Jacob – The Ways Of A Carnal Man

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6/7/98

JACOB – THE WAYS OF A CARNAL MAN
GENESIS 30:25-31, 55


God intends for us to learn from the lives of the patriarchs.  They stand on the pages of scripture like mountain
peaks on a horizon.  We are to learn from their successes and their failures.  Jacob is one of the more complex and
interesting of the patriarchs.  He is the one that many of us find it easy to identify with.  

In the section of Genesis under our consideration, we see Jacob as a man in between in his commitment to God.
Ever since he met God personally at Bethel, he has been in personal covenant with God.  However, that relationship
with God is not making much difference in his life at this point in the journey.  He represents what I choose to call – a
carnal man.  A carnal person is a New Testament terminology, but Jacob is an Old Testament example of it.  A
carnal person is someone who is indeed a child of God but the person is not living like it.  While the person is a
citizen of the kingdom of God, the person is still living like they were full citizens of this world.

Among the Old Testament personalities in this section of Genesis we could consider Abraham a spiritual man.  He is
a man who is making an honest and consistent attempt to walk with God as a child of God. There were glaring
failures in his life but they always became stepping stones to a new victory.

Laban would be an example of the natural man.  He was a gifted, middle- Easterner, who was strictly a citizen of this
world. Laban had no covenant with God and made no claims upon God.  

The disappointing thing as you read this section of Genesis is that it is very difficult to see much difference between
Laban and Jacob.  Jacob is still living by essentially the same principals that governed the life of Laban.  This is not
the way it should a have been.  I want us to take a careful look at Jacob at this point in his pilgrimage so that we can
better understand what it means to be a carnal man.  We need to take this look because living the carnal life is
always a temptation to the children of God.  

I.  THE CARNAL PERSON IS MOTIVATED BY SELF-INTEREST.
The motivation of Laban and Jacob seems to have been the same.  They did their maneuvering and their
manipulation of each other with one thing in mind--What is in this for me?  No matter what they may be saying with
their lips we sense that in their hearts they are always looking out for self.  This is surely true of Jacob in this period
in his life.  

1. The relationships of life are determined by self-interest.
At this point in time whether Jacob is relating to his wives or to his father-in-law, he is always looking out for Jacob.  
He wants to know what is in it for me.  This is characteristic of the carnal life.  This is a chief characteristic of the
carnal life.  It is predictable that any person who has become a child of God but who is still living under the control of
the old sinful nature will manifest it in self-interest.  This self-control will affect every relationship in their lives.  Their
family life, their place of employment, their relationship to neighbors, their relationships to friends, all of these
relationships will be controlled by and molded by self-interest.

2.  Decisions are made on the basis of self- interest.  
You never sense at this point in Jacob’s life that he is making decisions on the basis of eternal value.  His decisions
are not made on the basis of love or faith.  His decisions are made on the basis of what will be best for me.  

Even when he is leaving Padon-Haran to return to the land of Canaan you sense he still is looking out for Jacob.  He
leaves while Laban is away shearing his sheep because he knows this will be the best time for Jacob to leave.  Sure,
he had a word from God instructing him to go back to the tents of Isaac but his basic motivation in going back was
not obedience to a word from God – but was rather this will be best for Jacob.

Anytime you are dealing with someone who is still living the carnal life you can expect to find them motivated by self-
interest.  Any time you slip down to that level of living in your own life, you will be motivated by self-interest.  It is
characteristic of Jacob at this point in his life and it is a characteristic of some of you at this point in your life.  

II.  THE CARNAL PERSON DEPENDS ON HIS NATURAL ABILITIES.
Jacob was not without natural abilities.  Apart from his relationship with God Jacob would have been successful at
whatever he set out to do.  He was gifted with a lot of natural abilities.  You add to Jacob’s natural abilities the favor
of God and you have the formula for a very successful man.

As you read carefully this biographical section that deals with his relationship with Laban, you will find very little
evidence that Jacob was depending upon God.

1. The person has great confidence in his coping skills.
Jacob believed that if he was given a level playing field he could out wit any opponent he might face.  Even though
he knew his Uncle Laban, who was also his father-in-law, to be a skilled man, Jacob was confident that he could out
wit and out think and out maneuver Laban if given the chance.  This is a characteristic of a carnal man.  He is a
carnal man in part because his confidence is misplaced.  Instead of putting his confidence in the faithfulness of God
and the resourcefulness of the scripture he chooses to put his confidence in the arm of flesh.  He trusted in himself
rather than in God.  

2.  This person turns to God only in emergencies.
The carnal person is not an irreligious person.  The person is not one who is disrespectful of God.  Rather he or she
is one who is simply seeking to live life on their own terms without calling on God.  As you read carefully the record
of Jacob’s life at this point you will discover that he was not above prayer.  However, prayer was reserved for only
times of emergency.  He built no altars and offered no sacrifices during his years in  
Padon-Haran.  Instead he was day by day maneuvering working out things in his own terms.

If Laban has been taking advantage of him, Jacob will get even on his own terms.  He will not seek the face of the
God of all the earth who does things right.  He will turn to God only when he is forced to turn to God.  

Prayerfulness and carnality just do not go together.  Building altars and running your own life just do not match.  
The person who is building an altar and seeking the face of God regularly will be able to live above the downward
pull of the old carnal nature.  

III  THE CARNAL PERSON IS A CONSTANT SOURCE OF CONFLICT.
Before a covenant was established between Jacob and God at Bethel, as a natural man, conflict characterized his
life.  He was in conflict with his twin brother, Esau.  He was in conflict with his father Isaac.  It is not surprising that
when he gets to the tents of Laban in the land of Haran that he is still a man whose life is characterized by conflict.  
Nothing really has changed that much even though God established a covenant with him at Bethel.  People who live
on the level of self-interest will always be experiencing broken relationships and shattered confidences.  They will
leave behind them a trail of conflict.

1.  There will be conflict within himself.
Even though this was a rather prosperous period in Jacob’s life, I find no evidence that he was a man full of joy and
peace.  Indeed I find evidence that he was a man who was still at odds with himself.  He was still a person who had
conflict raging in his bosom.  This is characteristic of the carnal Christian.  He makes others unhappy primarily
because he or she is unhappy with himself or herself.  

2.  There will be conflict with others.
This is the passage that focuses on the conflict between Jacob and Laban.  It was a conflict that finally led to the
separation between the two.  It is a reminder of that incident where the carnality of Lot led to the separation between
Abraham and Lot.  Carnality makes it impossible to build healthy, loving, and strong relationships with those about
you.  

It is helpful to remember that the troubled Corinthian Church, which had so much division in its fellowship, is the
church that Paul characterized as being carnal.  Division and carnality go together.  Broken relationships and
dominion of the flesh go together.  If you are ever to escape a pattern of broken relationships, you must learn to
walk in the Spirit.

IV.  THE CARNAL PERSON IS STILL THE OBJECT OF GOD’S LOVING PURPOSE.  
This is the encouraging thing.  Even though it is obvious that Jacob is living very much like Laban, there is still
something different.  The difference between the two men is that Jacob is the object of God’s loving purpose.  He
has entered into a covenant with God that sets him apart in his relationship with God.  There are things in this
passage that indicate this.  

1.  God still speaks to the carnal person.
There are two instances at least in this passage in which God spoke to carnal Jacob.  One was the instance in which
He gave to Jacob the promise and the plan for prospering while he was working for Laban.  The selection of the
stripped and colored sheep and goats came from God, not by the methods by which Jacob sought to accomplish
this, but the idea itself came from God.

Then, at that critical moment when it was obvious that he was in the disfavor of Laban, the word of the Lord came to
him saying, “Go back to Canaan and find you father, Isaac!”  God is still speaking to Jacob.  God does not give up
on the carnal Christian but rather He continues by His providential word to bring that carnal Christian to the level of
spiritual living.

2.  God still protects him.
It is extremely encouraging to see God intervene on behalf of his carnal servant, Jacob, at this point.  When Laban
sets out on his seven day pursuit of Jacob with fire in his eye and anger in his heart and a sword in his hand, God
intervenes.  God of Jacob came to Laban in the night in a dream to say to him, “Don’t you speak an evil word
against my servant, Jacob.”  It put the fear of the Lord on that man of the world.  When he finally overtook Jacob and
his herds, there was heavy restraint on him that kept him from doing anything harmful to Jacob or his family.  God
was still intervening on behalf of his carnal servant, Jacob.

Did Jacob deserve such care?  Obviously not!  But God was simply being faithful to His covenant.  When we are
faithless and disobedient, God is still faithful.  Oh the wonder of the patience of God in dealing with us during our
periods of carnality.  

3.  God still prospers him.
While Jacob set out to make sure that he prospered while he was in the land of Haran, it was God Himself who
brought about his prosperity.  I doubt that Jacob was fully aware of the extent of the blessing of God upon his life,
but it was there.  This is evidence of the continuing grace of God upon the worldly child of God.  While Jacob is still
operating in self-interest, God is at work in the circumstance of his life working out his purpose in Jacob.

Laban recognized this at least in part.  He acknowledged that he was aware that his own herds had multiplied
because Jacob was overseeing his herds.  He knew that the God of Jacob was making a difference in the life of
Jacob.  God made Jacob a witness by His blessing upon his life even when Jacob did not deserve to be made a
witness.

You must not judge or misinterpret the prosperity of God upon your life.  The prosperity of God upon your life may
not be a sign of God’s approval.  It may simply be a sign of God’s faithfulness.  Jacob was not under the approval of
God at this point in his life but God was being faithful to the promise that He had made to Jacob.

Aren’t you weary of living a self-centered life?  Aren’t you weary with so much of your energy being spent upon the
pushing of your agenda?  Aren’t you weary of the conflicts that are constantly coming about because of your selfish
behavior?  Aren’t you weary of living beneath your spiritual privileges in Christ Jesus?  God wants to bring you to the
place that you are walking in the Spirit enjoying your inheritance in Christ Jesus.  It is when you are walking in the
spirit as Jacob will demonstrate in the later period of his life, that you bless others and make a difference in the
world.  May God help us to learn the futility and the emptiness of the carnal life as we study the life of Jacob!

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