| Themes of wandering, sibling rivalry, barren wife, wives
in conflict, renaming, God perceived in dream and vision |
Two Levels of Reality: Human and Divine
| Human events viewed in context of God’s will |
| Tensions of fate/free will, destiny/choice |
Jacob’s Journey
| Resembles that of grandfather Abraham (visionary) |
| Resembles that of son (Joseph, dreamer) |
| At portals of manhood, journeys into foreign land |
| 28--Conversion |
| Wives: love, jealousy, and children |
| 32--meeting with God |
| Wrestles with God, reunited with Esau |
| Jacob=Israel=God-fighter |
| Conflict between Jacob and Esau=threat to covenant: could
lead to extinction of Abram's family; Jacob's leaving land for 20 years
also threatens covenant--family could simply return to Mesopotamia. |
| Ethnic distinctiveness and the land (like 14, appear
as interlude) |
Joseph (37-50)
| Relationship formed between Abram's family and land |
| Emerging profile of Judah (significance for later history);
role is parallel to that of Jacob (deceived, asks for evidence concerning
identity) |
| 37--Judah's younger son: forces his way out when all
seems lost; makes breach (Judah-Tamar, twins Perez, Zerah) |
| Joseph (39), same kind of forcing out |
| Providential care of Joseph=sovereign control of history |