I’m Pastor Rich Bitterman, a country preacher from the Ozarks. Guy Howard, the old Walking Preacher, once wore out his boots traveling from church to church, meeting strangers and sharing the gospel. I’m doing the same today on digital roads. Each post is a visit. Each verse is a step. Let’s walk the Word together.
🪔 Today’s Truth:
God doesn’t call the perfect. He names the strugglers.
We stand here today, nearly four millennia removed from the flickering flames of Abraham’s tent and the dusty trails where Jacob once walked. The world around us pulses with neon and noise, glass towers and steel bridges, while theirs was carved from earth and whispered under the endless stars.
Yet, beneath the vast expanse of time, a quiet truth remains: Jacob’s story breathes still, like a restless wind through our own lives.
He was no myth or distant ancestor cloaked in holiness. Jacob was flesh and bone, a man forged in failure and fear, hope and heartache. A man whose hands grasped at blessing with both cunning and desperation. His footprints in the dust mirror our own…stumbling, wrestling, yearning for something beyond ourselves.
Jacob’s name would become Israel, “a prince with God.” But he did not arrive there polished or proud. His was a journey marred by deceit, sibling strife, and self-doubt. If you’ve ever lied to cover a truth, wrestled with a brother, or felt the ache of a dream deferred, you have met Jacob in your own reflection.
The Weight of Legacy
When the modern nation of Israel rose from the ashes of exile in 1948, it chose its name not by chance but by inheritance. Israel. The name of a man whose life was tangled with God’s covenant promises. To claim Jacob is to claim the struggle of grace…unearned, relentless, and enduring.
Jacob is our father too. When Scripture calls God’s people by his name, it invites us to enter into a lineage defined not by perfection but by the sovereign mercy that chooses the unlikely.
Prayer Born from Silence
Isaac and Rebekah waited. Twenty years passed in the quiet tension of God’s promise. Isaac, unlike his father Abraham, resisted shortcuts. He lingered in faith, not impatience. Every unanswered prayer pressed heavy on his heart, each silence a reminder that God’s timing eludes human hands.
Children are God’s gift, loaned to parents like fragile glass, held for a breath before God calls them home. When Isaac pleaded for a child, his prayers cut through the waiting years like a sharpened blade.
But blessings do not come without shadows. Inside Rebekah’s womb, a storm raged. Two lives wrestled for dominion even before birth. Prayer had summoned a gift, but it also unearthed struggle. Like us, those chosen to carry God’s promise find their path marked by conflict between old selves and new, between earthly longing and heavenly call.
The Sovereignty of Choice
God’s voice to Rebekah pierces time and reason: “Two nations are in your womb… the older shall serve the younger.”
This overturns every expectation, every human calculation of worth.
Paul would later echo this in Romans, reminding us that election is not earned or deserved. Before good or evil, before first breath or deed, God’s choice stands firm. This is not cruelty. It is justice redefined by a God whose wisdom surpasses mortal judgment.
We wrestle with this mystery. It unsettles our sense of fairness. But the question is not whether God’s choice is just, it must be, for God is justice itself.
The Marked Difference
When the twins were born, the contrast was undeniable. Esau, the first, wild and ruddy, his skin a cloak of hair…rough like the land he roamed, strong and worldly-wise. Jacob, grasping his brother’s heel, smooth-skinned, thoughtful, and burdened with a name that meant “supplanter.”
In their bodies, their destinies, and their hearts, difference ran deep. Isaac saw in Esau the hunter, the provider. Rebekah saw in Jacob the quiet man destined for covenant.
This story is a portrait of messy grace, family fracture, and the strange ways God works through weakness.
When God Chooses the Unlikely to Lead
Jacob’s life unfolds full of contradictions. A deceiver who becomes a leader. A man of guile who wrestles with God and wins. A son who flees, only to return as a father of nations.
In Jacob, we see ourselves: flawed, fragile, fighting for blessing. His story invites us to trust that God is at work in the shadowed valleys of our own journeys.
An Invitation Beyond Time
Look back on your own life…the missteps, the broken promises, the unanswered prayers. Look to the future you fear you may never reach. Jacob’s God is our God. His grace, not our merit, shapes our story.
God’s ways are not our ways. He chooses what the world despises to shame the mighty. He calls the weak to wear the crown.
If you feel unworthy or unprepared, remember Jacob, the prince made of dust and dreams, wrestling with God until his name changed, until his soul was marked by mercy.
Our pilgrimage may be few and filled with struggle, but in God’s hands, it is never wasted.
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So cool to start seeing the gospel develop through the Bible and in every chapter and character!
Thank you 🙏