks one, the other may escape.
Jacob prays to the God of Abraham and Isaac, recalling God’s command to return, confessing His unworthiness of all God’s steadfast love and faithfulness, and asking for deliverance from Esau while reminding God of the promise to make His seed like the sand of the sea.
Jacob prepares an elaborate gift from His livestock and sends it ahead in waves through His servants, instructing each to say that the gift belongs to Jacob and that Jacob Himself is coming behind them. He hopes to pacify Esau’s face with the present.
Jacob rises in the night, sends His wives, female servants, children, and possessions across the Jabbok, and remains alone.
A man wrestles with Jacob until daybreak. Seeing that He does not prevail against Him, the man touches Jacob’s hip socket and dislocates it. Jacob refuses to let go unless He is blessed. The man asks His name, renames Him Israel because He has striven with God and with men and prevailed, and blesses Him there. Jacob names the place Peniel because He has seen God face to face and yet His life has been spared. The chapter closes with the sun rising on Him as He limps because of His injured hip.
- 32:1–2: As Jacob goes on His way, angels of God meet Him, and He names the place Mahanaim because He recognizes it as God’s camp.
- 32:3–8: Jacob sends messengers ahead to Esau in the land of Seir. They return reporting that Esau is coming with four hundred men. Jacob becomes greatly afraid and distressed, and He divides the people, flocks, herds, and camels into two camps so that if Esau attacks one, the other may escape.
- 32:9–12: Jacob prays to the God of Abraham and Isaac, recalling God’s command to return, confessing His unworthiness of all God’s steadfast love and faithfulness, and asking for deliverance from Esau while reminding God of the promise to make His seed like the sand of the sea.
- 32:13–21: Jacob prepares an elaborate gift from His livestock and sends it ahead in waves through His servants, instructing each to say that the gift belongs to Jacob and that Jacob Himself is coming behind them. He hopes to pacify Esau’s face with the present.
- 32:22–24: Jacob rises in the night, sends His wives, female servants, children, and possessions across the Jabbok, and remains alone.
- 32:24–32: A man wrestles with Jacob until daybreak. Seeing that He does not prevail against Him, the man touches Jacob’s hip socket and dislocates it. Jacob refuses to let go unless He is blessed. The man asks His name, renames Him Israel because He has striven with God and with men and prevailed, and blesses Him there. Jacob names the place Peniel because He has seen God face to face and yet His life has been spared. The chapter closes with the sun rising on Him as He limps because of His injured hip.
Theological Focus
- Divine Encounter
- Prayer
- Dependence
- Transformation
- Weakness and Strength
- Covenant Identity
- Divine Blessing
- Fear and Faith
- Covenant Theology
- Providence
- Sanctification
- Divine Presence
- Biblical Theology
- Christology Preparation
Covenant Significance
Genesis 32 is covenantally decisive because Jacob, the covenant heir, is personally transformed and publicly renamed Israel. This new name will become the name of the covenant nation, which means the chapter has significance far beyond Jacob’s individual biography. The covenant line is not only continuing genetically, it is being shaped spiritually and theologically.
Jacob’s prayer also explicitly appeals to the Abrahamic promise of seed and return, showing that His encounter is embedded within the larger covenant structure. The blessing received at Peniel confirms that the covenant God is not absent from Jacob’s fear-filled return, but actively present to preserve and reshape the heir of promise. This chapter therefore marks both covenant continuity and covenant identity formation.
Canonical Connections
Genesis 32 is covenantally decisive because Jacob, the covenant heir, is personally transformed and publicly renamed Israel. This new name will become the name of the covenant nation, which means the chapter has significance far beyond Jacob’s individual biography. The covenant line is not only continuing genetically, it is being shaped spiritually and theologically.
Jacob’s prayer also explicitly appeals to the Abrahamic promise of seed and return, showing that His encounter is embedded within the larger covenant structure. The blessing received at Peniel confirms that the covenant God is not absent from Jacob’s fear-filled return, but actively present to preserve and reshape the heir of promise. This chapter therefore marks both covenant continuity and covenant identity formation.
Genesis 28:10-22
Genesis 31:3-13
Hosea 12:3-5
Exodus 33:20
Deuteronomy 32:9-12
Genesis 28:10-22
Genesis 31:3-55
Genesis 33:1-20
Hosea 12:3-5
Cross References
You shall remember all the way which Yahweh your God has led you these forty years in the wilderness, that he might humble you, to test you, to know what was in your heart, whether you would keep his commandments or not. He humbled you,...
Moses said to the people, “Don’t be afraid. Stand still, and see the salvation of Yahweh, which he will work for you today; for you will never again see the Egyptians whom you have seen today. Yahweh will fight for you, and you shall be...
He said, “You cannot see my face, for man may not see me and live.”
Behold, Yahweh stood above it, and said, “I am Yahweh, the God of Abraham your father, and the God of Isaac. I will give the land you lie on to you and to your offspring. Your offspring will be as the dust of the earth, and you will spread...
In the womb he took his brother by the heel; and in his manhood he contended with God. Indeed, he struggled with the angel, and prevailed; he wept, and made supplication to him. He found him at Bethel, and there he spoke with us,
For the high and lofty One who inhabits eternity, whose name is Holy, says: “I dwell in the high and holy place, with him also who is of a contrite and humble spirit, to revive the spirit of the humble, and to revive the heart of the...
The king’s heart is in Yahweh’s hand like the watercourses. He turns it wherever he desires.
Genesis 32 deepens the gospel trajectory by showing a sinner of promise brought low before God and transformed not by merit but by divine encounter and blessing. Jacob does not emerge from the night boasting in His strength. He emerges limping, renamed, and blessed. He has seen God face to face and yet lived. That prepares the way for the fuller hope of the gospel, where sinners meet God not unto destruction but unto blessing through the mediation of Christ.
The chapter also teaches that true blessing comes through surrender and dependence rather than self-made gain, a pattern fulfilled supremely in the cross, where weakness becomes the place of victory and grace remakes identity.
Primary Emphasis
Genesis 32 contributes to Christology by deepening the biblical pattern of divine-human encounter, mediation, and transformation through weakness. Jacob’s face-to-face yet sparing encounter with God heightens the longing for a fuller and more final mediation between God and man. The chapter also contributes to the biblical theme that divine blessing comes through weakness, surrender, and clinging dependence rather than fleshly strength.
In the larger canonical horizon, these themes converge in Christ, through whom God is encountered without destruction, through whom blessing is secured, and through whose own suffering and weakness the people of God are brought into life. The Israel-name also matters christologically because the story of Israel, now named here, will ultimately find its faithful representative and fulfillment in Christ.
Chapter Contribution
Genesis 32 teaches that covenant heirs are transformed not merely by receiving promises, but by being brought into humbling, God-dependent encounter where self-reliance is broken and blessing is sought from God alone. The chapter opens with reassurance as angels meet Jacob, showing that the unseen heavenly reality still surrounds His path. Yet divine reassurance does not remove the felt terror of earthly threat.
Jacob hears that Esau is coming with four hundred men and immediately moves into a familiar pattern of calculated response. He divides the camps, arranges the gifts, and plans carefully. These actions are not presented as wholly faithless, but neither are they sufficient. The heart of the chapter is Jacob’s prayer and then Jacob’s wrestling. In the prayer He does something profoundly important: He grounds His plea in God’s word, God’s command, God’s past kindness, and God’s promise.
He also confesses His unworthiness. This marks genuine spiritual maturation. Yet even that prayer leads into an even deeper encounter. Left alone, Jacob is met by the divine wrestler. The encounter is mysterious, bodily, and humbling. Jacob is not merely informed, He is overcome and marked. His hip is struck so that His strength is permanently compromised, and yet in that very weakness He clings for blessing.
The question 'What is Your name?' forces Jacob to face His identity as Jacob, the grasping heel-holder, before He receives the new name Israel. The new name does not celebrate autonomous power, but a life forever marked by striving that now ends in dependence on God. The limp becomes a sign that true covenant strength comes through brokenness before God, not through cleverness before men.
Thus Genesis 32 argues that God’s people must move from strategy to supplication, from self-protection to surrender, and from grasping blessing by deceit to receiving blessing by clinging faith.
God personally confronts His people in order to humble, bless, and transform them.
God surrounds and accompanies His servant even when danger remains unresolved.
God’s confrontation of His servant is not destruction but merciful transformation.
Right prayer acknowledges unworthiness and depends entirely on God’s covenant faithfulness.
God gives His people a new name and identity rooted in His purpose rather than their past patterns.
True faith clings to God for blessing even in pain, confusion, and weakness.
Faith responds to fear by appealing to God’s character, promises, and mercies.
God leads His people into difficult confrontations without abandoning them.
God often breaks self-reliance so that His people learn to depend on Him.
Trust in God does not exclude prudent preparation in the face of real danger.
6 Imperatives
- Return and face what lies ahead under God’s word
- Pray from the promise
- Do not let go until You receive God’s blessing
- Face honestly who You are before receiving who God names You to be
Sense two camps
Definition two camps
Why it matters Jacob names the place Mahanaim after seeing God’s camp, signaling that His vulnerable earthly journey is accompanied by a heavenly reality.
Sense steadfast love, covenant loyalty
Definition steadfast love, covenant loyalty
Why it matters Jacob confesses His unworthiness of all God’s steadfast love, showing deepened covenant awareness in His prayer.
Cross-language bridge 2 links · View in lexicon
Sense truth, faithfulness
Definition truth, faithfulness
Why it matters Paired with steadfast love in Jacob’s prayer, the term highlights that His return rests upon God’s faithful reliability.
Sense deliver, rescue
Definition deliver, rescue
Why it matters Jacob’s plea for deliverance from Esau shows that covenant prayer includes urgent dependence upon God for rescue from human threat.
Sense appease his face, pacify him
Definition appease his face, pacify him
Why it matters Jacob’s hope to appease Esau’s face with gifts reflects both His fear and His attempt to deal with the relational consequences of past sin.
Sense wrestle
Definition wrestle
Why it matters The wrestling verb drives the chapter’s climactic encounter, showing that Jacob’s transformation occurs through prolonged bodily struggle with the divine figure.
Sense Jabbok
Definition Jabbok
Why it matters The Jabbok functions as a threshold location where Jacob is stripped of normal supports and confronted by God before meeting Esau.
Sense Israel
Definition Israel
Why it matters The new name marks Jacob’s covenant transformation and becomes the name of the people of God, making this one of the foundational naming moments in Scripture.
Cross-language bridge 2 links · View in lexicon
Sense face of God
Definition face of God
Why it matters Jacob’s naming of the place Peniel expresses the astonishing reality that He encountered God face to face and yet survived.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense limp
Definition limp
Why it matters Jacob’s limp becomes the embodied sign of His transformation, reminding the reader that divine blessing came through weakness and wound.
Sense thigh, hip socket
Definition thigh, hip socket
Why it matters The striking of Jacob’s hip signifies the breaking of natural strength at the very place associated with vigor and continuity.
Sense bless
Definition bless
Why it matters Jacob’s insistence on blessing in the wrestling scene reveals the transformed direction of His grasping, no longer toward theft, but toward God Himself.
Lexicon data: MorphGNT Strong's Dictionary XML (CC0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Bible (CC BY 4.0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Lexicon (CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible Data (CC BY 4.0) · Full details
C.F. Keil & F. Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (1861–91) — public domain
- Genesis 32 warns that self-reliance, even when clothed in planning and religious language, must be broken if one is to cling truly to God, and that unresolved sin and fear will eventually force a person into crisis before both God and man.
- Treating Jacob’s strategies as either pure faithfulness or pure unbelief, instead of seeing the chapter’s more complex movement from anxious planning toward deeper God-dependence.
- Reading the wrestling scene as merely symbolic inner struggle without recognizing the text’s insistence on a real bodily encounter with a divine figure.
- Assuming Jacob 'prevails' because He overpowers God, when the narrative actually shows that He prevails by clinging in weakness after being disabled.
- Ignoring the importance of the name question and missing that Jacob must face His old identity before receiving the new one.
- Reducing the new name Israel to a simple honorific without seeing that it emerges from painful encounter, brokenness, and covenant transformation.
- Missing the significance of the limp as a lasting embodied reminder that blessing now comes through dependence rather than cunning.
- What unresolved fear or guilt is God using to bring You to deeper dependence on Him?
- How much of Your life is still shaped by planning that never truly yields itself to God in prayer?
- What does Jacob’s refusal to let go until He is blessed teach You about persevering prayer and desperate faith?
- Where has God wounded Your self-reliance so that You might learn to walk with a holy limp of dependence?
- If God asked You, as He asked Jacob, 'What is Your name?' what old identity, pattern, or reputation would have to be faced honestly before deeper transformation can come?
- Preach Genesis 32 as a chapter for people standing at the edge of consequences, showing that God often meets His people most deeply when they can no longer outrun what they fear.
- Use Jacob’s prayer as a model of biblical pleading that grounds itself in God’s command, God’s character, personal unworthiness, and the promise of God.
- Help believers see that wise planning is not enough · there are seasons where God must break confidence in strategy so that the soul learns to cling to Him.
- Teach that spiritual transformation is often painful and embodied, leaving lasting reminders that we are no longer who we once were.
- Encourage saints who feel weakened or marked by suffering that God may use the limp itself as part of His sanctifying work rather than as proof of abandonment.
- Show that identity in God’s covenant is not formed by our best self-description, but by the Lord’s renaming grace after honest confrontation.
- Use Peniel to speak to believers about the fearsome mercy of encountering God and surviving only because He blesses rather than destroys.
Genesis 32 deepens the gospel trajectory by showing a sinner of promise brought low before God and transformed not by merit but by divine encounter and blessing. Jacob does not emerge from the night boasting in His strength. He emerges limping, renamed, and blessed. He has seen God face to face and yet lived. That prepares the way for the fuller hope of the gospel, where sinners meet God not unto destruction but unto blessing through the mediation of Christ.
The chapter also teaches that true blessing comes through surrender and dependence rather than self-made gain, a pattern fulfilled supremely in the cross, where weakness becomes the place of victory and grace remakes identity.
Genesis 32 deepens the gospel trajectory by showing a sinner of promise brought low before God and transformed not by merit but by divine encounter and blessing. Jacob does not emerge from the night boasting in His strength. He emerges limping, renamed, and blessed. He has seen God face to face and yet lived. That prepares the way for the fuller hope of the gospel, where sinners meet God not unto destruction but unto blessing through the mediation of Christ.
The chapter also teaches that true blessing comes through surrender and dependence rather than self-made gain, a pattern fulfilled supremely in the cross, where weakness becomes the place of victory and grace remakes identity.
Genesis 32 deepens the gospel trajectory by showing a sinner of promise brought low before God and transformed not by merit but by divine encounter and blessing. Jacob does not emerge from the night boasting in His strength. He emerges limping, renamed, and blessed. He has seen God face to face and yet lived. That prepares the way for the fuller hope of the gospel, where sinners meet God not unto destruction but unto blessing through the mediation of Christ.
The chapter also teaches that true blessing comes through surrender and dependence rather than self-made gain, a pattern fulfilled supremely in the cross, where weakness becomes the place of victory and grace remakes identity.
Genesis 32 deepens the gospel trajectory by showing a sinner of promise brought low before God and transformed not by merit but by divine encounter and blessing. Jacob does not emerge from the night boasting in His strength. He emerges limping, renamed, and blessed. He has seen God face to face and yet lived. That prepares the way for the fuller hope of the gospel, where sinners meet God not unto destruction but unto blessing through the mediation of Christ.
The chapter also teaches that true blessing comes through surrender and dependence rather than self-made gain, a pattern fulfilled supremely in the cross, where weakness becomes the place of victory and grace remakes identity.
Genesis 32 deepens the gospel trajectory by showing a sinner of promise brought low before God and transformed not by merit but by divine encounter and blessing. Jacob does not emerge from the night boasting in His strength. He emerges limping, renamed, and blessed. He has seen God face to face and yet lived. That prepares the way for the fuller hope of the gospel, where sinners meet God not unto destruction but unto blessing through the mediation of Christ.
The chapter also teaches that true blessing comes through surrender and dependence rather than self-made gain, a pattern fulfilled supremely in the cross, where weakness becomes the place of victory and grace remakes identity.
6
Very high
- Return and face what lies ahead under God’s word
- Pray from the promise
- Do not let go until You receive God’s blessing
- Face honestly who You are before receiving who God names You to be
Follow faith, believing response, trust, and persevering allegiance across Scripture.
Trace how divine glory, revealed majesty, and Christ-centered exaltation move across Scripture.
Trace remnant preservation, covenant continuity, and mercy under judgment across Scripture.
Trace servant identity, obedient mission, and suffering service across Scripture.
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
Genesis 32 is covenantally decisive because Jacob, the covenant heir, is personally transformed and publicly renamed Israel. This new name will become the name of the covenant nation, which means the chapter has significance far beyond Jacob’s individual biography. The covenant line is not only continuing genetically, it is being shaped spiritually and theologically.
Jacob’s prayer also explicitly appeals to the Abrahamic promise of seed and return, showing that His encounter is embedded within the larger covenant structure. The blessing received at Peniel confirms that the covenant God is not absent from Jacob’s fear-filled return, but actively present to preserve and reshape the heir of promise. This chapter therefore marks both covenant continuity and covenant identity formation.
Genesis 32 deepens the gospel trajectory by showing a sinner of promise brought low before God and transformed not by merit but by divine encounter and blessing. Jacob does not emerge from the night boasting in His strength. He emerges limping, renamed, and blessed. He has seen God face to face and yet lived. That prepares the way for the fuller hope of the gospel, where sinners meet God not unto destruction but unto blessing through the mediation of Christ.
The chapter also teaches that true blessing comes through surrender and dependence rather than self-made gain, a pattern fulfilled supremely in the cross, where weakness becomes the place of victory and grace remakes identity.
Focus Points
- Divine Encounter
- Prayer
- Dependence
- Transformation
- Weakness and Strength
- Covenant Identity
- Divine Blessing
- Fear and Faith
- Covenant Theology
- Providence
- Sanctification
- Divine Presence
- Biblical Theology
- Christology Preparation
Cross References
Passages
Chapter opening: Genesis 32:1-21
Gen 32:1-3 The Host of God. - When Laban had taken his departure peaceably, Jacob pursued his journey to Canaan. He was then met by some angels of God, in whom he discerned an encampment of God; and he called the place where they appeared Mahanaim , i. e. , double camp or double host, because the host of God joined his host as a safeguard. This appearance of angels necessarily reminded him of the vision of the ladder, on his flight from Canaan.
Just as the angels ascending and descending had then represented to him the divine protection and assistance during his journey and sojourn in a foreign land, so now the angelic host was a signal of the help of God for the approaching conflict with Esau of which he was in fear, and a fresh pledge of the promise (Gen 28:15), “I will bring thee back to the land,” etc. Jacob saw it during his journey; in a waking condition, therefore, not internally, but out of or above himself: but whether with the eyes of the body or of the mind (cf.
2Ki 6:17), cannot be determined. Mahanaim was afterwards a distinguished city, which is frequently mentioned, situated to the north of the Jabbok; and the name and remains are still preserved in the place called Mahneh (Robinson, Pal. Appendix, p. 166), the site of which, however, has not yet been minutely examined (see my Comm. on Joshua, p. 259).
Gen 32:1-3 The Host of God. - When Laban had taken his departure peaceably, Jacob pursued his journey to Canaan. He was then met by some angels of God, in whom he discerned an encampment of God; and he called the place where they appeared Mahanaim , i. e. , double camp or double host, because the host of God joined his host as a safeguard. This appearance of angels necessarily reminded him of the vision of the ladder, on his flight from Canaan.
Just as the angels ascending and descending had then represented to him the divine protection and assistance during his journey and sojourn in a foreign land, so now the angelic host was a signal of the help of God for the approaching conflict with Esau of which he was in fear, and a fresh pledge of the promise (Gen 28:15), “I will bring thee back to the land,” etc. Jacob saw it during his journey; in a waking condition, therefore, not internally, but out of or above himself: but whether with the eyes of the body or of the mind (cf.
2Ki 6:17), cannot be determined. Mahanaim was afterwards a distinguished city, which is frequently mentioned, situated to the north of the Jabbok; and the name and remains are still preserved in the place called Mahneh (Robinson, Pal. Appendix, p. 166), the site of which, however, has not yet been minutely examined (see my Comm. on Joshua, p. 259).
Gen 32:1-3 The Host of God. - When Laban had taken his departure peaceably, Jacob pursued his journey to Canaan. He was then met by some angels of God, in whom he discerned an encampment of God; and he called the place where they appeared Mahanaim , i. e. , double camp or double host, because the host of God joined his host as a safeguard. This appearance of angels necessarily reminded him of the vision of the ladder, on his flight from Canaan.
Just as the angels ascending and descending had then represented to him the divine protection and assistance during his journey and sojourn in a foreign land, so now the angelic host was a signal of the help of God for the approaching conflict with Esau of which he was in fear, and a fresh pledge of the promise (Gen 28:15), “I will bring thee back to the land,” etc. Jacob saw it during his journey; in a waking condition, therefore, not internally, but out of or above himself: but whether with the eyes of the body or of the mind (cf.
2Ki 6:17), cannot be determined. Mahanaim was afterwards a distinguished city, which is frequently mentioned, situated to the north of the Jabbok; and the name and remains are still preserved in the place called Mahneh (Robinson, Pal. Appendix, p. 166), the site of which, however, has not yet been minutely examined (see my Comm. on Joshua, p. 259).
Gen 32:4-7 From this point Jacob sent messengers forward to his brother Esau, to make known his return in such a style of humility (“thy servant,” “my lord”) as was adapted to conciliate him. אחר (Gen 32:5) is the first pers. imperf. Kal for אאחר, from אחר to delay, to pass a time; cf. Pro 8:17, and Ges. §68, 2. The statement that Esau was already in the land of Seir (Gen 32:4), or, as it is afterwards called, the field of Edom, is not at variance with Gen 36:6, and may be very naturally explained on the supposition, that with the increase of his family and possessions, he severed himself more and more from his father’s house, becoming increasingly convinced, as time went on, that he could hope for no change in the blessings pronounced by his father upon Jacob and himself, which excluded him from the inheritance of the promise, viz.
, the future possession of Canaan. Now, even if his malicious feelings towards Jacob had gradually softened down, he had probably never said anything to his parents on the subject, so that Rebekah had been unable to fulfil her promise (Gen 27:45); and Jacob, being quite uncertain as to his brother’s state of mind, was thrown into the greatest alarm and anxiety by the report of the messengers, that Esau was coming to meet him with 400 men.
The simplest explanation of the fact that Esau should have had so many men about him as a standing army, is that given by Delitzsch ; namely, that he had to subjugate the Horite population in Seir, for which purpose he might easily have formed such an army, partly from the Canaanitish and Ishmaelitish relations of his wives, and partly from his own servants. His reason for going to meet Jacob with such a company may have been, either to show how mighty a prince he was, or with the intention of making his brother sensible of his superior power, and assuming a hostile attitude if the circumstances favoured it, even though the lapse of years had so far mitigated his anger, that he no longer seriously thought of executing the vengeance he had threatened twenty years before.
For we are warranted in regarding Jacob’s fear as no vain, subjective fancy, but as having an objective foundation, by the fact that God endowed him with courage and strength for his meeting with Esau, through the medium of the angelic host and the wrestling at the Jabbok; whilst, on the other hand, the brotherly affection and openness with which Esau met him, are to be attributed partly to Jacob’s humble demeanour, and still more to the fact, that by the influence of God, the still remaining malice had been rooted out from his heart.
Gen 32:4-7 From this point Jacob sent messengers forward to his brother Esau, to make known his return in such a style of humility (“thy servant,” “my lord”) as was adapted to conciliate him. אחר (Gen 32:5) is the first pers. imperf. Kal for אאחר, from אחר to delay, to pass a time; cf. Pro 8:17, and Ges. §68, 2. The statement that Esau was already in the land of Seir (Gen 32:4), or, as it is afterwards called, the field of Edom, is not at variance with Gen 36:6, and may be very naturally explained on the supposition, that with the increase of his family and possessions, he severed himself more and more from his father’s house, becoming increasingly convinced, as time went on, that he could hope for no change in the blessings pronounced by his father upon Jacob and himself, which excluded him from the inheritance of the promise, viz.
, the future possession of Canaan. Now, even if his malicious feelings towards Jacob had gradually softened down, he had probably never said anything to his parents on the subject, so that Rebekah had been unable to fulfil her promise (Gen 27:45); and Jacob, being quite uncertain as to his brother’s state of mind, was thrown into the greatest alarm and anxiety by the report of the messengers, that Esau was coming to meet him with 400 men.
The simplest explanation of the fact that Esau should have had so many men about him as a standing army, is that given by Delitzsch ; namely, that he had to subjugate the Horite population in Seir, for which purpose he might easily have formed such an army, partly from the Canaanitish and Ishmaelitish relations of his wives, and partly from his own servants. His reason for going to meet Jacob with such a company may have been, either to show how mighty a prince he was, or with the intention of making his brother sensible of his superior power, and assuming a hostile attitude if the circumstances favoured it, even though the lapse of years had so far mitigated his anger, that he no longer seriously thought of executing the vengeance he had threatened twenty years before.
For we are warranted in regarding Jacob’s fear as no vain, subjective fancy, but as having an objective foundation, by the fact that God endowed him with courage and strength for his meeting with Esau, through the medium of the angelic host and the wrestling at the Jabbok; whilst, on the other hand, the brotherly affection and openness with which Esau met him, are to be attributed partly to Jacob’s humble demeanour, and still more to the fact, that by the influence of God, the still remaining malice had been rooted out from his heart.
Gen 32:4-7 From this point Jacob sent messengers forward to his brother Esau, to make known his return in such a style of humility (“thy servant,” “my lord”) as was adapted to conciliate him. אחר (Gen 32:5) is the first pers. imperf. Kal for אאחר, from אחר to delay, to pass a time; cf. Pro 8:17, and Ges. §68, 2. The statement that Esau was already in the land of Seir (Gen 32:4), or, as it is afterwards called, the field of Edom, is not at variance with Gen 36:6, and may be very naturally explained on the supposition, that with the increase of his family and possessions, he severed himself more and more from his father’s house, becoming increasingly convinced, as time went on, that he could hope for no change in the blessings pronounced by his father upon Jacob and himself, which excluded him from the inheritance of the promise, viz.
, the future possession of Canaan. Now, even if his malicious feelings towards Jacob had gradually softened down, he had probably never said anything to his parents on the subject, so that Rebekah had been unable to fulfil her promise (Gen 27:45); and Jacob, being quite uncertain as to his brother’s state of mind, was thrown into the greatest alarm and anxiety by the report of the messengers, that Esau was coming to meet him with 400 men.
The simplest explanation of the fact that Esau should have had so many men about him as a standing army, is that given by Delitzsch ; namely, that he had to subjugate the Horite population in Seir, for which purpose he might easily have formed such an army, partly from the Canaanitish and Ishmaelitish relations of his wives, and partly from his own servants. His reason for going to meet Jacob with such a company may have been, either to show how mighty a prince he was, or with the intention of making his brother sensible of his superior power, and assuming a hostile attitude if the circumstances favoured it, even though the lapse of years had so far mitigated his anger, that he no longer seriously thought of executing the vengeance he had threatened twenty years before.
For we are warranted in regarding Jacob’s fear as no vain, subjective fancy, but as having an objective foundation, by the fact that God endowed him with courage and strength for his meeting with Esau, through the medium of the angelic host and the wrestling at the Jabbok; whilst, on the other hand, the brotherly affection and openness with which Esau met him, are to be attributed partly to Jacob’s humble demeanour, and still more to the fact, that by the influence of God, the still remaining malice had been rooted out from his heart.
Gen 32:4-7 From this point Jacob sent messengers forward to his brother Esau, to make known his return in such a style of humility (“thy servant,” “my lord”) as was adapted to conciliate him. אחר (Gen 32:5) is the first pers. imperf. Kal for אאחר, from אחר to delay, to pass a time; cf. Pro 8:17, and Ges. §68, 2. The statement that Esau was already in the land of Seir (Gen 32:4), or, as it is afterwards called, the field of Edom, is not at variance with Gen 36:6, and may be very naturally explained on the supposition, that with the increase of his family and possessions, he severed himself more and more from his father’s house, becoming increasingly convinced, as time went on, that he could hope for no change in the blessings pronounced by his father upon Jacob and himself, which excluded him from the inheritance of the promise, viz.
, the future possession of Canaan. Now, even if his malicious feelings towards Jacob had gradually softened down, he had probably never said anything to his parents on the subject, so that Rebekah had been unable to fulfil her promise (Gen 27:45); and Jacob, being quite uncertain as to his brother’s state of mind, was thrown into the greatest alarm and anxiety by the report of the messengers, that Esau was coming to meet him with 400 men.
The simplest explanation of the fact that Esau should have had so many men about him as a standing army, is that given by Delitzsch ; namely, that he had to subjugate the Horite population in Seir, for which purpose he might easily have formed such an army, partly from the Canaanitish and Ishmaelitish relations of his wives, and partly from his own servants. His reason for going to meet Jacob with such a company may have been, either to show how mighty a prince he was, or with the intention of making his brother sensible of his superior power, and assuming a hostile attitude if the circumstances favoured it, even though the lapse of years had so far mitigated his anger, that he no longer seriously thought of executing the vengeance he had threatened twenty years before.
For we are warranted in regarding Jacob’s fear as no vain, subjective fancy, but as having an objective foundation, by the fact that God endowed him with courage and strength for his meeting with Esau, through the medium of the angelic host and the wrestling at the Jabbok; whilst, on the other hand, the brotherly affection and openness with which Esau met him, are to be attributed partly to Jacob’s humble demeanour, and still more to the fact, that by the influence of God, the still remaining malice had been rooted out from his heart.
Gen 32:8-11 Jacob, fearing the worst, divided his people and flocks into two camps, that if Esau smote the one, the other might escape. He then turned to the Great Helper in every time of need, and with an earnest prayer besought the God of his fathers, Abraham and Isaac, who had directed him to return, that, on the ground of the abundant mercies and truth (cf. Gen 24:27) He had shown him thus far, He would deliver him out of the hand of his brother, and from the threatening destruction, and so fulfil His promises.
Gen 32:8-11 Jacob, fearing the worst, divided his people and flocks into two camps, that if Esau smote the one, the other might escape. He then turned to the Great Helper in every time of need, and with an earnest prayer besought the God of his fathers, Abraham and Isaac, who had directed him to return, that, on the ground of the abundant mercies and truth (cf. Gen 24:27) He had shown him thus far, He would deliver him out of the hand of his brother, and from the threatening destruction, and so fulfil His promises.
Gen 32:8-11 Jacob, fearing the worst, divided his people and flocks into two camps, that if Esau smote the one, the other might escape. He then turned to the Great Helper in every time of need, and with an earnest prayer besought the God of his fathers, Abraham and Isaac, who had directed him to return, that, on the ground of the abundant mercies and truth (cf. Gen 24:27) He had shown him thus far, He would deliver him out of the hand of his brother, and from the threatening destruction, and so fulfil His promises.
Gen 32:8-11 Jacob, fearing the worst, divided his people and flocks into two camps, that if Esau smote the one, the other might escape. He then turned to the Great Helper in every time of need, and with an earnest prayer besought the God of his fathers, Abraham and Isaac, who had directed him to return, that, on the ground of the abundant mercies and truth (cf. Gen 24:27) He had shown him thus far, He would deliver him out of the hand of his brother, and from the threatening destruction, and so fulfil His promises.
Gen 32:12-13 “ For I am in fear of him, that (פּן ne ) he come and smite me, mother with children .” בּנים על אם is a proverbial expression for unsparing cruelty, taken from the bird which covers its young to protect them (Deu 22:6, cf. Hos 10:14). על super, una cum, as in Exo 35:22.
Gen 32:12-13 “ For I am in fear of him, that (פּן ne ) he come and smite me, mother with children .” בּנים על אם is a proverbial expression for unsparing cruelty, taken from the bird which covers its young to protect them (Deu 22:6, cf. Hos 10:14). על super, una cum, as in Exo 35:22.
Gen 32:14-22 Although hoping for aid and safety from the Lord alone, Jacob neglected no means of doing what might help to appease his brother. Having taken up his quarters for the night in the place where he received the tidings of Esau’s approach, he selected from his flocks (“ of that which came to his hand, ” i. e. , which he had acquired) a very respectable present of 550 head of cattle, and sent them in different detachments to meet Esau, “ as a present from his servant Jacob, ” who was coming behind.
The selection was in harmony with the general possessions of nomads (cf. Job 1:3; Job 42:12), and the proportion of male to female animals was arranged according to the agricultural rule of Varro ( de re rustica 2, 3). The division of the present, “ drove and drove separately, ” i. e. , into several separate droves which followed one another at certain intervals, was to serve the purpose of gradually mitigating the wrath of Esau.
פּנים כּפּר, Gen 32:21, to appease the countenance; פּנים נשׁא to raise any one’s countenance, i. e. , to receive him in a friendly manner. This present he sent forward; and he himself remained the same night (mentioned in Gen 32:14) in the camp.
Gen 32:14-22 Although hoping for aid and safety from the Lord alone, Jacob neglected no means of doing what might help to appease his brother. Having taken up his quarters for the night in the place where he received the tidings of Esau’s approach, he selected from his flocks (“ of that which came to his hand, ” i. e. , which he had acquired) a very respectable present of 550 head of cattle, and sent them in different detachments to meet Esau, “ as a present from his servant Jacob, ” who was coming behind.
The selection was in harmony with the general possessions of nomads (cf. Job 1:3; Job 42:12), and the proportion of male to female animals was arranged according to the agricultural rule of Varro ( de re rustica 2, 3). The division of the present, “ drove and drove separately, ” i. e. , into several separate droves which followed one another at certain intervals, was to serve the purpose of gradually mitigating the wrath of Esau.
פּנים כּפּר, Gen 32:21, to appease the countenance; פּנים נשׁא to raise any one’s countenance, i. e. , to receive him in a friendly manner. This present he sent forward; and he himself remained the same night (mentioned in Gen 32:14) in the camp.
Gen 32:14-22 Although hoping for aid and safety from the Lord alone, Jacob neglected no means of doing what might help to appease his brother. Having taken up his quarters for the night in the place where he received the tidings of Esau’s approach, he selected from his flocks (“ of that which came to his hand, ” i. e. , which he had acquired) a very respectable present of 550 head of cattle, and sent them in different detachments to meet Esau, “ as a present from his servant Jacob, ” who was coming behind.
The selection was in harmony with the general possessions of nomads (cf. Job 1:3; Job 42:12), and the proportion of male to female animals was arranged according to the agricultural rule of Varro ( de re rustica 2, 3). The division of the present, “ drove and drove separately, ” i. e. , into several separate droves which followed one another at certain intervals, was to serve the purpose of gradually mitigating the wrath of Esau.
פּנים כּפּר, Gen 32:21, to appease the countenance; פּנים נשׁא to raise any one’s countenance, i. e. , to receive him in a friendly manner. This present he sent forward; and he himself remained the same night (mentioned in Gen 32:14) in the camp.
Gen 32:14-22 Although hoping for aid and safety from the Lord alone, Jacob neglected no means of doing what might help to appease his brother. Having taken up his quarters for the night in the place where he received the tidings of Esau’s approach, he selected from his flocks (“ of that which came to his hand, ” i. e. , which he had acquired) a very respectable present of 550 head of cattle, and sent them in different detachments to meet Esau, “ as a present from his servant Jacob, ” who was coming behind.
The selection was in harmony with the general possessions of nomads (cf. Job 1:3; Job 42:12), and the proportion of male to female animals was arranged according to the agricultural rule of Varro ( de re rustica 2, 3). The division of the present, “ drove and drove separately, ” i. e. , into several separate droves which followed one another at certain intervals, was to serve the purpose of gradually mitigating the wrath of Esau.
פּנים כּפּר, Gen 32:21, to appease the countenance; פּנים נשׁא to raise any one’s countenance, i. e. , to receive him in a friendly manner. This present he sent forward; and he himself remained the same night (mentioned in Gen 32:14) in the camp.
Gen 32:14-22 Although hoping for aid and safety from the Lord alone, Jacob neglected no means of doing what might help to appease his brother. Having taken up his quarters for the night in the place where he received the tidings of Esau’s approach, he selected from his flocks (“ of that which came to his hand, ” i. e. , which he had acquired) a very respectable present of 550 head of cattle, and sent them in different detachments to meet Esau, “ as a present from his servant Jacob, ” who was coming behind.
The selection was in harmony with the general possessions of nomads (cf. Job 1:3; Job 42:12), and the proportion of male to female animals was arranged according to the agricultural rule of Varro ( de re rustica 2, 3). The division of the present, “ drove and drove separately, ” i. e. , into several separate droves which followed one another at certain intervals, was to serve the purpose of gradually mitigating the wrath of Esau.
פּנים כּפּר, Gen 32:21, to appease the countenance; פּנים נשׁא to raise any one’s countenance, i. e. , to receive him in a friendly manner. This present he sent forward; and he himself remained the same night (mentioned in Gen 32:14) in the camp.
Gen 32:14-22 Although hoping for aid and safety from the Lord alone, Jacob neglected no means of doing what might help to appease his brother. Having taken up his quarters for the night in the place where he received the tidings of Esau’s approach, he selected from his flocks (“ of that which came to his hand, ” i. e. , which he had acquired) a very respectable present of 550 head of cattle, and sent them in different detachments to meet Esau, “ as a present from his servant Jacob, ” who was coming behind.
The selection was in harmony with the general possessions of nomads (cf. Job 1:3; Job 42:12), and the proportion of male to female animals was arranged according to the agricultural rule of Varro ( de re rustica 2, 3). The division of the present, “ drove and drove separately, ” i. e. , into several separate droves which followed one another at certain intervals, was to serve the purpose of gradually mitigating the wrath of Esau.
פּנים כּפּר, Gen 32:21, to appease the countenance; פּנים נשׁא to raise any one’s countenance, i. e. , to receive him in a friendly manner. This present he sent forward; and he himself remained the same night (mentioned in Gen 32:14) in the camp.
Gen 32:14-22 Although hoping for aid and safety from the Lord alone, Jacob neglected no means of doing what might help to appease his brother. Having taken up his quarters for the night in the place where he received the tidings of Esau’s approach, he selected from his flocks (“ of that which came to his hand, ” i. e. , which he had acquired) a very respectable present of 550 head of cattle, and sent them in different detachments to meet Esau, “ as a present from his servant Jacob, ” who was coming behind.
The selection was in harmony with the general possessions of nomads (cf. Job 1:3; Job 42:12), and the proportion of male to female animals was arranged according to the agricultural rule of Varro ( de re rustica 2, 3). The division of the present, “ drove and drove separately, ” i. e. , into several separate droves which followed one another at certain intervals, was to serve the purpose of gradually mitigating the wrath of Esau.
פּנים כּפּר, Gen 32:21, to appease the countenance; פּנים נשׁא to raise any one’s countenance, i. e. , to receive him in a friendly manner. This present he sent forward; and he himself remained the same night (mentioned in Gen 32:14) in the camp.
Gen 32:14-22 Although hoping for aid and safety from the Lord alone, Jacob neglected no means of doing what might help to appease his brother. Having taken up his quarters for the night in the place where he received the tidings of Esau’s approach, he selected from his flocks (“ of that which came to his hand, ” i. e. , which he had acquired) a very respectable present of 550 head of cattle, and sent them in different detachments to meet Esau, “ as a present from his servant Jacob, ” who was coming behind.
The selection was in harmony with the general possessions of nomads (cf. Job 1:3; Job 42:12), and the proportion of male to female animals was arranged according to the agricultural rule of Varro ( de re rustica 2, 3). The division of the present, “ drove and drove separately, ” i. e. , into several separate droves which followed one another at certain intervals, was to serve the purpose of gradually mitigating the wrath of Esau.
פּנים כּפּר, Gen 32:21, to appease the countenance; פּנים נשׁא to raise any one’s countenance, i. e. , to receive him in a friendly manner. This present he sent forward; and he himself remained the same night (mentioned in Gen 32:14) in the camp.
Gen 32:14-22 Although hoping for aid and safety from the Lord alone, Jacob neglected no means of doing what might help to appease his brother. Having taken up his quarters for the night in the place where he received the tidings of Esau’s approach, he selected from his flocks (“ of that which came to his hand, ” i. e. , which he had acquired) a very respectable present of 550 head of cattle, and sent them in different detachments to meet Esau, “ as a present from his servant Jacob, ” who was coming behind.
The selection was in harmony with the general possessions of nomads (cf. Job 1:3; Job 42:12), and the proportion of male to female animals was arranged according to the agricultural rule of Varro ( de re rustica 2, 3). The division of the present, “ drove and drove separately, ” i. e. , into several separate droves which followed one another at certain intervals, was to serve the purpose of gradually mitigating the wrath of Esau.
פּנים כּפּר, Gen 32:21, to appease the countenance; פּנים נשׁא to raise any one’s countenance, i. e. , to receive him in a friendly manner. This present he sent forward; and he himself remained the same night (mentioned in Gen 32:14) in the camp.
Gen 32:23-24 The Wrestling with God. - The same night, he conveyed his family with all his possessions across the ford of the Jabbok. Jabbok is the present Wady es Zerka (i. e. , the blue), which flows from the east towards the Jordan, and with its deep rocky valley formed at that time the boundary between the kingdoms of Sihon at Heshbon and Og of Bashan. It now separates the countries of Moerad or Ajlun and Belka .
The ford by which Jacob crossed was hardly the one which he took on his outward journey, upon the Syrian caravan-road by Kalaat-Zerka , but one much farther to the west, between Jebel Ajlun and Jebel Jelaad , through which Buckingham , Burckhardt , and Seetzen passed; and where there are still traces of walls and buildings to be seen, and other marks of cultivation.
Gen 32:23-24 The Wrestling with God. - The same night, he conveyed his family with all his possessions across the ford of the Jabbok. Jabbok is the present Wady es Zerka (i. e. , the blue), which flows from the east towards the Jordan, and with its deep rocky valley formed at that time the boundary between the kingdoms of Sihon at Heshbon and Og of Bashan. It now separates the countries of Moerad or Ajlun and Belka .
The ford by which Jacob crossed was hardly the one which he took on his outward journey, upon the Syrian caravan-road by Kalaat-Zerka , but one much farther to the west, between Jebel Ajlun and Jebel Jelaad , through which Buckingham , Burckhardt , and Seetzen passed; and where there are still traces of walls and buildings to be seen, and other marks of cultivation.
Gen 32:25 When Jacob was left alone on the northern side of the Jabbok, after sending all the rest across, “ there wrestled a man with him until the breaking of the day .” נאבק, an old word, which only occurs here (Gen 32:25, Gen 32:26), signifying to wrestle, is either derived from אבק to wind, or related to חבק to contract one’s self, to plant limb and limb firmly together. From this wrestling the river evidently received its name of Jabbok (יבּק = יאבּק).
Gen 32:26-30 “ And when He (the unknown) saw that He did not overcome him, He touched his hip-socket; and his hip-socket was put out of joint (תּקע from רקע) as He wrestled with him. ” Still Jacob would not let Him go until He blessed him. He then said to Jacob, “ They name shall be called no more Jacob, but Israel (ישׂראל, God’s fighter, from שׂרה to fight, and אל God); for thou hast fought with God and with men, and hast prevailed .
” When Jacob asked Him His name, He declined giving any definite answer, and “ blessed him there . ” He did not tell him His name; not merely, as the angel stated to Manoah in reply to a similar question (Jdg 13:18), because it was פּלא wonder, i. e. , incomprehensible to mortal man, but still more to fill Jacob’s soul with awe at the mysterious character of the whole event, and to lead him to take it to heart.
What Jacob wanted to know, with regard to the person of the wonderful Wrestler, and the meaning and intention of the struggle, he must already have suspected, when he would not let Him go until He blessed him; and it was put before him still more plainly in the new name that was given to him with this explanation, “ Thou hast fought with Elohim and with men, and hast conquered . ” God had met him in the form of a man: God in the angel, according to Hos 12:4-5, i.
e. , not in a created angel, but in the Angel of Jehovah , the visible manifestation of the invisible God. Our history does not speak of Jehovah , or the Angel of Jehovah , but of Elohim , for the purpose of bringing out the contrast between God and the creature. This remarkable occurrence is not to be regarded as a dream or an internal vision, but fell within the sphere of sensuous perception.
At the same time, it was not a natural or corporeal wrestling, but a “real conflict of both mind and body, a work of the spirit with intense effort of the body” ( Delitzsch ), in which Jacob was lifted up into a highly elevated condition of body and mind resembling that of ecstasy, through the medium of the manifestation of God. In a merely outward conflict, it is impossible to conquer through prayers and tears.
As the idea of a dream or vision has no point of contact in the history; so the notion, that the outward conflict of bodily wrestling, and the spiritual conflict with prayer and tears, are two features opposed to one another and spiritually distinct, is evidently at variance with the meaning of the narrative and the interpretation of the prophet Hosea. Since Jacob still continued his resistance, even after his hip had been put out of joint, and would not let Him go till He had blessed him, it cannot be said that it was not till all hope of maintaining the conflict by bodily strength was taken from him, that he had recourse to the weapon of prayer.
And when Hosea (Hos 12:4-5) points his contemporaries to their wrestling forefather as an example for their imitation, in these words, “He took his brother by the heel in the womb, and in his human strength he fought with God; and he fought with the Angel and prevailed; he wept and made supplication unto Him,” the turn by which the explanatory periphrasis of Jacob’s words, “I will not let Thee go except Thou bless me,” is linked on to the previous clause by בּכה without a copula or vav consec. , is a proof that the prophet did not regard the weeping and supplication as occurring after the wrestling, or as only a second element, which was subsequently added to the corporeal struggle.
Hosea evidently looked upon the weeping and supplication as the distinguishing feature in the conflict, without thereby excluding the corporeal wrestling. At the same time, by connecting this event with what took place at the birth of the twins (Gen 25:26), the prophet teaches that Jacob merely completed, by his wrestling with God, what he had already been engaged in even from his mother’s womb, viz.
, his striving for the birthright; in other words, for the possession of the covenant promise and the covenant blessing. This meaning is also indicated by the circumstances under which the event took place. Jacob had wrested the blessing of the birthright from his brother Esau; but it was by cunning and deceit, and he had been obliged to flee from his wrath in consequence.
And now that he desired to return to the land of promise and his father’s house, and to enter upon the inheritance promised him in his father’s blessing; Esau was coming to meet him with 400 men, which filled him with great alarm. As he felt too weak to enter upon a conflict with him, he prayed to the covenant God for deliverance from the hand of his brother, and the fulfilment of the covenant promises.
The answer of God to this prayer was the present wrestling with God, in which he was victorious indeed, but not without carrying the marks of it all his life long in the dislocation of his thigh. Jacob’s great fear of Esau’s wrath and vengeance, which he could not suppress notwithstanding the divine revelations at Bethel and Mahanaim, had its foundation in his evil conscience, in the consciousness of the sin connected with his wilful and treacherous appropriation of the blessing of the first-born.
To save him from the hand of his brother, it was necessary that God should first meet him as an enemy, and show him that his real opponent was God Himself, and that he must first of all overcome Him before he could hope to overcome his brother. And Jacob overcame God; not with the power of the flesh however, with which he had hitherto wrestled for God against man (God convinced him of that by touching his hip, so that it was put out of joint), but by the power of faith and prayer, reaching by firm hold of God even to the point of being blessed, by which he proved himself to be a true wrestler of God, who fought with God and with men, i.
e. , who by his wrestling with God overcame men as well. And whilst by the dislocation of his hip the carnal nature of his previous wrestling was declared to be powerless and wrong, he received in the new name of Israel the prize of victory, and at the same time directions from God how he was henceforth to strive for the cause of the Lord. - By his wrestling with God, Jacob entered upon a new stage in his life.
As a sign of this, he received a new name, which indicated, as the result of this conflict, the nature of his new relation to God. But whilst Abram and Sarai, from the time when God changed their names (Gen 17:5 and Gen 17:15), are always called by their new names; in the history of Jacob we find the old name used interchangeably with the new. “For the first two names denoted a change into a new and permanent position, effected and intended by the will and promise of God; consequently the old names were entirely abolished.
But the name Israel denoted a spiritual state determined by faith; and in Jacob’s life the natural state, determined by flesh and blood, still continued to stand side by side with this. Jacob’s new name was transmitted to his descendants, however, who were called Israel as the covenant nation. For as the blessing of their forefather’s conflict came down to them as a spiritual inheritance, so did they also enter upon the duty of preserving this inheritance by continuing in a similar conflict.
Gen 32:26-30 “ And when He (the unknown) saw that He did not overcome him, He touched his hip-socket; and his hip-socket was put out of joint (תּקע from רקע) as He wrestled with him. ” Still Jacob would not let Him go until He blessed him. He then said to Jacob, “ They name shall be called no more Jacob, but Israel (ישׂראל, God’s fighter, from שׂרה to fight, and אל God); for thou hast fought with God and with men, and hast prevailed .
” When Jacob asked Him His name, He declined giving any definite answer, and “ blessed him there . ” He did not tell him His name; not merely, as the angel stated to Manoah in reply to a similar question (Jdg 13:18), because it was פּלא wonder, i. e. , incomprehensible to mortal man, but still more to fill Jacob’s soul with awe at the mysterious character of the whole event, and to lead him to take it to heart.
What Jacob wanted to know, with regard to the person of the wonderful Wrestler, and the meaning and intention of the struggle, he must already have suspected, when he would not let Him go until He blessed him; and it was put before him still more plainly in the new name that was given to him with this explanation, “ Thou hast fought with Elohim and with men, and hast conquered . ” God had met him in the form of a man: God in the angel, according to Hos 12:4-5, i.
e. , not in a created angel, but in the Angel of Jehovah , the visible manifestation of the invisible God. Our history does not speak of Jehovah , or the Angel of Jehovah , but of Elohim , for the purpose of bringing out the contrast between God and the creature. This remarkable occurrence is not to be regarded as a dream or an internal vision, but fell within the sphere of sensuous perception.
At the same time, it was not a natural or corporeal wrestling, but a “real conflict of both mind and body, a work of the spirit with intense effort of the body” ( Delitzsch ), in which Jacob was lifted up into a highly elevated condition of body and mind resembling that of ecstasy, through the medium of the manifestation of God. In a merely outward conflict, it is impossible to conquer through prayers and tears.
As the idea of a dream or vision has no point of contact in the history; so the notion, that the outward conflict of bodily wrestling, and the spiritual conflict with prayer and tears, are two features opposed to one another and spiritually distinct, is evidently at variance with the meaning of the narrative and the interpretation of the prophet Hosea. Since Jacob still continued his resistance, even after his hip had been put out of joint, and would not let Him go till He had blessed him, it cannot be said that it was not till all hope of maintaining the conflict by bodily strength was taken from him, that he had recourse to the weapon of prayer.
And when Hosea (Hos 12:4-5) points his contemporaries to their wrestling forefather as an example for their imitation, in these words, “He took his brother by the heel in the womb, and in his human strength he fought with God; and he fought with the Angel and prevailed; he wept and made supplication unto Him,” the turn by which the explanatory periphrasis of Jacob’s words, “I will not let Thee go except Thou bless me,” is linked on to the previous clause by בּכה without a copula or vav consec. , is a proof that the prophet did not regard the weeping and supplication as occurring after the wrestling, or as only a second element, which was subsequently added to the corporeal struggle.
Hosea evidently looked upon the weeping and supplication as the distinguishing feature in the conflict, without thereby excluding the corporeal wrestling. At the same time, by connecting this event with what took place at the birth of the twins (Gen 25:26), the prophet teaches that Jacob merely completed, by his wrestling with God, what he had already been engaged in even from his mother’s womb, viz.
, his striving for the birthright; in other words, for the possession of the covenant promise and the covenant blessing. This meaning is also indicated by the circumstances under which the event took place. Jacob had wrested the blessing of the birthright from his brother Esau; but it was by cunning and deceit, and he had been obliged to flee from his wrath in consequence.
And now that he desired to return to the land of promise and his father’s house, and to enter upon the inheritance promised him in his father’s blessing; Esau was coming to meet him with 400 men, which filled him with great alarm. As he felt too weak to enter upon a conflict with him, he prayed to the covenant God for deliverance from the hand of his brother, and the fulfilment of the covenant promises.
The answer of God to this prayer was the present wrestling with God, in which he was victorious indeed, but not without carrying the marks of it all his life long in the dislocation of his thigh. Jacob’s great fear of Esau’s wrath and vengeance, which he could not suppress notwithstanding the divine revelations at Bethel and Mahanaim, had its foundation in his evil conscience, in the consciousness of the sin connected with his wilful and treacherous appropriation of the blessing of the first-born.
To save him from the hand of his brother, it was necessary that God should first meet him as an enemy, and show him that his real opponent was God Himself, and that he must first of all overcome Him before he could hope to overcome his brother. And Jacob overcame God; not with the power of the flesh however, with which he had hitherto wrestled for God against man (God convinced him of that by touching his hip, so that it was put out of joint), but by the power of faith and prayer, reaching by firm hold of God even to the point of being blessed, by which he proved himself to be a true wrestler of God, who fought with God and with men, i.
e. , who by his wrestling with God overcame men as well. And whilst by the dislocation of his hip the carnal nature of his previous wrestling was declared to be powerless and wrong, he received in the new name of Israel the prize of victory, and at the same time directions from God how he was henceforth to strive for the cause of the Lord. - By his wrestling with God, Jacob entered upon a new stage in his life.
As a sign of this, he received a new name, which indicated, as the result of this conflict, the nature of his new relation to God. But whilst Abram and Sarai, from the time when God changed their names (Gen 17:5 and Gen 17:15), are always called by their new names; in the history of Jacob we find the old name used interchangeably with the new. “For the first two names denoted a change into a new and permanent position, effected and intended by the will and promise of God; consequently the old names were entirely abolished.
But the name Israel denoted a spiritual state determined by faith; and in Jacob’s life the natural state, determined by flesh and blood, still continued to stand side by side with this. Jacob’s new name was transmitted to his descendants, however, who were called Israel as the covenant nation. For as the blessing of their forefather’s conflict came down to them as a spiritual inheritance, so did they also enter upon the duty of preserving this inheritance by continuing in a similar conflict.
Gen 32:26-30 “ And when He (the unknown) saw that He did not overcome him, He touched his hip-socket; and his hip-socket was put out of joint (תּקע from רקע) as He wrestled with him. ” Still Jacob would not let Him go until He blessed him. He then said to Jacob, “ They name shall be called no more Jacob, but Israel (ישׂראל, God’s fighter, from שׂרה to fight, and אל God); for thou hast fought with God and with men, and hast prevailed .
” When Jacob asked Him His name, He declined giving any definite answer, and “ blessed him there . ” He did not tell him His name; not merely, as the angel stated to Manoah in reply to a similar question (Jdg 13:18), because it was פּלא wonder, i. e. , incomprehensible to mortal man, but still more to fill Jacob’s soul with awe at the mysterious character of the whole event, and to lead him to take it to heart.
What Jacob wanted to know, with regard to the person of the wonderful Wrestler, and the meaning and intention of the struggle, he must already have suspected, when he would not let Him go until He blessed him; and it was put before him still more plainly in the new name that was given to him with this explanation, “ Thou hast fought with Elohim and with men, and hast conquered . ” God had met him in the form of a man: God in the angel, according to Hos 12:4-5, i.
e. , not in a created angel, but in the Angel of Jehovah , the visible manifestation of the invisible God. Our history does not speak of Jehovah , or the Angel of Jehovah , but of Elohim , for the purpose of bringing out the contrast between God and the creature. This remarkable occurrence is not to be regarded as a dream or an internal vision, but fell within the sphere of sensuous perception.
At the same time, it was not a natural or corporeal wrestling, but a “real conflict of both mind and body, a work of the spirit with intense effort of the body” ( Delitzsch ), in which Jacob was lifted up into a highly elevated condition of body and mind resembling that of ecstasy, through the medium of the manifestation of God. In a merely outward conflict, it is impossible to conquer through prayers and tears.
As the idea of a dream or vision has no point of contact in the history; so the notion, that the outward conflict of bodily wrestling, and the spiritual conflict with prayer and tears, are two features opposed to one another and spiritually distinct, is evidently at variance with the meaning of the narrative and the interpretation of the prophet Hosea. Since Jacob still continued his resistance, even after his hip had been put out of joint, and would not let Him go till He had blessed him, it cannot be said that it was not till all hope of maintaining the conflict by bodily strength was taken from him, that he had recourse to the weapon of prayer.
And when Hosea (Hos 12:4-5) points his contemporaries to their wrestling forefather as an example for their imitation, in these words, “He took his brother by the heel in the womb, and in his human strength he fought with God; and he fought with the Angel and prevailed; he wept and made supplication unto Him,” the turn by which the explanatory periphrasis of Jacob’s words, “I will not let Thee go except Thou bless me,” is linked on to the previous clause by בּכה without a copula or vav consec. , is a proof that the prophet did not regard the weeping and supplication as occurring after the wrestling, or as only a second element, which was subsequently added to the corporeal struggle.
Hosea evidently looked upon the weeping and supplication as the distinguishing feature in the conflict, without thereby excluding the corporeal wrestling. At the same time, by connecting this event with what took place at the birth of the twins (Gen 25:26), the prophet teaches that Jacob merely completed, by his wrestling with God, what he had already been engaged in even from his mother’s womb, viz.
, his striving for the birthright; in other words, for the possession of the covenant promise and the covenant blessing. This meaning is also indicated by the circumstances under which the event took place. Jacob had wrested the blessing of the birthright from his brother Esau; but it was by cunning and deceit, and he had been obliged to flee from his wrath in consequence.
And now that he desired to return to the land of promise and his father’s house, and to enter upon the inheritance promised him in his father’s blessing; Esau was coming to meet him with 400 men, which filled him with great alarm. As he felt too weak to enter upon a conflict with him, he prayed to the covenant God for deliverance from the hand of his brother, and the fulfilment of the covenant promises.
The answer of God to this prayer was the present wrestling with God, in which he was victorious indeed, but not without carrying the marks of it all his life long in the dislocation of his thigh. Jacob’s great fear of Esau’s wrath and vengeance, which he could not suppress notwithstanding the divine revelations at Bethel and Mahanaim, had its foundation in his evil conscience, in the consciousness of the sin connected with his wilful and treacherous appropriation of the blessing of the first-born.
To save him from the hand of his brother, it was necessary that God should first meet him as an enemy, and show him that his real opponent was God Himself, and that he must first of all overcome Him before he could hope to overcome his brother. And Jacob overcame God; not with the power of the flesh however, with which he had hitherto wrestled for God against man (God convinced him of that by touching his hip, so that it was put out of joint), but by the power of faith and prayer, reaching by firm hold of God even to the point of being blessed, by which he proved himself to be a true wrestler of God, who fought with God and with men, i.
e. , who by his wrestling with God overcame men as well. And whilst by the dislocation of his hip the carnal nature of his previous wrestling was declared to be powerless and wrong, he received in the new name of Israel the prize of victory, and at the same time directions from God how he was henceforth to strive for the cause of the Lord. - By his wrestling with God, Jacob entered upon a new stage in his life.
As a sign of this, he received a new name, which indicated, as the result of this conflict, the nature of his new relation to God. But whilst Abram and Sarai, from the time when God changed their names (Gen 17:5 and Gen 17:15), are always called by their new names; in the history of Jacob we find the old name used interchangeably with the new. “For the first two names denoted a change into a new and permanent position, effected and intended by the will and promise of God; consequently the old names were entirely abolished.
But the name Israel denoted a spiritual state determined by faith; and in Jacob’s life the natural state, determined by flesh and blood, still continued to stand side by side with this. Jacob’s new name was transmitted to his descendants, however, who were called Israel as the covenant nation. For as the blessing of their forefather’s conflict came down to them as a spiritual inheritance, so did they also enter upon the duty of preserving this inheritance by continuing in a similar conflict.
Gen 32:26-30 “ And when He (the unknown) saw that He did not overcome him, He touched his hip-socket; and his hip-socket was put out of joint (תּקע from רקע) as He wrestled with him. ” Still Jacob would not let Him go until He blessed him. He then said to Jacob, “ They name shall be called no more Jacob, but Israel (ישׂראל, God’s fighter, from שׂרה to fight, and אל God); for thou hast fought with God and with men, and hast prevailed .
” When Jacob asked Him His name, He declined giving any definite answer, and “ blessed him there . ” He did not tell him His name; not merely, as the angel stated to Manoah in reply to a similar question (Jdg 13:18), because it was פּלא wonder, i. e. , incomprehensible to mortal man, but still more to fill Jacob’s soul with awe at the mysterious character of the whole event, and to lead him to take it to heart.
What Jacob wanted to know, with regard to the person of the wonderful Wrestler, and the meaning and intention of the struggle, he must already have suspected, when he would not let Him go until He blessed him; and it was put before him still more plainly in the new name that was given to him with this explanation, “ Thou hast fought with Elohim and with men, and hast conquered . ” God had met him in the form of a man: God in the angel, according to Hos 12:4-5, i.
e. , not in a created angel, but in the Angel of Jehovah , the visible manifestation of the invisible God. Our history does not speak of Jehovah , or the Angel of Jehovah , but of Elohim , for the purpose of bringing out the contrast between God and the creature. This remarkable occurrence is not to be regarded as a dream or an internal vision, but fell within the sphere of sensuous perception.
At the same time, it was not a natural or corporeal wrestling, but a “real conflict of both mind and body, a work of the spirit with intense effort of the body” ( Delitzsch ), in which Jacob was lifted up into a highly elevated condition of body and mind resembling that of ecstasy, through the medium of the manifestation of God. In a merely outward conflict, it is impossible to conquer through prayers and tears.
As the idea of a dream or vision has no point of contact in the history; so the notion, that the outward conflict of bodily wrestling, and the spiritual conflict with prayer and tears, are two features opposed to one another and spiritually distinct, is evidently at variance with the meaning of the narrative and the interpretation of the prophet Hosea. Since Jacob still continued his resistance, even after his hip had been put out of joint, and would not let Him go till He had blessed him, it cannot be said that it was not till all hope of maintaining the conflict by bodily strength was taken from him, that he had recourse to the weapon of prayer.
And when Hosea (Hos 12:4-5) points his contemporaries to their wrestling forefather as an example for their imitation, in these words, “He took his brother by the heel in the womb, and in his human strength he fought with God; and he fought with the Angel and prevailed; he wept and made supplication unto Him,” the turn by which the explanatory periphrasis of Jacob’s words, “I will not let Thee go except Thou bless me,” is linked on to the previous clause by בּכה without a copula or vav consec. , is a proof that the prophet did not regard the weeping and supplication as occurring after the wrestling, or as only a second element, which was subsequently added to the corporeal struggle.
Hosea evidently looked upon the weeping and supplication as the distinguishing feature in the conflict, without thereby excluding the corporeal wrestling. At the same time, by connecting this event with what took place at the birth of the twins (Gen 25:26), the prophet teaches that Jacob merely completed, by his wrestling with God, what he had already been engaged in even from his mother’s womb, viz.
, his striving for the birthright; in other words, for the possession of the covenant promise and the covenant blessing. This meaning is also indicated by the circumstances under which the event took place. Jacob had wrested the blessing of the birthright from his brother Esau; but it was by cunning and deceit, and he had been obliged to flee from his wrath in consequence.
And now that he desired to return to the land of promise and his father’s house, and to enter upon the inheritance promised him in his father’s blessing; Esau was coming to meet him with 400 men, which filled him with great alarm. As he felt too weak to enter upon a conflict with him, he prayed to the covenant God for deliverance from the hand of his brother, and the fulfilment of the covenant promises.
The answer of God to this prayer was the present wrestling with God, in which he was victorious indeed, but not without carrying the marks of it all his life long in the dislocation of his thigh. Jacob’s great fear of Esau’s wrath and vengeance, which he could not suppress notwithstanding the divine revelations at Bethel and Mahanaim, had its foundation in his evil conscience, in the consciousness of the sin connected with his wilful and treacherous appropriation of the blessing of the first-born.
To save him from the hand of his brother, it was necessary that God should first meet him as an enemy, and show him that his real opponent was God Himself, and that he must first of all overcome Him before he could hope to overcome his brother. And Jacob overcame God; not with the power of the flesh however, with which he had hitherto wrestled for God against man (God convinced him of that by touching his hip, so that it was put out of joint), but by the power of faith and prayer, reaching by firm hold of God even to the point of being blessed, by which he proved himself to be a true wrestler of God, who fought with God and with men, i.
e. , who by his wrestling with God overcame men as well. And whilst by the dislocation of his hip the carnal nature of his previous wrestling was declared to be powerless and wrong, he received in the new name of Israel the prize of victory, and at the same time directions from God how he was henceforth to strive for the cause of the Lord. - By his wrestling with God, Jacob entered upon a new stage in his life.
As a sign of this, he received a new name, which indicated, as the result of this conflict, the nature of his new relation to God. But whilst Abram and Sarai, from the time when God changed their names (Gen 17:5 and Gen 17:15), are always called by their new names; in the history of Jacob we find the old name used interchangeably with the new. “For the first two names denoted a change into a new and permanent position, effected and intended by the will and promise of God; consequently the old names were entirely abolished.
But the name Israel denoted a spiritual state determined by faith; and in Jacob’s life the natural state, determined by flesh and blood, still continued to stand side by side with this. Jacob’s new name was transmitted to his descendants, however, who were called Israel as the covenant nation. For as the blessing of their forefather’s conflict came down to them as a spiritual inheritance, so did they also enter upon the duty of preserving this inheritance by continuing in a similar conflict.
Gen 32:26-30 “ And when He (the unknown) saw that He did not overcome him, He touched his hip-socket; and his hip-socket was put out of joint (תּקע from רקע) as He wrestled with him. ” Still Jacob would not let Him go until He blessed him. He then said to Jacob, “ They name shall be called no more Jacob, but Israel (ישׂראל, God’s fighter, from שׂרה to fight, and אל God); for thou hast fought with God and with men, and hast prevailed .
” When Jacob asked Him His name, He declined giving any definite answer, and “ blessed him there . ” He did not tell him His name; not merely, as the angel stated to Manoah in reply to a similar question (Jdg 13:18), because it was פּלא wonder, i. e. , incomprehensible to mortal man, but still more to fill Jacob’s soul with awe at the mysterious character of the whole event, and to lead him to take it to heart.
What Jacob wanted to know, with regard to the person of the wonderful Wrestler, and the meaning and intention of the struggle, he must already have suspected, when he would not let Him go until He blessed him; and it was put before him still more plainly in the new name that was given to him with this explanation, “ Thou hast fought with Elohim and with men, and hast conquered . ” God had met him in the form of a man: God in the angel, according to Hos 12:4-5, i.
e. , not in a created angel, but in the Angel of Jehovah , the visible manifestation of the invisible God. Our history does not speak of Jehovah , or the Angel of Jehovah , but of Elohim , for the purpose of bringing out the contrast between God and the creature. This remarkable occurrence is not to be regarded as a dream or an internal vision, but fell within the sphere of sensuous perception.
At the same time, it was not a natural or corporeal wrestling, but a “real conflict of both mind and body, a work of the spirit with intense effort of the body” ( Delitzsch ), in which Jacob was lifted up into a highly elevated condition of body and mind resembling that of ecstasy, through the medium of the manifestation of God. In a merely outward conflict, it is impossible to conquer through prayers and tears.
As the idea of a dream or vision has no point of contact in the history; so the notion, that the outward conflict of bodily wrestling, and the spiritual conflict with prayer and tears, are two features opposed to one another and spiritually distinct, is evidently at variance with the meaning of the narrative and the interpretation of the prophet Hosea. Since Jacob still continued his resistance, even after his hip had been put out of joint, and would not let Him go till He had blessed him, it cannot be said that it was not till all hope of maintaining the conflict by bodily strength was taken from him, that he had recourse to the weapon of prayer.
And when Hosea (Hos 12:4-5) points his contemporaries to their wrestling forefather as an example for their imitation, in these words, “He took his brother by the heel in the womb, and in his human strength he fought with God; and he fought with the Angel and prevailed; he wept and made supplication unto Him,” the turn by which the explanatory periphrasis of Jacob’s words, “I will not let Thee go except Thou bless me,” is linked on to the previous clause by בּכה without a copula or vav consec. , is a proof that the prophet did not regard the weeping and supplication as occurring after the wrestling, or as only a second element, which was subsequently added to the corporeal struggle.
Hosea evidently looked upon the weeping and supplication as the distinguishing feature in the conflict, without thereby excluding the corporeal wrestling. At the same time, by connecting this event with what took place at the birth of the twins (Gen 25:26), the prophet teaches that Jacob merely completed, by his wrestling with God, what he had already been engaged in even from his mother’s womb, viz.
, his striving for the birthright; in other words, for the possession of the covenant promise and the covenant blessing. This meaning is also indicated by the circumstances under which the event took place. Jacob had wrested the blessing of the birthright from his brother Esau; but it was by cunning and deceit, and he had been obliged to flee from his wrath in consequence.
And now that he desired to return to the land of promise and his father’s house, and to enter upon the inheritance promised him in his father’s blessing; Esau was coming to meet him with 400 men, which filled him with great alarm. As he felt too weak to enter upon a conflict with him, he prayed to the covenant God for deliverance from the hand of his brother, and the fulfilment of the covenant promises.
The answer of God to this prayer was the present wrestling with God, in which he was victorious indeed, but not without carrying the marks of it all his life long in the dislocation of his thigh. Jacob’s great fear of Esau’s wrath and vengeance, which he could not suppress notwithstanding the divine revelations at Bethel and Mahanaim, had its foundation in his evil conscience, in the consciousness of the sin connected with his wilful and treacherous appropriation of the blessing of the first-born.
To save him from the hand of his brother, it was necessary that God should first meet him as an enemy, and show him that his real opponent was God Himself, and that he must first of all overcome Him before he could hope to overcome his brother. And Jacob overcame God; not with the power of the flesh however, with which he had hitherto wrestled for God against man (God convinced him of that by touching his hip, so that it was put out of joint), but by the power of faith and prayer, reaching by firm hold of God even to the point of being blessed, by which he proved himself to be a true wrestler of God, who fought with God and with men, i.
e. , who by his wrestling with God overcame men as well. And whilst by the dislocation of his hip the carnal nature of his previous wrestling was declared to be powerless and wrong, he received in the new name of Israel the prize of victory, and at the same time directions from God how he was henceforth to strive for the cause of the Lord. - By his wrestling with God, Jacob entered upon a new stage in his life.
As a sign of this, he received a new name, which indicated, as the result of this conflict, the nature of his new relation to God. But whilst Abram and Sarai, from the time when God changed their names (Gen 17:5 and Gen 17:15), are always called by their new names; in the history of Jacob we find the old name used interchangeably with the new. “For the first two names denoted a change into a new and permanent position, effected and intended by the will and promise of God; consequently the old names were entirely abolished.
But the name Israel denoted a spiritual state determined by faith; and in Jacob’s life the natural state, determined by flesh and blood, still continued to stand side by side with this. Jacob’s new name was transmitted to his descendants, however, who were called Israel as the covenant nation. For as the blessing of their forefather’s conflict came down to them as a spiritual inheritance, so did they also enter upon the duty of preserving this inheritance by continuing in a similar conflict.
Gen 32:31 The remembrance of this wonderful conflict Jacob perpetuated in the name which he gave to the place where it had occurred, viz., Pniel or Pnuel (with the connecting wound וּ or י), because there he had seen Elohim face to face, and his soul had been delivered (from death, Gen 16:13).