you Well, good morning. I'd like
to share a few thoughts from Genesis 33 and 34 that I trust
will be an encouragement to you on the journey ahead today. In
Genesis 33, we see an illustration of what we know in our heads,
but often doesn't affect our behavior or our feelings in our
heart. And that is, how often do the
things that we worry about never come to pass? In the earlier
chapter, chapter 32, 31, 32, Jacob is heading back to his
homeland, and he's going to be meeting his brother Esau, and
he's scared to death of that meeting. He's afraid that his
brother is going to kill him. He gets word that his brother's
coming out with 400 men when Esau hears that Jacob is coming,
and Jacob is just convinced that, you know, Esau is coming to kill
us. He's going to wipe us out. That fear, on the one hand, you
could say is a reasonable fear, because remember, why did Jacob
leave his homeland in the first place? Because the word came
to Jacob that Esau wanted to kill him, because Jacob had deceived
the father to steal the blessing from Esau. On one hand, it seems
reasonable, but on the other hand, if Esau succeeds in what
Jacob is afraid will happen, then God's promise would fail. God promised that the blessing
would come through Jacob. God promised Jacob that he would
bring him back safely to his homeland in Canaan. God promised
that. If Esau is successful in killing
Jacob, then that promise would never come to pass. Can he trust
God or not? When we're filled with fear and
anxiety and worry, often the promises of God get put in the
background of our mind and just kind of forgotten about, aren't
they? It's a sad reality. Well, the fact of the matter
is Jacob really didn't have anything to fear because we read in verse
4 that when he and Esau meet, it says, Esau ran to meet him
and embraced him and fell on his neck and kissed him and they
wept. There was no need to fear. There
was no need to be filled with anxiety and worry and fret. God
took care of Esau's heart. Well, we've been looking the
last few days at the theme of deception in the life of Jacob,
and it's run through a lot of things, hasn't it? Through Jacob's
life, through his father-in-law, even through his own wife, and
now we see in chapters 33 and 34 that theme of deception continuing
throughout the course of this story. It seems that Jacob deceives
his brother Esau in verses 14 through 17, that Esau offers
to accompany Jacob in this journey, and Jacob says, no, no, no, no,
you go on home, and I'll come and join you there. And so Esau
goes on home, and in verse 16, Esau returned to Seir, but it
says, verse 17, Jacob journeyed to Succoth and built himself
a house and made booths and Succoth is not anywhere near Seir. Did
he deceive his brother, again, out of fear? It seems maybe that's
the case. Distrust, yeah, perhaps. Well,
and then there's also another occasion of deception in the
next chapter when a couple of Jacob's, well, Jacob is himself
deceived in verses 13 and following, in chapter 34. by his own sons, and his sons
deceive the citizens of Shechem in this plot to exact revenge
on their sister, Jacob's daughter Dinah. Yeah, but Jacob and his
sons, they're not the only deceivers. In this whole incident with Hamor
and Shechem in chapter 34, you see their real motive that comes
out. It sounds like initially when they're talking, when Hamor
and Shechem are talking to Jacob and his family, It sounds like
all they really want to do is just live peaceably together
with one another. Let me have your daughter, and
I love her, and we'll live happily ever after. But that's not the
real motive. The real motive comes out in verses 21-24, when
Hamor and Shechem, his son, communicate to the men of the city to convince
them to go along with this treaty with Jacob and his family. They
say, here's what will happen. We'll get them to sign this treaty
with us, come into this covenant with us, and we'll take them
over. Everything that's theirs, it'll be ours. We'll get their
daughters for ourselves. We'll overtake them. That's the real motive. Deception,
trickery, how deep it runs through the human heart. I trust that
God has challenged us when we've seen all these examples of deception
in these chapters in Genesis over the last week. that we will
be warned against it, and we will be determined to defeat
the temptation to deceive others and manipulate others to get
what we want. Our Father and our God, I pray
that we would take this to heart and be challenged to avoid the
sin of deception and manipulation of others, we pray in Jesus'
name. Amen. All right, listen, have
a good rest of your day. May the Lord bless you in it.