Day 21. Reading in Genesis 27 – 29.
What stood out to you in today’s reading? (See my own confession at the end.)
Genesis 27.
Jacob has already tricked the (double portion) “birthright” from his brother. Today, he tricks his father into giving him the blessing as well.
The “blessing” is more of a spiritual grace. It’s like passing down the promises God gave to Abraham about dominance, descendants, land, and the Promised One to come.
When Rebekah was carrying the boys in her womb, God had prophesied that the older of the twins would serve the younger. Still, Jacob had tricked his brother into giving him the birthright. And today, he and his mother will trick Isaac into giving him the blessing. THERE WAS NO NEED TO TRICK! It was God’s plan.
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Isaac was also deceptive, trying to sneak around his wife by telling Esau to bring him a delicious wild-caught feast. But he was not only blind, he must have been hard of hearing too. His whispered request to Esau was louder than he realized. Rebekah heard his plans and made some of her own, convincing her favorite son it was necessary to deceive his father. They got to work killing, skinning, cooking, and sewing.
I can understand their deceiving Isaac with the food (older folks lose some of their sense of taste. Add some more wild herbs, and you’re good.) The same goes for smelling the scent of the outdoors on clothes, but his sense of touch? Surely, the thick hairs on Esau’s arms and neck were softer than a kid goat’s would be!!!
Nevertheless, even with Isaac’s doubt and questions, his growling stomach won. The mother-son duo did the deed. Later, satisfied and perhaps feeling sleepy, Isaac gave the paternal blessing to Jacob, his second son, the deceiving grabber.
Almost like a melodrama, Esau arrives and cooks up a rabbit or deer in his own tent. “Here, Dad, is the hearty, meaty, chunky herby stew you wanted.
Huh? Who are you?
Esau, your son, with your food.
I already ate it!
What??? GRRRRrrrr. THAT CHEATING BROTHER OF MINE STOLE MY BLESSING!
“Yes,” said Isaac softly. “And he shall be blessed.” Did Dad, at that moment, realize the truth he spoke. That God HAD CHOSEN Jacob to carry the family blessing? In pity, he gave Esau a watered-down blessing of leanness, violence, servitude, and eventual freedom.
Fists clenched and gritting his teeth, Esau vowed to kill Jacob as soon as his father died.
Again, Rebekah overheard this vow, and fearing for Jacob’s life, she contrived to send him away to “get a wife from my family.” Defeated and tricked again, blind and hard of hearing, Isaac agreed. (Perhaps he soothed himself remembering the beautiful young wife he had gotten from there years before.)
Jacob is sent away. Rebekah never again sees her favorite son but has to deal with Esau and his horrible wives for the rest of her life. She dies before Jacob returns.
Genesis 28.
God is gracious to Jacob, meeting him along the way, giving him a vision of a ladder to heaven, and personally giving Jacob the Abrahamic covenant.
“I am the LORD, the God of Abraham, your father, and the God of Isaac. The land on which you lie, I will give to you and to your offspring. Your offspring shall be like the dust of the earth, and you shall spread abroad to the west, east, north, and south, and IN YOU and your offspring shall all the families of the earth be blessed. And I am with you and will keep you and bring you back to this land.”
Despite all the unnecessary deception and conniving, God blessed Jacob….as He had prophesied.
Jacob doesn’t quite get the magnitude of this. “Okay,” he says. “IF God will be with me, and keep me, and give me bread to eat and clothing to wear, and bring me back here… THEN the LORD shall be my God.” And as a sort of “PS” he says, “And of all that you give me, I will give You a full tenth.”
Genesis 29.
Oh boy, does Jacob get a taste of the deception he’s played on Esau and their father! Yes, he arrives at his family’s land. Yes, he meets the gorgeous Rachel at the well (like Rebekah, his mother), and yes, he falls madly in love with her at first sight. Yes, her even wilier brother, Laban, agrees that he can marry the her IF he’ll work for him for …. oh, say, seven years.
All’s good. Right? After all, he doesn’t have camel-loads of a dowery.
But the deceiver is deceived. (How does it feel?) He works hard and doesn’t mind. He’s in love. His wedding night comes, but instead of Rachel, her older sister is substituted. (In the dark – like Isaac had been – Leah probably felt and smelled the same as Rachel. He enjoyed her like he dreamed.) Then the dawn comes – like it did with Isaac when Esau came with his stew. This was NOT who Jacob thought!!!
He’s furious but stuck. (Like Isaac was with giving the blessing to another son.) He fulfills a week of nuptial duty with Leah and then gets Rachel. But…. he has to work ANOTHER SEVEN YEARS.
(Oh, but it’s not over yet, Jacob, my boy!)
Jacob doesn’t know it now (and perhaps never), but God has chosen Leah for the line of the Promised One to come. Her fourth son, Judah, is the son of promise, through whom the Lion of Judah will come.
- How I see myself in these chapters. After all, my name is the female version of Jacob, the grabber, the deceiver. I’ve connived to get what I wanted by despicable means. I’ve hurt others in the process. I’ve thought that “I” needed to get what I wanted SOONER that it came. I’ve gone ahead of God’s will and way. AND YET, STILL, God has blessed me, taken care of me, and given me what He promised.
- I hope that, UNLIKE Jacob, I’ve learned my lesson and can pray Proverbs 3:5-7. “Trust in the LORD with all your heart, and do NOT lean on your own understanding. In all your ways, acknowledge Him, and He will direct your path. Be not wise in your own eyes; but fear the LORD, and turn away from evil.”
- And Psalm 37:4-7. “Delight yourself in the LORD, and He will give you the desires of your heart. Commit your way to the LORD; trust in Him, and He will act. He will bring forth your righteousness as the light, and your justice as the noonday. Be still before the LORD, and wait patiently for Him.”
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