Jacob and Rachel (and Leah)
Most view Jacob’s relationship with Rachel as something that could have been set up in Hollywood. And therein lies the problem. In fact, many get caught up in Jacob’s ability to wait for Rachel as opposed to the fact that he didn’t seek God what-so-ever on this matter. In contrast to his father Isaac who meditated and prayed while his wife was being sought, Jacob hooked up with the first woman he saw. Let’s get into the story.
Genesis 29 opens with Jacob heading off to the East. He is about 450 miles from home as he rolls up to Haran and runs into folks from the area. He asks them if they know Laban who is Rebekah’s brother and someone from whom he could marry as they are inside the family. The men respond that Laban lives near and is doing well and that his daughter Rachel is on her way with some sheep. Jacob then asks the men why they don’t lift the big rock off the well so that Rachel can water her sheep and they say because they want their sheep to get some water. So Jacob ignores the town tradition rolls away the rock and waters Rachel’s sheep and then moves in for a kiss.
No other place in the Bible save Song of Solomon is there any talk of kissing. But here, Jacob moved solely by Rachel’s beauty and the fact that she was someone he could marry he went in for a kiss. Now culturally this had to cause a stir. Even today, you don’t hear many men walking up to a girl at a gas station, paying for her gas and then playing tonsil hockey. So think back almost 4000 years and you can guess how well that went over with the locals as they watched this thing unfold.
So let’s recap Jacob for a moment. He deceives his father for Esau’s blessing. Esau swears to kill Jacob and Jacob runs away to Haran on the advice of his mother. No prayer involved. God does give him a little revelation on his way out that he is with him with the whole dream of Angels ascending and descending, but we have no interpretation of what that meant or what Jacob thought it meant. He travels 450 miles and we have no record of him praying. He gets to Haran and meets Rachel, sees her beauty, breaks tradition of uncovering the water well, gives a drink to Rachel’s sheep, makes out with her and then cries. Ok seriously, this is like uncovering the original chic flick.
The weird thing is that he tells Rachel he is related to her after they make out. Which makes me wonder about Rachel. Is she willing to go for any guy who can move a rock off a well to water her sheep? Anyway, Jacob and Rachel immediately head home and Laban is all excited that his nephew has shown up and they all have a month long party and Jacob is treated like a guest. Eventually, there comes a time where Laban who is a shrewd business man and knows that nobody works for free asks Jacob what his pay shall be.
Jacob’s price is Laban’s daughter. Laban is no idiot and will milk this deal for all its worth and so he demands 7 years for Jacob to marry Rachel. Jacob is all about it. Now the thing that Jacob doesn’t realize is that he has met his match as a trickster. There is no way Laban is going to marry off the second daughter without marrying off the first. And so he conspires with Leah for the switcheroo. This of course is reminiscient of the trick that Rebekah, Laban’s sister worked out with Jacob for him to get Esau’s blessing. What goes around comes around friends.
Again, there is a contrast between Isaac as a young man of prayer for the most part and Jacob as a young man who depends on his own intellect and cunning to get what he desires and this time he pays for it. The morning after the wedding, Jacob realizes he has been had and he actually married Leah.
Jacob does not divorce Leah, but rather makes a deal for Rachel. He must work another 7 years for her.
Now it isn’t until Genesis 31 that Jacob communicates with God at all, in fact, God comes to him. It seems that only Rachel and Leah are praying as God heeds their prayers for children. Jacob could not be a cruddier husband. Although, when God tells him to head back to Canaan, he obeys, but what else would you do if God talked to you?
Observations of Jacob:
Hopeless romantic looking out only for himself and the desires of his eyes.
He did not pray for where to go when he left Canaan
He did not pray for whom he should marry
He wanted to marry Rachel based solely on her beauty
Interpretations:
Jacob walked into the trap of having two wives because he never consulted God
God worked providentially through Jacob’s prayerlessness
Application:
The process of finding a wife must be something for which men diligently seek God.
Jacob never prayed and got a housefull of infighting that would later make him say to pharaoh in Genesis 47:9, “The years of my sojourning are one hundred and thirty; few and unpleasant have been the years of my life, nor have they attained the years that my fathers lived during the days of their sojourning.”
Good grief. How did he go from weeping over finding Rachel to lamenting over his whole life? God used him for his purposes, but since he rarely sought God he never found joy in the journey.
If you don’t seek God and find a wife then the one you married is the one you should be with
Jacob in spite of being fooled did not divorce Leah. This was proper. Now of course, he ended up with essentially four wives and that does not translate to our contemporary world, but what does translate is that although Jacob was deceived he did not try to get out of that marriage. Today we have too many people who felt they were deceived not by their spouse’s father, but by their spouse in presenting them to be something they never were and divorce occurs. However, once you are married in the site of God, it is a done deal. That is why it is so important to seek God on the front end.
God uses sinful messed up people to fulfill his purposes.
Whether Jacob liked it or not, God used him. He used him to build up a people for himself. He used a dysfunctional family with men and women whose faith did not necessarily reflect anything that we would want to imitate. However, that gives me hope, because I can be pretty dysfunctional too. God doesn’t need perfect people, he uses us as he pleases and if we would seek Him, I know that we would enjoy the journey so much more. So instead of our lives being absolutely miserable, we could rejoice with what God has done with our lives which our so short in comparison to how much time we will spend with him if we have come to know His Son, Jesus as our Lord and Savior.