25 When Laban reached him, Jacob's tents were pitched in the Gilead mountains; Laban pitched his tents there, too.
26-30
"What do you mean," said Laban, "by keeping me in the dark and sneaking
off, hauling my daughters off like prisoners of war? Why did you run
off like a thief in the night? Why didn't you tell me? Why, I would have
sent you off with a great celebration—music, timbrels, flutes! But you
wouldn't permit me so much as a kiss for my daughters and grandchildren.
It was a stupid thing for you to do. If I had a mind to, I could
destroy you right now, but the God of your father spoke to me last
night, 'Be careful what you do to Jacob, whether good or bad.' I
understand. You left because you were homesick. But why did you steal my
household gods?"
31-32
Jacob answered Laban, "I was afraid. I thought you would take your
daughters away from me by brute force. But as far as your gods are
concerned, if you find that anybody here has them, that person dies.
With all of us watching, look around. If you find anything here that
belongs to you, take it." Jacob didn't know that Rachel had stolen the
gods.
33-35 Laban
went through Jacob's tent, Leah's tent, and the tents of the two maids
but didn't find them. He went from Leah's tent to Rachel's. But Rachel
had taken the household gods, put them inside a camel cushion, and was
sitting on them. When Laban had gone through the tent, searching high
and low without finding a thing, Rachel said to her father, "Don't think
I'm being disrespectful, my master, that I can't stand before you, but
I'm having my period." So even though he turned the place upside down in
his search, he didn't find the household gods.
36-37
Now it was Jacob's turn to get angry. He lit into Laban: "So what's my
crime, what wrong have I done you that you badger me like this? You've
ransacked the place. Have you turned up a single thing that's yours?
Let's see it—display the evidence. Our two families can be the jury and
decide between us.
38-42
"In the twenty years I've worked for you, ewes and she-goats never
miscarried. I never feasted on the rams from your flock. I never brought
you a torn carcass killed by wild animals but that I paid for it out of
my own pocket—actually, you made me pay whether it was my fault or not.
I was out in all kinds of weather, from torrid heat to freezing cold,
putting in many a sleepless night. For twenty years I've done this: I
slaved away fourteen years for your two daughters and another six years
for your flock and you changed my wages ten times. If the God of my
father, the God of Abraham and the Fear of Isaac, had not stuck with me,
you would have sent me off penniless. But God saw the fix I was in and
how hard I had worked and last night rendered his verdict."
43-44
Laban defended himself: "The daughters are my daughters, the children
are my children, the flock is my flock—everything you see is mine. But
what can I do about my daughters or for the children they've had? So
let's settle things between us, make a covenant—God will be the witness
between us."
45 Jacob took a stone and set it upright as a pillar.
46-47
Jacob called his family around, "Get stones!" They gathered stones and
heaped them up and then ate there beside the pile of stones. Laban named
it in Aramaic, Yegar-sahadutha (Witness Monument); Jacob echoed the
naming in Hebrew, Galeed (Witness Monument).
48-50
Laban said, "This monument of stones will be a witness, beginning now,
between you and me." (That's why it is called Galeed—Witness Monument.)
It is also called Mizpah (Watchtower) because Laban said, "God
keep watch between you and me when we are out of each other's sight. If
you mistreat my daughters or take other wives when there's no one
around to see you, God will see you and stand witness between us."
51-53
Laban continued to Jacob, "This monument of stones and this stone
pillar that I have set up is a witness, a witness that I won't cross
this line to hurt you and you won't cross this line to hurt me. The God
of Abraham and the God of Nahor (the God of their ancestor) will keep
things straight between us."
53-55
Jacob promised, swearing by the Fear, the God of his father Isaac. Then
Jacob offered a sacrifice on the mountain and worshiped, calling in all
his family members to the meal. They ate and slept that night on the
mountain. Laban got up early the next morning, kissed his grandchildren
and his daughters, blessed them, and then set off for home.
Genesis 32
1-2
And Jacob went his way. Angels of God met him. When Jacob saw them he
said, "Oh! God's Camp!" And he named the place Mahanaim (Campground).