The Second Marriage

but Rachel was beautiful and well favored Genesis 29:17  NASB

Rachel – We know God doesn’t always choose the first.  Jacob, not Esau.  Abel, not Cain.  Joseph.  David.  God’s choosing often crosses the boundaries of human protocol and expectation.  We hold up these men as examples of God’s selection.  But maybe we should hold up a few women too.

Rachel, the second daughter, is Jacob’ s choice, and since nothing happens by accident, she is also God’s choice to bring about rescue for Israel through her son, Joseph.  Of course, there is a lot of soap opera action between the beginning and the end of Rachel’s story, but her legacy is a very long one.  “Rachel crying for her children” still rings true thousands of years after she was buried on the road to Bethlehem.

Rachel in Hebrew is Resh-Chet-Lamad.  In pictograph, Rachel is “the person who controls what separates.”  In Hebrew, rachel is a word that describes a female sheep (ewe), idiomatically, “one with purity.”  In contemporary Jewish understanding, Rachel is a name that means “innocence of a lamb.”  Perhaps it isn’t quite an accident that Jacob met Rachel fulfilling her task as a shepherdess.  Let’s go back to the pictograph for a moment.  What kind of woman is a woman who is in control of the fence around her?  Since the letter Chet also means “private or inner room,” we might also ask what kind of woman is a woman who takes control of her own privacy, her own inner room?  Hebrew answers:  “A woman of purity.”

It is significant that rachel is used in two verses with extended meaning.  The first is Song of Songs 6:6.  In its plural form, the word describes the beauty of white teeth.  It is an intimate part of the man’s complete adoration of his lover, an exquisite love poem filled with similes about her attractiveness.  Rachel is associated with overpowering love; love so intense that a man will work years of his life to enjoy it.

But another verse reveals a deeper degree of devotion.  That verse is Isaiah 53:7.  It doesn’t say, “he was brought like a lamb to the slaughter, like a sheep that is dumb before its shearers.”  It says, “ooch-rachel lifnei – like a rachel before her shearers.”  We know that using rachel conveys the imagery of innocence, but we also need to know that a ram resists shearing but a ewe does not.  Rachel voluntarily submits.  She controls her own inner room so what happens on the outside does not destroy who she is.  That also shows itself to be the case in the Genesis account.

Hebrew names carry meaning, sometimes meaning that transcends centuries, geographies and events.  The marriage feast of the Lamb will be an opportunity to meet the ultimate Rachel.  While we are waiting of her, we can enjoy the hints of the purity to come.

Topical Index:  Rachel, ewe, lamb, innocence, purity, Genesis 29:17

Please indulge me as a father today.  My only daughter, Rachel, was born on this day.

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Linda K. Morales

Wow, Skip, that was powerful and beautiful! What a name, Rachel… “she controls her inner room so that whats happening on the outside does not destroy who she is”!!!! What a beautiful lesson in purity and whole hearted devotion to what is holy! I will use this metaphor often! These words have stirred up a desire in me that longs for for Heaven, that begins right here in the here and now. “Be holy for I am holy.” Yes, I look forward in meeting this Rachel someday!!!

Brian

See what kind of love the Father has given to us, that we should be called children of God; and so we are. The reason why the world does not know us is that it did not know him.
Beloved, we are God’s children now, and what we will be has not yet appeared; but we know that when he appears, we shall be like him, because we shall see him as he is.
And everyone who thus hopes in him purifies himself as he is pure. I John 3:1-3

Lowell Hayes

Bless you and may Rachel give you great joy this day.

jane

Blessings to you and your daughter on her birthday… I love that you shared her name’s deeper significance. What a beautiful picture! Your sharing also conveys that adoring, sweet, tender kind of powerfully proud, protective love of our Abba… what a dear man you are.

Much respect and blessings to abound to your dwelling!
🙂
jane

carl roberts

Happy Birthday Rachel!

I boast not of works or tell of good deeds
For naught have I done to merit His grace
All glory and praise shall rest upon Him
So willing (rachel) to die in my place

I will glory in the cross
In the cross
Lest His suffering all be in vain
I will weep no more for the cross that He bore
I will glory in the cross

My trophies and crowns, my robe stained with sin
Twas all that I had to lay at His feet
Unworthy to eat from the table of Life
Till Love made provision for me

I will glory in the cross
In the cross
Lest His suffering all be in vain
I will weep no more for the cross that He bore
I will glory in the cross.

CYndee

I hope you (Skip) got to tell Rachel “happy birthday” over the phone today. Hearing our children’s voices is music to our ears when they are so far away. YHWH’s richest blessings upon you both!