By James L. Thornton
Have
you ever had a dream that seemed so real that when you woke up it had made such
an impression on you that it was indelibly implanted in your memory? And even
years later you could recall every detail of it. Maybe it was of something that
you tried to make come true in your life. In this study we want to look at such
a dream that is the most talked about, preached about, sung about, dream in the
history of the world, it is even held in our own mind to the point we want it
to come to pass in our own life.
The
Bible records many dreams—it is one of God’s ways of communicating with man (Job 4:12-16).
Some are soothing, some are informative and some are disturbing. In this study
we will look at the most well known dream in human history. A dream that has
been preached about, sung about, and painted by artists more than any other. It
is still an inspiration to everyone who reads or hears about. We are talking about
Jacob’s Dream.
Why
is it that this dream is so important to us? And how can we draw inspiration
from someone’s dream who has been dead 35 centuries, after all it was only a dream? These and other question we will attempt to answer in this
study.
Genesis 28:12"And
he dreamed, and behold a ladder set up on the earth, and the top of it reached
to heaven: and behold the angels of God ascending and descending on it.
13a. And,
behold, the LORD stood above it,
Jacob, pursued by the fierce and adamant hatred of his brother Esau, for the
first time in his life, had left his parental roof and, taking the wanderer’s
staff in his hand, had journeyed forth to the doubtful haven of refuge, which
was his uncle’s home in Haran.
On
the first day of his journey the sun slowly sank from sight, and for the first
time in his life he had to sleep, not at home, but in the open, not in his
tent, but under the starry sky. It needs little effort of the imagination to
realize that his sleep was not a peaceful one. No man ever had more on his mind
to disturb his sleep.
The
nameless fear of the unknown, the very real danger of wild animals, which made
him place a protective circle of stone round him, his brother Esau possibly not
far behind, the hard stone which he used as a pillow, anxiety, and deep concern
about the future, all these considerations combined to make his sleep fitful
and disturbed, and the natural result was that he dreamed. And what a dream.
And what was his dream? That wondrous vision of which the passage of time has
not succeeded in diminishing the beauty, which makes its instant appeal at all
times to every age. As we have said, the subject of song and sermon and artists
that can never be exhausted.
Let us
look at his dream. He dreamed that a ladder stretched from heaven to earth. At
the top was the divine presence of God. At the foot was Jacob, and the link
between Jacob on earth and God in heaven was a ladder, and the angels of God
were ascending and descending on it.
And
Lo, God spoke to him and said: Genesis 28:13. "I am the LORD God of
Abraham thy father, and the God of Isaac: the land whereon thou liest, to thee
will I give it, and to thy seed;
14. And
thy seed shall be as the dust of the earth, and thou shalt spread abroad to the
west, and to the east, and to the north, and to the south: and in thee and in
thy seed shall all the families of the earth be blessed.
15. And,
behold, I am with thee, and will keep thee in all places whither thou goest,
and will bring thee again into this land; for I will not leave thee, until I
have done that which I have spoken to thee of" (Genesis 28:13-15).
So
vivid and breathtaking was this dream that Jacob awoke from his troubled sleep
very much afraid.
22. "And
Jacob vowed a vow saying, If God will be with me, and will keep me in this way
that I go, and will give me bread to eat, and raiment to put on,
21. So
that I come again to my father's house in peace; then shall the LORD be my God:
22. And
this stone, which I have set for a pillar, shall be God's house: and of all
that thou shalt give me I will surely give the tenth unto thee" (Genesis 28:20-22)
Let
us ask a very pertinent question and then give an answer to that question.
Surely
did not that vow of Jacob constitute a serious lack of faith on Jacob’s part?
Here God had appeared to him and said explicitly, "behold, I am with thee,
and will keep thee in all places whither thou goest." Jacob has the
faithlessness, one might say, effrontery, we could say the presumptuousness, to
doubt God’s word and say, "If God be with me, and if he will keep
me in the way I am going."
If? But had not God said
that he would?
The
answer we give is simple. Jacob was not sure, If, after all it was only a dream.
ONLY A DREAM:
But what is a dream</u>? One fact seems established beyond doubt and that is,
that thoughts and ideas which are ruthlessly pressed into the subconscious
during one’s waking hours take advantage of the removal of the guard of the
conscious mind during sleep and crowd into the foreground. It is for that
reason that dreams constitute such a valuable indication of the true inner,
unsuspected thoughts of man.
The
dream of Jacob takes on a new meaning in the light of the logic of the
psycho-annalist.
Here
for the first time the real inner man, which had been obscured, obfuscated,
suppressed and overlaid, was revealed, and for the first time the glimpse of
future greatness was seen.
All
his life Jacob had been "a plain man dwelling in tents" (Genesis 25:27), and
under these circumstances there was nothing which could enable one to plumb the
hidden depths of his heart.
On the
contrary, of the little we know of Jacob before this rude shock of awakening
came to him, there is nothing to his credit; the sale of the birthright, the
deception of his father to obtain the blessing—not in any of these things was
the future "Israel" who strove with God and with man and prevailed,
"Israel a Prince with God" seen.
Look
back for a moment on his birth, his mother asking God why she was having so
much trouble in her expectancy, and the answer from God himself setting the
younger, Jacob, before his twin older brother Esau (Genesis 25:23).
We
can be sure Rebekah told and retold this to Jacob many times and also explained
the meaning and possibilities which went with the birthright.
Jacob
grew up with this dream of the future suppressed for years and years—he was
seventy-seven when he left home. "Its can never come to pass," he
thought. But when his mother’s plan worked to his advantage in obtaining the
blessing from his father, and after listening to the words of the blessing, all
these old suppressed memories returned.
And
now circumstances had conspired to bring the subconscious to the forefront of
his mind, and here for the first time we see a man with vision, visions of
himself as the channel through which God would come down from heaven to earth,
visions of his children living in the land from which he had been driven out as
a homeless wanderer.
There
is not a more tragic life in history than that of Jacob. From the moment of
that dream until a broken and battered old man aged One-hundred-thirty, he
passed the last seventeen years in a foreign land, dependant on his son’s
bounty, his life was one succession of unrelieved tragedy.
His
unremitting toil in the employ of his kinsman Laban, his unceremonious flight,
his terror of Esau’s approach, the premature death of his beloved wife, the
disgrace of his only daughter, the cruel act of vengeance of his sons Simeon
and Levi, the shameful act of Ruben, the apparent loss of his most beloved son
Joseph, one tragedy followed hard on the heels of others, and with truth he
said to Pharaoh, "Few and evil have been the years of my life" (Genesis 47:9).
But
throughout the whole of that tragedy of life he hugged to his bosom the memory,
the promise, the hope of that wondrous dream.
At
some half-century after the dream, he lay upon his death bed, he said to
Joseph, "God Almighty appeared unto me at Luz in the land of Canaan, and
blessed me, And said unto me, Behold, I will make thee fruitful, and multiply
thee, and I will make of thee a multitude of people; and will give this land to
thy seed after thee for an everlasting possession. (Genesis 48:3-4).
God did
appear to me." It is that sentence that
reveals that throughout all his sufferings that the blessing and promise God made
to him in a dream, sustained him.
How
many of us had an experience with God some years back, and many time the devil
has tried to make us believe that it was only an illusion, only a dream with no
real substance to back it up? Trials and tests have come upon us, the way seems
uphill all the time, but somehow we have clung to the promise, the hope, we
obtained when God appeared to us.
Let
us tell the devil "God did appear to me, and gave me a promise, and I am
not going to let it go, come what may." Amen.
By, James L. Thornton
I am a retired pastor currently living in the Nashville, Tn. area and we attend First Church, Bro. Ron Becton pastor. We are putting our sermons and Bible studies on the web. We have been doing this for five years and have more than 3 million visits on it. We would like to share some of our studies and writings with all the people on Everyone Apostolic. My wife, Mary Lee, has Bible Quizzing questions on almost every verse in the Bible and would like to share this also. James & Mary Lee Thornton
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