Verse 1
Genesis 35:1. God said, Arise,
go up to Beth-el — This was a
word in season to comfort his
disquieted mind, and direct him
to a safer place. Make there an
altar — Consider and pay thy
vows there, made in the time of
thy distress. Jacob had said in
the day of his distress, If I
come again in peace, this stone
shall be God’s house, Genesis
28:22. God had performed his
part, and given Jacob more than
he then desired, namely, “bread
to eat, and raiment to put on;”
but it seems, if he had not
forgotten his vow, he had at
least deferred the performance
of it, waiting, probably, for a
fit time for that purpose; or an
admonition from God concerning
the proper season of paying it.
And dwell there — That is, he
was not only to go himself, but
to take his family with him,
that they might join with him in
his devotions.
Verse 2
Genesis 35:2. Put away the
strange gods that are among you
— This is evidently a
mistranslation; the Hebrew אלהי
הנכר means, not the strange gods
that are among you, but the gods
of the stranger that is among
you, alluding probably to the
captive Shechemite women, who
now made a part of his
household, or to other Gentiles
who had joined themselves to his
family, and who might secretly
worship idols. Thus, like a good
man, and a good master of a
family, he takes care not only
for himself, but for all his
family, to keep them from the
exercise of a false religion,
and to engage them, as far as he
could, in the profession and
practice of the true. And be
clean — Cleanse yourselves by
outward and ritual washing,
(compare Exodus 19:10-14,) which
even then was in use, and was
considered as an emblem of
cleansing the soul, by
repentance, from all those
impure lusts and vile
affections, whereby a man
becomes polluted in the sight of
God. This, no doubt, Jacob had
chiefly in view; namely, that
they should cleanse their hands
from blood, and from their late
detestable cruelty, and purify
their hearts from those evil
dispositions which had given
birth to such abominable
wickedness, that they might be
fit to approach God in his
worship. And change your
garments — In token of your
changing your minds and manners.
Verse 3
Genesis 35:3. Who answered me in
the day of my distress — He
considers God’s gracious promise
then made to him, and the
assurance of his favour toward
him, and care of him, impressed
by God upon his mind, as an
answer to his prayers, although
he had then seen no success, nor
any accomplishment of God’s word
to him.
Verse 4
Genesis 35:4. They gave unto
Jacob all the strange gods —
Rather, the gods of the
stranger; and all their
ear-rings — Either because they
had been abused to idolatry and
superstition, and were therefore
to be destroyed, (Deuteronomy
7:57 and Deuteronomy 12:3,) or
for fear they should be so
abused.
For the Holy Scriptures
insinuate, and other writers
expressly affirm, that divers
heathen nations did wear
ear-rings for the honour of
their idols, and with the
representations or ensigns of
their idols engraven upon them,
such as the rings and vessels
mentioned by Maimonides, marked
with the image of the sun and
moon. Jacob hid them under the
oak — In a place only known to
himself. It is probable they
were first melted or broken.
Verse 5
Genesis 35:5. The terror of God
— A great terror from God; was
upon the cities — Especially the
cities nearest to Shechem, so
that, although, humanly
speaking, they were able, they
were restrained from pursuing or
destroying Jacob and his family.
Nothing less could have secured
them, considering the number,
power, and rage of their
enemies. God governs the world
more by secret terrors on men’s
minds than we are aware of.
Verse 7
Genesis 35:7. He built an altar
— And, no doubt, offered
sacrifice upon it, perhaps the
tenth of his cattle, according
to his vow, I will give the
tenth unto thee. And he called
the place — That is, the altar,
El-Beth-el — The God of Beth-el.
As when he made a thankful
acknowledgment of the honour God
had done him in calling him
Israel, he worshipped God by the
name of El-elohe-Israel; so now
he was making a grateful
recognition of God’s former
favour at Beth-el, he worships
God by the name of the God of
Beth-el, because there God
appeared to him.
Verse 8
Genesis 35:8. Deborah, Rebekah’s
nurse, died — It appears, on
computation, that this event
took place not less than a
hundred and twenty-five years
after Rebekah’s marriage with
Isaac. No doubt Rebekah was now
dead, and this old nurse, who
had come with her into Canaan,
(Genesis 24:59,) and had tarried
with her while she lived, was,
after her death, taken into
Jacob’s family, in which, as she
was a person of great prudence
and piety, her presence and
advice must have been very
useful. Hence her death is
recorded in Jacob’s history,
rather than in Isaac’s. Now,
while they were at Beth-el, she
died, and died so much lamented,
that the oak, under which she
was buried was called
Allon-bachuth, the oak of
weeping.
Verse 10-11
Genesis 35:10-11. He called his
name Israel — So he had been
named by the angel that wrestled
with him, (Genesis 32:28,) and
the change of his name, then
made, is here confirmed and
ratified by the Divine Majesty,
to encourage him against the
fear of the Canaanites, and to
assure him that, as he had
prevailed over Esau, so he
should now prevail over those of
whom he was afraid. And he here
renews and ratifies the covenant
with him by the name of
El-Shaddai, God all-sufficient,
to fulfil his promises in due
time, and to protect and provide
for him at the present. Two
things are here promised him;
1st, That he should be the
father of a great nation; great
in number, a company of nations
shall be of thee. Every tribe of
Israel was a nation, and all the
twelve, a company of nations;
great in honour and power; kings
shall come out of thy loins. 2d,
That he should be master of a
good land, (Genesis 35:12,) the
land that was given to Abraham
and Isaac being here entailed on
Jacob and his seed. These two
promises had also a spiritual
signification, which we may
suppose Jacob himself had some
notion of; for, without doubt,
Christ is the promised seed, and
heaven is the promised land; the
former is the foundation, and
the latter the top-stone of all
God’s favours.
Verse 13
Genesis 35:13. God went up from
him — In some visible display of
his glory, which had hovered
over him while he talked with
him; or by withdrawing the signs
of his special presence, as
Genesis 17:22, and 13:20; as, on
the contrary, God is said to
come down, not by change of
place, but by some signal
manifestation of his presence
and favour, Exodus 3:8; Numbers
11:17.
Verse 14
Genesis 35:14. And Jacob set up
a pillar — When he was going to
Padan-aram he set up that stone
which he had laid his head on
for a pillow; but now he took
time to erect one more stately
and durable, probably inserting
that stone in it. And in token
of his intending it for a sacred
memorial of his communion with
God, he poured oil, and the
other ingredients of a drink-
offering, upon it. And he
confirmed the name he had
formerly given to the place,
Beth-el, the house of God. Yet
this very place afterward lost
the honour of its name, and
became Beth-aven, a house of
iniquity; for here it was that
Jeroboam set up one of his
calves. It is impossible for the
best men to entail so much as
the profession and form of
religion upon a place.
Genesis 35:16-17. She had hard
labour — Harder than usual.
Rachel had said when she bore
Joseph, God shall give me
another son, which now the
midwife remembers, and tells
her, her words were made good.
Yet this did not avail; unless
God command away fear, no one
else can. We are apt in extreme
perils to comfort ourselves and
our friends with the hopes of a
temporal deliverance, in which
we may be disappointed; we had
better ground our comforts on
that which cannot fail us, the
hope of eternal life. Rachel had
passionately said, Give me
children, or else I die; and now
she had children (for this was
her second) she died.
Verse 18
Genesis 35:18. As her soul was
departing — בצאת נפשׁה, when her
soul was going out, namely, of
the body: an argument this of
the soul’s immortality,
especially if compared with
Ecclesiastes 12:7; from which
places collated, we learn both
whence it goes, and whither it
goes. She called his name Benoni
— The son of my sorrow. Thus, by
her own confession, the gaining
her desire became her sorrow: a
lively instance this of the
folly of inordinately desiring
any thing temporal: the object
obtained generally becomes a
source of sorrow to us. But his
father called him Benjamin — The
son of my right hand. As near,
dear, and precious to him as his
right hand, which is both more
useful and more honourable than
the left, Psalms 80:17; or,
instead of his right hand, the
staff, stay, and comfort of his
old age. Jacob seems to have
given him this name rather than
the other, because he would not
renew the sorrowful remembrance
of his mother’s death every time
he called his son by name. It
may be observed, that both names
were remarkably verified in his
posterity; the tribe of Benjamin
being remarkably brave and
active, and yet involved in more
sorrowful disasters than were
experienced by any of the other
tribes.
Verse 19
Genesis 35:19. Rachel was buried
in the way to Ephrath — Not in
the city, though it was near;
for in ancient times their
sepulchres were not in places of
resort, but in places separated
and out of the cities, Matthew
27:60;
Luke 7:12. If the soul be at
rest, the matter is not great
where the body lies. In the
place where the tree falls there
let it lie.
Verse 20
Genesis 35:20. Jacob set a
pillar upon her grave — As a
monument, or memorial of her
life and death, and as a
testimony of her future
resurrection. That is the pillar
of Rachel’s grave unto this day
— Unto the time when Moses wrote
this book. But it was known to
be Rachel’s sepulchre long
after, 1 Samuel 10:2, and
Providence so ordered it that
this place afterward fell into
the lot of Benjamin. Jacob set
up a pillar in remembrance of
his joys, (Genesis 35:14,) and
here he sets up one in
remembrance of his sorrows. Such
is human life with the
generality of mankind, a
checkered scene! sorrows and
joys follow one another in rapid
succession. Happy they who,
through that faith which is the
evidence of things not seen,
rise superior to them both, and
have their conversation in
heaven, where such changes have
no place!
Verse 21
Genesis 35:21. Israel journeyed,
and spread his tent — Though a
prince with God, yet he dwells
in tents; the city is reserved
for him in the other world.
Verse 22
Genesis 35:22. When Israel dwelt
in that land — And probably was
absent from his family, which
might be the unhappy occasion of
these disorders. Though,
perhaps, Bilhah was the greater
criminal, yet Reuben’s crime was
so provoking, that for it he
lost his birthright and
blessing, chap. Genesis 49:4.
Israel heard it — No more is
said: that is enough: he heard
it with the utmost grief and
shame, horror and displeasure.
No doubt he forsook Bilhah’s bed
upon it, as David afterward
acted in a like case. The sons
of Jacob were twelve — Moses
makes this observation here,
because Benjamin being now born,
Jacob had no more sons. When he
says, (Genesis 35:26,) which
were born to him in Padan-aram,
he speaks by a synecdoche, a
figure of speech often used in
Scripture, whereby that which
belonged to the greater part is
ascribed to all. They were all
born there except Benjamin, the
place of whose birth had been
just mentioned.
Verse 27
Genesis 35:27. Jacob came unto
Isaac his father — Probably to
dwell with or near him;
bringing, it seems, his family
with him. We can hardly suppose
that this was the first visit he
paid him since his return from
Mesopotamia.
Without question he had often
visited him, though the
Scripture be silent as to this
particular.
Verse 28-29
Genesis 35:28-29. The days of
Isaac were a hundred and
fourscore years — He lived the
longest of all the patriarchs,
even five years longer than
Abraham. He was a mild and quiet
man, and these qualities
probably contributed no little
to his health and long life.
Isaac lived about forty years
after he made his will. We shall
not die an hour the sooner, but
abundantly the better, for our
timely setting our heart and
house in order. Isaac gave up
the ghost and died — Although it
appears by computation that he
did not die till many years
after Joseph was sold into
Egypt, and, indeed, not till
about the time he was preferred
there; yet his death is here
recorded that his story might be
finished, and the subsequent
narrative proceed without
interruption. His sons Esau and
Jacob buried him — Solemnized
his funeral in an amicable
manner, being now perfectly
united in brotherly affection.
This is mentioned to show how
wonderfully God had changed
Esau’s mind, since he vowed his
brother’s murder, upon his
father’s death, Genesis 27:41.
God has many ways of preventing
ill men from doing the mischief
they intended; he can either tie
their hands, or change their
hearts. |