CHAPTER II
JACOB'S PILLOW-PILLAR STONE
When the Abrahamic covenant promises were given to
Jacob, he was making a journey from Beersheba to Padan-aram. He had but recently received from his father
Isaac the "Blessing," which
carried with it those much desired covenants and the special blessings and
promises which pertained to them. When Isaac gave this blessing to Jacob, he
told him not to take a wife of the daughters of Canaan, the land in which they
were then living, but to go to Laban, his mother's brother, and to take a wife
from among his daughters.
It is hardly to be supposed that Jacob was traveling
entirely alone, for that was not the Oriental custom. We learn, from incidental
remarks that are dropped elsewhere in reference to this journey, that he had
with him a tent which was pitched at night, and that the journey was made on
foot, for he walked with a staff. The sacred record deals chiefly with that
which took place between Jacob and the Lord, with but the slightest incidental
mention of details, as concerning a certain sundown, and stones for
pillows. The first mention of stones
for pillows, with reference to this occasion, is plural; but suddenly one of
those pillow stones is brought into great distinction.
The facts which brought that special stone into such
prominence may be quickly read, for the Bible account of them is very short;
but we doubt whether many who have read the record of those facts realize their
true symbolic import. We doubt also whether we shall be able to explain, even
approximately, not only the great distinction which has been bestowed upon that
stone as a symbol, but also the exalted place it has occupied ever since it
came into historic notice, or the supreme greatness of that position to which
prophecy declares it shall yet be raised. If we read the prophets aright, no
such glorious prominence, highly-honored use, or divinely-declared purpose, has
ever been given to any other inanimate thing on the earth, as that which is yet
in reserve for that special pillow stone upon which Jacob rested his head on
that certain night, when he camped before Luz, while on his way to Padan-aram.
It seems to have been the custom among Oriental
travelers, when they pitched their tents for the night, to take stones for head
pieces, or bolsters, in order to raise that part of their bedding on which
their heads rested to a comfortable position for rest and sleep. At least, this
is what Jacob did, and as he slept, he dreamed. In his dream he saw what is
called a ladder, but which may be called a staircase, or an open way that
reached from earth to heaven, for "the top of it reached to heaven."
The angels of God were ascending and descending by this existing way, which
for the time was made visible to the inheritor of the covenant promises; and, at
the top, above all that throng of radiant comers and goers, the Lord stood, and
gave Jacob the full text of the covenants, as formerly given to Abraham and
Isaac.
Upon hearing and receiving these promises from the
Lord, Jacob awoke, startled, convicted and afraid; startled because, as he
thought, he had accidentally got into God's house, and stumbled through the
gate which led away from this world to that pure one of which he had just
caught a glimpse; afraid, just as any man would be who had defrauded his
brother, and taken advantage of the love and confidence of a blind and aged
father; convicted! It could not have
been otherwise, for he had caught a glimpse of the holiness of God and the
purity of a sinless world. Hence, in the agony of that psychical fear, which
must ever be experienced by the wicked when brought in contact with absolute
holiness, he cried out, "How
dreadful is this place! This is none other but the
house of God, and this is the gate of heaven."
That which would have been a great joy to a holy man
was only a means of torture to this sinful one, who was fleeing from the anger
of an outraged brother. But he soon began to yield himself to God, and as he
yielded there came to him that ever accompanying desire, i.e., the desire to
worship. With these things there came also spiritual intuitions of coming
events, and of their importance to him in his relations to the divine
covenants. Then Jacob, awed by the sublime majesty of the Holy One, deeply
impressed by the greatness of the promises made to him, stirred in the depths
of his inner nature by the heavenly vision, pressed by the weight of
responsibility, yet encouraged by the dawning gladness in his heart, and moved
by the spirit of prophecy, took the stone upon which his head had rested, and
set it up for a pillar of witness. At the same time he anointed it with oil,
called it Bethel, used it for an altar at which to worship, and upon which to
make a vow unto the Lord God of his fathers, saying: "If God will be with
me, and keep me in this way that I go, and will give me bread to eat, and
raiment to put on, so that I come again to my father's house in peace; then
shall the Lord be my God: 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."
It is a most significant fact that the name Bethel,
or God's house, should have been given to this stone by the one who was the
father of the twelve patriarchs, who were the progenitors of that great
multitude which is also called "The House of God," "The Host of
God" and "The Families of God."
Also in the eighty-third psalm, The House of Israel, the Hidden Ones,
which, while hidden, are to develop into many nations, are called "The
Houses of God."
We must bear in mind the fact that Jacob gave the
name of Bethel not only to the place, or locality, where the stone was set up,
but also to the stone pillar for he emphatically declared: "This stone, which I have set for a pillar, shall be God's house." We
understand, however, that God inspired both the choice of this stone and its
name, for when he next spoke to Jacob he said: "I am the God of
Bethel." That means, I am the God of God's
house; or, in other words, the God of the Bethel stone which is in the
place called Bethel. Thus the Lord associates himself not only with the place
where he appeared to Jacob, but also with the Bethel rock.
Twenty years later Jacob returned to the land of
Canaan with great riches, and with the knowledge that his prosperity was the
result of divine favor and intervention; for the Lord had shown him how one
who is called "The Angel of God" was given power to control the
breeding of the cattle. Thus Jacob was made to know that God had accepted and
met all the conditions which he had made to him by vow on the Bethel
pillow-pillar stone.
Before Jacob reached Canaan he had confessed his
wrongdoings, and made peace with his brother; and God had taken away from him
not only the name of supplanter, but also the inborn supplanter nature, and given
him the victorious name of Israel.
It is a well-known fact that the place called Bethel
and the city of Luz were so near each other that the two names are used
interchangeably in the Scriptures, or rather that the name Bethel often
included the little city, which was previously called Luz. But before we can
understand the true relation of both Bethel and the Bethel rock to our general
subject, we must know to whom, or to which one of the tribes, Bethel was given
as a possession.
The sacred historian, when describing the boundaries
of the "lot" in Canaan
which fell to Joseph, describes one of those border lines as follows:
"And [it] goeth out from Bethel to Luz, and passeth along unto the borders
of Archi to Astaroth," (Josh. 16:2).
Also, in the description of that portion which fell to the children of
Benjamin -- their portion lay between Judah and Joseph, Judah being to the
south, and Joseph to the north of Benjamin -- we have the following: "And
the border went over from thence (Beth-aven) toward Luz, to the side of Luz,
which is Bethel, southward," (Josh. 18:13). From this we perceive, not
only that Benjamin's border was south of Bethel, but also that Bethel, the
place where Jacob set up the Bethel pillar-stone, was on the south side of the
city proper.
Further, it is recorded that the children of Dan
could not conquer the Amorites, but that the Amorites drove them into the
mountains, and occupied those portions of Dan's inheritance which best suited
them. But it is also recorded that the house of Joseph did conquer those
Amorites, that they compelled them to become their dependents, and that they
fixed their boundary lines. In the description of these boundaries we have the
following: "And the coast of the Amorites was from the going up to
Akrabbim, from the rock, and
upward," (Judges 1:36). Some may
think that this reference to the rock refers to the rock Etam, or Etam-rock.
This is not possible, because both Etam, the city, and the rock Etam are
southwest of Jerusalem in the hill country of Judea, and had nothing whatever
to do with the borders of Joseph, Dan or the Amorites. Hence the phrases,
"from the rock and upward," can mean only Bethel, the place of the
rock, or, from the BETHEL ROCK, and up into the mountains of Ephraim-Samaria-Israel.
Again, concerning the house of Joseph, Bethel and
Luz, we have the following: And the house of Joseph, they also went up against
Bethel and the Lord was with them. And the house of Joseph sent to descry
Bethel. (Now the name of the city was Luz.)
And the spies saw a man come forth out of the city, and they said unto
him: Shew us, we pray thee, the entrance into the city, and we will shew thee
mercy. And when he shewed them the
entrance into the city, they smote the city with the edge of the sword; but
they let go the man and all his family. And the man went into the land of the
Hittites, and built a city, and called the name thereof of Luz," (Judges
1:22-26). Thus, with the building of that other Luz, the name of Luz not only
departed forever from Bethel, but it is never again mentioned in sacred
history.
Finally, when Jeroboam, of the house of Joseph, was
made king of the ten tribes, and became fearful that the people would, if
allowed to go up to Jerusalem to worship, kill him, and go again to Rehoboam,
king of Judah, he, to prevent this, made two golden calves, of which it is
said: "He set the one in Bethel, and the other put he in Dan." His
right to place one in Bethel was undisputed, because it was not only "the
king's sanctuary," but it was also in his own tribal territory. He had a
sovereign's right to place one in Dan, for all who went there to worship were
confederate with him. The Dan referred to was the city of Dan, which was
situated in the northern part of his realm.
Now, one point is settled beyond the possibility of
doubt, and that is, that Bethel was a part of the inheritance which fell to
the house of Joseph when the land of Canaan was divided among the children of
Jacob. This brings us to a vital point concerning the subject in hand, namely:
That not only
Bethel, the city, or place, but also that Bethel the pillar-rock was given to
the birthright family; and that Israel carried that rock with them into Egypt
and in their subsequent journeyings in the wilderness.
Proof: Jacob died in Egypt, and his posterity were in
Egypt at the time. When dying, "Jacob called unto him his sons and said,
Gather yourselves together, that I may tell you that which shall befall you in
the last days." When his sons, in response to this call, came together, he
gave a prophecy concerning that which the posterity of each of them would be in
the last days. But while he was making the prophecy concerning Joseph and his
house, to whom he had just given the birthright, he stopped in the midst of his
prophetic utterances, and used the following parenthetical expression:
"(from thence is the shepherd, the stone of Israel)."
"Thence," as herein used, is an adverb used
as a noun, and is equivalent in value to that
place, or the place to which it refers.
The phrase, from thence, means
"out of there, out from thither, (or) out of that place.” Since the place
from whence (whence, present form of the old word thence) the stone came was the inheritance of Joseph, and since
Bethel, the place of the stone, was the inheritance of Joseph, we must know
that it came from thence, i.e.,
Bethel. Thus, the very fact that Jacob, when dying in Egypt, made use of those
words in reference to that Bethel stone, carries proof on its very face that
the stone was not, at that time, in the place where it had formerly been, but
that it was with them there in Egypt, and had previously been committed to the
care of the house of Joseph.
It has been estimated that the number of the Israelites
which came out of Egypt in the exodus were two millions and a half. All who
will take time to think will soon comprehend how impossible it would be, even
for a fertile country, much less a desert, to supply such a multitude, as well
as their cattle, of which not a hoof was left behind, with food and water
unless special arrangements were made for an extra supply. But in this case, as
a matter of course, that was not done; hence it became necessary for God to
furnish the supply of food and water for that vast concourse of people, and
also for their herds and flocks.
It is a well-known fact that the Lord continually
provided food for Israel during these forty years of wanderings in the
desert-wilderness. But, because there
are only two instances recorded in which the Lord supernaturally provided them
with water, most people think these were the only instances in which water was
thus provided. Yet, all who will give the subject just a little investigation
will soon know that such is not the case.
The first mention of no water for the people to drink
was while the Israelites were encamped at Rephidim. Without previously
selecting one special rock, the Lord said unto Moses: "I will stand before
thee there upon the rock in Horeb,
and thou shalt smite the rock, and
there shall come water out of it."
The phrase, "There in Horeb," points out the place where the
rock was at the time, and if the Lord, when he spoke of the rock, had used the
demonstrative form, and said "That rock," then we should know that he
was designating which one, or a certain one not yet selected, but the fact that
he said "The rock" is proof
to us that he was speaking of a rock with which they were already familiar. May
it not have been the Bethel pillar rock, "the
shepherd, the stone of
Israel," which had been committed to the keeping of the house of Joseph?
This possibility is more clearly manifest in the account
of the other circumstances when there was no water, which occurred at Kadish, a
city in the border of Edom, the country which belonged to the descendants of
Esau. At this place the people of Israel were very bitter against Moses and
Aaron, and said unto them, "Why have ye brought up the congregation of the
Lord into this wilderness, that we and our cattle should die there? And
wherefore have ye made us to come up out of Egypt, to bring us into this evil
place? It is no place of seed, or of figs, or of vines, or of pomegranites;
neither is there any water to drink.
And Moses and Aaron went from the presence of the assembly unto the
door of the tabernacle of the congregation, and they fell upon their faces, and
the glory of the Lord appeared unto them.
“And the Lord spake unto Moses, saying: Take the rod,
and gather the assembly together, and speak ye unto the rock before their eyes; and it shall give forth his water, and
thou shalt bring forth to them water out of the rock; so thou shalt give the congregation and their beasts drink.
And Moses took the rod from before the Lord, as he commanded him. And Moses
and Aaron gathered the congregation together before the rock, and he said unto them: Hear now, ye rebels; must we fetch
water out of this rock. And Moses
lifted up his hand, and with his rod he smote the rock twice: and the water came out abundantly, and the
congregation drank, and their beasts also," (Num. 20:5-11).
We have quoted this account in full, from the beginning
of the complaint by the people until the water was given, that our readers may
see that, although the phrase "the rock" is used four times, there is
not the slightest indication that there was any selection, or indication of
preference for any certain rock in the vicinity of Kadish, or that one was not
already chosen, and in their midst. It was to show also that at the very first
mention of water for the people from "this rock,"' all that was
necessary, as a preparatory measure, was for the Lord to say to Moses,
"Speak to the rock"; and also that when the people were commanded to
"gather before "the rock,"
they understood so well which rock it was that, in all that vast company of
two and a half millions, no explanations were necessary. Hence, it must have
been among them before this, and well known. Let us also bear in mind that this
name, "The Rock," was used
in the same relation at Rephidim, and yet the children of Israel had removed,
journeyed and pitched their tents twenty-one (See Numbers, 33d chapter) times
after leaving Rephidim, and here at Kadish there is with them that which is
still familiarly known as "THE ROCK."
We all know that stones are rocks, and that rocks are
stones, so that a rock or stone is only one rock or stone, and the appellation
"The Rock," and "The Stone," must refer to some special or
particular stone or rock. As we have seen, Israel must have been in possession
of just such a special rock, i. e., the Bethel stone, and that Jacob set it up
and called it a "Pillar." Later, in the days of Athaliah, after she
tried to destroy all the males of "the seed royal," but did not succeed,
for the reason that an infant son of Ahaziah, whom Athaliah succeeded to the
throne, was stolen from those whom she had ordered slain and hidden. The
stealing and hiding of this infant was so cleverly done that it was not missed
by the court slayer. This infant, whose
name was Joash was kept hidden from the wicked queen for six years. During this
time she reigned, not knowing that there was a male heir to the throne who
could dethrone her. But in the seventh year the secret was revealed to the
"rulers over hundreds," and to "the captains of the
guards," and quiet arrangements made to proclaim the seven-year-old prince
as their king. The plans were successful, and Athaliah knew nothing of it until
she heard the people in the temple shouting "God save the king!"
Thus it is recorded: "And when Athaliah heard
the noise of the guard and of the people, she came to the people into the temple
of the Lord. And when she looked,
behold! the king stood by a pillar, as the manner was," (2 Kings
11:13-14). Concerning this pillar, Dr. Adam Clark's translation reads,
"Stood on a pillar," which he explains is "The place or throne
on which they were accustomed to put their kings when they proclaimed
them." But in the revised version it is rendered, "Standing by the
pillar, as was their custom," the article denoting that particular pillar
by, or upon, which it was the custom of Israel to crown their kings.
Again, when the good king Josiah made a covenant
before the Lord, in the presence of all the people, that he would destroy
idolatry out of the land, it is written, "And the king stood by a [or
the] pillar and made a covenant before the Lord." (2 Kings 23:3.) There
is, in the Second Chronicles, a recapitulation of this circumstance concerning
Josiah, which gives the following, "And the king stood in his
place." His place, we are told,
was by the pillar, which might properly be translated pillar-stone, upon which all the kings of Israel were crowned, made
covenants, took oaths, or made vows, as did Jacob when he first set it up for a
pillar and made it God's house.
This stone is not only called "The Pillar,"
"The Rock," "Bethel," and "The Stone of Israel,"
but, wonderful to tell, it is also called "The Shepherd." And since
it is really the stone of Israel we
should expect it to be with them to whom it belonged, but since it is also the Shepherd of Israel, its very name
and character -- for with God names are always characteristic -- demand that
it should be with Israel in all their wanderings. Hence, this SHEPHERD --
though it is only a stone -- as any other shepherd would do, must go with His
flock.
We have said that this stone of
Israel, was a type, or symbol. For
proof, let us go back to the place called Bethel. There we shall find that Jacob, after setting up "The
Rock" for a pillar, also anointed it with oil, which in sacred symbols is
typical of the Holy Ghost. And,
according to sacred history, this Bethel stone is the only single, individual
stone that has ever been anointed; hence, among stones it is pre-eminently the Anointed One." When Christ, the great prototype, came,
and was anointed with the Holy Ghost, he was pre-eminently, among men, "the Anointed One."
Also, concerning "The rock" which
accompanied Israel, the Lord could say to Israel's leader, "Speak to THE ROCK."
But, on the other hand, Israel also could say, concerning that divine
presence which went with them, "Let
us sing unto THE ROCK of our salvation."
Again, this stone is called "The Shepherd of Israel." But there is also a divine one
unto whom Israel prayed, saying, "Give ear, O Shepherd of Israel" Later, when this same Shepherd was
manifest in the flesh, he said, "I am the Good Shepherd," and his apostles
spoke of him as "The Great Shepherd" and "The Chief Shepherd." Hence, the oft-repeated metaphor
of "sheep" and "flock," in both the Old and the New
Testaments.
Further, Israel had a pillar-rock, which went with
them as their shepherd in all their journeyings in the wilderness; but it is
also written that "The Lord went before them by day in A PILLAR of a
cloud, to lead them in the way; and by night in A PILLAR of fire, to give them
light!"
Still further, that the Scriptures might be
fulfilled, Israel's divine Shepherd-rock was smitten, for it is written,
"Smite the Shepherd." So,
too, Israel's literal Shepherd-rock was smitten. The Lord knew that he must be smitten for the sins of the people,
and, that the type and prototype might agree, he gave command, "Smite the
rock." Oh, the pain of it and --
especially to him; but he shall yet see the desire of his heart, i.e., his
emotional nature, his soul, and be satisfied.
It is also said of Israel that they "Did all
drink the same spiritual drink, for they drank of that Spiritual Rock that followed them, and that Rock was Christ." It is also true that they did all drink from
the same refreshing stream which flowed from that literal ROCK which also went with them, for it was their
Shepherd-rock. No doubt Israel was
supplied with water from this rock in the wilderness, as well as at Rephidim
and Kadish, for the country between these two places is much more desert than
these cities. At Kadish Moses sent
messengers to the king of Edom, asking permission for the Lord's host to pass
through his country, and told them to say, "Thus saith thy brother Israel,
Let us pass, I pray thee, through thy country: we will not pass through the
fields, or through the vineyards, neither
will we drink of the water of the wells; we will go by the king's highway;
we will not turn to the right hand nor to the left, until we have passed thy
borders. . . . If I and my cattle drink
of thy water, then I will pay for it I will only, without doing anything else,
go through on my feet."
Just imagine a company of two and one-half million
traveling on foot through a country which is several hundred miles in length,
giving assurance to its ruler that they would keep to the highway, and not turn
to the right and left, for any reason, nor drink water out of the wells (i.e.,
pits, fountains, springs, or wells; literally their water supply) of that
country. Israel could afford to make
this proposition, for both their Shepherd-rocks were with them, i.e., the
literal and the spiritual rock, and they knew that he, who had hitherto
furnished them with food and water, would still continue to supply them until
the end of the journey. Otherwise Moses
would never have made such a promise.
True, there was a conditional promise made, in which
there is a promise to pay for any of the water of Edom which might be
used. But this, as you see, was made
chiefly, if not altogether, on account of the cattle, which they might not be
able to control and keep to the dusty highways, while passing by the cool and
tempting pools and springs of water.
This might prove to be a difficult task for the drovers, especially in
the heat of the day; hence this proviso.
They were not supposed to get water from the rock until they had
completed their day's journey and pitched their tents.
Thus we have seen that among the Israelites there
were two rocks, two houses, two kingdoms, two nations, or a Sceptre and a
Birthright company. Of these two great
divisions, Judah and Joseph are the representatives. By divine appointment one of these rocks was given to the
Birthright family, and the other to the Sceptre family. The Bethel-Pillar-Shepherd-Stone of Israel
was given to Joseph, but to Judah was given the Spiritual Rock, for it is
written that "Our LORD sprang out of Judah." BOTH OF THESE ROCKS, each in a different
way, HAVE BEEN REJECTED, but EACH OF THEM SHALL YET BECOME THE HEAD OF THE
CORNER.