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Death shows up in Genesis 35 with no warning, and it forces a question most of us would rather avoid: do we face loss with fear, denial, or a deeper kind of hope? We follow Jacob back to Bethel, the place where God first met him, and we watch renewal begin in a surprisingly practical way, by burying idols, purifying the household, and choosing worship again. From there, God reaffirms the covenant promises given to Abraham and Isaac, and Jacob steps more fully into his identity as Israel, carrying not just blessing but responsibility.

Then the chapter turns tender and heavy. Deborah dies. Rachel dies in childbirth. Isaac dies at a ripe old age. We sit in the difference between an abrupt goodbye and an expected farewell, and we talk about how both can shake you. One detail hits especially hard: Rachel names her son “Ben-Oni” (son of my sorrow), but Jacob renames him “Benjamin” (son of my right hand, a place of blessing). That isn’t pretending the pain is small. It’s a picture of grief that tells the truth while still refusing to let sorrow be the final label.

We also explore a Christian view of death that avoids two extremes, celebrating death in a creepy way or running from it as if speaking of it makes it real. We talk about bereavement, why grief is a gift for processing loss, and why the hope of being with Jesus changes what we fear. We even look at King David’s response to loss as a model of praying hard, grieving honestly, and trusting God when the outcome is out of our hands. Subscribe for the daily Genesis Bible study journey, share this with someone walking through grief, and leave a review with the question you most want answered about life after death.

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Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation (NLT).
Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation.
Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.