Verse 1
Genesis 31:1. He heard the words
of Laban’s sons — For it seems
they spoke them in Jacob’s
hearing. The last chapter began
with Rachel’s envying Leah; this
begins with Laban’s sons envying
Jacob. Hath taken away all that
was our father’s — Not all,
sure: what was become of those
cattle which were committed to
the custody of Laban’s sons, and
sent three days’ journey off? He
has gotten all this glory — And
what was this glory? It was a
parcel of brown sheep, and
speckled goats, and some camels
and asses. But they meant
wealth, which the possessors
usually glory in, and whereby
they gain much esteem from
others.
Verse 3-4
Genesis 31:3-4. The Lord said
unto Jacob, Return — God, who
orders all things aright, having
blessed Jacob with greater
substance in the house of Laban
than he could have obtained in
his father’s house, without
great inconveniences, perhaps
irreconcilable, fatal hatred
between him and his brother
Esau, now orders him to return.
For, though Jacob had met with
very hard usage, yet he would
not quit his place till God bid
him. The direction he had from
Heaven is more fully related to
his wives afterward. Unto the
land of thy fathers — Not which
was properly theirs, but only
that in which they had
sojourned, and which was
promised to them in their seed.
And, as Jacob was an inheritor
of the promise, it was proper
that he should sojourn in the
land, to keep alive the hopes of
it in his posterity. Jacob sent
for Rachel and Leah to the field
— That he might discourse with
them more privately.
Verse 7-8
Genesis 31:7-8. Hath changed my
wages ten times — That is,
oft-times, as is often the
signification of the number ten.
It appears that Laban, through
envy and covetousness, often
broke his agreement made with
Jacob, and altered it as he
thought fit, and that Jacob
patiently yielded to all such
changes Then all the cattle bare
speckled — This seems to put it
out of doubt, that, as Jacob
says in the following verse, it
was indeed God who ordered this
matter; for it can scarcely be
supposed that any natural causes
whatever, without his peculiar
providence, could produce so
many different changes in a
thing of this nature, without
once failing.
Verse 9
Genesis 31:9. God hath taken
away the cattle of your father,
and given them to me — Thus the
righteous God paid Jacob for his
hard service out of Laban’s
estate, as he afterward paid the
seed of Jacob for the service of
the Egyptians with the spoils of
that people.
Verses 11-13
Genesis 31:11-13. The angel of
the Lord spake, I am the God of
Beth-el — This, no doubt, was
the Word, or Son of God, who now
condescended to be the angel or
messenger of the Father to
Jacob, and yet styles himself
the God of Beth-el. Thus was
Jacob reminded of Beth-el, and
of the promises made to him
there, by the same divine
person, who now again appeared
to him in a dream, to his great
comfort.
Verse 12
Genesis 31:12. I have seen all
that Laban doeth to thee — If we
attend to this vision we cannot
but see reason to conclude that
it was really communicated to
Jacob at this time to make use
of the speckled rods; for here
is a plain declaration that God
would effect the thing, and the
reason why; because he had seen
Laban’s ungenerous and unfair
dealing toward Jacob, and
therefore was resolved to punish
him for it, and at the same time
reward Jacob for his fidelity
and contentedness under these
injuries.
Verse 14-15
Genesis 31:14-15. Is there any
portion — Any hope of benefit;
for us in our father’s house? —
They both agree in acknowledging
that his behaviour had been
extremely ungenerous and sordid,
even to them, his own children.
Are we not counted of him
strangers? — Dealt with as
strangers, rather than children:
for he hath sold us — To thee
for fourteen years’ service. And
hath quite devoured (wholly
converted to his own use) our
money — That which in equity was
due to us for our portions, and
for our husband’s service.
Whereas Jacob looked upon the
wealth which God had transferred
from Laban to him as his wages,
they look upon it as their
portions; so that, both ways,
God forced Laban to pay his
debts, both to his servant and
to his daughters.
Verse 19
Genesis 31:19. Laban went to
shear his sheep — That part of
his flock which was in the hands
of his sons, three days’ journey
off. Now, 1st, It is certain it
was lawful for Jacob to leave
his service suddenly: it was not
only justified by the particular
instructions God gave him, but
warranted by the fundamental law
of self-preservation, which
directs us, when we are in
danger, to shift for our own
safety, as far as we can do it
without wronging our
consciences. 2d, It was his
prudence to steal away unawares
to Laban, lest if Laban had
known, he should have hindered
him, or plundered him. 3d, It
was honestly done to take no
more than his own with him, the
cattle of his getting. He took
what Providence gave him, and
would not take the repair of his
damages into his own hands. Yet
Rachel was not so honest as her
husband; she stole her father’s
images, and carried them away.
The Hebrew calls them teraphim.
Some think they were only little
representations of the ancestors
of the family in statue or
picture, which Rachel had a
particular fondness for, and was
desirous to have with her, now
she was going into another
country. It should rather seem
they were images for a religious
use, penates, household gods,
either worshipped, or consulted
as oracles; and we are willing
to hope that she took them away,
not out of covetousness, much
less for her own use, or out of
any superstitions fear, lest
Laban, by consulting his
teraphim, might know which way
they were gone; but with a
design to convince her father of
the folly of his regard to those
as gods which could not secure
themselves.
Verse 23
Genesis 31:23. He took his
brethren — That is, his
relations, and pursues Jacob to
bring him back into bondage, or
to strip him of what he had.
They overtook him in the mount
Gilead — This mount was about
two hundred and fifty miles from
Haran; so that Jacob travelled
twenty-five miles each day, and
Laban, in pursuing him,
thirty-seven.
Verse 24
Genesis 31:24. Speak not to
Jacob either good or bad — The
Hebrew is, from good to bad —
That is, enter into no
altercations, and use no harsh
language with him, which may
occasion a quarrel. Say nothing
against his going on with his
journey, for the thing
proceedeth from the Lord. The
same Hebraism we have, Genesis
24:50. The safety of good men is
very much owing to the hold God
has on the consciences of bad
men, and the access he has to
them.
Verse 27
Genesis 31:27. I might have sent
thee away with mirth and with
songs — Not as Rebekah was sent
away out of the same family
above one hundred and twenty
years before, with prayers and
blessings, but with sport and
merriment; which was a sign that
religion was much decayed in the
family.
Verse 29
Genesis 31:29. The God of your
fathers spake to me yesterday —
We find here that Laban,
whatever his disposition was,
and how great soever his anger,
paid regard to the heavenly
vision. For though he supposed
that he had both right and
strength on his side, either to
revenge the wrong or recover the
right, yet he owns himself under
the restraint of God’s power; he
durst not injure one whom he saw
to be the particular care of
Heaven. It seems probable that
God, who can change the heart in
a moment, effected a sudden
alteration in his disposition
toward Jacob.
Verse 30
Genesis 31:30. Wherefore hast
thou stolen my gods? — Foolish
man! to call those his gods that
could be stolen! Could he expect
protection from them that could
neither resist nor discover
their invaders? Happy are they
who have the Lord for their God.
Enemies may steal our goods, but
not our God.
Verse 31-32
Genesis 31:31-32. Jacob clears
himself by giving the true
reason why he went away unknown
to Laban; he feared lest Laban
should by force take away his
daughters, and so oblige him to
continue in his service. As to
the charge of stealing Laban’s
gods, he pleads not guilty. He
not only did not take them
himself, but he did not know
that they were taken. Let him
not live — This was rashly said,
and might have produced fatal
effects.
Verse 39-40
Genesis 31:39-40. That which was
torn I brought not unto thee —
What Jacob here affirms, and for
the truth of which he appeals to
Laban, shows him to have been of
a very industrious and faithful
disposition, and that Laban’s
temper was exceedingly selfish
and sordid: for though Jacob was
his relation, and his substance
had increased so greatly under
his hand, yet he was very rigid
toward him, and required him to
make good all the cattle that
were lost, by whatever accident
it happened. In the day the
drought consumed me — “In
Europe,” says Sir John Chardin,
quoted by Harmer, vol. 1. p. 74,
“the days and nights resemble
each other, with respect to the
qualities of heat and cold; but
it is quite otherwise in the
East. In the lower Asia, in
particular, the day is always
hot, and, as soon as the sun is
fifteen degrees above the
horizon, no cold is felt in the
depth of winter itself. On the
contrary, in the height of
summer, the nights are as cold
as at Paris in the month of
March. It is for this reason
that in Persia and Turkey they
always make use of furred habits
in the country, such only being
sufficient to resist the cold of
the nights.”
Verse 42
Genesis 31:42. Except God had
been with me — Jacob, on every
mention of his substance,
attributes all the increase of
it to the care that God had of
him. And he here speaks of God,
as the God of his father,
intimating, that he thought
himself unworthy to be thus
regarded, but was beloved for
his father’s sake. He calls him
the God of Abraham and the Fear
of Isaac: for Abraham was dead,
and gone to that world where
there is no fear; but Isaac was
yet alive, sanctifying the Lord
in his heart as his fear and his
dread.
Verse 43-44
Genesis 31:43-44. All is mine —
That is, came by me. Let us make
a covenant — It was made and
ratified with great solemnity,
according to the usages of those
times. 1st, A pillar was
erected, a heap of stones raised
to perpetuate the memory of the
thing, writing being then not
known. 2d, A sacrifice was
offered, a sacrifice of
peace-offerings. 3d, They ate
bread together, jointly
partaking of the feast upon the
sacrifice. This was in token of
a hearty reconciliation.
Covenants of friendship were
anciently ratified by the
parties eating and drinking
together.
Verses 47-53
Genesis 31:47-53. But Jacob
called it Galeed — The name
Laban gave it signifies the heap
of witness, in the Syrian
tongue, which he used, and
Galeed signifies the same in
Hebrew, the language which Jacob
used. It appears that the name
which Jacob gave it remained to
it, and not the name which Laban
gave it. And Mizpah — (Genesis
31:49,) This name in Hebrew
signifies a watchtower. And they
agreed to give it this second
name to remind them and their
posterity of the solemn appeal
they had now mutually made to
the all-seeing eye of God, whose
providence watches over the
actions of mankind, rewarding
sincerity and punishing
deceitfulness. They appeal to
him, 1st, As a witness, The Lord
judge between thee and me — That
is, the Lord take cognizance of
every thing that shall be done
on either side in violation of
this league. 2d, As a judge. The
God of Abraham, (Genesis 31:53,)
from whom Jacob was descended;
and the God of Nahor — Laban’s
progenitor; the God of their
father — From whom they were
both descended; judge betwixt
us. God’s relation to them is
thus expressed, to intimate that
they worshipped one and the same
God, upon which consideration
there ought to be no enmity
betwixt them. Those that have
one God, should have one heart:
God is judge between contending
parties, and he will judge
righteously. Whoever does wrong,
it is at his peril. Jacob sware
by the Fear of his father Isaac
— The God whom his father Isaac
feared, who had never served
other gods, as Abraham and Nahor
had done: to this only living
and true God he offered a
sacrifice, (Genesis 31:54,) in
gratitude for the peace he had
obtained with Laban. |