The One on Whom God’s Gaze Rests (Genesis 29:21-35)
Today’s passage tells the story of how Leah’s heart changes, centering on God’s tender touch toward Leah—a woman alienated within a marriage process filled with deception.
Jacob loved Rachel and regarded the seven years with her as mere days, but due to the deception of his uncle Laban, he was forced into his first marriage with the unwanted Leah.
Used by her father’s schemes, Leah became an unloved wife. Her husband’s heart was always with her younger sister Rachel, and she lived enduring the painful sense of alienation as the “one who is not loved” within the household.
In a harsh reality where value is measured by appearance and human charm (Leah, with her poor eyesight, versus the beautiful and lovely Rachel), Leah is regarded like an undervalued outcast. “The LORD saw that Leah was unloved, and He opened her womb; but Rachel bore no children.” (31)
While everyone focused on Rachel’s beauty, God saw the suffering of the alienated Leah. God shows compassion for a soul rejected for lacking human charm, and reveals that He is offering her comfort through the channel of ‘life.’
Leah appears to come to feel God’s true love, shifting from a thirst for love toward her husband to praise toward God. (Verses 32–35) The names of the four sons Leah bore contain the longing in her heart intact.
Reuben (“Behold, a son!” “My husband will love me now!”) (Longing for and obsessing over Jacob’s love)
Simeon (Hearing) “Because He has heard that I am unloved” (A cry of pain)
Levi (Union) “My husband will be united with me from now on” (Expectation regarding the relationship)
Judah (Praising) “I will now praise the Lord” (A shift in perspective)
Until she gave birth to her first three sons, Leah’s goal appears to be ‘her husband’s love.’ She seems unable to let go of the expectation that if she gave birth to a child, her husband would notice her and love her. However, when she gives birth to her fourth son, Judah, her confession changes.
“I will now praise the Lord.” Regardless of her husband Jacob’s reaction or attitude, she appears to be satisfied with God Himself, who cared for her and gave her life.
God changed Leah’s heart so that she would stop begging for love from people and abide in His unchanging love, causing true praise to burst forth from her lips.
Ultimately, through the lineage of ‘Judah,’ born of praise to God, Jesus Christ, the Messiah, came to this earth. God not only wiped away the tears of the most marginalized woman but also placed her in the most glorious position in the history of redemption.
When we thirst for human recognition and love, God is already ‘seeing’ our suffering.
When we lay down our expectations of people and begin to praise God, the miracle of Judah (praise) will begin in our lives.
God, let this be a day of praising You, who sees me and bestows love and a meticulous touch upon me, freeing me from the thirst for human gaze, attention, and recognition.
I pray in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.
By Rev. Jaewoong Chang




