[bible1year] Devotional comments on Genesis 25-27

Message: < previous - next > : Reply : Subscribe : Cleanse
Home   : January 2009 : Group Archive : Group : All Groups

From: root@...
Date: 9 Jan 2009 12:35:03 -0000
        Sarah lived to be 127 years old. After her death 
Abraham took another wife, whose name was Keturah. She 
bore him six sons, and from this marriage came the 
Midianites. Moses married a Midianite some 500 years 
later! Abraham died at the age of 175, and his sons, 
Isaac and Ishmael, buried him in the cave of Machpelah 
where Abraham had buried Sarah.

        Chapter 25 records the generations of Ishmael 
and Isaac. Ishmael was Abraham's son by Hagar. The 
Ishmaelites made Arabia their home and became known as 
the Arabs. Thus, Abraham was the father of the present 
Arab nation, as well as the father of the Jewish nation.

        Verses 24-34 record the birth of Jacob and Esau 
to Isaac and Rebekah. Since Esau was the firstborn of 
these twin boys, he was Isaac's natural heir, but God 
chose Jacob to be the transmitter of the precious 
heritage. In verse 23 God told Rebekah that "the elder 
shall serve the younger." Rebekah loved Jacob, while 
Isaac loved Esau. Isaac was about 137 years old now. His 
impatience to give Esau the blessing suggests his own 
carnal plans, not God's will.

        Had he forgotten God's Word that "the elder 
shall serve the younger," or was he trying to change 
God's plan? Rebekah had been told by God that Jacob 
would receive God's blessing, yet she schemed and 
plotted to make sure Esau was left out. And certainly 
Jacob knew of God's promise for his life. Yet he 
listened to his mother instead of God. Jacob would pay 
dearly in years to come for his sin, as would his 
mother. She never saw her son again. Esau deliberately 
acted to hurt her, and her bad example before Jacob cost 
him twenty years of trial. The result of this sin of 
unbelief was a division in the home. Rather than 
trusting God to do what He said He would do, God's Word 
and timetable were doubted, and the entire family 
suffered because of unbelief and disobedience. When 
Christians take things into their own hands, they can 
expect the result of their disobedience to be something 
less than pleasant!