Genesis
Chapters 33-34
Jacob Meets Esau
1Jacob saw Esau coming with his four hundred men, so he divided the children among Leah, Rachel, and the two concubines.
2He put the concubines and their children first, then Leah and her children, and finally Rachel and Joseph at the rear.
3Jacob went ahead of them and bowed down to the ground seven times as he approached his brother.
4But Esau ran to meet him, threw his arms around him, and kissed him. They were both crying.
5When Esau looked around and saw the women and the children, he asked, “Who are these people with you?” “These, sir, are the children whom God has been good enough to give me,” Jacob answered.
6Then the concubines came up with their children and bowed down;
7then Leah and her children came, and last of all Joseph and Rachel came and bowed down.
8Esau asked, “What about that other group I met? What did that mean?” Jacob answered, “It was to gain your favor.”
9But Esau said, “I have enough, my brother; keep what you have.”
10Jacob said, “No, please, if I have gained your favor, accept my gift. To see your face is for me like seeing the face of God, now that you have been so friendly to me.
11Please accept this gift which I have brought for you; God has been kind to me and given me everything I need.” Jacob kept on urging him until he accepted.
12Esau said, “Let's get ready and leave. I will go ahead of you.”
13Jacob answered, “You know that the children are weak, and I must think of the sheep and livestock with their young. If they are driven hard for even one day, the whole herd will die.
14Please go on ahead of me, and I will follow slowly, going as fast as I can with the livestock and the children until I catch up with you in Edom.”
15Esau said, “Then let me leave some of my men with you.” But Jacob answered, “There is no need for that for I only want to gain your favor.”
16So that day Esau started on his way back to Edom.
17But Jacob went to Sukkoth, where he built a house for himself and shelters for his livestock. That is why the place was named Sukkoth.
18On his return from Mesopotamia Jacob arrived safely at the city of Shechem in the land of Canaan and set up his camp in a field near the city.
19He bought that part of the field from the descendants of Hamor father of Shechem for a hundred pieces of silver.
20He put up an altar there and named it for El, the God of Israel.
Genesis Chapter 34
The Rape of Dinah
1One day Dinah, the daughter of Jacob and Leah, went to visit some of the Canaanite women.
2When Shechem son of Hamor the Hivite, who was chief of that region, saw her, he took her and raped her.
3But he found the young woman so attractive that he fell in love with her and tried to win her affection.
4He told his father, “I want you to get Dinah for me as my wife.”
5Jacob learned that his daughter had been disgraced, but because his sons were out in the fields with his livestock, he did nothing until they came back.
6Shechem's father Hamor went out to talk with Jacob,
7just as Jacob's sons were coming in from the fields. When they heard about it, they were shocked and furious that Shechem had done such a thing and had insulted the people of Israel by raping Jacob's daughter.
8Hamor said to him, “My son Shechem has fallen in love with your daughter; please let him marry her.
9Let us make an agreement that there will be intermarriage between our people and yours.
10Then you may stay here in our country with us; you may live anywhere you wish, trade freely, and own property.”
11Then Shechem said to Dinah's father and brothers, “Do me this favor, and I will give you whatever you want.
12Tell me what presents you want, and set the payment for the bride as high as you wish; I will give you whatever you ask, if you will only let me marry her.”
13Because Shechem had disgraced their sister Dinah, Jacob's sons answered Shechem and his father Hamor in a deceitful way.
14They said to him, “We cannot let our sister marry a man who is not circumcised; that would be a disgrace for us.
15We can agree only on the condition that you become like us by circumcising all your males.
16Then we will agree to intermarriage. We will settle among you and become one people with you.
17But if you will not accept our terms and be circumcised, we will take her and leave.”
18These terms seemed fair to Hamor and his son Shechem,
19and the young man lost no time in doing what was suggested, because he was in love with Jacob's daughter. He was the most important member of his family.
20Hamor and his son Shechem went to the meeting place at the city gate and spoke to the people of the town:
21“These men are friendly; let them live in the land with us and travel freely. The land is large enough for them also. Let us marry their daughters and give them ours in marriage.
22But these men will agree to live among us and be one people with us only on the condition that we circumcise all our males, as they are circumcised.
23Won't all their livestock and everything else they own be ours? So let us agree that they can live among us.”
24All the citizens of the city agreed with what Hamor and Shechem proposed, and all the males were circumcised.
25Three days later, when the men were still sore from their circumcision, two of Jacob's sons, Simeon and Levi, the brothers of Dinah, took their swords, went into the city without arousing suspicion, and killed all the men,
26including Hamor and his son Shechem. Then they took Dinah from Shechem's house and left.
27After the slaughter Jacob's other sons looted the town to take revenge for their sister's disgrace.
28They took the flocks, the cattle, the donkeys, and everything else in the city and in the fields.
29They took everything of value, captured all the women and children, and carried off everything in the houses.
30Jacob said to Simeon and Levi, “You have gotten me into trouble; now the Canaanites, the Perizzites, and everybody else in the land will hate me. I do not have many men; if they all band together against me and attack me, our whole family will be destroyed.”
31But they answered, “We cannot let our sister be treated like a common whore.”
Job
Chapters 23-24
1-2I still rebel and complain against God; I cannot keep from groaning.
3How I wish I knew where to find him, and knew how to go where he is.
4I would state my case before him and present all the arguments in my favor.
5I want to know what he would say and how he would answer me.
6Would God use all his strength against me? No, he would listen as I spoke.
7I am honest; I could reason with God; he would declare me innocent once and for all.
8I have searched in the East, but God is not there; I have not found him when I searched in the West.
9God has been at work in the North and the South, but still I have not seen him.
10Yet God knows every step I take; if he tests me, he will find me pure.
11I follow faithfully the road he chooses, and never wander to either side.
12I always do what God commands; I follow his will, not my own desires.
13He never changes. No one can oppose him or stop him from doing what he wants to do.
14He will fulfill what he has planned for me; that plan is just one of the many he has;
15I tremble with fear before him.
16-17Almighty God has destroyed my courage. It is God, not the dark, that makes me afraid— even though the darkness has made me blind.
Job Chapter 24
1Why doesn't God set a time for judging, a day of justice for those who serve him?
2People move property lines to get more land; they steal sheep and put them with their own flocks.
3They take donkeys that belong to orphans, and keep a widow's ox till she pays her debts.
4They prevent the poor from getting their rights and force the needy to run and hide.
5So the poor, like wild donkeys, search for food in the dry wilderness; nowhere else can they find food for their children.
6They have to harvest fields they don't own, and gather grapes in vineyards of the wicked.
7At night they sleep with nothing to cover them, nothing to keep them from the cold.
8They are drenched by the rain that falls on the mountains, and they huddle beside the rocks for shelter.
9Evil people make slaves of fatherless infants and take the children of the poor in payment for debts.
10But the poor must go out with no clothes to protect them; they must go hungry while harvesting wheat.
11They press olives for oil, and grapes for wine, but they themselves are thirsty.
12In the cities the wounded and dying cry out, but God ignores their prayers.
13There are those who reject the light; they don't understand it or go where it leads.
14At dawn the murderer gets up and goes out to kill the poor, and at night he steals.
15The adulterer waits for twilight to come; he covers his face so that no one can see him.
16At night thieves break into houses, but by day they hide and avoid the light.
17They fear the light of day, but darkness holds no terror for them.
[Zophar]
18The wicked are swept away by floods, and the land they own is under God's curse; they no longer go to work in their vineyards.
19As snow vanishes in heat and drought, so sinners vanish from the land of the living.
20Not even their mothers remember them now; they are eaten by worms and destroyed like fallen trees.
21That happens because they mistreated widows and showed no kindness to childless women.
22God, in his strength, destroys the mighty; God acts—and the wicked die.
23God may let them live secure, but keeps an eye on them all the time.
24For a while the wicked prosper, but then they wither like weeds, like stalks of grain that have been cut down.
25Can anyone deny that this is so? Can anyone prove that my words are not true?
Proverbs
Chapter 3
13Happy is anyone who becomes wise—who comes to have understanding.
14There is more profit in it than there is in silver; it is worth more to you than gold.
15Wisdom is more valuable than jewels; nothing you could want can compare with it.
16Wisdom offers you long life, as well as wealth and honor.
17Wisdom can make your life pleasant and lead you safely through it.
18Those who become wise are happy; wisdom will give them life.