Jacob Wrestles with God
After all his preparations to escape from a (supposed) disaster, for which he fears at the meeting with Esau, Jacob remains alone. That is the moment for God to act with him personally. Jacob must learn that not Esau, but God is his real opponent. There occurs a wrestling (Psalms 18:27). God – in the form of an angel – cannot win from him because Jacob does not want to bow. Until he dislocates the socket of Jacob’s thigh. In the socket of the thigh is the power to walk.
In Hosea 12 we read how Jacob won: by weeping and seeking God’s favor (Hosea 12:4-Deuteronomy :). A person only does this when he is at the end of his strengths. And that is the way God allows Himself to be overcome. It is like with the man we see in Romans 7. He also does everything in his own power, until he exclaims: “Wretched man that I am!” (Romans 7:24). Then comes the victory: “Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord!” (Romans 7:25). The wrestling is over as soon as someone sees that God has long since prepared liberation, for it was brought about by Jesus Christ. Whoever sees this will immediately thank God for it.
God meets Jacob in the dark. When God comes to Abraham, it is during the day (Genesis 18:1). That is not to wrestle, but to have fellowship with him. It is not Jacob’s wrestling with God, but God’s wrestling with Jacob. After God has touched the socket of Jacob’s thigh in the sinew of the hip (Genesis 32:32), Jacob’s wrestling with God turns into a clinging to Him. Jacob does not want to let Him go, but to receive a blessing from Him. Jacob later remains the limping Jacob. That’s how he goes to Esau, that’s how he stands before Pharaoh. It is a constant reminder of his absolute dependency on the blessing of God.
In asking for a blessing, Jacob acknowledges his Superior in the Wrestler. The wrestling lasts until the dawn. When God’s wrestling with us approaches its end, when we have finished our resisting, and when we are overcome by weeping and searching His favor, the dawn in our lives begins. Then we have found our “Penuel”, like Jacob here. Penuel means ‘face of God’.
Not only has the dawn come, but the sun rises upon Jacob’s life – compare his departure from the land, where the sun has set (Genesis 28:10-1 Kings :). As the awareness of one’s own weakness increases, so does the awareness of God’s greatness. That is the wonderful result of Penuel. It is to be desired that this is or becomes the experience of every child of God.
At Penuel Jacob is given a new name, “Israel”, which means ‘prince of God’ or ‘warrior of God’. After this the names Jacob and Israel are used alternately in his history. If the name Jacob is used, it generally looks at the weak Jacob who arranges things himself. If the name Israel is used, we see him acting in the power of faith, depending on God. This is not the case with Abraham. After Abram got his new name Abraham, there is no longer any mention of Abram.
When using the name Jacob, God reminds us that the believer needs His discipline as long as he lives on earth because he still has the flesh with him. His discipline can be corrective, but also preventive. In any case, His discipline is a proof of His grace.
The effect of God’s wrestling with Jacob on his posterity is that they are impressed by the event at the Jabbok and therefore do not eat the sinew of the hip. However, they haven’t learned the real lesson. The people of Israel as a whole still accounts entirely on their own – intellectual and military – strength. In this way we can also be impressed by a truth of God and show it in an outward attitude, without it really touching us from within and affecting our whole lives.