My life 96

Stanislaw Barszczak, The week of faith’s gift, part2

Beloved readers! This is my life and the image of my growing up in virtue also. The world of professional wrestling has always been bizarre with it’s stunts and superstars. The hype, glitz, and theatrics of wrestle mania, has created a new market for kids as well as adults. There are millions who watch such entertainment with passion, pulling for their favorite wrestler. Professional wrestling has become big money and I suppose a big waste of time. This form of entertainment as most everything else in this nation, has grown darker and more violent. Let us return to the bible. I remember from the bible the scene with David. David also knew he was not fighting a common battle and, therefore, could not use common weapons and armor. This faithful young man who walked in the way of the Lord could not walk in the king’s armor much less fight. Goliath was an extraordinary enemy. Ordinary weapons and armor were not effective. David knew that. After all, Saul had all the armor he wanted and he was still afraid to accept Goliath’s challenge. For David, the weapons of this world were untested and unreliable. He preferred to fight with the weapon he knew would be sufficient to defeat the enemy. That weapon was absolute faith in the covenant-keeping God of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, David, and yes, even us. He had another weapon as well. That weapon was the glory of God, and David knew God would protect his glory by doing for his people what they clearly could not do for themselves. But let us stop on a text about Jacob now. Probably we have ringside seats to witness the wrestling match of all time. This is no doubt the most unusual wrestling match in history. This event takes place in an open air arena beside the Jabbok River. In one corner stands Jacob, affectionately known as “Big Jake” or “The Schemer.” And in the other corner, of all people is God Himself. What a billing! Jacob versus God! Big jake versus Jehovah! Our text describes the blow by blow account of Jacob’s wrestling match with the omnipotent God. “How foolish,” you say. “Who would want to take on God, one on one, in a wrestling match? How could ‘Big Jake’ ever hope to win?” God has preserved this historical event in the life of Jacob to teach us lessons concerning our own struggles. You see, the truth is, all of us at some point in our journey, have taken on God. We have all stepped into the ring with God, and wrestled with Him about life. Right now as we speak, someone could be struggling with God about some situation, some problem, some difficulty, some injustice, he or she has incurred! It would be good for us to sit down in our ringside seats, and learn the lessons from Jacob’s wrestling match with God.
The commentators said, Jacob’s encounter with God began even before the day of his birth. The account given in Genesis 25:19-26 tells us that Rebekah was disturbed by the wrestling match going on in her belly as she carried the turbulent twins, Jacob and Esau. There in the womb, these two brothers who were destined to become two nations, were duking it out for dominance! Later when they came forth from the womb, Jacob grabbed Esau’s heel as if to pull him back in an effort to be the first born, a position of prominence in the Hebrew family. His parents observing this unusual trait named him, “Jacob.” You see in the ancient Hebrew culture, a person’s name carried with it the very essence and identity of the person. No Hebrew parent chose a name for their baby just because it sounded nice, or was popular, but only because the name fit the child! The name “Jacob” means “supplanter, schemer, cheater; one who grabs from behind.” Jacob was “called for clipping.” Such a person takes things in his own hands, wrestles to get his own way, and the remainder of Jacob’s life up to this main event reveals that Jacob was named properly. He wrestled with his brother Essau to get his birthright, he and his mother formed a tag team as they wrestled with his father to obtain the blessing of the firstborn, he wrestled with his uncle Laban (however uncle Laban gave him a run for his money) over flocks, herds, his daughters, and now he wrestles with God! Jacob is wrestling with God, because he has for a long time been wrestling with life. Everything that had happened, everything that was happening in his life, had been leading to this one critical, crucial encounter. By name and by nature Jacob has for a long time walked the road of his own choosing, the road of self will, selfish goals, the road of his own strength and resources. Now that road leads past the Jabbok River, a name which means “wrestling.” In our text, Jacob places his wives, servants, and company, over across the Jabbok river to the south side, and he estranges himself on the north bank. Completely alone with his doubts, dreams, and fears, Jacob was set for his encounter with God. Now would begin his long night of struggle, and in the agony of his soul, Jacob would wrestle in prayer, and actually, literally, wrestle the pre-incarnate Christ. By mornings light, Jacob would leave a different man with a new name, seeking a new destiny, walking a new road!
What was it that so troubled Jacob? What has brought him to this spiritual crisis in his life as he sits alone at the river gorge? What are the REASONS for his wrestling? One obvious reason is his name and nature. Jacob was growing weary of his wrestling, his struggle with life. Sure, he had some previous encounters with God. The Lord’s blessings had been upon his life despite Jacob’s insistence on singing, “I’ll do it my way!” The truth remained that he had done it his way, and now it was a royal mess! Jacob at the river gorge is a tired, weary, frightened, searching man, a man who is slow to trust God and quick to grab from behind. His name and nature has woven a web of trouble and conflict. What does Jacob have to show for all of his scheming? He has family problems. Jacob had left home with a father who no doubt was disappointed in him and a brother who swore to kill him. He wasn’t exactly popular with his uncle Laban and the in-laws. Now he had two wives who were continually fighting. His family life was a wreck! Sounds much like today, doesn’t it? Families everywhere are fighting and falling apart because they have forsaken God, His house, His Word! Like Jacob, many fathers and husbands turned away from God to follow the god of mammon. A home built upon this world with its philosophy and mind set is like building a house upon the sand. It will stand for a while, but when the wind and waves of trouble come and beat upon it, great is its fall! He was struggling with his destiny, his purpose. He was supposed to be heir to the promise of God first given to his grandfather Abraham and passed down to his father Isaac. At Bethel that promise was reiterated by God to Jacob and Jacob made a vow to God. We remember that vow recorded in Genesis 28:20-21. “And Jacob vowed a vow, saying, If or since God will be with me, and will keep me in this way that I go, and will give me bread to eat, and raiment to put on, So that I come again to my father’s house in peace; then shall the Lord be my God.” Without doubt, Jacob struggled with the timing of God’s plan for his life as well as the direction his life had taken. His patience had run thin and perhaps he was perplexed as to where his life was going. One thing was for sure, the Lord had kept His end of the bargain. Jacob was a blessed man. He came to Laban’s house empty, and now he was leaving full. Jacob was on his way to becoming the person who could fit that promise made by God, however Jacob still had the same nature and name. He was not entirely the Jacob who left home twenty years earlier, but he had not yet come to the end of his ways. There were some things in his life he had not set aside. We see this as he prepares to meet Esau. Instead of trusting God, he is referring to Esau as his master and himself as his servant, which is upside down! Instead of trusting God, he is sending wave after wave of presents to Esau in an effort to appease him. Now his life is as uncertain as ever. He is a man without a country. Jacob was rich in the things of this world, but he was not yet rich toward God. Today the average Pole has more than ever before, and yet a sense of hopelessness and despair has never filled the country as it fills it today. We have raised a whole generation without God, values or absolutes, and now we are both seeing and hearing the emptiness within. Most kids have things, but no reason to live. When we walk away from God, we walk away from our purpose for existence! Nothing can fill the heart like Jesus. He is certainly troubled about his future. Soon, the next morning Jacob is to meet up with his profane brother Essau. “BIG JAKE” for sure is no match for big, red headed, hairy, hot-tempered, rough, rugged he-man Essau. “Big jake versus big red.” The mother’s boy who hid out in the tents and loved to cook would be no contest for Essau. The future struck fear into the heart of Jacob. He needed some answers, some assurance as he faced the future and now he sits alone. Alone is a tough place to be when you need help, answers, and assurance. Alone is tough when you are at the top, but on the bottom it is unbearable! But Jacob is alone by his own design. He wanted it “his way” and now that is exactly what he has. There at the river ford, Jacob keeps his solitary, restless watch. Sleep was impossible. His troubled spirit would not let him rest. Jacob is at a crisis in life. Jacob is at a cross road.

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