Because of sin our ears are broken such that we more easily hear a whispered lie than shouted truth. We look to circumstances and not covenant as the gauge of God’s love. Our car rather than the cross tells us of God’s love. The car breaks down , the whisper “He doesn’t love you” is heard, and our heart cries, “why?”
The “biggest” word in this whole narrative is the first one, “Then…”. This takes us back to the divine encounter in chapter 28. “Then” has not only chronological, but also theological significance for God has just promised to be with Jacob and keep him wherever he goes (Genesis 28:15). This means that everything in this narrative, both halves of it, are expressions of God’s love and covenant faithfulness; both the first half in which everything delightfully seems to be falling into place, and the second half where everything in God’s discipline is seemingly falling apart. In fact the second half is saturated with more of God’s love than the second. God will sovereignly use a sinner to sanctify His saint, and He is loving in doing so.
If you are in Christ, God’s only stance towards you is love. It is wild, radical, uncompromising, unfailing love, but it is love. It will tolerate no toxic sin in you. His discipline is an expression of His love, not His wrath. Do not despise His discipline, esteem it (Hebrews 12:5-11). It is not pleasant in itself, but one day the night of chastening will end, and the morning will dawn with you discovering that you look a little more like God for He disciplines us unto holiness, and holiness is the greater happiness. Oh how good it is for us to be afflicted (Psalm 119:67, 71, 75)!
How is it that nothing can separate us from His love (Romans 8:31-39)? Jesus also, more than Jacob, relentlessly and joyfully pursued a bride. In His quest for her he deals not simply with some wily Laban. Sure Satan is the accuser of our souls, but he is not the owner. He will be defeated, not paid in this transaction. If Jesus simply had to pay Satan the cost might be cheap. Oh, what Christ would pay for His bride! God must purchase us… from Himself. We stand under His wrath, and He would have us stand under His love and He will compromise none of Himself in order to transport us (Romans 3:24-26). Justice must be satisfied, His glory manifested, His name honored. No mere 7 years of labor, but the wrath of God was suffered on the cross for this bride.
May you hear the shouts of God’s covenant love over the whispers of circumstances.
Josh, this hit the nail on the head for my past few days… in a Biblically illustrated way. Thanks for your insight.
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Let me revise that last sentence: I praise God for the insight He gives you. 🙂
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I was going to say I especially liked the last two paragraphs but then I read it again and decided I really liked it all… 🙂
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