Genesis 28:10-22
The Crack Where the Light Gets In
James Sledge July
23, 2017
Jacob
is alone and on the run. The con-job that stole Esau’s blessing has backfired.
Now his brother seeks to kill him, and he must flee for his life. He runs
toward Haran, the homeland of his mother. Presumably her family will take him
in.
Jacob
is in grave danger, but he is not the only thing at risk. God’s original
promise to Abraham and Sarah is in jeopardy as well. When God first spoke to
Abraham, saying, “Go from your country and your kindred and your father’s house to the
land that I will show you,” the country God told him to leave was
Haram. But now Jacob has left the land of promise, returning to the place Abraham
and Sarah had left.
This
danger to the promise was spoken by Abraham a generation earlier. When Abraham
was old and near death, he sent one of his servants to Haran to find Isaac a
wife. But he made that servant swear a solemn oath that he would not let Isaac
accompany him, would not let Isaac journey back to Haran. And so our story
speaks a double sense of threat, of danger, the threat to Jacob’s life as well
as the threat to God’s plans.
Jacob
may be unaware of that second danger. Up to this point, the story has been
silent on Jacob’s knowledge of the promise, or of God for that matter.
And
so Jacob, alone and on the run, stops to rest for the night. He must have been terribly
frightened. Perhaps Esau is in pursuit. And if Jacob knows about God and the
promise, he likely fears that God is angry with him as well.
In
the midst of the threat of his brother and possible divine punishment, sleep
must have been difficult. But harried and worn out by his journey, he takes a
stone for a pillow, and somehow falls asleep.