I think it was these 2 characters I read in the bible in the past. Jacob got the birthright deceitfully and became great. but did he get any punishment for being deceitful though he became great? Thanks all
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He reaped what he sowed; in that his uncle Laban also later deceived him concerning the fact that he gave him Leah before Rachel when Rachel was promised. And in that he changed his wages ten times.I think it was these 2 characters I read in the bible in the past. Jacob got the birthright deceitfully and became great. but did he get any punishment for being deceitful thought he became great? Thanks all
Oh ok, yeah those parts weren't clear to me that I got from it. He also reaped because I think Esau wanted to kill him so it instilled fear in himHe reaped what he sowed; in that his uncle Laban also later deceived him concerning the fact that he gave him Leah before Rachel when Rachel was promised. And in that he changed his wages ten times.
I think it was these 2 characters I read in the bible in the past. Jacob got the birthright deceitfully and became great. but did he get any punishment for being deceitful thought he became great? Thanks all
I think it was these 2 characters I read in the bible in the past. Jacob got the birthright deceitfully and became great. but did he get any punishment for being deceitful though he became great? Thanks all
.I think it was these 2 characters I read in the bible in the past. Jacob got the birthright deceitfully and became great. but did he get any punishment for being deceitful though he became great? Thanks all
He became great by divine predestination. God's will cannot be thwarted. He always has a plan, even though human freedom is involved. God chooses to direct His path through people who are faithful.
So, through Abraham God developed a plan using people who would inherit Abraham's own characteristics. Though Jacob was human and free to err, he ultimately showed the characteristics he inherited from his father Abraham.
Jacob suffered the loss of his homeland for awhile due to his unethical behavior and treatment of his equally pathetic brother, Esau. And he himself was deceived by his father-in-law Laban, who was able to pull double amount of pay for the rights to his daughter Rachel.
But it is the ultimate achievement of faith in God and in His righteousness that justifies a man, and Jacob was rewarded for that, as well, by producing the nation promised to Abraham. That Jacob had a love for what is godly is shown in his love for his son Joseph, who persevered in righteousness in pagan Egypt. Jacob suffered the loss of his son Joseph for years, but finally was rewarded by receiving him back much later.
If we've done wrong, we'll suffer for it. But what counts is our final decision, and our willingness to persevere in it.
I think people should look at parts of the the story of Jacob & Esau that are not brought out. First there's the prophecy involved with Jacob & Esau, that the older would served the younger and the prophecy was made while they were still in their mother's womb. So both parents knew about the prophecy. There's also the fact we have to take into consideration is that Esau was fleshly minded and materialistic he cared little of spiritual things, I mean he sold his birthright for a bowl of stew. By selling his birthright, Esau showed he despised the birthright, so he viewed the birthright as of little value, which means Esau showed a complete lack of faith. He also married women who were a source of great grief to his parents because they were women who worshiped false gods. When the time came that Isaac was going to give the blessing of firstborn he was going to give it to Esau, in spite of the fact that the True God Jehovah had prophesied that the older would serve the younger. Also, it appears that Esau never told his father that he sold his birthright to Jacob so Esau knew the blessing of firstborn didn't belong to him, yet he tried to steal what belonged to Jacob when Isaac was going to give the blessing of firstborn to Esau. Jacob listened to his mother and pretended to be his brother and Jacob got what belonged to him.
I haven't seen Jacob punished for what transpired between he and his brother, I haven't seen any scriptural evidence of it anyway. Because Esau had sold his birthright to Jacob, Jacob was legally entitled to act in the role of his brother Esau, the firstborn of Isaac. There is no doubt whatsoever that Jacob was entitled to the blessing. Jacob didn't maliciously misrepresent himself to try and get something that didn't belong to him. The lesson in this story of Jacob & Esau is in the scripture Hebrews 12:16 that when it comes to the true congregation (church) of God that there be no person in the congregation that doesn't appreciate sacred things, like Esau, who exchanged for one meal his rights as firstborn.
Gen 27.36 indicates there is a difference between the birth right and the blessing of the elder. Esau was the true elder of the two, and Rachel conspired to have Jacob dishonor Esau by taking away even his honor of being the first born. Esau had given up much of his inheritance. But he had not given up being blessed and honored for being the firstborn.
Yeah he did. Esau literally sold... his birthright to Jacob, as written.
Gen 25:29-34
29 And Jacob sod pottage: and Esau came from the field, and he was faint:
30 And Esau said to Jacob, Feed me, I pray thee, with that same red pottage; for I am faint: therefore was his name called Edom.
31 And Jacob said, Sell me this day thy birthright.
32 And Esau said, Behold, I am at the point to die: and what profit shall this birthright do to me?
33 And Jacob said, 'Swear to me this day'; and he sware unto him: and he sold his birthright unto Jacob.
34 Then Jacob gave Esau bread and pottage of lentiles; and he did eat and drink, and rose up, and went his way: thus Esau despised his birthright.
KJV
Esau's birthright which he sold to Jacob for a pot of beans, was the same blessing that God originally gave Abraham, and then to Isaac. One can easily trace the history of that particular Birthright, because it came from God, not man.
The Romans 9 potter and clay, and Jacob and Esau, is actually about NATIONS not individuals.
As Rebecca was told in Genesis 25:23 concerning her pregnancy: two nations are in your womb (Edom came from Esau, and Israel came from Jacob)
Gen 25:23 And the LORD said to her, “Two nations are in your womb, and two peoples from within you shall be divided; the one shall be stronger than the other, the older shall serve the younger.”
Romans 9,10, and 11 are actually about Israel, which came from Jacob, and other nations, more than about the two persons themselves.
Edom served Israel.
Doesn't 'Jacob' mean "Trickster" in Hebrew?
In any event, the household of Jacob/Israel is a study in dysfunction. Wives and servants having children in an effort to win a contest to buy the love of a husband with children named as counting pieces in the contest. Small wonder the hatred ran deep enough that some siblings wanted to kill their rival half-brothers from "that other woman".
Jacob loved his children like he loved his wives ... selectively. Born out of a generational curse from a father that loved one son more than the other. Jacob had to trick his father into obeying what God had commanded. How is that for being "second best" in your father's heart?
That's confusion, when you say Romans 9 isn't about Jacob and Esau personally...
Rom 9:10-13
10 And not only this; but when Rebecca also had conceived by one, even by our father Isaac;
11 (For the children being not yet born, neither having done any good or evil, that the purpose of God according to election might stand, not of works, but of Him That calleth;)
12 It was said unto her, "The elder shall serve the younger."
13 As it is written, "Jacob have I loved, but Esau have I hated."
KJV
That latter verse 13, Paul is pointing to the Book of Malachi where God says this...
Mal 1:2-3
2 "I have loved you, saith the LORD. Yet ye say, 'Wherein hast thou loved us?' Was not Esau Jacob's brother? saith the LORD: yet I loved Jacob,
3 And I hated Esau, and laid his mountains and his heritage waste for the dragons of the wilderness."
KJV
Perhaps you need to reflect a little longer on the story of Jacob.
The issue was with Isaac wanting to go against God and God's choosing of Jacob as the line through which the Abrahamic covenant would flow, while Jacob and Esau were still in the womb.
I can see God's hand in the events that enabled Jacob to receive Isaac's blessing. The trickster, in fact was Esau, who, according to the Book of Jasher, as a teenager, possibly around the age of 16 years old, killed Nimrod and then stole Adam's skins, made by God, from him, when Nimrod was dead, as a sign of Esau's presumed authority over people, that the skins gave. That was why Esau sold his birthright to Jacob, because he was fearful that if Nimrod's servants caught up with him that they would kill him out of revenge and the bowl of food from Jacob would provide a convincing cover for him if they did.
In the Bible, we are not given all of the possible facts that surround this part of the story of this particular interchange between the two twin.
Esau was the only accuser that Jacob was a trickster to cover the real reason why Esau gave up his birth right.
Shalom
Hebrew names have meanings.Esau was the only accuser that Jacob was a trickster to cover the real reason why Esau gave up his birth right.