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  1. Mar 22, 2018 · The most likely reason for this is that the spelling Peniel is intended to reflect the name and pronunciation of Jacobs time and the spelling Penuel is intended to reflect the name and pronunciation at Moses’ time or a copyist’s time.

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  2. Jan 4, 2022 · Answer. Peniel (also spelled Penuel) means “face of God.” In Genesis 32, Jacob is on his way to meet Esau and is dreading the encounter, thinking that Esau is going to kill him. (Esau had vowed to do just that in Genesis 27:41 because Jacob had cheated him out of receiving his father’s blessing.)

  3. Two men are named Penuel in the Bible. The first, a descendant of Judah, is listed as the father of Gedor (1Chronicles 4:4). The second is a Benjamite (1Chronicles 8:1, 25). In regards to a location, Penuel and Peniel are synonymous references.

  4. There are arresting thoughts on "Bethel" and "Peniel." or the empty and the full Jacob—the Jacob of Gen. 28 and the Jacob of Gen. 32 The principles illustrated there and lessons taught there aw equally divine, I need not say; but they are strikingly different.

  5. Jun 5, 2024 · Penuel: A Place of Transformation. Jacob’s Encounter at Penuel. The name Penuel translates to face of God. Its most critical Biblical mention occurs in Genesis 32:30, where Jacob names the place after wrestling with a mysterious man through the night:

  6. In Genesis 32:31 and the other passages in which the name occurs, its form is changed to Penuel. From the narrative it is evident that Peniel lay somewhere on the north bank of the Jabbok, and between that torrent and the fords of the Jordan at Succoth, a few miles north of the glen where the Jabbok falls into the Jordan.

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  8. Meaning: face of God. This is a place not far from Succoth, on the east of the Jordan River and north of the river Jabbok. It is also called “Peniel.” Here Jacob wrestled ( Genesis 32:24-32) “with a man” (“the angel”, Hos. 12:4. Jacob says of him, “I have seen God face to face”) “till the break of day.”

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