25/04/2026
Did you know Jacob was buried with Leah, not Rachel?
Not the woman he loved.
Not the one he cried for.
Not the one he labored fourteen years to have.
Leah.
In Genesis 49:29โ31, when Jacob was about to die, he gave a clear instruction:
โBury meโฆ in the caveโฆ where Abraham and Sarah areโฆ Isaac and Rebekahโฆ and there I buried Leah.โ
Pause.
Rachel was his passion.
Leah was his alignment.
Rachel was the love story.
Leah was the covenant story.
Rachel had his emotions.
Leah carried the promise.
Rachel was buried on the roadside (Genesis 35:19).
Leah was laid in the ancestral grave of covenantโthe lineage of Godโs dealings.
And here is the mystery:
Leah was the rejected one.
The one Jacob didnโt choose.
The one he endured, not desired.
But heaven chose her.
From Leah came Judah.
From Judah came Jesus Christ.
Let that settle in your spiritโ
The woman rejected by a man
became central to Godโs redemptive plan.
This is where many people miss it:
We are all trying to be โRachelโโ
seen, desired, celebrated.
But God builds legacy through โLeah seasonsโโ
hidden places, painful processes, quiet obedience.
Jacobโs final decision was not emotionalโ
it was spiritual alignment.
At the end of his life,
he didnโt choose loveโฆ
he chose covenant.
And that is the gospel pattern:
God does not build His purposes on human preference.
He builds on grace and election.
So if you feel overlookedโฆ
if you feel like second choiceโฆ
if life has not chosen you firstโ
hear this clearly:
Godโs choice overrides manโs rejection.
You may not be preferred by people,
but you can be positioned by God.
And when God positions a man,
history is rewritten.
Because in Godโs hands,
the rejected become vessels,
the unseen become pillars,
and the overlooked become eternal significance.
If you are in your Leah seasonโ
you are not losing.
You are being written into something bigger.
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