Chapter 19
The Return to Canaan
[This chapter is based on Genesis 34; 35; 37.]
CROSSING the Jordan, "Jacob came in peace to the city of Shechem, which is in the
land of Canaan." Genesis 33:18, R.V. Thus the patriarch's prayer at Bethel, that God
would bring him again in peace to his own land, had been granted. For a time he dwelt in
the vale of Shechem. It was here that Abraham, more than a hundred years before, had made
his first encampment and erected his first altar in the Land of Promise. Here Jacob
"bought the parcel of ground where he had spread his tent, at the hand of the
children of Hamor, Shechem's father, for a hundred pieces of money. And he erected there
an altar, and called it El-elohe-Israel" (verses 19, 20)--God, the God of
Israel." Like Abraham, Jacob set up beside his tent an altar unto the Lord, calling
the members of his household to the morning and the evening sacrifice. It was here also
that he dug the well to which, seventeen centuries later, came Jacob's Son and Saviour,
and beside which, resting during the noontide heat, He told His wondering hearers of that
"well of water springing up into everlasting life." John 4:14.
The tarry of Jacob and his sons at Shechem ended in violence and bloodshed. The one
daughter of the household had been brought to shame and sorrow, two brothers were involved
in the guilt of murder, a whole city had been given to ruin and slaughter, in retaliation
for the lawless deed of one rash youth. The beginning that led to results so terrible was
the act of Jacob's daughter, who "went out to see the daughters of the land,"
thus venturing into association with the ungodly. He who seeks pleasure among those that
fear not God is placing himself on Satan's ground and inviting his temptations.
The treacherous cruelty of Simeon and Levi was not unprovoked; yet in their course toward
the Shechemites they committed a grievous sin. They had carefully concealed from Jacob
their intentions, and the tidings of their revenge filled him with horror. Heartsick at
the deceit and violence of his sons, he only said, "Ye have troubled me to make me to
stink among the inhabitants of the land: . . . and I being few in number, they shall
gather themselves together against me, and slay me; and I shall be destroyed, I and my
house." But the grief and abhorrence with which he regarded their bloody deed is
shown by the words in which, nearly fifty years later, he referred to it, as he lay upon
his deathbed in Egypt: Simeon and Levi are brethren; instruments of cruelty are in their
habitations. O my soul, come not thou into their secret; unto their assembly, mine honor,
be not thou united. . . . Cursed be their anger, for it was fierce; and their wrath, for
it was cruel." Genesis 49:5-7.
Jacob felt that there was cause for deep humiliation. Cruelty and falsehood were manifest
in the character of his sons. There were false gods in the camp, and idolatry had to some
extent gained a foothold even in his household. Should the Lord deal with them according
to their deserts, would He not leave them to the vengeance of the surrounding nations?
While Jacob was thus bowed down with trouble, the Lord directed him to journey southward
to Bethel. The thought of this place reminded the patriarch not only of his vision of the
angels and of God's promises of mercy, but also of the vow which he had made there, that
the Lord should be his God. He determined that before going to this sacred spot his
household should be freed from the defilement of idolatry. He therefore gave direction to
all in the encampment, "Put away the strange gods that are among you, and be clean,
and change your garments: and let us arise, and go up to Bethel; and I will make there an
altar unto God, who answered me in the day of my distress, and was with me in the way
which I went."
With deep emotion Jacob repeated the story of his first visit to Bethel, when he left his
father's tent a lonely wanderer, fleeing for his life, and how the Lord had appeared to
him in the night vision. As he reviewed the wonderful dealings of God with him, his own
heart was softened, his children also were touched by a subduing power; he had taken the
most effectual way to prepare them to join in the worship of God when they should arrive
at Bethel. "And they gave unto Jacob all the strange gods which were in their hand,
and all their earrings which were in their ears; and Jacob hid them under the oak which
was by Shechem."
God caused a fear to rest upon the inhabitants of the land, so that they made no attempt
to avenge the slaughter at Shechem. The travelers reached Bethel unmolested. Here the Lord
again appeared to Jacob and renewed to him the covenant promise. "And Jacob set up a
pillar in the place where He talked with him, even a pillar of stone."
At Bethel, Jacob was called to mourn the loss of one who had long been an honored member
of his father's family--Rebekah's nurse, Deborah, who had accompanied her mistress from
Mesopotamia to the land of Canaan. The presence of this aged woman had been to Jacob a
precious tie that bound him to his early life, and especially to the mother whose love for
him had been so strong and tender. Deborah was buried with expressions of so great sorrow
that the oak under which her grave was made, was called "the oak of weeping." It
should not be passed unnoticed that the memory of her life of faithful service and of the
mourning over this household friend has been accounted worthy to be preserved in the word
of God.
From Bethel it was only a two days' journey to Hebron, but it brought to Jacob a heavy
grief in the death of Rachel. Twice seven years' service he had rendered for her sake, and
his love had made the toil but light. How deep and abiding that love had been, was shown
when long afterward, as Jacob in Egypt lay near his death, Joseph came to visit his
father, and the aged patriarch, glancing back upon his own life, said, "As for me,
when I came from Padan, Rachel died by me in the land of Canaan in the way, when yet there
was but a little way to come unto Ephrath: and I buried her there in the way of
Ephrath." Genesis 48:7. In the family history of his long and troubled life the loss
of Rachel was alone recalled.
Before her death Rachel gave birth to a second son. With her parting breath she named the
child Benoni, "son of my sorrow." But his father called him Benjamin, "son
of my right hand," or "my strength." Rachel was buried where she died, and
a pillar was raised upon the spot to perpetuate her memory.
On the way to Ephrath another dark crime stained the family of Jacob, causing Reuben, the
first-born son, to be denied the privileges and honors of the birthright.
At last Jacob came to his journey's end, "unto Isaac his father unto Mamre, . . .
which is Hebron, where Abraham and Isaac sojourned." Here he remained during the
closing years of his father's life. To Isaac, infirm and blind, the kind attentions of
this long-absent son were a comfort during years of loneliness and bereavement.
Jacob and Esau met at the deathbed of their father. Once the elder brother had looked
forward to this event as an opportunity for revenge, but his feelings had since greatly
changed. And Jacob, well content with the spiritual blessings of the birthright, resigned
to the elder brother the inheritance of their father's wealth--the only inheritance that
Esau sought or valued. They were no longer estranged by jealousy or hatred, yet they
parted, Esau removing to Mount Seir. God, who is rich in blessing, had granted to Jacob
worldly wealth, in addition to the higher good that he had sought. The possessions of the
two brothers "were more than that they might dwell together; and the land wherein
they were strangers could not bear them because of their cattle." This separation was
in accordance with the divine purpose concerning Jacob. Since the brothers differed so
greatly in regard to religious faith, it was better for them to dwell apart.
Esau and Jacob had alike been instructed in the knowledge of God, and both were free to
walk in His commandments and to receive His favor; but they had not both chosen to do
this. The two brothers had walked in different ways, and their paths would continue to
diverge more and more widely.
There was no arbitrary choice on the part of God by which Esau was shut out from the
blessings of salvation. The gifts of His grace through Christ are free to all. There is no
election but one's own by which any may perish. God has set forth in His word the
conditions upon which every soul will be elected to eternal life--obedience to His
commandments, through faith in Christ. God has elected a character in harmony with His
law, and anyone who shall reach the standard of His requirement will have an entrance into
the kingdom of glory. Christ Himself said, "He that believeth on the Son hath
everlasting life: and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life." John 3:36.
"Not everyone that saith unto Me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven;
but he that doeth the will of My Father which is in heaven." Matthew 7:21. And in the
Revelation He declares, "Blessed are they that do His commandments, that they may
have right to the tree of life, and may enter in through the gates into the city."
Revelation 22:14. As regards man's final salvation, this is the only election brought to
view in the word of God.
Every soul is elected who will work out his own salvation with fear and trembling. He is
elected who will put on the armor and fight the good fight of faith. He is elected who
will watch unto prayer, who will search the Scriptures, and flee from temptation He is
elected who will have faith continually, and who will be obedient to every word that
proceedeth out of the mouth of God. The provisions of redemption are free to all; the
results of redemption will be enjoyed by those who have complied with the conditions.
Esau had despised the blessings of the covenant. He had valued temporal above spiritual
good, and he had received that which he desired. It was by his own deliberate choice that
he was separated from the people of God. Jacob had chosen the inheritance of faith. He had
endeavored to obtain it by craft, treachery, and falsehood; but God had permitted his sin
to work out its correction. Yet through all the bitter experience of his later years,
Jacob had never swerved from his purpose or renounced his choice. He had learned that in
resorting to human skill and craft to secure the blessing, he had been warring against
God. From that night of wrestling beside the Jabbok, Jacob had come forth a different man.
Self-confidence had been uprooted. Henceforth the early cunning was no longer seen. In
place of craft and deception, his life was marked by simplicity and truth. He had learned
the lesson of simple reliance upon the Almighty Arm, and amid trial and affliction he
bowed in humble submission to the will of God. The baser elements of character were
consumed in the furnace fire, the true gold was refined, until the faith of Abraham and
Isaac appeared undimmed in Jacob.
The sin of Jacob, and the train of events to which it led, had not failed to exert an
influence for evil--an influence that revealed its bitter fruit in the character and life
of his sons. As these sons arrived at manhood they developed serious faults. The results
of polygamy were manifest in the household. This terrible evil tends to dry up the very
springs of love, and its influence weakens the most sacred ties. The jealousy of the
several mothers had embittered the family relation, the children had grown up contentious
and impatient of control, and the father's life was darkened with anxiety and grief.
There was one, however, of a widely different character--the elder son of Rachel, Joseph,
whose rare personal beauty seemed but to reflect an inward beauty of mind and heart. Pure,
active, and joyous, the lad gave evidence also of moral earnestness and firmness. He
listened to his father's instructions, and loved to obey God. The qualities that afterward
distinguished him in Egypt--gentleness, fidelity, and truthfulness--were already manifest
in his daily life. His mother being dead, his affections clung the more closely to the
father, and Jacob's heart was bound up in this child of his old age. He "loved Joseph
more than all his children."
But even this affection was to become a cause of trouble and sorrow. Jacob unwisely
manifested his preference for Joseph, and this excited the jealousy of his other sons. As
Joseph witnessed the evil conduct of his brothers, he was greatly troubled; he ventured
gently to remonstrate with them, but only aroused still further their hatred and
resentment. He could not endure to see them sinning against God, and he laid the matter
before his father, hoping that his authority might lead them to reform.
Jacob carefully avoided exciting their anger by harshness or severity. With deep emotion
he expressed his solicitude for his children, and implored them to have respect for his
gray hairs, and not to bring reproach upon his name, and above all not to dishonor God by
such disregard of His precepts. Ashamed that their wickedness was known, the young men
seemed to be repentant, but they only concealed their real feelings, which were rendered
more bitter by this exposure.
The father's injudicious gift to Joseph of a costly coat, or tunic, such as was usually
worn by persons of distinction, seemed to them another evidence of his partiality, and
excited a suspicion that he intended to pass by his elder children, to bestow the
birthright upon the son of Rachel. Their malice was still further increased as the boy one
day told them of a dream that he had had. "Behold," he said, "we were
binding sheaves in the field, and, lo, my sheaf arose, and also stood upright; and,
behold, your sheaves stood round about, and made obeisance to my sheaf."
"Shalt thou indeed reign over us? or shalt thou indeed have dominion over us?"
exclaimed his brothers in envious anger.
Soon he had another dream, of similar import, which he also related: "Behold, the sun
and the moon and the eleven stars made obeisance to me." This dream was interpreted
as readily as the first. The father, who was present, spoke reprovingly--"What is
this dream that thou hast dreamed? Shall I and thy mother and thy brethren indeed come to
bow down ourselves to thee to the earth?" Notwithstanding the apparent severity of
his words, Jacob believed that the Lord was revealing the future to Joseph.
As the lad stood before his brothers, his beautiful countenance lighted up with the Spirit
of inspiration, they could not withhold their admiration; but they did not choose to
renounce their evil ways, and they hated the purity that reproved their sins. The same
spirit that actuated Cain was kindling in their hearts.
The brothers were obliged to move from place to place to secure pasturage for their
flocks, and frequently they were absent from home for months together. After the
circumstances just related, they went to the place which their father had bought at
Shechem. Some time passed, bringing no tidings from them, and the father began to fear for
their safety, on account of their former cruelty toward the Shechemites. He therefore sent
Joseph to find them, and bring him words as to their welfare. Had Jacob known the real
feeling of his sons toward Joseph, he would not have trusted him alone with them; but this
they had carefully concealed.
With a joyful heart, Joseph parted from his father, neither the aged man nor the youth
dreaming of what would happen before they should meet again. When, after his long and
solitary journey, Joseph arrived at Shechem, his brothers and their flocks were not to be
found. Upon inquiring for them, he was directed to Dothan. He had already traveled more
than fifty miles, and now an additional distance of fifteen lay before him, but he
hastened on, forgetting his weariness in the thought of relieving the anxiety of his
father, and meeting the brothers, whom, despite their unkindness, he still loved.
His brothers saw him approaching; but no thought of the long journey he had made to meet
them, of his weariness and hunger, of his claims upon their hospitality and brotherly
love, softened the bitterness of their hatred. The sight of the coat, the token of their
father's love, filled them with frenzy. "Behold, this dreamer cometh," they
cried in mockery. Envy and revenge, long secretly cherished, now controlled them.
"Let us slay him," they said, "and cast him into some pit, and we will say,
Some evil beast hath devoured him; and we shall see what will become of his dreams."
They would have executed their purpose but for Reuben. He shrank from participating in the
murder of his brother, and proposed that Joseph be cast alive into a pit, and left there
to perish; secretly intending, however, to rescue him and return him to his father. Having
persuaded all to consent to this plan, Reuben left the company, fearing that he might fail
to control his feelings, and that his real intentions would be discovered.
Joseph came on, unsuspicious of danger, and glad that the object of his long search was
accomplished; but instead of the expected greeting, he was terrified by the angry and
revengeful glances which he met. He was seized and his coat stripped from him. Taunts and
threats revealed a deadly purpose. His entreaties were unheeded. He was wholly in the
power of those maddened men. Rudely dragging him to a deep pit, they thrust him in, and
having made sure that there was no possibility of his escape, they left him there to
perish from hunger, while they "sat down to eat bread."
But some of them were ill at ease; they did not feel the satisfaction they had anticipated
from their revenge. Soon a company of travelers was seen approaching. It was a caravan of
Ishmaelites from beyond Jordan, on their way to Egypt with spices and other merchandise.
Judah now proposed to sell their brother to these heathen traders instead of leaving him
to die. While he would be effectually put out of their way, they would remain clear of his
blood; "for," he urged, "he is our brother and our flesh." To this
proposition all agreed, and Joseph was quickly drawn out of the pit.
As he saw the merchants the dreadful truth flashed upon him. To become a slave was a fate
more to be feared than death. In an agony of terror he appealed to one and another of his
brothers, but in vain. Some were moved with pity, but fear of derision kept them silent;
all felt that they had now gone too far to retreat. If Joseph were spared, he would
doubtless report them to the father, who would not overlook their cruelty toward his
favorite son. Steeling their hearts against his entreaties, they delivered him into the
hands of the heathen traders. The caravan moved on, and was soon lost to view.
Reuben returned to the pit, but Joseph was not there. In alarm and self-reproach he rent
his garments, and sought his brothers, exclaiming, "The child is not; and I, whither
shall I go?" Upon learning the fate of Joseph, and that it would now be impossible to
recover him, Reuben was induced to unite with the rest in the attempt to conceal their
guilt. Having killed a kid, they dipped Joseph's coat in its blood, and took it to their
father, telling him that they had found it in the fields, and that they feared it was
their brother's. "Know now," they said, "whether it be thy son's coat or
no." They had looked forward to this scene with dread, but they were not prepared for
the heart-rending anguish, the utter abandonment of grief, which they were compelled to
witness. "It is my son's coat," said Jacob; "an evil beast hath devoured
him. Joseph is without doubt rent in pieces." Vainly his sons and daughters attempted
to comfort him. He "rent his clothes, and put sackcloth upon his loins, and mourned
for his son many days." Time seemed to bring no alleviation of his grief. "I
will go down into the grave unto my son mourning," was his despairing cry. The young
men, terrified at what they had done, yet dreading their father's reproaches, still hid in
their own hearts the knowledge of their guilt, which even to themselves seemed very great.
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