Read Genesis 25:29-34
Verse
29-34 - We have here the bargain made between Jacob and Esau
about the right, which was Esau's by birth, but Jacob's by promise.
It was for a spiritual privilege; and we see Jacob's desire of the
birth-right, but he sought to obtain it by crooked courses, not like
his character as a plain man. He was right, that he coveted
earnestly the best gifts; he was wrong, that he took advantage of
his brother's need. The inheritance of their father's worldly goods
did not descend to Jacob, and was not meant in this proposal. But it
includeth the future possession of the land of Canaan by his
children's children, and the covenant made with Abraham as to Christ
the promised Seed. Believing Jacob valued these above all things;
unbelieving Esau despised them. Yet although we must be of Jacob's
judgment in seeking the birth-right, we ought carefully to avoid all
guile, in seeking to obtain even the greatest advantages. Jacob's
pottage pleased Esau's eye. "Give me some of that red;" for this he
was called Edom, or Red. Gratifying the sensual appetite ruins
thousands of precious souls. When men's hearts walk after their own
eyes, Job 31:7,. and when they serve
their own bellies, they are sure to be punished. If we use ourselves
to deny ourselves, we break the force of most temptations. It cannot
be supposed that Esau was dying of hunger in Isaac's house. The
words signify, I am going towards death; he seems to mean, I shall
never live to inherit Canaan, or any of those future supposed
blessings; and what signifies it who has them when I am dead and
gone. This would be the language of profaneness, with which the
apostle brands him, Hebrews 12:16.
and this contempt of the birth-right is blamed, ver.34. It is the
greatest folly to part with our interest in God, and Christ, and
heaven, for the riches, honours, and pleasures of this world; it is
as bad a bargain as his who sold a birth-right for a dish of
pottage. Esau ate and drank, pleased his palate, satisfied his
appetite, and then carelessly rose up and went his way, without any
serious thought, or any regret, about the bad bargain he had made.
Thus Esau despised his birth-right. By his neglect and contempt
afterwards, and by justifying himself in what he had done, he put
the bargain past recall. People are ruined, not so much by doing
what is amiss, as by doing it and not repenting of it.
Return to Outline
Henry's Genesis 26