Difference between revisions of "Jacob" - New World Encyclopedia

From New World Encyclopedia
 
(46 intermediate revisions by 9 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{claimed}}
+
{{2Copyedited}}{{Copyedited}}{{Ebcompleted}}{{Paid}}{{Approved}}{{Submitted}}{{images OK}}
  
[[Image:Isaac Blessing Jacob - Govert Flinck.jpg|thumb|250px|''Isaac Blessing Jacob'', [[Govert Flinck]], 1638]]
+
[[Image:Isaac Blessing Jacob - Govert Flinck.jpg|thumb|300px|''Isaac Blessing '''Jacob''''', [[Govert Flinck]], 1638]]
    {{otheruses4|'''Jacob''' in the [[Hebrew Bible]]|other uses of the name|Jacob (disambiguation)}}
+
'''Jacob''' or '''Ya'akov''' ([[Hebrew language|Hebrew]]: '''יַעֲקֹב'''; [[Arabic language|Arabic]]: '''يعقوب''', ''{{Unicode|Yaʿqūb}}''; "holds the heel"), also known as '''Israel''' ("Struggles with God"), was the third biblical [[patriarch]] and the father of the [[Israelites]]. His father was [[Isaac]], and his grandfather was [[Abraham]]. According to the biblical account, Jacob was the father of one daughter and 12 sons, who became the 12 [[Tribes of Israel]]. He was the husband of two primary wives, [[Leah]] and [[Rachel]], and two secondary wives, Bilhah and Zilpah.  
'''Jacob''' or '''Ya'akov''', ([[Hebrew language|Hebrew]]: '''יַעֲקֹב''', <small>[[Hebrew language#Modern Hebrew|Standard]]</small>&nbsp;''{{Unicode|Yaʿaqov}}'' <small>[[Tiberian vocalization|Tiberian]]</small>&nbsp;''{{Unicode|Yaʿăqōḇ}}''; [[Arabic language|Arabic]]: '''يعقوب''', ''{{Unicode|Yaʿqūb}}''; "holds the heel"), also known as '''Israel''' ([[Hebrew language|Hebrew]]: '''יִשְׂרָאֵל''', <small>[[Hebrew language#Modern Hebrew|Standard]]</small>&nbsp;''{{Unicode|Yisraʾel}}'' <small>[[Tiberian vocalization|Tiberian]]</small>&nbsp;''{{Unicode|Yiśrāʾēl}}''; [[Arabic language|Arabic]]: '''اسرائيل''', ''{{Unicode|Isrāʾīl}}''; "Struggled with God"), is the third [[Biblical]] [[patriarch]]. His father is [[Isaac]], and his grandfather is [[Abraham]]. Jacob plays a major part in some of the later events in the [[Book of Genesis]].
 
  
== Bibilical accounts ==
+
In the [[Book of Genesis]], Jacob overcomes many adversities to win God's blessing and a central place as the father of the Israelite people. Although some of his deeds—notably his deception of his father to gain the blessing of the first-born son—have been criticized as morally suspect, in the main he can be regarded as an example of a man who strove for his rightful place in history by winning over his adversaries, not by the sword, but by his wits, hard work, heroic persistence, and abiding faith.  
Jacob was born to [[Isaac]] and [[Rebekah]] after 20 years of marriage, at which time his father was 60 ([[Genesis]] 25:26), and his grandfather [[Abraham]] was 160. Rebekah had been barren, but Isaac's prayers for her were answered when she finally conceived. During Rebekah's pregnancy, "the children struggled together within her" ([[Genesis]] 25:22). (According to the medieval rabbinical sage [[Rashi]], whenever Rebekah passed a house of study, Jacob would struggle to be born; whenever she passed a place of idolatry, Esau would struggle.) Fearful of the excessive movement, Rebekah questioned God about the tumult in her womb. The method of her inquiry is not indicated — perhaps through peronal [[prayer]], [[prophecy]], or [[divination]] — but she learned that two children, who would become the founders of two nations. "The one people shall be stronger than the other people; and the elder shall serve the younger." (Gen. 25:23)
 
  
Esau was the firstborn. His brother Jacob was born immediately afterwards, and was grasping Esau's heel. His name, ''Ya'akov'' (יעקב), derives from the Hebrew word for "heel." Rabbinical commentators explain that Jacob was trying to hold Esau back from being the firstborn.
+
Jacob's course of suffering for 21 years in [[Haran]] can be seen as a model for all those who must endure exile and privation. His course of service to [[Laban]] is a model for those who wish to win the respect and trust of their oppressors. His wrestling with the [[angel]] shows that a man of strong faith can defeat the spiritual forces of darkness and the demons of his own mind. Most importantly, his sincere humility in front of his brother [[Esau]]—dramatically reversing the story of [[Cain and Abel]]—is the first recorded example of a man who successfully practiced the dictum "love your enemy." It is a pattern for anyone to restore a damaged relationship and bring about reconciliation with an enemy, attaining the goal of peace through unselfish love. It can also be applied to groups and even nations.  
  
Jacob and his twin brother were markedly different in appearance and behavior. Esau was a hunter whose body was covered with red hair, while Jacob was a gentle man who "dwelled in tents," apparently prefering to stay closer to home. Jacob was favored by his mother, while Esau was favored by his father.  
+
== Biblical Account ==
 +
===Struggle over the Birthright===
 +
Jacob was born to [[Isaac]] and [[Rebekah]] after 20 years of marriage. Rebekah had been barren, but Isaac's prayers for her were answered when she finally conceived. During Rebekah's pregnancy, "the children struggled together within her." Rebekah questioned God about the tumult in her womb, and she received a message that her offspring would become "two nations": "The one people shall be stronger than the other people; and the elder shall serve the younger" (Genesis 25:22-23).
  
===Birthright and Blessing===
+
Jacob was born immediately after his twin brother [[Esau]], and his hand grasped Esau's heel. His name, ''Ya'akov'' (יעקב), derives from the Hebrew word for "heel." Rabbinic commentators explain that Jacob was trying to hold Esau back from being the firstborn. The struggle with his brother over the birthright was the major theme in Jacob's life. It is evident from the text that even though Esau was born first, God favored Jacob. Jacob's mother, who understood from the [[prophecy]] that it was Jacob's destiny to take the position of first-born, raised him with that self-understanding. Yet Isaac the father took no notice, and favored Esau.
  
[[Image:Jacob-Esau-Birthright.jpg|thumb|left|Esau sells Jacob his birthright.]]We are told little of Jacob's boyhood. A major event in his life occurred on a day when he was engaged in cooking a stew when [[Esau]] returned from [[hunting]] faint from hunger. Esau requested some of the stew, which Jacob agreed to give him in exchange for his [[birthright]] as the older brother. Esau agreed, saying, "I am going to die - what is this birthright to me?" (Genesis 25:29-34)
+
Jacob and his twin brother were markedly different in appearance and behavior. Esau was a hunter whose body was covered with red hair, but Jacob was a gentle man who "dwelt in tents," apparently preferring to stay close to home.
  
After this, because of a [[famine]], Isaac moved the family to the [[Philistine]] town of Gerer. The text does not indicate Jacob's age at this point, but the twins were clearly without their mother for an extended period, as [[Rebekah]] was taken in the harem of King Abimelech, posing as [[Isaac]]'s sister. "After a long time," the king realized she was actually Isaac's wife and returned her to the family. Isaac's clan grew wealthy in both flocks and crops during this period and eventually left the Philistine terroritory to settle in [[Beehsheba]].
+
Rabbinic sources elaborate on the differences between the characters of the two boys. Whereas Jacob spent his time studying and learning to be a responsible and religious person, Esau by contrast scorned anything that was good, preferring to enjoy himself without regard to others. As for the birthright, Esau was pleased to learn about it because he wanted to inherit all the his father's property. But Isaac explained that with the birthright came responsibilities such as worshipping God and caring for the whole family. This explanation made Jacob wish that he could have the birthright.
  
At the age of 40, Jacob was still unmarried. Esau, on the other hand, took two [[Hittite]] women to be his wives, "who were a grief of mind unto Isaac and to Rebekah." (Gen 26:35)
+
One day while Jacob was cooking a pottage of lentils, Esau returned from [[hunting]], faint from hunger. Esau asked for some, but Jacob held back, only agreeing to give some in exchange for his [[birthright]] as the older brother. Esau agreed, saying, "I am going to die—what is this birthright to me?" (Genesis 25:29-34).
  
[[Image:Isaac-and-Jacob.jpg|thumb|200px|Jacob receives Isaac's blessing.]]
+
===Jacob Obtains his Father's Blessing===
 +
Many years passed and Esau continued to act as a son unworthy to carry on the traditions of Abraham and Isaac. He took two [[Hittite]] women to be his wives, "who were a grief of mind unto Isaac and to Rebekah" (Gen 26:35). Yet Isaac still regarded him as the first-born son.
  
Many years intervene in the story here. Isaac grew old and had become nearly blind. He decided to bless his eldest son before he died. He sent Esau out in the fields to hunt down some meat and prepare him a meal, after which he would receive Isaac's blessing. Rebekah, favoring the younger son, overheard this exchange and instructed Jacob to fetch her two goats so that she could prepare a tasty meal for his father. She then command Jacob to bring the meal to Isaac to receive the blessing in his brother's stead. Jacob worried that his father might notice the substitution through touch, since Esau was hairy and he was smooth. "What if my father touches me?," he asked. "I would appear to be tricking him and would bring down a curse on myself rather than a [[blessing]]." Gen. 27:12) Rebekah too responsibility for the act, saying, "Let the [[curse]] fall on me." She then disguised Jacob by placing hairy goatskins over his neck and arms.
+
When [[Isaac]] was old and nearly [[blindness|blind]], he told his eldest son that he wanted to bless him before he died. Esau had never thought to tell his father that he had sold his birthright to Jacob years before. So as his father instructed, Esau went out into the countryside to hunt for some venison for his father to eat before he gave him the blessing. Meanwhile, Rebekah overheard this exchange and remembered the dream God had given her when she was pregnant. Knowing that Jacob was the one who ought to receive the blessing, she instructed Jacob to fetch her two [[goat]]s so that she could prepare a tasty meal for his father. She then told Jacob to bring the meal to Isaac to receive the blessing in his brother's stead. Jacob worried that his father might notice the substitution through touch, since Esau was hairy and he was smooth. "'What if my father touches me?' he asked. 'I would appear to be tricking him and would bring down a curse on myself rather than a [[blessing]]'" (Genesis 27:12). Rebekah took responsibility for the act, saying, "Let the [[curse]] fall on me." She then disguised Jacob by placing hairy goatskins over his neck and arms.
  
Jacob went into his father's tent. Isaac was surprised that he had returned so soon from the suposed hunt. "Who are you, my son?" Isaac asked suspiciously. "I am Esau your firstborn," Jacob replied. Isaac was still suspicious and asked to feel him, since Esau was hairy. The goatskins seemed to fool him, although he declared, "The voice is the voice of Jacob, but the hands are the hands of Esau." Nevertheless, Isaac blessed him:
+
Jacob went into his father's tent. Isaac was surprised that he had returned so soon from the supposed hunt. "Who are you, my son?" Isaac asked suspiciously. "I am Esau your firstborn," Jacob replied. Isaac was still suspicious and asked to feel him, since Esau was hairy. The goatskins seemed to fool him, although he declared, "The voice is the voice of Jacob, but the hands are the hands of Esau." Nevertheless, Isaac blessed him:
  
:May nations serve you and peoples bow down to you.  
+
:May nations serve you and peoples bow down to you.<br/>
:Be lord over your brothers, and may the sons of your mother bow down to you.  
+
:Be lord over your brothers, and may the sons of your mother bow down to you.<br/>
:May those who curse you be cursed and those who bless you be blessed. (Gen. 27:29)  
+
:May those who curse you be cursed and those who bless you be blessed. (Genesis 27:29)  
  
As soon as Jacob left the tent, Esau arrived and exposed the deception. Isaac was shaken, but affirmed that Jacob would indeed be blessed. To Esau's pathetic entreaties, he agreed to give Esau a lesser blessing.
+
As soon as Jacob left the tent, Esau arrived and the trick was exposed. Isaac was shaken, but affirmed that Jacob would indeed be blessed. To Esau's pathetic entreaties, he agreed to give Esau a lesser blessing.
  
===Exile in Haran===
+
Was Jacob morally duplicitous? The mainstream view is that since Esau had already sold him the birthright, Jacob was within his rights to claim the blessing that he already owned. Furthermore it was God's will as revealed to Rebekah that the "elder should serve the younger." Jacob didn't take the initiative to gain the blessing and was afraid of deceiving his father; he was just obeying his mother. However, he did lie to his father and Esau obviously felt that he had been badly treated which suggests that, although Jacob had obtained the birthright and thus the right to the blessing, he had had done so through trickery instead of loving his brother and winning his brother's respect and natural surrender.
[[Image:Jacob's-ladder.jpg|thumb|left|Jacob's ladder.]]
 
Then [[Esau]] swore to himself that he would kill Jacob in revenge as soon as his father was dead. [[Rebekah]] prophetically intuited Esau's murderous intentions, and commanded Jacob to flee to Haran to the house of her brother, [[Laban (Bible)|Laban]], until Esau's rage subsided. She also convinced Isaac to support the journey, on the grounds that in Haran, Jacob chould marry a woman from their own clan, unlike Esau had done.
 
  
Traveling first northward, Jacob experienced a vision in which God conirmed that the covenant he had made with Abraham and Isaac would now pass to Jacob. He also saw a ladder reaching into heaven with angels going up and down it, a vision that is commonly referred to as [[Jacob's Ladder (Bible)|Jacob's Ladder]]. He named the place [[Bethel]], and erected a [[sacred pillar]] on the spot, vowing:
+
===Vision of Jacob's Ladder===
  
:"If God will be with me and will watch over me on this journey I am taking and will give me food to eat and clothes to wear so that I return safely to my father's house, then the Lord will be my God and this stone that I have set up as a pillar will be God's house, and of all that you give me I will give you a tenth." (Gen 28:20-22)
+
[[Esau]] swore to himself that he would kill Jacob in revenge as soon as their father was dead. When [[Rebekah]] was told about Esau's murderous intentions she told Jacob to flee to [[Haran]] to the house of her brother, [[Laban (Bible)|Laban]], until Esau's rage subsided. She also convinced Isaac to support the journey so that, unlike Esau, Jacob could marry a woman from their own clan.
  
Jacob awoke in the morning and continued on his way to Haran. As he approached his ancestral village, he stopped by the well where shepherds were watering their flocks and met Laban's younger daughter, his cousin Rachel. He loved her immediately, and after spending a month with his relatives, asked for her hand in marriage in return for working seven years for Laban.
+
Traveling first northward, Jacob experienced a vision in which God confirmed that the [[covenant]] he had made with Abraham and Isaac would now pass to Jacob. He also saw a ladder reaching into heaven with angels going up and down it, a vision that is commonly referred to as [[Jacob's Ladder (Bible)|Jacob's Ladder]]. He named the place [[Bethel]], and erected a [[sacred pillar]] on the spot, vowing:
  
[[Image:Leah-Rachel-Laban-Jacob.jpg|300px|thumb|Leah and Rachel listen while Laban bargains with Jacob.]]
+
<blockquote>"If God will be with me and will watch over me on this journey I am taking and will give me food to eat and clothes to wear so that I return safely to my father's house, then the Lord will be my God and this stone that I have set up as a pillar will be God's house (literally ''beth-el''), and all that thou givest me I will give the tenth to thee." (Genesis 28:20-22)</blockquote>
  
These seven years seemed to Jacob "but a few days, for the love he had for her," but when they were complete, Laban deceived Jacob by switching his older daughter, Leah, as the veiled bride. According to the traditional [[Midrash]]ic interpretation of the story, both Jacob and Rachel suspected that Laban would pull such a trick, for he was known as the "Aramean" (deceiver), and changed Jacob's wages hundreds of times during his employ. The couple devised a series of signs by which Jacob could identify the veiled bride, but when Rachel saw her sister being taken out to the wedding canopy, her heart went out to her and the public shame she would suffer if she was exposed. Therefore she gave Leah the signs so that Jacob would not realize the switch.  
+
This is the foundation-story for [[Bethel]], which would later become the chief sanctuary of the [[Kingdom of Israel|Northern Kingdom]], remembered for its consecration by the patriarch (Hosea 12:2-6). Furthermore, with this vow, Jacob continued the tradition established by Abraham of giving a tithe of one's income to the [[synagogue]] or [[church]].
  
In the morning, when the truth became known, Laban justified himself, saying that in their country it was unheard of to give the younger daughter before the older. However, he agreed to give Rachel in marriage as well if Jacob worked another seven years for him. After the week of wedding celebrations with Leah, Jacob married Rachel, and continued to work for Laban another seven years.
+
===Exile in Haran===
 +
Jacob continued on his way to Haran. As he approached his ancestral village, he stopped by the well where shepherds were watering their flocks and met [[Laban]]'s younger daughter, his cousin [[Rachel]]. He loved her immediately, and after spending a month with his relatives, asked for her hand in marriage in return for working seven years for Laban.
  
Jacob loved Rachel more than anything in the world, and Leah felt hated. God opened Leah's womb and she gave birth to four sons in succession: [[Reuben (Bible)|Reuben]], [[Simeon]], [[Levi]], and [[Judah (Biblical figure)|Judah]]. Rachel, however, was barren, and gave Jacob her handmaid [[Bilhah]] in marriage so she could raise children through her. Bilhah gave birth to [[Dan (biblical figure)|Dan]] and [[Naphtali]]. Seeing that she had left off childbearing temporarily, Leah then gave her handmaid [[Zilpah]] to Jacob in marriage so she could raise more children through her. Zilpah gave birth to [[Gad]] and [[Asher]]. (According to some , Bilhah and Zilpah were younger daughters of Laban). Afterwards, Leah became fertile again and gave birth to [[Issachar]], [[Zebulun]], and [[Dinah]]. At this point, God remembered Rachel, who gave birth to [[Joseph (Hebrew Bible)|Joseph]].  Various interpretations of biblical passages suggest that Jacob's favoritism of Rachel over Leah passed over to their children; some commentators feel that this plays  an important role in the later attempt on Joseph's life by his half-brothers.
+
These seven years seemed to Jacob "but a few days, for the love he had for her" (Gen 29:20). However, when it was time for their wedding, Laban deceived Jacob by switching his older daughter, [[Leah]], as the veiled bride. In the morning, when the truth became known, Laban justified himself by saying that in their country it was unheard of to give the younger daughter before the older. However, he agreed that Jacob could also marry Rachel in exchange for an additional seven years of Jacob's labor. After the week of wedding celebrations with Leah, Jacob married Rachel and continued to work for Laban another seven years.
  
Around the time that Joseph was born, Jacob desired to return home to his parents, but Laban was reluctant to release him, as God had blessed his flock on account of Jacob. Now Laban offered to pay Jacob, and Jacob proposed an unusual deal. He suggested that Laban remove all the spotted, speckled and brown goats and sheep from the flock; whichever ones would be born after that would be Jacob's wages. Left alone, Jacob planted rods of [[poplar]], [[hazel]], and [[chestnut]] in front of the flocks' watering holes, and when the animals saw them, they gave birth to spotted, speckled and brown foals. Thus Jacob became quite wealthy. [http://www.geocities.com/teflonivan/1Yakovproj.htm (See an illustration of the genetics behind this deal)]  
+
Because Jacob loved Rachel, Leah felt despised. However, "God opened Leah's womb" and she gave birth to four sons in succession: [[Reuben]], [[Simeon]], [[Levi]], and [[Judah]]. Rachel, however, was barren and gave Jacob her slave woman [[Bilhah]] as an additional wife, considering Blihah's children to count as her own. Bilhah gave birth to [[Dan (biblical figure)|Dan]] and [[Naphtali]]. Seeing that she had left off childbearing temporarily, Leah then gave her slave [[Zilpah]] to Jacob in marriage, so that she, too, could raise more children through her. Zilpah gave birth to [[Gad]] and [[Asher]]. Later, Leah became fertile again and gave birth to [[Issachar]], [[Zebulun]], and [[Dinah]]. At this point, "God remembered Rachel," who gave birth to [[Joseph, son of Jacob|Joseph]].
  
As time passed, Laban's sons noticed that Jacob was taking the better part of their flocks, and Laban's friendly attitude towards Jacob began to change. God told Jacob he should now leave, and he and his wives and children did so without informing Laban. Before they left, Rachel stole all the 'household idols' from Laban's house.
+
Thus the contest between Jacob and his brother repeated itself in the rivalry between Jacob's wives. However, there is little hint of any reconciliation between the women, as there was between Jacob and Esau. Leah, as the first wife, would hold authority in the family. Hence the rivalry would continue in the next generation, between the two sons of Rachel—[[Joseph, son of Jacob|Joseph]] and [[Benjamin]]—whom Jacob loved most, and their ten brothers—the sons of Leah and the two maidservants (who were both apparently under Leah's control). The pattern of Jacob's descendants dividing into ten-plus-two continued even into the division between the ten tribes of the [[Kingdom of Israel|Northern Kingdom]] and the [[Kingdom of Judah|two tribes of Judah]].  
  
Laban, in a rage, pursued Jacob for seven days. The night before he caught up to him, God spoke to him in a dream and warned him not to say anything good or bad to Jacob. When the two met, Laban played the part of the injured father-in-law and also demanded his idols back. Knowing nothing about Rachel's theft of the idols, Jacob told Laban that whoever stole them should die, and offered to let him search. When Laban reached Rachel's tent, she hid the idols by sitting on them. Jacob and Laban parted from each other in peace, Laban returning home and Jacob continuing on his way.
+
Around the time that Joseph was born, Jacob desired to return home to his parents, but Laban was reluctant to release him on account of Jacob's great proficiency in [[animal husbandry]]. The two men struck an unusual deal. Jacob would receive every speckled or spotted sheep, every dark-colored lamb, and every spotted or speckled goat out of Laban's flocks. In exchange, Jacob would work an additional seven years for Laban. Through a ploy involving clever breeding techniques, Jacob became extremely wealthy, not only in herd [[cattle]] but also in [[slavery|slaves]], [[camel]]s, and [[donkey]]s.
  
=== Return to Canaan ===
+
Overall, Jacob labored in Laban's service for 21 years. He persevered even though Laban deceived him over his wives and cheated him out of his wages ten times. When he was treated unjustly Jacob did not become angry and resentful like Esau did. Instead he digested his suffering and continued to serve uncle Laban without complaining. Some scholars believe that this was a time when Jacob matured, learning through those experiences to understand why his brother Esau had become so angry. His attitude became a model for [[Jew]]ish people, teaching them how they could survive and prosper even in the most unjust and hostile environment by keeping a good attitude and not complaining while using their wits and energy.
[[Image:Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn 063.jpg|thumb|Jacob struggles with the angel, by Rembrandt]]
 
[[Image:Jacob-angel.jpg|thumb|''[[Jacob Wrestling with the Angel]]'' &ndash; [[Gustave Doré]], 1855]]
 
As Jacob neared the land of [[Canaan]], he sent messengers ahead to his brother Esau. They returned with the news that Esau was coming to meet Jacob with an army of 400 men. In great apprehension, Jacob prepared for the worst. He felt that he must now depend only on God, and he betook himself to Him in earnest prayer, then sent on before him a munificent present to Esau, "a present to my lord Esau from thy servant Jacob."
 
  
Jacob then transported his family and flocks back across the ford [[Jabbok]], then crossed over towards the direction from which Esau would come, spending the night alone, in communion with God. There, a mysterious being ("a man", according to Genesis 32:24, or "the angel", according to Hosea 12:4) appeared and wrestled with Jacob until daybreak. When he saw he could not defeat Jacob, he touched him on the sinew of his thigh (the ''gid hanasheh'' - גיד הנשה). As a result, the Israelites would not consume that part of an animal's thigh from that point on (Genesis 32:33). This incident still has an impact on many Jews today, as [[Orthodox Judaism|Orthodox Jews]] will not eat the area containing the ''gid hanasheh'' (commonly identified as the [[sciatic nerve]]) on an otherwise [[Kashrut|kosher]] animal.  
+
According to the traditional Jewish texts, Jacob lived a life that paralleled the descent of his offspring, the Jewish people, into the darkness of exile and suffering. His personal struggles—the hatred of his brother [[Esau]], the deceptions of his father-in-law [[Laban]], a violent and injurious struggle with the angel of God, a near attack by the armed forces of Esau, the early death of his favorite wife [[Rachel]], the apparent death of his son [[Joseph, son of Jacob|Joseph]], the [[rape]] of his daughter [[Dinah]], and the enmity of the people of [[Canaan]] on account of his sons' slaughter of the [[Schechem]]ites, are all symbolic of the future difficulties and struggles the Jewish people would undergo during their many exiles, which continues to the present day.<ref>Stories and interpretations of Jacob's life abound in the rabbinical literature. See Emil G. Hirsch, M. Seligsohn, Solomon Schechter and Julius H. Greenstone, [http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=19&letter=J&search=jacob#1 “Jacob: In Rabbinical Literature,] ''Jewish Encyclopedia''. Retrieved September 7, 2007.</ref>
  
Jacob then demanded a blessing, and the mysterious being said that from now on, Jacob would be called Israel ([[Hebrew language|Hebrew]] ישׂראל ''Yisra'el'' or ''Yiśrā’ēl'', meaning "one who has struggled with God"). Jacob then asked the being's name, but the being refused to answer. Afterwards Jacob named the place ''Pnei-el'' ([[Penuel]], meaning "face of God"), saying "I have seen God face to face and lived."
+
===Return to Canaan===
 +
As time passed and Jacob's possessions grew, Laban's sons grew jealous of Jacob's success, and Laban's friendly attitude toward Jacob began to change. He began to allege that Jacob had taken livestock from his flocks. God told Jacob he should now leave, and thus he and his clan did so without informing Laban. Before they left, Rachel stole all the "household idols" (''teraphim'') from Laban's house.
  
Because of the ambiguous and varying terminology, and because the being refused to reveal its name, there are varying views as to whether this mysterious being was a man, an angel, or God Himself. According to Rashi, he was the guardian angel of Esau himself, sent to destroy Jacob before he could return to the land of Canaan. Trachtenberg theorizes that the being refused to identify itself for fear that if its secret name was known, it would have been conjurable by incantations (Trachtenberg 1939, p. 80). Some commentators, however, argue that the stranger was God Himself, citing Jacob's own words and the name he assumed thereafter ("One who has struggled with God"). They point out that although later holy scriptures maintain that God does not manifest as a mortal, several instances of it arguably occurs in Genesis, for example, in 18:1, with Abraham.  
+
Laban, in a rage, pursued Jacob for seven days. The night before he caught up with him, God spoke to him in a dream and warned him not to say anything good or bad to Jacob. When the two met, Laban played the part of the injured father-in-law and also demanded his teraphim back (Laban was hardly a pious man. His rage is explained by the ancient custom, according to [[Nuzi]] documents, that the teraphim represented title deeds to the contested property).<ref>E. A. Speiser (ed.), ''The Anchor Bible'': Genesis (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1964), 250-251.</ref> Ignorant of Rachel's theft of the idols, Jacob told Laban that whoever stole them should die, and offered to let him search. When Laban reached Rachel's tent, she hid the idols by sitting on them, pleading that she could not rise because of [[menstruation|menstrual]] cramps—"the way of women is upon me" (Gen. 31:35). This comical scene shows Rachel to be every bit as clever as her husband. Laban is unable to substantiate his claim to the property, and he parts from Jacob in peace, Laban returning home and Jacob continuing on his way.  
  
In the morning Jacob assembled his wives and 11 sons, placing Rachel and her children in the rear and Leah and her children in the front. Some commentators cite this placement as proof that Jacob continued to favor Rachel's children over Leah's, as presumably the rear position would be safer from a frontal assault by Esau, which Jacob feared.  Jacob himself took the foremost position.  Esau's spirit of revenge, however, had by this time been appeased  by Jacob's bounteous gift of camels, goats and flocks. Their reunion was an emotional one. Esau offered to accompany them on their way back to Israel, but Jacob protested that his children were still young and tender; they would eventually catch up with Esau at Mount Seir. According to the Sages, this was a prophetic reference to the End of Days, when Jacob's descendants would come to Mount Seir, the home of Edom, to deliver judgment against Esau's descendants for persecuting them throughout the millennia (Obadiah 1:21).
+
===Wrestling with a Mysterious Being===
 +
[[Image:Jacob-angel.jpg|thumb|300px|''Jacob Wrestling with the Angel'', Gustave Doré, 1855]]
 +
As Jacob neared the land of [[Canaan]], he sent messengers ahead to his brother [[Esau]]. They returned with the news that Esau was coming to meet Jacob with an army of four hundred men. In great apprehension, Jacob prepared for the worst. He felt that he must now depend only on [[Yahweh|God]], and he went in earnest prayer to God. Jacob then sent rich gifts of livestock and other wealth to Esau. When Esau asked the messangers who owned the flocks they replied, "They belong to your servant Jacob; he sends them as a present to my lord Esau, and he is behind us." Through such language Jacob humbled himself in front of his older brother and made it easier for him to forgive Jacob.
  
Jacob arrived in [[Shechem]], where he bought a parcel of land that would eventually house [[Joseph's Tomb]]. In Shechem, his daughter through Leah, [[Dinah]], was raped by the prince's son, who desired to marry the girl. Dinah's brothers, Simeon and Levi, offered to go ahead with the match as long as all the men of Shechem first performed the [[mitzvah]] of [[circumcision]] upon themselves, ostensibly to unite the children of Jacob in familial harmony. On the third day after the circumcision, when all the men of Shechem were most weak, Simeon and Levi put all the residents to death by the sword and escaped with their sister, Dinah. Jacob remained silent about the episode, but later rebuked his two sons for their anger in his deathbed blessing (Genesis 49:5-7).  
+
With his family on one side of the ford of [[Jabbok]], Jacob spent the night alone in communion with God on the other side of the [[river]]. There, a mysterious being—usually considered to be an [[angel]]—wrestled with Jacob, even striking him painfully in the hollow of his thigh. Yet Jacob would not give up, even until daybreak when the being apparently had to leave. When he tried to leave, Jacob demanded a blessing first, and the angel declared that from now on, Jacob would be called “Israel,” meaning "he who struggles with God." Jacob then asked the being's name, but his opponent refused to answer. Afterward Jacob named the place ''Penu-el'' (meaning "face of God"), saying "I have seen God face to face and lived."
  
As Jacob and his entourage neared the border of Canaan, Rachel went into labor and died as she gave birth to her second&mdash;and Jacob's twelfth&mdash;son, [[Benjamin]]. Jacob buried her and erected a monument over her grave, which is located just outside [[Bethlehem]]. [[Rachel's Tomb]] remains a popular site for pilgrimages and prayers to this day.
+
This incident still has an impact on many Jews today, as [[Orthodox Judaism|Orthodox Jews]] will not eat the area of an animal's thigh containing the ''gid hanasheh'' (commonly identified as the [[sciatic nerve]]) on an otherwise [[Kashrut|kosher]] animal.
  
Jacob was finally reunited with his father Isaac in [[Mamre]] (outside [[Hebron]]). When Isaac died at the age of 180, Jacob and Esau buried him together in the [[Cave of the Patriarchs|Cave of Machpelah]] which Abraham had purchased as a family burial plot.
+
There are varying views as to whether this mysterious being who wrestled with Jacob was a man, an angel, or God Himself. According to the Jewish commentator [[Rashi]], he was the [[guardian angel]] of Esau himself, sent to destroy Jacob before he could return to the land of [[Canaan]]. Other rabbinic traditions hold that the being refused to identify itself for fear that if its secret name was known, it would have been conjurable by incantations. Some commentators, however, argue that the stranger was God, citing Jacob's own words and the name he assumed thereafter ("struggles with God"). They point out that although later scriptures maintain that God does not manifest as a mortal, several instances of it arguably occurs in [[Genesis]], for example, in 18:1, with [[Abraham]]. Finally, there are modern psychological interpretations that see the wrestling as an inner struggle where Jacob must confront his own demons of fear and insecurity on the eve of his fateful meeting with his brother.
  
=== Jacob and Joseph ===
+
===The Encounter with Esau===
The Bible next relates the story of [[Joseph (dreamer)|Joseph]], who was separated from his father Jacob at the age of 17 and sent down to Egypt as a slave by his brothers, who were jealous of his dreams of kingship over them. Jacob was deeply grieved by the loss of his favorite son, and refused to be comforted. Christian commentators have speculated that this was a punishment from God due to Jacob's earlier sins, which included impersonation of Esau (a form of [[lying]] or deception). {{fact}}
+
[[Image:Jacob-Meets-Esau.jpg|thumb|400px|left|Jacob and Esau meet in peace at the Ford of Jabbok]]
 +
In the morning Jacob assembled his wives and 11 sons, placing [[Rachel]] and her children in the rear and [[Leah]] and her children in the front. Jacob himself took the foremost position. Jacob's bounteous gift of [[camel]]s, [[goat]]s and flocks had convinced [[Esau]] he meant no threat. As he approached his brother, Jacob humbled himself and bowed to the ground seven times, signifying his sincere apology for all the bad feelings between them. Their reunion was an emotional one. "Esau ran to meet Jacob and embraced him; he threw his arms around his neck and kissed him. And they wept." When Esau asked about the people with him, Jacob humbly said they were all a gift from God and told his slaves and family members to bow down to Esau. Esau assured his brother that he needed no gifts, being wealthy himself, but Jacob implored him to accept his presents, saying, "To see your face is like seeing the face of God". (Gen. 33:10)
  
[[image:Pretij.jpg|thumb|300px|[[Mattia Preti]], ''Jacob blessing his grandchildren, Ephraim and Manasseh, in the presence Joseph and their mother Asenath''. [[Whitfield Fine Art]]]]Thirteen years after the sale of Joseph, [[Pharaoh]] had two troubling dreams which could not be interpreted to his satisfaction. Joseph, who was in the king's prison, was recommended to Pharaoh as an interpreter of dreams, and he explained the dreams as relating to seven years of plenty followed by seven years of famine. Pharaoh was so impressed that he made Joseph viceroy over Egypt and the manager of Egypt's grain stores. Joseph artfully managed first the storage and then the distribution of Egypt's grain, making Pharaoh quite wealthy.
+
This is the climax of the Jacob story. The dramatic reconciliation between brothers may be the very first example of a man who successfully practices the dictum "love your enemy." It is paradigmatic for how all people can win over a bitter rival, attaining the goal through generosity, humility and unselfish love. The story contains many practical lessons for how to effect such reconciliation: (1) thorough preparation that includes gaining a foundation of accomplishment that can earn the rival's respect; (2) abiding love for the rival brother, leading one to risk the danger of confrontation; (3) overcoming a spiritual struggle over inner demons and doubts before meeting one's rival; (4) generous giving with a humble heart; and (5) unshakable faith in God's protection.
  
When the famine struck, the sons of Jacob went down to Egypt to procure grain for their starving families in Canaan. Joseph recognized them, and demanded to see the twelfth brother of whom they spoke, his own full-brother, Benjamin. He took Simeon as a hostage until they returned with Benjamin. Jacob was distraught when he heard this news, for Benjamin was all that was left to him of his beloved wife Rachel's children, and he refused to release him lest something happen to Benjamin, too. But when their food stores ran out and the famine worsened, Jacob agreed to Judah's promise to protect Benjamin from harm. The brothers returned to Joseph, and when Joseph saw Benjamin he was overcome with emotion, and revealed himself to his brothers. He invited them to bring their families and their father, Jacob, down to Egypt to live near him, and gave them a place to live in the Egyptian province of [[Land of Goshen|Goshen]].
+
===Jacob's Journey Home===
 +
Esau then offered to accompany them on their way, but Jacob preferred that they go their separate ways. Jacob was now the leader of a considerable clan, and besides, Esau had become a chieftain of [[Edom]] (Seir). It was time for Jacob to be a clan leader in his own right, as befitted the owner of the birthright.  
  
Jacob's last seventeen years were spent in tranquility in Egypt, knowing that all his 12 sons were righteous people, and he died at the age of 147. Before he died, he made Joseph promise that he would bury him in the Cave of Machpelah, even though Jacob had buried Joseph's mother, Rachel, by the side of the road and not in the Cave (Leah was buried there, instead). With Pharaoh's permission, Joseph led a huge state funeral back to the land of Canaan, with the 12 sons carrying their father's coffin and many Egyptian officials accompanying them.
+
Jacob arrived in [[Shechem]], where he bought a parcel of land that would eventually house [[Joseph's Tomb]]. There he dwelt for several years and set up an altar and called it "[[El]] Elohe Israel" (El, the God of Israel). Finally, Jacob set out for [[Bethel]], the place where God had appeared to him and where he had made his vow. As his clan neared Bethel, Rachel went into labor and died as she gave birth to her second—and Jacob's twelfth—son, [[Benjamin]]. Jacob buried her and erected a monument over her grave, which is located just outside [[Bethlehem]]. [[Rachel's Tomb]] remains a popular site for pilgrimages and prayers to this day.
  
Before he died, Jacob also elevated Joseph's two sons, [[Ephraim]] and [[Manasseh]], to the status of full [[Twelve Tribes of Israel|tribes]]. He also blessed each of his sons. According to the [[Midrash]], he desired to tell them the exact date when the [[Messiah]] would arrive, but the prophecy failed him. He feared lest one of his sons was not righteous, but they responded, ''"Shema Yisrael Adonai Eloheinu Adonai Echad"'' - ''"Hear O Israel'' [Israel being another name of Jacob], ''the Lord Our God, the Lord is One!"'' Satisfied that his sons were united in the service of God, Jacob proclaimed, ''"Baruch Shem Kavod Malchuso Le'Olam Va'Ed"'' - ''"Blessed is the Name of His glorious Kingdom for ever and ever"''. Today these two verses are said together, the first one aloud and the second one quietly, in the morning and evening Jewish prayer services.
+
Jacob was finally reunited with his father Isaac in [[Mamre]] (outside [[Hebron]]). When Isaac died at the age of 180, Jacob and Esau buried him together in the [[Cave of the Patriarchs|Cave of Machpelah]] which Abraham had purchased as a family burial plot.
  
==Other references==
+
=== Jacob's Later Life ===
Jacob is the only person in Old Testament (Jewish) [[Scripture]] whom God said He "loved". ([[Book of Malachi|Malachi]] 1:2&ndash;3, "...I loved Jacob, and I hated [[Esau]]...", also quoted in [[Letter to the Romans|Romans]]).
+
In his old age, Jacob functions as an aged patriarch who can barely control the actions of his offspring. In Shechem, [[Dinah]], his daughter through [[Leah]], was [[rape]]d by the prince's son, who then fell in love with her and desired to marry the girl. Dinah's brothers, pretending [[friendship]], agreed on the condition that the men of Shechem first be [[circumcision|circumcised]]. While the men were recovering from their wounds, Levi and Simeon slaughtered the male residents of the town and fled not only with Dinah, but also with much plunder including their victims' wives and children. Jacob would rebuke his two sons for this act only on his deathbed (Gen. 49:5-7).  
  
==Jacob's sons==
+
Jacob was especially fond of his and Rachel's son [[Joseph, son of Jacob|Joseph]], for whom he made a richly-embroidered coat. This incited Joseph's brothers to [[jealousy]], which was exacerbated by Joseph's reported dream that the sun, moon and stars had bowed to him. The obvious interpretation was that Jacob (the [[sun]]), Rachel (the [[moon]]) and Joseph's brothers (the [[star]]s) would one day prostrate themselves before Joseph. The brothers then sold Joseph into [[slavery]], telling Jacob that he had been killed by a wild beast.
{{main|Israelite}}
 
{{sons of Jacob}}
 
  
{{Tribes of Israel}}
+
[[image:Pretij.jpg|thumb|300px|Jacob (at right) blessing his grandchildren, Ephraim and Manasseh, in the presence Joseph and their mother]]
 +
More than a decade later, in the midst of a famine, Jacob ordered his sons, except for Benjamin, the youngest, to travel to [[Egypt]] to procure grain for their starving families in [[Canaan]]. When they returned with the grain, they informed Jacob that they had been accused as [[espionage|spies]] and that [[Simeon]] had remained behind as a hostage. To redeem him, they must return with young Benjamin to show their good faith. Jacob initially refused, but after the initial token shipment of grain had been consumed and the famine continued to plague the clan, he reluctantly agreed that Benjamin could accompany the brothers on the return trip. While there, they learned that the great Egyptian lord with whom they had been dealing was none other than their long lost brother Joseph. After testing his siblings several times, Joseph was now satisfied that they had seen the error of their earlier ways and changed. He richly rewarded them with grain and other wealth and sent them back to report the whole story to Jacob.
  
Jacob had twelve sons by his four wives, as follows:
+
Overjoyed to see his beloved Joseph—now the prime minister of Egypt—again, Jacob's last 17 years were spent in tranquility in Egypt, knowing that all his 12 sons had become righteous men. Before he died, Jacob elevated Joseph's two sons, [[Ephraim]] and [[Manasseh]], to the status of full [[Twelve Tribes of Israel|tribes]]. He also blessed all twelve of his sons, each with a prophetic blessing related to the character of the tribe that would spring from them. To his fourth son, [[Judah]], he gave a particularly significant blessing, signaling the tribe's future pre-eminence and the coming of the [[Messiah]] from Judah's lineage:
*By [[Leah]]: [[Reuben (Bible)|Reuben]], [[Simeon (Biblical figure)|Simeon]], [[Levi]], [[Judah (Biblical figure)|Judah]], [[Issachar]], [[Zebulun]].
 
*By [[Bilhah]]: [[Dan (biblical figure)|Dan]] and [[Naphtali]].
 
*By [[Zilpah]]: [[Gad]] and [[Asher]].
 
*By [[Rachel]]: [[Joseph (Hebrew Bible)|Joseph]] and [[Benjamin]].
 
  
These 12 sons comprise the twelve [[Tribes of Israel]]. These tribes were recorded on the vestments of the [[Kohen|Kohen Gadol]] (high priest). However, when the land of Israel was apportioned among the tribes in the days of [[Joshua]], the [[Levite|Tribe of Levi]], being priests, did not receive land. Therefore, when the tribes are listed in reference to their receipt of land, as well as to their encampments during the 40 years of wandering in the desert, the [[Tribe of Joseph]] is replaced by the tribes of [[Ephraim]] and [[Manasseh]] (the two sons of Joseph by his Egyptian wife [[Asenath]], whom Jacob elevated to the status of full tribes).
+
:The scepter will not depart from Judah,  
 +
:nor the ruler's staff from between his feet,  
 +
:until he comes to whom it belongs
 +
:and the obedience of the nations is his. (Gen. 49:10)
  
Thus, the two divisions of the tribes are:
+
With the Pharaoh's permission, after Jacob died, Joseph led a huge state funeral back to the land of Canaan, with the 12 sons carrying their father's coffin and many Egyptian officials accompanying them.
  
Traditional division:
+
==Jacob in Islam==
#[[Reuben (Bible)|Reuben]]
+
In [[Arabic language|Arabic]], Jacob is known as [[Yaqub]]. According to the [[Qur'an]], Jacob is of the company of [[the Elect]] and the Good (38:47, 21:75). He is revered as a prophet. The Qur'an does not give the details of Jacob’s life. He was honored by God with the name ''Isra'il'' not after his fight with the [[angel]], but after he faithfully migrated during the night at God's command. Isra' means Night Journey and ''Il'' simply means God ([[Allah]]) (a cognate of the word [[El]] in Hebrew). God bestowed his special favor on Jacob and his posterity as He did on [[Abraham]] and [[Isaac]] (Qur'an 12:6). Jacob was a man of might and vision (38:45) and was chosen by God to preach the Message. The Qur'an stresses that true service to the One true God, especially in [[worship]], was the main legacy of Jacob and his fathers (2:132-133). [[Salvation]], according to the Qu'ran, hinges upon this legacy rather than one's religious identity (2:130-141).
#[[Simeon (Biblical figure)|Simeon]]
 
#[[Levi]]
 
#[[Judah (biblical figure)|Judah]]
 
#[[Issachar]]
 
#[[Zebulun]]
 
#[[Tribe of Dan|Dan]]
 
#[[Naphtali]]
 
#[[Gad]]
 
#[[Asher]]
 
#[[Joseph (dreamer)|Joseph]]
 
#[[Benjamin]]
 
  
Division according to apportionment of land in Israel:
+
==Critical Views==
#[[Reuben (Bible)|Reuben]]
+
Jacob, along with the other patriarchs, is at the center of numerous controversies among biblical scholars, historians, and archaeologists. Was he an historical person at all? If so, was he truly the son of [[Isaac]] and grandson of [[Abraham]]? Is the biblical story of Jacob accurate? Was it written by [[Moses]], as traditionally claimed, or from several sources later combined by scribes during the period of the kings?
#[[Simeon (Biblical figure)|Simeon]]
 
#[[Judah (biblical figure)|Judah]]
 
#[[Issachar]]
 
#[[Zebulun]]
 
#[[Tribe of Dan|Dan]]
 
#[[Naphtali]]
 
#[[Gad]]
 
#[[Asher]]
 
#[[Benjamin]]
 
#[[Ephraim]]
 
#[[Manasseh]]
 
  
== Rabbinical teachings ==
+
According to the [[documentary hypothesis]], some sections of the Jacob saga are derived from the northern "Elohist" source (derived from its author's use of the word "[[El]]ohim" for God), while the greater part is derived from the southern [[Yahwist]] source, (derived from its use of the word [[Yahweh]] for God).
According to the classic Jewish texts, Jacob, as the third and last patriarch, lived a life that paralleled the descent of his offspring, the Jewish people, into the darkness of exile. In contrast to Abraham&mdash;who illuminated the world with knowledge of God and earned the respect of the inhabitants of the land of [[Canaan]]&mdash;and Isaac&mdash;who continued his father's teachings and also lived in relative harmony with his neighbors&mdash;Jacob experienced many personal struggles both in the land and out of it (including the hatred of his brother [[Esau]], the death of his favorite wife [[Rachel]], the sale of his son [[Joseph (dreamer)|Joseph]], the rape of his daughter [[Dinah]], and the deception of his father-in-law [[Laban (Bible)|Laban]]). For this reason, the Jewish commentators interpret many elements of his story as being symbolic of the future difficulties and struggles the Jewish people would undergo during their long exile, which continues to the present day.
 
  
According to the [[Midrash]], the day on which Esau sold his birthright was the very same day that Abraham died; the lentil soup which Jacob had cooked was a food traditionally eaten at times of mourning. This sheds some light on Esau's comment that he "was going to die."  The midrash further states that Esau had committed the three cardinal sins &ndash; [[murder]], [[adultery]] and [[Idolatry in Judaism|idolatry]], which is why he was tired that day. Setting the scene at the time of Abraham's death would mean that Jacob and Esau were both 15 years old at that time.
+
The traditions of Yahweh-worship and El-worship were eventually unified in the monotheistic tradition. However, enmity between northern and southern tribes was often strong. It is interesting to note Jacob's erecting of a [[sacred pillar]] at [[Bethel]] in this context. The southern priests in Jerusalem later condemned such pillars—called ''asherim'' and translated as "Ashera poles"—as idolatrous. In a campaign to centralize worship in [[Jerusalem]], the northern sanctuary at Bethel was destroyed by King [[Josiah]], and its sacred pillar was obliterated (2 Kings 23:13). The town of [[Shechem]], where Jacob reportedly established another altar, later became a center of [[Samaritan]] tradition.
  
==Jacob in Islam==
+
Some scholars doubt the lineal descent of the patriarchs. They believe that several distinct peoples—the tribes of [[Abraham]], [[Isaac]], Jacob, and Joseph—eventually federated into one nation which called itself the [[Israelites]]. Accordingly, the stories of their origins were similarly unified, by making them a single lineage. Other scholars, usually referred to as biblical "minimalists," reject the historicity of these men altogether.
{{main|Yaqub}}
 
  
In [[Arabic language|Arabic]], Jacob is known as [[Yaqub]]. He is revered as a prophet who received inspiration from God. The [[Qur'an]] does not give the details of Jacob’s life. It is said that he was later honored by God with the name Is'rail ([[Israel]] in English) ([[Yisrael]] in Hebrew) because of his devotion and dedication to God's will. [[Isra']] means Night Journey and ''Il'' simply means [[God]] ([[Allah]]) (similar to the word [[El]] in [[Semitic]] Language meaning God). Yaqub was said to have migrated somewhere in a night journey with his children and later favored by God with this name. God perfected his favor on Jacob and his posterity as he perfected his favor on Abraham and Isaac (12:6). Jacob was a man of might and vision (38:45) and was chosen by God to preach the Message. The Qur'an stresses that worshiping and bowing to the One true God was the main legacy of Jacob and his fathers (2:132-133). [[Salvation]], according to the Qu'ran, hinges upon this legacy rather than being a Jew or Christian (See Qu'ran 2:130-141).
+
In a similar vein, the story of Jacob and [[Esau]] can be seen as explaining the ancient enmity that existed in later times between the Israelites and the [[Edom|Edomites]], supposedly descended from Esau. Historically, Israel and Edom were sometimes allied, sometimes tributaries of each other, and sometimes outright enemies. The story of Jacob and Esau justifies Israel's dominance over Edom on the grounds that "the elder must serve the younger." Later, the [[prophet]] [[Malachi]] would declare God's words: "I have loved Jacob, but Esau I have hated" (Mal. 1:2-3).
  
According to the Qu'ran, Jacob was of the company of the Elect and the Good (38:47, 21:75). Yaqub is a name that is accepted in Muslim community showing the value attributed to Jacob.
+
Literary critic [[Harold Bloom]] sees Jacob as the only real male hero in the Yahwist narrative, which he believes to have been written by a female literary genius in the time of King [[Rehoboam]]. "Partly it is his energy of being, partly his heroic persistence," Bloom says, "but mostly it is because J [the Yahwist] persuades us that Jacob, Israel, has the Blessing."<ref>Harold Bloom, ''The Book of J'' (Grove Press, 2005, ISBN 0802141919).</ref>
  
==See also==
+
==Footnotes==
* [[History of ancient Israel and Judah]]
+
<references />
* ''[[Jacob Wrestling with the Angel]]'', the name given to at least three different major paintings
 
* During the Second World War the French writer and anti-Nazi resistance fighter [[André Malraux]] worked on a long novel, ''The Struggle Against the Angel'', the manuscript of which was destroyed by the Gestapo upon his capture in 1944. The name was apparently inspired by the Jacob story. A surviving opening book to ''The Struggle Against the Angel'', named ''The Walnut Trees of Altenburg'', was published after the war.
 
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
{{commonscat|Jacob}}
+
*Bloom, Harold. 2005. ''The Book of J''. Grove Press. ISBN 0802141919
*{{Harvard reference|
+
*Heap, Norman. 1999. ''Abraham, Isaac and Jacob: Servants and Prophets of God''. Family History Publications. ISBN 978-0945905028
  |Surname=Trachtenberg
+
*Smith, Mark S., 2002. ''The Early History of God: Yahweh and the Other Deities in Ancient Israel''. William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. ISBN 978-0802839725
  |Given=Joshua
 
  |Title=Jewish Magic and Superstition: A Study in Folk Religion
 
  |Place=New York
 
  |Publisher=Behrman's Jewish Book house
 
  |Year=1939}}
 
 
 
==External links==
 
* [http://www.geocities.com/teflonivan/1Yakovproj.htm Behind Jacob’s deal with Laban - its genetics illustrated]
 
*[http://www.biblaridion-online.net/zine-online/zine07q1/bibzine07q1_p4.html ''Biblaridion magazine'':] Jacob as a paradigm for the nation of Israel
 
 
 
 
 
  
 +
[[category:philosophy and religion]]
 +
[[Category:Religion]]
 
{{credit|102533832}}
 
{{credit|102533832}}

Latest revision as of 08:01, 18 March 2024


Isaac Blessing Jacob, Govert Flinck, 1638

Jacob or Ya'akov (Hebrew: יַעֲקֹב; Arabic: يعقوب, Yaʿqūb; "holds the heel"), also known as Israel ("Struggles with God"), was the third biblical patriarch and the father of the Israelites. His father was Isaac, and his grandfather was Abraham. According to the biblical account, Jacob was the father of one daughter and 12 sons, who became the 12 Tribes of Israel. He was the husband of two primary wives, Leah and Rachel, and two secondary wives, Bilhah and Zilpah.

In the Book of Genesis, Jacob overcomes many adversities to win God's blessing and a central place as the father of the Israelite people. Although some of his deeds—notably his deception of his father to gain the blessing of the first-born son—have been criticized as morally suspect, in the main he can be regarded as an example of a man who strove for his rightful place in history by winning over his adversaries, not by the sword, but by his wits, hard work, heroic persistence, and abiding faith.

Jacob's course of suffering for 21 years in Haran can be seen as a model for all those who must endure exile and privation. His course of service to Laban is a model for those who wish to win the respect and trust of their oppressors. His wrestling with the angel shows that a man of strong faith can defeat the spiritual forces of darkness and the demons of his own mind. Most importantly, his sincere humility in front of his brother Esau—dramatically reversing the story of Cain and Abel—is the first recorded example of a man who successfully practiced the dictum "love your enemy." It is a pattern for anyone to restore a damaged relationship and bring about reconciliation with an enemy, attaining the goal of peace through unselfish love. It can also be applied to groups and even nations.

Biblical Account

Struggle over the Birthright

Jacob was born to Isaac and Rebekah after 20 years of marriage. Rebekah had been barren, but Isaac's prayers for her were answered when she finally conceived. During Rebekah's pregnancy, "the children struggled together within her." Rebekah questioned God about the tumult in her womb, and she received a message that her offspring would become "two nations": "The one people shall be stronger than the other people; and the elder shall serve the younger" (Genesis 25:22-23).

Jacob was born immediately after his twin brother Esau, and his hand grasped Esau's heel. His name, Ya'akov (יעקב), derives from the Hebrew word for "heel." Rabbinic commentators explain that Jacob was trying to hold Esau back from being the firstborn. The struggle with his brother over the birthright was the major theme in Jacob's life. It is evident from the text that even though Esau was born first, God favored Jacob. Jacob's mother, who understood from the prophecy that it was Jacob's destiny to take the position of first-born, raised him with that self-understanding. Yet Isaac the father took no notice, and favored Esau.

Jacob and his twin brother were markedly different in appearance and behavior. Esau was a hunter whose body was covered with red hair, but Jacob was a gentle man who "dwelt in tents," apparently preferring to stay close to home.

Rabbinic sources elaborate on the differences between the characters of the two boys. Whereas Jacob spent his time studying and learning to be a responsible and religious person, Esau by contrast scorned anything that was good, preferring to enjoy himself without regard to others. As for the birthright, Esau was pleased to learn about it because he wanted to inherit all the his father's property. But Isaac explained that with the birthright came responsibilities such as worshipping God and caring for the whole family. This explanation made Jacob wish that he could have the birthright.

One day while Jacob was cooking a pottage of lentils, Esau returned from hunting, faint from hunger. Esau asked for some, but Jacob held back, only agreeing to give some in exchange for his birthright as the older brother. Esau agreed, saying, "I am going to die—what is this birthright to me?" (Genesis 25:29-34).

Jacob Obtains his Father's Blessing

Many years passed and Esau continued to act as a son unworthy to carry on the traditions of Abraham and Isaac. He took two Hittite women to be his wives, "who were a grief of mind unto Isaac and to Rebekah" (Gen 26:35). Yet Isaac still regarded him as the first-born son.

When Isaac was old and nearly blind, he told his eldest son that he wanted to bless him before he died. Esau had never thought to tell his father that he had sold his birthright to Jacob years before. So as his father instructed, Esau went out into the countryside to hunt for some venison for his father to eat before he gave him the blessing. Meanwhile, Rebekah overheard this exchange and remembered the dream God had given her when she was pregnant. Knowing that Jacob was the one who ought to receive the blessing, she instructed Jacob to fetch her two goats so that she could prepare a tasty meal for his father. She then told Jacob to bring the meal to Isaac to receive the blessing in his brother's stead. Jacob worried that his father might notice the substitution through touch, since Esau was hairy and he was smooth. "'What if my father touches me?' he asked. 'I would appear to be tricking him and would bring down a curse on myself rather than a blessing'" (Genesis 27:12). Rebekah took responsibility for the act, saying, "Let the curse fall on me." She then disguised Jacob by placing hairy goatskins over his neck and arms.

Jacob went into his father's tent. Isaac was surprised that he had returned so soon from the supposed hunt. "Who are you, my son?" Isaac asked suspiciously. "I am Esau your firstborn," Jacob replied. Isaac was still suspicious and asked to feel him, since Esau was hairy. The goatskins seemed to fool him, although he declared, "The voice is the voice of Jacob, but the hands are the hands of Esau." Nevertheless, Isaac blessed him:

May nations serve you and peoples bow down to you.
Be lord over your brothers, and may the sons of your mother bow down to you.
May those who curse you be cursed and those who bless you be blessed. (Genesis 27:29)

As soon as Jacob left the tent, Esau arrived and the trick was exposed. Isaac was shaken, but affirmed that Jacob would indeed be blessed. To Esau's pathetic entreaties, he agreed to give Esau a lesser blessing.

Was Jacob morally duplicitous? The mainstream view is that since Esau had already sold him the birthright, Jacob was within his rights to claim the blessing that he already owned. Furthermore it was God's will as revealed to Rebekah that the "elder should serve the younger." Jacob didn't take the initiative to gain the blessing and was afraid of deceiving his father; he was just obeying his mother. However, he did lie to his father and Esau obviously felt that he had been badly treated which suggests that, although Jacob had obtained the birthright and thus the right to the blessing, he had had done so through trickery instead of loving his brother and winning his brother's respect and natural surrender.

Vision of Jacob's Ladder

Esau swore to himself that he would kill Jacob in revenge as soon as their father was dead. When Rebekah was told about Esau's murderous intentions she told Jacob to flee to Haran to the house of her brother, Laban, until Esau's rage subsided. She also convinced Isaac to support the journey so that, unlike Esau, Jacob could marry a woman from their own clan.

Traveling first northward, Jacob experienced a vision in which God confirmed that the covenant he had made with Abraham and Isaac would now pass to Jacob. He also saw a ladder reaching into heaven with angels going up and down it, a vision that is commonly referred to as Jacob's Ladder. He named the place Bethel, and erected a sacred pillar on the spot, vowing:

"If God will be with me and will watch over me on this journey I am taking and will give me food to eat and clothes to wear so that I return safely to my father's house, then the Lord will be my God and this stone that I have set up as a pillar will be God's house (literally beth-el), and all that thou givest me I will give the tenth to thee." (Genesis 28:20-22)

This is the foundation-story for Bethel, which would later become the chief sanctuary of the Northern Kingdom, remembered for its consecration by the patriarch (Hosea 12:2-6). Furthermore, with this vow, Jacob continued the tradition established by Abraham of giving a tithe of one's income to the synagogue or church.

Exile in Haran

Jacob continued on his way to Haran. As he approached his ancestral village, he stopped by the well where shepherds were watering their flocks and met Laban's younger daughter, his cousin Rachel. He loved her immediately, and after spending a month with his relatives, asked for her hand in marriage in return for working seven years for Laban.

These seven years seemed to Jacob "but a few days, for the love he had for her" (Gen 29:20). However, when it was time for their wedding, Laban deceived Jacob by switching his older daughter, Leah, as the veiled bride. In the morning, when the truth became known, Laban justified himself by saying that in their country it was unheard of to give the younger daughter before the older. However, he agreed that Jacob could also marry Rachel in exchange for an additional seven years of Jacob's labor. After the week of wedding celebrations with Leah, Jacob married Rachel and continued to work for Laban another seven years.

Because Jacob loved Rachel, Leah felt despised. However, "God opened Leah's womb" and she gave birth to four sons in succession: Reuben, Simeon, Levi, and Judah. Rachel, however, was barren and gave Jacob her slave woman Bilhah as an additional wife, considering Blihah's children to count as her own. Bilhah gave birth to Dan and Naphtali. Seeing that she had left off childbearing temporarily, Leah then gave her slave Zilpah to Jacob in marriage, so that she, too, could raise more children through her. Zilpah gave birth to Gad and Asher. Later, Leah became fertile again and gave birth to Issachar, Zebulun, and Dinah. At this point, "God remembered Rachel," who gave birth to Joseph.

Thus the contest between Jacob and his brother repeated itself in the rivalry between Jacob's wives. However, there is little hint of any reconciliation between the women, as there was between Jacob and Esau. Leah, as the first wife, would hold authority in the family. Hence the rivalry would continue in the next generation, between the two sons of Rachel—Joseph and Benjamin—whom Jacob loved most, and their ten brothers—the sons of Leah and the two maidservants (who were both apparently under Leah's control). The pattern of Jacob's descendants dividing into ten-plus-two continued even into the division between the ten tribes of the Northern Kingdom and the two tribes of Judah.

Around the time that Joseph was born, Jacob desired to return home to his parents, but Laban was reluctant to release him on account of Jacob's great proficiency in animal husbandry. The two men struck an unusual deal. Jacob would receive every speckled or spotted sheep, every dark-colored lamb, and every spotted or speckled goat out of Laban's flocks. In exchange, Jacob would work an additional seven years for Laban. Through a ploy involving clever breeding techniques, Jacob became extremely wealthy, not only in herd cattle but also in slaves, camels, and donkeys.

Overall, Jacob labored in Laban's service for 21 years. He persevered even though Laban deceived him over his wives and cheated him out of his wages ten times. When he was treated unjustly Jacob did not become angry and resentful like Esau did. Instead he digested his suffering and continued to serve uncle Laban without complaining. Some scholars believe that this was a time when Jacob matured, learning through those experiences to understand why his brother Esau had become so angry. His attitude became a model for Jewish people, teaching them how they could survive and prosper even in the most unjust and hostile environment by keeping a good attitude and not complaining while using their wits and energy.

According to the traditional Jewish texts, Jacob lived a life that paralleled the descent of his offspring, the Jewish people, into the darkness of exile and suffering. His personal struggles—the hatred of his brother Esau, the deceptions of his father-in-law Laban, a violent and injurious struggle with the angel of God, a near attack by the armed forces of Esau, the early death of his favorite wife Rachel, the apparent death of his son Joseph, the rape of his daughter Dinah, and the enmity of the people of Canaan on account of his sons' slaughter of the Schechemites, are all symbolic of the future difficulties and struggles the Jewish people would undergo during their many exiles, which continues to the present day.[1]

Return to Canaan

As time passed and Jacob's possessions grew, Laban's sons grew jealous of Jacob's success, and Laban's friendly attitude toward Jacob began to change. He began to allege that Jacob had taken livestock from his flocks. God told Jacob he should now leave, and thus he and his clan did so without informing Laban. Before they left, Rachel stole all the "household idols" (teraphim) from Laban's house.

Laban, in a rage, pursued Jacob for seven days. The night before he caught up with him, God spoke to him in a dream and warned him not to say anything good or bad to Jacob. When the two met, Laban played the part of the injured father-in-law and also demanded his teraphim back (Laban was hardly a pious man. His rage is explained by the ancient custom, according to Nuzi documents, that the teraphim represented title deeds to the contested property).[2] Ignorant of Rachel's theft of the idols, Jacob told Laban that whoever stole them should die, and offered to let him search. When Laban reached Rachel's tent, she hid the idols by sitting on them, pleading that she could not rise because of menstrual cramps—"the way of women is upon me" (Gen. 31:35). This comical scene shows Rachel to be every bit as clever as her husband. Laban is unable to substantiate his claim to the property, and he parts from Jacob in peace, Laban returning home and Jacob continuing on his way.

Wrestling with a Mysterious Being

Jacob Wrestling with the Angel, Gustave Doré, 1855

As Jacob neared the land of Canaan, he sent messengers ahead to his brother Esau. They returned with the news that Esau was coming to meet Jacob with an army of four hundred men. In great apprehension, Jacob prepared for the worst. He felt that he must now depend only on God, and he went in earnest prayer to God. Jacob then sent rich gifts of livestock and other wealth to Esau. When Esau asked the messangers who owned the flocks they replied, "They belong to your servant Jacob; he sends them as a present to my lord Esau, and he is behind us." Through such language Jacob humbled himself in front of his older brother and made it easier for him to forgive Jacob.

With his family on one side of the ford of Jabbok, Jacob spent the night alone in communion with God on the other side of the river. There, a mysterious being—usually considered to be an angel—wrestled with Jacob, even striking him painfully in the hollow of his thigh. Yet Jacob would not give up, even until daybreak when the being apparently had to leave. When he tried to leave, Jacob demanded a blessing first, and the angel declared that from now on, Jacob would be called “Israel,” meaning "he who struggles with God." Jacob then asked the being's name, but his opponent refused to answer. Afterward Jacob named the place Penu-el (meaning "face of God"), saying "I have seen God face to face and lived."

This incident still has an impact on many Jews today, as Orthodox Jews will not eat the area of an animal's thigh containing the gid hanasheh (commonly identified as the sciatic nerve) on an otherwise kosher animal.

There are varying views as to whether this mysterious being who wrestled with Jacob was a man, an angel, or God Himself. According to the Jewish commentator Rashi, he was the guardian angel of Esau himself, sent to destroy Jacob before he could return to the land of Canaan. Other rabbinic traditions hold that the being refused to identify itself for fear that if its secret name was known, it would have been conjurable by incantations. Some commentators, however, argue that the stranger was God, citing Jacob's own words and the name he assumed thereafter ("struggles with God"). They point out that although later scriptures maintain that God does not manifest as a mortal, several instances of it arguably occurs in Genesis, for example, in 18:1, with Abraham. Finally, there are modern psychological interpretations that see the wrestling as an inner struggle where Jacob must confront his own demons of fear and insecurity on the eve of his fateful meeting with his brother.

The Encounter with Esau

Jacob and Esau meet in peace at the Ford of Jabbok

In the morning Jacob assembled his wives and 11 sons, placing Rachel and her children in the rear and Leah and her children in the front. Jacob himself took the foremost position. Jacob's bounteous gift of camels, goats and flocks had convinced Esau he meant no threat. As he approached his brother, Jacob humbled himself and bowed to the ground seven times, signifying his sincere apology for all the bad feelings between them. Their reunion was an emotional one. "Esau ran to meet Jacob and embraced him; he threw his arms around his neck and kissed him. And they wept." When Esau asked about the people with him, Jacob humbly said they were all a gift from God and told his slaves and family members to bow down to Esau. Esau assured his brother that he needed no gifts, being wealthy himself, but Jacob implored him to accept his presents, saying, "To see your face is like seeing the face of God". (Gen. 33:10)

This is the climax of the Jacob story. The dramatic reconciliation between brothers may be the very first example of a man who successfully practices the dictum "love your enemy." It is paradigmatic for how all people can win over a bitter rival, attaining the goal through generosity, humility and unselfish love. The story contains many practical lessons for how to effect such reconciliation: (1) thorough preparation that includes gaining a foundation of accomplishment that can earn the rival's respect; (2) abiding love for the rival brother, leading one to risk the danger of confrontation; (3) overcoming a spiritual struggle over inner demons and doubts before meeting one's rival; (4) generous giving with a humble heart; and (5) unshakable faith in God's protection.

Jacob's Journey Home

Esau then offered to accompany them on their way, but Jacob preferred that they go their separate ways. Jacob was now the leader of a considerable clan, and besides, Esau had become a chieftain of Edom (Seir). It was time for Jacob to be a clan leader in his own right, as befitted the owner of the birthright.

Jacob arrived in Shechem, where he bought a parcel of land that would eventually house Joseph's Tomb. There he dwelt for several years and set up an altar and called it "El Elohe Israel" (El, the God of Israel). Finally, Jacob set out for Bethel, the place where God had appeared to him and where he had made his vow. As his clan neared Bethel, Rachel went into labor and died as she gave birth to her second—and Jacob's twelfth—son, Benjamin. Jacob buried her and erected a monument over her grave, which is located just outside Bethlehem. Rachel's Tomb remains a popular site for pilgrimages and prayers to this day.

Jacob was finally reunited with his father Isaac in Mamre (outside Hebron). When Isaac died at the age of 180, Jacob and Esau buried him together in the Cave of Machpelah which Abraham had purchased as a family burial plot.

Jacob's Later Life

In his old age, Jacob functions as an aged patriarch who can barely control the actions of his offspring. In Shechem, Dinah, his daughter through Leah, was raped by the prince's son, who then fell in love with her and desired to marry the girl. Dinah's brothers, pretending friendship, agreed on the condition that the men of Shechem first be circumcised. While the men were recovering from their wounds, Levi and Simeon slaughtered the male residents of the town and fled not only with Dinah, but also with much plunder including their victims' wives and children. Jacob would rebuke his two sons for this act only on his deathbed (Gen. 49:5-7).

Jacob was especially fond of his and Rachel's son Joseph, for whom he made a richly-embroidered coat. This incited Joseph's brothers to jealousy, which was exacerbated by Joseph's reported dream that the sun, moon and stars had bowed to him. The obvious interpretation was that Jacob (the sun), Rachel (the moon) and Joseph's brothers (the stars) would one day prostrate themselves before Joseph. The brothers then sold Joseph into slavery, telling Jacob that he had been killed by a wild beast.

Jacob (at right) blessing his grandchildren, Ephraim and Manasseh, in the presence Joseph and their mother

More than a decade later, in the midst of a famine, Jacob ordered his sons, except for Benjamin, the youngest, to travel to Egypt to procure grain for their starving families in Canaan. When they returned with the grain, they informed Jacob that they had been accused as spies and that Simeon had remained behind as a hostage. To redeem him, they must return with young Benjamin to show their good faith. Jacob initially refused, but after the initial token shipment of grain had been consumed and the famine continued to plague the clan, he reluctantly agreed that Benjamin could accompany the brothers on the return trip. While there, they learned that the great Egyptian lord with whom they had been dealing was none other than their long lost brother Joseph. After testing his siblings several times, Joseph was now satisfied that they had seen the error of their earlier ways and changed. He richly rewarded them with grain and other wealth and sent them back to report the whole story to Jacob.

Overjoyed to see his beloved Joseph—now the prime minister of Egypt—again, Jacob's last 17 years were spent in tranquility in Egypt, knowing that all his 12 sons had become righteous men. Before he died, Jacob elevated Joseph's two sons, Ephraim and Manasseh, to the status of full tribes. He also blessed all twelve of his sons, each with a prophetic blessing related to the character of the tribe that would spring from them. To his fourth son, Judah, he gave a particularly significant blessing, signaling the tribe's future pre-eminence and the coming of the Messiah from Judah's lineage:

The scepter will not depart from Judah,
nor the ruler's staff from between his feet,
until he comes to whom it belongs
and the obedience of the nations is his. (Gen. 49:10)

With the Pharaoh's permission, after Jacob died, Joseph led a huge state funeral back to the land of Canaan, with the 12 sons carrying their father's coffin and many Egyptian officials accompanying them.

Jacob in Islam

In Arabic, Jacob is known as Yaqub. According to the Qur'an, Jacob is of the company of the Elect and the Good (38:47, 21:75). He is revered as a prophet. The Qur'an does not give the details of Jacob’s life. He was honored by God with the name Isra'il not after his fight with the angel, but after he faithfully migrated during the night at God's command. Isra' means Night Journey and Il simply means God (Allah) (a cognate of the word El in Hebrew). God bestowed his special favor on Jacob and his posterity as He did on Abraham and Isaac (Qur'an 12:6). Jacob was a man of might and vision (38:45) and was chosen by God to preach the Message. The Qur'an stresses that true service to the One true God, especially in worship, was the main legacy of Jacob and his fathers (2:132-133). Salvation, according to the Qu'ran, hinges upon this legacy rather than one's religious identity (2:130-141).

Critical Views

Jacob, along with the other patriarchs, is at the center of numerous controversies among biblical scholars, historians, and archaeologists. Was he an historical person at all? If so, was he truly the son of Isaac and grandson of Abraham? Is the biblical story of Jacob accurate? Was it written by Moses, as traditionally claimed, or from several sources later combined by scribes during the period of the kings?

According to the documentary hypothesis, some sections of the Jacob saga are derived from the northern "Elohist" source (derived from its author's use of the word "Elohim" for God), while the greater part is derived from the southern Yahwist source, (derived from its use of the word Yahweh for God).

The traditions of Yahweh-worship and El-worship were eventually unified in the monotheistic tradition. However, enmity between northern and southern tribes was often strong. It is interesting to note Jacob's erecting of a sacred pillar at Bethel in this context. The southern priests in Jerusalem later condemned such pillars—called asherim and translated as "Ashera poles"—as idolatrous. In a campaign to centralize worship in Jerusalem, the northern sanctuary at Bethel was destroyed by King Josiah, and its sacred pillar was obliterated (2 Kings 23:13). The town of Shechem, where Jacob reportedly established another altar, later became a center of Samaritan tradition.

Some scholars doubt the lineal descent of the patriarchs. They believe that several distinct peoples—the tribes of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Joseph—eventually federated into one nation which called itself the Israelites. Accordingly, the stories of their origins were similarly unified, by making them a single lineage. Other scholars, usually referred to as biblical "minimalists," reject the historicity of these men altogether.

In a similar vein, the story of Jacob and Esau can be seen as explaining the ancient enmity that existed in later times between the Israelites and the Edomites, supposedly descended from Esau. Historically, Israel and Edom were sometimes allied, sometimes tributaries of each other, and sometimes outright enemies. The story of Jacob and Esau justifies Israel's dominance over Edom on the grounds that "the elder must serve the younger." Later, the prophet Malachi would declare God's words: "I have loved Jacob, but Esau I have hated" (Mal. 1:2-3).

Literary critic Harold Bloom sees Jacob as the only real male hero in the Yahwist narrative, which he believes to have been written by a female literary genius in the time of King Rehoboam. "Partly it is his energy of being, partly his heroic persistence," Bloom says, "but mostly it is because J [the Yahwist] persuades us that Jacob, Israel, has the Blessing."[3]

Footnotes

  1. Stories and interpretations of Jacob's life abound in the rabbinical literature. See Emil G. Hirsch, M. Seligsohn, Solomon Schechter and Julius H. Greenstone, “Jacob: In Rabbinical Literature,” Jewish Encyclopedia. Retrieved September 7, 2007.
  2. E. A. Speiser (ed.), The Anchor Bible: Genesis (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1964), 250-251.
  3. Harold Bloom, The Book of J (Grove Press, 2005, ISBN 0802141919).

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Bloom, Harold. 2005. The Book of J. Grove Press. ISBN 0802141919
  • Heap, Norman. 1999. Abraham, Isaac and Jacob: Servants and Prophets of God. Family History Publications. ISBN 978-0945905028
  • Smith, Mark S., 2002. The Early History of God: Yahweh and the Other Deities in Ancient Israel. William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. ISBN 978-0802839725

Credits

New World Encyclopedia writers and editors rewrote and completed the Wikipedia article in accordance with New World Encyclopedia standards. This article abides by terms of the Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0 License (CC-by-sa), which may be used and disseminated with proper attribution. Credit is due under the terms of this license that can reference both the New World Encyclopedia contributors and the selfless volunteer contributors of the Wikimedia Foundation. To cite this article click here for a list of acceptable citing formats.The history of earlier contributions by wikipedians is accessible to researchers here:

The history of this article since it was imported to New World Encyclopedia:

Note: Some restrictions may apply to use of individual images which are separately licensed.