Having been humbled and blessed by God, Jacob meets Esau in lowliness and receives unexpected peace, then continues under the covenant promise into the land where He worships the God who has preserved Him.
Jacob Meets Esau in Humility, God Grants Peace, and the Covenant Heir Settles in the Land
Having been humbled and blessed by God, Jacob meets Esau in lowliness and receives unexpected peace, then continues under the covenant promise into the land where He worships the God who has preserved Him.
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Having been humbled and blessed by God, Jacob meets Esau in lowliness and receives unexpected peace, then continues under the covenant promise into the land where He worships the God who has preserved Him.
Genesis 33 teaches that reconciliation and peace are gifts of God’s providence that often come to the humbled rather than the self-assured, and that covenant life must continue forward even after mercy has been granted. Jacob enters the chapter no longer as the manipulative man of Genesis 27, but as one who has been broken and renamed by God. His bowing seven times before Esau is a visible act of humility.
The one who once sought to dominate by grasping now approaches in lowliness. Esau’s response is one of the most surprising reversals in Genesis. Instead of attack, there is running, embracing, kissing, and weeping. The feared brother becomes the welcoming brother. This does not erase the reality of past sin, but it does demonstrate that God is able to govern human hearts and outcomes beyond what fear anticipates.
Jacob’s statement that seeing Esau’s face is like seeing the face of God is especially significant. Coming directly after Peniel, it suggests that Jacob interprets this mercy as a continuation of divine grace. The God He met in the night is the God who now grants peace in the day. Yet the chapter also shows that reconciliation is not the same as indistinguishable union.
Jacob does not travel with Esau to Seir, and He declines Esau’s escort. This is not necessarily deceitful in the same sense as earlier episodes, but it does show prudence and the continuation of distinct covenant direction. The chapter closes with Jacob’s safe arrival in Canaan, a land purchase, and an altar. These actions reveal that the real endpoint is not merely restored family feeling, but covenant settlement under God.
Thus Genesis 33 argues that God grants peace where judgment was feared, that humility is fitting for the forgiven and transformed, and that mercy in reconciliation must lead onward into covenant worship and obedient dwelling.
Genesis 33 follows immediately after the crisis and transformation of Genesis 32. Jacob has just wrestled with God, been renamed Israel, and emerged limping from Peniel with a new dependence upon divine blessing. Yet the earthly crisis remains. Esau is still approaching with four hundred men, and the unresolved tension created by Jacob’s earlier deception still hangs heavily over the narrative.
Within the Jacob cycle, Genesis 33 functions as a chapter of unexpected mercy. The feared encounter becomes a scene of reconciliation rather than violence. At the same time, the chapter does not present a naïve or total restoration of all things. Jacob and Esau are reconciled in an immediate sense, but they do not merge households or futures. Jacob continues toward the land under promise, while Esau returns to Seir.
In the wider structure of Genesis, this chapter shows that God can soften the consequences of long-standing sin and grant peace that human fear could not produce, while still maintaining covenant distinction and directional separation. It is therefore a chapter of grace, humility, prudence, reconciliation, and covenant settlement.
Jacob lifts His eyes and sees Esau coming with four hundred men. He divides the children among Leah, Rachel, and the two female servants, placing the servants and their children first, Leah and her children next, and Rachel and Joseph last. Jacob Himself goes ahead of them and bows to the ground seven times as He approaches Esau.
Esau runs to meet Jacob, embraces Him, falls on His neck, kisses Him, and they weep. Esau asks about the women and children, and Jacob presents them. Esau then asks about the droves Jacob sent ahead. Jacob explains that they were to find favor in Esau’s sight. Esau initially declines the gift, saying He has enough, but Jacob urges Him to receive it, saying that seeing Esau’s face is like seeing the face of God, since Esau has received Him favorably. Esau accepts the gift.
Esau proposes that they journey together, but Jacob declines, citing the needs of the children and the nursing flocks and herds. Esau offers some of His men as escort, but Jacob declines again. Esau returns to Seir, and Jacob journeys to Succoth, where He builds a house for Himself and shelters for His livestock.
Jacob comes safely to the city of Shechem in the land of Canaan after returning from Paddan Aram. He camps before the city, buys the piece of land where He pitches His tent from the sons of Hamor for one hundred pieces of money, and erects an altar there, calling it El-Elohe-Israel.
- 33:1–3: Jacob lifts His eyes and sees Esau coming with four hundred men. He divides the children among Leah, Rachel, and the two female servants, placing the servants and their children first, Leah and her children next, and Rachel and Joseph last. Jacob Himself goes ahead of them and bows to the ground seven times as He approaches Esau.
- 33:4–11: Esau runs to meet Jacob, embraces Him, falls on His neck, kisses Him, and they weep. Esau asks about the women and children, and Jacob presents them. Esau then asks about the droves Jacob sent ahead. Jacob explains that they were to find favor in Esau’s sight. Esau initially declines the gift, saying He has enough, but Jacob urges Him to receive it, saying that seeing Esau’s face is like seeing the face of God, since Esau has received Him favorably. Esau accepts the gift.
- 33:12–17: Esau proposes that they journey together, but Jacob declines, citing the needs of the children and the nursing flocks and herds. Esau offers some of His men as escort, but Jacob declines again. Esau returns to Seir, and Jacob journeys to Succoth, where He builds a house for Himself and shelters for His livestock.
- 33:18–20: Jacob comes safely to the city of Shechem in the land of Canaan after returning from Paddan Aram. He camps before the city, buys the piece of land where He pitches His tent from the sons of Hamor for one hundred pieces of money, and erects an altar there, calling it El-Elohe-Israel.
Theological Focus
- Reconciliation
- Providence
- Humility
- Divine Mercy
- Covenant Settlement
- Peace
- Worship
- Transformation
- Covenant Theology
- Biblical Theology
Covenant Significance
Genesis 33 is covenantally significant because Jacob, now Israel, enters the land safely after returning from Paddan Aram and begins to settle there under the promise. The chapter also shows that the covenant heir is preserved through the dangerous reunion with Esau, meaning the line of promise survives both the internal crisis of Jacob’s past and the external threat of fraternal vengeance.
The purchase of land near Shechem echoes earlier patriarchal acts of land acquisition and signals another concrete foothold in Canaan. The altar at the close is especially important, because Jacob publicly identifies the God who preserved Him as the God of Israel. This chapter therefore advances the covenant through peace, preservation, land presence, and worship.
Canonical Connections
Genesis 33 is covenantally significant because Jacob, now Israel, enters the land safely after returning from Paddan Aram and begins to settle there under the promise. The chapter also shows that the covenant heir is preserved through the dangerous reunion with Esau, meaning the line of promise survives both the internal crisis of Jacob’s past and the external threat of fraternal vengeance.
The purchase of land near Shechem echoes earlier patriarchal acts of land acquisition and signals another concrete foothold in Canaan. The altar at the close is especially important, because Jacob publicly identifies the God who preserved Him as the God of Israel. This chapter therefore advances the covenant through peace, preservation, land presence, and worship.
Genesis 27:41-45
Genesis 28:13-15
Genesis 32:1-32
Genesis 35:1-7
Psalm 27:8
Genesis 27:41-45
Genesis 32:1-32
Genesis 35:1-7
Luke 15:20-24
Cross References
Esau hated Jacob because of the blessing with which his father blessed him. Esau said in his heart, “The days of mourning for my father are at hand. Then I will kill my brother Jacob.” The words of Esau, her elder son, were told to...
so that I come again to my father’s house in peace, and Yahweh will be my God, then this stone, which I have set up for a pillar, will be God’s house. Of all that you will give me I will surely give a tenth to you.”
The work of righteousness will be peace, and the effect of righteousness, quietness and confidence forever.
When a man’s ways please Yahweh, he makes even his enemies to be at peace with him.
Genesis 33 strengthens the gospel trajectory by showing a guilty man approaching one He has wronged and receiving embrace rather than destruction. Jacob’s past is real, His fear is justified, and yet mercy meets Him. The chapter does not provide the full doctrine of atonement or reconciliation, but it does prepare the heart to understand the wonder of peace granted where judgment was feared.
In the fullness of Scripture, that peace is secured through Jesus Christ, by whom sinners who deserve wrath are received in mercy and brought into worshipful peace with God.
Primary Emphasis
Genesis 33 contributes to Christology indirectly by showing a pattern of peace and reconciliation granted through divine mercy after guilt, fear, and deserved threat. Jacob approaches in humility and receives welcome rather than destruction. This anticipates the broader biblical pattern in which guilty people find peace not because their past is denied, but because God grants mercy beyond expectation.
The chapter also contributes to the theology of worshipful arrival in the land, as the covenant heir reaches the place of promise and responds with altar-building. In the larger canonical frame, Christ is the one through whom true reconciliation, peace, and access to God are secured fully and finally.
Chapter Contribution
Genesis 33 teaches that reconciliation and peace are gifts of God’s providence that often come to the humbled rather than the self-assured, and that covenant life must continue forward even after mercy has been granted. Jacob enters the chapter no longer as the manipulative man of Genesis 27, but as one who has been broken and renamed by God. His bowing seven times before Esau is a visible act of humility.
The one who once sought to dominate by grasping now approaches in lowliness. Esau’s response is one of the most surprising reversals in Genesis. Instead of attack, there is running, embracing, kissing, and weeping. The feared brother becomes the welcoming brother. This does not erase the reality of past sin, but it does demonstrate that God is able to govern human hearts and outcomes beyond what fear anticipates.
Jacob’s statement that seeing Esau’s face is like seeing the face of God is especially significant. Coming directly after Peniel, it suggests that Jacob interprets this mercy as a continuation of divine grace. The God He met in the night is the God who now grants peace in the day. Yet the chapter also shows that reconciliation is not the same as indistinguishable union.
Jacob does not travel with Esau to Seir, and He declines Esau’s escort. This is not necessarily deceitful in the same sense as earlier episodes, but it does show prudence and the continuation of distinct covenant direction. The chapter closes with Jacob’s safe arrival in Canaan, a land purchase, and an altar. These actions reveal that the real endpoint is not merely restored family feeling, but covenant settlement under God.
Thus Genesis 33 argues that God grants peace where judgment was feared, that humility is fitting for the forgiven and transformed, and that mercy in reconciliation must lead onward into covenant worship and obedient dwelling.
Unexpected human kindness may become a visible expression of God’s prior mercy.
True repentance and growth are displayed in lowered posture, honor-giving, and yielded self-presentation.
God prepares outcomes in advance by working in hearts and circumstances beyond human control.
God can bring peace into relationships marked by deep fear, injury, and history of sin.
Reconciliation and safe return ought to culminate in public worship and acknowledgment of God.
4 Imperatives
- Receive the gift
- Travel at a pace fitting the vulnerable
- Walk in peace without abandoning wisdom
- Respond to mercy with altar and confession
Sense bow down, prostrate oneself
Definition bow down, prostrate oneself
Why it matters Jacob’s repeated bowing dramatizes His humility and marks a stark contrast with the grasping, self-advancing man of earlier chapters.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense favor, grace
Definition favor, grace
Why it matters Jacob repeatedly speaks of finding favor in Esau’s sight, showing His awareness that peace must come as received grace rather than demanded right.
Sense face, presence
Definition face, presence
Why it matters Jacob’s statement about seeing Esau’s face like seeing the face of God ties the reconciliation scene directly back to Peniel and frames peace as divine mercy.
Sense accept favorably, be pleased with
Definition accept favorably, be pleased with
Why it matters Jacob interprets Esau’s favorable reception as a gracious acceptance that mirrors God’s merciful dealing with Him.
Sense gift, tribute, offering
Definition gift, tribute, offering
Why it matters The present Jacob urges Esau to receive is part of His effort to seek peace and reflects His desire to approach in lowliness rather than dominance.
Sense children / little ones
Definition children / little ones
Why it matters Jacob’s concern for the children and nursing flocks explains His prudential separation from Esau and highlights His pastoral responsibility over the household.
Sense booths, shelters
Definition booths, shelters
Why it matters Jacob’s move to Succoth and the building of shelters reflects His settling movement and pastoral care of the household after reconciliation.
Sense safe, whole, in peace
Definition safe, whole, in peace
Why it matters Jacob’s safe arrival at Shechem signals the fulfillment of God’s preserving promise from Bethel and Peniel.
Sense buy, acquire
Definition buy, acquire
Why it matters Jacob’s purchase of land near Shechem signals concrete settlement under promise and echoes patriarchal acts of land foothold acquisition.
Sense altar
Definition altar
Why it matters The altar marks Jacob’s arrival not merely as survival, but as worshipful covenant settlement in the land.
Sense God, the God of Israel
Definition God, the God of Israel
Why it matters This altar-name is a major theological confession. Jacob publicly identifies the God who preserved and renamed Him as the God of Israel, binding worship to covenant identity.
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 33 warns against assuming that reconciliation means all distinctions disappear, and it also reminds readers that peace received by grace should lead to worship and covenant faithfulness, not careless drift.
- Treating Esau’s welcome as though it proves all covenant distinctions between Jacob and Esau have vanished, when the chapter still preserves separate futures and directions.
- Reading Jacob’s humility as mere diplomacy while ignoring how Genesis 32 has already transformed the man who now bows before Esau.
- Assuming the chapter erases the moral seriousness of Jacob’s past deception, rather than showing mercy in the wake of that past.
- Flattening Jacob’s statement about seeing the face of God in Esau’s face into mere flattery, when it carries theological weight in light of Peniel.
- Missing the significance of the land purchase and altar at the end, as though the chapter’s main point is emotional reunion alone.
- Treating prudential separation after reconciliation as proof that reconciliation was false, instead of recognizing that peace and distinct callings can coexist.
- Where do You most fear the consequences of past wrongs, and how does this chapter deepen Your trust that God can grant peace beyond what You expect?
- What does Jacob’s posture of bowing and going ahead of His family teach You about humility when seeking reconciliation?
- How do You distinguish between genuine peace and the unwise collapse of all boundaries or distinctions?
- Have You turned moments of mercy into worship, as Jacob does with the altar, or have You merely moved on?
- What relationship in Your life needs both humility and prudence rather than either avoidance or naïve merging?
- Preach Genesis 33 as a chapter of unexpected mercy, showing that the God who met Jacob at Peniel also governs the face of Esau the next morning.
- Use Jacob’s humility to teach that reconciliation often requires lowliness, not self-defense, posturing, or entitlement.
- Encourage believers who fear meeting the consequences of past failures that God is able to go before them and soften what they most dread.
- Help the church understand that reconciliation does not always mean full relational closeness or identical paths, and that peace may coexist with wise separation.
- Use the closing altar to teach that every major deliverance and mercy should move us toward explicit worship rather than quiet relief alone.
- Show that peace with man must not eclipse covenant faithfulness to God, since Jacob’s true destination remains life in the land under divine promise.
- Offer pastoral wisdom for restored but still delicate relationships, where grace, gratitude, and boundaries may all be necessary.
Genesis 33 strengthens the gospel trajectory by showing a guilty man approaching one He has wronged and receiving embrace rather than destruction. Jacob’s past is real, His fear is justified, and yet mercy meets Him. The chapter does not provide the full doctrine of atonement or reconciliation, but it does prepare the heart to understand the wonder of peace granted where judgment was feared.
In the fullness of Scripture, that peace is secured through Jesus Christ, by whom sinners who deserve wrath are received in mercy and brought into worshipful peace with God.
Genesis 33 strengthens the gospel trajectory by showing a guilty man approaching one He has wronged and receiving embrace rather than destruction. Jacob’s past is real, His fear is justified, and yet mercy meets Him. The chapter does not provide the full doctrine of atonement or reconciliation, but it does prepare the heart to understand the wonder of peace granted where judgment was feared.
In the fullness of Scripture, that peace is secured through Jesus Christ, by whom sinners who deserve wrath are received in mercy and brought into worshipful peace with God.
Genesis 33 strengthens the gospel trajectory by showing a guilty man approaching one He has wronged and receiving embrace rather than destruction. Jacob’s past is real, His fear is justified, and yet mercy meets Him. The chapter does not provide the full doctrine of atonement or reconciliation, but it does prepare the heart to understand the wonder of peace granted where judgment was feared.
In the fullness of Scripture, that peace is secured through Jesus Christ, by whom sinners who deserve wrath are received in mercy and brought into worshipful peace with God.
Genesis 33 strengthens the gospel trajectory by showing a guilty man approaching one He has wronged and receiving embrace rather than destruction. Jacob’s past is real, His fear is justified, and yet mercy meets Him. The chapter does not provide the full doctrine of atonement or reconciliation, but it does prepare the heart to understand the wonder of peace granted where judgment was feared.
In the fullness of Scripture, that peace is secured through Jesus Christ, by whom sinners who deserve wrath are received in mercy and brought into worshipful peace with God.
Genesis 33 strengthens the gospel trajectory by showing a guilty man approaching one He has wronged and receiving embrace rather than destruction. Jacob’s past is real, His fear is justified, and yet mercy meets Him. The chapter does not provide the full doctrine of atonement or reconciliation, but it does prepare the heart to understand the wonder of peace granted where judgment was feared.
In the fullness of Scripture, that peace is secured through Jesus Christ, by whom sinners who deserve wrath are received in mercy and brought into worshipful peace with God.
4
Moderate
- Receive the gift
- Travel at a pace fitting the vulnerable
- Walk in peace without abandoning wisdom
- Respond to mercy with altar and confession
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
Genesis 33 is covenantally significant because Jacob, now Israel, enters the land safely after returning from Paddan Aram and begins to settle there under the promise. The chapter also shows that the covenant heir is preserved through the dangerous reunion with Esau, meaning the line of promise survives both the internal crisis of Jacob’s past and the external threat of fraternal vengeance.
The purchase of land near Shechem echoes earlier patriarchal acts of land acquisition and signals another concrete foothold in Canaan. The altar at the close is especially important, because Jacob publicly identifies the God who preserved Him as the God of Israel. This chapter therefore advances the covenant through peace, preservation, land presence, and worship.
Genesis 33 strengthens the gospel trajectory by showing a guilty man approaching one He has wronged and receiving embrace rather than destruction. Jacob’s past is real, His fear is justified, and yet mercy meets Him. The chapter does not provide the full doctrine of atonement or reconciliation, but it does prepare the heart to understand the wonder of peace granted where judgment was feared.
In the fullness of Scripture, that peace is secured through Jesus Christ, by whom sinners who deserve wrath are received in mercy and brought into worshipful peace with God.
Focus Points
- Reconciliation
- Providence
- Humility
- Divine Mercy
- Covenant Settlement
- Peace
- Worship
- Transformation
- Covenant Theology
- Biblical Theology
Cross References
Passages
Chapter opening: Genesis 33:1-20
Gen 33:1-4 Meeting with Esau. - As Jacob went forward, he saw Esau coming to meet him with his 400 mean. He then arranged his wives and children in such a manner, that the maids with their children went first, Leah with hers in the middle, and Rachel with Joseph behind, thus forming a long procession. But he himself went in front, and met Esau with sevenfold obeisance.
ארצה ישׁתּחוּ does not denote complete prostration, like ארצה אפּים in Gen 19:1, but a deep Oriental bow, in which the head approaches the ground, but does not touch it. By this manifestation of deep reverence, Jacob hoped to win his brother’s heart. He humbled himself before him as the elder, with the feeling that he had formerly sinned against him. Esau, on the other hand, “had a comparatively better, but not so tender a conscience.
” At the sight of Jacob he was carried away by the natural feelings of brotherly affection, and running up to him, embraced him, fell on his neck, and kissed him; and they both wept. The puncta extraordinaria above ישּׁקהוּ are probably intended to mark the word as suspicious. They “are like a note of interrogation, questioning the genuineness of this kiss; but without any reason” ( Del .)
Even if there was still some malice in Esau’s heart, it was overcome by the humility with which his brother met him, so that he allowed free course to the generous emotions of his heart; all the more, because the “roving life” which suited his nature had procured him such wealth and power, that he was quite equal to his brother in earthly possessions.
Gen 33:1-4 Meeting with Esau. - As Jacob went forward, he saw Esau coming to meet him with his 400 mean. He then arranged his wives and children in such a manner, that the maids with their children went first, Leah with hers in the middle, and Rachel with Joseph behind, thus forming a long procession. But he himself went in front, and met Esau with sevenfold obeisance.
ארצה ישׁתּחוּ does not denote complete prostration, like ארצה אפּים in Gen 19:1, but a deep Oriental bow, in which the head approaches the ground, but does not touch it. By this manifestation of deep reverence, Jacob hoped to win his brother’s heart. He humbled himself before him as the elder, with the feeling that he had formerly sinned against him. Esau, on the other hand, “had a comparatively better, but not so tender a conscience.
” At the sight of Jacob he was carried away by the natural feelings of brotherly affection, and running up to him, embraced him, fell on his neck, and kissed him; and they both wept. The puncta extraordinaria above ישּׁקהוּ are probably intended to mark the word as suspicious. They “are like a note of interrogation, questioning the genuineness of this kiss; but without any reason” ( Del .)
Even if there was still some malice in Esau’s heart, it was overcome by the humility with which his brother met him, so that he allowed free course to the generous emotions of his heart; all the more, because the “roving life” which suited his nature had procured him such wealth and power, that he was quite equal to his brother in earthly possessions.
Gen 33:1-4 Meeting with Esau. - As Jacob went forward, he saw Esau coming to meet him with his 400 mean. He then arranged his wives and children in such a manner, that the maids with their children went first, Leah with hers in the middle, and Rachel with Joseph behind, thus forming a long procession. But he himself went in front, and met Esau with sevenfold obeisance.
ארצה ישׁתּחוּ does not denote complete prostration, like ארצה אפּים in Gen 19:1, but a deep Oriental bow, in which the head approaches the ground, but does not touch it. By this manifestation of deep reverence, Jacob hoped to win his brother’s heart. He humbled himself before him as the elder, with the feeling that he had formerly sinned against him. Esau, on the other hand, “had a comparatively better, but not so tender a conscience.
” At the sight of Jacob he was carried away by the natural feelings of brotherly affection, and running up to him, embraced him, fell on his neck, and kissed him; and they both wept. The puncta extraordinaria above ישּׁקהוּ are probably intended to mark the word as suspicious. They “are like a note of interrogation, questioning the genuineness of this kiss; but without any reason” ( Del .)
Even if there was still some malice in Esau’s heart, it was overcome by the humility with which his brother met him, so that he allowed free course to the generous emotions of his heart; all the more, because the “roving life” which suited his nature had procured him such wealth and power, that he was quite equal to his brother in earthly possessions.
Gen 33:1-4 Meeting with Esau. - As Jacob went forward, he saw Esau coming to meet him with his 400 mean. He then arranged his wives and children in such a manner, that the maids with their children went first, Leah with hers in the middle, and Rachel with Joseph behind, thus forming a long procession. But he himself went in front, and met Esau with sevenfold obeisance.
ארצה ישׁתּחוּ does not denote complete prostration, like ארצה אפּים in Gen 19:1, but a deep Oriental bow, in which the head approaches the ground, but does not touch it. By this manifestation of deep reverence, Jacob hoped to win his brother’s heart. He humbled himself before him as the elder, with the feeling that he had formerly sinned against him. Esau, on the other hand, “had a comparatively better, but not so tender a conscience.
” At the sight of Jacob he was carried away by the natural feelings of brotherly affection, and running up to him, embraced him, fell on his neck, and kissed him; and they both wept. The puncta extraordinaria above ישּׁקהוּ are probably intended to mark the word as suspicious. They “are like a note of interrogation, questioning the genuineness of this kiss; but without any reason” ( Del .)
Even if there was still some malice in Esau’s heart, it was overcome by the humility with which his brother met him, so that he allowed free course to the generous emotions of his heart; all the more, because the “roving life” which suited his nature had procured him such wealth and power, that he was quite equal to his brother in earthly possessions.
Gen 33:5-7 When his eyes fell upon the women and children, he inquired respecting them, “ Whom hast thou here? ” And Jacob replied, “ The children with whom Elohim hath favoured me .” Upon this, the mothers and their children approached in order, making reverential obeisance. חנן with double acc. “graciously to present.” Elohim: “ to avoid reminding Esau of the blessing of Jehovah , which had occasioned his absence” ( Del .).
Gen 33:5-7 When his eyes fell upon the women and children, he inquired respecting them, “ Whom hast thou here? ” And Jacob replied, “ The children with whom Elohim hath favoured me .” Upon this, the mothers and their children approached in order, making reverential obeisance. חנן with double acc. “graciously to present.” Elohim: “ to avoid reminding Esau of the blessing of Jehovah , which had occasioned his absence” ( Del .).
Gen 33:5-7 When his eyes fell upon the women and children, he inquired respecting them, “ Whom hast thou here? ” And Jacob replied, “ The children with whom Elohim hath favoured me .” Upon this, the mothers and their children approached in order, making reverential obeisance. חנן with double acc. “graciously to present.” Elohim: “ to avoid reminding Esau of the blessing of Jehovah , which had occasioned his absence” ( Del .).
Gen 33:8-9 And he said, These are to find grace in the sight of my lord. Esau then inquired about the camp that had met him, i.e., the presents of cattle that were sent to meet him, and refused to accept them, until Jacob’s urgent persuasion eventually induced him to do so.
Gen 33:8-9 And he said, These are to find grace in the sight of my lord. Esau then inquired about the camp that had met him, i.e., the presents of cattle that were sent to meet him, and refused to accept them, until Jacob’s urgent persuasion eventually induced him to do so.
Gen 33:10 “ For therefore, ” sc., to be able to offer thee this present, “ have I come to see thy face, as man seeth the face of God, and thou hast received me favourably .” The thought is this: In thy countenance I have been met with divine (heavenly) friendliness (cf. 1Sa 29:9; 2Sa 14:17). Jacob might say this without cringing, since he “must have discerned the work of God in the unexpected change in his brother’s disposition towards him, and in his brother’s friendliness a reflection of this divine.”
Gen 33:11 Blessing: i.e., the present, expressive of his desire to bless, as in 1Sa 25:27; 1Sa 30:26. הבאת: for הבאה, as in Deu 31:29; Isa 7:14, etc.; sometimes also in verbs הל, Lev 25:21; Lev 26:34. כל ישׁ־לי: “ I have all ” (not all kinds of things); viz as the heir of the divine promise.
Gen 33:12-15 Lastly, Esau proposed to accompany Jacob on his journey. But Jacob politely declined not only his own company, but also the escort, which Esau afterwards offered him, of a portion of his attendants; the latter as being unnecessary, the former as likely to be injurious to his flocks. This did not spring from any feeling of distrust; and the ground assigned was no mere pretext.
He needed no military guard, “for he knew that he was defended by the hosts of God;” and the reason given was a very good one: “ My lord knoweth that the children are tender, and the flocks and herds that are milking (עלות from עוּל, giving milk or suckling) are upon me ” (עלי): i. e. , because they are giving milk they are an object of especial anxiety to me; “ and if one should overdrive them a single day, all the sheep would die .
” A caravan, with delicate children and cattle that required care, could not possibly keep pace with Esau and his horsemen, without taking harm. And Jacob could not expect his brother to accommodate himself to the rate at which he was travelling. For this reason he wished Esau to go on first; and he would drive gently behind, “ according to the foot of the cattle (מלאכה possessions = cattle), and according to the foot of the children, ” i.
e. , “according to the pace at which the cattle and the children could go” ( Luther ). “ Till I come to my lord to Seir: ” these words are not to be understood as meaning that he intended to go direct to Seir; consequently they were not a wilful deception for the purpose of getting rid of Esau. Jacob’s destination was Canaan, and in Canaan probably Hebron, where his father Isaac still lived.
From thence he may have thought of paying a visit to Esau in Seir. Whether he carried out this intention or not, we cannot tell; for we have not a record of all that Jacob did, but only of the principal events of his life. We afterwards find them both meeting together as friends at their father’s funeral (Gen 35:29). Again, the attitude of inferiority which Jacob assumed in his conversation with Esau, addressing him as lord, and speaking of himself as servant, was simply an act of courtesy suited to the circumstances, in which he paid to Esau the respect due to the head of a powerful band; since he could not conscientiously have maintained the attitude of a brother, when inwardly and spiritually, in spite of Esau’s friendly meeting, they were so completely separated the one from the other.
Gen 33:12-15 Lastly, Esau proposed to accompany Jacob on his journey. But Jacob politely declined not only his own company, but also the escort, which Esau afterwards offered him, of a portion of his attendants; the latter as being unnecessary, the former as likely to be injurious to his flocks. This did not spring from any feeling of distrust; and the ground assigned was no mere pretext.
He needed no military guard, “for he knew that he was defended by the hosts of God;” and the reason given was a very good one: “ My lord knoweth that the children are tender, and the flocks and herds that are milking (עלות from עוּל, giving milk or suckling) are upon me ” (עלי): i. e. , because they are giving milk they are an object of especial anxiety to me; “ and if one should overdrive them a single day, all the sheep would die .
” A caravan, with delicate children and cattle that required care, could not possibly keep pace with Esau and his horsemen, without taking harm. And Jacob could not expect his brother to accommodate himself to the rate at which he was travelling. For this reason he wished Esau to go on first; and he would drive gently behind, “ according to the foot of the cattle (מלאכה possessions = cattle), and according to the foot of the children, ” i.
e. , “according to the pace at which the cattle and the children could go” ( Luther ). “ Till I come to my lord to Seir: ” these words are not to be understood as meaning that he intended to go direct to Seir; consequently they were not a wilful deception for the purpose of getting rid of Esau. Jacob’s destination was Canaan, and in Canaan probably Hebron, where his father Isaac still lived.
From thence he may have thought of paying a visit to Esau in Seir. Whether he carried out this intention or not, we cannot tell; for we have not a record of all that Jacob did, but only of the principal events of his life. We afterwards find them both meeting together as friends at their father’s funeral (Gen 35:29). Again, the attitude of inferiority which Jacob assumed in his conversation with Esau, addressing him as lord, and speaking of himself as servant, was simply an act of courtesy suited to the circumstances, in which he paid to Esau the respect due to the head of a powerful band; since he could not conscientiously have maintained the attitude of a brother, when inwardly and spiritually, in spite of Esau’s friendly meeting, they were so completely separated the one from the other.
Gen 33:12-15 Lastly, Esau proposed to accompany Jacob on his journey. But Jacob politely declined not only his own company, but also the escort, which Esau afterwards offered him, of a portion of his attendants; the latter as being unnecessary, the former as likely to be injurious to his flocks. This did not spring from any feeling of distrust; and the ground assigned was no mere pretext.
He needed no military guard, “for he knew that he was defended by the hosts of God;” and the reason given was a very good one: “ My lord knoweth that the children are tender, and the flocks and herds that are milking (עלות from עוּל, giving milk or suckling) are upon me ” (עלי): i. e. , because they are giving milk they are an object of especial anxiety to me; “ and if one should overdrive them a single day, all the sheep would die .
” A caravan, with delicate children and cattle that required care, could not possibly keep pace with Esau and his horsemen, without taking harm. And Jacob could not expect his brother to accommodate himself to the rate at which he was travelling. For this reason he wished Esau to go on first; and he would drive gently behind, “ according to the foot of the cattle (מלאכה possessions = cattle), and according to the foot of the children, ” i.
e. , “according to the pace at which the cattle and the children could go” ( Luther ). “ Till I come to my lord to Seir: ” these words are not to be understood as meaning that he intended to go direct to Seir; consequently they were not a wilful deception for the purpose of getting rid of Esau. Jacob’s destination was Canaan, and in Canaan probably Hebron, where his father Isaac still lived.
From thence he may have thought of paying a visit to Esau in Seir. Whether he carried out this intention or not, we cannot tell; for we have not a record of all that Jacob did, but only of the principal events of his life. We afterwards find them both meeting together as friends at their father’s funeral (Gen 35:29). Again, the attitude of inferiority which Jacob assumed in his conversation with Esau, addressing him as lord, and speaking of himself as servant, was simply an act of courtesy suited to the circumstances, in which he paid to Esau the respect due to the head of a powerful band; since he could not conscientiously have maintained the attitude of a brother, when inwardly and spiritually, in spite of Esau’s friendly meeting, they were so completely separated the one from the other.
Gen 33:12-15 Lastly, Esau proposed to accompany Jacob on his journey. But Jacob politely declined not only his own company, but also the escort, which Esau afterwards offered him, of a portion of his attendants; the latter as being unnecessary, the former as likely to be injurious to his flocks. This did not spring from any feeling of distrust; and the ground assigned was no mere pretext.
He needed no military guard, “for he knew that he was defended by the hosts of God;” and the reason given was a very good one: “ My lord knoweth that the children are tender, and the flocks and herds that are milking (עלות from עוּל, giving milk or suckling) are upon me ” (עלי): i. e. , because they are giving milk they are an object of especial anxiety to me; “ and if one should overdrive them a single day, all the sheep would die .
” A caravan, with delicate children and cattle that required care, could not possibly keep pace with Esau and his horsemen, without taking harm. And Jacob could not expect his brother to accommodate himself to the rate at which he was travelling. For this reason he wished Esau to go on first; and he would drive gently behind, “ according to the foot of the cattle (מלאכה possessions = cattle), and according to the foot of the children, ” i.
e. , “according to the pace at which the cattle and the children could go” ( Luther ). “ Till I come to my lord to Seir: ” these words are not to be understood as meaning that he intended to go direct to Seir; consequently they were not a wilful deception for the purpose of getting rid of Esau. Jacob’s destination was Canaan, and in Canaan probably Hebron, where his father Isaac still lived.
From thence he may have thought of paying a visit to Esau in Seir. Whether he carried out this intention or not, we cannot tell; for we have not a record of all that Jacob did, but only of the principal events of his life. We afterwards find them both meeting together as friends at their father’s funeral (Gen 35:29). Again, the attitude of inferiority which Jacob assumed in his conversation with Esau, addressing him as lord, and speaking of himself as servant, was simply an act of courtesy suited to the circumstances, in which he paid to Esau the respect due to the head of a powerful band; since he could not conscientiously have maintained the attitude of a brother, when inwardly and spiritually, in spite of Esau’s friendly meeting, they were so completely separated the one from the other.
Gen 33:16-17 Esau set off the same day for Mount Seir, whilst Jacob proceeded to Succoth, where he built himself a house and made succoth for his flocks, i. e. , probably not huts of branches and shrubs, but hurdles or folds made of twigs woven together. According to Jos 13:27, Succoth was in the valley of the Jordan, and was allotted to the tribe of Gad, as part of the district of the Jordan, “on the other side Jordan eastward;” and this is confirmed by Jdg 8:4-5, and by Jerome ( quaest.
ad h. l. ): Sochoth usque hodie civitas trans Jordanem in parte Scythopoleos . Consequently it cannot be identified with the Sâcut on the western side of the Jordan, to the south of Beisan, above the Wady el Mâlih . - How long Jacob remained in Succoth cannot be determined; but we may conclude that he stayed there some years from the circumstance, that by erecting a house and huts he prepared for a lengthened stay.
The motives which induced him to remain there are also unknown to us. But when Knobel adduces the fact, that Jacob came to Canaan for the purpose of visiting Isaac (Gen 31:18), as a reason why it is improbable that he continued long at Succoth, he forgets that Jacob could visit his father from Succoth just as well as from Shechem, and that, with the number of people and cattle that he had about him, it was impossible that he should join and subordinate himself to Isaac’s household, after having attained through his past life and the promises of God a position of patriarchal independence.
Gen 33:16-17 Esau set off the same day for Mount Seir, whilst Jacob proceeded to Succoth, where he built himself a house and made succoth for his flocks, i. e. , probably not huts of branches and shrubs, but hurdles or folds made of twigs woven together. According to Jos 13:27, Succoth was in the valley of the Jordan, and was allotted to the tribe of Gad, as part of the district of the Jordan, “on the other side Jordan eastward;” and this is confirmed by Jdg 8:4-5, and by Jerome ( quaest.
ad h. l. ): Sochoth usque hodie civitas trans Jordanem in parte Scythopoleos . Consequently it cannot be identified with the Sâcut on the western side of the Jordan, to the south of Beisan, above the Wady el Mâlih . - How long Jacob remained in Succoth cannot be determined; but we may conclude that he stayed there some years from the circumstance, that by erecting a house and huts he prepared for a lengthened stay.
The motives which induced him to remain there are also unknown to us. But when Knobel adduces the fact, that Jacob came to Canaan for the purpose of visiting Isaac (Gen 31:18), as a reason why it is improbable that he continued long at Succoth, he forgets that Jacob could visit his father from Succoth just as well as from Shechem, and that, with the number of people and cattle that he had about him, it was impossible that he should join and subordinate himself to Isaac’s household, after having attained through his past life and the promises of God a position of patriarchal independence.
Gen 33:18-20 From Succoth, Jacob crossed a ford of the Jordan, and “ came in safety to the city of Sichem in the land of Canaan . ” שׁלם is not a proper name meaning “to Shalem,” as it is rendered by Luther (and Eng. Vers. , Tr .) after the lxx, Vulg. , etc. ; but an adjective, safe, peaceful, equivalent to בּשׁלום, “in peace,” in Gen 28:21, to which there is an evident allusion.
What Jacob had asked for in his vow at Bethel, before his departure from Canaan, was now fulfilled. He had returned in safety “to the land of Canaan;” Succoth, therefore, did not belong to the land of Canaan, but must have been on the eastern side of the Jordan. שׁכם עיר, lit. , city of Shechem; so called from Shechem the son of the Hivite prince Hamor (Gen 33:19, Gen 34:2.)
, who founded it and called it by the name of his son, since it was not in existence in Abraham’s time (vid. , Gen 12:6). Jacob pitched his tent before the town, and then bought the piece of ground upon which he encamped from the sons of Hamor for 100 Kesita . קשׂיטה is not a piece of silver of the value of a lamb (according to the ancient versions), but a quantity of silver weighed out, of considerable, though not exactly determinable value: cf.
Ges. thes. s. v . This purchase showed that Jacob, in reliance upon the promise of God, regarded Canaan as his own home and the home of his seed. This piece of field, which fell to the lot of the sons of Joseph, and where Joseph’s bones were buried (Jos 24:32), was, according to tradition, the plain which stretches out at the south-eastern opening of the valley of Shechem, where Jacob’s well is still pointed out (Joh 4:6), also Joseph’s grave, a Mahometan wely (grave) two or three hundred paces to the north (Rob.
Pal. iii. 95ff.) Jacob also erected an altar, as Abraham had previously done after his entrance into Canaan (Gen 12:7), and called it El-Elohe-Israel , “ God (the mighty) is the God of Israel, ” to set forth in this name the spiritual acquisition of his previous life, and according to his vow (Gen 28:21) to give glory to the “God of Israel” (as he called Jehovah , with reference to the name given to him at Gen 32:29), for having proved Himself to be El, a mighty God, during his long absence, and that it might serve as a memorial for his descendants.
Gen 33:18-20 From Succoth, Jacob crossed a ford of the Jordan, and “ came in safety to the city of Sichem in the land of Canaan . ” שׁלם is not a proper name meaning “to Shalem,” as it is rendered by Luther (and Eng. Vers. , Tr .) after the lxx, Vulg. , etc. ; but an adjective, safe, peaceful, equivalent to בּשׁלום, “in peace,” in Gen 28:21, to which there is an evident allusion.
What Jacob had asked for in his vow at Bethel, before his departure from Canaan, was now fulfilled. He had returned in safety “to the land of Canaan;” Succoth, therefore, did not belong to the land of Canaan, but must have been on the eastern side of the Jordan. שׁכם עיר, lit. , city of Shechem; so called from Shechem the son of the Hivite prince Hamor (Gen 33:19, Gen 34:2.)
, who founded it and called it by the name of his son, since it was not in existence in Abraham’s time (vid. , Gen 12:6). Jacob pitched his tent before the town, and then bought the piece of ground upon which he encamped from the sons of Hamor for 100 Kesita . קשׂיטה is not a piece of silver of the value of a lamb (according to the ancient versions), but a quantity of silver weighed out, of considerable, though not exactly determinable value: cf.
Ges. thes. s. v . This purchase showed that Jacob, in reliance upon the promise of God, regarded Canaan as his own home and the home of his seed. This piece of field, which fell to the lot of the sons of Joseph, and where Joseph’s bones were buried (Jos 24:32), was, according to tradition, the plain which stretches out at the south-eastern opening of the valley of Shechem, where Jacob’s well is still pointed out (Joh 4:6), also Joseph’s grave, a Mahometan wely (grave) two or three hundred paces to the north (Rob.
Pal. iii. 95ff.) Jacob also erected an altar, as Abraham had previously done after his entrance into Canaan (Gen 12:7), and called it El-Elohe-Israel , “ God (the mighty) is the God of Israel, ” to set forth in this name the spiritual acquisition of his previous life, and according to his vow (Gen 28:21) to give glory to the “God of Israel” (as he called Jehovah , with reference to the name given to him at Gen 32:29), for having proved Himself to be El, a mighty God, during his long absence, and that it might serve as a memorial for his descendants.