Jacob reaches the edge of everything he has built through running, hiding, striving, and half-truths - a life that looks successful on the outside but is collapsing in the quiet as his past catches up to him and his fear of Esau closes in. Left alone at night by the Jabbok, he is confronted by a mysterious divine “man” and wrestles until daybreak, discovering that the One he cannot outmaneuver is also the One he cannot live without. With a single touch his hip is put out of joint, stripping him of the ability to run and forcing him to cling, desperate not for another scheme but for real blessing. The turning point comes when he is asked his name, and he finally says “Jacob” - not as a label but as confession, the uncovering of the false self that has chased blessing through manipulation. Instead of being destroyed by honesty, he is renamed Israel, marked forever as one who wrestles with God and is blessed in the encounter; he names the place Peniel because he has seen God face to face and lived, and he rises limping but changed, no longer hiding behind gifts and strategies, learning that true blessing is found not in control but in clinging to God with exposed, repentant faith