From J. C. Philpot's Daily Portions
August 3 "One shall say, I am the Lord's--and another shall call
himself by the name of Jacob; and another shall subscribe with his hand unto
the Lord, and surname himself by the name of Israel." Isaiah 44:5 "Another shall call himself by the name of Jacob." Jacob
was a wrestler, for he wrestled all night with the angel; and by wrestling
he obtained the blessing. So at present you may be a wrestling Jacob, but
have not yet come off a prevailing Israel. You may not be without a sense of
guilt and bondage at times in your conscience, and may often doubt and fear
whether the root of the matter be in you, because you cannot use the
language of assurance and say, "I am the Lord's." Still you may be a
wrestling Jacob. The Lord may have put his Spirit in you to enable you to
wrestle with him for the blessing, and yet he may not have given you that
appropriating faith whereby you can believe that he is yours, and can call
him such. How full was the patriarch Jacob of doubt and fear when
his own life, and that of his wife and children, lay in the very hands of
the injured Esau! But it was this very fear which made him wrestle all the
harder, and more fervently cry out, "I will not let you go except you bless
me." Can you not say, "I am seeking for a blessing of this kind with all my
heart; I am wrestling with God for it by prayer and supplication, and
nothing less can satisfy me?" If this be your experience, you certainly may
"call yourself by the name of Jacob." "And shall surname himself by the name of Israel." As
Jacob represents a wrestler in the court of grace, so Israel is the emblem
of one who has obtained the blessing. When, therefore, any wrestling Jacob
has prevailed with God by strength of arm, he may surname himself by the
name of Israel. He can then say, "I have wrestled with God for the promised
blessing, and have obtained it. I have cried unto the Lord, and he has heard
my cry. I have spread my petition before him, and he has at last granted
it." So wrestled and so prevailed Hannah, David, Hezekiah, and many a saint
both dead and living.