What troubles does Jacob contend with throughout his life?
How does he usually respond?
Which challenge does he find he cannot respond to?
How does he view his life as he approaches the end?
What follows is from the 3rd-2nd C. B.C.E commentator Philo of Alexandria, who wrote several treatises defending Judaism and Torah against the critiques of the Greco-Roman thinkers.
(3) [77] This is why all whom Moses calls wise are represented as sojourners. Their souls are never colonists leaving heaven for a new home. Their way is to visit earthly nature as men who travel abroad to see and learn.
(4) [78] So when they have stayed awhile in their bodies, and beheld through them all that sense and mortality has to shew, they make their way back to the place from which they set out at the first. To them the heavenly region, where their citizenship lies, is their native land; the earthly region in which they became sojourners is a foreign country. For surely, when men found a colony, the land which receives them becomes their native land instead of the mother city, but to the traveller abroad the land which sent him forth is still the mother to whom also he yearns to return.
(5) [79] We shall not be surprised, then, to find Abraham, when he rose from the life of death and vanity, saying to the guardians of the dead and stewards of mortality, “I am a stranger and sojourner with you” (Gen. 23:4). “You,” he means, “are children of the soil who honour the dust and clay before the soul and have adjudged the precedence to the man named Ephron, which being interpreted is ‘clay.’ ”
(6) [80] And just as natural are the words of the Practiser Jacob, when he laments his sojourn in the body. “The days of the years of my life, the days which I sojourn, have been few and evil, they have not reached to the days of my fathers which they sojourned” (Gen. 47:9).