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Chad Bird - Limping with God: Jacob & the Old Testament Guide to Messy Discipleship

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Chad Bird Limping with God: Jacob & the Old Testament Guide to Messy Discipleship
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Jacob seems to be anything but a model disciple. Hes a trickster, liar, and selfishly ambitious man who fathers children with four women and leads a dysfunctional family rife with jealousy and backstabbing. But Jacob is also Israel, the namesake of the Old Testament community of God, chosen and blessed. As such, this sinner-saint, who limps along with the Lord, burdened by weakness and beset by problems, is the mirror image of all of us who follow Jesus. In his life we see our lives, our struggles, our failures, and most especially the God who loves us and chooses us as his own. As we explore his bio, from his wrangling in the womb with Esau to his death as an old man in Egypt, we will learn more about ourselves and the God who is with us and for us in Jesus the Messiah.

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Limping with God: Jacob & The Old Testament Guide to Messy Discipleship

2022 New Reformation Publications

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests, write to the publisher at the address below.

Published by:
1517 Publishing
PO Box 54032
Irvine, CA 92619-4032

Unless otherwise indicated, all Scripture quotations are from The ESV Bible (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version), copyright 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

Publishers Cataloging-In-Publication Data
(Prepared by The Donohue Group, Inc.)

Names: Bird, Chad, author.
Title: Limping with God : Jacob & the Old Testament guide to messy discipleship / Chad Bird.
Description: Irvine, CA : 1517 Publishing, [2022] | Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: ISBN 9781948969826 (hardcover) | ISBN 9781948969833 (paperback) | ISBN 9781948969840 (ebook)

Subjects: LCSH: Jacob (Biblical patriarch) | Bible. Old TestamentCriticism, interpretation, etc. | Christian lifeBiblical teaching. | God (Christianity)Mercy.

Classification: LCC BS580.J3 B57 2022 (print) | LCC BS580.J3 (ebook) | DDC 222/.11092dc23

Printed in the United States of America.

Cover art by Brenton Clarke Little

ISBN : 9781948969840

This digital document has been produced by Nord Compo.

Foreword

One of the most heartbreaking and liberating revelations that confronts us in our growing-up years is that all our heroes are characters in a tragedy. Those to whom we look up in devotion will, almost without exception, become those whom we look down upon in dismay. I remember, as a young man, being awed by a leader in our church. His character. His eloquence. The way he truly was a man of God. When later I heard the whispers about his philandering, then the growing volume of the rabid small-town gossip, my heart shrank within me. I felt stupid. How could I be so nave as to look up to him?

If I were able to write a letter to the younger me, I would simply say, Listen, youre not stupid. You just have yet to plumb the depths of humanitys radical frailty.

We have a tendency, in church circles, to close our eyes to this patent truth. We suppose that the best models of the Christian life are heroes or heroines of the faith. Sunday School material, of course, has mastered the art of inculcating this moralistic ideology, with various Old Testament paragons of this or that virtue held up before our childrens eyes as the person they should aspire to be. Noah the Obedient. David the Brave. You know the predictable titles. Anyone with even a passing familiarity of these stories knows that our children are being lied toor, to put it more charitably, half-lied-to. Biblical stars, like famous people today and of every generation, have a large pile of bones rattling around in their closets, and often spilling out onto the floor for all the world to gawk at. Or, to change the metaphor, in the dark basement of every human heart, heroic or otherwise, the wolves of evil scratch and growland often escape, with disastrous consequences.

One of the reasons I have devoted my life to studying and writing about the Old Testament is because, in these stories, there is a remarkable expos of these wolves. Here we spy humanitys occasional beauty (yes) and ongoing ugliness (also yes). Rather than whitewashing the flaws of their characters, the biblical authors paint them in lurid and glowing colors. In fact, some of the narratives are so embarrassingly honest that I cringe to think that these poor souls have had their dirty underwear swinging in the breeze of Scripture for millennia. Yet there they areunlaundered, raw, nasty, evil, and extraordinarily human. I can only hope that part of the heavenly bliss for these characters will be in not knowing that their lives have been the objects of sermon material for ages!

Or perhaps they do know. And are glad. Glad in this way: they are thankful that we can read their stories and (to borrow C. S. Lewis famous phrase), say, What? You too? I thought I was the only one. And they can smile from the page of Scripture and say, Oh, no, friend. You are far from alone. Indeed, our flawed and frail friends of the Bible give us a profound hope. That hope is not built upon them, but upon the fact that the perfect God chose to use such profoundly imperfect people in his kingdom.

Among such people was a man whose life we will explore in this book, the man named Jacob.

There is much in Jacobs character, actions, and motives that I find extremely distasteful, which is exactly why I identify so closely with him. He is everything about myself that I wish I were not. Even in utero, he is looking out for #1. He takes full advantage of the disadvantages of others. He tells lies. He plays favorites. He fights with God. For all these reasons and more, Jacob is the model disciple. The model disciple in that there is no effort to clean him up and make him look more presentable to the world so as not to embarrass God for having chosen such a deceitful man to be not only his follower but the very man after whom the Old Testament community of believers was named: Israel.

Jacobs crimes and punishments are paraded in public, as is the Lords stubborn and gracious commitment to him.

Jacobs story is the story of a God who doesnt select the sainted or pick the pious, but who regularly pans for gold in the sewers of this world. And, even there, he doesnt find gold but plain old stink-covered rocks that he washes, polishes, and gilds with grace.

Such is Jacob.

Such am I.

And such are you.

I have entitled this book, Limping with God instead of Walking with God or Running with God, not because there would be anything wrong with those metaphors, but because, as Jacob limped away from his famous wrestling match with God, so we all get by on bum hips and bad knees. Following Jesus, we gimp our way down the dark and slippery paths of life. As we do, we discover, ironically, that the longer we follow him, the weaker we become, and the more we lean on our Lord. Finally, at our most mature, our eyes are opened to realize that weve never run or walked or even limped a single day of our lives.

Weve been on Christs shoulders the entire time.

PART 1
THE EARLY YEARS:
THE BROTHERS HAIRY AND HEEL
CHAPTER 1
Dear God, Any Day Now

And Isaac prayed to the LORD for his wife, because she was barren.

Genesis 25:21

If there is any other certainty in life besides the proverbial death and taxes, it is this: God will not do something when you want him to do it. He may do it earlier. He may do it later. But if you ask the Lord to do something at 7:00 on Wednesday night on March 14, dont be shocked when he shows up a week before or six months later, with neither his hat in his hand nor even a flimsy excuse. Whatever the LORD pleases, he does (Ps. 135:6). Thats about as true as true can be. However, if God has a predilection, it is to be perpetually late. And not just a wee bit tardy, but ridiculously, almost laughably late. Just ask Sarah or her daughter-in-law, Rebekah.

Sarah held a full promise in her hand and an empty womb in her belly. As distressing as it is today for women who desire to bear children, but cannot, it must have been all the more painful for Sarah because, when she was sixty-five years old, God had promised her a child. Then he forgot about her for the next twenty-five years. Or so it seemed.

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