Though the covenant blessing passes to Jacob according to God’s prior purpose, Genesis 27 shows that the family’s favoritism and deception bring deep sorrow, proving that God’s sovereignty is never an excuse for sinful means.
Isaac Blesses Jacob by Deception, and the Covenant Blessing Advances Through Human Sin Under Divine Sovereignty
Though the covenant blessing passes to Jacob according to God’s prior purpose, Genesis 27 shows that the family’s favoritism and deception bring deep sorrow, proving that God’s sovereignty is never an excuse for sinful means.
Reading a chapter
What this page is: Each chapter page shows the big idea, the argument flow, key original-language terms, doctrine connections, and passage units, all in one place.
How to use it: Start with the Overview tab to get the chapter's main point. Then move to Passages to study individual units, or Language to trace key terms.
Going deeper: The Doctrines and Motifs tabs show how this chapter connects to the broader biblical story.
Though the covenant blessing passes to Jacob according to God’s prior purpose, Genesis 27 shows that the family’s favoritism and deception bring deep sorrow, proving that God’s sovereignty is never an excuse for sinful means.
Genesis 27 teaches that the covenant promise is effectual, weighty, and governed by God’s sovereign purpose, yet the human agents involved remain morally responsible for the sinful ways they seek to secure or resist that purpose. Isaac’s intention to bless Esau shows a troubling disconnect between parental preference and the prior divine oracle concerning the twins.
Rebekah, aware of God’s declared purpose, does not wait on the Lord but schemes to bring it about through manipulation. Jacob, though the divinely chosen recipient of the blessing, enters that role through cowardly compliance and direct deception, even invoking the name of the Lord falsely to strengthen His lie. Esau, for His part, had already despised the birthright, yet now grieves the loss of the blessing without evidence of deep covenant repentance.
The chapter therefore exposes every major figure with moral seriousness. Yet through all of this, the blessing itself proves irreversible. Isaac’s violent trembling suggests more than emotional shock; it signals recognition that something larger than family maneuvering has occurred. The blessing spoken over Jacob includes fertility, dominion, and the Abrahamic formula of cursing and blessing, indicating that the covenant line has now moved forward decisively through Him.
Still, the path is full of pain. The chosen line advances, but the household is torn apart. Jacob gains the blessing yet loses peace, home, and family nearness. Thus Genesis 27 argues that God’s sovereign purpose stands, but sinful strategies wound everyone involved. Divine election does not sanctify deception, and covenant blessing does not eliminate disciplinary sorrow.
Genesis 27 is one of the most sobering and consequential chapters in the patriarchal narrative. Genesis 25 had already revealed the divine oracle that the older would serve the younger, and Genesis 26 ended by highlighting Esau’s covenant-insensitive marriages. Yet despite those signals, the covenant blessing in this chapter is sought, contested, and transmitted through a web of family favoritism, deception, impulsive desire, and bitter conflict.
Within the flow of Genesis, this chapter does not introduce God’s sovereign choice for the first time, but shows how that already-declared purpose unfolds amid the sinful actions of covenant family members. Isaac desires to bless Esau, Rebekah schemes to secure the blessing for Jacob, Jacob deceives His father, and Esau responds with anguish and murderous intent.
The result is not triumph but fracture. At the same time, the chapter makes clear that the covenant blessing, once spoken, is weighty, effective, and not casually reversible. In the wider canonical frame, Genesis 27 demonstrates that God’s redemptive purposes advance through and despite human sin, without that sin being excused or sanctified. The chapter therefore stands as a powerful witness to both divine sovereignty and human accountability.
Isaac, old and dim-eyed, summons Esau and tells Him to hunt game and prepare the savory food He loves so that He may bless Him before He dies.
Rebekah overhears the plan, instructs Jacob to bring two young goats, prepares the food Isaac loves, and clothes Jacob in Esau’s garments while covering His hands and neck with goat skins to mimic Esau’s hairiness.
Jacob enters Isaac’s presence, lies repeatedly about His identity and about the Lord’s providence in His quick success, receives Isaac’s tactile and olfactory inspection, and finally receives the covenantal blessing of abundance, dominion, and the Abrahamic blessing-curse formula.
Esau returns, the deception is exposed, Isaac trembles violently, yet confirms that Jacob shall indeed remain blessed. Esau weeps bitterly and pleads for a blessing, receiving instead a secondary word of hardship, martial existence, and eventual resistance.
Esau hates Jacob and plans to kill Him after Isaac dies. Rebekah learns of the threat, tells Jacob to flee to Laban in Haran, and persuades Isaac through concern over Hittite wives that Jacob should not marry among the daughters of the land.
- 27:1–4: Isaac, old and dim-eyed, summons Esau and tells Him to hunt game and prepare the savory food He loves so that He may bless Him before He dies.
- 27:5–17: Rebekah overhears the plan, instructs Jacob to bring two young goats, prepares the food Isaac loves, and clothes Jacob in Esau’s garments while covering His hands and neck with goat skins to mimic Esau’s hairiness.
- 27:18–29: Jacob enters Isaac’s presence, lies repeatedly about His identity and about the Lord’s providence in His quick success, receives Isaac’s tactile and olfactory inspection, and finally receives the covenantal blessing of abundance, dominion, and the Abrahamic blessing-curse formula.
- 27:30–40: Esau returns, the deception is exposed, Isaac trembles violently, yet confirms that Jacob shall indeed remain blessed. Esau weeps bitterly and pleads for a blessing, receiving instead a secondary word of hardship, martial existence, and eventual resistance.
- 27:41–46: Esau hates Jacob and plans to kill Him after Isaac dies. Rebekah learns of the threat, tells Jacob to flee to Laban in Haran, and persuades Isaac through concern over Hittite wives that Jacob should not marry among the daughters of the land.
Theological Focus
- Divine Sovereignty
- Covenant Blessing
- Human Accountability
- Deception
- Family Favoritism
- Irreversibility of Blessing
- Sinful Means
- Providence
- Covenant Theology
- Hamartiology
- Family Ethics
- Biblical Theology
- Christology Preparation
Covenant Significance
Genesis 27 is covenantally significant because the patriarchal blessing is formally pronounced over Jacob, carrying forward the Abrahamic promise into the next generation. The blessing includes agricultural abundance, rule, and the core Abrahamic blessing-curse language, which shows that this is no mere sentimental farewell but a covenant-bearing pronouncement.
The chapter also demonstrates that the covenant blessing is not infinitely transferable at human whim once spoken. Isaac recognizes that Jacob remains blessed. This confirms that the promise is advancing through Jacob in accordance with the prior divine oracle. At the same time, the chapter warns that covenant succession may unfold amid painful human failure, requiring careful distinction between God’s purpose and man’s sinful methods.
Canonical Connections
Genesis 27 is covenantally significant because the patriarchal blessing is formally pronounced over Jacob, carrying forward the Abrahamic promise into the next generation. The blessing includes agricultural abundance, rule, and the core Abrahamic blessing-curse language, which shows that this is no mere sentimental farewell but a covenant-bearing pronouncement.
The chapter also demonstrates that the covenant blessing is not infinitely transferable at human whim once spoken. Isaac recognizes that Jacob remains blessed. This confirms that the promise is advancing through Jacob in accordance with the prior divine oracle. At the same time, the chapter warns that covenant succession may unfold amid painful human failure, requiring careful distinction between God’s purpose and man’s sinful methods.
Genesis 25:23-34
Genesis 26:34-35
Genesis 28:1-5
Malachi 1:2-3
Psalm 37:5-7
Genesis 25:23-34
Genesis 26:34-35
Genesis 28:1-9
Hebrews 12:16-17
Cross References
Now Yahweh said to Abram, “Leave your country, and your relatives, and your father’s house, and go to the land that I will show you. I will make of you a great nation. I will bless you and make your name great. You will be a blessing. I...
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 will put hostility between you and the woman, and between your offspring and her offspring. He will bruise your head, and you will bruise his heel.”
Behold, I have received a command to bless. He has blessed, and I can’t reverse it.
Then they will call on me, but I will not answer. They will seek me diligently, but they will not find me; because they hated knowledge, and didn’t choose the fear of Yahweh. They wanted none of my counsel. They despised all my reproof.
Hatred stirs up strife, but love covers all wrongs.
Lying lips are an abomination to Yahweh, but those who do the truth are his delight.
There are many plans in a man’s heart, but Yahweh’s counsel will prevail.
Genesis 27 advances the gospel trajectory by carrying the covenant blessing forward through Jacob, the next link in the promised line. Yet it does so in a way that exposes the moral inability of the covenant family itself. The line of promise moves forward, but nobody in the chapter emerges as morally clean. This deepens the need for a greater heir, a truer Son, and a holier covenant bearer than Jacob.
In the fullness of Scripture, that heir is Jesus Christ, through whom the promise advances without deceit, whose obedience is perfect, and in whom God’s blessing comes to His people by grace rather than manipulation.
Primary Emphasis
Genesis 27 contributes to Christology by advancing the covenant line through Jacob, from whom the tribes of Israel will come and through whom the messianic trajectory will continue. The chapter also reinforces a recurring biblical pattern: God’s redemptive line advances not by human worthiness, but by divine purpose and mercy. The blessing that moves through Jacob, though obtained in the midst of family sin, remains part of the larger seed-line that ultimately leads to Christ.
In this way the chapter contributes to the long biblical testimony that God’s promise is stronger than human failure, though never dependent upon or approving of sin.
Chapter Contribution
Genesis 27 teaches that the covenant promise is effectual, weighty, and governed by God’s sovereign purpose, yet the human agents involved remain morally responsible for the sinful ways they seek to secure or resist that purpose. Isaac’s intention to bless Esau shows a troubling disconnect between parental preference and the prior divine oracle concerning the twins.
Rebekah, aware of God’s declared purpose, does not wait on the Lord but schemes to bring it about through manipulation. Jacob, though the divinely chosen recipient of the blessing, enters that role through cowardly compliance and direct deception, even invoking the name of the Lord falsely to strengthen His lie. Esau, for His part, had already despised the birthright, yet now grieves the loss of the blessing without evidence of deep covenant repentance.
The chapter therefore exposes every major figure with moral seriousness. Yet through all of this, the blessing itself proves irreversible. Isaac’s violent trembling suggests more than emotional shock; it signals recognition that something larger than family maneuvering has occurred. The blessing spoken over Jacob includes fertility, dominion, and the Abrahamic formula of cursing and blessing, indicating that the covenant line has now moved forward decisively through Him.
Still, the path is full of pain. The chosen line advances, but the household is torn apart. Jacob gains the blessing yet loses peace, home, and family nearness. Thus Genesis 27 argues that God’s sovereign purpose stands, but sinful strategies wound everyone involved. Divine election does not sanctify deception, and covenant blessing does not eliminate disciplinary sorrow.
Disregard for spiritual privilege leads to lasting loss and regret.
Sinful actions produce relational and spiritual consequences that unfold over time.
God’s blessing carries real authority and significance once pronounced.
God’s covenant blessings, once established, carry enduring and irreversible significance.
God preserves His covenant purposes even through difficult circumstances.
God’s purposes are accomplished even through flawed human actions.
Separation from place and family often follows human rebellion and conflict.
Family dynamics can either reflect or distort God’s covenant purposes.
Human hearts are capable of deceit even in sacred contexts.
Even within covenant families, sin distorts relationships and actions.
Spiritual inheritance is unique and cannot be duplicated or transferred once given.
Individuals are accountable for the methods they use, even when pursuing good ends.
Sin produces relational division, hostility, and long-term consequences.
Spoken words, especially covenantal declarations, carry binding significance.
9 Imperatives
- Go hunt and prepare food
- Bring the goats and obey the scheme
- Listen to my voice
- Rise and flee to Laban
- Do not seek holy inheritance through deceitful self-reliance
Sense blessing
Definition blessing
Why it matters The blessing in this chapter is covenantally weighty and effectual, not a mere fatherly wish, which is why its transfer to Jacob is irreversible in the narrative.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense birthright
Definition birthright
Why it matters Though the previous chapter highlighted Esau’s sale of the birthright, this chapter shows the related but distinct struggle over the spoken covenant blessing.
Sense deceit, treachery
Definition deceit, treachery
Why it matters Esau’s cry that Jacob came with deceit names one of the chapter’s central moral realities, the sinful method by which the blessing is obtained.
Sense cried with an exceedingly great and bitter cry
Definition cried with an exceedingly great and bitter cry
Why it matters Esau’s cry reveals the deep emotional fallout of the blessing’s loss, while also raising the question of whether His sorrow is covenantal or merely consequential.
Sense tremble violently
Definition tremble violently
Why it matters Isaac’s violent trembling suggests a profound recognition that the blessing has moved according to a reality deeper than family planning or human control.
Sense voice, sound
Definition voice, sound
Why it matters Isaac’s statement 'The voice is Jacob’s voice, but the hands are the hands of Esau' highlights the tension between truth and appearance that runs through the deception.
Sense fatness of the earth
Definition fatness of the earth
Why it matters The blessing over Jacob includes agricultural abundance, linking Him to the fruitfulness dimensions of covenant inheritance.
Sense cursed be those who curse you, blessed be those who bless you
Definition cursed be those who curse you, blessed be those who bless you
Why it matters This formula directly ties Jacob’s blessing to the Abrahamic covenant and shows that the promise-bearing line has moved through Him.
Sense hate, bear a grudge
Definition hate, bear a grudge
Why it matters Esau’s hatred of Jacob shows how the sinful handling of covenant realities creates relational rupture and violence.
Sense flee
Definition flee
Why it matters Jacob receives the blessing, yet immediately must flee, underscoring that covenant gain acquired through deceit comes with painful consequences.
Sense bitterness of spirit, grief of mind
Definition bitterness of spirit, grief of mind
Why it matters Rebekah’s concern over Hittite wives connects the chapter’s family tensions to covenant distinction and foreshadows Jacob’s departure as both protection and redirection.
Lexicon data: MorphGNT Strong's Dictionary XML (CC0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Bible (CC BY 4.0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Lexicon (CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible Data (CC BY 4.0) · Full details
C.F. Keil & F. Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (1861–91) — public domain
- Genesis 27 warns that favoritism, deceit, and fleshly grasping can tear a family apart, and that even when someone gains what God had purposed, sinful methods leave bitter consequences in their wake.
- Treating Jacob’s deception as acceptable simply because He was the one God had chosen, rather than recognizing that the chapter exposes the sinfulness of the means used.
- Reading Isaac as merely weak and sentimental without seeing the seriousness of His intent to bless Esau despite prior divine revelation and Esau’s own covenant insensitivity.
- Assuming Esau’s tears prove true repentance, when the chapter emphasizes anguish over loss without showing deep reverence for the covenant promise itself.
- Flattening Rebekah into a hero of faith when her actions are manipulative and deeply damaging, even if she knows the divine oracle.
- Reducing the blessing to family inheritance language only, rather than seeing its covenantal connection to Abrahamic promise and future redemptive history.
- Ignoring the cost of Jacob’s gain, as though receiving the blessing meant immediate joy rather than exile, fear, and fractured relationships.
- Where are You tempted to justify sinful means because You believe the end result is good or even God-ordained?
- How has favoritism or partiality damaged relationships in Your own family, church, or leadership setting?
- Do You value God’s promises enough to pursue them righteously, or are You willing to manipulate circumstances to get what You want?
- What is the difference between grieving a painful consequence and truly repenting of sin, as seen in Esau’s response?
- How does this chapter challenge You to believe that God can accomplish His purposes without Your deceit, pressure, or control?
- Preach Genesis 27 as a warning that divine sovereignty never gives permission for manipulation, deceit, or fleshly control.
- Use the chapter to expose the destructive power of favoritism in families, showing how parental partiality can intensify rivalry and spiritual confusion.
- Help believers distinguish between God’s purpose and our methods, emphasizing that obedience includes both the right end and the right path.
- Address the painful reality that even forgiven sin can leave relational consequences that last for years.
- Show that tears over loss are not the same as repentance, and that grief alone does not equal a changed heart.
- Comfort troubled believers with the truth that God’s plan is not ultimately threatened by human failure, while also warning them that disobedience brings real sorrow.
- Call families and churches toward truthfulness, patience, and reverent trust instead of schemes, hidden agendas, and emotional manipulation.
Genesis 27 advances the gospel trajectory by carrying the covenant blessing forward through Jacob, the next link in the promised line. Yet it does so in a way that exposes the moral inability of the covenant family itself. The line of promise moves forward, but nobody in the chapter emerges as morally clean. This deepens the need for a greater heir, a truer Son, and a holier covenant bearer than Jacob.
In the fullness of Scripture, that heir is Jesus Christ, through whom the promise advances without deceit, whose obedience is perfect, and in whom God’s blessing comes to His people by grace rather than manipulation.
Genesis 27 advances the gospel trajectory by carrying the covenant blessing forward through Jacob, the next link in the promised line. Yet it does so in a way that exposes the moral inability of the covenant family itself. The line of promise moves forward, but nobody in the chapter emerges as morally clean. This deepens the need for a greater heir, a truer Son, and a holier covenant bearer than Jacob.
In the fullness of Scripture, that heir is Jesus Christ, through whom the promise advances without deceit, whose obedience is perfect, and in whom God’s blessing comes to His people by grace rather than manipulation.
Genesis 27 advances the gospel trajectory by carrying the covenant blessing forward through Jacob, the next link in the promised line. Yet it does so in a way that exposes the moral inability of the covenant family itself. The line of promise moves forward, but nobody in the chapter emerges as morally clean. This deepens the need for a greater heir, a truer Son, and a holier covenant bearer than Jacob.
In the fullness of Scripture, that heir is Jesus Christ, through whom the promise advances without deceit, whose obedience is perfect, and in whom God’s blessing comes to His people by grace rather than manipulation.
Genesis 27 advances the gospel trajectory by carrying the covenant blessing forward through Jacob, the next link in the promised line. Yet it does so in a way that exposes the moral inability of the covenant family itself. The line of promise moves forward, but nobody in the chapter emerges as morally clean. This deepens the need for a greater heir, a truer Son, and a holier covenant bearer than Jacob.
In the fullness of Scripture, that heir is Jesus Christ, through whom the promise advances without deceit, whose obedience is perfect, and in whom God’s blessing comes to His people by grace rather than manipulation.
Genesis 27 advances the gospel trajectory by carrying the covenant blessing forward through Jacob, the next link in the promised line. Yet it does so in a way that exposes the moral inability of the covenant family itself. The line of promise moves forward, but nobody in the chapter emerges as morally clean. This deepens the need for a greater heir, a truer Son, and a holier covenant bearer than Jacob.
In the fullness of Scripture, that heir is Jesus Christ, through whom the promise advances without deceit, whose obedience is perfect, and in whom God’s blessing comes to His people by grace rather than manipulation.
9
High
- Go hunt and prepare food
- Bring the goats and obey the scheme
- Listen to my voice
- Rise and flee to Laban
- Do not seek holy inheritance through deceitful self-reliance
Trace remnant preservation, covenant continuity, and mercy under judgment across Scripture.
Track judgment as covenant accountability, divine justice, and eschatological reckoning.
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
Genesis 27 is covenantally significant because the patriarchal blessing is formally pronounced over Jacob, carrying forward the Abrahamic promise into the next generation. The blessing includes agricultural abundance, rule, and the core Abrahamic blessing-curse language, which shows that this is no mere sentimental farewell but a covenant-bearing pronouncement.
The chapter also demonstrates that the covenant blessing is not infinitely transferable at human whim once spoken. Isaac recognizes that Jacob remains blessed. This confirms that the promise is advancing through Jacob in accordance with the prior divine oracle. At the same time, the chapter warns that covenant succession may unfold amid painful human failure, requiring careful distinction between God’s purpose and man’s sinful methods.
Genesis 27 advances the gospel trajectory by carrying the covenant blessing forward through Jacob, the next link in the promised line. Yet it does so in a way that exposes the moral inability of the covenant family itself. The line of promise moves forward, but nobody in the chapter emerges as morally clean. This deepens the need for a greater heir, a truer Son, and a holier covenant bearer than Jacob.
In the fullness of Scripture, that heir is Jesus Christ, through whom the promise advances without deceit, whose obedience is perfect, and in whom God’s blessing comes to His people by grace rather than manipulation.
Focus Points
- Divine Sovereignty
- Covenant Blessing
- Human Accountability
- Deception
- Family Favoritism
- Irreversibility of Blessing
- Sinful Means
- Providence
- Covenant Theology
- Hamartiology
- Family Ethics
- Biblical Theology
- Christology Preparation
Cross References
Passages
Chapter opening: Genesis 27:1-17
Gen 27:1-4 When Isaac had grown old, and his eyes were dim, so that he could no longer see (מראת from seeing, with the neg. מן as in Gen 16:2, etc.) , he wished, in the consciousness of approaching death, to give his blessing to his elder son. Isaac was then in his 137th year, at which age his half-brother Ishmael had died fourteen years before; and this, with the increasing infirmities of age, may have suggested the thought of death, though he did not die till forty-three years afterwards (Gen 35:28).
Without regard to the words which were spoken by God with reference to the children before their birth, and without taking any notice of Esau’s frivolous barter of his birthright and his ungodly connection with Canaanites, Isaac maintained his preference for Esau, and directed him therefore to take his things (כּלים, hunting gear), his quiver and bow, to hunt game and prepare a savoury dish, that he might eat, and his soul might bless him. As his preference for Esau was fostered and strengthened by, if it did not spring from, his liking for game (Gen 25:28), so now he wished to raise his spirits for imparting the blessing by a dish of venison prepared to his taste.
In this the infirmity of his flesh is evident. At the same time, it was not merely because of his partiality for Esau, but unquestionably on account of the natural rights of the first-born, that he wished to impart the blessing to him, just as the desire to do this before his death arose from the consciousness of his patriarchal call.
Gen 27:1-4 When Isaac had grown old, and his eyes were dim, so that he could no longer see (מראת from seeing, with the neg. מן as in Gen 16:2, etc.) , he wished, in the consciousness of approaching death, to give his blessing to his elder son. Isaac was then in his 137th year, at which age his half-brother Ishmael had died fourteen years before; and this, with the increasing infirmities of age, may have suggested the thought of death, though he did not die till forty-three years afterwards (Gen 35:28).
Without regard to the words which were spoken by God with reference to the children before their birth, and without taking any notice of Esau’s frivolous barter of his birthright and his ungodly connection with Canaanites, Isaac maintained his preference for Esau, and directed him therefore to take his things (כּלים, hunting gear), his quiver and bow, to hunt game and prepare a savoury dish, that he might eat, and his soul might bless him. As his preference for Esau was fostered and strengthened by, if it did not spring from, his liking for game (Gen 25:28), so now he wished to raise his spirits for imparting the blessing by a dish of venison prepared to his taste.
In this the infirmity of his flesh is evident. At the same time, it was not merely because of his partiality for Esau, but unquestionably on account of the natural rights of the first-born, that he wished to impart the blessing to him, just as the desire to do this before his death arose from the consciousness of his patriarchal call.
Gen 27:1-4 When Isaac had grown old, and his eyes were dim, so that he could no longer see (מראת from seeing, with the neg. מן as in Gen 16:2, etc.) , he wished, in the consciousness of approaching death, to give his blessing to his elder son. Isaac was then in his 137th year, at which age his half-brother Ishmael had died fourteen years before; and this, with the increasing infirmities of age, may have suggested the thought of death, though he did not die till forty-three years afterwards (Gen 35:28).
Without regard to the words which were spoken by God with reference to the children before their birth, and without taking any notice of Esau’s frivolous barter of his birthright and his ungodly connection with Canaanites, Isaac maintained his preference for Esau, and directed him therefore to take his things (כּלים, hunting gear), his quiver and bow, to hunt game and prepare a savoury dish, that he might eat, and his soul might bless him. As his preference for Esau was fostered and strengthened by, if it did not spring from, his liking for game (Gen 25:28), so now he wished to raise his spirits for imparting the blessing by a dish of venison prepared to his taste.
In this the infirmity of his flesh is evident. At the same time, it was not merely because of his partiality for Esau, but unquestionably on account of the natural rights of the first-born, that he wished to impart the blessing to him, just as the desire to do this before his death arose from the consciousness of his patriarchal call.
Gen 27:1-4 When Isaac had grown old, and his eyes were dim, so that he could no longer see (מראת from seeing, with the neg. מן as in Gen 16:2, etc.) , he wished, in the consciousness of approaching death, to give his blessing to his elder son. Isaac was then in his 137th year, at which age his half-brother Ishmael had died fourteen years before; and this, with the increasing infirmities of age, may have suggested the thought of death, though he did not die till forty-three years afterwards (Gen 35:28).
Without regard to the words which were spoken by God with reference to the children before their birth, and without taking any notice of Esau’s frivolous barter of his birthright and his ungodly connection with Canaanites, Isaac maintained his preference for Esau, and directed him therefore to take his things (כּלים, hunting gear), his quiver and bow, to hunt game and prepare a savoury dish, that he might eat, and his soul might bless him. As his preference for Esau was fostered and strengthened by, if it did not spring from, his liking for game (Gen 25:28), so now he wished to raise his spirits for imparting the blessing by a dish of venison prepared to his taste.
In this the infirmity of his flesh is evident. At the same time, it was not merely because of his partiality for Esau, but unquestionably on account of the natural rights of the first-born, that he wished to impart the blessing to him, just as the desire to do this before his death arose from the consciousness of his patriarchal call.
Gen 27:5-17 Rebekah, who heard what he said, sought to frustrate this intention, and to secure the blessing for her (favourite) son Jacob. Whilst Esau was away hunting, she told Jacob to take his father a dish, which she would prepare from two kids according to his taste; and, having introduced himself as Esau, to ask for the blessing “ before Jehovah . ” Jacob’s objection, that the father would know him by his smooth skin, and so, instead of blessing him, might pronounce a curse upon him as a mocker, i.
e. , one who was trifling with his blind father, she silenced by saying, that she would take the curse upon herself. She evidently relied upon the word of promise, and thought that she ought to do her part to secure its fulfilment by directing the father’s blessing to Jacob; and to this end she thought any means allowable. Consequently she was so assured of the success of her stratagem as to have no fear of the possibility of a curse.
Jacob then acceded to her plan, and fetched the goats. Rebekah prepared them according to her husband’s taste; and having told Jacob to put on Esau’s best clothes which were with her in the dwelling (the tent, not the house), she covered his hands and the smooth (i. e. , the smoother parts) of his neck with the skins of the kids of the goats, and sent him with the savoury dish to his father.
Gen 27:5-17 Rebekah, who heard what he said, sought to frustrate this intention, and to secure the blessing for her (favourite) son Jacob. Whilst Esau was away hunting, she told Jacob to take his father a dish, which she would prepare from two kids according to his taste; and, having introduced himself as Esau, to ask for the blessing “ before Jehovah . ” Jacob’s objection, that the father would know him by his smooth skin, and so, instead of blessing him, might pronounce a curse upon him as a mocker, i.
e. , one who was trifling with his blind father, she silenced by saying, that she would take the curse upon herself. She evidently relied upon the word of promise, and thought that she ought to do her part to secure its fulfilment by directing the father’s blessing to Jacob; and to this end she thought any means allowable. Consequently she was so assured of the success of her stratagem as to have no fear of the possibility of a curse.
Jacob then acceded to her plan, and fetched the goats. Rebekah prepared them according to her husband’s taste; and having told Jacob to put on Esau’s best clothes which were with her in the dwelling (the tent, not the house), she covered his hands and the smooth (i. e. , the smoother parts) of his neck with the skins of the kids of the goats, and sent him with the savoury dish to his father.
Gen 27:5-17 Rebekah, who heard what he said, sought to frustrate this intention, and to secure the blessing for her (favourite) son Jacob. Whilst Esau was away hunting, she told Jacob to take his father a dish, which she would prepare from two kids according to his taste; and, having introduced himself as Esau, to ask for the blessing “ before Jehovah . ” Jacob’s objection, that the father would know him by his smooth skin, and so, instead of blessing him, might pronounce a curse upon him as a mocker, i.
e. , one who was trifling with his blind father, she silenced by saying, that she would take the curse upon herself. She evidently relied upon the word of promise, and thought that she ought to do her part to secure its fulfilment by directing the father’s blessing to Jacob; and to this end she thought any means allowable. Consequently she was so assured of the success of her stratagem as to have no fear of the possibility of a curse.
Jacob then acceded to her plan, and fetched the goats. Rebekah prepared them according to her husband’s taste; and having told Jacob to put on Esau’s best clothes which were with her in the dwelling (the tent, not the house), she covered his hands and the smooth (i. e. , the smoother parts) of his neck with the skins of the kids of the goats, and sent him with the savoury dish to his father.
Gen 27:5-17 Rebekah, who heard what he said, sought to frustrate this intention, and to secure the blessing for her (favourite) son Jacob. Whilst Esau was away hunting, she told Jacob to take his father a dish, which she would prepare from two kids according to his taste; and, having introduced himself as Esau, to ask for the blessing “ before Jehovah . ” Jacob’s objection, that the father would know him by his smooth skin, and so, instead of blessing him, might pronounce a curse upon him as a mocker, i.
e. , one who was trifling with his blind father, she silenced by saying, that she would take the curse upon herself. She evidently relied upon the word of promise, and thought that she ought to do her part to secure its fulfilment by directing the father’s blessing to Jacob; and to this end she thought any means allowable. Consequently she was so assured of the success of her stratagem as to have no fear of the possibility of a curse.
Jacob then acceded to her plan, and fetched the goats. Rebekah prepared them according to her husband’s taste; and having told Jacob to put on Esau’s best clothes which were with her in the dwelling (the tent, not the house), she covered his hands and the smooth (i. e. , the smoother parts) of his neck with the skins of the kids of the goats, and sent him with the savoury dish to his father.
Gen 27:5-17 Rebekah, who heard what he said, sought to frustrate this intention, and to secure the blessing for her (favourite) son Jacob. Whilst Esau was away hunting, she told Jacob to take his father a dish, which she would prepare from two kids according to his taste; and, having introduced himself as Esau, to ask for the blessing “ before Jehovah . ” Jacob’s objection, that the father would know him by his smooth skin, and so, instead of blessing him, might pronounce a curse upon him as a mocker, i.
e. , one who was trifling with his blind father, she silenced by saying, that she would take the curse upon herself. She evidently relied upon the word of promise, and thought that she ought to do her part to secure its fulfilment by directing the father’s blessing to Jacob; and to this end she thought any means allowable. Consequently she was so assured of the success of her stratagem as to have no fear of the possibility of a curse.
Jacob then acceded to her plan, and fetched the goats. Rebekah prepared them according to her husband’s taste; and having told Jacob to put on Esau’s best clothes which were with her in the dwelling (the tent, not the house), she covered his hands and the smooth (i. e. , the smoother parts) of his neck with the skins of the kids of the goats, and sent him with the savoury dish to his father.
Gen 27:5-17 Rebekah, who heard what he said, sought to frustrate this intention, and to secure the blessing for her (favourite) son Jacob. Whilst Esau was away hunting, she told Jacob to take his father a dish, which she would prepare from two kids according to his taste; and, having introduced himself as Esau, to ask for the blessing “ before Jehovah . ” Jacob’s objection, that the father would know him by his smooth skin, and so, instead of blessing him, might pronounce a curse upon him as a mocker, i.
e. , one who was trifling with his blind father, she silenced by saying, that she would take the curse upon herself. She evidently relied upon the word of promise, and thought that she ought to do her part to secure its fulfilment by directing the father’s blessing to Jacob; and to this end she thought any means allowable. Consequently she was so assured of the success of her stratagem as to have no fear of the possibility of a curse.
Jacob then acceded to her plan, and fetched the goats. Rebekah prepared them according to her husband’s taste; and having told Jacob to put on Esau’s best clothes which were with her in the dwelling (the tent, not the house), she covered his hands and the smooth (i. e. , the smoother parts) of his neck with the skins of the kids of the goats, and sent him with the savoury dish to his father.
Gen 27:5-17 Rebekah, who heard what he said, sought to frustrate this intention, and to secure the blessing for her (favourite) son Jacob. Whilst Esau was away hunting, she told Jacob to take his father a dish, which she would prepare from two kids according to his taste; and, having introduced himself as Esau, to ask for the blessing “ before Jehovah . ” Jacob’s objection, that the father would know him by his smooth skin, and so, instead of blessing him, might pronounce a curse upon him as a mocker, i.
e. , one who was trifling with his blind father, she silenced by saying, that she would take the curse upon herself. She evidently relied upon the word of promise, and thought that she ought to do her part to secure its fulfilment by directing the father’s blessing to Jacob; and to this end she thought any means allowable. Consequently she was so assured of the success of her stratagem as to have no fear of the possibility of a curse.
Jacob then acceded to her plan, and fetched the goats. Rebekah prepared them according to her husband’s taste; and having told Jacob to put on Esau’s best clothes which were with her in the dwelling (the tent, not the house), she covered his hands and the smooth (i. e. , the smoother parts) of his neck with the skins of the kids of the goats, and sent him with the savoury dish to his father.
Gen 27:5-17 Rebekah, who heard what he said, sought to frustrate this intention, and to secure the blessing for her (favourite) son Jacob. Whilst Esau was away hunting, she told Jacob to take his father a dish, which she would prepare from two kids according to his taste; and, having introduced himself as Esau, to ask for the blessing “ before Jehovah . ” Jacob’s objection, that the father would know him by his smooth skin, and so, instead of blessing him, might pronounce a curse upon him as a mocker, i.
e. , one who was trifling with his blind father, she silenced by saying, that she would take the curse upon herself. She evidently relied upon the word of promise, and thought that she ought to do her part to secure its fulfilment by directing the father’s blessing to Jacob; and to this end she thought any means allowable. Consequently she was so assured of the success of her stratagem as to have no fear of the possibility of a curse.
Jacob then acceded to her plan, and fetched the goats. Rebekah prepared them according to her husband’s taste; and having told Jacob to put on Esau’s best clothes which were with her in the dwelling (the tent, not the house), she covered his hands and the smooth (i. e. , the smoother parts) of his neck with the skins of the kids of the goats, and sent him with the savoury dish to his father.
Gen 27:5-17 Rebekah, who heard what he said, sought to frustrate this intention, and to secure the blessing for her (favourite) son Jacob. Whilst Esau was away hunting, she told Jacob to take his father a dish, which she would prepare from two kids according to his taste; and, having introduced himself as Esau, to ask for the blessing “ before Jehovah . ” Jacob’s objection, that the father would know him by his smooth skin, and so, instead of blessing him, might pronounce a curse upon him as a mocker, i.
e. , one who was trifling with his blind father, she silenced by saying, that she would take the curse upon herself. She evidently relied upon the word of promise, and thought that she ought to do her part to secure its fulfilment by directing the father’s blessing to Jacob; and to this end she thought any means allowable. Consequently she was so assured of the success of her stratagem as to have no fear of the possibility of a curse.
Jacob then acceded to her plan, and fetched the goats. Rebekah prepared them according to her husband’s taste; and having told Jacob to put on Esau’s best clothes which were with her in the dwelling (the tent, not the house), she covered his hands and the smooth (i. e. , the smoother parts) of his neck with the skins of the kids of the goats, and sent him with the savoury dish to his father.
Gen 27:5-17 Rebekah, who heard what he said, sought to frustrate this intention, and to secure the blessing for her (favourite) son Jacob. Whilst Esau was away hunting, she told Jacob to take his father a dish, which she would prepare from two kids according to his taste; and, having introduced himself as Esau, to ask for the blessing “ before Jehovah . ” Jacob’s objection, that the father would know him by his smooth skin, and so, instead of blessing him, might pronounce a curse upon him as a mocker, i.
e. , one who was trifling with his blind father, she silenced by saying, that she would take the curse upon herself. She evidently relied upon the word of promise, and thought that she ought to do her part to secure its fulfilment by directing the father’s blessing to Jacob; and to this end she thought any means allowable. Consequently she was so assured of the success of her stratagem as to have no fear of the possibility of a curse.
Jacob then acceded to her plan, and fetched the goats. Rebekah prepared them according to her husband’s taste; and having told Jacob to put on Esau’s best clothes which were with her in the dwelling (the tent, not the house), she covered his hands and the smooth (i. e. , the smoother parts) of his neck with the skins of the kids of the goats, and sent him with the savoury dish to his father.
Gen 27:5-17 Rebekah, who heard what he said, sought to frustrate this intention, and to secure the blessing for her (favourite) son Jacob. Whilst Esau was away hunting, she told Jacob to take his father a dish, which she would prepare from two kids according to his taste; and, having introduced himself as Esau, to ask for the blessing “ before Jehovah . ” Jacob’s objection, that the father would know him by his smooth skin, and so, instead of blessing him, might pronounce a curse upon him as a mocker, i.
e. , one who was trifling with his blind father, she silenced by saying, that she would take the curse upon herself. She evidently relied upon the word of promise, and thought that she ought to do her part to secure its fulfilment by directing the father’s blessing to Jacob; and to this end she thought any means allowable. Consequently she was so assured of the success of her stratagem as to have no fear of the possibility of a curse.
Jacob then acceded to her plan, and fetched the goats. Rebekah prepared them according to her husband’s taste; and having told Jacob to put on Esau’s best clothes which were with her in the dwelling (the tent, not the house), she covered his hands and the smooth (i. e. , the smoother parts) of his neck with the skins of the kids of the goats, and sent him with the savoury dish to his father.
Gen 27:5-17 Rebekah, who heard what he said, sought to frustrate this intention, and to secure the blessing for her (favourite) son Jacob. Whilst Esau was away hunting, she told Jacob to take his father a dish, which she would prepare from two kids according to his taste; and, having introduced himself as Esau, to ask for the blessing “ before Jehovah . ” Jacob’s objection, that the father would know him by his smooth skin, and so, instead of blessing him, might pronounce a curse upon him as a mocker, i.
e. , one who was trifling with his blind father, she silenced by saying, that she would take the curse upon herself. She evidently relied upon the word of promise, and thought that she ought to do her part to secure its fulfilment by directing the father’s blessing to Jacob; and to this end she thought any means allowable. Consequently she was so assured of the success of her stratagem as to have no fear of the possibility of a curse.
Jacob then acceded to her plan, and fetched the goats. Rebekah prepared them according to her husband’s taste; and having told Jacob to put on Esau’s best clothes which were with her in the dwelling (the tent, not the house), she covered his hands and the smooth (i. e. , the smoother parts) of his neck with the skins of the kids of the goats, and sent him with the savoury dish to his father.
Gen 27:5-17 Rebekah, who heard what he said, sought to frustrate this intention, and to secure the blessing for her (favourite) son Jacob. Whilst Esau was away hunting, she told Jacob to take his father a dish, which she would prepare from two kids according to his taste; and, having introduced himself as Esau, to ask for the blessing “ before Jehovah . ” Jacob’s objection, that the father would know him by his smooth skin, and so, instead of blessing him, might pronounce a curse upon him as a mocker, i.
e. , one who was trifling with his blind father, she silenced by saying, that she would take the curse upon herself. She evidently relied upon the word of promise, and thought that she ought to do her part to secure its fulfilment by directing the father’s blessing to Jacob; and to this end she thought any means allowable. Consequently she was so assured of the success of her stratagem as to have no fear of the possibility of a curse.
Jacob then acceded to her plan, and fetched the goats. Rebekah prepared them according to her husband’s taste; and having told Jacob to put on Esau’s best clothes which were with her in the dwelling (the tent, not the house), she covered his hands and the smooth (i. e. , the smoother parts) of his neck with the skins of the kids of the goats, and sent him with the savoury dish to his father.
Gen 27:18-23 But Jacob had no easy task to perform before his father. As soon as he had spoken on entering, his father asked him, “ Who art thou, my son? ” On his replying, “ I am Esau, thy first-born, ” the father expressed his surprise at the rapid success of his hunting; and when he was satisfied with the reply, “ Jehovah thy God sent it (the thing desired) to meet me, ” he became suspicious about the voice, and bade him come nearer, that he might feel him.
But as his hands appeared hairy like Esau’s, he did not recognise him; and “ so he blessed him. ” In this remark (Gen 27:23) the writer gives the result of Jacob’s attempt; so that the blessing is merely mentioned proleptically here, and refers to the formal blessing described afterwards, and not to the first greeting and salutation.
Gen 27:18-23 But Jacob had no easy task to perform before his father. As soon as he had spoken on entering, his father asked him, “ Who art thou, my son? ” On his replying, “ I am Esau, thy first-born, ” the father expressed his surprise at the rapid success of his hunting; and when he was satisfied with the reply, “ Jehovah thy God sent it (the thing desired) to meet me, ” he became suspicious about the voice, and bade him come nearer, that he might feel him.
But as his hands appeared hairy like Esau’s, he did not recognise him; and “ so he blessed him. ” In this remark (Gen 27:23) the writer gives the result of Jacob’s attempt; so that the blessing is merely mentioned proleptically here, and refers to the formal blessing described afterwards, and not to the first greeting and salutation.
Gen 27:18-23 But Jacob had no easy task to perform before his father. As soon as he had spoken on entering, his father asked him, “ Who art thou, my son? ” On his replying, “ I am Esau, thy first-born, ” the father expressed his surprise at the rapid success of his hunting; and when he was satisfied with the reply, “ Jehovah thy God sent it (the thing desired) to meet me, ” he became suspicious about the voice, and bade him come nearer, that he might feel him.
But as his hands appeared hairy like Esau’s, he did not recognise him; and “ so he blessed him. ” In this remark (Gen 27:23) the writer gives the result of Jacob’s attempt; so that the blessing is merely mentioned proleptically here, and refers to the formal blessing described afterwards, and not to the first greeting and salutation.
Gen 27:18-23 But Jacob had no easy task to perform before his father. As soon as he had spoken on entering, his father asked him, “ Who art thou, my son? ” On his replying, “ I am Esau, thy first-born, ” the father expressed his surprise at the rapid success of his hunting; and when he was satisfied with the reply, “ Jehovah thy God sent it (the thing desired) to meet me, ” he became suspicious about the voice, and bade him come nearer, that he might feel him.
But as his hands appeared hairy like Esau’s, he did not recognise him; and “ so he blessed him. ” In this remark (Gen 27:23) the writer gives the result of Jacob’s attempt; so that the blessing is merely mentioned proleptically here, and refers to the formal blessing described afterwards, and not to the first greeting and salutation.
Gen 27:18-23 But Jacob had no easy task to perform before his father. As soon as he had spoken on entering, his father asked him, “ Who art thou, my son? ” On his replying, “ I am Esau, thy first-born, ” the father expressed his surprise at the rapid success of his hunting; and when he was satisfied with the reply, “ Jehovah thy God sent it (the thing desired) to meet me, ” he became suspicious about the voice, and bade him come nearer, that he might feel him.
But as his hands appeared hairy like Esau’s, he did not recognise him; and “ so he blessed him. ” In this remark (Gen 27:23) the writer gives the result of Jacob’s attempt; so that the blessing is merely mentioned proleptically here, and refers to the formal blessing described afterwards, and not to the first greeting and salutation.
Gen 27:18-23 But Jacob had no easy task to perform before his father. As soon as he had spoken on entering, his father asked him, “ Who art thou, my son? ” On his replying, “ I am Esau, thy first-born, ” the father expressed his surprise at the rapid success of his hunting; and when he was satisfied with the reply, “ Jehovah thy God sent it (the thing desired) to meet me, ” he became suspicious about the voice, and bade him come nearer, that he might feel him.
But as his hands appeared hairy like Esau’s, he did not recognise him; and “ so he blessed him. ” In this remark (Gen 27:23) the writer gives the result of Jacob’s attempt; so that the blessing is merely mentioned proleptically here, and refers to the formal blessing described afterwards, and not to the first greeting and salutation.
Gen 27:24-29 After his father, in order to get rid of his suspicion about the voice, had asked him once more, “ Art thou really my son Esau? ” and Jacob had replied, “ I am ” (אני = yes), he told him to hand him the savoury dish that he might eat. After eating, he kissed his son as a sing of his paternal affection, and in doing so he smelt the odour of his clothes, i.
e. , the clothes of Esau, which were thoroughly scented with the odour of the fields, and then imparted his blessing (Gen 27:27-29). The blessing itself is thrown, as the sign of an elevated state of mind, into the poetic style of parallel clauses, and contains the peculiar forms of poetry, such as ראה for הנּה, הוה for היה, etc. The smell of the clothes with the scent of the field suggested to the patriarch’s mind the image of his son’s future prosperity, so that he saw him in possession of the promised land and the full enjoyment of its valuable blessings, having the smell of the field which Jehovah blessed, i.
e. , the garden of paradise, and broke out into the wish, “ God ( Ha-Elohim , the personal God, not Jehovah , the covenant God) give thee from the dew of heaven, and the fat fields of the earth, and plenty of corn and wine, ” i. e. , a land blessed with the dew of heaven and a fruitful soil. In Eastern countries, where there is so little rain, the dew is the most important prerequisite for the growth of the fruits of the earth, and is often mentioned therefore as a source of blessing (Deu 33:13, Deu 33:28; Hos 14:6; Zec 8:12).
In משׁמנּי, notwithstanding the absence of the Dagesh from the שׁ, the מ is the prep. מן, as the parallel מטּל proves; and שׁמנּים both here and in Gen 27:39 are the fat (fertile) districts of a country. The rest of the blessing had reference to the future pre-eminence of his son. He was to be lord not only over his brethren (i. e. , over kindred tribes), but over (foreign) peoples and nations also.
The blessing rises here to the idea of universal dominion, which was to be realized in the fact that, according to the attitude assumed by the people towards him as their lord, it would secure to them either a blessing or a curse. If we compare this blessing with the promises which Abraham received, there are two elements of the latter which are very apparent; viz.
, the possession of the land, in the promise of the rich enjoyment of its produce, and the numerous increase of posterity, in the promised dominion over the nations. The third element, however, the blessing of the nations in and through the seed of Abraham, is so generalized in the expression, which is moulded according to Gen 12:3, “Cursed be every one that curseth thee, and blessed be he that blesseth thee,” that the person blessed is not thereby declared to be the medium of salvation to the nations.
Since the intention to give the blessing to Esau the first-born did not spring from proper feelings towards Jehovah and His promises, the blessing itself, as the use of the word Elohim instead of Jehovah or El Shaddai (cf. Gen 28:3) clearly shows, could not rise to the full height of the divine blessings of salvation, but referred chiefly to the relation in which the two brothers and their descendants would stand to one another, the theme with which Isaac’s soul was entirely filled.
It was only the painful discovery that, in blessing against his will, he had been compelled to follow the saving counsel of God, which awakened in him the consciousness of his patriarchal vocation, and gave him the spiritual power to impart the “blessing of Abraham” to the son whom he had kept back, but whom Jehovah had chosen, when he was about to send him away to Haran (Gen 28:3-4).
Gen 27:24-29 After his father, in order to get rid of his suspicion about the voice, had asked him once more, “ Art thou really my son Esau? ” and Jacob had replied, “ I am ” (אני = yes), he told him to hand him the savoury dish that he might eat. After eating, he kissed his son as a sing of his paternal affection, and in doing so he smelt the odour of his clothes, i.
e. , the clothes of Esau, which were thoroughly scented with the odour of the fields, and then imparted his blessing (Gen 27:27-29). The blessing itself is thrown, as the sign of an elevated state of mind, into the poetic style of parallel clauses, and contains the peculiar forms of poetry, such as ראה for הנּה, הוה for היה, etc. The smell of the clothes with the scent of the field suggested to the patriarch’s mind the image of his son’s future prosperity, so that he saw him in possession of the promised land and the full enjoyment of its valuable blessings, having the smell of the field which Jehovah blessed, i.
e. , the garden of paradise, and broke out into the wish, “ God ( Ha-Elohim , the personal God, not Jehovah , the covenant God) give thee from the dew of heaven, and the fat fields of the earth, and plenty of corn and wine, ” i. e. , a land blessed with the dew of heaven and a fruitful soil. In Eastern countries, where there is so little rain, the dew is the most important prerequisite for the growth of the fruits of the earth, and is often mentioned therefore as a source of blessing (Deu 33:13, Deu 33:28; Hos 14:6; Zec 8:12).
In משׁמנּי, notwithstanding the absence of the Dagesh from the שׁ, the מ is the prep. מן, as the parallel מטּל proves; and שׁמנּים both here and in Gen 27:39 are the fat (fertile) districts of a country. The rest of the blessing had reference to the future pre-eminence of his son. He was to be lord not only over his brethren (i. e. , over kindred tribes), but over (foreign) peoples and nations also.
The blessing rises here to the idea of universal dominion, which was to be realized in the fact that, according to the attitude assumed by the people towards him as their lord, it would secure to them either a blessing or a curse. If we compare this blessing with the promises which Abraham received, there are two elements of the latter which are very apparent; viz.
, the possession of the land, in the promise of the rich enjoyment of its produce, and the numerous increase of posterity, in the promised dominion over the nations. The third element, however, the blessing of the nations in and through the seed of Abraham, is so generalized in the expression, which is moulded according to Gen 12:3, “Cursed be every one that curseth thee, and blessed be he that blesseth thee,” that the person blessed is not thereby declared to be the medium of salvation to the nations.
Since the intention to give the blessing to Esau the first-born did not spring from proper feelings towards Jehovah and His promises, the blessing itself, as the use of the word Elohim instead of Jehovah or El Shaddai (cf. Gen 28:3) clearly shows, could not rise to the full height of the divine blessings of salvation, but referred chiefly to the relation in which the two brothers and their descendants would stand to one another, the theme with which Isaac’s soul was entirely filled.
It was only the painful discovery that, in blessing against his will, he had been compelled to follow the saving counsel of God, which awakened in him the consciousness of his patriarchal vocation, and gave him the spiritual power to impart the “blessing of Abraham” to the son whom he had kept back, but whom Jehovah had chosen, when he was about to send him away to Haran (Gen 28:3-4).
Gen 27:24-29 After his father, in order to get rid of his suspicion about the voice, had asked him once more, “ Art thou really my son Esau? ” and Jacob had replied, “ I am ” (אני = yes), he told him to hand him the savoury dish that he might eat. After eating, he kissed his son as a sing of his paternal affection, and in doing so he smelt the odour of his clothes, i.
e. , the clothes of Esau, which were thoroughly scented with the odour of the fields, and then imparted his blessing (Gen 27:27-29). The blessing itself is thrown, as the sign of an elevated state of mind, into the poetic style of parallel clauses, and contains the peculiar forms of poetry, such as ראה for הנּה, הוה for היה, etc. The smell of the clothes with the scent of the field suggested to the patriarch’s mind the image of his son’s future prosperity, so that he saw him in possession of the promised land and the full enjoyment of its valuable blessings, having the smell of the field which Jehovah blessed, i.
e. , the garden of paradise, and broke out into the wish, “ God ( Ha-Elohim , the personal God, not Jehovah , the covenant God) give thee from the dew of heaven, and the fat fields of the earth, and plenty of corn and wine, ” i. e. , a land blessed with the dew of heaven and a fruitful soil. In Eastern countries, where there is so little rain, the dew is the most important prerequisite for the growth of the fruits of the earth, and is often mentioned therefore as a source of blessing (Deu 33:13, Deu 33:28; Hos 14:6; Zec 8:12).
In משׁמנּי, notwithstanding the absence of the Dagesh from the שׁ, the מ is the prep. מן, as the parallel מטּל proves; and שׁמנּים both here and in Gen 27:39 are the fat (fertile) districts of a country. The rest of the blessing had reference to the future pre-eminence of his son. He was to be lord not only over his brethren (i. e. , over kindred tribes), but over (foreign) peoples and nations also.
The blessing rises here to the idea of universal dominion, which was to be realized in the fact that, according to the attitude assumed by the people towards him as their lord, it would secure to them either a blessing or a curse. If we compare this blessing with the promises which Abraham received, there are two elements of the latter which are very apparent; viz.
, the possession of the land, in the promise of the rich enjoyment of its produce, and the numerous increase of posterity, in the promised dominion over the nations. The third element, however, the blessing of the nations in and through the seed of Abraham, is so generalized in the expression, which is moulded according to Gen 12:3, “Cursed be every one that curseth thee, and blessed be he that blesseth thee,” that the person blessed is not thereby declared to be the medium of salvation to the nations.
Since the intention to give the blessing to Esau the first-born did not spring from proper feelings towards Jehovah and His promises, the blessing itself, as the use of the word Elohim instead of Jehovah or El Shaddai (cf. Gen 28:3) clearly shows, could not rise to the full height of the divine blessings of salvation, but referred chiefly to the relation in which the two brothers and their descendants would stand to one another, the theme with which Isaac’s soul was entirely filled.
It was only the painful discovery that, in blessing against his will, he had been compelled to follow the saving counsel of God, which awakened in him the consciousness of his patriarchal vocation, and gave him the spiritual power to impart the “blessing of Abraham” to the son whom he had kept back, but whom Jehovah had chosen, when he was about to send him away to Haran (Gen 28:3-4).
Gen 27:24-29 After his father, in order to get rid of his suspicion about the voice, had asked him once more, “ Art thou really my son Esau? ” and Jacob had replied, “ I am ” (אני = yes), he told him to hand him the savoury dish that he might eat. After eating, he kissed his son as a sing of his paternal affection, and in doing so he smelt the odour of his clothes, i.
e. , the clothes of Esau, which were thoroughly scented with the odour of the fields, and then imparted his blessing (Gen 27:27-29). The blessing itself is thrown, as the sign of an elevated state of mind, into the poetic style of parallel clauses, and contains the peculiar forms of poetry, such as ראה for הנּה, הוה for היה, etc. The smell of the clothes with the scent of the field suggested to the patriarch’s mind the image of his son’s future prosperity, so that he saw him in possession of the promised land and the full enjoyment of its valuable blessings, having the smell of the field which Jehovah blessed, i.
e. , the garden of paradise, and broke out into the wish, “ God ( Ha-Elohim , the personal God, not Jehovah , the covenant God) give thee from the dew of heaven, and the fat fields of the earth, and plenty of corn and wine, ” i. e. , a land blessed with the dew of heaven and a fruitful soil. In Eastern countries, where there is so little rain, the dew is the most important prerequisite for the growth of the fruits of the earth, and is often mentioned therefore as a source of blessing (Deu 33:13, Deu 33:28; Hos 14:6; Zec 8:12).
In משׁמנּי, notwithstanding the absence of the Dagesh from the שׁ, the מ is the prep. מן, as the parallel מטּל proves; and שׁמנּים both here and in Gen 27:39 are the fat (fertile) districts of a country. The rest of the blessing had reference to the future pre-eminence of his son. He was to be lord not only over his brethren (i. e. , over kindred tribes), but over (foreign) peoples and nations also.
The blessing rises here to the idea of universal dominion, which was to be realized in the fact that, according to the attitude assumed by the people towards him as their lord, it would secure to them either a blessing or a curse. If we compare this blessing with the promises which Abraham received, there are two elements of the latter which are very apparent; viz.
, the possession of the land, in the promise of the rich enjoyment of its produce, and the numerous increase of posterity, in the promised dominion over the nations. The third element, however, the blessing of the nations in and through the seed of Abraham, is so generalized in the expression, which is moulded according to Gen 12:3, “Cursed be every one that curseth thee, and blessed be he that blesseth thee,” that the person blessed is not thereby declared to be the medium of salvation to the nations.
Since the intention to give the blessing to Esau the first-born did not spring from proper feelings towards Jehovah and His promises, the blessing itself, as the use of the word Elohim instead of Jehovah or El Shaddai (cf. Gen 28:3) clearly shows, could not rise to the full height of the divine blessings of salvation, but referred chiefly to the relation in which the two brothers and their descendants would stand to one another, the theme with which Isaac’s soul was entirely filled.
It was only the painful discovery that, in blessing against his will, he had been compelled to follow the saving counsel of God, which awakened in him the consciousness of his patriarchal vocation, and gave him the spiritual power to impart the “blessing of Abraham” to the son whom he had kept back, but whom Jehovah had chosen, when he was about to send him away to Haran (Gen 28:3-4).
Gen 27:24-29 After his father, in order to get rid of his suspicion about the voice, had asked him once more, “ Art thou really my son Esau? ” and Jacob had replied, “ I am ” (אני = yes), he told him to hand him the savoury dish that he might eat. After eating, he kissed his son as a sing of his paternal affection, and in doing so he smelt the odour of his clothes, i.
e. , the clothes of Esau, which were thoroughly scented with the odour of the fields, and then imparted his blessing (Gen 27:27-29). The blessing itself is thrown, as the sign of an elevated state of mind, into the poetic style of parallel clauses, and contains the peculiar forms of poetry, such as ראה for הנּה, הוה for היה, etc. The smell of the clothes with the scent of the field suggested to the patriarch’s mind the image of his son’s future prosperity, so that he saw him in possession of the promised land and the full enjoyment of its valuable blessings, having the smell of the field which Jehovah blessed, i.
e. , the garden of paradise, and broke out into the wish, “ God ( Ha-Elohim , the personal God, not Jehovah , the covenant God) give thee from the dew of heaven, and the fat fields of the earth, and plenty of corn and wine, ” i. e. , a land blessed with the dew of heaven and a fruitful soil. In Eastern countries, where there is so little rain, the dew is the most important prerequisite for the growth of the fruits of the earth, and is often mentioned therefore as a source of blessing (Deu 33:13, Deu 33:28; Hos 14:6; Zec 8:12).
In משׁמנּי, notwithstanding the absence of the Dagesh from the שׁ, the מ is the prep. מן, as the parallel מטּל proves; and שׁמנּים both here and in Gen 27:39 are the fat (fertile) districts of a country. The rest of the blessing had reference to the future pre-eminence of his son. He was to be lord not only over his brethren (i. e. , over kindred tribes), but over (foreign) peoples and nations also.
The blessing rises here to the idea of universal dominion, which was to be realized in the fact that, according to the attitude assumed by the people towards him as their lord, it would secure to them either a blessing or a curse. If we compare this blessing with the promises which Abraham received, there are two elements of the latter which are very apparent; viz.
, the possession of the land, in the promise of the rich enjoyment of its produce, and the numerous increase of posterity, in the promised dominion over the nations. The third element, however, the blessing of the nations in and through the seed of Abraham, is so generalized in the expression, which is moulded according to Gen 12:3, “Cursed be every one that curseth thee, and blessed be he that blesseth thee,” that the person blessed is not thereby declared to be the medium of salvation to the nations.
Since the intention to give the blessing to Esau the first-born did not spring from proper feelings towards Jehovah and His promises, the blessing itself, as the use of the word Elohim instead of Jehovah or El Shaddai (cf. Gen 28:3) clearly shows, could not rise to the full height of the divine blessings of salvation, but referred chiefly to the relation in which the two brothers and their descendants would stand to one another, the theme with which Isaac’s soul was entirely filled.
It was only the painful discovery that, in blessing against his will, he had been compelled to follow the saving counsel of God, which awakened in him the consciousness of his patriarchal vocation, and gave him the spiritual power to impart the “blessing of Abraham” to the son whom he had kept back, but whom Jehovah had chosen, when he was about to send him away to Haran (Gen 28:3-4).
Gen 27:24-29 After his father, in order to get rid of his suspicion about the voice, had asked him once more, “ Art thou really my son Esau? ” and Jacob had replied, “ I am ” (אני = yes), he told him to hand him the savoury dish that he might eat. After eating, he kissed his son as a sing of his paternal affection, and in doing so he smelt the odour of his clothes, i.
e. , the clothes of Esau, which were thoroughly scented with the odour of the fields, and then imparted his blessing (Gen 27:27-29). The blessing itself is thrown, as the sign of an elevated state of mind, into the poetic style of parallel clauses, and contains the peculiar forms of poetry, such as ראה for הנּה, הוה for היה, etc. The smell of the clothes with the scent of the field suggested to the patriarch’s mind the image of his son’s future prosperity, so that he saw him in possession of the promised land and the full enjoyment of its valuable blessings, having the smell of the field which Jehovah blessed, i.
e. , the garden of paradise, and broke out into the wish, “ God ( Ha-Elohim , the personal God, not Jehovah , the covenant God) give thee from the dew of heaven, and the fat fields of the earth, and plenty of corn and wine, ” i. e. , a land blessed with the dew of heaven and a fruitful soil. In Eastern countries, where there is so little rain, the dew is the most important prerequisite for the growth of the fruits of the earth, and is often mentioned therefore as a source of blessing (Deu 33:13, Deu 33:28; Hos 14:6; Zec 8:12).
In משׁמנּי, notwithstanding the absence of the Dagesh from the שׁ, the מ is the prep. מן, as the parallel מטּל proves; and שׁמנּים both here and in Gen 27:39 are the fat (fertile) districts of a country. The rest of the blessing had reference to the future pre-eminence of his son. He was to be lord not only over his brethren (i. e. , over kindred tribes), but over (foreign) peoples and nations also.
The blessing rises here to the idea of universal dominion, which was to be realized in the fact that, according to the attitude assumed by the people towards him as their lord, it would secure to them either a blessing or a curse. If we compare this blessing with the promises which Abraham received, there are two elements of the latter which are very apparent; viz.
, the possession of the land, in the promise of the rich enjoyment of its produce, and the numerous increase of posterity, in the promised dominion over the nations. The third element, however, the blessing of the nations in and through the seed of Abraham, is so generalized in the expression, which is moulded according to Gen 12:3, “Cursed be every one that curseth thee, and blessed be he that blesseth thee,” that the person blessed is not thereby declared to be the medium of salvation to the nations.
Since the intention to give the blessing to Esau the first-born did not spring from proper feelings towards Jehovah and His promises, the blessing itself, as the use of the word Elohim instead of Jehovah or El Shaddai (cf. Gen 28:3) clearly shows, could not rise to the full height of the divine blessings of salvation, but referred chiefly to the relation in which the two brothers and their descendants would stand to one another, the theme with which Isaac’s soul was entirely filled.
It was only the painful discovery that, in blessing against his will, he had been compelled to follow the saving counsel of God, which awakened in him the consciousness of his patriarchal vocation, and gave him the spiritual power to impart the “blessing of Abraham” to the son whom he had kept back, but whom Jehovah had chosen, when he was about to send him away to Haran (Gen 28:3-4).
Gen 27:30-40 Jacob had hardly left his father, after receiving the blessing (יצא אך, was only gone out), when Esau returned and came to Isaac, with the game prepared, to receive the blessing. The shock was inconceivable which Isaac received, when he found that he had blessed another, and not Esau-that, in fact, he had blessed Jacob. At the same time he neither could nor would, either curse him on account of the deception which he had practised, or withdraw the blessing imparted.
For he could not help confessing to himself that he had sinned and brought the deception upon himself by his carnal preference for Esau. Moreover, the blessing was not a matter of subjective human affection, but a right entrusted by the grace of God to paternal supremacy and authority, in the exercise of which the person blessing, being impelled and guided by a higher authority, imparted to the person to be blest spiritual possessions and powers, which the will of man could not capriciously withdraw.
Regarding this as the meaning of the blessing, Isaac necessarily saw in what had taken place the will of God, which had directed to Jacob the blessing that he had intended for Esau. He therefore said, “ I have blessed him; yea, he will be ( remain ) blessed ” (cf. Heb 12:17). Even the great and bitter lamentation into which Esau broke out could not change his father’s mind.
To his entreaty in Gen 27:34, “ Bless me, even me also, O my father! ” he replied, “ Thy brother came with subtilty, and hath taken away thy blessing . ” Esau answered, “ Is it that (הכי) they have named him Jacob (overreacher), and he has overreached me twice? ” i. e. , has he received the name Jacob from the fact that he has twice outwitted me? הכי is used “when the cause is not rightly known” (cf.
Gen 29:15). To his further entreaty, “Hast thou not reserved a blessing for me? ” (אצל, lit. , to lay aside), Isaac repeated the substance of the blessing given to Jacob, and added, “and to thee (לכה for לך as in Gen 3:9), now, what can I do, my son? ” When Esau again repeated, with tears, the entreaty that Isaac would bless him also, the father gave him a blessing (Gen 27:39, Gen 27:40), but one which, when compared with the blessing of Jacob, was to be regarded rather as “a modified curse,” and which is not even described as a blessing, but “introduced a disturbing element into Jacob’s blessing, a retribution for the impure means by which he had obtained it.
” “ Behold, ” it states, “ from the fat fields of the earth will thy dwelling be, and from the dew of heaven from above . ” By a play upon the words Isaac uses the same expression as in Gen 27:28, “from the fat fields of the earth, and from the dew,” but in the opposite sense, מן being partitive there, and privative here, “from = away from. ” The context requires that the words should be taken thus, and not in the sense of “thy dwelling shall partake of the fat of the earth and the dew of heaven” ( Vulg .
, Luth . , etc.) Since Isaac said (Gen 27:37) he had given Jacob the blessing of the super-abundance of corn and wine, he could not possibly promise Esau also fat fields and the dew of heaven. Nor would this agree with the words which follows, “ By thy sword wilt thou live . ” Moreover, the privative sense of מן is thoroughly poetical (cf. 2Sa 1:22; Job 11:15, etc.)
The idea expressed in the words, therefore, was that the dwelling-place of Esau would be the very opposite of the land of Canaan, viz. , an unfruitful land. This is generally the condition of the mountainous country of Edom, which, although not without its fertile slopes and valleys, especially in the eastern portion (cf. Robinson, Pal. ii. p. 552), is thoroughly waste and barren in the western; so that Seetzen says it consists of “the most desolate and barren mountains probably in the world.
” The mode of life and occupation of the inhabitants were adapted to the country. “ By (lit. , on) thy sword thou wilt live; ” i. e. , thy maintenance will depend on the sword (על as in Deu 8:3 cf. Isa 28:16), “live by war, rapine, and freebooting” ( Knobel ). “ And thy brother thou wilt serve; yet it will come to pass, as (כּאשׁר, lit. , in proportion as, cf.
Num 27:14) thou shakest (tossest), thou wilt break his yoke from thy neck . ” רוּד, “to rove about” (Jer 2:31; Hos 12:1), Hiphil “to cause (the thoughts) to rove about” (Psa 55:3); but Hengstenberg’s rendering is the best here, viz. , “to shake, sc. , the yoke. ” In the wild, sport-loving Esau there was aptly prefigured the character of his posterity. Josephus describes the Idumaean people as “a tumultuous and disorderly nation, always on the watch on every motion, delighting in mutations” ( Whiston’s tr.
: de bell Judg 4; 1:1-21:25; 1). The mental eye of the patriarch discerned in the son his whole future family in its attitude to its brother-nation, and he promised Edom, not freedom from the dominion of Israel (for Esau was to serve his brother, as Jehovah had predicted before their birth), but only a repeated and not unsuccessful struggle for freedom. And so it was; the historical relation of Edom to Israel assumed the form of a constant reiteration of servitude, revolt, and reconquest.
After a long period of independence at the first, the Edomites were defeated by Saul (1Sa 14:47) and subjugated by David (2Sa 8:14); and, in spite of an attempt at revolt under Solomon (1Ki 11:14.) , they remained subject to the kingdom of Judah until the time of Joram, when they rebelled. They were subdued again by Amaziah (2Ki 14:7; 2Ch 25:11.) , and remained in subjection under Uzziah and Jotham (2Ki 14:22; 2Ch 26:2).
It was not till the reign of Ahaz that they shook the yoke of Judah entirely off (2Ki 16:6; 2Ch 28:17), without Judah being ever able to reduce them again. At length, however, they were completely conquered by John Hyrcanus about b. c. 129, compelled to submit to circumcision, and incorporated in the Jewish state (Josephus, Ant. xiii. 9, 1, xv. 7, 9). At a still later period, through Antipater and Herod, they established an Idumaean dynasty over Judea, which lasted till the complete dissolution of the Jewish state.
Thus the words of Isaac to his two sons were fulfilled-words which are justly said to have been spoken “in faith concerning things to come” (Heb 11:20). For the blessing was a prophecy, and that not merely in the case of Esau, but in that of Jacob also; although Isaac was deceived with regard to the person of the latter. Jacob remained blessed, therefore, because, according to the predetermination of God, the elder was to serve the younger; but the deceit by which his mother prompted him to secure the blessing was never approved.
On the contrary, the sin was followed by immediate punishment. Rebekah was obliged to send her pet son into a foreign land, away from his father’s house, and in an utterly destitute condition. She did not see him for twenty years, even if she lived till his return, and possibly never saw again. Jacob had to atone for his sin against both brother and father by a long and painful exile, in the midst of privation, anxiety, fraud, and want.
Isaac was punished for retaining his preference for Esau, in opposition to the revealed will of Jehovah , by the success of Jacob’s stratagem; and Esau for his contempt of the birthright, by the loss of the blessing of the first-born. In this way a higher hand prevailed above the acts of sinful men, bringing the counsel and will of Jehovah to eventual triumph, in opposition to human thought and will.
Gen 27:30-40 Jacob had hardly left his father, after receiving the blessing (יצא אך, was only gone out), when Esau returned and came to Isaac, with the game prepared, to receive the blessing. The shock was inconceivable which Isaac received, when he found that he had blessed another, and not Esau-that, in fact, he had blessed Jacob. At the same time he neither could nor would, either curse him on account of the deception which he had practised, or withdraw the blessing imparted.
For he could not help confessing to himself that he had sinned and brought the deception upon himself by his carnal preference for Esau. Moreover, the blessing was not a matter of subjective human affection, but a right entrusted by the grace of God to paternal supremacy and authority, in the exercise of which the person blessing, being impelled and guided by a higher authority, imparted to the person to be blest spiritual possessions and powers, which the will of man could not capriciously withdraw.
Regarding this as the meaning of the blessing, Isaac necessarily saw in what had taken place the will of God, which had directed to Jacob the blessing that he had intended for Esau. He therefore said, “ I have blessed him; yea, he will be ( remain ) blessed ” (cf. Heb 12:17). Even the great and bitter lamentation into which Esau broke out could not change his father’s mind.
To his entreaty in Gen 27:34, “ Bless me, even me also, O my father! ” he replied, “ Thy brother came with subtilty, and hath taken away thy blessing . ” Esau answered, “ Is it that (הכי) they have named him Jacob (overreacher), and he has overreached me twice? ” i. e. , has he received the name Jacob from the fact that he has twice outwitted me? הכי is used “when the cause is not rightly known” (cf.
Gen 29:15). To his further entreaty, “Hast thou not reserved a blessing for me? ” (אצל, lit. , to lay aside), Isaac repeated the substance of the blessing given to Jacob, and added, “and to thee (לכה for לך as in Gen 3:9), now, what can I do, my son? ” When Esau again repeated, with tears, the entreaty that Isaac would bless him also, the father gave him a blessing (Gen 27:39, Gen 27:40), but one which, when compared with the blessing of Jacob, was to be regarded rather as “a modified curse,” and which is not even described as a blessing, but “introduced a disturbing element into Jacob’s blessing, a retribution for the impure means by which he had obtained it.
” “ Behold, ” it states, “ from the fat fields of the earth will thy dwelling be, and from the dew of heaven from above . ” By a play upon the words Isaac uses the same expression as in Gen 27:28, “from the fat fields of the earth, and from the dew,” but in the opposite sense, מן being partitive there, and privative here, “from = away from. ” The context requires that the words should be taken thus, and not in the sense of “thy dwelling shall partake of the fat of the earth and the dew of heaven” ( Vulg .
, Luth . , etc.) Since Isaac said (Gen 27:37) he had given Jacob the blessing of the super-abundance of corn and wine, he could not possibly promise Esau also fat fields and the dew of heaven. Nor would this agree with the words which follows, “ By thy sword wilt thou live . ” Moreover, the privative sense of מן is thoroughly poetical (cf. 2Sa 1:22; Job 11:15, etc.)
The idea expressed in the words, therefore, was that the dwelling-place of Esau would be the very opposite of the land of Canaan, viz. , an unfruitful land. This is generally the condition of the mountainous country of Edom, which, although not without its fertile slopes and valleys, especially in the eastern portion (cf. Robinson, Pal. ii. p. 552), is thoroughly waste and barren in the western; so that Seetzen says it consists of “the most desolate and barren mountains probably in the world.
” The mode of life and occupation of the inhabitants were adapted to the country. “ By (lit. , on) thy sword thou wilt live; ” i. e. , thy maintenance will depend on the sword (על as in Deu 8:3 cf. Isa 28:16), “live by war, rapine, and freebooting” ( Knobel ). “ And thy brother thou wilt serve; yet it will come to pass, as (כּאשׁר, lit. , in proportion as, cf.
Num 27:14) thou shakest (tossest), thou wilt break his yoke from thy neck . ” רוּד, “to rove about” (Jer 2:31; Hos 12:1), Hiphil “to cause (the thoughts) to rove about” (Psa 55:3); but Hengstenberg’s rendering is the best here, viz. , “to shake, sc. , the yoke. ” In the wild, sport-loving Esau there was aptly prefigured the character of his posterity. Josephus describes the Idumaean people as “a tumultuous and disorderly nation, always on the watch on every motion, delighting in mutations” ( Whiston’s tr.
: de bell Judg 4; 1:1-21:25; 1). The mental eye of the patriarch discerned in the son his whole future family in its attitude to its brother-nation, and he promised Edom, not freedom from the dominion of Israel (for Esau was to serve his brother, as Jehovah had predicted before their birth), but only a repeated and not unsuccessful struggle for freedom. And so it was; the historical relation of Edom to Israel assumed the form of a constant reiteration of servitude, revolt, and reconquest.
After a long period of independence at the first, the Edomites were defeated by Saul (1Sa 14:47) and subjugated by David (2Sa 8:14); and, in spite of an attempt at revolt under Solomon (1Ki 11:14.) , they remained subject to the kingdom of Judah until the time of Joram, when they rebelled. They were subdued again by Amaziah (2Ki 14:7; 2Ch 25:11.) , and remained in subjection under Uzziah and Jotham (2Ki 14:22; 2Ch 26:2).
It was not till the reign of Ahaz that they shook the yoke of Judah entirely off (2Ki 16:6; 2Ch 28:17), without Judah being ever able to reduce them again. At length, however, they were completely conquered by John Hyrcanus about b. c. 129, compelled to submit to circumcision, and incorporated in the Jewish state (Josephus, Ant. xiii. 9, 1, xv. 7, 9). At a still later period, through Antipater and Herod, they established an Idumaean dynasty over Judea, which lasted till the complete dissolution of the Jewish state.
Thus the words of Isaac to his two sons were fulfilled-words which are justly said to have been spoken “in faith concerning things to come” (Heb 11:20). For the blessing was a prophecy, and that not merely in the case of Esau, but in that of Jacob also; although Isaac was deceived with regard to the person of the latter. Jacob remained blessed, therefore, because, according to the predetermination of God, the elder was to serve the younger; but the deceit by which his mother prompted him to secure the blessing was never approved.
On the contrary, the sin was followed by immediate punishment. Rebekah was obliged to send her pet son into a foreign land, away from his father’s house, and in an utterly destitute condition. She did not see him for twenty years, even if she lived till his return, and possibly never saw again. Jacob had to atone for his sin against both brother and father by a long and painful exile, in the midst of privation, anxiety, fraud, and want.
Isaac was punished for retaining his preference for Esau, in opposition to the revealed will of Jehovah , by the success of Jacob’s stratagem; and Esau for his contempt of the birthright, by the loss of the blessing of the first-born. In this way a higher hand prevailed above the acts of sinful men, bringing the counsel and will of Jehovah to eventual triumph, in opposition to human thought and will.
Gen 27:30-40 Jacob had hardly left his father, after receiving the blessing (יצא אך, was only gone out), when Esau returned and came to Isaac, with the game prepared, to receive the blessing. The shock was inconceivable which Isaac received, when he found that he had blessed another, and not Esau-that, in fact, he had blessed Jacob. At the same time he neither could nor would, either curse him on account of the deception which he had practised, or withdraw the blessing imparted.
For he could not help confessing to himself that he had sinned and brought the deception upon himself by his carnal preference for Esau. Moreover, the blessing was not a matter of subjective human affection, but a right entrusted by the grace of God to paternal supremacy and authority, in the exercise of which the person blessing, being impelled and guided by a higher authority, imparted to the person to be blest spiritual possessions and powers, which the will of man could not capriciously withdraw.
Regarding this as the meaning of the blessing, Isaac necessarily saw in what had taken place the will of God, which had directed to Jacob the blessing that he had intended for Esau. He therefore said, “ I have blessed him; yea, he will be ( remain ) blessed ” (cf. Heb 12:17). Even the great and bitter lamentation into which Esau broke out could not change his father’s mind.
To his entreaty in Gen 27:34, “ Bless me, even me also, O my father! ” he replied, “ Thy brother came with subtilty, and hath taken away thy blessing . ” Esau answered, “ Is it that (הכי) they have named him Jacob (overreacher), and he has overreached me twice? ” i. e. , has he received the name Jacob from the fact that he has twice outwitted me? הכי is used “when the cause is not rightly known” (cf.
Gen 29:15). To his further entreaty, “Hast thou not reserved a blessing for me? ” (אצל, lit. , to lay aside), Isaac repeated the substance of the blessing given to Jacob, and added, “and to thee (לכה for לך as in Gen 3:9), now, what can I do, my son? ” When Esau again repeated, with tears, the entreaty that Isaac would bless him also, the father gave him a blessing (Gen 27:39, Gen 27:40), but one which, when compared with the blessing of Jacob, was to be regarded rather as “a modified curse,” and which is not even described as a blessing, but “introduced a disturbing element into Jacob’s blessing, a retribution for the impure means by which he had obtained it.
” “ Behold, ” it states, “ from the fat fields of the earth will thy dwelling be, and from the dew of heaven from above . ” By a play upon the words Isaac uses the same expression as in Gen 27:28, “from the fat fields of the earth, and from the dew,” but in the opposite sense, מן being partitive there, and privative here, “from = away from. ” The context requires that the words should be taken thus, and not in the sense of “thy dwelling shall partake of the fat of the earth and the dew of heaven” ( Vulg .
, Luth . , etc.) Since Isaac said (Gen 27:37) he had given Jacob the blessing of the super-abundance of corn and wine, he could not possibly promise Esau also fat fields and the dew of heaven. Nor would this agree with the words which follows, “ By thy sword wilt thou live . ” Moreover, the privative sense of מן is thoroughly poetical (cf. 2Sa 1:22; Job 11:15, etc.)
The idea expressed in the words, therefore, was that the dwelling-place of Esau would be the very opposite of the land of Canaan, viz. , an unfruitful land. This is generally the condition of the mountainous country of Edom, which, although not without its fertile slopes and valleys, especially in the eastern portion (cf. Robinson, Pal. ii. p. 552), is thoroughly waste and barren in the western; so that Seetzen says it consists of “the most desolate and barren mountains probably in the world.
” The mode of life and occupation of the inhabitants were adapted to the country. “ By (lit. , on) thy sword thou wilt live; ” i. e. , thy maintenance will depend on the sword (על as in Deu 8:3 cf. Isa 28:16), “live by war, rapine, and freebooting” ( Knobel ). “ And thy brother thou wilt serve; yet it will come to pass, as (כּאשׁר, lit. , in proportion as, cf.
Num 27:14) thou shakest (tossest), thou wilt break his yoke from thy neck . ” רוּד, “to rove about” (Jer 2:31; Hos 12:1), Hiphil “to cause (the thoughts) to rove about” (Psa 55:3); but Hengstenberg’s rendering is the best here, viz. , “to shake, sc. , the yoke. ” In the wild, sport-loving Esau there was aptly prefigured the character of his posterity. Josephus describes the Idumaean people as “a tumultuous and disorderly nation, always on the watch on every motion, delighting in mutations” ( Whiston’s tr.
: de bell Judg 4; 1:1-21:25; 1). The mental eye of the patriarch discerned in the son his whole future family in its attitude to its brother-nation, and he promised Edom, not freedom from the dominion of Israel (for Esau was to serve his brother, as Jehovah had predicted before their birth), but only a repeated and not unsuccessful struggle for freedom. And so it was; the historical relation of Edom to Israel assumed the form of a constant reiteration of servitude, revolt, and reconquest.
After a long period of independence at the first, the Edomites were defeated by Saul (1Sa 14:47) and subjugated by David (2Sa 8:14); and, in spite of an attempt at revolt under Solomon (1Ki 11:14.) , they remained subject to the kingdom of Judah until the time of Joram, when they rebelled. They were subdued again by Amaziah (2Ki 14:7; 2Ch 25:11.) , and remained in subjection under Uzziah and Jotham (2Ki 14:22; 2Ch 26:2).
It was not till the reign of Ahaz that they shook the yoke of Judah entirely off (2Ki 16:6; 2Ch 28:17), without Judah being ever able to reduce them again. At length, however, they were completely conquered by John Hyrcanus about b. c. 129, compelled to submit to circumcision, and incorporated in the Jewish state (Josephus, Ant. xiii. 9, 1, xv. 7, 9). At a still later period, through Antipater and Herod, they established an Idumaean dynasty over Judea, which lasted till the complete dissolution of the Jewish state.
Thus the words of Isaac to his two sons were fulfilled-words which are justly said to have been spoken “in faith concerning things to come” (Heb 11:20). For the blessing was a prophecy, and that not merely in the case of Esau, but in that of Jacob also; although Isaac was deceived with regard to the person of the latter. Jacob remained blessed, therefore, because, according to the predetermination of God, the elder was to serve the younger; but the deceit by which his mother prompted him to secure the blessing was never approved.
On the contrary, the sin was followed by immediate punishment. Rebekah was obliged to send her pet son into a foreign land, away from his father’s house, and in an utterly destitute condition. She did not see him for twenty years, even if she lived till his return, and possibly never saw again. Jacob had to atone for his sin against both brother and father by a long and painful exile, in the midst of privation, anxiety, fraud, and want.
Isaac was punished for retaining his preference for Esau, in opposition to the revealed will of Jehovah , by the success of Jacob’s stratagem; and Esau for his contempt of the birthright, by the loss of the blessing of the first-born. In this way a higher hand prevailed above the acts of sinful men, bringing the counsel and will of Jehovah to eventual triumph, in opposition to human thought and will.
Gen 27:30-40 Jacob had hardly left his father, after receiving the blessing (יצא אך, was only gone out), when Esau returned and came to Isaac, with the game prepared, to receive the blessing. The shock was inconceivable which Isaac received, when he found that he had blessed another, and not Esau-that, in fact, he had blessed Jacob. At the same time he neither could nor would, either curse him on account of the deception which he had practised, or withdraw the blessing imparted.
For he could not help confessing to himself that he had sinned and brought the deception upon himself by his carnal preference for Esau. Moreover, the blessing was not a matter of subjective human affection, but a right entrusted by the grace of God to paternal supremacy and authority, in the exercise of which the person blessing, being impelled and guided by a higher authority, imparted to the person to be blest spiritual possessions and powers, which the will of man could not capriciously withdraw.
Regarding this as the meaning of the blessing, Isaac necessarily saw in what had taken place the will of God, which had directed to Jacob the blessing that he had intended for Esau. He therefore said, “ I have blessed him; yea, he will be ( remain ) blessed ” (cf. Heb 12:17). Even the great and bitter lamentation into which Esau broke out could not change his father’s mind.
To his entreaty in Gen 27:34, “ Bless me, even me also, O my father! ” he replied, “ Thy brother came with subtilty, and hath taken away thy blessing . ” Esau answered, “ Is it that (הכי) they have named him Jacob (overreacher), and he has overreached me twice? ” i. e. , has he received the name Jacob from the fact that he has twice outwitted me? הכי is used “when the cause is not rightly known” (cf.
Gen 29:15). To his further entreaty, “Hast thou not reserved a blessing for me? ” (אצל, lit. , to lay aside), Isaac repeated the substance of the blessing given to Jacob, and added, “and to thee (לכה for לך as in Gen 3:9), now, what can I do, my son? ” When Esau again repeated, with tears, the entreaty that Isaac would bless him also, the father gave him a blessing (Gen 27:39, Gen 27:40), but one which, when compared with the blessing of Jacob, was to be regarded rather as “a modified curse,” and which is not even described as a blessing, but “introduced a disturbing element into Jacob’s blessing, a retribution for the impure means by which he had obtained it.
” “ Behold, ” it states, “ from the fat fields of the earth will thy dwelling be, and from the dew of heaven from above . ” By a play upon the words Isaac uses the same expression as in Gen 27:28, “from the fat fields of the earth, and from the dew,” but in the opposite sense, מן being partitive there, and privative here, “from = away from. ” The context requires that the words should be taken thus, and not in the sense of “thy dwelling shall partake of the fat of the earth and the dew of heaven” ( Vulg .
, Luth . , etc.) Since Isaac said (Gen 27:37) he had given Jacob the blessing of the super-abundance of corn and wine, he could not possibly promise Esau also fat fields and the dew of heaven. Nor would this agree with the words which follows, “ By thy sword wilt thou live . ” Moreover, the privative sense of מן is thoroughly poetical (cf. 2Sa 1:22; Job 11:15, etc.)
The idea expressed in the words, therefore, was that the dwelling-place of Esau would be the very opposite of the land of Canaan, viz. , an unfruitful land. This is generally the condition of the mountainous country of Edom, which, although not without its fertile slopes and valleys, especially in the eastern portion (cf. Robinson, Pal. ii. p. 552), is thoroughly waste and barren in the western; so that Seetzen says it consists of “the most desolate and barren mountains probably in the world.
” The mode of life and occupation of the inhabitants were adapted to the country. “ By (lit. , on) thy sword thou wilt live; ” i. e. , thy maintenance will depend on the sword (על as in Deu 8:3 cf. Isa 28:16), “live by war, rapine, and freebooting” ( Knobel ). “ And thy brother thou wilt serve; yet it will come to pass, as (כּאשׁר, lit. , in proportion as, cf.
Num 27:14) thou shakest (tossest), thou wilt break his yoke from thy neck . ” רוּד, “to rove about” (Jer 2:31; Hos 12:1), Hiphil “to cause (the thoughts) to rove about” (Psa 55:3); but Hengstenberg’s rendering is the best here, viz. , “to shake, sc. , the yoke. ” In the wild, sport-loving Esau there was aptly prefigured the character of his posterity. Josephus describes the Idumaean people as “a tumultuous and disorderly nation, always on the watch on every motion, delighting in mutations” ( Whiston’s tr.
: de bell Judg 4; 1:1-21:25; 1). The mental eye of the patriarch discerned in the son his whole future family in its attitude to its brother-nation, and he promised Edom, not freedom from the dominion of Israel (for Esau was to serve his brother, as Jehovah had predicted before their birth), but only a repeated and not unsuccessful struggle for freedom. And so it was; the historical relation of Edom to Israel assumed the form of a constant reiteration of servitude, revolt, and reconquest.
After a long period of independence at the first, the Edomites were defeated by Saul (1Sa 14:47) and subjugated by David (2Sa 8:14); and, in spite of an attempt at revolt under Solomon (1Ki 11:14.) , they remained subject to the kingdom of Judah until the time of Joram, when they rebelled. They were subdued again by Amaziah (2Ki 14:7; 2Ch 25:11.) , and remained in subjection under Uzziah and Jotham (2Ki 14:22; 2Ch 26:2).
It was not till the reign of Ahaz that they shook the yoke of Judah entirely off (2Ki 16:6; 2Ch 28:17), without Judah being ever able to reduce them again. At length, however, they were completely conquered by John Hyrcanus about b. c. 129, compelled to submit to circumcision, and incorporated in the Jewish state (Josephus, Ant. xiii. 9, 1, xv. 7, 9). At a still later period, through Antipater and Herod, they established an Idumaean dynasty over Judea, which lasted till the complete dissolution of the Jewish state.
Thus the words of Isaac to his two sons were fulfilled-words which are justly said to have been spoken “in faith concerning things to come” (Heb 11:20). For the blessing was a prophecy, and that not merely in the case of Esau, but in that of Jacob also; although Isaac was deceived with regard to the person of the latter. Jacob remained blessed, therefore, because, according to the predetermination of God, the elder was to serve the younger; but the deceit by which his mother prompted him to secure the blessing was never approved.
On the contrary, the sin was followed by immediate punishment. Rebekah was obliged to send her pet son into a foreign land, away from his father’s house, and in an utterly destitute condition. She did not see him for twenty years, even if she lived till his return, and possibly never saw again. Jacob had to atone for his sin against both brother and father by a long and painful exile, in the midst of privation, anxiety, fraud, and want.
Isaac was punished for retaining his preference for Esau, in opposition to the revealed will of Jehovah , by the success of Jacob’s stratagem; and Esau for his contempt of the birthright, by the loss of the blessing of the first-born. In this way a higher hand prevailed above the acts of sinful men, bringing the counsel and will of Jehovah to eventual triumph, in opposition to human thought and will.
Gen 27:30-40 Jacob had hardly left his father, after receiving the blessing (יצא אך, was only gone out), when Esau returned and came to Isaac, with the game prepared, to receive the blessing. The shock was inconceivable which Isaac received, when he found that he had blessed another, and not Esau-that, in fact, he had blessed Jacob. At the same time he neither could nor would, either curse him on account of the deception which he had practised, or withdraw the blessing imparted.
For he could not help confessing to himself that he had sinned and brought the deception upon himself by his carnal preference for Esau. Moreover, the blessing was not a matter of subjective human affection, but a right entrusted by the grace of God to paternal supremacy and authority, in the exercise of which the person blessing, being impelled and guided by a higher authority, imparted to the person to be blest spiritual possessions and powers, which the will of man could not capriciously withdraw.
Regarding this as the meaning of the blessing, Isaac necessarily saw in what had taken place the will of God, which had directed to Jacob the blessing that he had intended for Esau. He therefore said, “ I have blessed him; yea, he will be ( remain ) blessed ” (cf. Heb 12:17). Even the great and bitter lamentation into which Esau broke out could not change his father’s mind.
To his entreaty in Gen 27:34, “ Bless me, even me also, O my father! ” he replied, “ Thy brother came with subtilty, and hath taken away thy blessing . ” Esau answered, “ Is it that (הכי) they have named him Jacob (overreacher), and he has overreached me twice? ” i. e. , has he received the name Jacob from the fact that he has twice outwitted me? הכי is used “when the cause is not rightly known” (cf.
Gen 29:15). To his further entreaty, “Hast thou not reserved a blessing for me? ” (אצל, lit. , to lay aside), Isaac repeated the substance of the blessing given to Jacob, and added, “and to thee (לכה for לך as in Gen 3:9), now, what can I do, my son? ” When Esau again repeated, with tears, the entreaty that Isaac would bless him also, the father gave him a blessing (Gen 27:39, Gen 27:40), but one which, when compared with the blessing of Jacob, was to be regarded rather as “a modified curse,” and which is not even described as a blessing, but “introduced a disturbing element into Jacob’s blessing, a retribution for the impure means by which he had obtained it.
” “ Behold, ” it states, “ from the fat fields of the earth will thy dwelling be, and from the dew of heaven from above . ” By a play upon the words Isaac uses the same expression as in Gen 27:28, “from the fat fields of the earth, and from the dew,” but in the opposite sense, מן being partitive there, and privative here, “from = away from. ” The context requires that the words should be taken thus, and not in the sense of “thy dwelling shall partake of the fat of the earth and the dew of heaven” ( Vulg .
, Luth . , etc.) Since Isaac said (Gen 27:37) he had given Jacob the blessing of the super-abundance of corn and wine, he could not possibly promise Esau also fat fields and the dew of heaven. Nor would this agree with the words which follows, “ By thy sword wilt thou live . ” Moreover, the privative sense of מן is thoroughly poetical (cf. 2Sa 1:22; Job 11:15, etc.)
The idea expressed in the words, therefore, was that the dwelling-place of Esau would be the very opposite of the land of Canaan, viz. , an unfruitful land. This is generally the condition of the mountainous country of Edom, which, although not without its fertile slopes and valleys, especially in the eastern portion (cf. Robinson, Pal. ii. p. 552), is thoroughly waste and barren in the western; so that Seetzen says it consists of “the most desolate and barren mountains probably in the world.
” The mode of life and occupation of the inhabitants were adapted to the country. “ By (lit. , on) thy sword thou wilt live; ” i. e. , thy maintenance will depend on the sword (על as in Deu 8:3 cf. Isa 28:16), “live by war, rapine, and freebooting” ( Knobel ). “ And thy brother thou wilt serve; yet it will come to pass, as (כּאשׁר, lit. , in proportion as, cf.
Num 27:14) thou shakest (tossest), thou wilt break his yoke from thy neck . ” רוּד, “to rove about” (Jer 2:31; Hos 12:1), Hiphil “to cause (the thoughts) to rove about” (Psa 55:3); but Hengstenberg’s rendering is the best here, viz. , “to shake, sc. , the yoke. ” In the wild, sport-loving Esau there was aptly prefigured the character of his posterity. Josephus describes the Idumaean people as “a tumultuous and disorderly nation, always on the watch on every motion, delighting in mutations” ( Whiston’s tr.
: de bell Judg 4; 1:1-21:25; 1). The mental eye of the patriarch discerned in the son his whole future family in its attitude to its brother-nation, and he promised Edom, not freedom from the dominion of Israel (for Esau was to serve his brother, as Jehovah had predicted before their birth), but only a repeated and not unsuccessful struggle for freedom. And so it was; the historical relation of Edom to Israel assumed the form of a constant reiteration of servitude, revolt, and reconquest.
After a long period of independence at the first, the Edomites were defeated by Saul (1Sa 14:47) and subjugated by David (2Sa 8:14); and, in spite of an attempt at revolt under Solomon (1Ki 11:14.) , they remained subject to the kingdom of Judah until the time of Joram, when they rebelled. They were subdued again by Amaziah (2Ki 14:7; 2Ch 25:11.) , and remained in subjection under Uzziah and Jotham (2Ki 14:22; 2Ch 26:2).
It was not till the reign of Ahaz that they shook the yoke of Judah entirely off (2Ki 16:6; 2Ch 28:17), without Judah being ever able to reduce them again. At length, however, they were completely conquered by John Hyrcanus about b. c. 129, compelled to submit to circumcision, and incorporated in the Jewish state (Josephus, Ant. xiii. 9, 1, xv. 7, 9). At a still later period, through Antipater and Herod, they established an Idumaean dynasty over Judea, which lasted till the complete dissolution of the Jewish state.
Thus the words of Isaac to his two sons were fulfilled-words which are justly said to have been spoken “in faith concerning things to come” (Heb 11:20). For the blessing was a prophecy, and that not merely in the case of Esau, but in that of Jacob also; although Isaac was deceived with regard to the person of the latter. Jacob remained blessed, therefore, because, according to the predetermination of God, the elder was to serve the younger; but the deceit by which his mother prompted him to secure the blessing was never approved.
On the contrary, the sin was followed by immediate punishment. Rebekah was obliged to send her pet son into a foreign land, away from his father’s house, and in an utterly destitute condition. She did not see him for twenty years, even if she lived till his return, and possibly never saw again. Jacob had to atone for his sin against both brother and father by a long and painful exile, in the midst of privation, anxiety, fraud, and want.
Isaac was punished for retaining his preference for Esau, in opposition to the revealed will of Jehovah , by the success of Jacob’s stratagem; and Esau for his contempt of the birthright, by the loss of the blessing of the first-born. In this way a higher hand prevailed above the acts of sinful men, bringing the counsel and will of Jehovah to eventual triumph, in opposition to human thought and will.
Gen 27:30-40 Jacob had hardly left his father, after receiving the blessing (יצא אך, was only gone out), when Esau returned and came to Isaac, with the game prepared, to receive the blessing. The shock was inconceivable which Isaac received, when he found that he had blessed another, and not Esau-that, in fact, he had blessed Jacob. At the same time he neither could nor would, either curse him on account of the deception which he had practised, or withdraw the blessing imparted.
For he could not help confessing to himself that he had sinned and brought the deception upon himself by his carnal preference for Esau. Moreover, the blessing was not a matter of subjective human affection, but a right entrusted by the grace of God to paternal supremacy and authority, in the exercise of which the person blessing, being impelled and guided by a higher authority, imparted to the person to be blest spiritual possessions and powers, which the will of man could not capriciously withdraw.
Regarding this as the meaning of the blessing, Isaac necessarily saw in what had taken place the will of God, which had directed to Jacob the blessing that he had intended for Esau. He therefore said, “ I have blessed him; yea, he will be ( remain ) blessed ” (cf. Heb 12:17). Even the great and bitter lamentation into which Esau broke out could not change his father’s mind.
To his entreaty in Gen 27:34, “ Bless me, even me also, O my father! ” he replied, “ Thy brother came with subtilty, and hath taken away thy blessing . ” Esau answered, “ Is it that (הכי) they have named him Jacob (overreacher), and he has overreached me twice? ” i. e. , has he received the name Jacob from the fact that he has twice outwitted me? הכי is used “when the cause is not rightly known” (cf.
Gen 29:15). To his further entreaty, “Hast thou not reserved a blessing for me? ” (אצל, lit. , to lay aside), Isaac repeated the substance of the blessing given to Jacob, and added, “and to thee (לכה for לך as in Gen 3:9), now, what can I do, my son? ” When Esau again repeated, with tears, the entreaty that Isaac would bless him also, the father gave him a blessing (Gen 27:39, Gen 27:40), but one which, when compared with the blessing of Jacob, was to be regarded rather as “a modified curse,” and which is not even described as a blessing, but “introduced a disturbing element into Jacob’s blessing, a retribution for the impure means by which he had obtained it.
” “ Behold, ” it states, “ from the fat fields of the earth will thy dwelling be, and from the dew of heaven from above . ” By a play upon the words Isaac uses the same expression as in Gen 27:28, “from the fat fields of the earth, and from the dew,” but in the opposite sense, מן being partitive there, and privative here, “from = away from. ” The context requires that the words should be taken thus, and not in the sense of “thy dwelling shall partake of the fat of the earth and the dew of heaven” ( Vulg .
, Luth . , etc.) Since Isaac said (Gen 27:37) he had given Jacob the blessing of the super-abundance of corn and wine, he could not possibly promise Esau also fat fields and the dew of heaven. Nor would this agree with the words which follows, “ By thy sword wilt thou live . ” Moreover, the privative sense of מן is thoroughly poetical (cf. 2Sa 1:22; Job 11:15, etc.)
The idea expressed in the words, therefore, was that the dwelling-place of Esau would be the very opposite of the land of Canaan, viz. , an unfruitful land. This is generally the condition of the mountainous country of Edom, which, although not without its fertile slopes and valleys, especially in the eastern portion (cf. Robinson, Pal. ii. p. 552), is thoroughly waste and barren in the western; so that Seetzen says it consists of “the most desolate and barren mountains probably in the world.
” The mode of life and occupation of the inhabitants were adapted to the country. “ By (lit. , on) thy sword thou wilt live; ” i. e. , thy maintenance will depend on the sword (על as in Deu 8:3 cf. Isa 28:16), “live by war, rapine, and freebooting” ( Knobel ). “ And thy brother thou wilt serve; yet it will come to pass, as (כּאשׁר, lit. , in proportion as, cf.
Num 27:14) thou shakest (tossest), thou wilt break his yoke from thy neck . ” רוּד, “to rove about” (Jer 2:31; Hos 12:1), Hiphil “to cause (the thoughts) to rove about” (Psa 55:3); but Hengstenberg’s rendering is the best here, viz. , “to shake, sc. , the yoke. ” In the wild, sport-loving Esau there was aptly prefigured the character of his posterity. Josephus describes the Idumaean people as “a tumultuous and disorderly nation, always on the watch on every motion, delighting in mutations” ( Whiston’s tr.
: de bell Judg 4; 1:1-21:25; 1). The mental eye of the patriarch discerned in the son his whole future family in its attitude to its brother-nation, and he promised Edom, not freedom from the dominion of Israel (for Esau was to serve his brother, as Jehovah had predicted before their birth), but only a repeated and not unsuccessful struggle for freedom. And so it was; the historical relation of Edom to Israel assumed the form of a constant reiteration of servitude, revolt, and reconquest.
After a long period of independence at the first, the Edomites were defeated by Saul (1Sa 14:47) and subjugated by David (2Sa 8:14); and, in spite of an attempt at revolt under Solomon (1Ki 11:14.) , they remained subject to the kingdom of Judah until the time of Joram, when they rebelled. They were subdued again by Amaziah (2Ki 14:7; 2Ch 25:11.) , and remained in subjection under Uzziah and Jotham (2Ki 14:22; 2Ch 26:2).
It was not till the reign of Ahaz that they shook the yoke of Judah entirely off (2Ki 16:6; 2Ch 28:17), without Judah being ever able to reduce them again. At length, however, they were completely conquered by John Hyrcanus about b. c. 129, compelled to submit to circumcision, and incorporated in the Jewish state (Josephus, Ant. xiii. 9, 1, xv. 7, 9). At a still later period, through Antipater and Herod, they established an Idumaean dynasty over Judea, which lasted till the complete dissolution of the Jewish state.
Thus the words of Isaac to his two sons were fulfilled-words which are justly said to have been spoken “in faith concerning things to come” (Heb 11:20). For the blessing was a prophecy, and that not merely in the case of Esau, but in that of Jacob also; although Isaac was deceived with regard to the person of the latter. Jacob remained blessed, therefore, because, according to the predetermination of God, the elder was to serve the younger; but the deceit by which his mother prompted him to secure the blessing was never approved.
On the contrary, the sin was followed by immediate punishment. Rebekah was obliged to send her pet son into a foreign land, away from his father’s house, and in an utterly destitute condition. She did not see him for twenty years, even if she lived till his return, and possibly never saw again. Jacob had to atone for his sin against both brother and father by a long and painful exile, in the midst of privation, anxiety, fraud, and want.
Isaac was punished for retaining his preference for Esau, in opposition to the revealed will of Jehovah , by the success of Jacob’s stratagem; and Esau for his contempt of the birthright, by the loss of the blessing of the first-born. In this way a higher hand prevailed above the acts of sinful men, bringing the counsel and will of Jehovah to eventual triumph, in opposition to human thought and will.
Gen 27:30-40 Jacob had hardly left his father, after receiving the blessing (יצא אך, was only gone out), when Esau returned and came to Isaac, with the game prepared, to receive the blessing. The shock was inconceivable which Isaac received, when he found that he had blessed another, and not Esau-that, in fact, he had blessed Jacob. At the same time he neither could nor would, either curse him on account of the deception which he had practised, or withdraw the blessing imparted.
For he could not help confessing to himself that he had sinned and brought the deception upon himself by his carnal preference for Esau. Moreover, the blessing was not a matter of subjective human affection, but a right entrusted by the grace of God to paternal supremacy and authority, in the exercise of which the person blessing, being impelled and guided by a higher authority, imparted to the person to be blest spiritual possessions and powers, which the will of man could not capriciously withdraw.
Regarding this as the meaning of the blessing, Isaac necessarily saw in what had taken place the will of God, which had directed to Jacob the blessing that he had intended for Esau. He therefore said, “ I have blessed him; yea, he will be ( remain ) blessed ” (cf. Heb 12:17). Even the great and bitter lamentation into which Esau broke out could not change his father’s mind.
To his entreaty in Gen 27:34, “ Bless me, even me also, O my father! ” he replied, “ Thy brother came with subtilty, and hath taken away thy blessing . ” Esau answered, “ Is it that (הכי) they have named him Jacob (overreacher), and he has overreached me twice? ” i. e. , has he received the name Jacob from the fact that he has twice outwitted me? הכי is used “when the cause is not rightly known” (cf.
Gen 29:15). To his further entreaty, “Hast thou not reserved a blessing for me? ” (אצל, lit. , to lay aside), Isaac repeated the substance of the blessing given to Jacob, and added, “and to thee (לכה for לך as in Gen 3:9), now, what can I do, my son? ” When Esau again repeated, with tears, the entreaty that Isaac would bless him also, the father gave him a blessing (Gen 27:39, Gen 27:40), but one which, when compared with the blessing of Jacob, was to be regarded rather as “a modified curse,” and which is not even described as a blessing, but “introduced a disturbing element into Jacob’s blessing, a retribution for the impure means by which he had obtained it.
” “ Behold, ” it states, “ from the fat fields of the earth will thy dwelling be, and from the dew of heaven from above . ” By a play upon the words Isaac uses the same expression as in Gen 27:28, “from the fat fields of the earth, and from the dew,” but in the opposite sense, מן being partitive there, and privative here, “from = away from. ” The context requires that the words should be taken thus, and not in the sense of “thy dwelling shall partake of the fat of the earth and the dew of heaven” ( Vulg .
, Luth . , etc.) Since Isaac said (Gen 27:37) he had given Jacob the blessing of the super-abundance of corn and wine, he could not possibly promise Esau also fat fields and the dew of heaven. Nor would this agree with the words which follows, “ By thy sword wilt thou live . ” Moreover, the privative sense of מן is thoroughly poetical (cf. 2Sa 1:22; Job 11:15, etc.)
The idea expressed in the words, therefore, was that the dwelling-place of Esau would be the very opposite of the land of Canaan, viz. , an unfruitful land. This is generally the condition of the mountainous country of Edom, which, although not without its fertile slopes and valleys, especially in the eastern portion (cf. Robinson, Pal. ii. p. 552), is thoroughly waste and barren in the western; so that Seetzen says it consists of “the most desolate and barren mountains probably in the world.
” The mode of life and occupation of the inhabitants were adapted to the country. “ By (lit. , on) thy sword thou wilt live; ” i. e. , thy maintenance will depend on the sword (על as in Deu 8:3 cf. Isa 28:16), “live by war, rapine, and freebooting” ( Knobel ). “ And thy brother thou wilt serve; yet it will come to pass, as (כּאשׁר, lit. , in proportion as, cf.
Num 27:14) thou shakest (tossest), thou wilt break his yoke from thy neck . ” רוּד, “to rove about” (Jer 2:31; Hos 12:1), Hiphil “to cause (the thoughts) to rove about” (Psa 55:3); but Hengstenberg’s rendering is the best here, viz. , “to shake, sc. , the yoke. ” In the wild, sport-loving Esau there was aptly prefigured the character of his posterity. Josephus describes the Idumaean people as “a tumultuous and disorderly nation, always on the watch on every motion, delighting in mutations” ( Whiston’s tr.
: de bell Judg 4; 1:1-21:25; 1). The mental eye of the patriarch discerned in the son his whole future family in its attitude to its brother-nation, and he promised Edom, not freedom from the dominion of Israel (for Esau was to serve his brother, as Jehovah had predicted before their birth), but only a repeated and not unsuccessful struggle for freedom. And so it was; the historical relation of Edom to Israel assumed the form of a constant reiteration of servitude, revolt, and reconquest.
After a long period of independence at the first, the Edomites were defeated by Saul (1Sa 14:47) and subjugated by David (2Sa 8:14); and, in spite of an attempt at revolt under Solomon (1Ki 11:14.) , they remained subject to the kingdom of Judah until the time of Joram, when they rebelled. They were subdued again by Amaziah (2Ki 14:7; 2Ch 25:11.) , and remained in subjection under Uzziah and Jotham (2Ki 14:22; 2Ch 26:2).
It was not till the reign of Ahaz that they shook the yoke of Judah entirely off (2Ki 16:6; 2Ch 28:17), without Judah being ever able to reduce them again. At length, however, they were completely conquered by John Hyrcanus about b. c. 129, compelled to submit to circumcision, and incorporated in the Jewish state (Josephus, Ant. xiii. 9, 1, xv. 7, 9). At a still later period, through Antipater and Herod, they established an Idumaean dynasty over Judea, which lasted till the complete dissolution of the Jewish state.
Thus the words of Isaac to his two sons were fulfilled-words which are justly said to have been spoken “in faith concerning things to come” (Heb 11:20). For the blessing was a prophecy, and that not merely in the case of Esau, but in that of Jacob also; although Isaac was deceived with regard to the person of the latter. Jacob remained blessed, therefore, because, according to the predetermination of God, the elder was to serve the younger; but the deceit by which his mother prompted him to secure the blessing was never approved.
On the contrary, the sin was followed by immediate punishment. Rebekah was obliged to send her pet son into a foreign land, away from his father’s house, and in an utterly destitute condition. She did not see him for twenty years, even if she lived till his return, and possibly never saw again. Jacob had to atone for his sin against both brother and father by a long and painful exile, in the midst of privation, anxiety, fraud, and want.
Isaac was punished for retaining his preference for Esau, in opposition to the revealed will of Jehovah , by the success of Jacob’s stratagem; and Esau for his contempt of the birthright, by the loss of the blessing of the first-born. In this way a higher hand prevailed above the acts of sinful men, bringing the counsel and will of Jehovah to eventual triumph, in opposition to human thought and will.
Gen 27:30-40 Jacob had hardly left his father, after receiving the blessing (יצא אך, was only gone out), when Esau returned and came to Isaac, with the game prepared, to receive the blessing. The shock was inconceivable which Isaac received, when he found that he had blessed another, and not Esau-that, in fact, he had blessed Jacob. At the same time he neither could nor would, either curse him on account of the deception which he had practised, or withdraw the blessing imparted.
For he could not help confessing to himself that he had sinned and brought the deception upon himself by his carnal preference for Esau. Moreover, the blessing was not a matter of subjective human affection, but a right entrusted by the grace of God to paternal supremacy and authority, in the exercise of which the person blessing, being impelled and guided by a higher authority, imparted to the person to be blest spiritual possessions and powers, which the will of man could not capriciously withdraw.
Regarding this as the meaning of the blessing, Isaac necessarily saw in what had taken place the will of God, which had directed to Jacob the blessing that he had intended for Esau. He therefore said, “ I have blessed him; yea, he will be ( remain ) blessed ” (cf. Heb 12:17). Even the great and bitter lamentation into which Esau broke out could not change his father’s mind.
To his entreaty in Gen 27:34, “ Bless me, even me also, O my father! ” he replied, “ Thy brother came with subtilty, and hath taken away thy blessing . ” Esau answered, “ Is it that (הכי) they have named him Jacob (overreacher), and he has overreached me twice? ” i. e. , has he received the name Jacob from the fact that he has twice outwitted me? הכי is used “when the cause is not rightly known” (cf.
Gen 29:15). To his further entreaty, “Hast thou not reserved a blessing for me? ” (אצל, lit. , to lay aside), Isaac repeated the substance of the blessing given to Jacob, and added, “and to thee (לכה for לך as in Gen 3:9), now, what can I do, my son? ” When Esau again repeated, with tears, the entreaty that Isaac would bless him also, the father gave him a blessing (Gen 27:39, Gen 27:40), but one which, when compared with the blessing of Jacob, was to be regarded rather as “a modified curse,” and which is not even described as a blessing, but “introduced a disturbing element into Jacob’s blessing, a retribution for the impure means by which he had obtained it.
” “ Behold, ” it states, “ from the fat fields of the earth will thy dwelling be, and from the dew of heaven from above . ” By a play upon the words Isaac uses the same expression as in Gen 27:28, “from the fat fields of the earth, and from the dew,” but in the opposite sense, מן being partitive there, and privative here, “from = away from. ” The context requires that the words should be taken thus, and not in the sense of “thy dwelling shall partake of the fat of the earth and the dew of heaven” ( Vulg .
, Luth . , etc.) Since Isaac said (Gen 27:37) he had given Jacob the blessing of the super-abundance of corn and wine, he could not possibly promise Esau also fat fields and the dew of heaven. Nor would this agree with the words which follows, “ By thy sword wilt thou live . ” Moreover, the privative sense of מן is thoroughly poetical (cf. 2Sa 1:22; Job 11:15, etc.)
The idea expressed in the words, therefore, was that the dwelling-place of Esau would be the very opposite of the land of Canaan, viz. , an unfruitful land. This is generally the condition of the mountainous country of Edom, which, although not without its fertile slopes and valleys, especially in the eastern portion (cf. Robinson, Pal. ii. p. 552), is thoroughly waste and barren in the western; so that Seetzen says it consists of “the most desolate and barren mountains probably in the world.
” The mode of life and occupation of the inhabitants were adapted to the country. “ By (lit. , on) thy sword thou wilt live; ” i. e. , thy maintenance will depend on the sword (על as in Deu 8:3 cf. Isa 28:16), “live by war, rapine, and freebooting” ( Knobel ). “ And thy brother thou wilt serve; yet it will come to pass, as (כּאשׁר, lit. , in proportion as, cf.
Num 27:14) thou shakest (tossest), thou wilt break his yoke from thy neck . ” רוּד, “to rove about” (Jer 2:31; Hos 12:1), Hiphil “to cause (the thoughts) to rove about” (Psa 55:3); but Hengstenberg’s rendering is the best here, viz. , “to shake, sc. , the yoke. ” In the wild, sport-loving Esau there was aptly prefigured the character of his posterity. Josephus describes the Idumaean people as “a tumultuous and disorderly nation, always on the watch on every motion, delighting in mutations” ( Whiston’s tr.
: de bell Judg 4; 1:1-21:25; 1). The mental eye of the patriarch discerned in the son his whole future family in its attitude to its brother-nation, and he promised Edom, not freedom from the dominion of Israel (for Esau was to serve his brother, as Jehovah had predicted before their birth), but only a repeated and not unsuccessful struggle for freedom. And so it was; the historical relation of Edom to Israel assumed the form of a constant reiteration of servitude, revolt, and reconquest.
After a long period of independence at the first, the Edomites were defeated by Saul (1Sa 14:47) and subjugated by David (2Sa 8:14); and, in spite of an attempt at revolt under Solomon (1Ki 11:14.) , they remained subject to the kingdom of Judah until the time of Joram, when they rebelled. They were subdued again by Amaziah (2Ki 14:7; 2Ch 25:11.) , and remained in subjection under Uzziah and Jotham (2Ki 14:22; 2Ch 26:2).
It was not till the reign of Ahaz that they shook the yoke of Judah entirely off (2Ki 16:6; 2Ch 28:17), without Judah being ever able to reduce them again. At length, however, they were completely conquered by John Hyrcanus about b. c. 129, compelled to submit to circumcision, and incorporated in the Jewish state (Josephus, Ant. xiii. 9, 1, xv. 7, 9). At a still later period, through Antipater and Herod, they established an Idumaean dynasty over Judea, which lasted till the complete dissolution of the Jewish state.
Thus the words of Isaac to his two sons were fulfilled-words which are justly said to have been spoken “in faith concerning things to come” (Heb 11:20). For the blessing was a prophecy, and that not merely in the case of Esau, but in that of Jacob also; although Isaac was deceived with regard to the person of the latter. Jacob remained blessed, therefore, because, according to the predetermination of God, the elder was to serve the younger; but the deceit by which his mother prompted him to secure the blessing was never approved.
On the contrary, the sin was followed by immediate punishment. Rebekah was obliged to send her pet son into a foreign land, away from his father’s house, and in an utterly destitute condition. She did not see him for twenty years, even if she lived till his return, and possibly never saw again. Jacob had to atone for his sin against both brother and father by a long and painful exile, in the midst of privation, anxiety, fraud, and want.
Isaac was punished for retaining his preference for Esau, in opposition to the revealed will of Jehovah , by the success of Jacob’s stratagem; and Esau for his contempt of the birthright, by the loss of the blessing of the first-born. In this way a higher hand prevailed above the acts of sinful men, bringing the counsel and will of Jehovah to eventual triumph, in opposition to human thought and will.
Gen 27:30-40 Jacob had hardly left his father, after receiving the blessing (יצא אך, was only gone out), when Esau returned and came to Isaac, with the game prepared, to receive the blessing. The shock was inconceivable which Isaac received, when he found that he had blessed another, and not Esau-that, in fact, he had blessed Jacob. At the same time he neither could nor would, either curse him on account of the deception which he had practised, or withdraw the blessing imparted.
For he could not help confessing to himself that he had sinned and brought the deception upon himself by his carnal preference for Esau. Moreover, the blessing was not a matter of subjective human affection, but a right entrusted by the grace of God to paternal supremacy and authority, in the exercise of which the person blessing, being impelled and guided by a higher authority, imparted to the person to be blest spiritual possessions and powers, which the will of man could not capriciously withdraw.
Regarding this as the meaning of the blessing, Isaac necessarily saw in what had taken place the will of God, which had directed to Jacob the blessing that he had intended for Esau. He therefore said, “ I have blessed him; yea, he will be ( remain ) blessed ” (cf. Heb 12:17). Even the great and bitter lamentation into which Esau broke out could not change his father’s mind.
To his entreaty in Gen 27:34, “ Bless me, even me also, O my father! ” he replied, “ Thy brother came with subtilty, and hath taken away thy blessing . ” Esau answered, “ Is it that (הכי) they have named him Jacob (overreacher), and he has overreached me twice? ” i. e. , has he received the name Jacob from the fact that he has twice outwitted me? הכי is used “when the cause is not rightly known” (cf.
Gen 29:15). To his further entreaty, “Hast thou not reserved a blessing for me? ” (אצל, lit. , to lay aside), Isaac repeated the substance of the blessing given to Jacob, and added, “and to thee (לכה for לך as in Gen 3:9), now, what can I do, my son? ” When Esau again repeated, with tears, the entreaty that Isaac would bless him also, the father gave him a blessing (Gen 27:39, Gen 27:40), but one which, when compared with the blessing of Jacob, was to be regarded rather as “a modified curse,” and which is not even described as a blessing, but “introduced a disturbing element into Jacob’s blessing, a retribution for the impure means by which he had obtained it.
” “ Behold, ” it states, “ from the fat fields of the earth will thy dwelling be, and from the dew of heaven from above . ” By a play upon the words Isaac uses the same expression as in Gen 27:28, “from the fat fields of the earth, and from the dew,” but in the opposite sense, מן being partitive there, and privative here, “from = away from. ” The context requires that the words should be taken thus, and not in the sense of “thy dwelling shall partake of the fat of the earth and the dew of heaven” ( Vulg .
, Luth . , etc.) Since Isaac said (Gen 27:37) he had given Jacob the blessing of the super-abundance of corn and wine, he could not possibly promise Esau also fat fields and the dew of heaven. Nor would this agree with the words which follows, “ By thy sword wilt thou live . ” Moreover, the privative sense of מן is thoroughly poetical (cf. 2Sa 1:22; Job 11:15, etc.)
The idea expressed in the words, therefore, was that the dwelling-place of Esau would be the very opposite of the land of Canaan, viz. , an unfruitful land. This is generally the condition of the mountainous country of Edom, which, although not without its fertile slopes and valleys, especially in the eastern portion (cf. Robinson, Pal. ii. p. 552), is thoroughly waste and barren in the western; so that Seetzen says it consists of “the most desolate and barren mountains probably in the world.
” The mode of life and occupation of the inhabitants were adapted to the country. “ By (lit. , on) thy sword thou wilt live; ” i. e. , thy maintenance will depend on the sword (על as in Deu 8:3 cf. Isa 28:16), “live by war, rapine, and freebooting” ( Knobel ). “ And thy brother thou wilt serve; yet it will come to pass, as (כּאשׁר, lit. , in proportion as, cf.
Num 27:14) thou shakest (tossest), thou wilt break his yoke from thy neck . ” רוּד, “to rove about” (Jer 2:31; Hos 12:1), Hiphil “to cause (the thoughts) to rove about” (Psa 55:3); but Hengstenberg’s rendering is the best here, viz. , “to shake, sc. , the yoke. ” In the wild, sport-loving Esau there was aptly prefigured the character of his posterity. Josephus describes the Idumaean people as “a tumultuous and disorderly nation, always on the watch on every motion, delighting in mutations” ( Whiston’s tr.
: de bell Judg 4; 1:1-21:25; 1). The mental eye of the patriarch discerned in the son his whole future family in its attitude to its brother-nation, and he promised Edom, not freedom from the dominion of Israel (for Esau was to serve his brother, as Jehovah had predicted before their birth), but only a repeated and not unsuccessful struggle for freedom. And so it was; the historical relation of Edom to Israel assumed the form of a constant reiteration of servitude, revolt, and reconquest.
After a long period of independence at the first, the Edomites were defeated by Saul (1Sa 14:47) and subjugated by David (2Sa 8:14); and, in spite of an attempt at revolt under Solomon (1Ki 11:14.) , they remained subject to the kingdom of Judah until the time of Joram, when they rebelled. They were subdued again by Amaziah (2Ki 14:7; 2Ch 25:11.) , and remained in subjection under Uzziah and Jotham (2Ki 14:22; 2Ch 26:2).
It was not till the reign of Ahaz that they shook the yoke of Judah entirely off (2Ki 16:6; 2Ch 28:17), without Judah being ever able to reduce them again. At length, however, they were completely conquered by John Hyrcanus about b. c. 129, compelled to submit to circumcision, and incorporated in the Jewish state (Josephus, Ant. xiii. 9, 1, xv. 7, 9). At a still later period, through Antipater and Herod, they established an Idumaean dynasty over Judea, which lasted till the complete dissolution of the Jewish state.
Thus the words of Isaac to his two sons were fulfilled-words which are justly said to have been spoken “in faith concerning things to come” (Heb 11:20). For the blessing was a prophecy, and that not merely in the case of Esau, but in that of Jacob also; although Isaac was deceived with regard to the person of the latter. Jacob remained blessed, therefore, because, according to the predetermination of God, the elder was to serve the younger; but the deceit by which his mother prompted him to secure the blessing was never approved.
On the contrary, the sin was followed by immediate punishment. Rebekah was obliged to send her pet son into a foreign land, away from his father’s house, and in an utterly destitute condition. She did not see him for twenty years, even if she lived till his return, and possibly never saw again. Jacob had to atone for his sin against both brother and father by a long and painful exile, in the midst of privation, anxiety, fraud, and want.
Isaac was punished for retaining his preference for Esau, in opposition to the revealed will of Jehovah , by the success of Jacob’s stratagem; and Esau for his contempt of the birthright, by the loss of the blessing of the first-born. In this way a higher hand prevailed above the acts of sinful men, bringing the counsel and will of Jehovah to eventual triumph, in opposition to human thought and will.
Gen 27:30-40 Jacob had hardly left his father, after receiving the blessing (יצא אך, was only gone out), when Esau returned and came to Isaac, with the game prepared, to receive the blessing. The shock was inconceivable which Isaac received, when he found that he had blessed another, and not Esau-that, in fact, he had blessed Jacob. At the same time he neither could nor would, either curse him on account of the deception which he had practised, or withdraw the blessing imparted.
For he could not help confessing to himself that he had sinned and brought the deception upon himself by his carnal preference for Esau. Moreover, the blessing was not a matter of subjective human affection, but a right entrusted by the grace of God to paternal supremacy and authority, in the exercise of which the person blessing, being impelled and guided by a higher authority, imparted to the person to be blest spiritual possessions and powers, which the will of man could not capriciously withdraw.
Regarding this as the meaning of the blessing, Isaac necessarily saw in what had taken place the will of God, which had directed to Jacob the blessing that he had intended for Esau. He therefore said, “ I have blessed him; yea, he will be ( remain ) blessed ” (cf. Heb 12:17). Even the great and bitter lamentation into which Esau broke out could not change his father’s mind.
To his entreaty in Gen 27:34, “ Bless me, even me also, O my father! ” he replied, “ Thy brother came with subtilty, and hath taken away thy blessing . ” Esau answered, “ Is it that (הכי) they have named him Jacob (overreacher), and he has overreached me twice? ” i. e. , has he received the name Jacob from the fact that he has twice outwitted me? הכי is used “when the cause is not rightly known” (cf.
Gen 29:15). To his further entreaty, “Hast thou not reserved a blessing for me? ” (אצל, lit. , to lay aside), Isaac repeated the substance of the blessing given to Jacob, and added, “and to thee (לכה for לך as in Gen 3:9), now, what can I do, my son? ” When Esau again repeated, with tears, the entreaty that Isaac would bless him also, the father gave him a blessing (Gen 27:39, Gen 27:40), but one which, when compared with the blessing of Jacob, was to be regarded rather as “a modified curse,” and which is not even described as a blessing, but “introduced a disturbing element into Jacob’s blessing, a retribution for the impure means by which he had obtained it.
” “ Behold, ” it states, “ from the fat fields of the earth will thy dwelling be, and from the dew of heaven from above . ” By a play upon the words Isaac uses the same expression as in Gen 27:28, “from the fat fields of the earth, and from the dew,” but in the opposite sense, מן being partitive there, and privative here, “from = away from. ” The context requires that the words should be taken thus, and not in the sense of “thy dwelling shall partake of the fat of the earth and the dew of heaven” ( Vulg .
, Luth . , etc.) Since Isaac said (Gen 27:37) he had given Jacob the blessing of the super-abundance of corn and wine, he could not possibly promise Esau also fat fields and the dew of heaven. Nor would this agree with the words which follows, “ By thy sword wilt thou live . ” Moreover, the privative sense of מן is thoroughly poetical (cf. 2Sa 1:22; Job 11:15, etc.)
The idea expressed in the words, therefore, was that the dwelling-place of Esau would be the very opposite of the land of Canaan, viz. , an unfruitful land. This is generally the condition of the mountainous country of Edom, which, although not without its fertile slopes and valleys, especially in the eastern portion (cf. Robinson, Pal. ii. p. 552), is thoroughly waste and barren in the western; so that Seetzen says it consists of “the most desolate and barren mountains probably in the world.
” The mode of life and occupation of the inhabitants were adapted to the country. “ By (lit. , on) thy sword thou wilt live; ” i. e. , thy maintenance will depend on the sword (על as in Deu 8:3 cf. Isa 28:16), “live by war, rapine, and freebooting” ( Knobel ). “ And thy brother thou wilt serve; yet it will come to pass, as (כּאשׁר, lit. , in proportion as, cf.
Num 27:14) thou shakest (tossest), thou wilt break his yoke from thy neck . ” רוּד, “to rove about” (Jer 2:31; Hos 12:1), Hiphil “to cause (the thoughts) to rove about” (Psa 55:3); but Hengstenberg’s rendering is the best here, viz. , “to shake, sc. , the yoke. ” In the wild, sport-loving Esau there was aptly prefigured the character of his posterity. Josephus describes the Idumaean people as “a tumultuous and disorderly nation, always on the watch on every motion, delighting in mutations” ( Whiston’s tr.
: de bell Judg 4; 1:1-21:25; 1). The mental eye of the patriarch discerned in the son his whole future family in its attitude to its brother-nation, and he promised Edom, not freedom from the dominion of Israel (for Esau was to serve his brother, as Jehovah had predicted before their birth), but only a repeated and not unsuccessful struggle for freedom. And so it was; the historical relation of Edom to Israel assumed the form of a constant reiteration of servitude, revolt, and reconquest.
After a long period of independence at the first, the Edomites were defeated by Saul (1Sa 14:47) and subjugated by David (2Sa 8:14); and, in spite of an attempt at revolt under Solomon (1Ki 11:14.) , they remained subject to the kingdom of Judah until the time of Joram, when they rebelled. They were subdued again by Amaziah (2Ki 14:7; 2Ch 25:11.) , and remained in subjection under Uzziah and Jotham (2Ki 14:22; 2Ch 26:2).
It was not till the reign of Ahaz that they shook the yoke of Judah entirely off (2Ki 16:6; 2Ch 28:17), without Judah being ever able to reduce them again. At length, however, they were completely conquered by John Hyrcanus about b. c. 129, compelled to submit to circumcision, and incorporated in the Jewish state (Josephus, Ant. xiii. 9, 1, xv. 7, 9). At a still later period, through Antipater and Herod, they established an Idumaean dynasty over Judea, which lasted till the complete dissolution of the Jewish state.
Thus the words of Isaac to his two sons were fulfilled-words which are justly said to have been spoken “in faith concerning things to come” (Heb 11:20). For the blessing was a prophecy, and that not merely in the case of Esau, but in that of Jacob also; although Isaac was deceived with regard to the person of the latter. Jacob remained blessed, therefore, because, according to the predetermination of God, the elder was to serve the younger; but the deceit by which his mother prompted him to secure the blessing was never approved.
On the contrary, the sin was followed by immediate punishment. Rebekah was obliged to send her pet son into a foreign land, away from his father’s house, and in an utterly destitute condition. She did not see him for twenty years, even if she lived till his return, and possibly never saw again. Jacob had to atone for his sin against both brother and father by a long and painful exile, in the midst of privation, anxiety, fraud, and want.
Isaac was punished for retaining his preference for Esau, in opposition to the revealed will of Jehovah , by the success of Jacob’s stratagem; and Esau for his contempt of the birthright, by the loss of the blessing of the first-born. In this way a higher hand prevailed above the acts of sinful men, bringing the counsel and will of Jehovah to eventual triumph, in opposition to human thought and will.
Gen 27:30-40 Jacob had hardly left his father, after receiving the blessing (יצא אך, was only gone out), when Esau returned and came to Isaac, with the game prepared, to receive the blessing. The shock was inconceivable which Isaac received, when he found that he had blessed another, and not Esau-that, in fact, he had blessed Jacob. At the same time he neither could nor would, either curse him on account of the deception which he had practised, or withdraw the blessing imparted.
For he could not help confessing to himself that he had sinned and brought the deception upon himself by his carnal preference for Esau. Moreover, the blessing was not a matter of subjective human affection, but a right entrusted by the grace of God to paternal supremacy and authority, in the exercise of which the person blessing, being impelled and guided by a higher authority, imparted to the person to be blest spiritual possessions and powers, which the will of man could not capriciously withdraw.
Regarding this as the meaning of the blessing, Isaac necessarily saw in what had taken place the will of God, which had directed to Jacob the blessing that he had intended for Esau. He therefore said, “ I have blessed him; yea, he will be ( remain ) blessed ” (cf. Heb 12:17). Even the great and bitter lamentation into which Esau broke out could not change his father’s mind.
To his entreaty in Gen 27:34, “ Bless me, even me also, O my father! ” he replied, “ Thy brother came with subtilty, and hath taken away thy blessing . ” Esau answered, “ Is it that (הכי) they have named him Jacob (overreacher), and he has overreached me twice? ” i. e. , has he received the name Jacob from the fact that he has twice outwitted me? הכי is used “when the cause is not rightly known” (cf.
Gen 29:15). To his further entreaty, “Hast thou not reserved a blessing for me? ” (אצל, lit. , to lay aside), Isaac repeated the substance of the blessing given to Jacob, and added, “and to thee (לכה for לך as in Gen 3:9), now, what can I do, my son? ” When Esau again repeated, with tears, the entreaty that Isaac would bless him also, the father gave him a blessing (Gen 27:39, Gen 27:40), but one which, when compared with the blessing of Jacob, was to be regarded rather as “a modified curse,” and which is not even described as a blessing, but “introduced a disturbing element into Jacob’s blessing, a retribution for the impure means by which he had obtained it.
” “ Behold, ” it states, “ from the fat fields of the earth will thy dwelling be, and from the dew of heaven from above . ” By a play upon the words Isaac uses the same expression as in Gen 27:28, “from the fat fields of the earth, and from the dew,” but in the opposite sense, מן being partitive there, and privative here, “from = away from. ” The context requires that the words should be taken thus, and not in the sense of “thy dwelling shall partake of the fat of the earth and the dew of heaven” ( Vulg .
, Luth . , etc.) Since Isaac said (Gen 27:37) he had given Jacob the blessing of the super-abundance of corn and wine, he could not possibly promise Esau also fat fields and the dew of heaven. Nor would this agree with the words which follows, “ By thy sword wilt thou live . ” Moreover, the privative sense of מן is thoroughly poetical (cf. 2Sa 1:22; Job 11:15, etc.)
The idea expressed in the words, therefore, was that the dwelling-place of Esau would be the very opposite of the land of Canaan, viz. , an unfruitful land. This is generally the condition of the mountainous country of Edom, which, although not without its fertile slopes and valleys, especially in the eastern portion (cf. Robinson, Pal. ii. p. 552), is thoroughly waste and barren in the western; so that Seetzen says it consists of “the most desolate and barren mountains probably in the world.
” The mode of life and occupation of the inhabitants were adapted to the country. “ By (lit. , on) thy sword thou wilt live; ” i. e. , thy maintenance will depend on the sword (על as in Deu 8:3 cf. Isa 28:16), “live by war, rapine, and freebooting” ( Knobel ). “ And thy brother thou wilt serve; yet it will come to pass, as (כּאשׁר, lit. , in proportion as, cf.
Num 27:14) thou shakest (tossest), thou wilt break his yoke from thy neck . ” רוּד, “to rove about” (Jer 2:31; Hos 12:1), Hiphil “to cause (the thoughts) to rove about” (Psa 55:3); but Hengstenberg’s rendering is the best here, viz. , “to shake, sc. , the yoke. ” In the wild, sport-loving Esau there was aptly prefigured the character of his posterity. Josephus describes the Idumaean people as “a tumultuous and disorderly nation, always on the watch on every motion, delighting in mutations” ( Whiston’s tr.
: de bell Judg 4; 1:1-21:25; 1). The mental eye of the patriarch discerned in the son his whole future family in its attitude to its brother-nation, and he promised Edom, not freedom from the dominion of Israel (for Esau was to serve his brother, as Jehovah had predicted before their birth), but only a repeated and not unsuccessful struggle for freedom. And so it was; the historical relation of Edom to Israel assumed the form of a constant reiteration of servitude, revolt, and reconquest.
After a long period of independence at the first, the Edomites were defeated by Saul (1Sa 14:47) and subjugated by David (2Sa 8:14); and, in spite of an attempt at revolt under Solomon (1Ki 11:14.) , they remained subject to the kingdom of Judah until the time of Joram, when they rebelled. They were subdued again by Amaziah (2Ki 14:7; 2Ch 25:11.) , and remained in subjection under Uzziah and Jotham (2Ki 14:22; 2Ch 26:2).
It was not till the reign of Ahaz that they shook the yoke of Judah entirely off (2Ki 16:6; 2Ch 28:17), without Judah being ever able to reduce them again. At length, however, they were completely conquered by John Hyrcanus about b. c. 129, compelled to submit to circumcision, and incorporated in the Jewish state (Josephus, Ant. xiii. 9, 1, xv. 7, 9). At a still later period, through Antipater and Herod, they established an Idumaean dynasty over Judea, which lasted till the complete dissolution of the Jewish state.
Thus the words of Isaac to his two sons were fulfilled-words which are justly said to have been spoken “in faith concerning things to come” (Heb 11:20). For the blessing was a prophecy, and that not merely in the case of Esau, but in that of Jacob also; although Isaac was deceived with regard to the person of the latter. Jacob remained blessed, therefore, because, according to the predetermination of God, the elder was to serve the younger; but the deceit by which his mother prompted him to secure the blessing was never approved.
On the contrary, the sin was followed by immediate punishment. Rebekah was obliged to send her pet son into a foreign land, away from his father’s house, and in an utterly destitute condition. She did not see him for twenty years, even if she lived till his return, and possibly never saw again. Jacob had to atone for his sin against both brother and father by a long and painful exile, in the midst of privation, anxiety, fraud, and want.
Isaac was punished for retaining his preference for Esau, in opposition to the revealed will of Jehovah , by the success of Jacob’s stratagem; and Esau for his contempt of the birthright, by the loss of the blessing of the first-born. In this way a higher hand prevailed above the acts of sinful men, bringing the counsel and will of Jehovah to eventual triumph, in opposition to human thought and will.
Gen 27:41 Esau’s complaining and weeping were now changed into mortal hatred of his brother. “ The days of mourning, ” he said to himself, “ for my father are at hand, and I will kill my brother Jacob .” אבי אבל: genit. obj . as in Amo 8:10; Jer 6:26. He would put off his intended fratricide that he might not hurt his father’s mind.
Gen 27:42-46 When Rebekah was informed by some one of Esau’s intention, she advised Jacob to protect himself from his revenge (התנחם to procure comfort by retaliation, equivalent to “avenge himself,” התנקּם, Isa 1:24), by fleeing to her brother Laban in Haran, and remaining there “ some days, ” as she mildly puts it, until his brother’s wrath was subdued. “ For why should I lose you both in one day?
” viz. , Jacob through Esau’s vengeance, and Esau as a murderer by the avenger of blood (Gen 9:6, cf. 2Sa 14:6-7). In order to obtain Isaac’s consent to this plan, without hurting his feelings by telling him of Esau’s murderous intentions, she spoke to him of her troubles on account of the Hittite wives of Esau, and the weariness of life that she should feel if Jacob also were to marry one of the daughters of the land, and so introduced the idea of sending Jacob to her relations in Mesopotamia, with a view to his marriage there.
Jacob’s Departure from his Parents’ House. - Rebekah’s complaint reminded Isaac of his own call, and his consequent duty to provide for Jacob’s marriage in a manner corresponding to the divine counsels of salvation.
Gen 27:42-46 When Rebekah was informed by some one of Esau’s intention, she advised Jacob to protect himself from his revenge (התנחם to procure comfort by retaliation, equivalent to “avenge himself,” התנקּם, Isa 1:24), by fleeing to her brother Laban in Haran, and remaining there “ some days, ” as she mildly puts it, until his brother’s wrath was subdued. “ For why should I lose you both in one day?
” viz. , Jacob through Esau’s vengeance, and Esau as a murderer by the avenger of blood (Gen 9:6, cf. 2Sa 14:6-7). In order to obtain Isaac’s consent to this plan, without hurting his feelings by telling him of Esau’s murderous intentions, she spoke to him of her troubles on account of the Hittite wives of Esau, and the weariness of life that she should feel if Jacob also were to marry one of the daughters of the land, and so introduced the idea of sending Jacob to her relations in Mesopotamia, with a view to his marriage there.
Jacob’s Departure from his Parents’ House. - Rebekah’s complaint reminded Isaac of his own call, and his consequent duty to provide for Jacob’s marriage in a manner corresponding to the divine counsels of salvation.
Gen 27:42-46 When Rebekah was informed by some one of Esau’s intention, she advised Jacob to protect himself from his revenge (התנחם to procure comfort by retaliation, equivalent to “avenge himself,” התנקּם, Isa 1:24), by fleeing to her brother Laban in Haran, and remaining there “ some days, ” as she mildly puts it, until his brother’s wrath was subdued. “ For why should I lose you both in one day?
” viz. , Jacob through Esau’s vengeance, and Esau as a murderer by the avenger of blood (Gen 9:6, cf. 2Sa 14:6-7). In order to obtain Isaac’s consent to this plan, without hurting his feelings by telling him of Esau’s murderous intentions, she spoke to him of her troubles on account of the Hittite wives of Esau, and the weariness of life that she should feel if Jacob also were to marry one of the daughters of the land, and so introduced the idea of sending Jacob to her relations in Mesopotamia, with a view to his marriage there.
Jacob’s Departure from his Parents’ House. - Rebekah’s complaint reminded Isaac of his own call, and his consequent duty to provide for Jacob’s marriage in a manner corresponding to the divine counsels of salvation.
Gen 27:42-46 When Rebekah was informed by some one of Esau’s intention, she advised Jacob to protect himself from his revenge (התנחם to procure comfort by retaliation, equivalent to “avenge himself,” התנקּם, Isa 1:24), by fleeing to her brother Laban in Haran, and remaining there “ some days, ” as she mildly puts it, until his brother’s wrath was subdued. “ For why should I lose you both in one day?
” viz. , Jacob through Esau’s vengeance, and Esau as a murderer by the avenger of blood (Gen 9:6, cf. 2Sa 14:6-7). In order to obtain Isaac’s consent to this plan, without hurting his feelings by telling him of Esau’s murderous intentions, she spoke to him of her troubles on account of the Hittite wives of Esau, and the weariness of life that she should feel if Jacob also were to marry one of the daughters of the land, and so introduced the idea of sending Jacob to her relations in Mesopotamia, with a view to his marriage there.
Jacob’s Departure from his Parents’ House. - Rebekah’s complaint reminded Isaac of his own call, and his consequent duty to provide for Jacob’s marriage in a manner corresponding to the divine counsels of salvation.