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Genesis 35

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And God said unto Jacob, Arise, go up to Beth–el, and dwell there: and make there an altar unto God, that appeared unto thee when thou fleddest from the face of Esau thy brother.

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Then Jacob said unto his household, and to all that were with him, Put away the strange gods that are among you, and be clean, and change your garments:

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And let us arise, and go up to Beth–el; and I will make there an altar unto God, who answered me in the day of my distress, and was with me in the way which I went.

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And they gave unto Jacob all the strange gods which were in their hand, and all their earrings which were in their ears; and Jacob hid them under the oak which was by Shechem.

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And they journeyed: and the terror of God was upon the cities that were round about them, and they did not pursue after the sons of Jacob.

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So Jacob came to Luz, which is in the land of Canaan, that is, Beth–el, he and all the people that were with him.

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And he built there an altar, and called the place El–beth–el: because there God appeared unto him, when he fled from the face of his brother.

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But Deborah Rebekah’s nurse died, and she was buried beneath Beth–el under an oak: and the name of it was called Allon–bachuth.

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And God appeared unto Jacob again, when he came out of Padan–aram, and blessed him.

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And God said unto him, Thy name is Jacob: thy name shall not be called any more Jacob, but Israel shall be thy name: and he called his name Israel.

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And God said unto him, I am God Almighty: be fruitful and multiply; a nation and a company of nations shall be of thee, and kings shall come out of thy loins;

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And the land which I gave Abraham and Isaac, to thee I will give it, and to thy seed after thee will I give the land.

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And God went up from him in the place where he talked with him.

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And Jacob set up a pillar in the place where he talked with him, even a pillar of stone: and he poured a drink offering thereon, and he poured oil thereon.

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And Jacob called the name of the place where God spake with him, Beth–el.

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And they journeyed from Beth–el; and there was but a little way to come to Ephrath: and Rachel travailed, and she had hard labour.

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And it came to pass, when she was in hard labour, that the midwife said unto her, Fear not; thou shalt have this son also.

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And it came to pass, as her soul was in departing, (for she died) that she called his name Ben–oni: but his father called him Benjamin.

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And Rachel died, and was buried in the way to Ephrath, which is Beth–lehem.

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And Jacob set a pillar upon her grave: that is the pillar of Rachel’s grave unto this day.

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And Israel journeyed, and spread his tent beyond the tower of Edar.

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And it came to pass, when Israel dwelt in that land, that Reuben went and lay with Bilhah his father’s concubine: and Israel heard it. Now the sons of Jacob were twelve:

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The sons of Leah; Reuben, Jacob’s firstborn, and Simeon, and Levi, and Judah, and Issachar, and Zebulun:

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The sons of Rachel; Joseph, and Benjamin:

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And the sons of Bilhah, Rachel’s handmaid; Dan, and Naphtali:

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And the sons of Zilpah, Leah’s handmaid; Gad, and Asher: these are the sons of Jacob, which were born to him in Padan–aram.

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And Jacob came unto Isaac his father unto Mamre, unto the city of Arbah, which is Hebron, where Abraham and Isaac sojourned.

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And the days of Isaac were an hundred and fourscore years.

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And Isaac gave up the ghost, and died, and was gathered unto his people, being old and full of days: and his sons Esau and Jacob buried him.

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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.

Genesis 35:5

Then they set out, and the terror of God fell on the towns all around them so that no one pursued them. The divine protection during the journey — the terror of God on the surrounding towns — prevents the retaliation that Jacob feared in Genesis 34:30. The application: the covenant person who obeys the command to return to the place of worship is protected by divine provision during the journey. God's terror goes ahead of them.

Genesis 35:6

Jacob and all the people with him came to Luz — that is, Bethel — in the land of Canaan. The arrival at Bethel is the completion of the journey from the stone pillar of Genesis 28 to the rebuilt altar of verse 7. The covenant return to the covenant place. The application: arriving at Bethel is arriving at the place where everything significant in Jacob's covenant life began.

Genesis 35:7

There he built an altar, and he called the place El Bethel, because it was there that God revealed himself to him when he was fleeing from his brother. El Bethel means God of the house of God. The altar built and the name given are Jacob's covenant act of honoring the original encounter. The application: the act of building the altar at the place of original encounter is the act of acknowledging that what happened there was real and was from God.

Genesis 35:8

Now Deborah, Rebekah's nurse, died and was buried under the oak outside Bethel. That is why it was called Allon Bakuth. Allon Bakuth means oak of weeping. The brief notice of Deborah's death — Rebekah's nurse who traveled with the family from Paddan Aram — is a small, tender marker of continuity and loss. The weeping at her death honors the connection she represented to Rebekah's household. The application: the deaths of the people who connected the generations — nurses, servants, household members who carried the memory — deserve their own tears and their own oaks of weeping.

Genesis 35:9

After Jacob returned from Paddan Aram, God appeared to him again and blessed him. The theophany at Bethel is the covenant confirmation that follows the altar-building. God appears again — as he appeared at Bethel in Genesis 28 and at Peniel in Genesis 32. The application: the God who appears at the beginning of a covenant journey appears again at the return. The covenant encounter is not a one-time event.

Genesis 35:10

God said to him: your name is Jacob, but you will no longer be called Jacob; your name will be Israel. So he named him Israel. The name-change confirmed at Bethel was given at Peniel in Genesis 32:28 — but here it is confirmed by God himself at the covenant place. The double confirmation of the new name at two separate sites is the covenant's emphasis on the permanence of the transformation. The application: the new identity given in the wrestling night is ratified at the altar. Peniel gives the name; Bethel confirms it.

Genesis 35:11

And God said to him: I am God Almighty; be fruitful and increase in number. A nation and a community of nations will come from you, and kings will be among your descendants. El Shaddai — the name given to Abraham in Genesis 17:1 and invoked over Jacob's departure in Genesis 28:3 — is now spoken directly to Jacob. The covenant promises — fruitfulness, nations, kings — are the Abrahamic covenant given to Israel by name. The application: the covenant promises confirmed at Bethel are the same promises given to Abraham — now given to the man who has become Israel.

Genesis 35:12

The land I gave to Abraham and Isaac I also give to you, and I will give this land to your descendants after you. The land promise — given to Abraham in Genesis 12:7 and confirmed to Isaac in Genesis 26:3 — is now confirmed to Israel. The covenant land is the same land in each generation; the promise is renewed with each inheritor. The application: the covenant land is not inherited automatically but is given again to each generation by the same God who gave it to the first.

Genesis 35:13

Then God went up from him at the place where he had talked with him. The departure of God — going up from the place of conversation — marks the completion of the covenant encounter. The application: the divine encounters that confirm the covenant have clear beginnings and endings. God comes, speaks, and goes. The encounter is real; the departure is real.

Genesis 35:14

Jacob set up a stone pillar at the place where God had talked with him, and he poured out a drink offering on it; he also poured oil on it. The setting up of the stone pillar and the pouring of oil echoes Genesis 28:18 exactly — the same acts at the same place at the beginning and end of the journey. The drink offering is added in the return — a development from the oil alone of the first visit. The application: the return to a place of covenant encounter is enriched by what the journey has added. The pilgrim who returns to Bethel has more to pour than the runaway who first arrived.

Genesis 35:15

Jacob called the place where God had talked with him Bethel. The renaming of Bethel — it was already named Bethel in Genesis 28:19 — is the confirmation of the name: the place is still, and forever, the house of God. The application: the covenant places retain their names across time. Bethel is Bethel, whatever else has happened in between.

Genesis 35:16

Then they moved on from Bethel. While they were still some distance from Ephrath, Rachel began to give birth and had great difficulty. The journey resumes after Bethel — and immediately the next crisis arrives. Rachel, who prayed for another son in Genesis 30:24, goes into the labor that will answer the prayer at the cost of her life. The application: the covenant journey continues after the mountain. The difficulty of childbirth follows immediately on the heels of the Bethel encounter.

Genesis 35:17

And as she was having great difficulty in childbirth, the midwife said to her: don't despair, for you have another son. The midwife's words — you have another son — are the answer to Rachel's prayer of Genesis 30:24: may the LORD add to me another son. The prayer is answered in the moment of the greatest suffering. The application: the answer to a prayer for addition can arrive in a moment of subtraction — the son added, the mother taken.

Genesis 35:18

As she breathed her last — for she was dying — she named her son Ben-Oni. But his father named him Benjamin. Ben-Oni means son of my trouble; Benjamin means son of my right hand. The dying mother names her son from her pain; the father renames him from his honor. Both names are true: he cost Rachel her life; he is Jacob's favored son. The application: the two names of Benjamin hold the two truths of his arrival — grief and blessing, subtraction and addition.

Genesis 35:19

So Rachel died and was buried on the way to Ephrath — that is, Bethlehem. The road to Bethlehem is the road where Rachel dies. Jeremiah 31:15 hears Rachel weeping for her children in Ramah — the grief of the mother who dies on the Bethlehem road becomes the grief of the mother who weeps for children taken into exile. Matthew 2:18 applies the same verse to the slaughter of the innocents in Bethlehem. The application: Rachel's death on the Bethlehem road is one of the Bible's most layered prophetic sites — the grief of Genesis 35 reverberates through Jeremiah 31 and Matthew 2.

Genesis 35:20

Over her tomb Jacob set up a pillar, and to this day that pillar marks Rachel's tomb. The pillar over Rachel's tomb is Jacob's covenant act of honoring the beloved wife — the same pillar-setting he used at Bethel and at Galeed, now used at the grave of Rachel. The application: the pillar that marks a grave is the covenant person's way of saying this life mattered, this person is remembered, this loss is not forgotten.

Genesis 35:21

Israel moved on again and pitched his tent beyond Migdal Eder. The use of the name Israel — not Jacob — at the moment of resuming the journey after Rachel's death is the narrative's emphasis: the man who moves on is the man who has been transformed. The grief is real; the movement continues. The application: the covenant name Israel carries the capacity to move forward through grief that the old name Jacob may not have had.

Genesis 35:22

While Israel was living in that region, Reuben went in and slept with his father's concubine Bilhah, and Israel heard of it. Now Jacob had twelve sons. The violation of Bilhah by Reuben — the firstborn — is the act that will cost him his birthright in Genesis 49:3-4. The brief notation and Israel heard of it is another instance of the patriarch's passive response to a family violation, mirroring Genesis 34:5. The application: the covenant family's tendency toward sexual violation, from Shechem's assault to Reuben's, is the family darkness that the covenant blessing does not simply erase.

Genesis 35:23

The sons of Leah: Reuben the firstborn of Jacob, Simeon, Levi, Judah, Issachar, and Zebulun. The listing of the twelve sons by their mothers — Leah, Rachel, Bilhah, Zilpah — is the formal enumeration of the covenant family's completeness. The structure of the list is the structure of the covenant family. The application: the twelve sons of Jacob are the twelve tribes of Israel — the list is not merely genealogical but prophetic.

Genesis 35:24

The sons of Rachel: Joseph and Benjamin. The two sons of Rachel — Joseph, the beloved son of the beloved wife, and Benjamin, born at the cost of Rachel's life — are the sons through whom the most significant covenant stories will be told. The application: Rachel's two sons will carry the narratives that close Genesis. The mother who died on the Bethlehem road lives in the stories of her children.

Genesis 35:25

The sons of Rachel's servant Bilhah: Dan and Naphtali. The naming of Bilhah's sons — Dan, meaning he has judged, and Naphtali, meaning my struggle — recalls Rachel's theological naming from chapter 30. The application: the names given in seasons of struggle carry the theology of those seasons forward into the names of tribes.

Genesis 35:26

The sons of Leah's servant Zilpah: Gad and Asher. These were the sons of Jacob, born to him in Paddan Aram. The naming of Zilpah's sons — Gad, meaning good fortune, and Asher, meaning happy — recalls Leah's naming from chapter 30. The application: the full twelve are named — all four mothers honored in the enumeration.

Genesis 35:27

Jacob came home to his father Isaac in Mamre, near Kiriath Arba, where Abraham and Isaac had stayed. The return to Isaac in Mamre is the completion of the vow of Genesis 28:21 — I will return safely to my father's household. Twenty years after the vow at Bethel, Jacob arrives where his father lives. The application: the promises made at Bethel are kept. The vow of safe return is fulfilled when Jacob arrives at Isaac's tent.

Genesis 35:28

Isaac lived a hundred and eighty years. The age at death is given with covenant precision — the same precision used for Abraham's 175 years and Ishmael's 137 years. The application: every year of a covenant life is counted. Isaac's 180 years are fully numbered before God.

Genesis 35:29

Then he breathed his last and died and was gathered to his people, old and full of years. And his sons Esau and Jacob buried him. The death notice for Isaac uses the same honorable formula as Abraham's — old and full of years, gathered to his people. And his sons Esau and Jacob buried him — together, the second time the brothers are together at a burial, after the reconciliation of Genesis 33. The application: the covenant patriarch is buried by both his sons — the reconciliation of Genesis 33 holds. Both sons stand at their father's grave.