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Chapter 16
Jacob and Esau
[This chapter is based on Genesis 25:19-34; 27.]
JACOB and Esau, the twin sons of Isaac, present a striking contrast,
both in character and in life. This unlikeness was foretold by the angel
of God before their birth. When in answer to Rebekah's troubled prayer
he declared that two sons would be given her, he opened to her their
future history, that each would become the head of a mighty nation, but
that one would be greater than the other, and that the younger would
have the pre-eminence.
Esau grew up loving self-gratification and centering all his interest in
the present. Impatient of restraint, he delighted in the wild freedom of
the chase, and early chose the life of a hunter. Yet he was the father's
favorite. The quiet, peace-loving shepherd was attracted by the daring
and vigor of this elder son, who fearlessly ranged over mountain and
desert, returning home with game for his father and with exciting
accounts of his adventurous life. Jacob, thoughtful, diligent, and
care-taking, ever thinking more of the future than the present, was
content to dwell at home, occupied in the care of the flocks and the
tillage of the soil. His patient perseverance, thrift, and foresight
were valued by the mother. His affections were deep and strong, and his
gentle, unremitting attentions added far more to her happiness than did
the boisterous and occasional kindnesses of Esau. To Rebekah, Jacob was
the dearer son.
The promises made to Abraham and confirmed to his son were held by Isaac
and Rebekah as the great object of their desires and hopes. With these
promises Esau and Jacob were familiar. They were taught to regard the
birthright as a matter of great importance, for it included not only an
inheritance of worldly wealth but spiritual pre-eminence. He who
received it was to be the priest of his family, and in the line of his
posterity the Redeemer of the world would come. On the other hand, there
were obligations resting upon the possessor of the birthright. He who
should inherit its blessings must devote his life to the service of God.
Like Abraham, he must be obedient to the divine requirements. In
marriage, in his family relations, in public life, he must consult the
will of God.
Isaac made known to his sons these privileges and conditions, and
plainly stated that Esau, as the eldest, was the one entitled to the
birthright. But Esau had no love for devotion, no inclination to a
religious life. The requirements that accompanied the spiritual
birthright were an unwelcome and even hateful restraint to him. The law
of God, which was the condition of the divine covenant with Abraham, was
regarded by Esau as a yoke of bondage. Bent on self-indulgence, he
desired nothing so much as liberty to do as he pleased. To him power and
riches, feasting and reveling, were happiness. He gloried in the
unrestrained freedom of his wild, roving life. Rebekah remembered the
words of the angel, and she read with clearer insight than did her
husband the character of their sons. She was convinced that the heritage
of divine promise was intended for Jacob. She repeated to Isaac the
angel's words; but the father's affections were centered upon the elder
son, and he was unshaken in his purpose.
Jacob had learned from his mother of the divine intimation that the
birthright should fall to him, and he was filled with an unspeakable
desire for the privileges which it would confer. It was not the
possession of his father's wealth that he craved; the spiritual
birthright was the object of his longing. To commune with God as did
righteous Abraham, to offer the sacrifice of atonement for his family,
to be the progenitor of the chosen people and of the promised Messiah,
and to inherit the immortal possessions embraced in the blessings of the
covenant-here were the privileges and honors that kindled his most
ardent desires. His mind was ever reaching forward to the future, and
seeking to grasp its unseen blessings.
With secret longing he listened to all that his father told concerning
the spiritual birthright; he carefully treasured what he had learned
from his mother. Day and night the subject occupied his thoughts, until
it became the absorbing interest of his life. But while he thus esteemed
eternal above temporal blessings, Jacob had not an experimental
knowledge of the God whom he revered. His heart had not been renewed by
divine grace. He believed that the promise concerning himself could not
be fulfilled so long as Esau retained the rights of the first-born, and
he constantly studied to devise some way whereby he might secure the
blessing which his brother held so lightly, but which was so precious to
himself.
When Esau, coming home one day faint and weary from the chase, asked for
the food that Jacob was preparing, the latter, with whom one thought was
ever uppermost, seized upon his advantage, and offered to satisfy his
brother's hunger at the price of the birthright. "Behold, I am at the
point to die," cried the reckless, self-indulgent hunter, "and what
profit shall this birthright do to me?" And for a dish of red pottage he
parted with his birthright, and confirmed the transaction by an oath. A
short time at most would have secured him food in his father's tents,
but to satisfy the desire of the moment he carelessly bartered the
glorious heritage that God Himself had promised to his fathers. His
whole interest was in the present. He was ready to sacrifice the
heavenly to the earthly, to exchange a future good for a momentary
indulgence.
"Thus Esau despised his birthright." In disposing of it he felt a sense
of relief. Now his way was unobstructed; he could do as he liked. For
this wild pleasure, miscalled freedom, how many are still selling their
birthright to an inheritance pure and undefiled, eternal in the heavens!
Ever subject to mere outward and earthly attractions, Esau took two
wives of the daughters of Heth. They were worshipers of false gods, and
their idolatry was a bitter grief to Isaac and Rebekah. Esau had
violated one of the conditions of the covenant, which forbade
intermarriage between the chosen people and the heathen; yet Isaac was
still unshaken in his determination to bestow upon him the birthright.
The reasoning of Rebekah, Jacob's strong desire for the blessing, and
Esau's indifference to its obligations had no effect to change the
father's purpose.
Years passed on, until Isaac, old and blind, and expecting soon to die,
determined no longer to delay the bestowal of the blessing upon his
elder son. But knowing the opposition of Rebekah and Jacob, he decided
to perform the solemn ceremony in secret. In accordance with the custom
of making a feast upon such occasions, the patriarch bade Esau, "Go out
to the field, and take me some venison; and make me savory meat, . . .
that my soul may bless thee before I die."
Rebekah divined his purpose. She was confident that it was contrary to
what God had revealed as His will. Isaac was in danger of incurring the
divine displeasure and of debarring his younger son from the position to
which God had called him. She had in vain tried the effect of reasoning
with Isaac, and she determined to resort to stratagem.
No sooner had Esau departed on his errand than Rebekah set about the
accomplishment of her purpose. She told Jacob what had taken place,
urging the necessity of immediate action to prevent the bestowal of the
blessing, finally and irrevocably, upon Esau. And she assured her son
that if he would follow her directions, he might obtain it as God had
promised. Jacob did not readily consent to the plan that she proposed.
The thought of deceiving his father caused him great distress. He felt
that such a sin would bring a curse rather than a blessing. But his
scruples were overborne, and he proceeded to carry out his mother's
suggestions. It was not his intention to utter a direct falsehood, but
once in the presence of his father he seemed to have gone too far to
retreat, and he obtained by fraud the coveted blessing.
Jacob and Rebekah succeeded in their purpose, but they gained only
trouble and sorrow by their deception. God had declared that Jacob
should receive the birthright, and His word would have been fulfilled in
His own time had they waited in faith for Him to work for them. But like
many who now profess to be children of God, they were unwilling to leave
the matter in His hands. Rebekah bitterly repented the wrong counsel she
had given her son; it was the means of separating him from her, and she
never saw his face again. From the hour when he received the birthright,
Jacob was weighed down with self-condemnation. He had sinned against his
father, his brother, his own soul, and against God. In one short hour he
had made work for a lifelong repentance. This scene was vivid before him
in afteryears, when the wicked course of his sons oppressed his soul.
No sooner had Jacob left his father's tent than Esau entered. Though he
had sold his birthright, and confirmed the transfer by a solemn oath, he
was now determined to secure its blessings, regardless of his brother's
claim. With the spiritual was connected the temporal birthright, which
would give him the headship of the family and possession of a double
portion of his father's wealth. These were blessings that he could
value. "Let my father arise," he said, "and eat of his son's venison,
that thy soul may bless me."
Trembling with astonishment and distress, the blind old father learned
the deception that had been practiced upon him. His long and fondly
cherished hopes had been thwarted, and he keenly felt the disappointment
that must come upon his elder son. Yet the conviction flashed upon him
that it was God's providence which had defeated his purpose and brought
about the very thing he had determined to prevent. He remembered the
words of the angel to Rebekah, and notwithstanding the sin of which
Jacob was now guilty, he saw in him the one best fitted to accomplish
the purposes of God. While the words of blessing were upon his lips, he
had felt the Spirit of inspiration upon him; and now, knowing all the
circumstances, he ratified the benediction unwittingly pronounced upon
Jacob: "I have blessed him; yea, and he shall be blessed."
Esau had lightly valued the blessing while it seemed within his reach,
but he desired to possess it now that it was gone from him forever. All
the strength of his impulsive, passionate nature was aroused, and his
grief and rage were terrible. He cried with an exceeding bitter cry,
"Bless me, even me also, O my father!" "Hast thou not reserved a
blessing for me?" But the promise given was not to be recalled. The
birthright which he had so carelessly bartered he could not now regain.
"For one morsel of meat," for a momentary gratification of appetite that
had never been restrained, Esau sold his inheritance; but when he saw
his folly, it was too late to recover the blessing. "He found no place
of repentance, though he sought it carefully with tears." Hebrews 12:16,
17. Esau was not shut out from the privilege of seeking God's favor by
repentance, but he could find no means of recovering the birthright. His
grief did not spring from conviction of sin; he did not desire to be
reconciled to God. He sorrowed because of the results of his sin, but
not for the sin itself.
Because of his indifference to the divine blessings and requirements,
Esau is called in Scripture "a profane person." Verse 16. He represents
those who lightly value the redemption purchased for them by Christ, and
are ready to sacrifice their heirship to heaven for the perishable
things of earth. Multitudes live for the present, with no thought or
care for the future. Like Esau they cry, "Let us eat and drink; for
tomorrow we die." 1 Corinthians 15:32. They are controlled by
inclination; and rather than practice self-denial, they will forgo the
most valuable considerations. If one must be relinquished, the
gratification of a depraved appetite or the heavenly blessings promised
only to the self-denying and God-fearing, the claims of appetite
prevail, and God and heaven are virtually despised. How many, even of
professed Christians, cling to indulgences that are injurious to health
and that benumb the sensibilities of the soul. When the duty is
presented of cleansing themselves from all filthiness of the flesh and
spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God, they are offended. They
see that they cannot retain these hurtful gratifications and yet secure
heaven, and they conclude that since the way to eternal life is so
strait, they will no longer walk therein.
Multitudes are selling their birthright for sensual indulgence. Health
is sacrificed, the mental faculties are enfeebled, and heaven is
forfeited; and all for a mere temporary pleasure--an indulgence at once
both weakening and debasing in its character. As Esau awoke to see the
folly of his rash exchange when it was too late to recover his loss, so
it will be in the day of God with those who have bartered their heirship
to heaven for selfish gratifications.
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