Genesis 35
Genesis 35 marks a moment of spiritual renewal and painful loss for Jacob. God calls him back to Bethel — the place where He first appeared to him fleeing from Esau — and Jacob commands his household to put away all foreign gods, purify themselves, and change their garments. The household surrenders their idols. At Bethel, God appears again, reaffirms the name Israel, and restates the Abrahamic covenant with full solemnity. It is a homecoming to the place of first encounter, a renewal of what had grown cluttered and compromised. But the journey is marked by grief: Rachel dies giving birth to Benjamin on the road near Bethlehem — her last breath naming him son of my sorrow, but Jacob names him son of my right hand. Then Isaac dies, and Jacob and Esau bury him together, a final echo of the reconciliation in chapter 33. Bethlehem, where Rachel is buried, will one day be the birthplace of David and of Christ. Even the places of grief in God's story become locations of future hope.
Genesis 35:1
Then God said to Jacob: go up to Bethel and settle there, and build an altar there to God, who appeared to you when you were fleeing from your brother Esau. The divine command to return to Bethel is the command to return to the origin of Jacob's covenant life — the place of the first divine encounter, the pillar, the vow, the name of the place where God is. The application: Bethel is always the place the covenant person needs to return to when the family has sunk into the violence of chapter 34. Go back to the beginning. Build the altar.
Genesis 35:2
So Jacob said to his household and to all who were with him: get rid of the foreign gods you have among you, and purify yourselves and change your clothes. The household purification before the journey to Bethel is the preparatory act of covenant renewal: foreign gods removed, ritual purification, clean clothes. The application: the return to the place of covenant encounter requires the removal of everything that has accumulated since the last encounter. Foreign gods, ritual impurity, old clothes — all of it must go.
Genesis 35:3
Then come, let us go up to Bethel, where I will build an altar to God, who answered me in the day of my distress and who has been with me wherever I have gone. Jacob's testimony to his household is the testimony of the Bethel encounter: the God who answered me in distress, who has been with me everywhere. The application: the invitation to the communal act of worship is always grounded in personal testimony. Jacob invites his household to the God who answered him personally.
Genesis 35:4
So they gave Jacob all the foreign gods they had and the rings in their ears, and Jacob buried them under the oak at Shechem. The handing over of foreign gods and earrings — the material objects associated with alternative devotions — is the household's compliance with Jacob's command. The burial under the oak is the permanent removal: these objects are not thrown away to be retrieved but buried. The application: the removal of alternative devotions from the household requires more than putting them aside — they must be permanently relinquished.