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Jacob wrestling with the angel

Jacob wrestling with the angel is described in Genesis (32:22–32; also referenced in Hosea 12:3–5). The "angel" in question is referred to as "man" (אִישׁ) and "God" in Genesis, while Hosea references an "angel" (מַלְאָךְ).[1] The account includes the renaming of Jacob as Israel (etymologized as "contends-with-God").

Gustave Doré, Jacob Wrestling with the Angel (1855)

In the Genesis narrative, Jacob spent the night alone on a riverside during his journey back to Canaan. He encounters a "man" who proceeds to wrestle with him until daybreak. In the end, Jacob is given the name "Israel" and blessed, while the "man" refuses to give his own name. Jacob then names the place where they wrestled Penuel (פְּנוּאֵל "face of God" or "facing God"[2]).

Biblical text

The Masoretic text reads as follows:

The same night he arose and took his two wives, his two female servants, and his eleven children, and crossed the ford of the Jabbok. He took them and sent them across the stream, and everything else that he had. And Jacob was left alone. And a man wrestled with him until the breaking of the day. When the man saw that he did not prevail against Jacob, he touched his hip socket, and Jacob's hip was put out of joint as he wrestled with him. Then he said, "Let me go, for the day has broken." But Jacob said, “I will not let you go unless you bless me.” And he said to him, “What is your name?” And he said, "Jacob." Then he said, "Your name shall no longer be called Jacob, but Israel, for you have striven with God and with men, and have prevailed." Then Jacob asked him, “Please tell me your name.” But he said, “Why is it that you ask my name?” And there he blessed him. So Jacob called the name of the place Peniel, saying, "For I have seen God face to face, and yet my life has been delivered." The sun rose upon him as he passed Penuel, limping because of his hip. Therefore to this day the people of Israel do not eat the sinew of the thigh that is on the hip socket, because he touched the socket of Jacob's hip on the sinew of the thigh.

— Genesis 32:22–32

The account contains several plays on the meaning of Hebrew names—Peniel (or Penuel), Israel—as well as similarity to the root of Jacob's name (which sounds like the Hebrew for "heel") and its compound.[3] The limping of Jacob (Yaʿaqob ), may mirror the name of the river, Jabbok (Yabbok יַבֹּק , sounds like "crooked" river), and Nahmanides (Deut. 2:10 of Jeshurun) gives the etymology "one who walks crookedly" for the name Jacob.[4]

The Hebrew text states that it is a "man" (אִישׁ, LXX ἄνθρωπος, Vulgate vir) with whom Jacob wrestles, but later this "man" is identified with God (Elohim) by Jacob.[5] Hosea 12:4 furthermore references an "angel" (malak). Following this, the Targum of Onkelos offers "because I have seen the Angel of the Lord face to face", and the Targum of Palestine gives "because I have seen the Angels of the Lord face to face".[6]

Interpretations

The identity of Jacob's wrestling opponent is a matter of debate,[7] named variously as a dream figure, a prophetic vision, an angel (such as Michael and Samael), a protective river spirit, Jesus, or God.[8]

Jewish interpretations

In Hosea 12:4, Jacob's opponent is described as malakh "angel": "Yes, he had power over the angel, and prevailed: he wept, and made supplication to him: he found him in Bethel, and there he spoke with us;". The relative age of the text of Genesis and of Hosea is unclear, as both are part of the Hebrew Bible as redacted in the Second Temple Period, and it has been suggested that malakh may be a late emendation of the text, and would as such represent an early Jewish interpretation of the episode.[9]

Maimonides believed that the incident was "a vision of prophecy",[10] while Rashi believed Jacob wrestled with the guardian angel of Esau (identified as Samael),[11] his elder twin brother.[12]Zvi Kolitz (1993) referred to Jacob "wrestling with God".[13]

As a result of the hip injury Jacob suffered while wrestling, Jews are prohibited from eating the meat tendon attached to the hip socket (sciatic tendon),[14][15][16] as mentioned in the account at Genesis 32:32.[17]

Christian interpretations

The interpretation that "Jacob wrestled with God" (glossed in the name Isra-'el) is common in Protestant theology, endorsed by both Martin Luther and John Calvin (although Calvin believed the event was "only a vision"),[10] as well as later writers such as Joseph Barker (1854)[18] or Peter L. Berger (2014).[19] Other commentaries treat the expression of Jacob's having seen "God face to face" as referencing the Angel of the Lord as the "Face of God".[20]

The proximity of the terms "man" and "God" in the text in some Christian commentaries has also been taken as suggestive of a Christophany. J. Douglas MacMillan (1991) suggests that the angel with whom Jacob wrestles is a "pre-incarnation appearance of Christ in the form of a man."[21]

According to one Christian commentary of the Bible incident described, "Jacob said, 'I saw God face to face'. Jacob's remark does not necessarily mean that the 'man' with whom he wrestled is God. Rather, as with other, similar statements, when one saw the 'angel of the Lord,' it was appropriate to claim to have seen the face of God."[20]

Islamic interpretation

This story is not mentioned in the Quran, but is discussed in Muslim commentaries.[22][23] The commentaries employ the story in explaining other events in the Hebrew Bible that are discussed in the Quran that have parallels, like Moses being attacked by an angel,[24] and to explain Jewish eating customs.[22][25] Like some Jewish commentators, Islamic commentators described the event as punishment for Jacob failing to give tithes to God but making an offering like a tithe to Esau.[24]

Other views

In an analysis of Marxist philosopher Ernst Bloch's 1968 book Atheism in Christianity, Roland Boer says that Bloch sees the incident as falling into the category of "myth, or at least legend". Boer calls this an example of "a bloodthirsty, vengeful God ... outdone by cunning human beings keen to avoid his fury".[26]

The wrestling incident on the bank of a stream has been compared to the Greek mythology stories of Achilles' duel with the river god Scamander[27] and with Menelaus wrestling with the sea-god Proteus.[28] It is also claimed the wrestling incident, along with other Old Testament stories of the Jewish Patriarchs, is based on Akhenaten-linked Egyptian mythology, where Jacob is Osiris/Wizzer, Esau is Set, and the wrestling match is the struggle between them.

Rosemary Ellen Guiley gives this summary:

"This dramatic scene has spurred much commentary from Judaic, Catholic, and Protestant theologians, biblical scholars, and literary critics. Does Jacob wrestle with God or with an angel? ... There is no definitive answer, but the story has been rationalized, romanticized, treated as myth, and treated symbolically."[29]

In arts

Visual arts

One of the oldest visual depictions is in the illustrated manuscript the Vienna Genesis.[30] Many artists have depicted the scene, considering it as a paradigm of artistic creation.[31] In sculpture Jacob Wrestling with the Angel is the subject of a 1940 sculpture by Sir Jacob Epstein on display at the Tate Britain.[32] Paintings include:

In music

The Latin text of Genesis 32:30 'Vidi dominum facie ad faciem; et salva facta est anima mea' (I have seen the Lord face to face) was set for the third nocturn at Matins on the second Sunday of Lent and was a popular medieval telling of the story of Jacob's encounter with the angel. It is set as the tenor (upper voice) text of Machaut's multi-text-layered Motet Vidi dominum (M 15; I have seen the Lord) simultaneously with two secular French texts: "Faux semblant m'a decü" and "Amours qui ha le pouvoir."[34] Machaut musically contrasts God's blessing in the Latin text with the disappointments of secular love in the French texts.[35] Charles Wesley's hymn "Come, O Thou Traveller Unknown", often known as "Wrestling Jacob", is based on the passage which describes Jacob wrestling with an angel. It is traditionally sung to the tune of St Petersburg.[36]U2's Bullet the Blue Sky, the 4th track on their 1987 album The Joshua Tree includes the lyric "Jacob wrestled the angel and the angel was overcome." The lyrics of Isaac, a song featured on Madonna's Confessions on a Dance Floor album, contains many allusions to the book of Genesis and references Jacob's encounter with the angel in the line "wrestle with your darkness, angels call your name". Noah Reid released his song "Jacob's Dream" as the second single of his 2020 second album.[37] The song uses the metaphor of wrestling with angels to explore that "blessings are hard to come by and they cost you something," as Reid told Indie88.[38] Mark Alburger's Israel in Trouble, Op. 57 (1997) includes the story in movement VIII. On his way.

In literature and theatre

The motif of "wrestling with the angels" occurs in several novels including Hermann Hesse's Demian (1919), Dodie Smith's I Capture the Castle (1948), Margaret Laurence's The Stone Angel (1964). In T.H. White's The Once and Future King, the Wart is described as knowing that the work of training a hawk "had been like Jacob's struggle with the angel". In poetry the theme appears in Rainer Maria Rilke's "The Man Watching" (c.1920), Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's "Evangeline,"[39] Herman Melville's poem "Art," and Emily Dickinson's poem "A little East of Jordan" (Fr145B, 1860). In theatre, wrestling with the angel is mentioned in Tony Kushner's play Angels in America (1990); the version depicted in its miniseries adaptation is the 1865 version by Alexander Louis Leloir. Gustave Dore's image is reenacted in Jean-Luc Godard's Passion by a film extra dressed as an angel and Jerzy Radziwiłowicz.[40] Also Maud Hart Lovelace's Betsy's Wedding (1955), Stephen King's novel 11/22/63 (2011),[41] Sheila Heti's novel Motherhood (2018) and David Fennario's play Balconville (1979). A short story in Daniel Mallory Ortberg's collection The Merry Spinster (2018) explores a version of the narrative as told from the perspective of the angel.

See also

References

  1. ^ John Muddiman (2007). Barton, John; Muddiman, John (eds.). The Oxford Bible Commentary (Illustrated, reprint, revised ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 577. ISBN 9780199277186.
  2. ^ Strong's Concordance H6439
  3. ^ A Dictionary of Biblical Tradition in English Literature, ed. David L. Jeffrey (1992). p. 852 "WRESTLING JACOB The account of Jacob wrestling with the angel at the ford of the Jabbok River is replete with Hebrew puns (Gen. 32:24–32). Several of these relate to the root of Jacob's name, 'qb ("heel"), and its compound standing as a West Semitic diminutive of "The LORD will pursue" or "The LORD preserves"
  4. ^ A Dictionary of Biblical Tradition in English Literature, ed. David L. Jeffrey (1992). p. 852: "Jacob was forced to answer, Yaʿaqob, perhaps mirroring the name of the river, Yabbok, but meaning'crooked' (Nahmanides, Deut. 2:10 of Jeshurun, gives this etymology for Jacob, 'one who walks crookedly'; after the thigh wound delivered ..."
  5. ^ Meir Gertner, Vetus Testamentum, International Organization of Old Testament Scholars, International Organization for the Study of the Old Testament 1960. Volume 10, p. 277: "In Genesis it is a 'man' with whom Jacob wrestled. Later in the story this 'man' appears to be identified with God (Gen. xxxii 29, 31). Talmud, Targum, Syriac and Vulgate take 'God' here to be an angel."
  6. ^ Anthony Hanson The Prophetic Gospel: Study of John and the Old Testament 056704064X 2006 Page 76 "The Targum of Onkelos offers 'because I have seen the Angel of the Lord face to face',14 and the Targum of Palestine 'because I have seen the Angels of the Lord face to face'.i5 No doubt this substitution was facilitated by Hosea 12.4, where
  7. ^ Green, Thomas A, ed. (2001). Martial Arts of the World: An Encyclopedia (illustrated ed.). ABC-CLIO. p. 788. ISBN 9781576071502.
  8. ^ Ellens, J. Harold; Rollins, Wayne G., eds. (2004). Psychology and the Bible: From Genesis to apocalyptic vision (illustrated ed.). Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 77. ISBN 9780275983499.
  9. ^ "the word is regarded as a gloss by many writers" Myrto Theocharous Lexical Dependence and Intertextual Allusion in the Septuagint of the Twelve Patriarchs
  10. ^ a b Loades, Ann; McLain, Michael, eds. (1992). "Wrestling with the Angel: A Study in Historical and Literary Interpretation". Hermeneutics, the Bible and Literary Criticism (illustrated ed.). Springer. pp. 133–4. ISBN 9781349219865.
  11. ^ Howard Schwartz; Elliot K. Ginsburg (2006). Tree of Souls: The Mythology of Judaism (illustrated, reprint, annotated ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 359. ISBN 9780195327137.
  12. ^ Shammai Engelmayer; Joseph S. Ozarowski; David Sofian (1997). Lipman, Steve (ed.). Common Ground: The Weekly Torah Portion Through the Eyes of a Conservative, Orthodox, and Reform Rabbi. Jason Aronson. p. 50. ISBN 9780765759924.
  13. ^ Zvi Kolitz (1993). Confrontation: The Existential Thought of Rabbi J.B. Soloveitchik. KTAV Publishing House. p. 50. ISBN 9780881254310.
  14. ^ Ze'ev Maghen (2006). After Hardship Cometh Ease: The Jews as Backdrop for Muslim Moderation (reprint ed.). Walter de Gruyter. p. 117. ISBN 9783110184549.
  15. ^ John R. Kohlenberger (2004). Kohlenberger, John R. (ed.). The Essential Evangelical Parallel Bible: New King James Version, English Standard Version, New Living Translation, the Message. Oxford University Press. p. 77. ISBN 9780195281781.
  16. ^ Tremper Longman; David E. Garland (2008). Longman, Tremper; Garland, David E. (eds.). Genesis-Leviticus (revised ed.). Harper Collins. p. 255. ISBN 9780310230823.
  17. ^ Eli Yassif (2009). The Hebrew Folktale: History, Genre, Meaning. Indiana University Press. p. 13. ISBN 9780253002624.
  18. ^ Joseph Barker (1854). Seven Lectures on the Supernatural Origin & Divine Authority of the Bible. By J. Barker. Containing his reply to the Rev. Mr. Sergeant, etc. George Turner. p. 87.
  19. ^ Peter L. Berger (2014). Redeeming Laughter: The Comic Dimension of Human Experience (2, reprint ed.). Walter de Gruyter. p. 88. ISBN 9783110354003.
  20. ^ a b Tremper Longman; David E. Garland (2008). Longman, Tremper; Garland, David E. (eds.). Genesis-Leviticus (revised ed.). Harper Collins. pp. 255–6. ISBN 9780310230823.
  21. ^ MacMillan, J. Douglas (1991). Wrestling with God: Lessons from the Life of Jacob. Evangelical Press of Wales. p. 56.
  22. ^ a b Ibn Kathir. "The Story of Ya'qub (Jacob)". The Stories of the Prophets. Retrieved 24 June 2017.
  23. ^ Noegel, Scott B.; Brannon M. Wheeler (April 2010). "Jacob". The A to Z of Prophets in Islam and Judaism. Scarecrow Press. pp. 160–162. ISBN 978-1-4617-1895-6.
  24. ^ a b Wheeler, Brannon M. (2002). Moses in the Quran and Islamic Exegesis. Psychology Press. p. 55. ISBN 9780700716036.
  25. ^ Wheeler, Brannon (2002). Prophets in the Quran: An Introduction to the Quran and Muslim Exegesis. A&C Black. pp. 114–115. ISBN 9780826449566.
  26. ^ Roland Boer (2007). Criticism of Heaven: On Marxism and Theology. Brill. pp. 39, 41. ISBN 9789004161115.
  27. ^ Donald H. Mills (2002). The Hero and the Sea: Patterns of Chaos in Ancient Myth. Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers. pp. 145–149. ISBN 978-0-86516-508-3.
  28. ^ Bruce Louden (2011). Homer's Odyssey and the Near East. Cambridge University Press. pp. 114–118. ISBN 9781139494908.
  29. ^ Guiley, Rosemary E. (2004). The Encyclopedia of Angels. Infobase Publishing. p. 195. ISBN 9781438130026.
  30. ^ Horst Woldemar Janson, Anthony F. Janson (2004). History of Art: The Western Tradition "The Vienna Genesis ... (In the center foreground, for example, we see him wrestling with the angel, then receiving the angel's blessing.)" [full page illustration]
  31. ^ Dohna Schlobitten, Yvonne (2020). La lotta di Giacobbe, paradigma della creazione artistica. Cittadella. pp. 7–21. ISBN 978-8830817326.
  32. ^ "Sir Jacob Epstein: Jacob and the Angel". Tate. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  33. ^ "Irish High Crosses: Kells" [1]
  34. ^ Anne Walters Robertson (2002). Guillaume De Machaut and Reims: Context and Meaning in His Musical Works, p. 163. "Drawn from the Genesis story of Jacob's wrestling match with the angel, Vidi dominum is a favorite phrase for theologians wishing to express their ecstasy at the moment of sight of God."
  35. ^ "The text of the tenor for Machaut's motet 15 comes from the third nocturn at Matins on the second Sunday of Lent. Its biblical provenance is Genesis 32: 30. Here Jacob, after having wrestled with the angel and received both a new name (Israel) and a divine blessing, exclaims: 'Vidi dominum facie ad faciem; et salva facta est anima mea' (I have seen the Lord face to face; and my life is preserved.) Kevin Brownlee, "Machaut's Motet 15 and the Roman de la Rose: The Literary Context of Amours Qui a Le Pouoir/Faus Samblant M'a Deceü/Vidi Dominum*, in Iain Fenlon, ed. (2009), Early Music History 10: Studies in Medieval and Early Modern Music, p. 14. "The final lines of the paired poems, in which the speaker bemoans his ruin (triplum) and bad treatment (motetus) are opposed to Jacob's wrestling with the angel that lead to his blessing and re-naming as Israel...." Margaret Bent, "Deception, Exegesis and Sounding Number in Machaut's Motet 15," in Iain Fenlon, ed. (2009), Early Music History 10: Studies in Medieval and Early Modern Music, p. 25.
  36. ^ "Come, O Thou Traveler Unknown". www.cyberhymnal.org.
  37. ^ "Noah Reid on Instagram: "Wrestlin with angels. Aren't we all. Jacob's Dream is out now, link in bio as the kids say."". Instagram. Archived from the original on 2021-12-24. Retrieved 2020-03-29.
  38. ^ "Indie88 Premiere: 'Schitt's Creek' star Noah Reid shares video for single 'Jacob's Dream' | Indie88". Retrieved 2020-03-29.
  39. ^ "Longfellow: Evangeline: A Tale of Acadie, Evangeline: A Tale of Acadie".
  40. ^ . www.youtube.com. Archived from the original on 2014-05-26.
  41. ^ King, Stephen (November 8, 2011). 11/22/63 (First ed.). United States: Scribner. p. 555. ISBN 978-1-4516-2728-2. Retrieved August 15, 2019.

Further reading

  • Geller, Stephen A. (1982). "The Struggle at the Jabbok: the Uses of Enigma in a Biblical Narrative" (PDF). Journal of the Ancient Near Eastern Society. New Jork City: Columbia University. 14 (1): 37–60. Retrieved January 6, 2019. {{cite journal}}: External link in |format= (help) Also in: Geller, Stephen A. (2014) [1996]. "2. The Struggle at the Jabbok. The uses of enigma in biblical religion (pp. 9ff.)". Sacred Enigmas. Literary Religion in the Hebrew Bible. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-31779901-6. [I]n the context of the wrestling bout, the name implies that Jacob won this supremacy, linked to that of God's, by a kind of theomachy. [...] By prevailing over God, he has won the name 'God rules' (p. 22).

External links

  • Links to images of Jacob Wrestling with the Angel
  • Wrestling with Angels chabad.org

jacob, wrestling, with, angel, described, genesis, also, referenced, hosea, angel, question, referred, יש, genesis, while, hosea, references, angel, account, includes, renaming, jacob, israel, etymologized, contends, with, gustave, doré, jacob, wrestling, with. Jacob wrestling with the angel is described in Genesis 32 22 32 also referenced in Hosea 12 3 5 The angel in question is referred to as man א יש and God in Genesis while Hosea references an angel מ ל א ך 1 The account includes the renaming of Jacob as Israel etymologized as contends with God Gustave Dore Jacob Wrestling with the Angel 1855 In the Genesis narrative Jacob spent the night alone on a riverside during his journey back to Canaan He encounters a man who proceeds to wrestle with him until daybreak In the end Jacob is given the name Israel and blessed while the man refuses to give his own name Jacob then names the place where they wrestled Penuel פ נו א ל face of God or facing God 2 Contents 1 Biblical text 2 Interpretations 2 1 Jewish interpretations 2 2 Christian interpretations 2 3 Islamic interpretation 2 4 Other views 3 In arts 3 1 Visual arts 3 2 In music 3 3 In literature and theatre 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksBiblical text EditThe Masoretic text reads as follows The same night he arose and took his two wives his two female servants and his eleven children and crossed the ford of the Jabbok He took them and sent them across the stream and everything else that he had And Jacob was left alone And a man wrestled with him until the breaking of the day When the man saw that he did not prevail against Jacob he touched his hip socket and Jacob s hip was put out of joint as he wrestled with him Then he said Let me go for the day has broken But Jacob said I will not let you go unless you bless me And he said to him What is your name And he said Jacob Then he said Your name shall no longer be called Jacob but Israel for you have striven with God and with men and have prevailed Then Jacob asked him Please tell me your name But he said Why is it that you ask my name And there he blessed him So Jacob called the name of the place Peniel saying For I have seen God face to face and yet my life has been delivered The sun rose upon him as he passed Penuel limping because of his hip Therefore to this day the people of Israel do not eat the sinew of the thigh that is on the hip socket because he touched the socket of Jacob s hip on the sinew of the thigh Genesis 32 22 32 The account contains several plays on the meaning of Hebrew names Peniel or Penuel Israel as well as similarity to the root of Jacob s name which sounds like the Hebrew for heel and its compound 3 The limping of Jacob Yaʿaqob may mirror the name of the river Jabbok Yabbok י ב ק sounds like crooked river and Nahmanides Deut 2 10 of Jeshurun gives the etymology one who walks crookedly for the name Jacob 4 The Hebrew text states that it is a man א יש LXX ἄn8rwpos Vulgate vir with whom Jacob wrestles but later this man is identified with God Elohim by Jacob 5 Hosea 12 4 furthermore references an angel malak Following this the Targum of Onkelos offers because I have seen the Angel of the Lord face to face and the Targum of Palestine gives because I have seen the Angels of the Lord face to face 6 Interpretations EditThe identity of Jacob s wrestling opponent is a matter of debate 7 named variously as a dream figure a prophetic vision an angel such as Michael and Samael a protective river spirit Jesus or God 8 Jewish interpretations Edit In Hosea 12 4 Jacob s opponent is described as malakh angel Yes he had power over the angel and prevailed he wept and made supplication to him he found him in Bethel and there he spoke with us The relative age of the text of Genesis and of Hosea is unclear as both are part of the Hebrew Bible as redacted in the Second Temple Period and it has been suggested that malakh may be a late emendation of the text and would as such represent an early Jewish interpretation of the episode 9 Maimonides believed that the incident was a vision of prophecy 10 while Rashi believed Jacob wrestled with the guardian angel of Esau identified as Samael 11 his elder twin brother 12 Zvi Kolitz 1993 referred to Jacob wrestling with God 13 As a result of the hip injury Jacob suffered while wrestling Jews are prohibited from eating the meat tendon attached to the hip socket sciatic tendon 14 15 16 as mentioned in the account at Genesis 32 32 17 Christian interpretations Edit The interpretation that Jacob wrestled with God glossed in the name Isra el is common in Protestant theology endorsed by both Martin Luther and John Calvin although Calvin believed the event was only a vision 10 as well as later writers such as Joseph Barker 1854 18 or Peter L Berger 2014 19 Other commentaries treat the expression of Jacob s having seen God face to face as referencing the Angel of the Lord as the Face of God 20 The proximity of the terms man and God in the text in some Christian commentaries has also been taken as suggestive of a Christophany J Douglas MacMillan 1991 suggests that the angel with whom Jacob wrestles is a pre incarnation appearance of Christ in the form of a man 21 According to one Christian commentary of the Bible incident described Jacob said I saw God face to face Jacob s remark does not necessarily mean that the man with whom he wrestled is God Rather as with other similar statements when one saw the angel of the Lord it was appropriate to claim to have seen the face of God 20 Islamic interpretation Edit This story is not mentioned in the Quran but is discussed in Muslim commentaries 22 23 The commentaries employ the story in explaining other events in the Hebrew Bible that are discussed in the Quran that have parallels like Moses being attacked by an angel 24 and to explain Jewish eating customs 22 25 Like some Jewish commentators Islamic commentators described the event as punishment for Jacob failing to give tithes to God but making an offering like a tithe to Esau 24 Other views Edit In an analysis of Marxist philosopher Ernst Bloch s 1968 book Atheism in Christianity Roland Boer says that Bloch sees the incident as falling into the category of myth or at least legend Boer calls this an example of a bloodthirsty vengeful God outdone by cunning human beings keen to avoid his fury 26 The wrestling incident on the bank of a stream has been compared to the Greek mythology stories of Achilles duel with the river god Scamander 27 and with Menelaus wrestling with the sea god Proteus 28 It is also claimed the wrestling incident along with other Old Testament stories of the Jewish Patriarchs is based on Akhenaten linked Egyptian mythology where Jacob is Osiris Wizzer Esau is Set and the wrestling match is the struggle between them Rosemary Ellen Guiley gives this summary This dramatic scene has spurred much commentary from Judaic Catholic and Protestant theologians biblical scholars and literary critics Does Jacob wrestle with God or with an angel There is no definitive answer but the story has been rationalized romanticized treated as myth and treated symbolically 29 In arts EditVisual arts Edit One of the oldest visual depictions is in the illustrated manuscript the Vienna Genesis 30 Many artists have depicted the scene considering it as a paradigm of artistic creation 31 In sculpture Jacob Wrestling with the Angel is the subject of a 1940 sculpture by Sir Jacob Epstein on display at the Tate Britain 32 Paintings include Depiction on a high cross in Kells Ireland 10th century 33 Rembrandt 1659 Eugene Delacroix 1861 Eugene Delacroix 1861 detail Leon Bonnat 1876 Jacob and the Angel by Gustave Moreau 1878 Alexander Louis Leloir 1865 Paul Gauguin 1888 Vision after the Sermon showing the episode envisioned by Breton villagers Jacob struggles with the angel Gutenberg Bible 1558 Jacob wrestles with God 1860 woodcut by Julius Schnorr von CarolsfeldIn music Edit The Latin text of Genesis 32 30 Vidi dominum facie ad faciem et salva facta est anima mea I have seen the Lord face to face was set for the third nocturn at Matins on the second Sunday of Lent and was a popular medieval telling of the story of Jacob s encounter with the angel It is set as the tenor upper voice text of Machaut s multi text layered Motet Vidi dominum M 15 I have seen the Lord simultaneously with two secular French texts Faux semblant m a decu and Amours qui ha le pouvoir 34 Machaut musically contrasts God s blessing in the Latin text with the disappointments of secular love in the French texts 35 Charles Wesley s hymn Come O Thou Traveller Unknown often known as Wrestling Jacob is based on the passage which describes Jacob wrestling with an angel It is traditionally sung to the tune of St Petersburg 36 U2 s Bullet the Blue Sky the 4th track on their 1987 album The Joshua Tree includes the lyric Jacob wrestled the angel and the angel was overcome The lyrics of Isaac a song featured on Madonna s Confessions on a Dance Floor album contains many allusions to the book of Genesis and references Jacob s encounter with the angel in the line wrestle with your darkness angels call your name Noah Reid released his song Jacob s Dream as the second single of his 2020 second album 37 The song uses the metaphor of wrestling with angels to explore that blessings are hard to come by and they cost you something as Reid told Indie88 38 Mark Alburger s Israel in Trouble Op 57 1997 includes the story in movement VIII On his way In literature and theatre Edit The motif of wrestling with the angels occurs in several novels including Hermann Hesse s Demian 1919 Dodie Smith s I Capture the Castle 1948 Margaret Laurence s The Stone Angel 1964 In T H White s The Once and Future King the Wart is described as knowing that the work of training a hawk had been like Jacob s struggle with the angel In poetry the theme appears in Rainer Maria Rilke s The Man Watching c 1920 Henry Wadsworth Longfellow s Evangeline 39 Herman Melville s poem Art and Emily Dickinson s poem A little East of Jordan Fr145B 1860 In theatre wrestling with the angel is mentioned in Tony Kushner s play Angels in America 1990 the version depicted in its miniseries adaptation is the 1865 version by Alexander Louis Leloir Gustave Dore s image is reenacted in Jean Luc Godard s Passion by a film extra dressed as an angel and Jerzy Radziwilowicz 40 Also Maud Hart Lovelace s Betsy s Wedding 1955 Stephen King s novel 11 22 63 2011 41 Sheila Heti s novel Motherhood 2018 and David Fennario s play Balconville 1979 A short story in Daniel Mallory Ortberg s collection The Merry Spinster 2018 explores a version of the narrative as told from the perspective of the angel See also EditAngel of the Lord Jacob s ladder Theophany List of angels in theologyReferences Edit John Muddiman 2007 Barton John Muddiman John eds The Oxford Bible Commentary Illustrated reprint revised ed Oxford University Press p 577 ISBN 9780199277186 Strong s Concordance H6439 A Dictionary of Biblical Tradition in English Literature ed David L Jeffrey 1992 p 852 WRESTLING JACOB The account of Jacob wrestling with the angel at the ford of the Jabbok River is replete with Hebrew puns Gen 32 24 32 Several of these relate to the root of Jacob s name qb heel and its compound standing as a West Semitic diminutive of The LORD will pursue or The LORD preserves A Dictionary of Biblical Tradition in English Literature ed David L Jeffrey 1992 p 852 Jacob was forced to answer Yaʿaqob perhaps mirroring the name of the river Yabbok but meaning crooked Nahmanides Deut 2 10 of Jeshurun gives this etymology for Jacob one who walks crookedly after the thigh wound delivered Meir Gertner Vetus Testamentum International Organization of Old Testament Scholars International Organization for the Study of the Old Testament 1960 Volume 10 p 277 In Genesis it is a man with whom Jacob wrestled Later in the story this man appears to be identified with God Gen xxxii 29 31 Talmud Targum Syriac and Vulgate take God here to be an angel Anthony Hanson The Prophetic Gospel Study of John and the Old Testament 056704064X 2006 Page 76 The Targum of Onkelos offers because I have seen the Angel of the Lord face to face 14 and the Targum of Palestine because I have seen the Angels of the Lord face to face i5 No doubt this substitution was facilitated by Hosea 12 4 where Green Thomas A ed 2001 Martial Arts of the World An Encyclopedia illustrated ed ABC CLIO p 788 ISBN 9781576071502 Ellens J Harold Rollins Wayne G eds 2004 Psychology and the Bible From Genesis to apocalyptic vision illustrated ed Greenwood Publishing Group p 77 ISBN 9780275983499 the word is regarded as a gloss by many writers Myrto Theocharous Lexical Dependence and Intertextual Allusion in the Septuagint of the Twelve Patriarchs a b Loades Ann McLain Michael eds 1992 Wrestling with the Angel A Study in Historical and Literary Interpretation Hermeneutics the Bible and Literary Criticism illustrated ed Springer pp 133 4 ISBN 9781349219865 Howard Schwartz Elliot K Ginsburg 2006 Tree of Souls The Mythology of Judaism illustrated reprint annotated ed Oxford University Press p 359 ISBN 9780195327137 Shammai Engelmayer Joseph S Ozarowski David Sofian 1997 Lipman Steve ed Common Ground The Weekly Torah Portion Through the Eyes of a Conservative Orthodox and Reform Rabbi Jason Aronson p 50 ISBN 9780765759924 Zvi Kolitz 1993 Confrontation The Existential Thought of Rabbi J B Soloveitchik KTAV Publishing House p 50 ISBN 9780881254310 Ze ev Maghen 2006 After Hardship Cometh Ease The Jews as Backdrop for Muslim Moderation reprint ed Walter de Gruyter p 117 ISBN 9783110184549 John R Kohlenberger 2004 Kohlenberger John R ed The Essential Evangelical Parallel Bible New King James Version English Standard Version New Living Translation the Message Oxford University Press p 77 ISBN 9780195281781 Tremper Longman David E Garland 2008 Longman Tremper Garland David E eds Genesis Leviticus revised ed Harper Collins p 255 ISBN 9780310230823 Eli Yassif 2009 The Hebrew Folktale History Genre Meaning Indiana University Press p 13 ISBN 9780253002624 Joseph Barker 1854 Seven Lectures on the Supernatural Origin amp Divine Authority of the Bible By J Barker Containing his reply to the Rev Mr Sergeant etc George Turner p 87 Peter L Berger 2014 Redeeming Laughter The Comic Dimension of Human Experience 2 reprint ed Walter de Gruyter p 88 ISBN 9783110354003 a b Tremper Longman David E Garland 2008 Longman Tremper Garland David E eds Genesis Leviticus revised ed Harper Collins pp 255 6 ISBN 9780310230823 MacMillan J Douglas 1991 Wrestling with God Lessons from the Life of Jacob Evangelical Press of Wales p 56 a b Ibn Kathir The Story of Ya qub Jacob The Stories of the Prophets Retrieved 24 June 2017 Noegel Scott B Brannon M Wheeler April 2010 Jacob The A to Z of Prophets in Islam and Judaism Scarecrow Press pp 160 162 ISBN 978 1 4617 1895 6 a b Wheeler Brannon M 2002 Moses in the Quran and Islamic Exegesis Psychology Press p 55 ISBN 9780700716036 Wheeler Brannon 2002 Prophets in the Quran An Introduction to the Quran and Muslim Exegesis A amp C Black pp 114 115 ISBN 9780826449566 Roland Boer 2007 Criticism of Heaven On Marxism and Theology Brill pp 39 41 ISBN 9789004161115 Donald H Mills 2002 The Hero and the Sea Patterns of Chaos in Ancient Myth Bolchazy Carducci Publishers pp 145 149 ISBN 978 0 86516 508 3 Bruce Louden 2011 Homer s Odyssey and the Near East Cambridge University Press pp 114 118 ISBN 9781139494908 Guiley Rosemary E 2004 The Encyclopedia of Angels Infobase Publishing p 195 ISBN 9781438130026 Horst Woldemar Janson Anthony F Janson 2004 History of Art The Western Tradition The Vienna Genesis In the center foreground for example we see him wrestling with the angel then receiving the angel s blessing full page illustration Dohna Schlobitten Yvonne 2020 La lotta di Giacobbe paradigma della creazione artistica Cittadella pp 7 21 ISBN 978 8830817326 Sir Jacob Epstein Jacob and the Angel Tate Retrieved 25 June 2017 Irish High Crosses Kells 1 Anne Walters Robertson 2002 Guillaume De Machaut and Reims Context and Meaning in His Musical Works p 163 Drawn from the Genesis story of Jacob s wrestling match with the angel Vidi dominum is a favorite phrase for theologians wishing to express their ecstasy at the moment of sight of God The text of the tenor for Machaut s motet 15 comes from the third nocturn at Matins on the second Sunday of Lent Its biblical provenance is Genesis 32 30 Here Jacob after having wrestled with the angel and received both a new name Israel and a divine blessing exclaims Vidi dominum facie ad faciem et salva facta est anima mea I have seen the Lord face to face and my life is preserved Kevin Brownlee Machaut s Motet 15 and the Roman de la Rose The Literary Context of Amours Qui a Le Pouoir Faus Samblant M a Deceu Vidi Dominum in Iain Fenlon ed 2009 Early Music History 10 Studies in Medieval and Early Modern Music p 14 The final lines of the paired poems in which the speaker bemoans his ruin triplum and bad treatment motetus are opposed to Jacob s wrestling with the angel that lead to his blessing and re naming as Israel Margaret Bent Deception Exegesis and Sounding Number in Machaut s Motet 15 in Iain Fenlon ed 2009 Early Music History 10 Studies in Medieval and Early Modern Music p 25 Come O Thou Traveler Unknown www cyberhymnal org Noah Reid on Instagram Wrestlin with angels Aren t we all Jacob s Dream is out now link in bio as the kids say Instagram Archived from the original on 2021 12 24 Retrieved 2020 03 29 Indie88 Premiere Schitt s Creek star Noah Reid shares video for single Jacob s Dream Indie88 Retrieved 2020 03 29 Longfellow Evangeline A Tale of Acadie Evangeline A Tale of Acadie YouTube www youtube com Archived from the original on 2014 05 26 King Stephen November 8 2011 11 22 63 First ed United States Scribner p 555 ISBN 978 1 4516 2728 2 Retrieved August 15 2019 Further reading EditGeller Stephen A 1982 The Struggle at the Jabbok the Uses of Enigma in a Biblical Narrative PDF Journal of the Ancient Near Eastern Society New Jork City Columbia University 14 1 37 60 Retrieved January 6 2019 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a External link in code class cs1 code format code help Also in Geller Stephen A 2014 1996 2 The Struggle at the Jabbok The uses of enigma in biblical religion pp 9ff Sacred Enigmas Literary Religion in the Hebrew Bible London Routledge ISBN 978 1 31779901 6 I n the context of the wrestling bout the name implies that Jacob won this supremacy linked to that of God s by a kind of theomachy By prevailing over God he has won the name God rules p 22 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jacob Wrestling with the Angel Links to images of Jacob Wrestling with the Angel Jacob s Wrestling Match Was It an Angel or Esau Wrestling with Angels chabad org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jacob wrestling with the angel amp oldid 1148673283, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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