Verse 1
Genesis 30:1. Rachel envied her
sister — The Hebrew women
considered barrenness as one of
the greatest misfortunes that
could befall them, not only from
a natural desire of children,
but from their eager wishes to
be the means of fulfilling the
promise to Abraham, and bringing
forth that seed in which all the
families of the earth were to be
blessed. But Rachel does not
seem to have been chiefly
actuated by this motive in
desiring children, but by envy
of her sister; hence she says,
Give me children — A child would
not content her; but because
Leah has more than one, she must
have more too. And her heart is
set upon it: she repines, and
grows impatient with her
husband; else I die — That is, I
shall fret myself to death; the
want of this satisfaction will
shorten my days. Observe the
difference between Rachel’s
asking for this mercy, and
Hannah’s, 1 Samuel 1:10, &c.
Rachel envied, Hannah wept:
Rachel must have children, and
she died of the second; Hannah
prayed for this child, and she
had four more: Rachel is
importunate and peremptory,
Hannah is submissive and devout;
If thou wilt give me a child, I
will give him to the Lord. Let
Hannah be imitated, and not
Rachel; and let our desires be
always under the conduct and
check of reason and religion.
Verse 2
Genesis 30:2. And Jacob’s anger
was kindled — He was angry at
the sin, and showed his
displeasure, by a grave and
pious reply: Am I in God’s
stead? — Can I give thee that
which God denies thee? He
acknowledges the hand of God in
the affliction: He hath withheld
the fruit of the womb. Whatever
we want, it is God that
withholds it, as sovereign Lord,
most wise, holy, and just, who
may do what he will with his
own, and is debtor to no man;
who never did, nor ever can do
any wrong to any of his
creatures. The key of the
clouds, of the heart, of the
grave, and of the womb, are four
keys which God has in his hand,
and which (the rabbins say) he
trusts neither with angel nor
seraph. He also acknowledges his
own inability to alter what God
appointed; am I in God’s stead?
There is no creature that is, or
can be, to us, in God’s stead.
God may be to us instead of any
creature, as the sun instead of
the moon and stars; but the moon
and all the stars will not be to
us instead of the sun. No
creature’s wisdom, power, and
love, will be to us instead of
God’s. It is therefore our sin
and folly to place that
confidence in any creature which
is to be placed in God only.
Verse 3
Genesis 30:3. Behold my maid
Bilhah — She will rather have
children by reputation than none
at all; children that she can
call her own, though they be not
so. But had she not considered
her sister as her rival, and
envied her, she would have
thought Leah’s children nearer
to her, and more entitled to her
care than Bilhah’s could be. As
an early instance of her
dominion over the children born
in her apartment, she takes a
pleasure in giving them names
that carry in them nothing but
marks of emulation with her
sister. As if she had overcome
her, 1st, At law, she calls the
first son of her handmaid Dan,
judgment; saying, God hath
judged me — That is, given
sentence in my favour. 2d, In
battle, she calls the next
Naphtali, wrestlings, saying, I
have wrestled with my sister,
and have prevailed — See what
roots of bitterness envy and
strife are, and what mischief
they make among relations!
Verse 9
Genesis 30:9. Rachel had
absurdly and preposterously put
her maid into her husband’s bed;
and now Leah, because she missed
one year in bearing children,
doth the same, to be even with
her. See the power of rivalship,
and admire the wisdom of the
divine appointment, which joins
together one man and one woman
only. Two sons Zilpah bare to
Jacob, whom Leah looked upon
herself as entitled to, in token
of which, she called one Gad,
promising herself a little troop
of children. The other she
called Asher, happy, thinking
herself happy in him, and
promising herself that her
neighbours would think so too.
Verse 14
Genesis 30:14. Found mandrakes —
The word דודאים, thus rendered,
is only found here and Song of
Solomon 7:13; and it is not
agreed among interpreters
whether it signifies a fruit or
a flower. It is thought,
however, by many, that
mandrake-apples are here meant,
which, according to Pliny, are
of the size of filberts. They
were pleasant to the smell,
(Song of Solomon 7:13,) and
probably also desirable for
food. Whatever they were, Rachel
could not see them in Leah’s
hands, but she must covet them.
Verse 17
Genesis 30:17. God hearkened
unto Leah — And she was now
blessed with two sons, the first
of whom she called Issachar,
hire, reckoning herself well
repaid for her mandrakes; nay,
(which was a strange
construction of the providence,)
rewarded for giving her maid to
her husband. The other she
called Zebulun, dwelling, owning
God’s bounty to her, God has
endowed me. Jacob had not
endowed her when he married her;
but she reckons a family of
children a good dowry.
Verse 21
Genesis 30:21. Mention is made
of Dinah, because of the
following story concerning her,
chap. 34. Perhaps Jacob had
other daughters, though not
registered.
Verse 22
Genesis 30:22. God remembered
Rachel — Whom he seemed to have
forgotten, and hearkened to her,
whose prayers had been long
denied, and then she bare a son.
Rachel called her son Joseph,
which, in Hebrew, is akin to two
words of a contrary
signification: Asaph, abstulit,
he has taken away my reproach;
as if the greatest mercy she had
in this son were, that she had
saved her credit: and Joseph,
addidit; the Lord shall add to
me another son: which may be
looked upon as the language of
her faith: she takes this mercy
as an earnest of further mercy:
hath God given me this grace? I
may call it Joseph, and say, he
shall add more grace.
Verse 27
Genesis 30:27. I have learned by
experience — The best way of
learning. And it would be well
if we always remembered and
adhered to what we have thus
learned. But, alas! we are too
apt to forget or neglect it.
Verse 32
Genesis 30:32. Removing all the
speckled and spotted — He does
not mean, that those cattle
which were already speckled and
spotted, &c., should be given
him; for that does not agree
with what went before: Thou
shalt not give me any thing,
that is, I will take nothing
that is now thine. Besides, it
would have been no wonder if
those that were spotted already
should bring forth others like
themselves. But the sense is,
that he would separate all the
spotted sheep and goats, and
then, out of those which were of
one colour, would have all that
should fall hereafter of the
before-mentioned variety. Jacob
desired to make a clear bargain,
about which they might have no
disputes. Had they agreed for a
particular number of cattle
every year, there might have
been room for cavil and
suspicions; for if any of the
flock had by accident been lost,
they might have differed whether
Jacob’s or Laban’s were the lost
cattle. But, to prevent all
possible disputes, “Let me,”
says Jacob, “have all the
speckled and spotted cattle, and
then, whenever you have a mind
to look into my stock, my
integrity will come before your
face,” or be conspicuous, which
is the meaning of the next
verse.
Verse 34
Genesis 30:34. Laban was willing
to consent to this bargain,
because he thought, that if
those few he had that were now
speckled and spotted were
separated from the rest, the
body of the flock, which Jacob
was to tend, being of one
colour, either all black or all
white, would produce few or none
of mixed colours, and so he
should have Jacob’s service for
nothing, or next to nothing.
Verse 35-36
Genesis 30:35-36. He gave them
into the hands of his sons — To
be fed apart by themselves, lest
Jacob should get any of them to
mix with those of one colour. He
set three days’ journey betwixt
himself and Jacob — Such
journeys as flocks are able to
make, that they might not so
much as see one another. Between
this and the 37th verse, the
Samaritan copy inserts a
paragraph about the angel’s
appearing to Jacob in a dream,
which is not found in any other
version; but is related by Jacob
himself in the following
chapter, Genesis 30:11, as a
thing which had happened to him,
and which justifies the policy
which the subsequent verses
represent him as using.
Verse 37-38
Genesis 30:37-38. And pilled
white streaks in them — Pilled
off the bark from the rods, at
certain distances, till the
white appeared between the bark.
He set the rods in the gutters —
Or channels of water, at the
time when the cattle were wont
to couple, that their fancies
might be painted with such
divers colours as they saw in
the rods. As it appears from
Genesis 31:10, that God, to
reward Jacob’s fidelity, and
punish Laban’s injustice,
determined that the cattle
should generally be speckled and
spotted; so it is probable he
directed him to take this method
to attain that end; not as
though it were sufficient of
itself to produce such an
effect, which any person that
will make the trial will find it
is not; but as a means which God
would bless in order to it, and
which Jacob was required to use
in testimony of his dependance
on God, as Naaman was required
to wash in the river Jordan, in
order to his being cured of his
leprosy. Much being said by
authors concerning the
surprising effects which
impressions made upon the
imaginations of pregnant animals
will have upon the form, shape,
and colour of the young, Dr.
Shuckford observes, “1st, That
it cannot be proved that the
method which Jacob used is a
natural and effectual way to
produce variegated cattle; the
ancient naturalists having
carried their thoughts upon
these subjects much further than
they will bear; that the effect
of impressions upon the
imagination must be very
accidental, because the objects
that should cause them may or
may not be taken notice of. But,
2d, Granting that they might
naturally produce the effect
here mentioned; yet if, as is
probable, Jacob used the rods in
obedience to a special divine
direction, without knowing any
thing of their natural virtue,
the effect must still be
ascribed immediately to God
himself; just as in the case of
Hezekiah, though the figs which
were applied for his recovery
might be a natural remedy for
his distemper; yet, since the
application of them was not made
by any rules of physic then
known, but by a divine
direction, the cure is justly
ascribed to the immediate hand
of God.”
Verse 40
Genesis 30:40. Jacob set the
faces of the flocks toward the
ring-streaked — Having used the
pilled rods by divine direction,
and seeing the effects they
produced, he here employs his
own natural sagacity, and turns
the faces of Laban’s flocks
toward the ring-streaked and the
brown, that by looking
frequently on them, they might
be disposed in their conception
to bring forth the like. And he
put his own flocks apart, lest,
by looking at Laban’s, their
young might fall off from being
ring-streaked and brown.
Verse 43
Genesis 30:43. The man increased
exceedingly — Upon the whole of
what is said here, and in the
following chapter, we may
conclude that Jacob’s behaviour
in this affair was generous,
fair, and candid; that he chose
the ring-streaked cattle with a
view to prevent disputes,
trusting that God would so order
it, agreeably to his petition at
Beth-el, that he should have
enough, being determined to be
content with what God’s
providence should give him; and
that, when he made use of the
rods, it was an act of faith,
and in obedience to God’s
command. We have the more reason
to think this, because we find
nothing but good arose to Jacob
from it; whereas, we may remark,
that though the Scripture often
mentions the misconduct of good
men, yet it always takes care to
inform us, that evil arose to
them in consequence of such
actions. We may observe also
God’s faithfulness; he had
promised Jacob at Beth-el to be
with him in all places whither
he should go; and we find him
accordingly blessing Laban
because he was with him: so
that, though Laban had but
little when Jacob came to him,
it was, under him, increased to
a multitude. We ought likewise
to take notice that, though
Jacob, from what he says to
Laban in the following chapter,
appears to have been a most
industrious, faithful servant,
yet he attributes all the
increase of the flock to the
blessing of God, and not to his
own care. |