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Genesis Chapter
Twenty-Five
Genesis 25
Chapter Contents
Abraham's family by Keturah, His death and burial. (1-10)
God blesses Isaac The descendants of Ishmael. (11-18) The birth of Esau and
Jacob. (19-26) The different characters of Esau and Jacob. (27,28) Esau
despises and sells his birth-right. (29-34)
Commentary on Genesis 25:1-10
All the days, even of the best and greatest saints, are
not remarkable days; some slide on silently; such were these last days of
Abraham. Here is an account of Abraham's children by Keturah, and the
disposition which he made of his estate. After the birth of these sons, he set
his house in order, with prudence and justice. He did this while he yet lived.
It is wisdom for men to do what they find to do while they live, as far as they
can. Abraham lived 175 years; just one hundred years after he came to Canaan;
so long he was a sojourner in a strange country. Whether our stay in this life
be long or short, it matters but little, provided we leave behind us a
testimony to the faithfulness and goodness of the Lord, and a good example to
our families. We are told that his sons Isaac and Ishmael buried him. It seems
that Abraham had himself brought them together while he lived. Let us not close
the history of the life of Abraham without blessing God for such a testimony of
the triumph of faith.
Commentary on Genesis 25:11-18
Ishmael had twelve sons, whose families became distinct tribes.
They peopled a very large country that lay between Egypt and Assyria, called
Arabia. The number and strength of this family were the fruit of the promise,
made to Hagar and to Abraham, concerning Ishmael.
Commentary on Genesis 25:19-26
Isaac seems not to have been much tried, but to have
spent his days in quietness. Jacob and Esau were prayed for; their parents,
after being long childless, obtained them by prayer. The fulfilment of God's
promise is always sure, yet it is often slow. The faith of believers is tried,
their patience exercised, and mercies long waited for are more welcome when
they come. Isaac and Rebekah kept in view the promise of all nations being
blessed in their posterity, therefore were not only desirous of children, but
anxious concerning every thing which seemed to mark their future character. In
all our doubts we should inquire of the Lord by prayer. In many of our
conflicts with sin and temptation, we may adopt Rebekah's words, "If it be
so, why am I thus?" If a child of God, why so careless or carnal? If not a
child of God, why so afraid of, or so burdened with sin?
Commentary on Genesis 25:27,28
Esau hunted the beasts of the field with dexterity and
success, till he became a conqueror, ruling over his neighbours. Jacob was a plain
man, one that liked the true delights of retirement, better than all pretended
pleasures. He was a stranger and a pilgrim in his spirit, and a shepherd all
his days. Isaac and Rebekah had but these two children, one was the father's
darling, and the other the mother's. And though godly parents must feel their
affections most drawn over towards a godly child, yet they will not show
partiality. Let their affections lead them to do what is just and equal to
every child, or evils will arise.
Commentary on Genesis 25:29-34
We have here the bargain made between Jacob and Esau
about the right, which was Esau's by birth, but Jacob's by promise. It was for
a spiritual privilege; and we see Jacob's desire of the birth-right, but he
sought to obtain it by crooked courses, not like his character as a plain man.
He was right, that he coveted earnestly the best gifts; he was wrong, that he
took advantage of his brother's need. The inheritance of their father's worldly
goods did not descend to Jacob, and was not meant in this proposal. But it
includeth the future possession of the land of Canaan by his children's
children, and the covenant made with Abraham as to Christ the promised Seed.
Believing Jacob valued these above all things; unbelieving Esau despised them.
Yet although we must be of Jacob's judgment in seeking the birth-right, we
ought carefully to avoid all guile, in seeking to obtain even the greatest
advantages. Jacob's pottage pleased Esau's eye. "Give me some of that
red;" for this he was called Edom, or Red. Gratifying the sensual appetite
ruins thousands of precious souls. When men's hearts walk after their own eyes,
Job 31:7, and when they serve their own bellies,
they are sure to be punished. If we use ourselves to deny ourselves, we break
the force of most temptations. It cannot be supposed that Esau was dying of
hunger in Isaac's house. The words signify, I am going towards death; he seems
to mean, I shall never live to inherit Canaan, or any of those future supposed
blessings; and what signifies it who has them when I am dead and gone. This
would be the language of profaneness, with which the apostle brands him, Hebrews 12:16; and this contempt of the
birth-right is blamed, verse 34. It is the greatest folly to part with
our interest in God, and Christ, and heaven, for the riches, honours, and
pleasures of this world; it is as bad a bargain as his who sold a birth-right
for a dish of pottage. Esau ate and drank, pleased his palate, satisfied his
appetite, and then carelessly rose up and went his way, without any serious
thought, or any regret, about the bad bargain he had made. Thus Esau despised
his birth-right. By his neglect and contempt afterwards, and by justifying
himself in what he had done, he put the bargain past recall. People are ruined,
not so much by doing what is amiss, as by doing it and not repenting of it.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Genesis》
Genesis 25
Verse 1
[1] Then
again Abraham took a wife, and her name was Keturah.
Five and thirty years Abraham lived after the
marriage of Isaac, and all that is recorded concerning him during that time
lies here in a very few verses: we hear no more of God's extraordinary
appearances to him, or trials of him; for all the days even of the greatest
saints are not eminent days, some slide on silently, and neither come nor go
with observation: such were these last days of Abraham. We have here an account
of his children by Keturah, another wife, which be married after the death of
Sarah. He had buried Sarah, and married Isaac, the two dear companions of his
life, and was now solitary; his family wanted a governess and it was not good
for him to he thus alone; he therefore marries Keturah, probably the chief of
his maid servants, born in his house, or bought with money. By her he had six
sons, in whom the promise made to Abraham concerning the great increase of his
posterity was in part fulfilled. The strength he received by the promise still
remained in him, to shew how much the virtue of the promise exceeds the power
of nature.
Verse 5
[5] And Abraham gave all that he had unto Isaac.
And Abraham gave all that he had to Isaac — As he was bound to do in justice to Sarah his first wife, and to Rebekah
who married Isaac upon the assurance of it.
Verse 6
[6] But
unto the sons of the concubines, which Abraham had, Abraham gave gifts, and
sent them away from Isaac his son, while he yet lived, eastward, unto the east
country.
He gave gifts — Or
portions to the rest of his children, both to Ishmael, though at first he was
sent empty away, and to his sons by Keturah. It was justice to provide for
them; parents that do not that, are worse than infidels. It was prudence to
settle them in places distant from Isaac, that they might not pretend to divide
the inheritance with him. He did this while he yet lived, lest it should not
have been done, or not so well done afterwards. In many cases it is wisdom for
men to make their own hands their executors, and what they find to do, to do it
while they live. These sons of the concubines were sent into the country that
lay east from Canaan, and their posterity were called the children of the east,
famous for their numbers. Their great increase was the fruit of the promise
made to Abraham, that God would multiply his seed.
Verse 7
[7] And
these are the days of the years of Abraham's life which he lived, an hundred
threescore and fifteen years.
And these are the days of Abraham — He lived one hundred and seventy-five years; just a hundred years after
he came to Canaan; so long he was a sojourner in a strange country.
Verse 8
[8] Then Abraham gave up the ghost, and died in a good old age, an old man,
and full of years; and was gathered to his people.
He died in a good old age, an old man — So God had promised him. His death was his discharge from the burdens of
his age: it was also the crown of the glory of his old age. He was full of
years - A good man, though he should not die old, dies full of days, satisfied
with living here, and longing to live in a better place.
And was gathered to his people — His body was gathered to the congregation of the dead, and his soul to
the congregation of the blessed. Death gathers us to our people. Those that are
our people while we live, whether the people of God, or the children of this
world, to them death will gather us.
Verse 9
[9] And
his sons Isaac and Ishmael buried him in the cave of Machpelah, in the field of
Ephron the son of Zohar the Hittite, which is before Mamre;
Here is nothing recorded of the pomp or
ceremony of his funeral; only we are told, his sons Isaac and Ishmael buried
him - It was the last office of respect they had to pay to their good father.
Some distance there had formerly been between Isaac and Ishmael, but it seems
either Abraham had himself brought them together while he lived, or at least
his death reconciled them. They buried him, in his own burying-place which he
had purchased and in which he had buried Sarah. Those that in life have been
very dear to each other, may not only innocently, but laudably, desire to be
buried together, that, in their deaths, they may not be divided, and in token
of their hopes of rising together.
Verse 11
[11] And
it came to pass after the death of Abraham, that God blessed his son Isaac; and
Isaac dwelt by the well Lahairoi.
And God blessed Isaac — The blessing of Abraham did not die with him, but survived to all the
children of the promise. But Moses presently digresseth from the story of
Isaac, to give a short account of Ishmael, for as much as he also was a son of
Abraham; and God had made some promises concerning him, which it was requisite
we should know the accomplishment of. He had twelve sons, twelve princes they
are called, Genesis 25:16, heads of families, which, in
process of time, became nations, numerous and very considerable. They peopled a
very large continent that lay between Egypt and Assyria, called Arabia. The
names of his twelve sons are recorded: Midian and Kedar we oft read of in
scripture. And his posterity had not only tents in the fields wherein they grew
rich in times of peace, but they had towns and castles, Genesis 25:16, where in they fortified
themselves in time of war. Their number and strength was the fruit of the
promise made to Hagar concerning Ishmael, Genesis 16:10. and to Abraham, Genesis 17:20; 21:13.
Verse 17
[17] And
these are the years of the life of Ishmael, an hundred and thirty and seven
years: and he gave up the ghost and died; and was gathered unto his people.
He lived an hundred and thirty and seven
years — Which is recorded to shew the efficacy of
Abraham's prayer for him, Genesis 17:18. O that Ishmael might live before
thee! Then he also was gathered to his people.
And he died in the presence of all his
brethren — With his friends about him. Who would not
wish so to do?
Verse 20
[20] And
Isaac was forty years old when he took Rebekah to wife, the daughter of Bethuel
the Syrian of Padanaram, the sister to Laban the Syrian.
And Isaac was forty years old — Not much is related concerning Isaac, but what had reference to his
father, while he lived, and to his sons afterward; for Isaac seems not to have
been a man of action, nor much tried, but to have spent his day, in quietness
and silence.
Verse 21
[21] And
Isaac intreated the LORD for his wife, because she was barren: and the LORD was
intreated of him, and Rebekah his wife conceived.
And Isaac intreated the Lord for his wife — Though God had promised to multiply his family, he prayed for it; for
God's promises must not supersede but encourage our prayers, and be improved as
the ground of our faith. Though he had prayed for this mercy many years, and it
was not granted, yet he did not leave off praying for it.
Verse 22
[22] And
the children struggled together within her; and she said, If it be so, why am I
thus? And she went to enquire of the LORD.
The children struggled within her — The commotion was altogether extra-ordinary, and made her very uneasy:
If it be so, or, since it is so, why am I thus? - Before the want of children
was her trouble, now the struggle of the children is no less so.
And she went to enquire of the Lord — Some think Melchizedek was now consulted as an oracle, or perhaps some
Urim or Teraphim were now used to enquire of God by, as afterwards in the
breast-plate of judgment. The word and prayer, by which we now enquire of the
Lord, give great relief to those that are upon any account perplexed: it is a
mighty ease to spread our case before the Lord, and ask council at his mouth.
Verse 23
[23] And
the LORD said unto her, Two nations are in thy womb, and two manner of people
shall be separated from thy bowels; and the one people shall be stronger than
the other people; and the elder shall serve the younger.
Two nations are in thy womb — She was now big not only with two children, but two nations, which
should not only in their manners greatly differ from each other, but in their
interest contend with each other, and the issue of the contest should be that
the elder should serve the younger, which was fulfilled in the subjection of
the Edomites for many ages to the house of David.
Verse 25
[25] And
the first came out red, all over like an hairy garment; and they called his
name Esau.
Esau when he was born was red and hairy, as
if he had been already a grown man, whence he had his name Esau, made, reared
already. This was an indication of a very strong constitution, and gave cause
to expect that he would be a very robust, daring, active man. But Jacob was
smooth and tender as other children.
Verse 26
[26] And
after that came his brother out, and his hand took hold on Esau's heel; and his
name was called Jacob: and Isaac was threescore years old when she bare them.
His hand took hold on Esau's heel — This signified, 1. Jacob's pursuit of the birth-right and blessing; from
the first he reached forth to have catched hold of it, and if possible to have
prevented his brother. 2. His prevailing for it at last: that in process of
time he should gain his point. This passage is referred to Hosea 12:3, and from hence he had his name
Jacob, a supplanter.
Verse 27
[27] And
the boys grew: and Esau was a cunning hunter, a man of the field; and Jacob was
a plain man, dwelling in tents.
Esau was an hunter —
And a man that knew how to live by his wits, for he was a cunning hunter.
A man of the field —
All for the game, and never so well but as when he was in pursuit of it.
And Jacob was a plain man — An honest man, that dealt fairly.
And dwelt in tents —
Either, 1. As a shepherd, loving that safe and silent employment of keeping
sheep, to which also he bred up his children, Genesis 46:34. Or, 2. As a student, he
frequented the tents of Melchizedek or Heber, as some understand it, to be
taught by them divine things.
Verse 28
[28] And
Isaac loved Esau, because he did eat of his venison: but Rebekah loved Jacob.
And Isaac loved Esau — Isaac though he was not a stirring man himself, yet he loved to have his
son active. Esau knew how to please him, and shewed a great respect for him, by
treating him often with venison, which won upon him more than one would have
thought. But Rebekah loved him whom God loved.
Verse 29
[29] And
Jacob sod pottage: and Esau came from the field, and he was faint:
Sod —
That is, boiled.
Verse 30
[30] And
Esau said to Jacob, Feed me, I pray thee, with that same red pottage; for I am
faint: therefore was his name called Edom.
Edom —
That is, red.
Verse 31
[31] And
Jacob said, Sell me this day thy birthright.
Sell me this day thy birth-right — He cannot be excused in taking advantage of Esau's necessity, yet
neither can Esau be excused who is profane, Hebrews 12:16, because for one morsel of meat he
sold his birth-right. The birth-right was typical of spiritual privileges,
those of the church of the first-born: Esau was now tried how he would value
those, and he shews himself sensible only of present grievances: may he but get
relief against them, he cares not for his birth-right. If we look on Esau's
birth-right as only a temporal advantage, what he said had something of truth
in it, that our worldly enjoyments, even those we are most fond of, will stand
us in no stead in a dying hour. They will not put by the stroke of death, nor
ease the pangs, nor remove the sting. But being of a spiritual nature, his
undervaluing it, was the greatest profaneness imaginable. It is egregious folly
to part with our interest in God, and Christ, and heaven, for the riches,
honours, and pleasures of this world.
Verse 34
[34] Then
Jacob gave Esau bread and pottage of lentiles; and he did eat and drink, and
rose up, and went his way: thus Esau despised his birthright.
He did eat and drink, and rise up and went
his way — Without any serious reflections upon the
ill bargain he had made, or any shew of regret.
Thus Esau despised his birth-right — He used no means to get the bargain revoked, made no appeal to his
father about it but the bargain which his necessity had made, (supposing it
were so) his profaneness confirmed, and by his subsequent neglect and contempt,
he put the bargain past recall.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on
Genesis》
ESAU.
Genesis 25:27-32.
Esau represents
a man of the world, and Jacob a man of God, although there are blemishes in his
life.
As a man’s
countenance will often reveal the course of life he is leading, so the several
sentences that speak of Esau indicate what kind of a character he was.
Ⅰ. The cunning hunter. “ Esau was a cunning hunter” (verse27). He was
no novice in the art of hunting, but he was an adept. By continually giving
himself to this pleasure he had become an expert. This indicates at once, that
he is a typical character of those who are wholly given over to the pursuits
and pastimes of the pleasures of this evil age.
Ⅱ. The man of the field. “ A man of the field.” (verse 27). From this
we gather he was a man of wild and lawless habits, one who did not care to be
under the restraint of home, but one who liked his own will and way.
Ⅲ. The thoughtful son. “ Isaac loved Esau, because he ate of his
venison” (verse 28). From Gen.27:1,2, we gather that Esau was willing to
minister to his father’s wants in obtaining venison for him. It has often been
found that those who are not godly have kind and thoughtful traits in their
character. It was kind of Esau to satisfy Isaac, whether it was wise for Isaac
to want the venison, and thus to keep his son roaming.
Ⅳ. The fainting sportsman. “ Esau came from the field, and was faint”
(ver.29). Trapp well remarks upon Esau’s faintness while in pursuit of
pleasure: “ Of carnal pleasures a man may break his neck sooner than his fast.
Nor is it want of variety in them, but inward weakness, or the course of
unsatisfyingness, that lies upon them. The creature is now as the husk without
the grain, the shell without the kernel, full of nothing but emptiness; and so
may faint us, but not fill us.”
Ⅴ. The stamped individual. “Esau said to Jacob, feed me, I pray thee,
with that same red pottage; for I am faint:therefore
his name was called Edom” (Margin, “red,” ver.30). Men have by their actions
made their name to be identical with some special sin; hence to mention the
name of some men is at once to bring up their sin. Judas is identified with
covetousness, Eli with simony, Korah with pride, and Esau with profanity
(Heb.12:16).
Ⅵ. The thoughtless questioner. “ What profit shall this birthright do
to me?” (ver.32). Of what use can a birthright be to a man at the point of
death? Esau says, in so many words, “ I prefer present gratification to
deferred privileges.” Thus it was with the rich man mentioned in Luke 16.; he
lived for the present while on earth, and he lived to repent his folly in hell.
Ⅶ. The bad bargainer. “ Esau who for one morsel of meat sold his
birthright” (Hebrews 12:16). The birthright meant a double portion of his
father’s property (Deut. 21:17); it meant authority over his brethren (Genesis
27:29; 49:3), and the right to the priestly office. The first-born of Israel
were replaced by the Levites (Num.3:12). Esau did indeed despise the birthright
by selling it for a mess of pottage. There are many to-day who are selling
their eternal interests by living for self, living in sin, following the
pleasure of the world and the desires of the flesh. What profit can these
things give in this life? How will these things look on the death-bed, and in
the coming eternity?
── F.E. Marsh《Five Hundred Bible Readings》
"THE BAD BARGAIN OF ESAU"
Genesis 25:29-34
INTRODUCTION
1. One of the saddest figures in the Bible is that of Esau...
a. Firstborn son of Isaac and Rebekah, twin brother of Jacob - cf.
Gen 25:21-26
b. Loved by his father Isaac, a skillful hunter - Gen 25:27-28
2. Esau was a man who had his good side...
a. He show kindness to his brother who had deceived him - cf. Gen
33:1-16
b. He helped bury his father Isaac - Gen 35:29
3. Yet on two occasions he was manipulated by his brother Jacob...
a. The first when Esau sold his birthright for a bowl of pottage
- Gen 25:29-34
b. The second when Jacob stole the blessing designed for Esau - Gen
27:1-41
[In this study, we shall focus our attention on the first occasion, and
lessons we might glean from this unfortunate circumstance in Esau's
life...]
I. ESAU SOLD HIS BIRTHRIGHT
A. ESAU'S BIRTHRIGHT...
1. The physical advantages of the birthright
a. Contained a double portion of the father's inheritance - Deu
21:17
1) The amount would have been very great
2) For what he eventually received was also great - cf. Gen
36:6-7
b. Offered rule and authority over other members of the family
- cf. Gen 27:29
2. The spiritual advantages of this particular birthright
a. Patriarch and priest of the house on the death of his father
(Barnes, Clarke)
b. Chief of the chosen family, and heir of the promised
blessing (Barnes)
c. Able to invoke the blessing of Abraham, regarding the
threefold promise - cf. Gen 28:4; 12:1-3
-- Such were the issues at stake when Jacob and Esau bartered over
the birthright
B. ESAU'S BAD BARGAIN...
1. Esau chose the sensual over the spiritual
a. He gave into the cravings of his hunger - Gen 25:29-34
b. He valued the red pottage more highly than his birthright
c. For this reason he was called "a profane person" - He 12:16
2. Esau chose the present over the future
a. He tossed away future rewards for present gratification
b. The pottage may have assuaged his hunger for the day, but
what of the morrow?
c. This too made him a "profane" person
-- For temporary, physical pleasures Esau sold his birthright;
what a bad bargain!
[Certainly we would not think of making the same kind of bargain, would
we? Perhaps not with an inheritance we might receive from our parents;
but what of our spiritual inheritance...?]
II. ARE WE SELLING OUR BIRTHRIGHT?
A. OUR BIRTHRIGHT AS CHRISTIANS...
1. We are heirs according to the promise made to Abraham - Ga 3:29
2. We are joint-heirs with Christ - Ro 8:16-17
a. We are heirs according to the hope of eternal life - Ti 3:7
b. We are heirs of the kingdom which He has promised - Ja 2:5;
cf. 2 Pe 1:11
3. In Him, all things are ours - 1 Co 3:21-23; cf. Re 21:7
4. Our inheritance is incorruptible, undefiled, that does not fade
away, reserved in heaven - 1 Pe 1:4
-- What a wonderful birthright, and not just limited to things in
the hereafter! - cf. Mk 10:28-30
B. ARE WE MAKING A BAD BARGAIN...?
1. How might we sell our birthright?
a. Succumbing to the passing pleasures of sin - cf. He 11:24-26
b. Lusting for things of the world - cf. 1 Jn 2:15; Ja 4:4
c. Walking after the flesh rather than after the Spirit - cf.
Ga 5:16-26
2. How might we hold on to our birthright?
a. Pursue peace and holiness - cf. He 12:14
b. Be careful not to fall short of God's grace - cf. He 12:15
c. Exercise discipline and godliness - cf. 1 Co 9:24-27; 1 Ti
4:7-8
CONCLUSION
1. Esau made the mistake of...
a. Depreciating the value of his inheritance
b. Succumbing to the desires of the flesh
2. We can make a similar mistake...
a. Not appreciating the value of our inheritance in Christ!
b. Giving in to the allure of immediate gratification of the flesh!
If we are not careful, the time will come when it is too late; no matter
how many tears we may shed, it will be too late to change God's mind
(cf. He 12:17). That is why we need to heed such warnings as that one
given by the apostle Paul:
"We then, as workers together with Him also plead with you not
to receive the grace of God in vain. For He says: "In an
acceptable time I have heard you, And in the day of salvation
I have helped you." Behold, now is the accepted time; behold,
now is the day of salvation."
- 2 Co 6:1-2
Are you in danger of selling your birthright as a Christian?
--《Executable
Outlines》
25 Chapter 25
Verses 1-7
These are the days of the years of Abraham’s life:--
The last years of Abraham
I.
ON
THEIR NATURAL SIDE. Active to the last.
II. ON THEIR
SPIRITUAL SIDE. He provided for the purity and peace of the chosen family, by
sending away the sons of his concubines. He did this
Life and character of Abraham
I. THE FIRST
PERIOD.
I. ABRAHAM COMES
BEFORE US AS AN EMIGRANT.
II. ABRAHAM COMES
BEFORE US AS A STRANGER.
III. ABRAHAM COMES
BEFORE US IN AN ASPECT OF BRIGHT MORAL BEAUTY (Genesis 13:5-18).
IV. A MORE OPEN
AND SIGNAL EVIDENCE OF THE DIVINE
COUNTENANCE AWAITS THE PATRIARCH (chap. 14.).
V. CONSIDER
ABRAHAM IN HIS PRIVATE COMMUNION WITH GOD.
II. THE SECOND
PERIOD. Abraham has shown how unreservedly he can give credit to God for the fulfilment
of His mere word, however incredible it might seem to the eye of sense. Will he
also and equally give credit to God for the fulfilment of it in His own way?
I. IN THIS NEW
TRIAL, THE PATRIARCH’S FAITH APPEARS AT FIRST TO FAIL.
II. THE MANNER OF
THE PATRIARCH’S REVIVAL IS EMINENTLY
GRACIOUS (chap. 17.).
III. THE
CULMINATING POINT OF ABRAHAM’S EXALTATION IN CONNECTION WITH HIS CONDUCT
TOWARDS LOT (chaps. 18., 19.).
IV. THE NEXT SCENE
PRESENTS TO US THE PATRIARCH GRIEVOUSLY HUMBLED (chap. 20.).
V. THE ACTUAL
FULFILMENT OF THE PROMISE DOES NOT
COMPLETELY ABOLISH ALL STRIFE BETWEEN THE FLESH AND THE
SPIRIT.
VI. THE SCENE ON
MOUNT MORIAH FORMS THE CLIMAX OF
ABRAHAM’S WALK OF FAITH.
VII. THE CLOSING
INCIDENTS IN ABRAHAM’S EVENTFUL LIFE. (T. H.Leale.)
Lessons
1. Piety as well a nature teacheth men to dispose of their estates
which God hath given them unto their seed.
2. Abraham may not, will not alter the portion of the child of
promise which God ordained. The best portion is for the children of promise.
They have all (Genesis 25:5).
3. Some portion below, the children of the flesh do carry away as
theirs.
4. It is wisdom for good fathers to settle their families, while
they are alive and stirring.
5. Some difference between the portion of the children of the flesh
and of the promise God makes here below.
6. Transplantation into places not inhabited, to people, is a design
allowed by God (Genesis 25:6). (G. Hughes, B. D.)
Educated by illusion
Let us hastily recapitulate his history, so chequered by
vicissitudes. He began his wanderings at Chanan; then seeking a new country, he
entered Canaan, feeding his flocks there as long as pasture lasted, and then
passed on. After that we find him still a wanderer, driven by famine to Egypt;
then returning home, parting with Lot, losing his best friend, commanded to
give up the dearest object of his heart, and at the close of life startled
almost to find that he had not a foot of earth in which to make for his wife a
grave. Thus throughout his life he was a pilgrim. In all we see God’s blessed
principle of illusion by which He draws us on towards Himself. The object of our
hope seems just before us, but we go on without attaining it; all appears
failure, yet all this time we are advancing surely on our journey and find our
hopes realized not here but in the kingdom beyond. Abraham learnt thus the
infinite nature of duty, and this is what a Christian must always feel. He must
never think that he can do all he ought to do. It is possible for the child to
do each day all that is required of him; but the more we receive of the spirit
of Christ, the larger, the more infinitely impossible of fulfilment will our
circle of duties become. (F. W. Robertson, M. A.)
Verses 8-10
Then Abraham gave up the ghost, and died in a good old age, an old
man, and fall of years; and was gathered to his people
Abraham’s departure
“Full of years” is not a mere synonym for longevity.
The expression is by no means a usual one. It is applied to Isaac at the close
of his calm, contemplative life, to David at the end of his stormy and
adventurous career, to the high priest Jehoiada, and to the patriarch Job. We
shall understand its meaning better if, instead of “full of years,” we read
“satisfied with years.” The words point to a calm close, with all desires
granted, with hot wishes stilled, and a willingness to let life go, because all
which it could give had been attained. We have two main things to consider.
1. The tranquil close of life.
2. Consider the glimpse of the joyful society beyond, which is given
us in that other remarkable expression of the text, “He was gathered to his
people.” The words contain a dim intimation of something beyond this present
life:
The death and burial of Abraham
I. HIS DEATH.
1. The peaceful close of a long life.
2. The close of a satisfied life.
3. An introduction to a new and better life.
II. HIS BURIAL.
1. An honourable one.
2. An occasion for peace among the members of his family.
3. The occasion of further blessing to the living (Genesis 25:11). (T. H.Leale.)
Abraham’s death
I. ABRAHAM DIED.
1. The best of men die.
2. The conquest pilgrimage ends.
3. Abraham was brought down to the grave in honour and peace.
4. He being dead, yet speaketh.
II. MARK HIS FAITH
(See Hebrews 11:13, &c.).
1. His faith related to his posterity and the land of promise. Hence
his interment in this particular cave. The field of his sepulchre was his own
possession.
2. It related to himself. Though losing the earthly Canaan, he was
sure of the heavenly Canaan. He was confident of a future life; and knew that
his faith and piety would not go unrecognized or unrewarded in the world to
come. So when we die, let it be in faith. (The Congregational Pulpit.)
Abraham’s death in old age
The inscription on his tomb, if I may so call it, was “ He died in
a good old age.” On this I have two remarks to offer--
Lessons
1. God records the time of His saints’ lives to set out the
continuance of their faith and patient waiting for God and His promise (Genesis 25:7).
2. Saints give up spirits to God; they are not snatched away.
3. It is good dying in an age full of goodness.
4. Saints, as Abraham, depart full and satisfied with life below.
5. Saints are gathered to their own people in their death (Genesis 25:8).
6. Honourable burial is due to saints deceased by their surviving
seed, or friends.
7. God was as good as His word to Abraham in his death (Genesis 25:9). (G. Hughes, B. D.)
Signs of age
We are as immortal as the angels until our work is done, and, that
finished, the best thing that can happen to us is to be called home to rest at
once rather than to be here, weak and worthless, in our tents waiting on the
plains of Moab. When Dr. Bees preached last in North Wales a friend said to
him--one of those who are always reminding people that they are getting
old--“You are whitening fast, Dr. Bees.” The old gentleman did not say anything
then; but when he got to the pulpit he referred to it, and said, “There is a
wee white flower that comes up through the earth at this season of the
year--sometimes it comes up through the snow and frost; but we are all glad to
see the snowdrop, because it proclaims that the winter is over and that the
summer is at baud. A friend reminded me last night that I was whitening fast.
But heed not that, brother; it is to me a proof that my winter will soon be
over, that I shall have done presently with the cold and east winds and the
frosts of earth, and that my summer--my eternal summer--is at hand.” (Heber
Evans.)
What men reap in age
A young man came to a man of ninety years of age and said to him,
“How have you made out to live so long and be so well?” The old man took the
youngster to an orchard, and, pointing to some large trees full of apples,
said, “I planted these trees when I was a boy, and do you wonder that now I am
permitted to gather the fruit of them?” We gather in old age what we plant in
our youth. Sow to the wind and we reap the whirlwind. Plant in early life the right
kind of a Christian character, and you will eat luscious fruit in old age, and
gather these harvest apples in eternity. (Dr. Talmage.)
Age and Christ
A distinguished Oneida chief, named Skenandon, having yielded to
the instructions of the Bey. Mr. Kirkland, and lived a reformed man for fifty
years, said just before he died, in his hundred and twentieth year, “I am an
aged hemlock; the winds of one hundred years have whistled through my branches;
I am dead at the top” (he was blind); “why I yet live the great good Spirit
only knows. Pray to my Jesus that I may wait with patience my appointed time to
die; and when I die, lay me by the side of my minister and father, that I may
go up with him at the great resurrection.”
Weakness of age
To an acquaintance who inquired about his welfare, he gave this
account: “I am but weak; but it is delightful to find one’s self weak in
everlasting arms; oh, how much do I owe my Lord! What a mercy, that once within
the covenant, there is no getting out of it again; now I find my faculties much
impaired.” His relations answering that it was only his memory which seemed to
be effected with his disease:--“Well,” said he, “oh, how marvellous that God
hath continued my judgment, considering how much I have abused it; and continued
my hope of eternal life, though I have misimproved it!”. . . Speaking on the
same topic afterwards he said very beautifully, “Were I once in heaven, a look
of Christ would cure my failing memory, and all my other weaknesses. There I
shall not need wine nor spirits to recruit me; no, nor shall I think of them,
but as Christ was through them kind to me.” (Life of the Rev. John Brown of
Haddington.)
Gathered to his people
Dimly, vaguely, veiledly, but unmistakably, as it seems to me, is
here expressed at least a premonition and feeling after the thought of an
immortal self in Abraham that was not there in what “his son Isaac Ishmael laid
in the cave at Macpelah,” but was somewhere else and was for ever. That is the
first thing hinted at here--the continuance of the personal being after death.
Is there anything more? I think there is. Now, remember, Abraham’s whole life
was shaped by that commandment, “Get thee out from thy father’s house, and from
thy kindred, and from thy country.” He never dwelt with his kindred; all his
days he was a pilgrim and sojourner, a stranger in a strange land. But now he
is gathered to his people. The life of isolation is over, the true social life
is begun. He is no longer separated from those around him, or flung amidst
those that are uncongenial to him. “He is gathered to his people”; he dwells
with his own tribe; he is at home; he is in the city. Further, the expressions
suggest that in the future men shall be associated according to affinity and
character. “He was gathered to his people,” whom he was like and who were like
him; the people with whom he had sympathy, the people whose lives were shaped
after the fashion of his own. Men will be sorted there. Gravitation will come
into play undisturbed; and the pebbles will be ranged according to their
weights on the great shore where the sea has cast them up, as they are upon
Chesil beach, down there in the English Channel, and many another coast
besides; all the big ones together and sized off to the smaller ones, regularly
and steadily laid out. Like draws to like. Our spiritual affinities, our
religious and moral character, will settle where we shall be and who our
companions will be when we get yonder. Some of us would not altogether like to
live with the people that are like ourselves, and some of us would not find the
result of this sorting to be very delightful. Men in the Dantesque circles were
only made more miserable because all around them were of the same sort, and
some of them worse than themselves. And an ordered hell, with no company for
the liar but liars, and none for the thief but thieves, and none for impure men
but the impure, and none for the godless but the godless, would be a hell
indeed. “He was gathered to his people,” and you and I will be gathered
likewise. What is the conclusion of the whole matter? Let us follow with our
thoughts, and in our lives those who have gone into the light, and cultivate in
heart and character those graces and excellences which are congruous with the
inheritance of the saints in light. Above all let us give our hearts to Christ,
by simple faith in Him, to be shaped and sanctified by Him. Then our country
will be where He is, and our people will be the people in whom His love abides,
and the tribe to which we belong will be the tribe of which He is Chieftain. So
when our turn comes, we may rise thankfully from the table in the wilderness,
which He has spread for us, having eaten as much as we desired, and quietly
follow the dark-robed messenger whom His love sends to bring us to the happy
multitudes that throng the streets of the city. There we shall find our true
home, our kindred, our King. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
Verse 11
God blessed his son Isaac
Divine blessing
Two large and perpetual principles, on which the government of God
proceeds, are involved in such commonplace incidents, as death, benefits
received, and access to a well of water--
God had blessed
Abraham, and He blessed Isaac; He repeated His procedure. Isaac received the
Divine blessing at the well Lahairoi--where Abraham did not dwell: God did not
repeat Himself.
I. I ask you,
fathers and mothers, to CONSIDER THE BEST INHERITANCE WHICH CAN BE LEFT TO
CHILDREN. It is not property or riches. If your children never inherit from you
anything but a few cheap well-used articles of furniture, yet can point to your
grave and say, “Under that grassy mound lie the remains of one who lived a life
of faith in the Son of God, and tried to make the world of his neighbourhood
better,” be sure they will inherit from you that which is more helpful and
ennobling than cartloads of gold or silver. Be it yours to secure that.
II. LET EACH ONE
CONSIDER THE NECESSITY OF PERSONAL OBEDIENCE TO GOD, IN ORDER TO BE FULLY
BLESSED. You may have not a few rich temporal blessings, but if you have not
received the grace of the Holy Spirit so as to call Jesus Christ Lord, then you
are rejecting that which alone conveys the favour in which is life eternal. No
one can acquire this blessing for you.
III. CONSIDER THE
VARYING CONDITIONS TO WHICH THE DIVINE BLESSING COMES. Abraham, Isaac,
Jacob--so different in their character--all were blessed by the Lord.
IV. IN ORDER TO
OBTAIN AND RETAIN DIVINE BLESSING, WE MUST KNOW THE SECRET OF SECURING IT.
Isaac’s knowledge of it is suggested by the words, “He dwelt by the well
Lahai-roi”--the well of the Living, Seeing One. Have you no memory of a private
room, or a sick bed, or a communion, when there came a flow of light and
impulse into your heart, and Jesus appeared to be your life as never before? Do
you never return in spirit to that scene, and endeavour again to refresh
yourself with its intimations? The Lord who blessed you then is the same still.
(D. G. Watt, M. A.)
A word for quiet people
1. After the death of Abraham, God blessed Isaac. What a contrast
meets us as we turn to him. The longest lived of the patriarchs, yet what a
little space he fills. Abraham has many chapters--so has Jacob, but Isaac has
scarcely a single chapter to himself, this is the lesson of his life. We talk
of most men because of their importance. I want to talk of Isaac because of his
unimportance. His are the annals of a quiet life. God is the God of Abraham.
Yes, we do not wonder at that--Abraham the hero, the warrior, the father and
founder of great nations--the man of such gifts and such achievements. But God
is the God of Isaac, too--the God of the quiet uneventful life. The heavenly
Father hath room in His heart for all His children. He who maketh us to differ,
loves us in all the separateness of our character.
2. Remember that Isaac is needed as well as Abraham. It is well that
there should be some few men here and there, lifted up above the rest like the
high hills that touch the sky. The sight of them is needful to refresh us, to
expand our thought, to break the dead level of life, and to bring down
blessings from heaven. But we need the quiet fields as well as the mountain
heights--they give us the grass of the meadow and the corn of the valley. Earth
has need of common people--and indeed most need of them. Some one said one day
to Abraham Lincoln, referring to some prominent man, “He is a common-looking
person.” “Friend,” said Abraham Lincoln, “the Lord prefers common-looking
people, that is why He has made so many of them.” If folks were all splendid
geniuses, whirling to heaven in chariots of fire, who would do the humdrum work
of life? Let us learn to think rightly of common-place people, including
ourselves. George Eliot preaches a needed gospel when she writes of one of her
characters, “He whose fortunes I have undertaken to relate was in no respect an
ideal or exceptional character . . . a man whose virtues were not heroic, and
who had no undetected crime within his heart; who had not the slightest mystery
hanging about him, but was palpably and unmistakably common-place . . . But,
dear madam, it is so very large a majority of your fellow-countrymen that are
of this insignificant stamp. Yet these common-place people--many of them--bear
a conscience, and have felt the sublime prompting to do the painful right; they
have their unspoken sorrows and their sacred joys; their hearts have perhaps
gone out towards their first-born, and they have mourned over the irreclaimable
dead. Depend upon it you would gain unspeakably if you would learn to see more
of the poetry and pathos, the tragedy and comedy, lying in the experience of a
human soul that looks through dull grey eyes and that speaks in a voice of
quite ordinary tones.”
3. Remember the advantages of such a life. “Isaac went into the
field at eventide to meditate.” Of such life, this is its distinction. If it
have less of action, it certainly has more room for meditation. If it knows
fewer things, yet it generally knows them better and deeper. If it has less
glory and triumph, yet it has closer and steadier communion. If it cannot fight
the Master’s battles, it can sit at the Master’s feet and learn of Him. The
quiet life has its blessings. Down by the stream the little meadow lay; and it
heard afar off the roar of the great city, and it saw the ruddy glare of its
lights flung up against the murky sky. “Alas!” it sighed, “how dull a life is
mine! Yonder, in the city, with its thousands, one might do some good. But I am
so far away and useless.” But in the night time came the stars and sang to
it--“Foolish creature, we are thine in all our silvery brightness, we whom they
scarcely see in the city.” Then the dew fell and whispered to its heart--“And I
am thine, I that am of no use on the hard city ways.” And up rose the sun and
woke the flowers and painted them afresh, and it said--“I am thine, I who have
to fight with city fogs for many an hour yonder.” And the meadow thought it had
something to sing about after all, and the lark went soaring heavenward with
music. But one day it heard some stray city sparrow tell a tale about the
hungry little children, and the drunken men, and the wretched women, and about
weary rich folks. And it grew sad again and said--“What can I do down here, out
of the way, and so common-place!” Then came the breeze and it cried in a hurry,
“Quick! give us your freshness and fragrance that we may bless the crowded
courts and streets,” and it was off. And there came some that picked the
flowers from beside the stream, and told how they should gladden many a weary
heart, and smile upon sick children, and light up many a dreary home. Then the
meadow sang a sweeter song than ever, and was glad that He who maketh all hath
so much room for the quiet and unknown, and can turn these to such good
account. God blessed Isaac.
4. Remember, again, that if quiet people do not go up so high as
others, they do not go down so low. “Happy is the nation whose annals are
dull,” said an authority. Think of Abraham and David and Elijah, and you will
see that the life of Isaac has its compensations.
5. Again-there is a special beauty of character belonging to the
quiet life. Take another of the few incidents in Isaac’s life--that recorded in
the sixty-seventh verse of the twenty-fourth chapter--“And he brought
Rebekah into his mother Sarah’s tent, and he loved her, and was
comforted after his mother’s death.” The gentle heart grieving for his mother,
and solaced by the love of Rebekah, is an aspect of the quiet life worth
lingering over. These are the gifts with which the quiet people do enrich the
world. We do not wonder now that God blessed Isaac.
6. Notice further--that the quiet life has its trials. We see it in
the picture of the dim-eyed Isaac sitting in the tent door, bidding his son
fetch for him the venison which his soul loved--an ease that breeds a
self-indulgence is the besetment of the quiet life. It needs to be stirred up,
and that sharply at times, and so there comes the famine, rousing him-making
the somewhat sluggish life beat more vigorously. Bringing new wants that
require new devices. Bringing new conditions that must be dealt with. No
harvest ever did so much for Isaac as that famine. Yet another tendency of the
quiet life is to fear and to cunning. We see it in Jacob the quiet man, the
smooth man. But here in Isaac is the possibility. The story of the men of Gerar
and Rebekah shows this tendency in Isaac. They who are weakest need most of all
the help of God and have most room for it. They who have no other gifts must
make the most of this.
7. Again, the quiet uneventful life has its victories--victories as
brave and oftentimes alike more noble and complete than the victories of the
warrior. Isaac pitched his tent in the Valley of Gerar and dwelt there, and
Isaac digged the wells of water which they had digged in the days of Abraham
his father (Genesis 18:23). Then the Philistines came
and stopped up the well. Ishmael would have fought for it, but that would have
taken time and men’s lives, and have established a feud between himself and his
neighbours. And after all he would have had to dig out the well again. So it
was a saving of trouble and time and of much else at once to dig the well. So
he digged again, and the Philistines came and filled that also. Again he might
have fought about that too--but all that made it worth while to dig before made
it worth while to dig again. So he removed from thence and digged another well;
and for that they strove not. He had got to Rehoboth--“room.” It is a good
place to live, Rehoboth--where there is room for forgiveness and patience there
is room for peace. And the Lord appeared to him the same night and said, “Fear
not, for I am with thee, and will bless thee.” Where there is room for love
there is room for God. Then came the kings and chief captains who had sent him
away and won by his gentleness, they sought an alliance with him--“We saw
certainly that the Lord was with thee: and we said, let there now be an oath
betwixt us, and let us make a covenant with thee. Thou art now the blessed of
the Lord. And he made them a feast, and they did eat and drink.” It was a great
triumph of peace principles; as pure a victory as was ever won. So the quiet
man was a hero all unbeknown to himself, and won a more noble victory then ever
came of cruel bloodshed. These gentle souls have a mighty power, mightier than
we reckon--like the silent stars that rule the darkness by shining. Lastly, let
us remember that it was not Isaac’s natural character that singled him out for
distinction; but it was his relation to the coming Messiah, the Lord Jesus
Christ. This was Abraham’s greatness; and here was Isaac as great as Abraham.
And herein is our greatness too. Not in what we are can we find our glory, but
in Him, our Saviour and our King. (Mark Guy Pearse.)
Isaac
I. THE PERSONAL
CHARACTER OF THIS MAN TAKES ROOT IN THE BLESSING OF GOD.
1. His natural life commences with a special benediction, for he was
a child of promise.
2. Isaac had a remarkable dedication in his youth.
3. But it is now, when Abraham is dead, that he more largely
receives the blessing.
4. More deeply impressed at the last than at the first, he solemnly
prepares transmit that blessing which he had inherited.
II. THIS MAN’S
MARKED INDIVIDUALITY GROWS UP AND SHAPES ITSELF IN THE GODLY HABITS OF A
PROTRACTED LIFE.
1. His habit of thought.
2. His habit of dealing with men.
3. His habits at home.
III. THE MARKED
INDIVIDUALITY OF THIS MAN IS SEEN IN THE AMPLE FRUIT WHICH IT BORE.
1. It is in Isaac that we get the best expression of patriotism.
2. Come within the radius of this man’s influence, and you feel that
he, too, in the best sense, was a man of the world.
3. But notably you feel in Isaac’s case what is that influence which
leads a man to make ample and timely disposition of his secular affairs, that
he may give himself more fully to better things. (G. Woolnough, M. A.)
Verses 12-18
These are the generations of Ishmael
I.
The generations of Ishmael
I. THAT THOSE WHO
ARE NOT APPOINTED TO THE MOST HONOURABLE PLACE ARE YET CARED FOR BY PROVIDENCE.
II. THAT
PROVIDENCE AFFORDS ENCOURAGEMENTS FOR THE SUPPORT OF FAITH AND VIRTUE.
III. THAT THE
FAITHFULNESS OF PROVIDENCE MAY BE PROVED ON DIFFERENT LINES. Past and present
condition of
The genealogies of the wicked
1. The genealogies of the wicked, God sometimes recorded for His own
glory and the sake of the Church (Genesis 25:12).
2. God doth by name punctually perform His promise unto His
servants, though it be concerning the wicked.
3. God doth vouchsafe a more abundant seed sometimes to the children
of the flesh than to the children of the promise. Ishmael hath many sons, it is
long till Isaac hath any.
4. Great dignities, commands, and powers below God doth cast upon
bondmen in the Church (Genesis 25:16). One drachm of grace is
above monarchies.
5. A long age may betide an Ishmael, but not a good one.
6. A like death may seem to be both to the righteous and the wicked,
but it is not so in truth.
7. The wicked in death are gathered to their people as well as the
righteous unto theirs (Genesis 25:17).
8. God giveth the lot of habitation, motion and cessation unto the
worst of men on earth (Genesis 25:18). (G. Hughes, B. D.)
Verses 19-23
The generations of Isaac.
--
The holy seed
1. God hath a special care to commend unto posterity the line of His
Church, and His providences towards it.
2. The eminent line of the Church visible begins from Abraham (Genesis 25:19).
3. The holy seed run not foolishly nor hastily into the marriage
covenant, but in maturity and prudence.
4. God separates the mother of His Church from all superstitious
relations. In calling any to His Church God separates them from corrupt
relations (Genesis 25:20). (G. Hughes, B. D.)
Lessons
1. In God’s answer of prayer the greatest mercies may be given in,
with the greatest temptation.
2. Hard temptations may sometimes cause gracious souls to be discontented
with their mercies.
3. In such temptations gracious hearts make their resource to God to
know His mind and do it (Genesis 25:22). (G. Hughes, B. D.)
Lessons
1. Jehovah vouchsafes answers to His troubled petitioners suitable
to their desires.
2. God hath by natural symptoms in some declared the two great
parties of the world and of the Church.
3. God’s oracle hath foretold heavy divisions between them.
4. God hath so ordered that the people of the world may be outwardly
stronger than the Church.
5. It is God’s oracle that the greatest in the world shall serve the
least in the Church.
6. The preferring or undervaluing of creatures either for outward or
inward, temporal or eternal good, depends wholly upon God’s will (Genesis 25:23). (G. Hughes, B. D.)
Rebekah’s barrenness
The intended mother of the promised seed was left for twenty years
childless--to contend with the doubts, surmises, evil proposals, proud
challengings of God, and murmurings, which must undoubtedly have arisen even in
so bright and spirited a heart as Rebekah’s. It was thus she was taught the
seriousness of the possession she had chosen for herself, and gradually led to
the implicit faith requisite for the discharge of its responsibilities. Many
young persons have a similar experience. They seem to themselves to have chosen
a wrong position, to have made a thorough mistake in life, and to have brought
themselves into circumstances in which they only retard, or quite prevent the
prosperity of those with whom they are connected. In proportion as Rebekah
loved Isaac, and entered into his prospects, must she have been tempted to
think she had far better have remained in Padanaram. It is a humbling thing to
stand in-some other person’s way; but if it is by no fault of ours, but in
obedience to affection or conscience we are in this position, we must, in
humility and patience, wait upon Providence as Rebekah did, and resist all
morbid despondency. This second barrenness in the prospective mother of the
promised seed was as needful to all concerned as the first was; for the people
of God, no more than any others, can learn in one lesson. They must again be
brought to a real dependence on God as the Giver of the heir. The prayer with
which Isaac “entreated” the Lord for his wife “because she was barren” was a
prayer of deeper intensity than he could have uttered had he merely remembered
the story that had been told him of his own birth. God must be recognized again
and again and throughout as the Giver of life to the promised line. Learn,
therefore, that although God has given you means of working out His salvation,
your Rebekah will be barren without His continued activity. On His own means
you must re-invite His blessing, for without the continuance of His aid you
will make nothing of the most beautiful and appropriate helps He has given you.
It was by pain, anxiety, and almost dismay, that Rebekah received intimation
that her prayer was answered. In this she is the type of many whom God hears.
Inward strife, miserable forebodings, deep dejection, are often the first
intimations that God is listening to our prayer and is beginning to work within
us. (M. Dods, D. D.)
Verses 24-26
Twins
Birth of Esau and Jacob
I.
THEIR
MARKED INDIVIDUALITY.
II. HOW HEREBY IS
POINTED OUT THEIR FUTURE DESTINY.
III. HOW THEIR CHARACTERS,
SO EARLY DEVELOPED, AFFECTED THE PREFERENCES OF THEIR PARENTS. (T. H. Leale.)
The twins
The children whose birth and destinies were thus predicted, at
once gave evidence of a difference even greater than that which will often
strike one as existing between two brothers, though rarely between twins. The
first was born, all over like a hairy garment, presenting the appearance of
being rolled up in a fur cloak or the skin of an animal--an appearance which
did not pass away in childhood, but so obstinately adhered to him through life,
that an imitation of his hands could be produced with the hairy skin of a kid.
This was by his parents considered ominous. The want of the hairy covering
which the lower animals have, is one of the signs marking out man as destined
for a higher and more refined life than they; and when their son appeared in
this guise, they could not but fear it prognosticated his sensual, animal
career. So they called him Esau. And so did the younger son from the first show
his nature, catching the heel of his brother, as if he were striving to be
first-born; and so they called him Jacob, the heel-catcher or supplanter--as
Esau afterwards bitterly observed--a name which precisely suited his crafty,
plotting nature, shown in his twice over tripping up and overthrowing his elder
brother. The name which Esau handed down to his people was, however, not his
original name, but one derived from the colour of that for which he sold his
birthright. It was in that exclamation of his, “Feed me with the same red,”
that he disclosed his character. (M. Dods, D. D.)
Verse 27
And the boys grew: and Esau was a cunning hunter
Esau, the hunter
I.
A
man of strong physical nature, a man of passion, with little self-restraint.
II. A man of swift
impulse.
III. A man reckless
of consequences. The present, the immediate, arrests him.
IV. Esau had no
sense of spiritual things. (L. D. Bevan.)
The animal and the spiritual
I. Esau was full
of healthy vigour and the spirit of adventure, exulting in field sports,
active, muscular, with the rough aspect and the bounding pulse of the free
desert. Jacob was a harmless shepherd, pensive and tranquil, dwelling by the
hearth and caring only for quiet occupations. Strength and speed and courage
and endurance are blessings not lightly to be despised; but he who confines his
ideal to them, as Esau did, chooses a low ideal, and one which can bring a man
but little peace at the last. Esau reaches but half the blessing of a man, and
that the meaner and temporal half; the other half seems seldom or never to have
entered his thoughts.
II. So side by
side the boys grew up; and the next memorable scene of their history shows us
that the great peril of animal life--the peril lest it should forget God
altogether and merge into mere uncontrolled, intemperate sensuality--had
happened to Esau I For the mess of pottage the sensual hunter sells in one
moment the prophecy of the far future and the blessing of a thousand years.
Esau’s epitaph is the epitaph of a lifetime recording for ever the consummated
carelessness of a moment. Esau, “a profane person, . . . who for one morsel of
meat sold his birthright.” Jacob, with all the contemptible faults which lay on
the surface of his character, had deep within his soul the faith in the unseen,
the sense of dependence on and love to God which Esau did not even comprehend.
1. Cultivate the whole of the nature which God has given you, and in
doing so remember that the mind is of more moment than the body, and the soul
than both.
2. Beware lest, in a moment of weakness and folly, you sell your
birthright and barter your happy innocence for torment and fear and shame. (Archdeacon
Farrar.)
Politic hunting
I. His STRENGTH:
A HUNTER. Hunting in itself is a delight lawful and laudable, and may well be
argued for from the disposition that God hath put into creatures. He hath
naturally inclined one kind of beasts to pursue another for man’s profit and
pleasure. He hath given the dog a secret instinct to follow the hare, the hart,
the fox, the boar, as if he would direct a man by the finger of nature to
exercise those qualities which His Divine wisdom created in them.
1. This practice of hunting hath in it delight.
2. Benefit. Recreations have also their profitable use, if rightly
undertaken.
II. HIS POLICY: A
CUNNING HUNTER.
1. He had a ravenous and intemperate desire. This appears from three
phrases he used:
2. His folly may be argued from his base estimation of the birthright;
that he would so lightly part from it, and on so easy conditions as pottage.
3. Another argument of his folly was ingratitude to God, who had in
mercy vouchsafed him, though but by a few minutes, the privilege of
primogeniture; wherewith divines hold that the priesthood was also conveyed.
4. His obstinacy taxeth his folly, that, after cold blood, leisure
to think of the treasure he sold, and digestion of his pottage, he repented,
not of his rashness, but (Genesis 25:34) “He did eat, and drink,
and rose up, and went his way”--filled his belly, rose up to his former
customs, and went his way without a Quidfeci? Therefore it is added, “he
despised his birthright.” He followed his pleasures without any interception of
sorrow or interruption of conscience. His whole life was a circle of sinful
customs; and not his birthright’s loss can put him out of them.
5. Lastly, his perfidious nature appeareth, that though he had made
an absolute conveyance of his birthright to Jacob, and sealed the deed with an
oath, yet he seemed to make but a jest of it, and purposed in his heart not to
perform it. Thus literally; let us now come to some moral application to
ourselves. Hunting is, for the most part, taken in the Holy Scripture in the
worst sense. So (Genesis 10:9) Nimrod was a hunter, even
to a proverb; and that “before the Lord,” as without fear of His majesty. Now,
if it were so hateful to hunt beasts, what is it to hunt men? The wicked
oppressors of the world are here typed and taxed, who employ both arm and brain
to hunt the poor out of their habitations, and to drink the blood of the
oppressed Herein observe--
I. The persons
hunted.
II. The manner of
hunting; and,
III. The hounds.
1. The poor are their prey: any man that either their wit or
violence can practise on.
2. You hear the object they hunt; attend the manner. And this you
shall find, as Esau’s, to consist in two things--force and fraud. They are not
only hunters, but cunning hunters.
3. Now for their hounds. Besides that they have long noses
themselves, and hands longer than their noses, they have dogs of all sorts.
Beagles, cunning intelligencers--the more crafty they are, the more
commendable, Their setters, prowling promoters; whereof there may be necessary
use, as men may have dogs, but they take them for mischievous purposes. Their
spaniels, fawning sycophants, who lick their master’s hands, but are brawling
ever at poor strangers. Their great mastiffs; surly and sharking bailiffs, that
can set a rankling tooth in the poor tenants’ ribs. Thus I have shown you a
field of hunters; what should I add, but my prayers to heaven, and desires to
earth, that these hunters may be hunted? The hunting of harmful beasts is
commended: the wolf, the boar, the bear, the fox, the tiger, the otter. But the
metaphorical hunting of these is more praiseworthy; the country wolves, or city
foxes, deserve most to be hunted. (T. Adams.)
Jacob was a plain man,
dwelling in tents
First impressions of Jacob
I. JACOB WAS THE
FATHER OF THE JEWISH RACE, AND A TYPICAL JEW. If we can understand the life of
Jacob, we can understand the history of his people. The extremes which startle
us in them are all in him. Like them, he is the most successful schemer of his
times; and, like them, he has that deep spirituality, that far-seeing faith,
which are the grandest of all qualities, and make a man capable of the highest
culture that a human spirit can receive. Like them, he spends the greatest part
of his life in exile, and amid trying conditions of toil and sorrow; and, like
them, he is inalienably attached to that dear land, his only hold on which was
by the promise of God, and the graves of the heroic dead.
II. JACOB HAS SO
MANY POINTS OF CONTACT WITH OURSELVES.
1. His failings speak to us.
2. His aspirations speak to us.
3. His sorrows speak to us.
III. IN JACOB WE
CAN TRACE THE WORKINGS OF DIVINE LOVE. “Jacob have I loved” (Malachi 1:2).
1. It was pre-natal love.
2. It was fervent love.
3. It was a disciplinary love.
IV. JACOB’S LIFE
GIVES A CLUE TO THE DOCTRINE OF ELECTION (see Romans 9:11). Election refers largely, if
not primarily, to the service which the elect are qualified to render to their
fellows throughout all coming time. (F. B. Meyer, B. A.)
Childhood shows the man
I. THAT CONDUCT
IN THE DAYS OF YOUTH FOREBODES THE PROCEDURE OF AFTER DAYS.
II. THAT THE BIBLE
INDICATES THE RIGHT WAY OF GROWING UP INTO A WORTHY MANHOOD.
III. THAT NATURAL
TENDENCIES MUST BE UNDER CONTROL FROM THE OUTSET OF LIFE. Conclusion: Read this
item in the life of Jacob and Esau--
1. To learn in what you may be tending to wrong.
2. To impress you with the truth that there are critical hours in
every one’s life.
3. To realize that there is present help against yielding. (D. G.
Watt, M. A.)
Jacob’s home life
I. FRATERNAL
DISSIMILARITY.
II. PARENTAL
PARTIALITY.
III. CONJUGAL,
CONTRARIETY. Lessons:
1. The responsibility of parents.
2. The need of love as a cementing influence in home life.
3. The baseness of unbrotherliness.
4. The downward course of sin. (T. S. Dickson.)
Dwelling in tents
Two things are observable in the holy patriarchs, and commendable
to all that will be heirs with them of eternal life.
1. Their contempt of the world. They that dwell in tents intend not
a long dwelling in a place. They are moveables, ever ready to be transferred at
the occasion and will of the inhabiter. “Abraham dwelt in tents with Isaac and
Jacob, the heirs with him of the same promise” (Hebrews 11:9). The reason is added, “for
he looked for a city which hath foundations, whose builder and maker is God.”
These saints studied not to enlarge their barns, as the rich cosmopolite (Luke 12:1-59.), or to sing requiems to
their souls, in the hoped perpetuity of earthly habitations. “Soul, live; thou
hast enough laid up for many years.” Fool! he had not enough for that night.
They had no thought that their houses should continue for ever, and their
dwelling-places to all generations; thereupon calling their lands after their
own Psalms 49:11). God convinceth the foolish
security of the Jews, to whom He had promised (by the Messiah to be purchased)
an everlasting royalty in heaven, by the Rechabites (Jeremiah 35:7), who built no houses, but
dwelt in tents, as if they were strangers, ready on a short warning for
removal. The Church esteems heaven her home, this world but a tent, a tent
which we must all leave, build we as high as Babel, as strong as Babylon. When
we have fortified, combined, feasted, death comes with a voider, and takes away
all.
2. Their frugality should not pass unregarded. Here is no ambition
of great buildings; a tent will serve. How differ our days and hearts from
those! The fashion is now to build great houses to our lands, till we have no
lands to our houses; and the credit of a good house is made, not to consist in
outward hospitality, but in outward walls. (T. Adams.)
The advantages of plain dealing
1. The principal is to please God, whose displeasure against
double-dealing the sad examples of Saul for the Amalekites, of Gehazi for the
bribes, of Ananias for the inheritance, testify in their destruction. Whose
delight in plain-dealing Himself affirms: “Behold an Israelite indeed, in whom
is no guile!” (John 1:17).
2. The credit of a good name, which is a most worthy treasure, is
thus preserved. The riches left thee by thy ancestors may miscarry through
others’ negligence; the name not, save by thy own fault. It is the
plain-dealer’s reward, his name shall be had in estimation; whereas no faith is
given to the dissembler, even speaking truth. Every man is more ready to trust
the poor plain-dealer than the glittering, false-tongued gallant.
3. It prevents and infatuates all the malicious plots of enemies. God,
in regard to thy simplicity, brings to nought all their machinations. Thou, O
Lord, hadst respect to my simple pureness. An innocent fool takes fearless
steps, and walks as securely as if it stood girt with a wall of brass.
4. It preserves thy state from ruin. When by subtlety men think to
scrape together much wealth, all is but the spider’s web, artificial and weak.
What plain-dealing-gets, sticks by us, and infallibly derives itself to our
posterity. If thou wouldst be good to thyself and thine, use plainness.
5. It shall somewhat keep thee from the troubles and vexations of
the world.
6. The curses of the poor shall never hurt thee. Though the
causeless curse shall never come, yet it is happy for a man so to live that all
may bless him. Now the plain man shall have this at last. Gallant prodigality,
like fire in flax, makes a great blaze, a hot show, but plain hospitality, like
fire in solid wood, holds out to warm the poor, because God blesseth it. So I
have seen hot spurs in the way gallop amain; but the ivy bushes have so stayed
them, that the plain traveller comes first to his journey’s end.
7. It shall be thy best comfort on thy death-bed: the conscience of
an innocent life. On this staff leans aged Samuel: “Whose ox or ass have I
taken?”
8. Lastly, thou shalt find rest for thy soul. Thou hast dealt
plainly; so will God with thee, multiplying upon thee His promised mercies. (T.
Adams.)
Jacob’s election; or, Divine sovereignty in its relation to life
I. Although Jacob
obtained, in virtue of his election, a certain priority over Esau, yet was Esau
also, equally with Jacob, the subject of Divine sovereignty.
II. The
appointment of God’s sovereignty concerning these two brothers did in no wise
determine their eternal destinies, but only the sphere of their human
histories.
III. It may have
been the case that the positions severally assigned to both Jacob and Esau in
the family of Isaac, were just those which were best adapted to ensure the
blessedness of both. Perhaps the only way to bring such a disposition as Esau’s
to esteem his birthright in Isaac was to transfer it to another. And that this
discipline was not lost on Esau the event distinctly shows. (W. Roberts.)
And the boys grew
I. They grew
bodily. Natural provision for this. Food, air, exercise, increase bulk of body.
Explain. Grew in stature and in strength.
II. They grew
mentally. Natural provision for this. Memory a storehouse for facts. Judgment a
mill for grinding them up and digesting them. Some boys are careless, dull,
disobedient, self-willed, grow slowly, become men bodily and remain children in
mind. Providential provision for mental growth. Books, schools, &c. These
boys had not these things.
III. They grew very
unlike each other. Sketch their differences, bodily, mentally, morally. See
rest of verse. Brothers often unlike in temper, taste, &c. With all mental
and other differences they should be alike pious. “Boy father of the man.”
IV. They grew up
into history. Which became the most prominent? Why? The practice of prayer at
length made Jacob the better man. He overcame evil. Esau degenerated. Learn:
You are all growing bodily: are you growing mentally? Do you grow in wisdom and
in grace, and in the favour of God and man? Are you growing like Christ,
growing up into Christ, growing more fit for heaven?
Constancy and inconstancy in the two brothers
It has been pointed out that the weakness in Esau’s character
which makes him so striking a contrast to his brother is his inconstancy.
“That
one error Fill him with faults; makes him run through all the sins.”
Constancy, persistence, dogged tenacity is certainly the striking
feature of Jacob’s character. He could wait and bide his lime; he could retain
one purpose year after year till it was accomplished. The very motto of his
life was, “I will not let Thee go except Thou bless me.” He watched for Esau’s
weak moment, and took advantage of it. He served fourteen years for the woman
he loved, and no hardship quenched his love. Nay, when a whole lifetime
intervened, and he lay dying in Egypt, his constant heart still turned to
Rachel, as if he had parted with her but yesterday. In contrast with his
tenacious, constant character stands Esau, led by impulse, betrayed by
appetite, everything by turns and nothing long. To-day despising his birthright,
to-morrow breaking his heart because for its loss; to-day vowing he will murder
his brother, to-morrow falling on his neck and kissing him; a man you cannot
reckon upon, and of too shallow a nature for anything to root itself deeply in.
(M. Dods, D. D.)
Life revealed in its progress
One ship is as good as another in the harbour. It is outside of
the harbour that the comparative merits of different vessels are made to
appear. There their qualities, whether superior or inferior, show themselves.
It is what ships do on the sea that determines that one is better or worse than
another. And as with ships, so with men. Two men start about alike on the morn
of life. They go along at first about together. But follow them five or ten
years, and about the fifth, the sixth, or the seventh year, the one--a man of
pleasure, a godless man, a man that does not believe in a Divine supervision of
the affairs of this world--begins to degenerate; while the other--a sober
Christian man, who believes that God controls the world and all that are in
it--in the beginning lays his foundation, going down so deep that he seems for
a time to burrow like a marmot; but then, little by little, he begins to work
upward, and he builds so that every hour men see that he is building strongly
and surely. (H. W. Beecher.)
Verses 29-34
Esau despised his birthright
The story of the birthright
The story of the birthright shows us what kind of a man Esau was:
hasty, careless, fond of the good things of this life.
He had no reason to complain if he lost his birthright. He did not care for it,
and so he had thrown it away. The day came when he wanted his birthright, and
could not have it, and found no place for repentance that is, no chance of
undoing what he had done--though he sought it carefully with tears. He had
sown, and he must reap. He had made his bed, and he must lie on it. And so must
Jacob in his turn.
I. IT IS NATURAL
TO PITY ESAU, BUT WE HAVE NO RIGHT TO DO MORE WE HAVE NO RIGHT TO FANCY FOR A
MOMENT THAT GOD WAS ARBITRARY OR HARD UPON HIM. Esau is not the sort of man to
be the father of a great nation, or of anything else great. Greedy, passionate,
reckless people like him, without due feeling of religion or the unseen world,
are not the men to govern the world or help it forward.
II. GOD REWARDED
JACOB’S FAITH BY GIVING HIM MORE LIGHT by not leaving him to himself and his
own darkness and meanness, but opening his eyes to understand the wondrous
things of His law, and showing him how that law is everlasting, righteous, not
to be escaped by any man; how every action brings forth its appointed fruit;
how those who sow the wind will reap the whirlwind.
III. IT IS THE
STEADY, PRUDENT, GOD-FEARING ONES, WHO WILL PROSPER ON THE EARTH, and not poor,
wild, hot-headed Esau. But those who give way to meanness, covetousness,
falsehood, as Jacob did, will repent it, the Lord will enter into judgment with
them quickly. (C. Kingsley, M. A.)
The despised birthright
In forfeiting his birthright to his younger brother, Esau gave
up--
1. The right of priesthood inherent in the eldest line of the
patriarch’s family;
2. The promise of the inheritance of the Holy Land;
3. The promise that in his race and of his blood Messiah should be
born. Esau parted with all this because, as he said in the rough, unreflective
common-place strain which marks persons of his character even now, and which
they mistake for common sense--“He did not see the good of it all.” “What good
shall this birthright do me?”
I. IN MATTERS OF
KNOWLEDGE WE FIND MEN DESPISING. THEIR BIRTHRIGHT. Knowledge is power; but as
the maxim is used now, it is utterly vulgarizing. Knowledge not loved for
itself is not loved at all. It may bring power, but it brings neither peace nor
elevation to the man who has won it. If we cultivate knowledge for the sake of
worldly advantage, what are we doing but blaming farewell to all that is
lasting or spiritual in knowledge and wisdom, and taking in exchange for it a
daily meal?
II. AGAIN, AS
CITIZENS, MEN DESPISE THEIR BIRTHRIGHT. If, when it is given them to choose
their rulers, they deliberately set aside thinkers; if they laugh at and
despise the corrupt motives which affect the choice of rulers, and yet take no
serious step to render corrupt motive impotent--then there is a real denial and
abnegation of citizens to act on the highest grounds of citizenship.
III. WE ARE IN
DAILY DANGER OF SELLING OUR BIRTHRIGHT IN RELIGION. Esau’s birthright was a
poor shadow to ours. Esau had priesthood; we are called to be priests of a yet
higher order. Esau had earthly promises; so have we. Esau had the promise of
Messiah; we have the knowledge of Messiah Himself.
IV. THE LOST
BIRTHRIGHT IS THE ONE THING THAT IS IRRETRIEVABLE Neither good nor bad men
consent that a forfeited birthright should be restored. (Archbishop Benson.)
On despising one’s birthright
Esau repeats here, as we all of us repeat, the history of the
fall. Man’s first sin was despising his birthright. The fruit of the tree was
Eve’s mess of pottage; the friendship, the Fatherhood of God, was the
birthright which she despised.
I. WHAT IS A
BIRTHRIGHT? Briefly, it is that which combines high honour with sacred duty; it
confers dignity and power, but it demands self-abnegation and unselfish work.
Each of us is born with a birthright. God’s infinite realm is large enough to
confer on each one of us ,a title, and to demand in return a correspondent duty
and work. The prize we strive for and have a right to strive for is the wealth
of the universe through eternity.
II. WHAT IS IT TO
DESPISE A BIRTHRIGHT? ESAU despised his birthright by holding it cheaper than
life. All shrinking from the pain and sacrifice which are ever found in the
path of duty is a despising of the birthright, a counting ourselves unworthy of
the place in the mansion which God has made us to occupy.
III. THE INEVITABLE
FRUIT: the brand of reprobate. Esau was rejected as “under proof.” God sought a
son: He found a slave; He marked him, like Cain, and sent him away. The
birthright which we despise as a possession will haunt us as an avenger, and
will anticipate upon earth the gloom of the second and utter death. (J. B.
Brown, B. A.)
The sale of the birthright
Esau may be regarded as the founder of the Epicurean sort, of all
whose motto and philosophy of life is, “Let us eat and drink, for tomorrow we
die.” Such is the chief lesson of this history. But this history, considered in
itself, shows us that both the parties to this bargain are to blame. It was
unrighteous business, and altogether discreditable to the two brothers engaged
in it. This is evident if we--
I. CONSIDER THE
PARTIES ENGAGED IN THIS TRANSACTION AS ORDINARY MEMBERS OF SOCIETY.
1. As to Jacob’s conduct.
2. As to Esau’s conduct.
II. CONSIDER THE
PARTIES ENGAGED IN THIS TRANSACTION AS RELIGIOUS MEN.
1. As to Jacob’s conduct.
2. As to Esau’s conduct.
(a) He preferred the present to the future.
(b) He preferred the sensual to the spiritual.
(c) He preferred the near and certain to the distant and probable. (T.
H.Leale.)
Esau’s contempt of his birthright
Let us consider--
I. WHETHER THERE
BE NOT A BIRTHRIGHT WHICH WE MAY SELL OR BLESSINGS TO THE ENJOYMENT OF WHICH WE
ARE BORN, BUT WHICH WE MAY FORFEIT. Compare our state with that of--
II. FOR WHAT
CONSIDERATION THEY WHO SELL THIS BIRTHRIGHT PART WITH IT. (J. Benson, D. D.)
The two brothers
1. They differed in appearance.
2. They differed in pursuits.
3. They differed most in character.
I. THE
BIRTHRIGHT.
1. Not worldly prosperity.
2. Not immunity from sorrow.
3. The birthright was a spiritual heritage.
It gave the right--which ever belonged to its possessor--of being
the priest of the family or clan. It carried the privilege of being the
depositary and communicator of the Divine secrets. It constituted a link m the
line of descent by which the Messiah was to be born into the world. The right
of wielding power with God and men; the right of catching up and handing on--as
in the old Greek race--the torch of Messianic hope; the right ofheirship to the
promises of the covenant made to Abraham; the right of standing among the
spiritual aristocracy of mankind; the right of being a pilgrim of eternity,
owning no foot of earth, because all heaven was held in fee--this, and more
than this, was summed up in the possession of the birthright.
II. THE BARTER. We
cannot exonerate either of these men from blame. Jacob was not only a traitor
to his brother, but he was faithless towards his God. Had it not been
distinctly whispered in his mother’s ear that the elder of the brothers should
serve the younger? Had not the realization of his loftiest ambition been
pledged by One whose faithfulness had been the theme of repeated talks with
Abraham, who had survived during the first eighteen years of his young life? He
might have been well assured that what the God of Abraham had promised He was
able also to perform; and would perform, without the aid of his own miserable
schemes. But how hard is it for us to quietly wait for God! We are too apt to
outrun Him; to forestall the quiet unfolding of His purposes; and to snatch at
promised blessings before they are ripe. And as for Esau, we can never forget
the beacon words of Scripture, “Look diligently, lest there be any profane
person, as Esau, who for one morsel of meat sold his birthright” Hebrews 12:15). Yet let us, in condemning
him across the ages, look close at home. How many are there amongst ourselves,
born into the world with splendid talents; dowried with unusual powers;
inheritors of noble names; heirs to vast estates; gifted with keys to unlock
any of the many doors to name, and fame, and usefulness--who yet fling away all
these possibilities of blessing and blessedness, for one brief plunge into the
Stygian pool of sensual indulgence! And the appeals to sense come oftenest when
we are least expecting them. These appeals, moreover, come in the most trivial
things. One mess of pottage; one glass of drink; one moment’s unbridled
passion; one afternoons’s saunter; a question and an answer; a movement or a
look. It is in such small things--small as the angle at which railway lines
diverge from each other to east and west--that great alternatives are offered
and great decisions made. (F. B.Meyer, B. A.)
Esau: a true idea of life and prosperity
I. A TRUE IDEA OF
LIFE. Esau felt himself at the point of death, and all men are at this point.
1. The period of our mortal life.
2. The nature of our mortal life. The moment we begin to live, that
moment we begin to die.
II. A TRUE IDEA OF
WEALTH. Esau felt that his birthright was nothing to him when he died, and how
patent this truth! Lessons:
1. To the aspirant for wealth. How foolish this eagerness. You are
reaching after that which is no sooner clasped than let go for ever.
2. To the possessor of wealth.
The birthright sold
I. THE CUNNING
MAN.
1. He waited for the right opportunity.
2. He employed the likeliest means of gaining his object.
3. He took no account of natural ties.
4. He made the compact irrevocable.
II. THE SENSUAL
MAN.
1. He lacked resolution.
2. He despised an honourable position.
3. He lost sight of the future. Conclusion: Both characters are
unjustifiable. (Homilist.)
Contempt of spiritual privileges
Hundreds and thousands of people are showing exactly the same sort
of contempt for spiritual privileges which God extends to them to-day as Esau
showed for the birthright. The hundreds and thousands with whom the present
overbears the future; who allow the body, with its appetites and passions, to
drown the voice of conscience, or obscure the vision of promise; who place
things temporal before things spiritual, the world before heaven, the present
before the eternal; who say of spiritual privileges, “What profit shall they be
to me?” or, “What earthly use are they?” Let us take one or two very common and
ordinary examples.
1. How few recognize the privilege of public worship as a privilege,
as well as a clear duty! How readily is the privilege exchanged for something
else, at the very smallest opportunity!--a country walk, a chat with a friend
who happens to drop in just as you are starting for church, a call, some
pleasure which might very well wait. A man hears the church bell ringing, and
he debates within himself whether he will go or not go. It is just the merest
matter of self-pleasing. There is no thought of the duty he owes to
God; and as for the privilege, he would stare at you if you
suggested it. “Privilege! Where is the privilege? What profit am I going to get
out of it? It will not increase my wages, or find me work, or lower the price
of bread! Privilege! What are you thinking about?” And so it ends in his
finding “something better to do”! Something, that is, that is pleasing to the
senses, or which helps him temporally. In other words, “he eats and drinks, and
goes his way, and despises his Christian birthright.”
2. Or take the case of one’s private devotions; the reading of the
Bible, and so forth. You are later than you should be in getting up. That puts
other things late. There is much to be done which must be done, but something
must be sacrificed, something must give way, What is it to be? The adornment of
the body must not be neglected; household business must not be interfered with;
prayers! they must give way. “I have no time to say any prayers this morning! “
“No time! “ No time for communion with God; for that which will make all the
difference to your whole day! But then, it is a spiritual privilege!
3. I need hardly remind you of the contempt of that greatest of all
privileges, which is so sadly common, the Holy Communion. (J. B. C. Murphy,
B. A.)
How Esau lost his birthright
I. JACOB’S
BARGAIN. Selfish and impatient.
II. ESAU’S SIN.
1. Sensuality.
2. Worldliness.
3. Recklessness. (W. S. Smith, B. D.)
The birthright
This blessing was principally spiritual and distant, having
respect to the setting up of God’s kingdom, to the birth of the Messiah, or, in
other words, to all those great things included in the covenant with Abraham.
This was well understood by the family; both Esau and Jacob must have often
heard their parents converse about it. If the birthright which was bought at
this time had consisted in any temporal advantages of dignity, authority, or
property to be enjoyed in the lifetime of the parties, Esau would not have made
so light of it as he did, calling it “this birthright,” and intimating that he
should soon die, and then it would be of no use to him. It is a fact, too, that
Jacob had none of the ordinary advantages of the birthright during his
lifetime. Instead of a double portion, he was sent out of the family with only
“a staff” in his hand, leaving Esau to possess the whole of his father’s
substance. And when more than twenty years afterwards he returned to Canaan, he
made no scruple to ascribe to his brother the excellency of dignity, and the
excellency of power, calling him “my lord Esau,” and acknowledging himself as
his “servant.” The truth is, the question between them was, which should be
heir to the blessings promised in the covenant with Abraham. This Jacob
desired, and Esau despised, and in despising such high blessings was guilty of
profaneness. (A. Fuller.)
Esau and Jacob
I. THE WEARY
HUNTER.
II. THE CRAFTY
DESIGNER.
III. THE UNFAIR
ADVANTAGE. Learn:
1. Divine wisdom is better than human craft.
2. Generosity is more noble than selfishness.
3. A good object will not justify unworthy means.
4. What was our birthright, compared with what Jesus has secured for
us? (J. C. Gray.)
Lessons
1. Gracious hearts take up those spiritual things which carnal men
refuse.
2. Good souls may desire the best security for spiritual privileges,
even in the way of having them from men. Swear to me, &c.
3. Souls spiritual are instantly desirous of spiritual things. This
day.
4. The just desires of good men may be an occasion of sin to the
wicked.
5. It is proper for wicked hearts to swear and sell away all the
tokens of spiritual advantages.
6. God’s providence orders wicked hearts in putting away from
themselves mercy which was otherwise bequeathed by grace to them (Genesis 25:33). (G. Hughes, B. D.)
Lessons
1. Heavenly souls easily part
with earthly for heavenly things, lentils for a birthright.
2. Carnal souls go away very well contented with sensual portions.
3. Sensual men despise and count vile the choicest of spiritual
privileges. (G. Hughes, B. D.)
Lentils
Lentils were and are extensively and carefully grown in Egypt,
Palestine, and Syria; those of Egypt were, at a later period, particularly
famous; and the manner of cooking them is even immortalized on monuments. They
are not only used as a pottage, but in times of scarcity, and more generally by
the poor, they are baked into bread, either alone or mixed with barley. Lentils
and rice, boiled in equal quantities, form still one of the favourite dishes in
many parts of the East. When cooked, they are of a yellowish brown colour,
approaching to red; some species, growing on a red soil, have this colour naturally;
and hence Esau, in his haste, calls the dish simply the red one. The fact, that
lentils were among the cheapest and most common articles of vegetable food,
enhances the force and point of our narrative. The privileges which the
birthright legally confers; the double portion of the father’s property; the
higher authority in the family; the greater social influence; all these
advantages, in this instance enhanced by spiritual blessings as their most
precious accompaniment, could have no value for one who regarded his existence
merely as the transitory play of an hour; and who was indifferent to the esteem
of others, because he had not risen to understand the dignity of mankind. If we
were to expect a historical allusion in this fact also, the probable supposition
offers itself, that indeed the Edomites, who were masters of the wide tracts
from the Red Sea along the whole mountain of Seir, up to the very frontiers of
Palestine, might, with a little exertion, have extended their dominion over the
land of Canaan; that, with a little degree of ambition and self-control, they
might have become a respected and mighty nation; but that their thoughtless and
ferocious habits kept them in the dreary solitudes, far from the chief scenes
of history and civilization. It is known that the Mohammedans long kept the
memory of this transaction alive by distributing daily to poor people and to
strangers lentils prepared in a kitchen near the grave at Hebron, where they
believed the cession of the birthright took place. (M. M. Kalisch, Ph. D.)
Fondness for pottage
The people of the East are exceedingly fond of pottage, which they
call keel. It is something like gruel, and is made of various kinds of
grain, which are first beaten in a mortar. The red pottage is made of kurakan,
and other grains, but is not superior to the other. For such a contemptible
mess, then, did Esau sell his birthright. When a man has sold his fields or
gardens for an insignificant sum, the people say, “The fellow has sold his land
for pottage.” Does a father give his daughter in marriage to a low-caste man,
it is observed, “He has given her for pottage.” Does a person by base means
seek for some paltry enjoyment, it is said “For one leaf” (namely leaffull) “of
pottage he will do nine days’ work.” Has a learned man who has given
instruction or advice to others stooped to anything which was not expected from
him, it is said “The learned one has fallen into the pottage pot.” Of a man in
great poverty, it is remarked, “Alas! he cannot get pottage.” A beggar asks,
“Sir, will you give me a little pottage?” Does a man seek to acquire great
things by small means, “He is trying to procure rubies by pottage.” When a
person greatly flatters another, it is common to say, “He praises him only for
his pottage.” Does a king greatly oppress his subjects, it is said, “He only
governs for the pottage.” Has an individual lost much money by trade, “The
speculation has broken his pottage pot.” Does a rich man threaten to ruin a
poor man, the latter will ask, “Will the lightning strike my pottage pot?” (Roberts.)
Brutishness of worldlings
Luther was told of a nobleman who, above all things, occupied
himself with amassing money, and was so buried in darkness that he gave no heed
to the word of God, and even said to one who pleaded with him, “Sir, the gospel
pays no interest.” “Have you no grains?” interposed Luther; then he told this
fable:--“A lion making a great feast, invited all the beasts, and with them
some swine. When all manner of dainties were set before the guests, the swine
asked, ‘Have you no grains?’” “Even so”; continued Luther, “even so it is in
these days with carnal men; we preachers set before them the most dainty and
costly dishes, such as everlasting salvation, the remission of sins, and God’s
grace; but they, like swine, turn up their snouts and ask for money. Offer a
cow a nutmeg and she will reject it for old hay.” (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Appetite gratified and appetite held in check
Which brother presents the more repulsive spectacle of the two in
this selling of the birthright it is hard to say. Who does net feel contempt
for the great, strong man, declaring he will die if he is required to wait five
minutes till his own supper is prepared; forgetting, in the craving of his
appetite, every consideration of a worthy kind; oblivious of everything but his
hunger and his food; crying, like a great baby, “Feed me with that red!” So it
is always with the man who has fallen under the power of sensual appetite. He
is always going to die if it is not immediately gratified. He must have his
appetite satisfied. No consideration of consequences can be listened to or
thought of; the man is helpless in the hands of his appetite--it rules and
drives him on, and he is utterly without self-control; nothing but physical
compulsion can restrain him. But the treacherous and self-seeking craft of the
other brother is as repulsive; the cold-blooded, calculating spirit that can
hold every appetite in check, that can cleave to one purpose for a life-time,
and, without scruple, take advantage of a twin-brother’s weakness. Jacob knows
his brother thoroughly, and all his knowledge he uses to betray him. He knows
he will speedily repent of his bargain, so be makes him swear he will abide by
it. It is a relentless purpose he carries out--he deliberately and
unhesitatingly sacrifices his brother to himself. Still, in two respects, Jacob
is the superior man. He can appreciate the birthright in his father’s family,
and he has constancy. (M. Dods, D. D.)
Despising spiritual gifts
Had the birthright been something to eat, Esau would not have sold
it. What an exhibition of human nature! What an exposure of our childish folly
and the infatuation of appetite! For Esau has company in his fall. We are all
stricken by his shame. We are conscious that if God had made provision for the
flesh we should have listened to Him more readily. “But what will this
birthright profit us?” We do not see the good it does: were it something to
keep us from disease, to give us long unsated days of pleasure, to bring us the
fruits of labour without the weariness of it, to make money for us, where is
the man who would not value it--where is the man who would lightly give it up?
But because it is only the favour of God that is offered, His endless love, His
holiness made ours this we will imperil or resign for every idle desire, for
every lust that bids us serve it a little longer. (M. Dods, D. D)
Three bad bargains
A Sunday-school teacher remarked that he who buys the truth makes
a good bargain. I inquired if any scholar recollected an instance in Scripture
of a bad bargain. “I do,” replied a boy, “Esau sold his birthright for a mess
of pottage.” A second said, “Judas made a bad bargain when he sold his Lord for
thirty pieces of silver.” A third boy observed, “Our Lord tells us that he
makes a bad bargain who to gain the whole world loses his own soul.” (Old
Testament Anecdotes.)
──《The Biblical Illustrator》