As Abraham dies and the next generation emerges, God preserves the covenant through Isaac alone and begins to reveal that His promise will advance according to His sovereign choice, not natural privilege or fleshly appetite.
Abraham Dies, the Promise Narrows Through Isaac, and Esau Despises What Jacob Desires
As Abraham dies and the next generation emerges, God preserves the covenant through Isaac alone and begins to reveal that His promise will advance according to His sovereign choice, not natural privilege or fleshly appetite.
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As Abraham dies and the next generation emerges, God preserves the covenant through Isaac alone and begins to reveal that His promise will advance according to His sovereign choice, not natural privilege or fleshly appetite.
Genesis 25 teaches that the covenant promise continues through divinely appointed succession rather than through mere physical descent, natural seniority, or human strength. The chapter begins by acknowledging Abraham’s broader fruitfulness, yet it sharply distinguishes Isaac from the other sons. Abraham gives gifts to the others, but to Isaac He gives all that He has.
This is not mere favoritism; it is covenantal ordering. The line of promise must remain clear. Abraham’s death then confirms that even the death of the covenant patriarch does not interrupt God’s purpose. The burial at Machpelah reinforces the family’s rootedness in the promised land, and God’s blessing shifts explicitly to Isaac. The Ishmael section further reinforces this pattern.
Ishmael is blessed, fruitful, and historically significant, yet His line is narrated and closed in a way that clears the stage for Isaac. The chapter then intensifies covenant theology through the conception of Esau and Jacob. Rebekah’s barrenness recalls earlier covenant impossibilities, and Isaac’s prayer shows dependence rather than manipulation. The prenatal struggle is interpreted by God Himself, making clear that the future will be shaped by divine purpose.
The oracle overturns natural expectation: the older will serve the younger. The final episode then reveals character in action. Esau, driven by immediate appetite, trades away His birthright, while Jacob, though not morally pure in motive, values what Esau treats as disposable. The concluding verdict is decisive: Esau despised His birthright. Thus Genesis 25 argues that God’s covenant advances by sovereign designation, that blessing outside the main line does not equal covenant inheritance, and that fleshly impulse can despise what is sacred while the promise moves on through the line God chooses.
Genesis 25 is a major transition chapter in the patriarchal narrative. It closes the earthly life of Abraham, clarifies the distinct lines flowing from Him, and begins to shift the narrative center more fully toward Isaac and then toward Jacob and Esau. Within the structure of Genesis, this chapter gathers together themes of death, blessing, covenant continuity, non-covenant branches, barrenness, answered prayer, prenatal struggle, divine election, and the value of the birthright.
It is therefore both a conclusion and a beginning. Abraham’s life ends, yet the covenant does not end with Him. The chapter carefully distinguishes between Abraham’s other descendants and Isaac, showing that the line of promise remains particular, not diffuse. It then introduces the next covenant generation through the difficult conception of Rebekah’s twins and the divine oracle that interprets their struggle before birth.
Finally, the birthright episode reveals the moral contrast between Esau and Jacob in seed form. Thus Genesis 25 functions as a hinge chapter, proving that the covenant promise survives Abraham’s death, continues through Isaac alone, and begins to narrow further through God’s sovereign purpose in the next generation.
Abraham takes Keturah as wife, fathers additional sons, and distributes gifts to them, but He gives all that He has to Isaac, while sending the sons of His concubines eastward away from Isaac.
Abraham dies at a good old age, is gathered to His people, and is buried by Isaac and Ishmael in the cave of Machpelah with Sarah; after Abraham’s death God blesses Isaac, who settles near Beer-lahai-roi.
The generations of Ishmael are listed, including His twelve princes and territorial spread, and the summary notes that He settled over against all His kinsmen.
The generations of Isaac begin. Rebekah is barren, Isaac prays, the Lord grants conception, the twins struggle within her, and God reveals that two nations are in her womb, the older will serve the younger. Esau is born first, then Jacob grasping Esau’s heel.
The boys grow, Esau becomes a skillful hunter and man of the field, Jacob a quiet man dwelling in tents. Isaac loves Esau because of the game He brings, while Rebekah loves Jacob. Esau returns famished from the field and sells His birthright to Jacob for bread and lentil stew, and the narrative concludes that Esau despised His birthright.
- 25:1–6: Abraham takes Keturah as wife, fathers additional sons, and distributes gifts to them, but He gives all that He has to Isaac, while sending the sons of His concubines eastward away from Isaac.
- 25:7–11: Abraham dies at a good old age, is gathered to His people, and is buried by Isaac and Ishmael in the cave of Machpelah with Sarah · after Abraham’s death God blesses Isaac, who settles near Beer-lahai-roi.
- 25:12–18: The generations of Ishmael are listed, including His twelve princes and territorial spread, and the summary notes that He settled over against all His kinsmen.
- 25:19–26: The generations of Isaac begin. Rebekah is barren, Isaac prays, the Lord grants conception, the twins struggle within her, and God reveals that two nations are in her womb, the older will serve the younger. Esau is born first, then Jacob grasping Esau’s heel.
- 25:27–34: The boys grow, Esau becomes a skillful hunter and man of the field, Jacob a quiet man dwelling in tents. Isaac loves Esau because of the game He brings, while Rebekah loves Jacob. Esau returns famished from the field and sells His birthright to Jacob for bread and lentil stew, and the narrative concludes that Esau despised His birthright.
Theological Focus
- Covenant Succession
- Divine Sovereignty
- Election within the Family
- Barrenness and Prayer
- Birthright
- Promise and Inheritance
- Death and Continuity
- Flesh versus Promise
- Covenant Theology
- Providence
- Prayer
- Election and Promise
- Biblical Theology
- Christology Preparation
Covenant Significance
Genesis 25 is covenantally significant because it transfers narrative emphasis from Abraham to Isaac and then begins to narrow the line further through Jacob over Esau. The chapter explicitly distinguishes Isaac as Abraham’s covenant heir over against Abraham’s other sons. It also shows that within Isaac’s own household, the covenant future will not simply follow the line of natural firstborn privilege.
God’s oracle concerning the twins reveals that the covenant line is determined by divine purpose. The sale of the birthright then reinforces the distinction at the level of moral response. This chapter is therefore crucial for understanding how the Abrahamic covenant continues and narrows from generation to generation.
Canonical Connections
Genesis 25 is covenantally significant because it transfers narrative emphasis from Abraham to Isaac and then begins to narrow the line further through Jacob over Esau. The chapter explicitly distinguishes Isaac as Abraham’s covenant heir over against Abraham’s other sons. It also shows that within Isaac’s own household, the covenant future will not simply follow the line of natural firstborn privilege.
God’s oracle concerning the twins reveals that the covenant line is determined by divine purpose. The sale of the birthright then reinforces the distinction at the level of moral response. This chapter is therefore crucial for understanding how the Abrahamic covenant continues and narrows from generation to generation.
Genesis 17:18-21
Genesis 21:1-21
Genesis 24:1-67
Deuteronomy 21:15-17
Malachi 1:2-3
Genesis 24:1-67
Genesis 26:1-35
Genesis 27:1-46
Romans 9:10-13
Cross References
but he shall acknowledge the firstborn, the son of the hated, by giving him a double portion of all that he has; for he is the beginning of his strength. The right of the firstborn is his.
When the Most High gave to the nations their inheritance, when he separated the children of men, he set the bounds of the peoples according to the number of the children of Israel.
So Moses the servant of Yahweh died there in the land of Moab, according to Yahweh’s word. He buried him in the valley in the land of Moab opposite Beth Peor, but no man knows where his tomb is to this day. Moses was one hundred twenty...
For you are a holy people to Yahweh your God. Yahweh your God has chosen you to be a people for his own possession, above all peoples who are on the face of the earth.
I will make of you a great nation. I will bless you and make your name great. You will be a blessing.
I will make of you a great nation. I will bless you and make your name great. You will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you, and I will curse him who treats you with contempt. All the families of the earth will be blessed...
“I have loved you,” says Yahweh. Yet you say, “How have you loved us?” “Wasn’t Esau Jacob’s brother?” says Yahweh, “Yet I loved Jacob; but Esau I hated, and made his mountains a desolation, and gave his heritage to the jackals of the...
There is a way which seems right to a man, but in the end it leads to death.
Genesis 25 advances the gospel trajectory by showing that the covenant promise continues through the line God appoints, not through mere physical descent or natural priority. Abraham dies, but the promise does not die. Isaac is blessed, and the future narrows again through Jacob rather than Esau. The chapter also exposes the danger of despising spiritual inheritance for immediate gratification, which is a deep human problem the gospel addresses.
In the fullness of Scripture, the promised line continues through these covenant generations until it reaches Jesus Christ, the true heir and seed through whom the inheritance of God’s people is secured.
Primary Emphasis
Genesis 25 contributes to Christology by continuing the line of promise through Isaac and then positioning Jacob as the next key bearer of covenant continuity. The chapter also reinforces the principle that the promised line advances by divine choice and not by mere human custom or natural precedence. This helps prepare the biblical theology of the seed leading ultimately to Christ.
The contrast between Esau and Jacob also contributes to the broader pattern that the redemptive line is not carried by the one who merely possesses natural advantage, but by the one marked out in God’s purpose.
Chapter Contribution
Genesis 25 teaches that the covenant promise continues through divinely appointed succession rather than through mere physical descent, natural seniority, or human strength. The chapter begins by acknowledging Abraham’s broader fruitfulness, yet it sharply distinguishes Isaac from the other sons. Abraham gives gifts to the others, but to Isaac He gives all that He has.
This is not mere favoritism; it is covenantal ordering. The line of promise must remain clear. Abraham’s death then confirms that even the death of the covenant patriarch does not interrupt God’s purpose. The burial at Machpelah reinforces the family’s rootedness in the promised land, and God’s blessing shifts explicitly to Isaac. The Ishmael section further reinforces this pattern.
Ishmael is blessed, fruitful, and historically significant, yet His line is narrated and closed in a way that clears the stage for Isaac. The chapter then intensifies covenant theology through the conception of Esau and Jacob. Rebekah’s barrenness recalls earlier covenant impossibilities, and Isaac’s prayer shows dependence rather than manipulation. The prenatal struggle is interpreted by God Himself, making clear that the future will be shaped by divine purpose.
The oracle overturns natural expectation: the older will serve the younger. The final episode then reveals character in action. Esau, driven by immediate appetite, trades away His birthright, while Jacob, though not morally pure in motive, values what Esau treats as disposable. The concluding verdict is decisive: Esau despised His birthright. Thus Genesis 25 argues that God’s covenant advances by sovereign designation, that blessing outside the main line does not equal covenant inheritance, and that fleshly impulse can despise what is sacred while the promise moves on through the line God chooses.
God preserves His covenant line through successive generations.
God’s redemptive purposes are carried through a specific chosen line.
God chooses a specific line through which His promises are fulfilled.
Covenant privilege requires valuing and stewarding what God has given.
God’s purposes stand despite human actions, yet individuals are accountable for their choices.
God fulfills His promises even outside the covenant line.
God opens the womb and advances His promises through His power.
Human hearts often prioritize immediate desires over spiritual realities.
Spiritual inheritance is distinct from physical lineage.
Even faithful servants of God experience death, yet God’s purposes continue.
God responds to the prayers of His people.
God’s word regarding multiplication and nationhood is reliable.
God governs the growth and spread of nations.
God chooses according to His purpose, not human order or merit.
True wisdom recognizes the lasting value of God’s promises.
2 Imperatives
- Sell me Your birthright today
- Swear to me today
- The chapter’s implied force warns against impulsive exchanges of sacred inheritance for immediate need
Sense bless
Definition bless
Why it matters The statement that God blessed Isaac after Abraham’s death makes clear that covenant favor now rests on Isaac as the heir of promise.
Sense generations, account, descendants
Definition generations, account, descendants
Why it matters The toledot markers organize the chapter around Ishmael’s closure and Isaac’s opening, clarifying covenant focus and narrative succession.
Sense entreat, pray earnestly
Definition entreat, pray earnestly
Why it matters Isaac’s prayer for Rebekah underscores that the covenant line continues by divine mercy and response, not human control.
Sense barren
Definition barren
Why it matters Rebekah’s barrenness continues the Genesis pattern that the covenant future depends on God’s power rather than ordinary fertility.
Sense struggle, crush together
Definition struggle, crush together
Why it matters The struggle of the twins in Rebekah’s womb signals from the outset that the future line will unfold through conflict under divine interpretation.
Sense nations
Definition nations
Why it matters God’s oracle reveals that the twins are not merely two boys, but two nations, placing their rivalry within the larger covenantal history of peoples.
Sense the older shall serve the younger
Definition the older shall serve the younger
Why it matters This oracle is the theological heart of the twins narrative, showing that the covenant future is governed by God’s purpose, not customary seniority.
Sense birthright
Definition birthright
Why it matters The birthright represents more than economics; in this context it is tied to family inheritance and covenant significance, and Esau’s contempt reveals spiritual shallowness.
Sense despise, treat as worthless
Definition despise, treat as worthless
Why it matters The closing verdict that Esau despised His birthright gives the chapter its moral and theological edge by exposing His contempt for sacred inheritance.
Sense stew, boiled dish
Definition stew, boiled dish
Why it matters The stew becomes the symbol of immediate appetite triumphing over long-term inheritance, making the exchange morally vivid.
Sense Edom
Definition Edom
Why it matters Esau’s association with Edom ties His identity to the immediate episode of appetite and points forward to the national line that will emerge from Him.
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C.F. Keil & F. Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (1861–91) — public domain
- Genesis 25 warns that a person can live close to covenant privilege and yet despise what is holy by surrendering eternal significance for immediate gratification.
- Treating Abraham’s later sons as though they share Isaac’s covenant role equally, when the chapter carefully distinguishes Isaac as the primary heir.
- Reading the oracle about Esau and Jacob as though God were merely predicting personality differences rather than declaring His sovereign purpose concerning nations and inheritance.
- Assuming Jacob is fully righteous in the birthright scene and Esau merely unlucky, instead of seeing that Jacob values what Esau despises while both characters still require moral evaluation.
- Reducing the birthright episode to sibling conflict alone rather than recognizing it as a theological revelation of how lightly Esau treats covenant privilege.
- Ignoring the role of Isaac’s prayer and Rebekah’s barrenness, which tie this generation back to the recurring pattern of divine life overcoming human inability.
- Missing the narrative significance of the Ishmael section, which shows blessing outside the central covenant line without collapsing that blessing into covenant inheritance.
- Do You treat spiritual privileges as precious, or have You grown casual about what God has placed before You?
- Where are You tempted, like Esau, to surrender something weighty and holy for momentary satisfaction?
- How does Isaac’s prayer for Rebekah challenge You to respond to long delays with dependence rather than manipulation?
- What does this chapter teach You about the difference between being near covenant realities and actually valuing them?
- How do You respond when God’s purposes overturn what seems naturally expected or culturally obvious?
- Preach Genesis 25 as a warning against despising holy things through worldly appetite and short-term thinking.
- Use the chapter to help believers distinguish between common blessing and covenant inheritance, showing that not every proximity to grace equals saving participation.
- Encourage couples and families facing long-term waiting or barrenness through Isaac’s example of prayerful dependence.
- Teach clearly that God’s redemptive purposes are not governed by natural human systems alone, but by His sovereign will.
- Help the church think seriously about birthright-like privileges today, gospel access, covenant teaching, spiritual formation, and the danger of treating them lightly.
- Show that grief and death in the covenant family do not terminate God’s plan, because Abraham dies and the promise continues.
- Use Esau’s example pastorally to expose the folly of trading long-term spiritual inheritance for immediate bodily or emotional relief.
Genesis 25 advances the gospel trajectory by showing that the covenant promise continues through the line God appoints, not through mere physical descent or natural priority. Abraham dies, but the promise does not die. Isaac is blessed, and the future narrows again through Jacob rather than Esau. The chapter also exposes the danger of despising spiritual inheritance for immediate gratification, which is a deep human problem the gospel addresses.
In the fullness of Scripture, the promised line continues through these covenant generations until it reaches Jesus Christ, the true heir and seed through whom the inheritance of God’s people is secured.
Genesis 25 advances the gospel trajectory by showing that the covenant promise continues through the line God appoints, not through mere physical descent or natural priority. Abraham dies, but the promise does not die. Isaac is blessed, and the future narrows again through Jacob rather than Esau. The chapter also exposes the danger of despising spiritual inheritance for immediate gratification, which is a deep human problem the gospel addresses.
In the fullness of Scripture, the promised line continues through these covenant generations until it reaches Jesus Christ, the true heir and seed through whom the inheritance of God’s people is secured.
Genesis 25 advances the gospel trajectory by showing that the covenant promise continues through the line God appoints, not through mere physical descent or natural priority. Abraham dies, but the promise does not die. Isaac is blessed, and the future narrows again through Jacob rather than Esau. The chapter also exposes the danger of despising spiritual inheritance for immediate gratification, which is a deep human problem the gospel addresses.
In the fullness of Scripture, the promised line continues through these covenant generations until it reaches Jesus Christ, the true heir and seed through whom the inheritance of God’s people is secured.
Genesis 25 advances the gospel trajectory by showing that the covenant promise continues through the line God appoints, not through mere physical descent or natural priority. Abraham dies, but the promise does not die. Isaac is blessed, and the future narrows again through Jacob rather than Esau. The chapter also exposes the danger of despising spiritual inheritance for immediate gratification, which is a deep human problem the gospel addresses.
In the fullness of Scripture, the promised line continues through these covenant generations until it reaches Jesus Christ, the true heir and seed through whom the inheritance of God’s people is secured.
Genesis 25 advances the gospel trajectory by showing that the covenant promise continues through the line God appoints, not through mere physical descent or natural priority. Abraham dies, but the promise does not die. Isaac is blessed, and the future narrows again through Jacob rather than Esau. The chapter also exposes the danger of despising spiritual inheritance for immediate gratification, which is a deep human problem the gospel addresses.
In the fullness of Scripture, the promised line continues through these covenant generations until it reaches Jesus Christ, the true heir and seed through whom the inheritance of God’s people is secured.
2
High
- Sell me Your birthright today
- Swear to me today
- The chapter’s implied force warns against impulsive exchanges of sacred inheritance for immediate need
Trace remnant preservation, covenant continuity, and mercy under judgment across Scripture.
Track judgment as covenant accountability, divine justice, and eschatological reckoning.
Follow shepherding as divine care, messianic leadership, and pastoral oversight across Scripture.
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
Genesis 25 is covenantally significant because it transfers narrative emphasis from Abraham to Isaac and then begins to narrow the line further through Jacob over Esau. The chapter explicitly distinguishes Isaac as Abraham’s covenant heir over against Abraham’s other sons. It also shows that within Isaac’s own household, the covenant future will not simply follow the line of natural firstborn privilege.
God’s oracle concerning the twins reveals that the covenant line is determined by divine purpose. The sale of the birthright then reinforces the distinction at the level of moral response. This chapter is therefore crucial for understanding how the Abrahamic covenant continues and narrows from generation to generation.
Genesis 25 advances the gospel trajectory by showing that the covenant promise continues through the line God appoints, not through mere physical descent or natural priority. Abraham dies, but the promise does not die. Isaac is blessed, and the future narrows again through Jacob rather than Esau. The chapter also exposes the danger of despising spiritual inheritance for immediate gratification, which is a deep human problem the gospel addresses.
In the fullness of Scripture, the promised line continues through these covenant generations until it reaches Jesus Christ, the true heir and seed through whom the inheritance of God’s people is secured.
Focus Points
- Covenant Succession
- Divine Sovereignty
- Election within the Family
- Barrenness and Prayer
- Birthright
- Promise and Inheritance
- Death and Continuity
- Flesh versus Promise
- Covenant Theology
- Providence
- Prayer
- Election and Promise
- Biblical Theology
- Christology Preparation
Cross References
Passages
Chapter opening: Genesis 25:1-11
Gen 25:1-2 Abraham’s Marriage to Keturah is generally supposed to have taken place after Sarah’s death, and his power to beget six sons at so advanced an age is attributed to the fact, that the Almighty had endowed him with new vital and reproductive energy for begetting the son of the promise. But there is no firm ground for this assumption; as it is not stated anywhere, that Abraham did not take Keturah as his wife till after Sarah’s death.
It is merely an inference drawn from the fact, that it is not mentioned till afterwards; and it is taken for granted that the history is written in strictly chronological order. But this supposition is precarious, and is not in harmony with the statement, that Abraham sent away the sons of the concubines with gifts during his own lifetime; for in the case supposed, the youngest of Keturah’s sons would not have been more than twenty-five or thirty years old at Abraham’s death; and in those days, when marriages were not generally contracted before the fortieth year, this seems too young for them to have been sent away from their father’s house.
This difficulty, however, is not decisive. Nor does the fact that Keturah is called a concubine in Gen 25:6, and 1Ch 1:32, necessarily show that she was contemporary with Sarah, but may be explained on the ground that Abraham did not place her on the same footing as Sarah, his sole wife, the mother of the promised seed. Of the sons and grandsons of Keturah, who are mentioned in 1Ch 1:32 as well as here, a few of the names may still be found among the Arabian tribes, but in most instances the attempt to trace them is very questionable.
This remark applies to the identification of Zimran with Ζαββάμ (Ptol. vi. 7, 5), the royal city of the Κιναιδοκολπῖται to the west of Mecca, on the Red Sea; of Jokshan with the Κασσανῖται, on the Red Sea (Ptol. vi. 7, 6), or with the Himyaritish tribe of Jakish in Southern Arabia; of Ishbak with the name Shobek , a place in the Edomitish country first mentioned by Abulfeda ; of Shuah with the tribe Syayhe to the east of Aila, or with Szyhhan in Northern Edom (Burckhardt, Syr .
692, 693, and 945), although the epithet the Shuhite, applied to Bildad, points to a place in Northern Idumaea. There is more plausibility in the comparison of Medan and Midian with Μοδιάνα on the eastern coast of the Elanitic Gulf, and Μαδιάνα, a tract to the north of this (Ptol. vi. 7, 2, 27; called by Arabian geographers Madyan , a city five days’ journey to the south of Aila).
The relationship of these two tribes will explain the fact, that the Midianim , Gen 37:28, are called Medanim in Gen 37:36.
Gen 25:1-2 Abraham’s Marriage to Keturah is generally supposed to have taken place after Sarah’s death, and his power to beget six sons at so advanced an age is attributed to the fact, that the Almighty had endowed him with new vital and reproductive energy for begetting the son of the promise. But there is no firm ground for this assumption; as it is not stated anywhere, that Abraham did not take Keturah as his wife till after Sarah’s death.
It is merely an inference drawn from the fact, that it is not mentioned till afterwards; and it is taken for granted that the history is written in strictly chronological order. But this supposition is precarious, and is not in harmony with the statement, that Abraham sent away the sons of the concubines with gifts during his own lifetime; for in the case supposed, the youngest of Keturah’s sons would not have been more than twenty-five or thirty years old at Abraham’s death; and in those days, when marriages were not generally contracted before the fortieth year, this seems too young for them to have been sent away from their father’s house.
This difficulty, however, is not decisive. Nor does the fact that Keturah is called a concubine in Gen 25:6, and 1Ch 1:32, necessarily show that she was contemporary with Sarah, but may be explained on the ground that Abraham did not place her on the same footing as Sarah, his sole wife, the mother of the promised seed. Of the sons and grandsons of Keturah, who are mentioned in 1Ch 1:32 as well as here, a few of the names may still be found among the Arabian tribes, but in most instances the attempt to trace them is very questionable.
This remark applies to the identification of Zimran with Ζαββάμ (Ptol. vi. 7, 5), the royal city of the Κιναιδοκολπῖται to the west of Mecca, on the Red Sea; of Jokshan with the Κασσανῖται, on the Red Sea (Ptol. vi. 7, 6), or with the Himyaritish tribe of Jakish in Southern Arabia; of Ishbak with the name Shobek , a place in the Edomitish country first mentioned by Abulfeda ; of Shuah with the tribe Syayhe to the east of Aila, or with Szyhhan in Northern Edom (Burckhardt, Syr .
692, 693, and 945), although the epithet the Shuhite, applied to Bildad, points to a place in Northern Idumaea. There is more plausibility in the comparison of Medan and Midian with Μοδιάνα on the eastern coast of the Elanitic Gulf, and Μαδιάνα, a tract to the north of this (Ptol. vi. 7, 2, 27; called by Arabian geographers Madyan , a city five days’ journey to the south of Aila).
The relationship of these two tribes will explain the fact, that the Midianim , Gen 37:28, are called Medanim in Gen 37:36.
Gen 25:3-4 Of the sons of Jokshan, Sheba was probably connected with the Sabaeans, who are associated in Job 6:19 with Tema , are mentioned in Job 1:15 as having stolen Job’s oxen and asses, and, according to Strabo (xvi. 779), were neighbours of the Nabataeans in the vicinity of Syria. Dedan was probably the trading people mentioned in Jer 25:23 along with Tema and Bus (Isa 21:13; Jer 49:8), in the neighbourhood of Edom (Eze 24:15), with whom the tribe of Banu Dudan , in Hejas, has been compared.
On their relation to the Cushites of the same name, vid. , Gen 10:7 and Gen 10:28, - Of the sons of Dedan, the Asshurim have been associated with the warlike tribe of the Asir to the south of Hejas, the Letushim with the Banu Leits in Hejas, and the Leummim with the tribe of the Banu Lâm , which extended even to Babylon and Mesopotamia. Of the descendants of Midian, Ephah is mentioned in Isa 60:6, in connection with Midian, as a people trading in gold and incense.
Epher has been compared with the Banu Gifar in Hejas; Hanoch , with the place called Hanakye , three days’ journey to the north of Medinah; Abidah and el-daah , with the tribes of Abide and Vadaa in the neighbourhood of Asir. But all this is very uncertain.
Gen 25:3-4 Of the sons of Jokshan, Sheba was probably connected with the Sabaeans, who are associated in Job 6:19 with Tema , are mentioned in Job 1:15 as having stolen Job’s oxen and asses, and, according to Strabo (xvi. 779), were neighbours of the Nabataeans in the vicinity of Syria. Dedan was probably the trading people mentioned in Jer 25:23 along with Tema and Bus (Isa 21:13; Jer 49:8), in the neighbourhood of Edom (Eze 24:15), with whom the tribe of Banu Dudan , in Hejas, has been compared.
On their relation to the Cushites of the same name, vid. , Gen 10:7 and Gen 10:28, - Of the sons of Dedan, the Asshurim have been associated with the warlike tribe of the Asir to the south of Hejas, the Letushim with the Banu Leits in Hejas, and the Leummim with the tribe of the Banu Lâm , which extended even to Babylon and Mesopotamia. Of the descendants of Midian, Ephah is mentioned in Isa 60:6, in connection with Midian, as a people trading in gold and incense.
Epher has been compared with the Banu Gifar in Hejas; Hanoch , with the place called Hanakye , three days’ journey to the north of Medinah; Abidah and el-daah , with the tribes of Abide and Vadaa in the neighbourhood of Asir. But all this is very uncertain.
Gen 25:5-6 Before his death, Abraham made a final disposition of his property. Isaac, the only son of his marriage with Sarah, received all his possessions. The sons of the concubines (Hagar and Keturah) were sent away with presents from their father’s house into the east country, i.e., Arabia in the widest sense, to the east and south-east of Palestine.
Gen 25:5-6 Before his death, Abraham made a final disposition of his property. Isaac, the only son of his marriage with Sarah, received all his possessions. The sons of the concubines (Hagar and Keturah) were sent away with presents from their father’s house into the east country, i.e., Arabia in the widest sense, to the east and south-east of Palestine.
Gen 25:7-8 Abraham died at the good old age of 175, and was “ gathered to his people .” This expression, which is synonymous with “going to his fathers” (Gen 15:15), or “being gathered to his fathers” (Jdg 2:10), but is constantly distinguished from departing this life and being buried, denotes the reunion in Sheol with friends who have gone before, and therefore presupposes faith in the personal continuance of a man after death, as a presentiment which the promises of God had exalted in the case of the patriarchs into a firm assurance of faith (Heb 11:13).
Gen 25:7-8 Abraham died at the good old age of 175, and was “ gathered to his people .” This expression, which is synonymous with “going to his fathers” (Gen 15:15), or “being gathered to his fathers” (Jdg 2:10), but is constantly distinguished from departing this life and being buried, denotes the reunion in Sheol with friends who have gone before, and therefore presupposes faith in the personal continuance of a man after death, as a presentiment which the promises of God had exalted in the case of the patriarchs into a firm assurance of faith (Heb 11:13).
Gen 25:9-10 The burial of the patriarch in the cave of Machpelah was attended to by Isaac and Ishmael; since the latter, although excluded from the blessings of the covenant, was acknowledged by God as the son of Abraham by a distinct blessing (Gen 17:20), and was thus elevated above the sons of Keturah.
Gen 25:9-10 The burial of the patriarch in the cave of Machpelah was attended to by Isaac and Ishmael; since the latter, although excluded from the blessings of the covenant, was acknowledged by God as the son of Abraham by a distinct blessing (Gen 17:20), and was thus elevated above the sons of Keturah.
Gen 25:11 After Abraham’s death the blessing was transferred to Isaac, who took up his abode by Hagar’s well, because he had already been there, and had dwelt in the south country (Gen 24:62). The blessing of Isaac is traced to Elohim , not to Jehovah ; because it referred neither exclusively nor pre-eminently to the gifts of grace connected with the promises of salvation, but quite generally to the inheritance of earthly possessions, which Isaac had received from his father.
Gen 25:12-18 To show that the promises of God, which had been made to Ishmael (Gen 16:10. and Gen 17:20), were fulfilled, a short account is given of his descendants; and according to the settled plan of Genesis, this account precedes the history of Isaac. This is evidently the intention of the list which follows of the twelve sons of Ishmael, who are given as princes of the tribes which sprang from them.
Nebajoth and Kedar are mentioned in Isa 60:7 as rich possessors of flocks, and, according to the current opinion which Wetzstein disputes, are the Nabataei et Cedrei of Pliny ( h. n. 5, 12). The Nabataeans held possession of Arabia Petraea , with Petra as their capital, and subsequently extended toward the south and north-east, probably as far as Babylon; so that the name was afterwards transferred to all the tribes to the east of the Jordan, and in the Nabataean writings became a common name for Chaldeans (ancient Babylonians), Syrians, Canaanites, and others.
The Kedarenes are mentioned in Isa 21:17 as good bowmen. They dwelt in the desert between Arabia Petraea and Babylon (Isa 42:11; Psa 120:5). According to Wetzstein , they are to be found in the nomad tribes of Arabia Petraea up to Harra . The name Dumah , Δούμεθα Αουμαίθα (Ptol. v. 19, 7, Steph. Byz .) , Domata (Plin. 6, 32), has been retained in the modern Dumat el Jendel in Nejd, the Arabian highland, four days’ journey to the north of Taima.
- Tema: a trading people (Job 6:19; Isa 21:14; mentioned in Jer 25:23, between Dedan and Bus) in the land of Taima , on the border of Nejd and the Syrian desert. According to Wetzstein , Dûma and Têma are still two important places in Eastern Hauran, three-quarters of an hour apart. Jetur and Naphish were neighbours of the tribes of Israel to the east of the Jordan (1Ch 5:19), who made war upon them along with the Hagrites, the Αγραῖοι of Ptol.
and Strabo. From Jetur sprang the Ituraeans , who lived, according to Strabo , near the Trachonians in an almost inaccessible, mountainous, and cavernous country; according to Wetzstein , in the mountains of the Druses in the centre of the Hauran, possibly the forefathers of the modern Druses. The other names are not yet satisfactorily determined. For Adbeel , Mibsam , and Kedma , the Arabian legends give no corresponding names.
Mishma is associated by Knobel with the Μαισαιμανείς of Ptol. vi. 7, 21, to the N. E. of Medina; Massa with the Μασανοί on the N. E. of Duma; Hadad (the proper reading for Hadar , according to 1Ch 1:30, the lxx, Sam. , Masor. , and most MSS) with the Arabian coast land, Chathth , between Oman and Bahrein, a district renowned for its lancers (Χαττηνία, Polyb.
; Attene, Plin .)
Gen 25:12-18 To show that the promises of God, which had been made to Ishmael (Gen 16:10. and Gen 17:20), were fulfilled, a short account is given of his descendants; and according to the settled plan of Genesis, this account precedes the history of Isaac. This is evidently the intention of the list which follows of the twelve sons of Ishmael, who are given as princes of the tribes which sprang from them.
Nebajoth and Kedar are mentioned in Isa 60:7 as rich possessors of flocks, and, according to the current opinion which Wetzstein disputes, are the Nabataei et Cedrei of Pliny ( h. n. 5, 12). The Nabataeans held possession of Arabia Petraea , with Petra as their capital, and subsequently extended toward the south and north-east, probably as far as Babylon; so that the name was afterwards transferred to all the tribes to the east of the Jordan, and in the Nabataean writings became a common name for Chaldeans (ancient Babylonians), Syrians, Canaanites, and others.
The Kedarenes are mentioned in Isa 21:17 as good bowmen. They dwelt in the desert between Arabia Petraea and Babylon (Isa 42:11; Psa 120:5). According to Wetzstein , they are to be found in the nomad tribes of Arabia Petraea up to Harra . The name Dumah , Δούμεθα Αουμαίθα (Ptol. v. 19, 7, Steph. Byz .) , Domata (Plin. 6, 32), has been retained in the modern Dumat el Jendel in Nejd, the Arabian highland, four days’ journey to the north of Taima.
- Tema: a trading people (Job 6:19; Isa 21:14; mentioned in Jer 25:23, between Dedan and Bus) in the land of Taima , on the border of Nejd and the Syrian desert. According to Wetzstein , Dûma and Têma are still two important places in Eastern Hauran, three-quarters of an hour apart. Jetur and Naphish were neighbours of the tribes of Israel to the east of the Jordan (1Ch 5:19), who made war upon them along with the Hagrites, the Αγραῖοι of Ptol.
and Strabo. From Jetur sprang the Ituraeans , who lived, according to Strabo , near the Trachonians in an almost inaccessible, mountainous, and cavernous country; according to Wetzstein , in the mountains of the Druses in the centre of the Hauran, possibly the forefathers of the modern Druses. The other names are not yet satisfactorily determined. For Adbeel , Mibsam , and Kedma , the Arabian legends give no corresponding names.
Mishma is associated by Knobel with the Μαισαιμανείς of Ptol. vi. 7, 21, to the N. E. of Medina; Massa with the Μασανοί on the N. E. of Duma; Hadad (the proper reading for Hadar , according to 1Ch 1:30, the lxx, Sam. , Masor. , and most MSS) with the Arabian coast land, Chathth , between Oman and Bahrein, a district renowned for its lancers (Χαττηνία, Polyb.
; Attene, Plin .)
Gen 25:12-18 To show that the promises of God, which had been made to Ishmael (Gen 16:10. and Gen 17:20), were fulfilled, a short account is given of his descendants; and according to the settled plan of Genesis, this account precedes the history of Isaac. This is evidently the intention of the list which follows of the twelve sons of Ishmael, who are given as princes of the tribes which sprang from them.
Nebajoth and Kedar are mentioned in Isa 60:7 as rich possessors of flocks, and, according to the current opinion which Wetzstein disputes, are the Nabataei et Cedrei of Pliny ( h. n. 5, 12). The Nabataeans held possession of Arabia Petraea , with Petra as their capital, and subsequently extended toward the south and north-east, probably as far as Babylon; so that the name was afterwards transferred to all the tribes to the east of the Jordan, and in the Nabataean writings became a common name for Chaldeans (ancient Babylonians), Syrians, Canaanites, and others.
The Kedarenes are mentioned in Isa 21:17 as good bowmen. They dwelt in the desert between Arabia Petraea and Babylon (Isa 42:11; Psa 120:5). According to Wetzstein , they are to be found in the nomad tribes of Arabia Petraea up to Harra . The name Dumah , Δούμεθα Αουμαίθα (Ptol. v. 19, 7, Steph. Byz .) , Domata (Plin. 6, 32), has been retained in the modern Dumat el Jendel in Nejd, the Arabian highland, four days’ journey to the north of Taima.
- Tema: a trading people (Job 6:19; Isa 21:14; mentioned in Jer 25:23, between Dedan and Bus) in the land of Taima , on the border of Nejd and the Syrian desert. According to Wetzstein , Dûma and Têma are still two important places in Eastern Hauran, three-quarters of an hour apart. Jetur and Naphish were neighbours of the tribes of Israel to the east of the Jordan (1Ch 5:19), who made war upon them along with the Hagrites, the Αγραῖοι of Ptol.
and Strabo. From Jetur sprang the Ituraeans , who lived, according to Strabo , near the Trachonians in an almost inaccessible, mountainous, and cavernous country; according to Wetzstein , in the mountains of the Druses in the centre of the Hauran, possibly the forefathers of the modern Druses. The other names are not yet satisfactorily determined. For Adbeel , Mibsam , and Kedma , the Arabian legends give no corresponding names.
Mishma is associated by Knobel with the Μαισαιμανείς of Ptol. vi. 7, 21, to the N. E. of Medina; Massa with the Μασανοί on the N. E. of Duma; Hadad (the proper reading for Hadar , according to 1Ch 1:30, the lxx, Sam. , Masor. , and most MSS) with the Arabian coast land, Chathth , between Oman and Bahrein, a district renowned for its lancers (Χαττηνία, Polyb.
; Attene, Plin .)
Gen 25:12-18 To show that the promises of God, which had been made to Ishmael (Gen 16:10. and Gen 17:20), were fulfilled, a short account is given of his descendants; and according to the settled plan of Genesis, this account precedes the history of Isaac. This is evidently the intention of the list which follows of the twelve sons of Ishmael, who are given as princes of the tribes which sprang from them.
Nebajoth and Kedar are mentioned in Isa 60:7 as rich possessors of flocks, and, according to the current opinion which Wetzstein disputes, are the Nabataei et Cedrei of Pliny ( h. n. 5, 12). The Nabataeans held possession of Arabia Petraea , with Petra as their capital, and subsequently extended toward the south and north-east, probably as far as Babylon; so that the name was afterwards transferred to all the tribes to the east of the Jordan, and in the Nabataean writings became a common name for Chaldeans (ancient Babylonians), Syrians, Canaanites, and others.
The Kedarenes are mentioned in Isa 21:17 as good bowmen. They dwelt in the desert between Arabia Petraea and Babylon (Isa 42:11; Psa 120:5). According to Wetzstein , they are to be found in the nomad tribes of Arabia Petraea up to Harra . The name Dumah , Δούμεθα Αουμαίθα (Ptol. v. 19, 7, Steph. Byz .) , Domata (Plin. 6, 32), has been retained in the modern Dumat el Jendel in Nejd, the Arabian highland, four days’ journey to the north of Taima.
- Tema: a trading people (Job 6:19; Isa 21:14; mentioned in Jer 25:23, between Dedan and Bus) in the land of Taima , on the border of Nejd and the Syrian desert. According to Wetzstein , Dûma and Têma are still two important places in Eastern Hauran, three-quarters of an hour apart. Jetur and Naphish were neighbours of the tribes of Israel to the east of the Jordan (1Ch 5:19), who made war upon them along with the Hagrites, the Αγραῖοι of Ptol.
and Strabo. From Jetur sprang the Ituraeans , who lived, according to Strabo , near the Trachonians in an almost inaccessible, mountainous, and cavernous country; according to Wetzstein , in the mountains of the Druses in the centre of the Hauran, possibly the forefathers of the modern Druses. The other names are not yet satisfactorily determined. For Adbeel , Mibsam , and Kedma , the Arabian legends give no corresponding names.
Mishma is associated by Knobel with the Μαισαιμανείς of Ptol. vi. 7, 21, to the N. E. of Medina; Massa with the Μασανοί on the N. E. of Duma; Hadad (the proper reading for Hadar , according to 1Ch 1:30, the lxx, Sam. , Masor. , and most MSS) with the Arabian coast land, Chathth , between Oman and Bahrein, a district renowned for its lancers (Χαττηνία, Polyb.
; Attene, Plin .)
Gen 25:12-18 To show that the promises of God, which had been made to Ishmael (Gen 16:10. and Gen 17:20), were fulfilled, a short account is given of his descendants; and according to the settled plan of Genesis, this account precedes the history of Isaac. This is evidently the intention of the list which follows of the twelve sons of Ishmael, who are given as princes of the tribes which sprang from them.
Nebajoth and Kedar are mentioned in Isa 60:7 as rich possessors of flocks, and, according to the current opinion which Wetzstein disputes, are the Nabataei et Cedrei of Pliny ( h. n. 5, 12). The Nabataeans held possession of Arabia Petraea , with Petra as their capital, and subsequently extended toward the south and north-east, probably as far as Babylon; so that the name was afterwards transferred to all the tribes to the east of the Jordan, and in the Nabataean writings became a common name for Chaldeans (ancient Babylonians), Syrians, Canaanites, and others.
The Kedarenes are mentioned in Isa 21:17 as good bowmen. They dwelt in the desert between Arabia Petraea and Babylon (Isa 42:11; Psa 120:5). According to Wetzstein , they are to be found in the nomad tribes of Arabia Petraea up to Harra . The name Dumah , Δούμεθα Αουμαίθα (Ptol. v. 19, 7, Steph. Byz .) , Domata (Plin. 6, 32), has been retained in the modern Dumat el Jendel in Nejd, the Arabian highland, four days’ journey to the north of Taima.
- Tema: a trading people (Job 6:19; Isa 21:14; mentioned in Jer 25:23, between Dedan and Bus) in the land of Taima , on the border of Nejd and the Syrian desert. According to Wetzstein , Dûma and Têma are still two important places in Eastern Hauran, three-quarters of an hour apart. Jetur and Naphish were neighbours of the tribes of Israel to the east of the Jordan (1Ch 5:19), who made war upon them along with the Hagrites, the Αγραῖοι of Ptol.
and Strabo. From Jetur sprang the Ituraeans , who lived, according to Strabo , near the Trachonians in an almost inaccessible, mountainous, and cavernous country; according to Wetzstein , in the mountains of the Druses in the centre of the Hauran, possibly the forefathers of the modern Druses. The other names are not yet satisfactorily determined. For Adbeel , Mibsam , and Kedma , the Arabian legends give no corresponding names.
Mishma is associated by Knobel with the Μαισαιμανείς of Ptol. vi. 7, 21, to the N. E. of Medina; Massa with the Μασανοί on the N. E. of Duma; Hadad (the proper reading for Hadar , according to 1Ch 1:30, the lxx, Sam. , Masor. , and most MSS) with the Arabian coast land, Chathth , between Oman and Bahrein, a district renowned for its lancers (Χαττηνία, Polyb.
; Attene, Plin .)
Gen 25:12-18 To show that the promises of God, which had been made to Ishmael (Gen 16:10. and Gen 17:20), were fulfilled, a short account is given of his descendants; and according to the settled plan of Genesis, this account precedes the history of Isaac. This is evidently the intention of the list which follows of the twelve sons of Ishmael, who are given as princes of the tribes which sprang from them.
Nebajoth and Kedar are mentioned in Isa 60:7 as rich possessors of flocks, and, according to the current opinion which Wetzstein disputes, are the Nabataei et Cedrei of Pliny ( h. n. 5, 12). The Nabataeans held possession of Arabia Petraea , with Petra as their capital, and subsequently extended toward the south and north-east, probably as far as Babylon; so that the name was afterwards transferred to all the tribes to the east of the Jordan, and in the Nabataean writings became a common name for Chaldeans (ancient Babylonians), Syrians, Canaanites, and others.
The Kedarenes are mentioned in Isa 21:17 as good bowmen. They dwelt in the desert between Arabia Petraea and Babylon (Isa 42:11; Psa 120:5). According to Wetzstein , they are to be found in the nomad tribes of Arabia Petraea up to Harra . The name Dumah , Δούμεθα Αουμαίθα (Ptol. v. 19, 7, Steph. Byz .) , Domata (Plin. 6, 32), has been retained in the modern Dumat el Jendel in Nejd, the Arabian highland, four days’ journey to the north of Taima.
- Tema: a trading people (Job 6:19; Isa 21:14; mentioned in Jer 25:23, between Dedan and Bus) in the land of Taima , on the border of Nejd and the Syrian desert. According to Wetzstein , Dûma and Têma are still two important places in Eastern Hauran, three-quarters of an hour apart. Jetur and Naphish were neighbours of the tribes of Israel to the east of the Jordan (1Ch 5:19), who made war upon them along with the Hagrites, the Αγραῖοι of Ptol.
and Strabo. From Jetur sprang the Ituraeans , who lived, according to Strabo , near the Trachonians in an almost inaccessible, mountainous, and cavernous country; according to Wetzstein , in the mountains of the Druses in the centre of the Hauran, possibly the forefathers of the modern Druses. The other names are not yet satisfactorily determined. For Adbeel , Mibsam , and Kedma , the Arabian legends give no corresponding names.
Mishma is associated by Knobel with the Μαισαιμανείς of Ptol. vi. 7, 21, to the N. E. of Medina; Massa with the Μασανοί on the N. E. of Duma; Hadad (the proper reading for Hadar , according to 1Ch 1:30, the lxx, Sam. , Masor. , and most MSS) with the Arabian coast land, Chathth , between Oman and Bahrein, a district renowned for its lancers (Χαττηνία, Polyb.
; Attene, Plin .)
Gen 25:12-18 To show that the promises of God, which had been made to Ishmael (Gen 16:10. and Gen 17:20), were fulfilled, a short account is given of his descendants; and according to the settled plan of Genesis, this account precedes the history of Isaac. This is evidently the intention of the list which follows of the twelve sons of Ishmael, who are given as princes of the tribes which sprang from them.
Nebajoth and Kedar are mentioned in Isa 60:7 as rich possessors of flocks, and, according to the current opinion which Wetzstein disputes, are the Nabataei et Cedrei of Pliny ( h. n. 5, 12). The Nabataeans held possession of Arabia Petraea , with Petra as their capital, and subsequently extended toward the south and north-east, probably as far as Babylon; so that the name was afterwards transferred to all the tribes to the east of the Jordan, and in the Nabataean writings became a common name for Chaldeans (ancient Babylonians), Syrians, Canaanites, and others.
The Kedarenes are mentioned in Isa 21:17 as good bowmen. They dwelt in the desert between Arabia Petraea and Babylon (Isa 42:11; Psa 120:5). According to Wetzstein , they are to be found in the nomad tribes of Arabia Petraea up to Harra . The name Dumah , Δούμεθα Αουμαίθα (Ptol. v. 19, 7, Steph. Byz .) , Domata (Plin. 6, 32), has been retained in the modern Dumat el Jendel in Nejd, the Arabian highland, four days’ journey to the north of Taima.
- Tema: a trading people (Job 6:19; Isa 21:14; mentioned in Jer 25:23, between Dedan and Bus) in the land of Taima , on the border of Nejd and the Syrian desert. According to Wetzstein , Dûma and Têma are still two important places in Eastern Hauran, three-quarters of an hour apart. Jetur and Naphish were neighbours of the tribes of Israel to the east of the Jordan (1Ch 5:19), who made war upon them along with the Hagrites, the Αγραῖοι of Ptol.
and Strabo. From Jetur sprang the Ituraeans , who lived, according to Strabo , near the Trachonians in an almost inaccessible, mountainous, and cavernous country; according to Wetzstein , in the mountains of the Druses in the centre of the Hauran, possibly the forefathers of the modern Druses. The other names are not yet satisfactorily determined. For Adbeel , Mibsam , and Kedma , the Arabian legends give no corresponding names.
Mishma is associated by Knobel with the Μαισαιμανείς of Ptol. vi. 7, 21, to the N. E. of Medina; Massa with the Μασανοί on the N. E. of Duma; Hadad (the proper reading for Hadar , according to 1Ch 1:30, the lxx, Sam. , Masor. , and most MSS) with the Arabian coast land, Chathth , between Oman and Bahrein, a district renowned for its lancers (Χαττηνία, Polyb.
; Attene, Plin .)
Gen 25:19-20 According to the plan of Genesis, the history ( tholedoth ) of Isaac commences with the birth of his sons. But to give it the character of completeness in itself, Isaac’s birth and marriage are mentioned again in Gen 25:19, Gen 25:20, as well as his age at the time of his marriage. The name given to the country of Rebekah (Gen 25:20) and the abode of Laban in Gen 28:2, Gen 28:6-7; Gen 31:18; Gen 33:18; Gen 35:9, Gen 35:26; Gen 46:15, viz.
, Padan-Aram , or more concisely Padan (Gen 48:7), “the flat, or flat land of Aram,” for which Hosea uses “the field of Aram” (Hos 12:12), is not a peculiar expression employed by the Elohist, or in the so-called foundation-work, for Aram Naharaim , Mesopotamia (Gen 24:10), but a more exact description of one particular district of Mesopotamia, viz. , of the large plain, surrounded by mountains, in which the town of Haran was situated.
The name was apparently transferred to the town itself afterwards. The history of Isaac consists of two stages: (1) the period of his active life, from his marriage and the birth of his sons till the departure of Jacob for Mesopotamia (Gen 25:20-28:9); and (2) the time of his suffering endurance in the growing infirmity of age, when the events of Jacob’s life form the leading feature of the still further expanded history of salvation (Gen 28:10-35:29).
This suffering condition, which lasted more than 40 years, reflected in a certain way the historical position which Isaac held in the patriarchal triad, as a passive rather than active link between Abraham and Jacob; and even in the active period of his life many of the events of Abraham’s history were repeated in a modified form. The name Jehovah prevails in the historical development of the tholedoth of Isaac, in the same manner as in that of Terah; although, on closer examination of the two, we find, first , that in this portion of Genesis the references to God are less frequent than in the earlier one; and secondly , that instead of the name Jehovah occurring more frequently than Elohim , the name Elohim predominates in this second stage of the history.
The first difference arises from the fact, that the historical matter furnishes less occasion for the introduction of the name of God, just because the revelations of God are more rare, since the appearances of Jehovah to Isaac and Jacob together are not so numerous as those to Abraham alone. The second may be explained partly from the fact, that Isaac and Jacob did not perpetually stand in such close and living faith in Jehovah as Abraham, and partly also from the fact, that the previous revelations of God gave rise to other titles for the covenant God, such as “God of Abraham,” “God of my father,” etc.
, which could be used in the place of the name Jehovah (cf. Gen 26:24; Gen 31:5, Gen 31:42; Gen 35:1, Gen 35:3, and the remarks on Gen 35:9).
Gen 25:19-20 According to the plan of Genesis, the history ( tholedoth ) of Isaac commences with the birth of his sons. But to give it the character of completeness in itself, Isaac’s birth and marriage are mentioned again in Gen 25:19, Gen 25:20, as well as his age at the time of his marriage. The name given to the country of Rebekah (Gen 25:20) and the abode of Laban in Gen 28:2, Gen 28:6-7; Gen 31:18; Gen 33:18; Gen 35:9, Gen 35:26; Gen 46:15, viz.
, Padan-Aram , or more concisely Padan (Gen 48:7), “the flat, or flat land of Aram,” for which Hosea uses “the field of Aram” (Hos 12:12), is not a peculiar expression employed by the Elohist, or in the so-called foundation-work, for Aram Naharaim , Mesopotamia (Gen 24:10), but a more exact description of one particular district of Mesopotamia, viz. , of the large plain, surrounded by mountains, in which the town of Haran was situated.
The name was apparently transferred to the town itself afterwards. The history of Isaac consists of two stages: (1) the period of his active life, from his marriage and the birth of his sons till the departure of Jacob for Mesopotamia (Gen 25:20-28:9); and (2) the time of his suffering endurance in the growing infirmity of age, when the events of Jacob’s life form the leading feature of the still further expanded history of salvation (Gen 28:10-35:29).
This suffering condition, which lasted more than 40 years, reflected in a certain way the historical position which Isaac held in the patriarchal triad, as a passive rather than active link between Abraham and Jacob; and even in the active period of his life many of the events of Abraham’s history were repeated in a modified form. The name Jehovah prevails in the historical development of the tholedoth of Isaac, in the same manner as in that of Terah; although, on closer examination of the two, we find, first , that in this portion of Genesis the references to God are less frequent than in the earlier one; and secondly , that instead of the name Jehovah occurring more frequently than Elohim , the name Elohim predominates in this second stage of the history.
The first difference arises from the fact, that the historical matter furnishes less occasion for the introduction of the name of God, just because the revelations of God are more rare, since the appearances of Jehovah to Isaac and Jacob together are not so numerous as those to Abraham alone. The second may be explained partly from the fact, that Isaac and Jacob did not perpetually stand in such close and living faith in Jehovah as Abraham, and partly also from the fact, that the previous revelations of God gave rise to other titles for the covenant God, such as “God of Abraham,” “God of my father,” etc.
, which could be used in the place of the name Jehovah (cf. Gen 26:24; Gen 31:5, Gen 31:42; Gen 35:1, Gen 35:3, and the remarks on Gen 35:9).
Gen 25:21 Isaac’s marriage, like Abraham’s, was for a long time unfruitful; not to extreme old age, however, but only for 20 years. The seed of the promise was to be prayed for from the Lord, that it might not be regarded merely as a fruit of nature, but be received and recognised as a gift of grace. At the same time Isaac was to be exercised in the patience of faith in the promise of God.
After this lengthened test, Jehovah heard his prayer in relation to his wife. לנוכח, Gen 25:21 and Gen 30:38, lit. , opposite to, so that the object is before the eyes, has been well explained by Luther thus: quod toto pectore et intentus in calamitatem uxoris oraverit. Sicut quando oro pro aliquo, propono illum mihi in conspectum cordis mei, et nihil aliud video aut cogito; in eum solum animo intueor .
Gen 25:22-23 When Rebekah conceived, the children struggled together in her womb. In this she saw an evil omen, that the pregnancy so long desired and entreated of Jehovah would bring misfortune, and that the fruit of her womb might not after all secure the blessing of the divine promise; so that in intense excitement she cried out, “ If it be so, wherefore am I?
” i. e. , why am I alive? cf. Gen 27:46. But she sought counsel from God: she went to inquire of Jehovah . Where and how she looked for a divine revelation in the matter, is not recorded, and therefore cannot be determined with certainty. Some suppose that it was by prayer and sacrifice at a place dedicated to Jehovah . Others imagine that she applied to a prophet - to Abraham, Melchizedek, or Shem ( Luther ); a frequent custom in Israel afterwards (1Sa 9:9), but not probable in the patriarchal age.
The divine answer, couched in the form of a prophetic oracle, assured her that she carried two nations in her womb, one stronger than the other; and that the greater (elder or first-born) should serve the less (younger). הפּרד ממּעיך: “ proceeding from thy womb, are separated . ”
Gen 25:22-23 When Rebekah conceived, the children struggled together in her womb. In this she saw an evil omen, that the pregnancy so long desired and entreated of Jehovah would bring misfortune, and that the fruit of her womb might not after all secure the blessing of the divine promise; so that in intense excitement she cried out, “ If it be so, wherefore am I?
” i. e. , why am I alive? cf. Gen 27:46. But she sought counsel from God: she went to inquire of Jehovah . Where and how she looked for a divine revelation in the matter, is not recorded, and therefore cannot be determined with certainty. Some suppose that it was by prayer and sacrifice at a place dedicated to Jehovah . Others imagine that she applied to a prophet - to Abraham, Melchizedek, or Shem ( Luther ); a frequent custom in Israel afterwards (1Sa 9:9), but not probable in the patriarchal age.
The divine answer, couched in the form of a prophetic oracle, assured her that she carried two nations in her womb, one stronger than the other; and that the greater (elder or first-born) should serve the less (younger). הפּרד ממּעיך: “ proceeding from thy womb, are separated . ”
Gen 25:24-26 When she was delivered, there were twins; the first-born was reddish, i. e. , of a reddish-brown colour (1Sa 16:12; 1Sa 17:42), and “all over like a hairy cloak,” i. e. , his whole body as if covered with a fur, with an unusual quantity of hair ( hypertrichosis ), which is sometimes the case with new-born infants, but was a sign in this instance of excessive sensual vigour and wildness.
The second had laid hold of the heel of the first, i. e. , he came into the world with his hand projected and holding the heel of the first-born, a sign of his future attitude towards his brother. From these accidental circumstances the children received their names. The elder they called Esau, the hairy one; the younger Jacob , heel-holder: יעקב from עקב ( denom .
of עקב heel, Hos 12:3), to hold the heel, then to outwit (Gen 27:36), just as in wrestling an attempt may be made to throw the opponent by grasping the heel.
Gen 25:24-26 When she was delivered, there were twins; the first-born was reddish, i. e. , of a reddish-brown colour (1Sa 16:12; 1Sa 17:42), and “all over like a hairy cloak,” i. e. , his whole body as if covered with a fur, with an unusual quantity of hair ( hypertrichosis ), which is sometimes the case with new-born infants, but was a sign in this instance of excessive sensual vigour and wildness.
The second had laid hold of the heel of the first, i. e. , he came into the world with his hand projected and holding the heel of the first-born, a sign of his future attitude towards his brother. From these accidental circumstances the children received their names. The elder they called Esau, the hairy one; the younger Jacob , heel-holder: יעקב from עקב ( denom .
of עקב heel, Hos 12:3), to hold the heel, then to outwit (Gen 27:36), just as in wrestling an attempt may be made to throw the opponent by grasping the heel.
Gen 25:24-26 When she was delivered, there were twins; the first-born was reddish, i. e. , of a reddish-brown colour (1Sa 16:12; 1Sa 17:42), and “all over like a hairy cloak,” i. e. , his whole body as if covered with a fur, with an unusual quantity of hair ( hypertrichosis ), which is sometimes the case with new-born infants, but was a sign in this instance of excessive sensual vigour and wildness.
The second had laid hold of the heel of the first, i. e. , he came into the world with his hand projected and holding the heel of the first-born, a sign of his future attitude towards his brother. From these accidental circumstances the children received their names. The elder they called Esau, the hairy one; the younger Jacob , heel-holder: יעקב from עקב ( denom .
of עקב heel, Hos 12:3), to hold the heel, then to outwit (Gen 27:36), just as in wrestling an attempt may be made to throw the opponent by grasping the heel.
Gen 25:27-28 Esau became “ a cunning hunter, a man of the field, ” i.e., a man wandering about in the fields. He was his father’s favourite, for “ venison was in his mouth, ” i.e., he was fond of it. But Jacob was תּם אישׁ, “a pious man” (Luther); תּם, integer , denotes here a disposition that finds pleasure in the quiet life of home. אהלים ישׁב, not dwelling in tents, but sitting in the tents, in contrast with the wild hunter’s life led by his brother; hence he was his mother’s favourite.
Gen 25:27-28 Esau became “ a cunning hunter, a man of the field, ” i.e., a man wandering about in the fields. He was his father’s favourite, for “ venison was in his mouth, ” i.e., he was fond of it. But Jacob was תּם אישׁ, “a pious man” (Luther); תּם, integer , denotes here a disposition that finds pleasure in the quiet life of home. אהלים ישׁב, not dwelling in tents, but sitting in the tents, in contrast with the wild hunter’s life led by his brother; hence he was his mother’s favourite.
Gen 25:29-34 The difference in the characters of the two brothers was soon shown in a singular circumstance, which was the turning-point in their lives. Esau returned home one day from the field quite exhausted, and seeing Jacob with a dish of lentils, still a favourite dish in Syria and Egypt, he asked with passionate eagerness for some to eat: “ Let me swallow some of that red, that red there; ” אדם, the brown-red lentil pottage.
From this he received the name Edom , just as among the ancient Arabians persons received names from quite accidental circumstances, which entirely obscured their proper names. Jacob made us of his brother’s hunger to get him to sell his birthright. The birthright consisted afterwards in a double portion of the father’s inheritance (Deu 21:17); but with the patriarchs it embraced the chieftainship, the rule over the brethren and the entire family (Gen 27:29), and the title to the blessing of the promise (Gen 27:4, Gen 27:27-29), which included the future possession of Canaan and of covenant fellowship with Jehovah (Gen 28:4).
Jacob knew this, and it led him to anticipate the purposes of God. Esau also knew it, but attached no value to it. There is proof enough that he knew he was giving away, along with the birthright, blessings which, because they were not of a material but of a spiritual nature, had no particular value in his estimation, in the words he made use of: “ Behold I am going to die (to meet death), and what is the birthright to me?
” The only thing of value to him was the sensual enjoyment of the present; the spiritual blessings of the future his carnal mind was unable to estimate. In this he showed himself to be βέβηλος (Heb 12:16), a profane man, who cared for nothing but the momentary gratification of sensual desires, who “ did eat and drink, and rose up, and went his way, and so despised his birthright ” (Gen 25:34).
With these words the Scriptures judge and condemn the conduct of Esau. Just as Ishmael was excluded from the promised blessing because he was begotten “according to the flesh,” so Esau lost it because his disposition was according to the flesh. The frivolity with which he sold his birthright to his brother for a dish of lentils, rendered him unfit to be the heir and possessor of the promised grace.
But this did not justify Jacob’s conduct in the matter. Though not condemned here, yet in the further course of the history it is shown to have been wrong, by the simple fact that he did not venture to make this transaction the basis of a claim. Isaac’s Joys and Sorrows - Genesis 26 The incidents of Isaac’s life which are collected together in this chapter, from the time of his sojourn in the south country, resemble in many respects certain events in the life of Abraham; but the distinctive peculiarities are such as to form a true picture of the dealings of God, which were in perfect accordance with the character of the patriarch.
Gen 25:29-34 The difference in the characters of the two brothers was soon shown in a singular circumstance, which was the turning-point in their lives. Esau returned home one day from the field quite exhausted, and seeing Jacob with a dish of lentils, still a favourite dish in Syria and Egypt, he asked with passionate eagerness for some to eat: “ Let me swallow some of that red, that red there; ” אדם, the brown-red lentil pottage.
From this he received the name Edom , just as among the ancient Arabians persons received names from quite accidental circumstances, which entirely obscured their proper names. Jacob made us of his brother’s hunger to get him to sell his birthright. The birthright consisted afterwards in a double portion of the father’s inheritance (Deu 21:17); but with the patriarchs it embraced the chieftainship, the rule over the brethren and the entire family (Gen 27:29), and the title to the blessing of the promise (Gen 27:4, Gen 27:27-29), which included the future possession of Canaan and of covenant fellowship with Jehovah (Gen 28:4).
Jacob knew this, and it led him to anticipate the purposes of God. Esau also knew it, but attached no value to it. There is proof enough that he knew he was giving away, along with the birthright, blessings which, because they were not of a material but of a spiritual nature, had no particular value in his estimation, in the words he made use of: “ Behold I am going to die (to meet death), and what is the birthright to me?
” The only thing of value to him was the sensual enjoyment of the present; the spiritual blessings of the future his carnal mind was unable to estimate. In this he showed himself to be βέβηλος (Heb 12:16), a profane man, who cared for nothing but the momentary gratification of sensual desires, who “ did eat and drink, and rose up, and went his way, and so despised his birthright ” (Gen 25:34).
With these words the Scriptures judge and condemn the conduct of Esau. Just as Ishmael was excluded from the promised blessing because he was begotten “according to the flesh,” so Esau lost it because his disposition was according to the flesh. The frivolity with which he sold his birthright to his brother for a dish of lentils, rendered him unfit to be the heir and possessor of the promised grace.
But this did not justify Jacob’s conduct in the matter. Though not condemned here, yet in the further course of the history it is shown to have been wrong, by the simple fact that he did not venture to make this transaction the basis of a claim. Isaac’s Joys and Sorrows - Genesis 26 The incidents of Isaac’s life which are collected together in this chapter, from the time of his sojourn in the south country, resemble in many respects certain events in the life of Abraham; but the distinctive peculiarities are such as to form a true picture of the dealings of God, which were in perfect accordance with the character of the patriarch.
Gen 25:29-34 The difference in the characters of the two brothers was soon shown in a singular circumstance, which was the turning-point in their lives. Esau returned home one day from the field quite exhausted, and seeing Jacob with a dish of lentils, still a favourite dish in Syria and Egypt, he asked with passionate eagerness for some to eat: “ Let me swallow some of that red, that red there; ” אדם, the brown-red lentil pottage.
From this he received the name Edom , just as among the ancient Arabians persons received names from quite accidental circumstances, which entirely obscured their proper names. Jacob made us of his brother’s hunger to get him to sell his birthright. The birthright consisted afterwards in a double portion of the father’s inheritance (Deu 21:17); but with the patriarchs it embraced the chieftainship, the rule over the brethren and the entire family (Gen 27:29), and the title to the blessing of the promise (Gen 27:4, Gen 27:27-29), which included the future possession of Canaan and of covenant fellowship with Jehovah (Gen 28:4).
Jacob knew this, and it led him to anticipate the purposes of God. Esau also knew it, but attached no value to it. There is proof enough that he knew he was giving away, along with the birthright, blessings which, because they were not of a material but of a spiritual nature, had no particular value in his estimation, in the words he made use of: “ Behold I am going to die (to meet death), and what is the birthright to me?
” The only thing of value to him was the sensual enjoyment of the present; the spiritual blessings of the future his carnal mind was unable to estimate. In this he showed himself to be βέβηλος (Heb 12:16), a profane man, who cared for nothing but the momentary gratification of sensual desires, who “ did eat and drink, and rose up, and went his way, and so despised his birthright ” (Gen 25:34).
With these words the Scriptures judge and condemn the conduct of Esau. Just as Ishmael was excluded from the promised blessing because he was begotten “according to the flesh,” so Esau lost it because his disposition was according to the flesh. The frivolity with which he sold his birthright to his brother for a dish of lentils, rendered him unfit to be the heir and possessor of the promised grace.
But this did not justify Jacob’s conduct in the matter. Though not condemned here, yet in the further course of the history it is shown to have been wrong, by the simple fact that he did not venture to make this transaction the basis of a claim. Isaac’s Joys and Sorrows - Genesis 26 The incidents of Isaac’s life which are collected together in this chapter, from the time of his sojourn in the south country, resemble in many respects certain events in the life of Abraham; but the distinctive peculiarities are such as to form a true picture of the dealings of God, which were in perfect accordance with the character of the patriarch.
Gen 25:29-34 The difference in the characters of the two brothers was soon shown in a singular circumstance, which was the turning-point in their lives. Esau returned home one day from the field quite exhausted, and seeing Jacob with a dish of lentils, still a favourite dish in Syria and Egypt, he asked with passionate eagerness for some to eat: “ Let me swallow some of that red, that red there; ” אדם, the brown-red lentil pottage.
From this he received the name Edom , just as among the ancient Arabians persons received names from quite accidental circumstances, which entirely obscured their proper names. Jacob made us of his brother’s hunger to get him to sell his birthright. The birthright consisted afterwards in a double portion of the father’s inheritance (Deu 21:17); but with the patriarchs it embraced the chieftainship, the rule over the brethren and the entire family (Gen 27:29), and the title to the blessing of the promise (Gen 27:4, Gen 27:27-29), which included the future possession of Canaan and of covenant fellowship with Jehovah (Gen 28:4).
Jacob knew this, and it led him to anticipate the purposes of God. Esau also knew it, but attached no value to it. There is proof enough that he knew he was giving away, along with the birthright, blessings which, because they were not of a material but of a spiritual nature, had no particular value in his estimation, in the words he made use of: “ Behold I am going to die (to meet death), and what is the birthright to me?
” The only thing of value to him was the sensual enjoyment of the present; the spiritual blessings of the future his carnal mind was unable to estimate. In this he showed himself to be βέβηλος (Heb 12:16), a profane man, who cared for nothing but the momentary gratification of sensual desires, who “ did eat and drink, and rose up, and went his way, and so despised his birthright ” (Gen 25:34).
With these words the Scriptures judge and condemn the conduct of Esau. Just as Ishmael was excluded from the promised blessing because he was begotten “according to the flesh,” so Esau lost it because his disposition was according to the flesh. The frivolity with which he sold his birthright to his brother for a dish of lentils, rendered him unfit to be the heir and possessor of the promised grace.
But this did not justify Jacob’s conduct in the matter. Though not condemned here, yet in the further course of the history it is shown to have been wrong, by the simple fact that he did not venture to make this transaction the basis of a claim. Isaac’s Joys and Sorrows - Genesis 26 The incidents of Isaac’s life which are collected together in this chapter, from the time of his sojourn in the south country, resemble in many respects certain events in the life of Abraham; but the distinctive peculiarities are such as to form a true picture of the dealings of God, which were in perfect accordance with the character of the patriarch.
Gen 25:29-34 The difference in the characters of the two brothers was soon shown in a singular circumstance, which was the turning-point in their lives. Esau returned home one day from the field quite exhausted, and seeing Jacob with a dish of lentils, still a favourite dish in Syria and Egypt, he asked with passionate eagerness for some to eat: “ Let me swallow some of that red, that red there; ” אדם, the brown-red lentil pottage.
From this he received the name Edom , just as among the ancient Arabians persons received names from quite accidental circumstances, which entirely obscured their proper names. Jacob made us of his brother’s hunger to get him to sell his birthright. The birthright consisted afterwards in a double portion of the father’s inheritance (Deu 21:17); but with the patriarchs it embraced the chieftainship, the rule over the brethren and the entire family (Gen 27:29), and the title to the blessing of the promise (Gen 27:4, Gen 27:27-29), which included the future possession of Canaan and of covenant fellowship with Jehovah (Gen 28:4).
Jacob knew this, and it led him to anticipate the purposes of God. Esau also knew it, but attached no value to it. There is proof enough that he knew he was giving away, along with the birthright, blessings which, because they were not of a material but of a spiritual nature, had no particular value in his estimation, in the words he made use of: “ Behold I am going to die (to meet death), and what is the birthright to me?
” The only thing of value to him was the sensual enjoyment of the present; the spiritual blessings of the future his carnal mind was unable to estimate. In this he showed himself to be βέβηλος (Heb 12:16), a profane man, who cared for nothing but the momentary gratification of sensual desires, who “ did eat and drink, and rose up, and went his way, and so despised his birthright ” (Gen 25:34).
With these words the Scriptures judge and condemn the conduct of Esau. Just as Ishmael was excluded from the promised blessing because he was begotten “according to the flesh,” so Esau lost it because his disposition was according to the flesh. The frivolity with which he sold his birthright to his brother for a dish of lentils, rendered him unfit to be the heir and possessor of the promised grace.
But this did not justify Jacob’s conduct in the matter. Though not condemned here, yet in the further course of the history it is shown to have been wrong, by the simple fact that he did not venture to make this transaction the basis of a claim. Isaac’s Joys and Sorrows - Genesis 26 The incidents of Isaac’s life which are collected together in this chapter, from the time of his sojourn in the south country, resemble in many respects certain events in the life of Abraham; but the distinctive peculiarities are such as to form a true picture of the dealings of God, which were in perfect accordance with the character of the patriarch.