"What is the meaning of Jacob wrestling with God?"
To best answer this question, it helps to know, among other things, that
deep-seated family hostilities characterized Jacob’s life. He was a
determined man; some would consider him to be ruthless. He was a con
artist, a liar, and a manipulator. In fact, the name Jacob not only means “deceiver,” but more literally it means “grabber.”
To know Jacob’s story is to know his life was one of never-ending
struggles. Though God promised Jacob that through him would come not
only a great nation, but a whole company of nations, he was a man full
of fears and anxieties. We now come to a pivotal point in his life when
he is about to meet his brother, Esau, who has vowed to kill him. All
Jacob’s struggles and fears are about to be realized. Sick of his
father-in-law's treatment, Jacob has fled Laban, only to encounter his
embittered brother, Esau. Anxious for his very life, Jacob concocted a
bribe and sent a caravan of gifts along with his women and children
across the River Jabbok in hopes of pacifying his brother. Now
physically exhausted, alone in the desert wilderness, facing sure death,
he’s divested of all his worldly possessions. In fact, he’s powerless
to control his fate. He collapses into a deep sleep on the banks of the
Jabbok River. With his father-in-law behind him and Esau before him, he
was too spent to struggle any longer.
But only then did his real struggle begin. Fleeing his family history
had been bad enough; wrestling with God Himself was a different matter
altogether. That night an angelic stranger visited Jacob. They wrestled
throughout the night until daybreak, at which point the stranger
crippled Jacob with a blow to his hip that disabled him with a limp for
the rest of his life. It was by then Jacob knew what had happened: “I
saw God face to face, and yet my life was spared” (Genesis 32:30). In the process, Jacob the deceiver received a new name, Israel,
which likely means “He struggles with God.” However, what is most
important occurs at the conclusion of that struggle. We read that God
“blessed him there” (Genesis 32:29).
In Western culture and even in our churches, we celebrate wealth and
power, strength, confidence, prestige, and victory. We despise and fear
weakness, failure, and doubt. Though we know that a measure of
vulnerability, fear, discouragement and depression come with normal
lives, we tend to view these as signs of failure or even a lack of
faith. However, we also know that in real life, naïve optimism and the
glowing accolades of glamour and success are a recipe for discontent and
despair. Sooner or later, the cold, hard realism of life catches up
with most of us. The story of Jacob pulls us back to reality.
Frederick Buechner, one the most read authors by Christian audiences,
characterizes Jacob’s divine encounter at the Jabbok River as the
“magnificent defeat of the human soul at the hands of God.” It’s in
Jacob’s story we can easily recognize our own elements of struggle:
fears, darkness, loneliness, vulnerabilities, empty feelings of
powerlessness, exhaustion and relentless pain.
Even the apostle Paul experienced similar discouragements and fears: “We
were harassed at every turn—conflicts on the outside, fears within” (2 Corinthians 7:5).
But, in truth, God does not want to leave us with our trials, our
fears, our battles in life. What we come to learn in our conflicts of
life is that God proffers us a corresponding divine gift. It is through
Him that we can receive the power of conversion and transformation, the
gift of not only surrender, but freedom, and the gifts of endurance,
faith and courage.
In the end, Jacob does what we all must do. He confronts his failures,
his weaknesses, his sins, all the things that are hurting him . . . and
faces God. Jacob wrestled with God all night. It was an exhausting
struggle that left him crippled. It was only after he came to grips with
God and ceased his struggling, realizing that he could not go on
without Him, that he received God’s blessing (Genesis 32:29).
What we learn from this remarkable incident in the life of Jacob is that
our lives are never meant to be easy. This is especially true when we
take it upon ourselves to wrestle with God and His will for our lives.
We also learn that as Christians, despite our trials and tribulations,
our strivings in this life are never devoid of God’s presence, and His
blessing inevitably follows the struggle, which can sometimes be messy
and chaotic. Real growth experiences always involve struggle and pain.
Jacob’s wrestling with God at the Jabbok that dark night reminds us of
this truth: though we may fight God and His will for us, in truth, God
is so very good. As believers in Christ, we may well struggle with Him
through the loneliness of night, but by daybreak His blessing will come.
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