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B'resheet/Genesis 29:18 "I will serve you seven years for Rachel, your younger daughter"
"Love will find a way," the saying, several books, many songs and CDs, say.
Here is Ya'akov making a way to marry Rachel, the girls he loves despite
the odds against him.
Rashi: Rabbi Shlomo Yitzchaki (1040-1105CE), French rabbi who wrote commentaries on the Torah, the Prophets and the Talmud, lived in Troyes where he founded a yeshiva in 1067; focuses on the plain meaning (p'shat) of the text, although sometimes quite cryptic in his brevity
Sforno: Rabbi Ovadiah Sforno (1470-1550CE), Italian rabbi, philosopher and physician; born in Cesena, he went to Rome to study medicine; left in 1525 and after some years of travel, settled in Bologna where he founded a yeshiva which he conducted until his death
That aside, the text goes on to tell us that "Ya'akov worked seven years for Rachel and they seemed to him a few days because of his love for her" (v20). Was this just infatuation or did Ya'akov see some essential quality in Rachel that he knew marked her out as a woman of worth? Seven years is a long time by anyone's counting, yet Ya'akov not only ended up working seven but fourteen years for Rachel. He knew that he had to marry her, so he gritted his teeth and worked in spite of his uncle's duplicity.
The writer to the Hebrews tells us that Yeshua "for the joy set before Him endured the cross, despising the shame and has sat down at the right hand of the throne of G-d" (Hebrews 12:2, NASB). Yeshua went ahead and pushed on through the physical and spiritual agony of the cross, His humiliation at the hands of both the Romans and the Jewish leaders of His day and the separation from His Father, in order to reach the prize set before Him: the victory over sin and death, the resurrection, the outpouring of the Spirit and the bringing of many sons to glory. This is why the gospel writer tells us that, "As the time approached for Him to be taken into heaven, He made His decision to set out for Jerusalem" (Luke 9:51, CJB>); He knew what had to be done; He knew that only He could do it; He knew that the time had come and "He humbled Himself becoming obedient to the point of death, even to death on a cross" (Philippians 2:8, NASB). In the older and more literal translations of the Bible, Luke's words present an even more graphic picture of Yeshua's determination: "When the time came ... He steadfastly set His face to go to Jerusalem" (KJV).
Further Study: Isaiah 50:4-7; Ezekiel 3:4-9
Application: What is our level of commitment to obedience to G-d's word, particularly when it becomes inconvenient or unpleasant? Should we not, as Rav Sha'ul says, "have the same mind in you was in Messiah Yeshua" (Philippians 2:5) and serve G-d both obediently and willingly?
© Jonathan Allen, 2005
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