EMBLEMS OF JACOB'S PILGRIMAGE
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Genesis 25:26
5-18-58 8:15 a.m.
You
are sharing with us the services of the First Baptist Church in Dallas, and
this is the pastor bringing the 8:15 o’clock Sunday morning message. It is
entitled The Emblems, the symbols of Jacob’s Pilgrimage. Now we
turn in our Bibles to the twenty-fifth chapter of the Book of Genesis.
Last Sunday morning we concluded with the beautiful story of the servant who
set out from the father in behalf of the son in seeking a bride for Rebekah,
seeking a bride for Isaac. And the servant comes back with Rebekah, and
Isaac and Rebekah are joined together in holy wedlock: the marriage of the Lamb
and the bride of the Lamb, His church.
Now
we begin this morning in the next chapter, the twenty-fifth chapter of the Book
of Genesis. And this morning's message is a summary view of the last of
this patriarch, Jacob. Jacob is more like us than any one of the other of
the patriarchs, full of weakness and human frailty. Through the hard
discipline of life and by the grace of God, he is brought to a place of
preferment in the household of the Lord.
Jacob
is as sorry a prospect as is any one of us. In the forty-first chapter of
Isaiah and the fourteenth verse, God calls Jacob a worm. "Thou worm
Jacob." Because of his groveling, and his crookedness, and his
chicanery, and his cheating, and his worthlessness, God calls Jacob a
worm. Yet, by the grace of God, through a long and wearisome pilgrimage, He
made of the worm Jacob, the prince Israel.
If
ever you're discouraged about yourself, or if ever you're discouraged about
somebody whom you love and for whom you pray, it will do you good to follow the
life of this cheat, and this crook, and this supplanter, who could have had all
of the promises of God in his patience, in his waiting. But instead of
achieving these things by trust and by a life of waiting, he adds to it all
kinds of devious, circuitous methods, works.
Finally,
God had to do away with his works. Finally, God had to do away with the
man himself until he came ultimately just to depend upon the grace and the
promise of the Lord, and like a worm, to fall helpless upon the arms of God.
So
I repeat: This man Jacob is more like us in infirmity, his humanity, his weakness
than any other patriarch; and yet of the patriarchs, it is this man that truly
and actually heads the people of God. They're not called
Abrahamites. They're not called Isaac-ites. But the chosen family
and race and nation of God is called Israelites after Jacob's new name.
So
this morning, we're going to take several of the things that you find in
Jacob's life as symbols, as emblems of his character, of his story, what he
was, and what ultimately he became. Now, the first emblem, the first
symbol, is in Genesis 25:26. The twenty-fifth chapter of Genesis and the twenty-sixth
verse.
Now,
Rebekah is to be the mother of twins. And God predicts their
future. “And when her days to be delivered were fulfilled, behold, there
were twins in her womb. And the first was born red, all over like an
hairy garment; and they called his name,” Red, “Esau,” Edom, Red, the Big Red.
“And after him was born his brother. And his hand took hold on Esau's
heel; and his name was called,” Supplanter: “Jacob.”
Now,
that's the first symbol. That's the first emblem. And that is as
true a picture of Jacob's life as you could have drawn with a pencil in
imagination, born with his hand on his brother's heel. And they named him
Supplanter. Watch him. He'll cheat you out of your house, and out
of your home, out of every acre of land you possess, and out of cow and calf
and sheep and goat. Watch him. His hand is out. Jacob, Supplanter.
And the rest of that story until God changed his nature is a story of the
supplanter Jacob.
Laban,
Rebekah's brother, up there in Padan Aram, up there in the head of the
Mesopotamian Valley, Laban thought he was smart. He thought he knew how
to drive a good bargain. But Laban was a child when Jacob got through
with him. This man Jacob is as shrewd, and as keen, and as smart, as full
of guile and shrewdness as any man you ever saw in your life. He'd come
into this town in rags, barefoot, peddling something from a load on his
back. And after he'd been here in the city of Dallas twenty years, he'd
own all the banks, he'd own all the stores, he'd own all the property, and
everybody in this town would be working for supplanter Jacob.
It's
no accident that the Jewish people came to be shrewd as they are and smart as
they are and traders as they are. They are Israelites. They're true
children of Jacob. That's the first emblem: born into this world with his
hand on his brother's heel, and they called his name Jacob, Supplanter.
But
there's also another thing in that, that God knew and God saw. Jacob not
only had an eye for the shrewdness of bargains, for making a deal that was
highly profitable, but he also had a spirit that coveted the blessings of
God. Isn't that a strange admixture in a man's character, aspiring to
achieve and to win and to get ahead in the material world trafficking,
merchandising? But he also had a sensitive heart toward the promised,
covenanted blessings of his father Isaac and his grandfather Abraham. And
you're going to see that now in the second emblem.
The
second emblem in Jacob's life is in the same twenty-fifth chapter. It's a
mess of pottage, it's made out of lentils. It's well seasoned. And
as it cooks and it boils and it steams, the odor is appetizing. And in
comes Esau, the Big Red. They named him Edom. Big Red, big, outdoor
man; his father loved him. No wonder his father loved him. There's
not a man in this earth that doesn't like a big, vigorous outdoor he-man of a
boy; run a race like a deer, throw a discus a hundred yards, shoot an
arrow straight through to a deer's heart, stalk the prey, a boar hunter, a man
of the field, knows exactly how to fish, big, fine strapping fellow and the
best scout in the world. Make you mad just like that; get over it just
like that. Volatile, lovable, easy going --you couldn't help but love
Esau. Esau was the finest animal you ever saw in your life.
Jacob?
His mother loved Jacob. He was always drying the dishes for her. He
was always sweeping out the house for her. He didn't go swimming; he
might get drowned. He didn't go hunting; he might get hurt. He
didn't play with the boys; he might pick up bad language. He was a
smooth-skinned--not hairy, like Esau--delicately-shaped, beautiful child who
followed his mother around, and his mother loved him.
Well
I don't blame Rebekah for loving Jacob. Wouldn't it be wonderful to have
a boy that would dry the dishes for you and like it? Make up the bed for
you and enjoy it? Sweep out the house for you and delight in it?
Run errands for you to the grocery store and not grumble? Wouldn't that
be wonderful to have a boy like that? And Rebekah loved him.
So
Esau comes in from the field. He's been out stalking the prey and hasn't
found any game. And days being gone and nights sleeping with the dew,
he's hungry. He's ravishingly hungry! When he comes in, there is
that pottage, oh, flavored so well, the aroma would drive a hungry man stark
crazy. And he says to Jacob, "Jacob, I'm about to die of
hunger. Jacob, give me some of that pottage." And Jacob--what
was that first emblem? With his hand out, supplanting. And Jacob
says, "You give me your birthright and I'll, I'll let you eat of this
savory pottage."
Now,
why did Jacob want the birthright? The birthright not only had in it the
first of the inheritance, a double portion, but the birthright also carried
with it the covenant blessings of God. It had in it great spiritual
connotations. All right, here are the two men. Esau, "What do
I care about God? What did I care about covenants? What do I care
about the promises of heaven? What do I care about these things that
pertain to the future? I am living now; I am going to live it up now. Brother,
strike up the band, play the tune, everybody in the dance. It's on the house,
drinks and all. Live it up!" That's Esau, the finest animal
you ever saw.
But
Jacob saw the covenant blessing of God as it was of the now, as it was of the
days to come. Evidently, Rebekah had taught him. And Jacob says,
"More than anything in this world, I'd love the birthright. I'll give
you the pottage if you'll give me the birthright." It's a cheat, I
know. It's the taking advantage of the hunger of the animal Esau. I
know. But it also shows that he wanted it, he thought of it, and he
prized it. And what does the Scripture say? Look at the last verse
of the twenty-fifth chapter of Genesis. “Thus Esau despised his
birthright.” And that was the difference. It didn't matter to Esau,
not at all. He despised his birthright, and Jacob wanted it, coveted it,
longed for it, desired it. And when he had an opportunity to strike a
bargain with Esau, he obtained it for a mess of pottage. That's the
second emblem, symbol, sign in the life of Jacob.
All
right. Turn again now to the twenty-eighth chapter of the Book of
Genesis, and here's a third emblem. Here's a third side. Genesis 28, the twenty-eighth
chapter of the Book of Genesis. Under the tutelage of his mother Rebekah,
Jacob not only has won the birthright, but he has stolen the blessing.
And Esau hates Jacob with bitter hatred, and Esau says in his heart, "The
days of my father's death are upon me, but when my father shall die and the
days of mourning are passed, I will slay that supplanter Jacob."
And
Rebekah hears it, and to save the life of that boy she loves, she sends him
away to Padan Aram, to her father's house to seek a wife. That's to save
his life. That's the last time Rebekah ever saw Jacob. She never
saw him again. God would have given all that to Jacob without that.
That's the chicanery. That's the cheat. That's the
supplanter. That's the lack of faith.
Instead
of trusting God for it, he tries to seize it, and he does. But God would
have given it to him; He said He would. Now he's in the darkest hour of
his life, It's midnight, night, night, night, away from home, and his brother,
swearing the day will come when I'll kill him. He will never see his
mother again. He will only see his father in age to bury him. And
he's by himself, and it's night, and his pillow is a hard stone. And in
the despond and despair and the darkness of his life, he lies down in a certain
place, and in his weariness and in his sorrow he falls upon sleep. And he
dreamed, and behold, a ladder.
That's
the third emblem: a ladder. And he dreamed, and behold, a ladder set upon
the earth, and the top of it reached to heaven. And behold, the angels of
God ascending and descending on it [Genesis 28:12], a ladder
reaching up to God and the angels ascending and descending; that's the
third symbol of his life.
Didn't
I say a moment ago that Jacob had not only an eye for a bargain, but somehow in
that strange admixture of his nature, he also had a great sensitivity for the
promises of God? And that ladder, that ladder, that ladder, that ladder
reaches up and up and up and beyond to God Himself. And God holds it,
that it doesn't slip or fall. It reaches to heaven, and it reaches to
earth where Jacob is, and between God and Jacob and the earth and heaven, all
the ministering spirits, the angels ascending and descending.
If
your ladder doesn't reach up to God, it's too short. If you're living for
now, you're living for too brief a span. Your ladder ought to reach into
eternity beyond death and beyond the grave. And God's ministering
spirits, the angels of the Lord, are sent to help us achieve that final hope
and ultimate destiny, rung at a time, step at a time, mounting little at a
time. We don't achieve it momentarily. It's a long
pilgrimage. It goes through some deep valleys.
In
fact, some of them you could see. They're veils of tears that go through
the night, and they go through deep sorrows. Step at a time, rung at a
time, little at a time, it's a ladder. I suppose in the wisdom of God
that's best, yet the Lord could transplant us to heaven just like that. I
suppose we would be characterless. We'd have no cause to know the tender,
guiding, merciful presence of the Lord. It is these experiences of our
pilgrimage that give us all of those things that make us what we ought to be in
the sight of the Lord.
It's
a ladder. And you mount it a step at a time, rung at a time, and it goes
up, it goes on. And it's an experience of life, and it leads to
God. That's the third emblem in his life.
Now
we must hasten. I have several more. Turn now to the thirty-second chapter
of the Book of Genesis. One of these mornings, we shall preach especially
on this. In my humble judgment, this emblem is the finest and the
sweetest and the most meaningful of any that you'll find in the Old
Testament. In those last three verses of the thirty-second chapter of the
Book of Genesis, “And Jacob called the name of the place Peniel. For he
said, I have seen God face to face." In the thirty-first verse, “And
as he passed over Penuel--I do not know why, I have tried to find out why, in
the thirtieth verse they spell it Peniel. That's the exact Hebrew,
Peniel. In the thirty-first verse, they spelled it Penuel. That's
the exact Hebrew word, Penuel. I do not know why they spelled it two
different ways. I could not find out. “But as he passed over Penuel,
Peniel”--Peniel means "I have seen God's face"–“he halted upon his
thigh.”
Now,
what happened at Peniel? Well, Jacob hasn't come very far up that ladder,
just maybe a rung, maybe a step or two. He's still trying
to--ingeniously--to save himself and to get the mastership of the
situation. He's still the same cheater, the same supplanter that he's been
all of his life. Oh, Jacob! Thou worm Jacob, crooked and
groveling. But in the face of stark and final tragedy, Esau is coming
with more than three hundred armed soldiers. And Esau has vowed,
"And I will take the very memory of Jacob and his family from off the face
of the earth!" And when they came to the little river Jabbok on the
eastern side of the Jordan, he divides his family, and he divides his flock so
that when Esau comes and destroys one, maybe perchance in the grace of God, maybe
the second one might escape, or someone from it.
And
apparently Jacob faces certain death for himself and all of his family.
But he's doing the best he can, still a-cheating, still a-scheming, still
supplanting, still doing everything he can to get himself out of that awful
impasse. So he sends them over by groups, and he himself is alone at the
River Jabbok, and there wrestles with him a Man, all night long. The Angel
of God.
What
does that mean? Wrestling. Some of you would know without my
describing it. Wrestling, all night long with God. Hardest thing in
the world, for a man to give up; that old Jacob's self somehow dies hard.
That old, selfish, grasping you: I got my plans, I've got my ambitions, I have
my wants. There are pleasures, and there are lusts, and there are sins,
and there are delights, and there are things of this world and this life: hard
to kill worm-Jacob. And the Angel wrestled with him all night long, and
he never overcame him. All night long, Jacob wrestled. And as it
began to break toward the dawn, the Angel touched his thigh and crippled
him. And he couldn't wrestle any longer, strength gone. Touched his
thigh and it was out of joint, and he's crippled. Then Jacob cries,
"O God, don't leave me like this!"
And
instead of wrestling, he clings to the Angel, a helpless suppliant.
"O Lord, don't leave me like this, crippled, and the armed soldiers of
Esau to destroy my family and me. Don't leave me like this."
And the Lord looked on worm-Jacob. Gone, his old pride and his old
supplanting nature and his old chicanery. Look at him. Helpless and
miserable and ready to die! Worm-Jacob. And the Lord said to him,
"Who are you? What's your name?"
And
he confessed it, "My name is Supplanter. My name is cheat. My
name is Duplicity and Double-Crosser. My name is Liar. My name is
Jacob." And God said, "No, Jacob. No longer Supplanter, Cheater,
Liar. Thy name shall be Israel: Prince of God." And when he
arose at the rising of the sun, he halted on his thigh. A broken man, he
halted on his thigh. No longer in his strength, but in God's strength; a
weak and helpless man leaning on the arms of omnipotence. And when Esau saw
him, he embraced him and kissed him and they wept together. What God can
do, what God can do! Dear people, let me just say the other two. I
must quit.
The
other emblem is a staff when he describes his pilgrimage, and the last emblem
is a grave.
In
the land of Egypt Jacob says, "And you're to take me back to
Machpelah." Why to Machpelah? Because God said, "And to
thee and to thy seed, I will give the land forever." Take me back to
Machpelah. The land is theirs. And in silent reverence today, the
children of Abraham guard the cave of Machpelah and the still silent form of
Jacob, who someday shall see their seed inherit forever God's promised
land. Oh, with what blessing do we follow the story of these sainted men!
Now,
we sing a stanza, one stanza, and somebody this morning to give his heart to
the Lord, somebody to put his life in the church, while we sing this hymn,
while we make this appeal, on the first note of the first stanza, would you
come and stand by me? In the balcony around on this lower floor, giving
your heart and faith to Christ or putting your life in the church, a family
you, or one somebody you, while we stand and sing, you come.