Bible Concordance
Jacob (361 Occurrences)Matthew 1:2 Abraham became the father of Isaac. Isaac became the father of Jacob. Jacob became the father of Judah and his brothers.
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Matthew 1:15 Eliud became the father of Eleazar. Eleazar became the father of Matthan. Matthan became the father of Jacob.
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Matthew 1:16 Jacob became the father of Joseph, the husband of Mary, from whom was born Jesus, who is called Christ.
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Matthew 8:11 I tell you that many will come from the east and the west, and will sit down with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob in the Kingdom of Heaven,
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Matthew 22:32 'I am the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob?' God is not the God of the dead, but of the living."
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Mark 12:26 But about the dead, that they are raised; haven't you read in the book of Moses, about the Bush, how God spoke to him, saying,'I am the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob'?
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Luke 1:33 and he will reign over the house of Jacob forever. There will be no end to his Kingdom."
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Luke 3:34 the son of Jacob, the son of Isaac, the son of Abraham, the son of Terah, the son of Nahor,
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Luke 13:28 There will be weeping and gnashing of teeth, when you see Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and all the prophets, in the Kingdom of God, and yourselves being thrown outside.
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Luke 20:37 But that the dead are raised, even Moses showed at the bush, when he called the Lord'The God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob.'
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John 4:5 So he came to a city of Samaria, called Sychar, near the parcel of ground that Jacob gave to his son, Joseph.
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John 4:6 Jacob's well was there. Jesus therefore, being tired from his journey, sat down by the well. It was about the sixth hour.
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John 4:12 Are you greater than our father, Jacob, who gave us the well, and drank of it himself, as did his children, and his livestock?"
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Acts 3:13 The God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the God of our fathers, has glorified his Servant Jesus, whom you delivered up, and denied in the presence of Pilate, when he had determined to release him.
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Acts 7:8 He gave him the covenant of circumcision. So Abraham became the father of Isaac, and circumcised him the eighth day. Isaac became the father of Jacob, and Jacob became the father of the twelve patriarchs.
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Acts 7:12 But when Jacob heard that there was grain in Egypt, he sent out our fathers the first time.
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Acts 7:14 Joseph sent, and summoned Jacob, his father, and all his relatives, seventy-five souls.
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Acts 7:15 Jacob went down into Egypt, and he died, himself and our fathers,
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Acts 7:32 'I am the God of your fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob.' Moses trembled, and dared not look.
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Acts 7:46 who found favor in the sight of God, and asked to find a habitation for the God of Jacob.
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Romans 9:13 Even as it is written, "Jacob I loved, but Esau I hated."
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Romans 11:26 and so all Israel will be saved. Even as it is written, "There will come out of Zion the Deliverer, and he will turn away ungodliness from Jacob.
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Hebrews 11:9 By faith, he lived as an alien in the land of promise, as in a land not his own, dwelling in tents, with Isaac and Jacob, the heirs with him of the same promise.
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Hebrews 11:20 By faith, Isaac blessed Jacob and Esau, even concerning things to come.
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Hebrews 11:21 By faith, Jacob, when he was dying, blessed each of the sons of Joseph, and worshiped, leaning on the top of his staff.
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Genesis 25:26 After that, his brother came out, and his hand had hold on Esau's heel. He was named Jacob. Isaac was sixty years old when she bore them.
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Genesis 25:27 The boys grew. Esau was a skillful hunter, a man of the field. Jacob was a quiet man, living in tents.
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Genesis 25:28 Now Isaac loved Esau, because he ate his venison. Rebekah loved Jacob.
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Genesis 25:29 Jacob boiled stew. Esau came in from the field, and he was famished.
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Genesis 25:30 Esau said to Jacob, "Please feed me with that same red stew, for I am famished." Therefore his name was called Edom.
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Genesis 25:31 Jacob said, "First, sell me your birthright."
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Genesis 25:33 Jacob said, "Swear to me first." He swore to him. He sold his birthright to Jacob.
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Genesis 25:34 Jacob gave Esau bread and stew of lentils. He ate and drank, rose up, and went his way. So Esau despised his birthright.
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Genesis 27:6 Rebekah spoke to Jacob her son, saying, "Behold, I heard your father speak to Esau your brother, saying,
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Genesis 27:11 Jacob said to Rebekah his mother, "Behold, Esau my brother is a hairy man, and I am a smooth man.
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Genesis 27:15 Rebekah took the good clothes of Esau, her elder son, which were with her in the house, and put them on Jacob, her younger son.
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Genesis 27:17 She gave the savory food and the bread, which she had prepared, into the hand of her son Jacob.
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Genesis 27:19 Jacob said to his father, "I am Esau your firstborn. I have done what you asked me to do. Please arise, sit and eat of my venison, that your soul may bless me."
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Genesis 27:21 Isaac said to Jacob, "Please come near, that I may feel you, my son, whether you are really my son Esau or not."
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Genesis 27:22 Jacob went near to Isaac his father. He felt him, and said, "The voice is Jacob's voice, but the hands are the hands of Esau."
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Genesis 27:25 He said, "Bring it near to me, and I will eat of my son's venison, that my soul may bless you." He brought it near to him, and he ate. He brought him wine, and he drank.
(See NIV)
Genesis 27:30 It happened, as soon as Isaac had made an end of blessing Jacob, and Jacob had just gone out from the presence of Isaac his father, that Esau his brother came in from his hunting.
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Genesis 27:36 He said, "Isn't he rightly named Jacob? For he has supplanted me these two times. He took away my birthright. See, now he has taken away my blessing." He said, "Haven't you reserved a blessing for me?"
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Genesis 27:41 Esau hated Jacob because of the blessing with which his father blessed him. Esau said in his heart, "The days of mourning for my father are at hand. Then I will kill my brother Jacob."
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Genesis 27:42 The words of Esau, her elder son, were told to Rebekah. She sent and called Jacob, her younger son, and said to him, "Behold, your brother Esau comforts himself about you by planning to kill you.
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Genesis 27:46 Rebekah said to Isaac, "I am weary of my life because of the daughters of Heth. If Jacob takes a wife of the daughters of Heth, such as these, of the daughters of the land, what good will my life do me?"
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Genesis 28:1 Isaac called Jacob, blessed him, and commanded him, "You shall not take a wife of the daughters of Canaan.
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Genesis 28:5 Isaac sent Jacob away. He went to Paddan Aram to Laban, son of Bethuel the Syrian, Rebekah's brother, Jacob's and Esau's mother.
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Genesis 28:6 Now Esau saw that Isaac had blessed Jacob and sent him away to Paddan Aram, to take him a wife from there, and that as he blessed him he gave him a command, saying, "You shall not take a wife of the daughters of Canaan,"
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Genesis 28:7 and that Jacob obeyed his father and his mother, and was gone to Paddan Aram.
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Genesis 28:10 Jacob went out from Beersheba, and went toward Haran.
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Genesis 28:16 Jacob awakened out of his sleep, and he said, "Surely Yahweh is in this place, and I didn't know it."
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Genesis 28:18 Jacob rose up early in the morning, and took the stone that he had put under his head, and set it up for a pillar, and poured oil on its top.
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Genesis 28:20 Jacob vowed a vow, saying, "If God will be with me, and will keep me in this way that I go, and will give me bread to eat, and clothing to put on,
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Genesis 29:1 Then Jacob went on his journey, and came to the land of the children of the east.
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Genesis 29:4 Jacob said to them, "My relatives, where are you from?" They said, "We are from Haran."
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Genesis 29:7 Then Jacob said, The sun is still high and it is not time to get the cattle together: get water for the sheep and go and give them their food.
(BBE)
Genesis 29:10 It happened, when Jacob saw Rachel the daughter of Laban, his mother's brother, and the sheep of Laban, his mother's brother, that Jacob went near, and rolled the stone from the well's mouth, and watered the flock of Laban his mother's brother.
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Genesis 29:11 Jacob kissed Rachel, and lifted up his voice, and wept.
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Genesis 29:12 Jacob told Rachel that he was her father's brother, and that he was Rebekah's son. She ran and told her father.
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Genesis 29:13 It happened, when Laban heard the news of Jacob, his sister's son, that he ran to meet Jacob, and embraced him, and kissed him, and brought him to his house. Jacob told Laban all these things.
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Genesis 29:14 And Laban said to him, Truly, you are my bone and my flesh. And he kept Jacob with him for the space of a month.
(BBE NIV)
Genesis 29:15 Laban said to Jacob, "Because you are my brother, should you therefore serve me for nothing? Tell me, what will your wages be?"
(WEB KJV JPS ASV BBE DBY WBS YLT NAS RSV)
Genesis 29:18 Jacob loved Rachel. He said, "I will serve you seven years for Rachel, your younger daughter."
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Genesis 29:20 Jacob served seven years for Rachel. They seemed to him but a few days, for the love he had for her.
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Genesis 29:21 Jacob said to Laban, "Give me my wife, for my days are fulfilled, that I may go in to her."
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Genesis 29:23 It happened in the evening, that he took Leah his daughter, and brought her to him. He went in to her.
(See NAS RSV NIV)
Genesis 29:25 And in the morning Jacob saw that it was Leah: and he said to Laban, What have you done to me? was I not working for you so that I might have Rachel? why have you been false to me?
(BBE RSV NIV)
Genesis 29:28 Jacob did so, and fulfilled her week. He gave him Rachel his daughter as wife.
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Genesis 29:30 Then Jacob took Rachel as his wife, and his love for her was greater than his love for Leah; and he went on working for Laban for another seven years.
(BBE NAS RSV NIV)
Genesis 30:1 When Rachel saw that she bore Jacob no children, Rachel envied her sister. She said to Jacob, "Give me children, or else I will die."
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Genesis 30:2 Jacob's anger was kindled against Rachel, and he said, "Am I in God's place, who has withheld from you the fruit of the womb?"
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Genesis 30:4 She gave him Bilhah her handmaid as wife, and Jacob went in to her.
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Genesis 30:5 Bilhah conceived, and bore Jacob a son.
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Genesis 30:7 Bilhah, Rachel's handmaid, conceived again, and bore Jacob a second son.
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Genesis 30:9 When Leah saw that she had finished bearing, she took Zilpah, her handmaid, and gave her to Jacob as a wife.
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Genesis 30:10 Zilpah, Leah's handmaid, bore Jacob a son.
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Genesis 30:12 Zilpah, Leah's handmaid, bore Jacob a second son.
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Genesis 30:16 Jacob came from the field in the evening, and Leah went out to meet him, and said, "You must come in to me; for I have surely hired you with my son's mandrakes." He lay with her that night.
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Genesis 30:17 God listened to Leah, and she conceived, and bore Jacob a fifth son.
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Genesis 30:19 Leah conceived again, and bore a sixth son to Jacob.
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Genesis 30:25 It happened, when Rachel had borne Joseph, that Jacob said to Laban, "Send me away, that I may go to my own place, and to my country.
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Genesis 30:29 Then Jacob said, You have seen what I have done for you, and how your cattle have done well under my care.
(BBE RSV NIV)
Genesis 30:31 He said, "What shall I give you?" Jacob said, "You shall not give me anything. If you will do this thing for me, I will again feed your flock and keep it.
(WEB KJV JPS ASV BBE DBY WBS YLT NAS RSV NIV)
Genesis 30:36 He set three days' journey between himself and Jacob, and Jacob fed the rest of Laban's flocks.
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Genesis 30:37 Jacob took to himself rods of fresh poplar, almond, plane tree, peeled white streaks in them, and made the white appear which was in the rods.
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Genesis 30:40 Jacob separated the lambs, and set the faces of the flocks toward the streaked and all the black in the flock of Laban: and he put his own droves apart, and didn't put them into Laban's flock.
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Genesis 30:41 It happened, whenever the stronger of the flock conceived, that Jacob laid the rods before the eyes of the flock in the gutters, that they might conceive among the rods;
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Genesis 30:42 but when the flock were feeble, he didn't put them in. So the feebler were Laban's, and the stronger Jacob's.
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Genesis 31:1 He heard the words of Laban's sons, saying, "Jacob has taken away all that was our father's. From that which was our father's, has he gotten all this wealth."
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Genesis 31:2 Jacob saw the expression on Laban's face, and, behold, it was not toward him as before.
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Genesis 31:3 Yahweh said to Jacob, "Return to the land of your fathers, and to your relatives, and I will be with you."
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Genesis 31:4 Jacob sent and called Rachel and Leah to the field to his flock,
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Genesis 31:11 The angel of God said to me in the dream,'Jacob,' and I said,'Here I am.'
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Genesis 31:17 Then Jacob rose up, and set his sons and his wives on the camels,
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Genesis 31:20 Jacob deceived Laban the Syrian, in that he didn't tell him that he was running away.
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Genesis 31:22 Laban was told on the third day that Jacob had fled.
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Genesis 31:23 He took his relatives with him, and pursued after him seven days' journey. He overtook him in the mountain of Gilead.
(See NIV)
Genesis 31:24 God came to Laban, the Syrian, in a dream of the night, and said to him, "Take heed to yourself that you don't speak to Jacob either good or bad."
(WEB KJV JPS ASV BBE DBY WBS YLT NAS RSV NIV)
Genesis 31:25 Laban caught up with Jacob. Now Jacob had pitched his tent in the mountain, and Laban with his relatives encamped in the mountain of Gilead.
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Thesaurus
Jacob (361 Occurrences)... When Isaac was about 160 years of age,
Jacob and his mother conspired to deceive
the aged patriarch (Genesis 27), with the view of procuring the transfer of
.../j/jacob.htm - 77kJacob's (34 Occurrences)
...Jacob's Well. ... It was dug by Jacob, and hence its name, in the "parcel of ground"
which he purchased from the sons of Hamor (Genesis 33:19). ...
/j/jacob's.htm - 23k
Paddan-aram (10 Occurrences)
... The versions agree in translating both as Mesopotamia, and identify with the home
of the patriarchs and the scene of Jacob's exile the district of Haran to the ...
/p/paddan-aram.htm - 10k
Sychar (1 Occurrence)
... the result of recent explorations, been identified with `Askar, a small Samaritan
town on the southern base of Ebal, about a mile to the north of Jacob's well. ...
/s/sychar.htm - 10k
Paddan (11 Occurrences)
... Genesis 28:5 Isaac sent Jacob away. He went to Paddan Aram to Laban, son of Bethuel
the Syrian, Rebekah's brother, Jacob's and Esau's mother. ...
/p/paddan.htm - 10k
Padanaram (10 Occurrences)
... Genesis 28:5 And Isaac sent away Jacob: and he went to Padanaram unto Laban, son
of Bethuel the Syrian, the brother of Rebekah, Jacob's and Esau's mother. ...
/p/padanaram.htm - 9k
Padan-aram (10 Occurrences)
... Genesis 28:5 And Isaac sent away Jacob; and he went to Padan-Aram, to Laban the
son of Bethuel the Syrian, the brother of Rebecca, Jacob's and Esau's mother. ...
/p/padan-aram.htm - 9k
Bilhah (11 Occurrences)
... Faltering; bashful, Rachel's handmaid, whom she gave to Jacob (Genesis 29:29). ... Genesis
30:4 She gave him Bilhah her handmaid as wife, and Jacob went in to her. ...
/b/bilhah.htm - 11k
Aram (130 Occurrences)
... Genesis 28:5 Isaac sent Jacob away. He went to Paddan Aram to Laban, son of Bethuel
the Syrian, Rebekah's brother, Jacob's and Esau's mother. ...
/a/aram.htm - 40k
Hamor (13 Occurrences)
... Easton's Bible Dictionary He-ass, a Hivite from whom Jacob purchased the plot
of ground in which Joseph was afterwards buried (Genesis 33:19). ...
/h/hamor.htm - 12k
Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary
Jacobthat supplants, undermines; the heel
Smith's Bible Dictionary
Jacob(supplanter), the second son of Isaac and Rebekah. He was born with Esau, probably at the well of Lahai-roi, about B.C. 1837. His history is related in the latter half of the book of Genesis. He bought the birthright from his brother Esau, and afterward acquired the blessing intended for Esau, by practicing a well-known deceit on Isaac. (Jacob did not obtain the blessing because of his deceit, but in spite of it. That which was promised he would have received in some good way; but Jacob and his mother, distrusting God's promise, sought the promised blessing in a wrong way, and received with it trouble and sorrow. --ED.) Jacob, in his 78th year, was sent from the family home to avoid his brother, and to seek a wife among his kindred in Padan-aram. As he passed through Bethel, God appeared to him. After the lapse of twenty-one years he returned from Padan-aram with two wives, two concubines, eleven sons and a daughter, and large property. He escaped from the angry pursuit of Laban, from a meeting with Esau, and from the vengeance of the Canaanites provoked by the murder of Shechem; and in each of these three emergencies he was aided and strengthened by the interposition of God, and in sign of the grace won by a night of wrestling with God his name was changed at Jabbok into Israel. Deborah and Rachel died before he reached Hebron; Joseph, the favorite son of Jacob, was sold into Egypt eleven years before the death of Isaac; and Jacob had probably exceeded his 130th year when he went tither. He was presented to Pharaoh, and dwelt for seventeen years in Rameses and Goshen, and died in his 147th year. His body was embalmed, carried with great care and pomp into the land of Canaan, and deposited with his fathers, and his wife Leah, in the cave of Machpelah. The example of Jacob is quoted by the first and the last of the minor prophets. Besides the frequent mention of his name in conjunction with the names of the other two patriarchs, there are distinct references to the events in the life of Jacob in four books of the New Testament - (John 1:51; 4:5,12; Acts 7:12,16; Romans 9:11-13; Hebrews 11:21; 12:16)
ATS Bible Dictionary
JacobSon of Isaac and Rebekah, and twin-brother to Esau. As at his birth he held his brother's heel, he was called Jacob, that is, the heelholder, one who comes behind and catches the heel of his adversary, a supplanter, Genesis 25:26. This was a king of predictive intimation of his future conduct in life. Jacob was meek and peaceable, living a shepherd life at home. Esau was more turbulent and fierce, and passionately fond of hunting. Isaac was partial to Esau, Rebekah to Jacob. Jacob having taken advantage of his brother's absence and his father's infirmity to obtain the blessing of the birthright, or primogeniture, was compelled to fly into Mesopotamia to avoid the consequences of his brother's wrath, Genesis 27:1-28:22. On his journey the Lord appeared to him in a dream, (see LADDER,) promised him His protection, and declared His purpose relative to his descendants' possessing the land of Canaan, and the descent of the Messiah through him, Genesis 28:10, etc. His subsequent days, which he calls "few and evil," were clouded with many sorrows, yet amid them all he was sustained by the care and favor of God. On his solitary journey of six hundred miles into Mesopotamia, and during the toils and injuries of this twenty years' service with Laban, God still prospered him, and on his return to the land of promise inclined the hostile spirits of Laban and of Esau to peace. On the border of Canaan the angels of God met him, and the God of angels wrestled with him, yielded him the blessing, and gave him the honored name of Israel. But sore trials awaited him: his mother was no more; his sister-wives imbittered his life with their jealousies; his children Dinah, Simeon, Levi and Reuben filled him with grief and shame; his beloved Rachel and his father were removed by death; Joseph his favorite son he had given up as slain by wild beasts; and the loss of Benjamin threatened to bring his gray hairs with sorrow to the grave. But the sunset of his life was majestically calm and bright. For seventeen years, he enjoyed in the land of Goshen a serene happiness: he gave a dying blessing in Jehovah's name to his assembled sons; visions of their future prosperity rose before his eyes, especially the long line of the royal race of Judah, culminating in the glorious kingdom of SHILOH. "He saw it, and was glad." Soon after, he was gathered to his fathers, and his body was embalmed, and buried with all possible honors in the burial-place of Abraham near Hebron, B. C. 1836-1689. In the history of Jacob we observe that in repeated instances he used unjustifiable means to secure promised advantages, instead of waiting, in faith and obedience, for the unfailing providence of God. We observe also the divine chastisement of his sins, and his steadfast growth in grace to the last, Genesis 24:1-50. His name is found in the New Testament, illustrating the sovereignty of God and the power of faith, Romans 9:13 Hebrews 11:9,21.
Easton's Bible Dictionary
One who follows on another's heels; supplanter, (
Genesis 25:26;
27:36;
Hosea 12:2-4), the second born of the twin sons of Isaac by Rebekah. He was born probably at Lahai-roi, when his father was fifty-nine and Abraham one hundred and fifty-nine years old. Like his father, he was of a quiet and gentle disposition, and when he grew up followed the life of a shepherd, while his brother Esau became an enterprising hunter. His dealing with Esau, however, showed much mean selfishness and cunning (
Genesis 25:29-34).
When Isaac was about 160 years of age, Jacob and his mother conspired to deceive the aged patriarch (Genesis 27), with the view of procuring the transfer of the birthright to himself. The birthright secured to him who possessed it (1) superior rank in his family (Genesis 49:3); (2) a double portion of the paternal inheritance (Deuteronomy 21:17); (3) the priestly office in the family (Numbers 8:17-19); and (4) the promise of the Seed in which all nations of the earth were to be blessed (Genesis 22:18).
Soon after his acquisition of his father's blessing (Genesis 27), Jacob became conscious of his guilt; and afraid of the anger of Esau, at the suggestion of Rebekah Isaac sent him away to Haran, 400 miles or more, to find a wife among his cousins, the family of Laban, the Syrian (28). There he met with Rachel (29). Laban would not consent to give him his daughter in marriage till he had served seven years; but to Jacob these years "seemed but a few days, for the love he had to her." But when the seven years were expired, Laban craftily deceived Jacob, and gave him his daughter Leah. Other seven years of service had to be completed probably before he obtained the beloved Rachel. But "life-long sorrow, disgrace, and trials, in the retributive providence of God, followed as a consequence of this double union."
At the close of the fourteen years of service, Jacob desired to return to his parents, but at the entreaty of Laban he tarried yet six years with him, tending his flocks (31:41). He then set out with his family and property "to go to Isaac his father in the land of Canaan" (Genesis 31). Laban was angry when he heard that Jacob had set out on his journey, and pursued after him, overtaking him in seven days. The meeting was of a painful kind. After much recrimination and reproach directed against Jacob, Laban is at length pacified, and taking an affectionate farewell of his daughters, returns to his home in Padanaram. And now all connection of the Israelites with Mesopotamia is at an end.
Soon after parting with Laban he is met by a company of angels, as if to greet him on his return and welcome him back to the Land of Promise (32:1, 2). He called the name of the place Mahanaim, i.e., "the double camp," probably his own camp and that of the angels. The vision of angels was the counterpart of that he had formerly seen at Bethel, when, twenty years before, the weary, solitary traveller, on his way to Padan-aram, saw the angels of God ascending and descending on the ladder whose top reached to heaven (28:12).
He now hears with dismay of the approach of his brother Esau with a band of 400 men to meet him. In great agony of mind he prepares for the worst. He feels that he must now depend only on God, and he betakes himself to him in earnest prayer, and sends on before him a munificent present to Esau, "a present to my lord Esau from thy servant Jacob." Jacob's family were then transported across the Jabbok; but he himself remained behind, spending the night in communion with God. While thus engaged, there appeared one in the form of a man who wrestled with him. In this mysterious contest Jacob prevailed, and as a memorial of it his name was changed to Israel (wrestler with God); and the place where this occured he called Peniel, "for", said he, "I have seen God face to face, and my life is preserved" (32:25-31).
After this anxious night, Jacob went on his way, halting, mysteriously weakened by the conflict, but strong in the assurance of the divine favour. Esau came forth and met him; but his spirit of revenge was appeased, and the brothers met as friends, and during the remainder of their lives they maintained friendly relations. After a brief sojourn at Succoth, Jacob moved forward and pitched his tent near Shechem (q.v.), 33:18; but at length, under divine directions, he moved to Bethel, where he made an altar unto God (35:6, 7), and where God appeared to him and renewed the Abrahamic covenant. While journeying from Bethel to Ephrath (the Canaanitish name of Bethlehem), Rachel died in giving birth to her second son Benjamin (35:16-20), fifteen or sixteen years after the birth of Joseph. He then reached the old family residence at Mamre, to wait on the dying bed of his father Isaac. The complete reconciliation between Esau and Jacob was shown by their uniting in the burial of the patriarch (35:27-29).
Jacob was soon after this deeply grieved by the loss of his beloved son Joseph through the jealousy of his brothers (37:33). Then follows the story of the famine, and the successive goings down into Egypt to buy corn (42), which led to the discovery of the long-lost Joseph, and the patriarch's going down with all his household, numbering about seventy souls (Exodus 1:5; Deuteronomy 10:22; Acts 7:14), to sojourn in the land of Goshen. Here Jacob, "after being strangely tossed about on a very rough ocean, found at last a tranquil harbour, where all the best affections of his nature were gently exercised and largely unfolded" (Genesis 48). At length the end of his checkered course draws nigh, and he summons his sons to his bedside that he may bless them. Among his last words he repeats the story of Rachel's death, although forty years had passed away since that event took place, as tenderly as if it had happened only yesterday; and when "he had made an end of charging his sons, he gathered up his feet into the bed, and yielded up the ghost" (49:33). His body was embalmed and carried with great pomp into the land of Canaan, and buried beside his wife Leah in the cave of Machpelah, according to his dying charge. There, probably, his embalmed body remains to this day (50:1-13). (see HEBRON.)
The history of Jacob is referred to by the prophets Hosea (12:3, 4, 12) and Malachi (1:2). In Micah 1:5 the name is a poetic synonym for Israel, the kingdom of the ten tribes. There are, besides the mention of his name along with those of the other patriarchs, distinct references to events of his life in Paul's epistles (Romans 9:11-13; Hebrews 12:16; 11:21). See references to his vision at Bethel and his possession of land at Shechem in John 1:51; 4:5, 12; also to the famine which was the occasion of his going down into Egypt in Acts 7:12 (see LUZ; BETHEL.)
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary
(
n.) A Hebrew patriarch (son of Isaac, and ancestor of the Jews), who in a vision saw a ladder reaching up to heaven (Gen. xxviii. 12); -- also called Israel.
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
JACOB (1)ja'-kub:
I. NAME
1. Form and Distribution
2. Etymology and Associations
II. HIS PLACE IN THE PATRIARCHAL SUCCESSION
1. As the Son of Isaac and Rebekah
2. As the Brother of Esau
3. As the Father of the Twelve
III. BIOGRAPHY
1. With Isaac in Canaan
2. To Aram and Back
3. In Canaan Again
4. Last Years in Egypt
IV. CHARACTER AND BELIEFS
1. Natural Qualities
2. Stages of Development
3. Attitude toward the Promise
4. How Far a "Type" of Israel
V. REFERENCES OUTSIDE OF GENESIS
1. In the Old Testament
2. In the New Testament
VI. MODERN INTERPRETATIONS OF JACOB
1. Personification of the Hebrew Nation
2. God and Demi-God
3. Character of Fiction
I. Name.
1. Form and Distribution:
ya`aqobh (5 times ya`aqowbh); Iakob, is in form a verb in the Qal imperfect, 3rd masculine singular. Like some 50 other Hebrew names of this same form, it has no subject for the verb expressed. But there are a number of independent indications that Jacob belongs to that large class of names consisting of a verb with some Divine name or title (in this case 'El) as the subject, from which the common abbreviated form is derived by omitting the subject.
(a) In Babylonian documents of the period of the Patriarchs, there occur such personal names as Ja-ku-bi, Ja-ku-ub-ilu (the former doubtless an abbreviation of the latter), and Aq-bu-u (compare Aq-bi-a-hu), according to Hilprecht a syncopated form for A-qu(?)-bu(-u), like Aq-bi-ili alongside of A-qa-bi-ili; all of which may be associated with the same root `aqabh, as appears in Jacob (see H. Ranke, Early Babylonian Personal Names, 1905, with annotations by Professor Hilprecht as editor, especially pp. 67, 113, 98 and 4).
(b) In the list of places in Palestine conquered by the Pharaoh Thutmose III appears a certain J'qb'r, which in Egyptian characters represents the Semitic letters ya`aqobh-'el, and which therefore seems to show that in the earlier half of the 15th century B.C. (so Petrie, Breasted) there was a place (not a tribe; see W. M. Muller, Asien und Europa, 162) in Central Palestine that bore a name in some way connected with "Jacob." Moreover, a Pharaoh of the Hyksos period bears a name that looks like ya`aqobh-'el (Spiegelberg, Orientalische Literaturzeitung, VII, 130).
(c) In the Jewish tractate Pirqe Abhoth, iii.l, we read of a Jew named 'Aqabhyah, which is a name composed of the same verbal root as that in Jacob, together with the Divine name Yahu (i.e. Yahweh) in its common abbreviated form. It should be noted that the personal names `Aqqubh and Ya`aqobhah (accent on the penult) also occur in the Old Testament, the former borne by no less than 4 different persons; also that in the Palmyrene inscriptions we find a person named `ath`aqobh, a name in which this same verb `aqabh is preceded by the name of the god `Ate, just as in `Aqabhyah it is followed by the name Yahu.
2. Etymology and Associations:
Such being the form and distribution of the name, it remains to inquire: What do we know of its etymology and what were the associations it conveyed to the Hebrew ear?
The verb in all its usages is capable of deduction, by simple association of ideas, from the noun "heel." "To heel" might mean:
(a) "to take hold of by the heel" (so probably Hosea 12:3; compare Genesis 27:36);
(b) "to follow with evil intent," "to supplant" or in general "to deceive" (so Genesis 27:36 Jeremiah 9:4, where the parallel, "go about with slanders," is interesting because the word so translated is akin to the noun "foot," as "supplant" is to "heel");
(c) "to follow with good intent," whether as a slave (compare our English "to heel," of a dog) for service, or as a guard for protection, hence, "to guard" (so in Ethiopic), "to keep guard over", and thus "to restrain" (so Job 37:4);
(d) "to follow," "to succeed," "to take the place of another" (so Arabic, and the Hebrew noun 'eqebh, "consequence," "recompense," whether of reward or punishment).
Among these four significations, which most commends itself as the original intent in the use of this verb to form a proper name? The answer to this question depends upon the degree of strength with which the Divine name was felt to be the subject of the verb As Jacob-el, the simplest interpretation of the name is undoubtedly, as Baethgen urges (Beitrage zur sem. Religionsgeschichte, 158), "God rewardeth" ((d) above), like Nathanael, "God hath given," etc. But we have already seen that centuries before the time when Jacob is said to have been born, this name was shortened by dropping the Divine subject; and in this shortened form it would be more likely to call up in the minds of all Semites who used it, associations with the primary, physical notion of its root ((a) above). Hence, there is no ground to deny that even in the patriarchal period, this familiar personal name Jacob lay ready at hand-a name ready made, as it were-for this child, in view of the peculiar circumstances of its birth; we may say, indeed, one could not escape the use of it. (A parallel case, perhaps, is Genesis 38:28, 30, Zerah; compare Zerahiah.) The associations of this root in everyday use in Jacob's family to mean "to supplant" led to the fresh realization of its appropriateness to his character and conduct when he was grown ((b) above). This construction does not interfere with a connection between the patriarch Jacob and the "Jacob-els" referred to above (under 1, (b)), should that connection on other grounds appear probable. Such a longer form was perhaps for every "Jacob" an alternative form of his name, and under certain circumstances may have been used by or of even the patriarch Jacob.
II. Place in the Patriarchal Succession.
1. As the Son of Isaac and Rebekah:
In the dynasty of the "heirs of the promise," Jacob takes his place, first, as the successor of Isaac. In Isaac's life the most significant single fact had been his marriage with Rebekah instead of with a woman of Canaan. Jacob therefore represents the first generation of those who are determinately separate from their environment. Abraham and his household were immigrants in Canaan; Jacob and Esau were natives of Canaan in the second generation, yet had not a drop of Canaanitish blood in their veins. Their birth was delayed till 20 years after the marriage of their parents. Rebekah's barrenness had certainly the same effect, and probably the same purpose, as that of Sarah: it drove Isaac to Divine aid, demanded of him as it had of Abraham that "faith and patience" through which they "inherited the promises" (Hebrews 6:12), and made the children of this pair also the evident gift of God's grace, so that Isaac was the better able "by faith" to "bless Jacob and Esau even concerning things to come" (Hebrews 11:20).
2. As the Brother of Esau:
These twin brothers therefore share thus far the same relation to their parents and to what their parents transmit to them. But here the likeness ceases. "Being not yet born, neither having done anything good or bad, that the purpose of God according to election might stand, not of works, but of him that calleth, it was said unto (Rebecca), The elder shall serve the younger" (Romans 9:11, 12). In the Genesis-narrative, without any doctrinal assertions either adduced to explain it, or deduced from it, the fact is nevertheless made as clear as it is in Malachi or Romans, that Esau is rejected, and Jacob is chosen as a link in the chain of inheritance that receives and transmits the promise.
3. As Father of the Twelve:
With Jacob the last person is reached who, for his own generation, thus sums up in a single individual "the seed" of promise. He becomes the father of 12 sons, who are the progenitors of the tribes of the "peculiar people." It is for this reason that this people bears his name, and not that of his father Isaac or that of his grandfather Abraham. The "children of Israel," the "house of Jacob," are the totality of the seed of the promise. The Edomites too are children of Isaac. Ishmaelites equally with Israelites boast of descent from Abraham. But the twelve tribes that called themselves "Israel" were all descendants of Jacob, and were the only descendants of Jacob on the agnatic principle of family-constitution.
III. Biography.
The life of a wanderer (Deuteronomy 26:5 the Revised Version, margin) such as Jacob was, may often be best divided on the geographical principle. Jacob's career falls into the four distinct periods: that of his residence with Isaac in Canaan, that of his residence with Laban in Aram, that of his independent life in Canaan and that of his migration to Egypt.
1. With Isaac in Canaan:
Jacob's birth was remarkable in respect of
(a) its delay for 20 years as noted above,
(b) that condition of his mother which led to the Divine oracle concerning his future greatness and supremacy, and
(c) the unusual phenomenon that gave him his name: "he holds by the heel" (see above, I, 2).
Unlike his twin brother, Jacob seems to have been free from any physical peculiarities; his smoothness (Genesis 27:11) is only predicated of him in contrast to Esau's hairiness. These brothers, as they developed, grew apart in tastes and habits. Jacob, like his father in his quiet manner of life and (for that reason perhaps) the companion and favorite of his mother, found early the opportunity to obtain Esau's sworn renunciation of his right of primogeniture, by taking advantage of his habits, his impulsiveness and his fundamental indifference to the higher things of the family, the things of the future (Genesis 25:32). It was not until long afterward that the companion scene to this first "supplanting" (Genesis 27:36) was enacted. Both sons meanwhile are to be thought of simply as members of Isaac's following, during all the period of his successive sojourns in Gerar, the Valley of Gerar and Beersheba (Genesis 26). Within this period, when the brothers were 40 years of age, occurred Esau's marriage with two Hittite women. Jacob, remembering his own mother's origin, bided his time to find the woman who should be the mother of his children. The question whether she should be brought to him, as Rebekah was to Isaac, or he should go to find her, was settled at last by a family feud that only his absence could heal. This feud was occasioned by the fraud that Jacob at Rebekah's behest practiced upon his father and brother, when these two were minded to nullify the clearly revealed purpose of the oracle (Genesis 25:23) and the sanctions of a solemn oath (Genesis 25:33). Isaac's partiality for Esau arose perhaps as much from Esau's resemblance to the active, impulsive nature of his mother, as from the sensual gratification afforded Isaac by the savory dishes his son's hunting supplied. At any rate, this partiality defeated itself because it overreached itself. The wife, who had learned to be eyes and ears for a husband's failing senses, detected the secret scheme, counterplotted with as much skill as unscrupulousness, and while she obtained the paternal blessing for her favorite son, fell nevertheless under the painful necessity of choosing between losing him through his brother's revenge or losing him by absence from home. She chose, of course, the latter alternative, and herself brought about Jacob's departure, by pleading to Isaac the necessity for obtaining a woman as Jacob's wife of a sort different from the Canaanitish women that Esau had married. Thus ends the first portion of Jacob's life.
2. To Aram and Back:
It is no young man that sets out thus to escape a brother's vengeance, and perhaps to find a wife at length among his mother's kindred. It was long before this that Esau at the age of forty had married the Hittite women (compare Genesis 26:34 with 27:46). Yet to one who had hitherto spent his life subordinate to his father, indulged by his mother, in awe of a brother's physical superiority, and "dwelling in tents, a quiet (domestic) man" (Genesis 25:27), this journey of 500 or 600 miles, with no one to guide, counsel or defend, was as new an experience as if he had really been the stripling that he is sometimes represented to have been. All the most significant chapters in life awaited him: self-determination, love, marriage, fatherhood, domestic provision and administration, adjustment of his relations with men, and above all a personal and independent religious experience.
Of these things, all were to come to him in the 20 years of absence from Canaan, and the last was to come first; for the dream of Jacob at Beth-el was of course but the opening scene in the long drama of God's direct dealing with Jacob. Yet it was the determinative scene, for God in His latest and fullest manifestation to Jacob was just "the God of Beth-el" (Genesis 35:7; Genesis 48:3; Genesis 49:24).
With the arrival at Haran came love at once, though not for 7 years the consummation of that love. Its strength is naively indicated by the writer in two ways: impliedly in the sudden output of physical power at the well-side (Genesis 29:10), and expressly in the patient years of toil for Rachel's sake, which "seemed unto him but a few days for the love he had to her" (Genesis 29:20). Jacob is not primarily to be blamed for the polygamy that brought trouble into his home-life and sowed the seeds of division and jealousy in the nation of the future. Although much of Israel's history can be summed up in the rivalry of Leah and Rachel-Judah and Joseph-yet it was not Jacob's choice but Laban's fraud that introduced this cause of schism. At the end of his 7 years' labor Jacob received as wife not Rachel but Leah, on the belated plea that to give the younger daughter before the elder was not the custom of the country. This was the first of the "ten times" that Laban "changed the wages" of Jacob (Genesis 31:7, 41). Rachel became Jacob's wife 7 days after Leah, and for this second wife he "served 7 other years." During these 7 years were born most of the sons and daughters (Genesis 37:35) that formed the actual family, the nucleus of that large caravan that Jacob took back with him to Canaan. Dinah is the only daughter named; Genesis 30:21 is obviously in preparation for the story of Genesis 34 (see especially 34:31). Four sons of Leah were the oldest: Reuben, with the right of primogeniture, Simeon, Levi and Judah. Next came the 4 sons of Bilhah and Zilpah, the personal slaves of the two wives (compare ABRAHAM, iv, 2); the two pairs of sons were probably of about the same age (compare order in Genesis 49). Leah's 5th and 6th sons were separated by an interval of uncertain length from her older group. And Joseph, the youngest son born in Haran, was Rachel's first child, equally beloved by his mother, and by his father for her sake (33:2; compare 44:20), as well as because he was the youngest of the eleven (37:3).
Jacob's years of service for his wives were followed by 6 years of service rendered for a stipulated wage. Laban's cunning in limiting the amount of this wage in a variety of ways was matched by Jacob's cunning in devising means to overreach his uncle, so that the penniless wanderer of 20 years before becomes the wealthy proprietor of countless cattle and of the hosts of slaves necessary for their care (Genesis 32:10). At the same time the apology of Jacob for his conduct during this entire period of residence in Haran is spirited (Genesis 31:36-42); it is apparently unanswerable by Laban (Genesis 31:43); and it is confirmed, both by the evident concurrence of Leah and Rachel (Genesis 31:14-16), and by indications in the narrative that the justice (not merely the partiality) of God gave to each party his due recompense: to Jacob the rich returns of skillful, patient industry; to Laban rebuke and warning (Genesis 31:5-13, 24, 29, 42).
The manner of Jacob's departure from Haran was determined by the strained relations between his uncle and himself. His motive in going, however, is represented as being fundamentally the desire to terminate an absence from his father's country that had already grown too long (Genesis 31:30; compare Genesis 30:25)-a desire which in fact presented itself to him in the form of a revelation of God's own purpose and command (Genesis 31:3). Unhappily, his clear record was stained by the act of another than himself, who nevertheless, as a member of his family, entailed thus upon him the burden of responsibility. Rachel, like Laban her father, was devoted to the superstition that manifested itself in the keeping and consulting of teraphim, a custom which, whether more nearly akin to fetishism, totemism, or ancestor-worship, was felt to be incompatible with the worship of the one true God. (Note that the "teraphim" of Genesis 31:19, 34 are the same as the "gods" of 31:30, 32 and, apparently, of 35:2, 4.) This theft furnished Laban with a pretext for pursuit. What he meant to do he probably knew but imperfectly himself. Coercion of some sort he would doubtless have brought to bear upon Jacob and his caravan, had he not recognized in a dream the God whom Jacob worshipped, and heard Him utter a word of warning against the use of violence. Laban failed to find his stolen gods, for his daughter was as crafty and ready-witted as he. The whole adventure ended in a formal reconciliation, with the usual sacrificial and memorial token (Genesis 31:43-55).
After Laban, Esau. One danger is no sooner escaped than a worse threatens. Yet between them lies the pledge of Divine presence and protection in the vision of God's host at Mahanaim: just a simple statement, with none of the fanciful detail that popular story-telling loves, but the sober record of a tradition to which the supernatural was matter of fact. Even the longer passage that preserves the occurrence at Peniel is conceived in the same spirit. What the revelation of the host of God had not sufficed to teach this faithless, anxious, scheming patriarch, that God sought to teach him in the night-struggle, with its ineffaceable physical memorial of a human impotence that can compass no more than to cling to Divine omnipotence (Genesis 32:22-32). The devices of crafty Jacob to disarm an offended and supposedly implacable brother proved as useless as that bootless wrestling of the night before; Esau's peculiar disposition was not of Jacob's making, but of God's, and to it alone Jacob owed his safety. The practical wisdom of Jacob dictated his insistence upon bringing to a speedy termination the proposed association with his changeable brother, amid the difficulties of a journey that could not be shared by such divergent social and racial elements as Esau's armed host and Jacob's caravan, without discontent on the one side and disaster on the other. The brothers part, not to meet again until they meet to bury their father at Hebron (Genesis 35:29).
3. In Canaan Again:
Before Jacob's arrival in the South of Canaan where his father yet lived and where his own youth had been spent, he passed through a period of wandering in Central Palestine, somewhat similar to that narrated of his grandfather Abraham. To any such nomad, wandering slowly from Aram toward Egypt, a period of residence in the region of Mt. Ephraim was a natural chapter in his book of travels. Jacob's longer stops, recorded for us, were
(1) at Succoth, East of the Jordan near Peniel,
(2) at Shechem and
(3) at Beth-el.
Nothing worthy of record occurred at Succoth, but the stay at Shechem was eventful. Genesis 34, which tells the story of Dinah's seduction and her brother's revenge, throws as much light upon the relations of Jacob and the Canaanites, as does chapter 14 or chapter 23 upon Abraham's relations, or chapter 26 upon Isaac's relations, with such settled inhabitants of the land. There is a strange blending of moral and immoral elements in Jacob and his family as portrayed in this contretemps. There is the persistent tradition of separateness from the Canaanites bequeathed from Abraham's day (chapter 24), together with a growing family consciousness and sense of superiority (34:7, 14, 31). And at the same time there is indifference to their unique moral station among the environing tribes, shown in Dinah's social relations with them (34:1), in the treachery and cruelty of Simeon and Levi (34:25-29), and in Jacob's greater concern for the security of his possessions than for the preservation of his good name (verse 30).
It was this concern for the safety of the family and its wealth that achieved the end which dread of social absorption would apparently never have achieved-the termination of a long residence where there was moral danger for all. For a second time Jacob had fairly to be driven to Beth-el. Safety from his foes was again a gift of God (Genesis 35:5), and in a renewal of the old forgotten ideals of consecration (Genesis 35:2-8), he and all his following move from the painful associations of Shechem to the hallowed associations of Beth-el. Here were renewed the various phases of all God's earlier communications to this patriarch and to his fathers before him. The new name of Israel, hitherto so ill deserved, is henceforth to find realization in his life; his fathers' God is to be his God; his seed is to inherit the land of promise, and is to be no mean tribe, but a group of peoples with kings to rule over them like the nations round about (Genesis 35:9-12). No wonder that Jacob here raises anew his monument of stone-emblem of the "Stone of Israel" (Genesis 49:24)-and stamps forever, by this public act, upon ancient Luz (Genesis 35:6), the name of Beth-el which he had privately given it years before (Genesis 28:19).
Losses and griefs characterized the family life of the patriarch at this period. The death of his mother's Syrian nurse at Beth-el (Genesis 35:8; compare Genesis 24:59) was followed by the death of his beloved wife Rachel at Ephrath (Genesis 35:19; Genesis 48:7) in bringing forth the youngest of his 12 sons, Benjamin. At about the same time the eldest of the 12, Reuben, forfeited the honor of his station in the family by an act that showed all too clearly the effect of recent association with Canaanites (Genesis 35:22). Finally, death claimed Jacob's aged father, whose latest years had been robbed of the companionship, not only of this son, but also of the son whom his partiality had all but made a fratricide; at Isaac's grave in Hebron the ill-matched brothers met once more, thenceforth to go their separate ways, both in their personal careers and in their descendants' history (Genesis 35:29).
Jacob now is by right of patriarchal custom head of all the family. He too takes up his residence at Hebron (Genesis 37:14), and the story of the family fortunes is now pursued under the new title of "the generations of Jacob" (Genesis 37:2). True, most of this story revolves about Joseph, the youngest of the family save Benjamin; yet the occurrence of passages like Genesis 38, devoted exclusively to Judah's affairs, or 46:8-27, the enumeration of Jacob's entire family through its secondary ramifications, or Genesis 49, the blessing of Jacob on all his sons-all these prove that Jacob, not Joseph, is the true center of the narrative until his death. As long as he lives he is the real head of his house, and not merely a superannuated veteran like Isaac. Not only Joseph, the boy of 17 (37:2), but also the self-willed elder sons, even a score of years later, come and go at his bidding (Genesis 42; Genesis 43; Genesis 43 44; 45). Joseph's dearest thought, as it is his first thought, is for his aged father (43:7, 27; 44:19:00; and especially 45:3, 9, 13, 23, and 46:29).
4. Last Years in Egypt:
It is this devotion of Joseph that results in Jacob's migration to Egypt. What honors there Joseph can show his father he shows him: he presents him to Pharaoh, who for Joseph's sake receives him with dignity, and assigns him a home and sustenance for himself and all his people as honored guests of the land of Egypt (Genesis 47:7-12). Yet in Beersheba, while en route to Egypt, Jacob had obtained a greater honor than this reception by Pharaoh. He had found there, as ready to respond to his sacrifices as ever to those of his fathers, the God of his father Isaac, and had received the gracious assurance of Divine guidance in this momentous journey, fraught with so vast a significance for the future nation and the world (Genesis 46:1-4): God Himself would go with him into Egypt and give him, not merely the gratification of once more embracing his long-lost son, but the fulfillment of the covenant-promise (Genesis 15:13-16) that he and his were not turning their backs upon Canaan forever. Though 130 years of age when he stood before Pharaoh, Jacob felt his days to have been "few" as well as "evil," in comparison with those of his fathers (Genesis 47:9). And in fact he had yet 17 years to live in Goshen (Genesis 47:28).
These last days are passed over without record, save of the growth and prosperity of the family. But at their close came the impartation of the ancestral blessings, with the last will of the dying patriarch. After adopting Joseph's sons, Manasseh and Ephraim, as his own, Jacob blesses them, preferring the younger to the elder as he himself had once been preferred to Esau, and assigns to Joseph the "double portion" of the firstborn-that "preeminence" which he denies to Reuben (Genesis 48:22; Genesis 49:4). In poetry that combines with the warm emotion and glowing imagery of its style and the unsurpassed elevation of its diction, a lyrical fervor of religious sentiment which demands for its author a personality that had passed through just such course of tuition as Jacob had experienced, the last words of Jacob, in Genesis 49, mark a turning-point in the history of the people of God. This is a translation of biography into prophecy. On the assumption that it is genuine, we may confidently aver that it was simply unforgetable by those who heard it. Its auditors were its theme. Their descendants were its fulfillment. Neither the one class nor the other could ever let it pass out of memory.
It was "by faith," we are well reminded, that Jacob "blessed" and "worshipped" "when he was dying" (Hebrews 11:21). For he held to the promises of God, and even in the hour of dissolution looked for the fulfillment of the covenant, according to which Canaan should belong to him and to his seed after him. He therefore set Joseph an example, by "giving commandment concerning his bones," that they might rest in the burial-place of Abraham and Isaac near Hebron. To the accomplishment of this mission Joseph and all his brethren addressed themselves after their father's decease and the 70 days of official mourning. Followed by a "very great company" of the notables of Egypt, including royal officials and representatives of the royal family, this Hebrew tribe carried up to sepulture in the land of promise the embalmed body of the patriarch from whom henceforth they were to take their tribal name, lamented him according to custom for 7 days, and then returned to their temporary home in Egypt, till their children should at length be "called" thence to become God's son" (Hosea 11:1) and inherit His promises to their father Jacob.
IV. Character and Beliefs.
In the course of this account of Jacob's career the inward as well as the outward fortunes of the man have somewhat appeared. Yet a more comprehensive view of the kind of man he was will not be superfluous at this point. With what disposition was he endowed-the natural nucleus for acquired characteristics and habits? Through what stages did he pass in the development of his beliefs and his character? In particular, what attitude did he maintain toward the most significant thing in his life, the promise of God to his house? And lastly, what resemblances may be traced in Israel the man to Israel the nation, of such sort that the one may be regarded as "typical" of the other? These matters deserve more than a passing notice.
1. Natural Qualities:
From his father, Jacob inherited that domesticity and affectionate attachment to his home circle which appears in his life from beginning to end. He inherited shrewdness, initiative and resourcefulness from Rebekah-qualities which she shared apparently with her brother Laban and all his family. The conspicuous ethical faults of Abraham and Isaac alike are want of candor and want of courage. It is not surprising, therefore, to find the same failings in Jacob. Deceit and cowardice are visible again and again in the impartial record of his life. Both spring from unbelief. They belong to the natural man. God's transformation of this man was wrought by faith-by awakening and nourishing in him a simple trust in the truth and power of the Divine word.
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JACOB (2)
(ya`aqobh; Iakob):
(1) The patriarch (see preceding article).
(2) The father of Joseph the husband of Mary (Matthew 1:15, 16).
(3) Patronymic denoting the Israelites (Isaiah 10:21; Isaiah 14:1 Jeremiah 10:16).
JACOB, TESTAMENT OF
See APOCALYPTIC LITERATURE.
Greek
2384. Iakob -- Jacob, the son of Isaac, also the father of Joseph ... ... Jacob, the son of Isaac, also the father of Joseph, Mary's husband. Part of Speech:
Proper Noun, Indeclinable Transliteration: Iakob Phonetic Spelling: (ee-ak
... //strongsnumbers.com/greek2/2384.htm - 6k4478. Rhachel -- Rachel, the wife of Jacob
... Rachel, the wife of Jacob. Part of Speech: Proper Noun, Indeclinable Transliteration:
Rhachel Phonetic Spelling: (hrakh-ale') Short Definition: Rachel Definition ...
//strongsnumbers.com/greek2/4478.htm - 6k
2194. Zaboulon -- Zebulun, a son of Jacob and one of the Isr. ...
... Zaboulon. 2195 . Zebulun, a son of Jacob and one of the Isr. ... Word Origin of Hebrew
origin Zebulun Definition Zebulun, a son of Jacob and one of the Isr. ...
//strongsnumbers.com/greek2/2194.htm - 6k
4502. Rhouben -- Reuben, a son of Jacob, also a tribe of Isr.
... Rhouben. 4503 . Reuben, a son of Jacob, also a tribe of Isr. ... Word Origin of Hebrew
origin Reuben Definition Reuben, a son of Jacob, also a tribe of Isr. ...
//strongsnumbers.com/greek2/4502.htm - 6k
2474. Israel -- Israel, the name of the Jewish people and their ...
... Noun, Indeclinable Transliteration: Israel Phonetic Spelling: (is-rah-ale') Short
Definition: Israel Definition: (Hebrew), Israel, surname of Jacob, then the ...
//strongsnumbers.com/greek2/2474.htm - 7k
11. Abraam -- Abraham, the Heb. patriarch
... Abraham. Of Hebrew origin ('Abraham); Abraham, the Hebrew patriarch -- Abraham.
(In Acts 7:16 the text should probably read Jacob.). see HEBREW 'Abraham. ...
//strongsnumbers.com/greek2/11.htm - 6k
2466. Isachar -- Issachar.
... Issachar. Of Hebrew origin (Yissaskar); Isachar (ie Jissaskar), a son of Jacob
(figuratively, his descendant) -- Issachar. see HEBREW Yissaskar. ...
//strongsnumbers.com/greek2/2466.htm - 6k
958. Beniamin -- Benjamin, one of the twelve Isr. tribes
... Indeclinable Transliteration: Beniamin Phonetic Spelling: (ben-ee-am-een') Short
Definition: Benjamin Definition: Benjamin, youngest son of Jacob, founder of ...
//strongsnumbers.com/greek2/958.htm - 6k
5443. phule -- a clan or tribe
... 5443 (from 5453 , "to generate") -- a tribe (race, lineage); the descendants of
a common ancestor, like the progeny springing from Jacob (Israel). ...
//strongsnumbers.com/greek2/5443.htm - 7k
2283. Thamar -- Tamar, an Israelite woman
... Indeclinable Transliteration: Thamar Phonetic Spelling: (tham'-ar) Short Definition:
Tamar Definition: Tamar, mother of Perez and Zerah by Judah, son of Jacob. ...
//strongsnumbers.com/greek2/2283.htm - 6k
Strong's Hebrew
3812. Leah -- "weary," a wife of Jacob... "weary," a wife of
Jacob. Transliteration: Leah Phonetic Spelling: (lay-aw') Short
Definition: Leah.
... Leah. From la'ah; weary; Leah, a wife of
Jacob -- Leah.
... /hebrew/3812.htm - 6k 415. El Elohe Yisrael -- "the mighty God of Israel," an altar of ...
El Elohe Yisrael. 414, 415. El Elohe Yisrael. 416 . "the mighty God of Israel,"
an altar of Jacob. Transliteration: El Elohe Yisrael Phonetic Spelling: (ale ...
/hebrew/415.htm - 6k
3478. Yisrael -- "God strives," another name of Jacob and his desc ...
... Yisrael. 3479 . "God strives," another name of Jacob and his desc. ... Word Origin
from sarah and el Definition "God strives," another name of Jacob and his desc. ...
/hebrew/3478.htm - 6k
416. El Beth-el -- "the God of Bethel," an altar of Jacob
... El Beth-el. 417 . "the God of Bethel," an altar of Jacob. Transliteration: El
Beth-el Phonetic Spelling: (ale bayth-ale') Short Definition: El-bethel. ...
/hebrew/416.htm - 6k
8095. Shimon -- a son of Jacob, also his tribe, also an Israelite ...
... a son of Jacob, also his tribe, also an Israelite with a foreign wife. Transliteration:
Shimon Phonetic Spelling: (shim-one') Short Definition: Simeon. ...
/hebrew/8095.htm - 6k
7354. Rachel -- a wife of Jacob
... a wife of Jacob. Transliteration: Rachel Phonetic Spelling: (raw-khale') Short
Definition: Rachel. ... Rachel. The same as rachel; Rachel, a wife of Jacob -- Rachel. ...
/hebrew/7354.htm - 6k
1835. Dan -- "judge," a son of Jacob, also his desc. and their ...
... 1834, 1835. Dan. 1836 . "judge," a son of Jacob, also his desc. ... Word Origin
from din Definition "judge," a son of Jacob, also his desc. ...
/hebrew/1835.htm - 6k
3878. Levi -- a son of Jacob, also the tribe descended from him
... 3877, 3878. Levi. 3879 . a son of Jacob, also the tribe descended from him.
Transliteration: Levi Phonetic Spelling: (lay-vee') Short Definition: Levi. ...
/hebrew/3878.htm - 6k
836. Asher -- "happy one," a son of Jacob, also the tribe ...
... 835, 836. Asher. 837 . "happy one," a son of Jacob, also the tribe descended
from him, also perhaps a city in Palestine. Transliteration ...
/hebrew/836.htm - 6k
3485. Yissaskar -- perhaps "there is recompense," a son of Jacob ...
... perhaps "there is recompense," a son of Jacob and Leah, also a son of Obed-edom.
Transliteration: Yissaskar Phonetic Spelling: (yis-saw-kawr') Short Definition ...
/hebrew/3485.htm - 6k
Library
The Story of Jacob
... THE STORY OF JACOB. After Abraham died, his son Isaac lived in the land
of Canaan. ... The older was named Esau and the younger Jacob. ...
/.../marshall/the wonder book of bible stories/the story of jacob.htm
Jacob and Esau
... Jacob and Esau. A Sermon (No.241). ... REV. CH SPURGEON. At New Park Street Chapel,
Southwark. "Jacob have I loved, but Esau have I hated.""Romans 9:15. ...
/.../spurgeon/spurgeons sermons volume 5 1859/jacob and esau.htm
Jacob --Israel --Jeshurun
... JACOB"ISRAEL"JESHURUN. 'Yet now hear, O Jacob My servant; and Israel,
whom I have chosen.... Fear not, O Jacob, My servant; and ...
/.../maclaren/expositions of holy scripture h/jacobisraeljeshurun.htm
Jacob-Wrestling
... PART II. SOME BIBLE TYPES OF PRAYER IV. JACOB-WRESTLING. "Lord, teach us to
pray.""Luke 11:1. "Jacob called the name of the place Peniel.""Genesis 32:30. ...
//christianbookshelf.org/whyte/lord teach us to pray/iv jacob-wrestling.htm
The Marriages of Jacob are a Figure of the Church.
... Chapter CXXXIV."The marriages of Jacob are a figure of the Church. ... The marriages
of Jacob were types of that which Christ was about to accomplish. ...
/.../chapter cxxxiv the marriages of jacob.htm
Of the Death of Jacob and Joseph.
... Containing The Interval Of Two Hundred And Twenty Years. From The Death Of Isaac
To The Exodus Out Of Egypt. CHAPTER 8. Of The Death Of Jacob And Joseph. ...
/.../josephus/the antiquities of the jews/chapter 8 of the death.htm
Jacob and Esau
... SERMON VI. JACOB AND ESAU. (Second Sunday in Lent.) Genesis 25:29-34.
And ... Edom. And Jacob said, Sell me this day thy birthright. ...
/.../kingsley/the gospel of the pentateuch/sermon vi jacob and esau.htm
How it is Said that Jacob Went into Egypt with Seventy-Five Souls ...
... Book XVI. Chapter 40."How It is Said that Jacob Went into Egypt with Seventy-Five
Souls, When Most of Those Who are Mentioned Were Born at a Later Period. ...
//christianbookshelf.org/augustine/city of god/chapter 40 how it is said.htm
Fragment x. Of the Patriarch Jacob. ...
... III."The Extant Fragments of the Five Books of the Chronography of Julius Africanus.
Fragment X. Of the Patriarch Jacob.� Of the Patriarch Jacob. ...
/.../africanus/the writings of julius africanus/fragment x of the patriarch.htm
How Joseph, the Youngest of Jacob's Sons, was Envied by his ...
... CHAPTER 2. How Joseph, The Youngest Of Jacob's Sons, Was Envied By His Brethren,
When Certain Dreams Had Foreshown His Future Happiness. ...
/.../josephus/the antiquities of the jews/chapter 2 how joseph the.htm
Subtopics
Iconoclasm: Destroyed by Jacob
Jacob
Jacob: 40 Days Mourning For
Jacob: Ancestor of Jesus
Jacob: Body of, Embalmed
Jacob: Burial of
Jacob: Changed to "Israel"
Jacob: Charges his Sons to Bury Him in the Field of Machpelah
Jacob: Death of
Jacob: Deborah, Rebekah's Nurse, Dies, and is Buried at Beth-El
Jacob: Descendants of
Jacob: Dissatisfied With Laban's Treatment and Returns to the Land of Canaan
Jacob: Dreads to Meet Esau; Sends Him Presents; Wrestles With an Angel
Jacob: Erects a Monument at Rachel's Grave
Jacob: Esau Seeks to Kill, Escapes to Padan-Aram
Jacob: Exacts a Promise from Joseph to Bury Him With his Forefathers
Jacob: Fradulently Obtains his Father's Blessing
Jacob: Given in Answer to Prayer
Jacob: Gives the Land of the Amorites to Joseph
Jacob: God Confirms the Covenant of Abraham To
Jacob: Hears That Joseph is Still Alive
Jacob: His Benediction Upon Joseph and his Two Sons
Jacob: His Daughter, Dinah, is Raped
Jacob: His Final Prophetic Benedictions Upon his Sons: Asher
Jacob: His Final Prophetic Benedictions Upon his Sons: Benjamin
Jacob: His Final Prophetic Benedictions Upon his Sons: Dan
Jacob: His Final Prophetic Benedictions Upon his Sons: Gad
Jacob: His Final Prophetic Benedictions Upon his Sons: Issachar
Jacob: His Final Prophetic Benedictions Upon his Sons: Joseph
Jacob: His Final Prophetic Benedictions Upon his Sons: Judah
Jacob: His Final Prophetic Benedictions Upon his Sons: Naphtali
Jacob: His Final Prophetic Benedictions Upon his Sons: Simeon and Levi
Jacob: His Final Prophetic Benedictions Upon his Sons: Upon Reuben
Jacob: His Final Prophetic Benedictions Upon his Sons: Zebulun
Jacob: His Grief Over the Detention of Simeon and the Demand for Benjamin to be Taken Into Egypt
Jacob: His Grief Over the Loss of Joseph
Jacob: His Love for Benjamin
Jacob: His Partiality for his Son, Joseph, and the Consequent Jealousy of his Other Sons
Jacob: His Vision of the Ladder
Jacob: His Wealth
Jacob: Joseph's Prophetic Dream Concerning
Jacob: Journeys to Ephrath
Jacob: Journeys to Shalem, where he Purchase a Parcel of Ground from Hamor and Erects an Altar
Jacob: Journeys to Succoth
Jacob: List of the Names of his Twelve Sons
Jacob: Lives in Egypt for Seventeen Years
Jacob: Lives in the Land of Canaan
Jacob: Meets Angels of God on the Journey, and Calls the Place "Mahanaim"
Jacob: Meets Joseph
Jacob: Moves to Egypt
Jacob: Obtains Esau's Birthright for Just One Bowl of Stew
Jacob: Pharaoh Receives Him, and is Blessed by Jacob
Jacob: Prophecies Concerning Himself and his Descendants
Jacob: Reconciliation of, With Esau
Jacob: Returns to Arbah, the City of his Father
Jacob: Returns to Beth-El, where he Builds an Altar, and Erects and Dedicates a Pillar
Jacob: Sends to Egypt to Buy Corn (Grain)
Jacob: Serves Fourteen Years for Leah and Rachel
Jacob: Sharp Practice of, With the Flocks and Herds of Laban
Jacob: Sojourns in Haran With his Uncle, Laban
Jacob: Son of Isaac, and the Twin Brother of Esau
Jacob: The Incest of his Son, Reuben, With his Concubine, Bilhah
Jacob: The Land of Goshen Assigned To
Jacob: The List of his Children and Grandchildren Who Went Down Into Egypt
Jacob: The Well of
Jacobs Well
Miscegenation: Jacob
Related Terms
Jacob's (34 Occurrences)
Paddan-aram (10 Occurrences)
Sychar (1 Occurrence)
Paddan (11 Occurrences)
Padanaram (10 Occurrences)
Padan-aram (10 Occurrences)
Bilhah (11 Occurrences)
Aram (130 Occurrences)
Hamor (13 Occurrences)
Birthright (10 Occurrences)
Blesseth (55 Occurrences)
Zilpah (7 Occurrences)
Patriarch (2 Occurrences)
Begat (112 Occurrences)
Shalem (1 Occurrence)
Beareth (108 Occurrences)
Kinsmen (74 Occurrences)
Birth-right (9 Occurrences)
Setteth (116 Occurrences)
Sojourned (20 Occurrences)
Souls (114 Occurrences)
Kissed (26 Occurrences)
Primogeniture
Betwixt (16 Occurrences)
Answereth (144 Occurrences)
Aramaean (13 Occurrences)
Aramean (17 Occurrences)
Syrian (12 Occurrences)
Succoth (18 Occurrences)
Bethel (67 Occurrences)
Pillar (72 Occurrences)
Benjamin (167 Occurrences)
Bare (250 Occurrences)
Shechem (61 Occurrences)
Calleth (261 Occurrences)
Saving (37 Occurrences)
Simeon (48 Occurrences)
Kiss (39 Occurrences)
Security (41 Occurrences)
Homeland (8 Occurrences)
Beersheba (33 Occurrences)
Asher (43 Occurrences)
Kissing (10 Occurrences)
Selah (76 Occurrences)
Pursued (75 Occurrences)
Pottage (7 Occurrences)
Pitched (101 Occurrences)
Peniel (4 Occurrences)
Peradventure (35 Occurrences)
Beth-el (65 Occurrences)
Beer-sheba (33 Occurrences)
Camped (100 Occurrences)
Conceiveth (27 Occurrences)
Acquired (32 Occurrences)
Seventeen (12 Occurrences)
Soup (10 Occurrences)
Sixty (70 Occurrences)
Stew (7 Occurrences)
Sepulchre (57 Occurrences)
Sweareth (34 Occurrences)
Slept (74 Occurrences)
Sister's (7 Occurrences)
Vision (106 Occurrences)
Animals (224 Occurrences)
Sware (90 Occurrences)
Se'ir (36 Occurrences)
Younger (39 Occurrences)
Buried (125 Occurrences)
Conceived (66 Occurrences)
Bore (221 Occurrences)
Almond (7 Occurrences)
Slay (189 Occurrences)
Six (198 Occurrences)
Arts (48 Occurrences)
Hebron (71 Occurrences)
Peoples (305 Occurrences)
Stayed (169 Occurrences)
Swore (109 Occurrences)
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