
The Bible does not hesitate to hold the mirror up to our fallen nature, or show  us what we are. Here is Israel, the prince with God, who had power with man, in  a very sorry plight. His children had involved him in it; but first, he had  involved them.
Dinah. - Little did she realize all the evil which that  visit of hers would bring on her people and on those whose guest she was. What  took her there? Had her upbringing been unnecessarily strict, and did she want a  little more freedom? There is an inevitable rebound with young people to the  other extreme, if needless seventy has been brought to bear on them in their  early days.
The probability, however, is that the laxity of her father's  home, and the effect of her mother's gods, had made the line of separation a  very faint one, and she felt no difficulty in overstepping it.
Simeon and  Levi. - "Ye have made me to stink." On his dying bed Jacob remembered this  treacherous cruelty and pronounced their scattering in Israel; though Levi undid  the effect of that bitter curse by his obedience and devotion. In after days it  was said, "My covenant was with him of life and peace," and though scattered, he  was as salt. In Simeon's case the curse was not cancelled by any subsequent  manifestation of obedience and devotion, and ran out its course.
There is  encouragement and warning here.
Jacob. - The real mistake of it all was  that Jacob bought that land, and settled too near the city (Genesis 33:18). As a  pilgrim he had no right to do this. If Christian parents will settle down in  fellowship with the world, they have themselves to thank for all the misery  which accrues to themselves and children, and the dishonor to God.