Verse 1
Genesis 32:1. The angels of God
met him — In some visible and
glorious forms, as they
frequently appeared to the
patriarchs. Probably only Jacob
saw them. They met him to bid
him welcome to Canaan again; a
more honourable reception than
ever any prince had that was met
by the magistrates of a city.
They met him to congratulate his
arrival, and his escape from
Laban. They had invisibly
attended him all along, but now
they appeared, because he had
greater dangers before him. When
God designs his people for
extraordinary trials, he
prepares them by extraordinary
comforts.
Verse 2
Genesis 32:2. This is God’s host
— Or army; so the angels are
justly called, because of their
great number, their excellent
order, their mighty power, and
the service they perform for God
and his church, for the
protection of which they are
sent. A good man may see by
faith what Jacob saw with his
bodily eyes. To preserve the
remembrance of this favour Jacob
named the place Mahanaim, two
hosts, or two camps. Probably
they appeared to him in two
hosts, one on either side, or
one in the front and the other
in the rear, to protect him from
Laban behind and Esau before,
and be a complete guard: or
Jacob’s family made one army,
representing the church militant
and itinerant on earth, and the
angels another army,
representing the church
triumphant, and at rest in
heaven.
Verse 4
Genesis 32:4. Speak unto my lord
Esau — He calls Esau his lord,
and himself his servant, to
intimate that he did not insist
on the prerogatives of the
birthright and blessing which he
had obtained for himself, but
left it to God to fulfil his own
purpose in his seed. And he
gives him a short account of
himself and of his property, and
where he had sojourned,
expressing withal a desire for
his favour and friendship.
Verse 5
Genesis 32:5. I have sent to
tell my lord — This message of
Jacob shows great prudence in
him; for had he returned into
Canaan without informing his
brother, and making him
acquainted with the substance he
had brought with him from Haran,
Esau, who lived at a distance
from his father Isaac, probably
would have thought, when he came
to take possession of Isaac’s
property on his death, that
Jacob had obtained all his
substance from his father, to
Esau’s prejudice, which might
have created an irreconcilable
misunderstanding between them.
Verse 6-7
Genesis 32:6-7. He cometh to
meet thee, and four hundred men
with him — He is now weary of
waiting for the days of mourning
for his father, and before they
come resolves to slay thee. Then
was Jacob greatly afraid and
distressed — He was conscious
how deeply he had offended his
brother, and remembered the
enmity which his brother
cherished against him, and hence
was not without an apprehension
that he might now execute the
threatened revenge. We see here
how a consciousness of sin tends
to weaken faith, and to produce
fear and dread. For,
notwithstanding the repeated
experience Jacob had had of the
divine protection; though he had
just seen himself surrounded
with a host of guardian angels;
though he had undertaken his
journey in obedience to God’s
express command, and had God’s
renewed promise to assure him of
a safe return, (Genesis 28:15;
Genesis 31:13,) yet a
consciousness of having injured
his brother, and of his
brother’s having it in his
power, should God permit him, to
avenge himself, damps his faith,
and fills him with the most
painful and distressing
apprehensions. A lively sense of
danger, however, may very well
consist with a degree of
confidence in God’s power and
goodness.
Verse 9
Genesis 32:9. He has recourse to
God in his distress by prayer,
the only effectual means of
obtaining relief in trouble. And
surely a finer model of genuine
prayer can hardly be met with or
imagined. It was evidently
dictated by the feelings of his
heart in this trying season. He
addressed himself to God as the
God of his fathers, not
presuming to call him his own
God, because of the sense he had
of his unworthiness. O God of my
father Abraham, and father Isaac
— This he could better plead,
because the government was
entailed upon him. Thou saidst,
Return unto thy country — He had
not rashly left his place with
Laban; but in obedience to God’s
command.
Verse 10
Genesis 32:10. I am not worthy —
It is a surprising plea. One
would think he should have
pleaded that what was now in
danger was his own against all
the world, and that he had
earned it dear enough; no, he
pleads, Lord, I am not worthy of
it. Of the least of all thy
mercies — Much less am I worthy
of so great a favour as this I
am now suing for. For with my
staff I passed over this Jordan
— Poor and desolate, like a
forlorn and despised pilgrim;
having no guides, no companions,
no attendants. And now I am
become two bands — Now I am
surrounded with a numerous
retinue of children and
servants. Those whose latter end
doth greatly increase, ought
with humility and thankfulness
to remember how small their
beginning was.
Verse 11-12
Genesis 32:11-12. Deliver me
from my brother Esau, for I fear
him — The fear that quickens
prayer is itself pleadable. It
was not a robber, but a murderer
that he was afraid of: nor was
it his own life only that lay at
stake, but the mothers’, and the
children’s. Thou saidst, I will
surely do thee good — God’s
promises, as they are the surest
guide of our desires in prayer,
and furnish us with the best
petitions; so they are the
firmest ground of our hopes, and
furnish us with the best pleas.
Verses 13-16
Genesis 32:13-16. A present for
Esau his brother — As he prays
and trusts in God, so he uses
the means; and having piously
made God his friend by prayer,
prudently endeavours to make
Esau his friend by a present.
Put a space between drove and
drove — To mitigate his
displeasure by degrees.
Verse 24
Genesis 32:24. Jacob was left
alone — In some private place,
that he might more freely and
ardently pour out his soul in
prayer, and again spread his
cares and fears before God.
There wrestled a man with him —
The eternal Word, or Son of God,
who often appeared in a human
shape, before he assumed the
human nature. We are told by
Hosea 12:4, how Jacob wrestled
with him; He wept and made
supplication: prayers and tears
were his weapons. It was not
only a corporal but a spiritual
wrestling, by vigorous faith and
holy desire; and this
circumstance shows that the
person with whom he wrestled was
not a created angel, but the
angel of the covenant; for
surely he would not pray and
make supplication to a creature.
Indeed, in the passage just
referred to, Hosea terms him
Jehovah, God of hosts, and says,
Jehovah is his memorial.
Verse 25
Genesis 32:25. He prevailed not
against him — The angel suffered
himself to be conquered, to
encourage Jacob’s faith and hope
against the approaching danger:
nay, he even imparted strength
to him to maintain the conflict.
For it was not in his own
strength that Jacob wrestled,
nor by his own strength that he
prevailed, but by strength
derived from Heaven, by which
alone he had power over the
angel, Hosea 12:3. Jacob’s thigh
was out of joint as he wrestled
with him — This was to humble
him, and make him sensible of
his own weakness, that he might
ascribe his victory, not to his
own power, but to the grace of
God, and might be encouraged to
depend on that grace for the
deliverance he was so much
concerned to obtain. It is
probable Jacob felt little or no
pain from this hurt, for he did
not so much as halt till the
struggle was over, Genesis
32:31. If so, it evidenced
itself to be a divine touch
indeed, wounding and healing at
the same time.
Verse 26
Genesis 32:26. Let me go — Thus
the angel, by an admirable
condescension, speaks to Jacob
as God did to Moses, Exodus
32:10, Let me alone, and that to
show the prevalency of his
prayer with God, and also to
encourage him to persist in the
conflict. For the day breaketh —
Therefore he would not any
longer detain Jacob, who had
business to do, a family to look
after, a journey to take. I will
not let thee go except thou
bless me — He resolves he will
have a blessing, and rather
shall all his bones be put out
of joint than he will suffer the
angel to leave him without a
blessing. Those who would be
blessed by Christ, and have his
salvation, must be in good
earnest and importunate for it.
Reader, art thou so? Dost thou
pray and not faint?
Verse 27-28
Genesis 32:27-28. What is thy
name? And he said, Jacob — That
is, a supplanter, as the word
signifies. He said, Thy name
shall be called no more Jacob —
Or, as the words should rather
be rendered, shall not only be
called Jacob, but Israel, or
Israel rather than Jacob, a man
prevailing with God, rather than
a supplanter. It is evident he
was afterward called Jacob, as
well as Israel, but the latter
name, in his posterity, nearly
swallowed up the former, who
were generally termed Israel,
and Israelites. The word Israel
means a prince with God. He is a
prince indeed that is a prince
with God, and those are truly
honourable that are mighty in
prayer. Yet this is not all;
having power with God, he shall
have power with men too; having
prevailed for a blessing from
heaven, he shall, no doubt,
prevail for Esau’s favour.
Accordingly the latter part of
the verse, literally translated,
is, Because, as a prince, thou
hast prevailed with God, with
men thou shalt also powerfully
prevail, — a translation as
perfectly agreeable to the
Septuagint as to the Hebrew, οτι
ενισχυσας μετα θεου, και μετα
ανθρωπων δυνατος εση, and also
countenanced by the Chaldee
Paraphrase, and the Vulgate.
Whatever enemies we have, if we
can but make God our friend, we
are sufficiently safe and happy:
they that, by faith, have power
in heaven, have thereby as much
power on earth as they have need
of.
Verse 29-30
Genesis 32:29-30. Wherefore dost
thou ask after my name? — Canst
thou be at any loss to know who
I am? The discovery of that was
reserved for his death-bed, upon
which he was taught to call him
Shiloh. But instead of telling
him his name, he gave him his
blessing, which was the thing
Jacob wrestled for; he blessed
him there — Repeated and
ratified the blessing formerly
given him. See how wonderfully
God condescends to countenance
and crown importunate prayer!
Those that resolve, though God
slay them, yet to trust him,
will at length be more than
conquerors. Peniel — That is,
the face of God. For I have seen
God face to face — Not in his
divine essence, for no man ever
saw God in that respect, John
1:18; but manifested in a more
satisfactory, familiar, and
friendly manner, than in dreams
or visions.
Verse 31
Genesis 32:31. He halted on his
thigh — And many think he
continued to do so to his dying
day. If he did he had no reason
to complain, for the honour and
comfort he obtained by his
struggle were abundantly
sufficient to countervail the
damage, though he went limping
to his grave. |