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Imagine a wedding night where the groom lifts the veil and discovers not Rachel, the woman he worked seven years to marry, but her older sister Leah — a deception orchestrated by their father. Now two sisters share one husband in one household. Leah, the unloved wife, bears son after son while Rachel, the beloved wife, remains barren year after year, watching her sister’s belly swell again and again, until finally she screams in desperation: “Give me children, or I shall die!” Scripture records that “Rachel envied her sister” — not mild disappointment but burning jealousy that consumed her soul. Leah was unloved but fruitful. Rachel was loved but barren. And in a culture where barrenness was shame and fertility was power, every one of Leah’s sons diminished Rachel’s position. When Rachel finally bore children through her handmaid, she declared: “With mighty wrestlings I have wrestled with my sister and have prevailed.” Combat. War. She didn’t see Leah as a fellow victim of their father’s deception but as an enemy to defeat. Did Rachel wish death upon Leah during those years? Scripture doesn’t explicitly record such thoughts, but the envy was real and intense. In the darkest moments when Leah’s fertility mocked her barrenness, such thoughts almost certainly arose — if my rival didn’t exist, I would win; if she were gone, I would have what she has. The tragedy is that both sisters were victims of their father’s greed, but instead of uniting against the man who manipulated them both, they turned on each other. Rachel’s envy didn’t hurt only herself — it poisoned her relationship with her sister, turned children into weapons, and ultimately led to her death in childbirth bearing the second son she desperately wanted. The story teaches a brutal lesson: envy is never satisfied, rivalry has no winners, and competing for love destroys the competitors. Rachel got her children and died anyway. Leah survived but never won Jacob’s love. Both paid prices they never imagined when the competition began.