2-4-3 Jacob's Blessings Of His Sons
      Jacob no longer saw the promised blessings as referring to him personally 
        having a prosperous time in the promised land; he joyfully looked forward 
        to the future Kingdom. He says that he now realizes that his blessings 
        (of forgiveness and the subsequent hope of the Kingdom) are greater than 
        the blessings of the everlasting mountains (49:26 RV mg.); he saw the 
        spiritual side of his blessings as more significant than the material 
        aspect. Despite the fact that the promises were primarily fulfilled in 
        the peace and prosperity he and his seed enjoyed at the end (48:4 " 
        multitude" s.w. 47:27; 35:11; 28:3), Jacob doesn't emphasize this 
        fact as he could have done; instead, he looks to the future, ultimate 
        fulfilments. He looked back on his life as a " pilgrimage" , 
        a series of temporary abodes on the way to something permanent, i.e. the 
        future Kingdom (47:9). Although his seed had become a " multitude" 
        as promised, he says that he refuses to unite himself with the " 
        assembly" (s.w. multitude) of Simeon and Levi (49:6), as if he saw 
        this physical fulfilment of the promises in his lifetime as worthy little. 
        His appreciation of the promises absolutely fills his thinking at the 
        end. The promised Kingdom was " the pride of Jacob" (Ps. 47:4 
        NIV; Am. 6:8; Nah. 2:2), his chiefest joy. There are aspects of Jacob's 
        blessings of his sons which evidently have not been fulfilled. Presumably 
        they will be fulfilled in the Kingdom, which shows how Jacob's mind was 
        not dwelling on his children receiving physical blessings from God in 
        the short term (cp. how Isaac blessed his sons), but rather the promised 
        eternal blessings of the Kingdom. It is quite likely that the sons, in 
        their humanity, expected blessings of a more immediate sort, such as a 
        dying father of those times would have shared out between his sons. But 
        instead, Jacob's talk is not of the things of this brief life, but of 
        the Kingdom.    
      He seems to have perceived the spiritual danger his children were in, 
        living in the luxury of Egypt. The promises of being fruitful and being 
        given a land were being fulfilled, in a primary sense, in Israel's experience 
        in Egypt (48:4 cp. 47:27). Joseph was given the land 
        of Egypt (41:41), using the same words as in 45:18; 48:4 concerning how 
        the true land -of Canaan- had been given to Abraham's 
        children. Jacob's children were given a possession in Egypt (47:11), 
        and therefore Jacob emphasized that their real possession was 
        the eternal inheritance of Canaan, not Egypt (48:4; 49:30; 50:13). Thus 
        Jacob at the end realized the importance of warning God's people against 
        the world, against the temptation of feeling that God's present material 
        blessing of us with a foretaste of His Kingdom means that in fact we lose 
        our enthusiasm for the true Kingdom, in its real, material sense. 
        Like Paul in his final flourish of 2 Tim., Jacob saw the need to warn 
        God's people, to point them away from the world, and towards the future 
        Kingdom. Jacob saw that his people, like him in his earlier life, would 
        be tempted to see God's promises on an altogether too human and material 
        level.    
            Jacob's blessing of Zebulun 
      His comment that Zebulun would dwell at the haven of the sea (49:13) 
        was not fulfilled in this dispensation, seeing that according to Josephus 
        (and a careful reconstruction of Joshua's words), Zebulun never dwelt 
        by the Sea, being cut off from the coast by the tribe of Asher. And yet 
        according to the distribution of the tribal cantons recorded in Ezekiel, 
        Zebulun will border the Red Sea in the Millennium (Ez. 48:26). And Jacob 
        foresaw this, and gave Zebulun that blessing, with not a mention of any 
        more immediate blessing. He had come to learn that in essence, the promised 
        blessings of God were of the future, not the here and now.    
            Jacob's blessing of Issachar
      " Issachar has desired that which is good; (i.e.) resting between 
        the inheritance. And having seen the resting place that it was good...he 
        subjected his shoulder to labour" (49:14 LXX). The Apostle alludes 
        to this Greek text in Heb. 4:1: " Let us labour therefore to enter 
        into that rest" . Jacob imputed righteousness to his son Issachar 
        at the end. Imputing righteousness to others, seeing the good and the 
        potential in them, was something Jacob only reached at the end; he saw 
        Issachar as seeing the future Kingdom, and devoting himself to labour 
        now to attain that future rest. And the writer to the Hebrews bids us 
        follow that man's example. Jacob's judgment of his Issachar was with regard 
        to how keenly he perceived the future rest of the Kingdom, and laboured 
        now to attain it. For this reason, Jacob commended him; he judged Issachar 
        according to how keenly he desired the Kingdom.   
            Jacob's blessing of Dan
      Dan was to bite the horse heels, so that the riders fell backwards (49:17). 
        This is to be connected with Zech. 10:5, which speaks of how in the last 
        days, the Arab invaders of Israel will be toppled from their horses by 
        the men of Israel / Jacob. Again, Jacob's mind was on the far distant 
        glory of his sons in the day of the Kingdom. There is also reference here 
        to Gen. 3:15, but with an unexpected twist; Dan as the snake (not the 
        woman) would bite his enemies, and thereby subdue them. Is there a hint 
        here that Jacob had so meditated on the Lord Jesus, the future Messiah, 
        that he realized that he must have our sinful, snake-like, Jacob-like 
        nature, and yet through that very fact the final victory against sin would 
        be won? 'Jacob' meaning 'heel-catcher' associates him with the seed of 
        the snake, who would bruise the seed of the woman in the heel. He saw 
        how he would somehow be rescued from his own ‘Jacob-ness’, saved from 
        himself, by the Saviour to come. It turned out that Jacob, who in some 
        ways was the seed of the snake, became the seed of the woman. And yet 
        his Messianic blessing of Dan indicates that he saw these two aspects 
        in his Saviour Lord; he was the one who had the appearance of the seed 
        of the snake (cp. how the bronze snake symbolized him), and yet was in 
        fact the seed of the woman. I really believe that Jacob had so deeply 
        reflected on his own life and sinfulness, on the promise in Eden, and 
        on the promises of Abraham's saviour-seed, that he came to as fine an 
        appreciation of the representative nature of Christ's sacrifice as any 
        believer has today. Thus a lifetime of reflection on the promises (rather 
        than thinking 'Yes, we know all about them') and sustained self-examination 
        will lead to a deep grasp of the fact that Christ really represented you, 
        he had exactly your nature, and thereby he is your very own saviour. And 
        yet the fact Christ was our representative seems to be written off by 
        many of us as a dead piece of doctrine we must learn before baptism.  
       
      " I have waited for thy salvation (Jesus)" (49:18) is commented 
        upon by the Jerusalem Targum with the suggestion that Jacob was expressing 
        a very definite Messianic expectation: " My soul waiteth not for 
        the deliverance of Gideon, the son of Joash, for it was only temporal; 
        nor for that of Samson, for it was but transient; but for the redemption 
        by the Messiah, the Son of David, which in thy word thou hast promised 
        to send to thy people, the children of Israel; for this, thy salvation, 
        my soul waiteth" .   
            Jacob's blessing of Gad
      Gad " shall overcome at the last" (49:19) reflects 
        how Jacob's mind was focused on the final victory of his people, " 
        at the last" .   
            Jacob's blessing of Asher 
      Asher " shall yield royal dainties" , or 'dainties 
        fit for a king' suggests Jacob imagining how in the Kingdom, the Lord 
        Jesus would eat food grown in Asher? The tribes of Israel will each bring 
        their royal dainties to the Lord Jesus in the Millennium (Ez. 45:16).  
       
            Jacob's blessing of Naphtali
      Naphtali " is a hind let loose: he giveth goodly 
        (lit. 'gracious') words" (49:21) is another Messianic hint; Ps. 22 
        (title) likens the Lord to a hind at the time of his death; and again, 
        Jacob's appreciation of the quality of grace as it would be manifested 
        in Christ comes out. The LXX says that Naphtali is " a tree trunk 
        let loose" . With all the other Messianic insights in Jacob's words, 
        this cannot be accidental. Jacob even saw something of  the physical 
        manner of the Lord's death. The idea of being let loose has day of atonement 
        connections (Lev. 16:21). Did Jacob see that far ahead? One Chaldee text 
        reads for this verse: “Naphtali is a swift messenger like a hind that 
        runneth on the tops of the mountains bringing glad tidings”.    
            Jacob's blessing of Benjamin
      " In the morning he shall devour the prey" (49:27) connects 
        with the promises that Messiah's second coming would be the true morning 
        (Is. 60:1; Mal. 4:1,2); this was the day when Benjamin would have his 
        true blessing.   
      Jacob's progression from perceiving the promises as concerning physical 
        blessing to seeing their essential relevance to forgiveness and future 
        salvation is made explicit by 49:26: " The blessings of thy father 
        have prevailed above the blessings of the ancient mountains, the delight, 
        glory or loveliness of the hills of eternity" (this rendition is 
        supported by the LXX, Gesenius, RVmg.). Remember that in the wrestling 
        incident, Jacob realized that the blessing of God essentially refers to 
        His forgiveness; and this connection between blessing and forgiveness 
        / salvation is widespread throughout Scripture: Dt. 33:23; Ps. 5:12  
        (blessing = grace) Dt. 30:19; Ps. 3:8; 24:5; 28:9; 133:3 (= salvation); 
        Ex. 12:32; 32:29; Num. 24:1; 2 Sam. 21:3; Ps. 67:1 (cp. context); Lk. 
        6:28 (cp. ) Acts 3:26; Rom. 4:7,8; 1 Cor. 10:16; Gal. 3:14 (= forgiveness). 
        Jacob's final appreciation of God's grace, the way he does far above what 
        our works should deserve, is indicated by his comment that " I had 
        not thought to see thy (Joseph's) face: and, lo, God hath shewed me also 
        thy seed" (48:11). " Thought" is 74 times translated " 
        pray" , and only once " thought" ; the idea is surely: 
        'I never prayed to see you again, I didn't therefore have the faith in 
        the resurrection which I should have done, just as I didn’t believe your 
        mother could be resurrected when you spoke of her coming to bow before 
        you (37:10); but God in His grace has done exceeding abundantly above 
        all I asked or didn't ask for, and shewed me not only your face in this 
        life, but also your children'.   
      Surrounded by his sons clamouring, one can imagine, for physical, immediate 
        blessings, just as he did in the first half of his life, Jacob says that 
        the spiritual blessings he had received, the grace, the forgiveness, the 
        salvation, were infinitely higher than the blessings of rock-solid hills 
        and mountains, things which seemed so permanent and tangible. His intangible 
        blessings were, he finally realized,. much higher than his intangible 
        ones. And so with us individually and as a community; we come to realize, 
        over time, that the Kingdom of God is not so much about meat and drink, 
        the physical, tangible things, but more about peace and joy in the Holy 
        Spirit (Rom. 14:17); we value the spiritual side of the Kingdom far more; 
        the reality of seeing God's face, of sin forgiven, of the collapse of 
        the wretched barrier which there is between us, the glory of God perfectly 
        revealed; these things come to mean far more than the fact that in the 
        1000 years of the brief Millennium, corn will wave on the tops of the 
        mountains, and children will play in the now-troubled streets of Jerusalem 
        (even assuming these passages are to be read dead literally). The spiritual 
        graces of the Kingdom, the conquest of sin, the end of sinful nature, 
        the true joy, the eternal felicity and true fellowship... these things, 
        the quality of the Kingdom existence, come to mean far more than 
        the fact it will be eternal, fascinating as this may be for us 
        to presently contemplate. Jacob is our pattern, and will be our pattern 
        by the end. Turn thou to thy God as Jacob did, Hosea 
        pleads (Hos. 12:4).   
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