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  1. Dec 29, 2017 · The standard approach was to suggest that Israel was not meant to replace Jacob, but to supplement it. Thus, Abraham ibn Ezra (35:10) writes [bold added]: לא יקרא שמך עוד יעקב לבדו כי גם ישראל.

  2. After he wrestles at Jabbok, he is renamed "Israel" meaning "strives with God." However, after this encounter, the text still calls him Jacob most of the time. Then in Genesis 35, he has another encounter with God and it then begins to call him Israel in the text. But not all the time.

  3. One of the things that makes this question even more complicated is that after God changed Jacob’s name to Israel, He still sometimes referred to Jacob as Jacob and Israel as the nation of Israel. Yet, at other times, He was referring to Israel, meaning the person Jacob, whose new name was Israel.

  4. Sep 4, 2023 · Ps 78:5 - For He established a testimony in Jacob and appointed a law in Israel, which He commanded our fathers to teach to their children, Ps 105:10 - He confirmed it to Jacob as a decree, to Israel as an everlasting covenant: Ps 105:23 - Then Israel entered Egypt; Jacob dwelt in the land of Ham.

  5. Why does Jacob get renamed to Israel on two separate occasions? The first time Jacob is renamed Israel is by the "angel/divine being" when they finish "fighting". This is in Genesis 32:28:

  6. Jan 23, 2015 · God changed Jacob's name to Israel, because Jacob struggled/wrestled with God, and the new name was granted to reflect the change. Abram was changed to Abraham. Note that names meant something significant.

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  8. Jan 4, 2022 · It was before he met with God in Bethel that Jacob purposefully put away his idols and purified himself (verse 2). After the name change, some passages in Genesis refer to Jacob as “Jacob” (Genesis 33:1; 34:7; 35:15; 37:1) and others as “Israel” (Genesis 35:21; 37:3; 43:6; 46:1).