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JACOB’S FRAUD
Genesis 27
"The counsel of the Lord standeth for ever."- Psa 33:11
THERE are some families whose miserable existence is almost entirely
made up of malicious plottings and counter-plottings, little
mischievous designs, and spiteful triumphs of one member or party in
the family over the other. It is not pleasant to have the veil
withdrawn, and to see that where love and eager self-sacrifice might
be expected their places are occupied by an eager assertion of
rights, and a cold, proud, and always petty and stupid, nursing of
some supposed injury. In the story told us so graphically in this
page, we see the family whom God has blessed sunk to this low level,
and betrayed by family jealousies into unseemly strife on the most
sacred ground. Each member of the family plans his own wicked
device, and God by the evil of one defeats the evil of another, and
saves His own purpose to bless the race from being frittered away
and lost. And it is told us in order that, amidst all this mess of
human craft and selfishness, the righteousness and stability of
God’s word of promise may be more vividly seen. Let us look at the
sin of each of the parties in order, and the punishment of each.
In the Epistle to the Hebrews Isaac is commended for his faith in
blessing his sons. It was commendable in him that, in great bodily
weakness, he still believed himself to be the guardian of God’s
blessing, and recognised that he had a great inheritance to bequeath
to his sons. But, in unaccountable and inconsistent contempt of
God’s expressed purpose, he proposes to hand over this blessing to
Esau. Many things had occurred to fix his attention upon the fact
that Esau was not to be his heir. Esau had sold his birthright, and
had married Hittite women, and his whole conduct was, no doubt, of a
piece with this, and showed that, in his hands, any spiritual
inheritance would be both unsafe and unappreciated. That Isaac had
some notion he was doing wrong in giving to Esau what belonged to
God, and what God meant to give to Jacob, is shown from his
precipitation in bestowing the blessing. He has no feeling that he
is authorized by God, and therefore he cannot wait calmly till God
should intimate, by unmistakable signs, that he is near his end;
but, seized with a panic test his favourite should somehow be left
unblessed, he feels, in his nervous alarm, as if he were at the
point of death, and, though destined to live for forty-three years
longer, he calls Esau that he may hand over to him his dying
testament. How different is the nerve of a man when he knows he is
doing God’s will, and when he is but fulfilling his own device. For
the same reason, he has to stimulate his spirit by artificial means.
The prophetic ecstasy is not felt by him; he must be exhilarated by
venison and wine, that, strengthened and revived in body, and having
his gratitude aroused afresh towards Esau, he may bless him with all
the greater vigour. The final stimulus is given when he smells the
garments of Esau on Jacob, and when that fresh earthy smell which so
revives us in spring, as if our life were renewed with the year, and
which hangs about one who has been in the open air, entered into
Isaac’s blood, and lent him fresh vigour.
It is a strange and, in some respects, perplexing spectacle that is
here presented to us-the organ of the Divine blessing represented by
a blind old man, laid on a "couch of skins," stimulated by meat and
wine, and trying to cheat God by bestowing the family blessing on
the son of his own choice to the exclusion of the divinely-appointed
heir. Out of such beginnings had God to educate a people worthy of
Himself, and through such hazards had He to guide the spiritual
blessing He designed to convey to us all.
Isaac laid a net for his own feet. By his unrighteous and timorous
haste he secured the defeat of his own long-cherished scheme. It was
his hasting to bless Esau which drove Rebekah to checkmate him by
winning the blessing for her favourite. The shock which Isaac felt
when Esau came in and the fraud was discovered is easily understood.
The mortification of the old man must have been extreme when he
found that he had so completely taken himself in. He was reclining
in the satisfied reflection that for once he had overreached his
astute Rebekah and her astute son, and in the comfortable feeling
that, at last, he had accomplished his one remaining desire, when he
learns from the exceeding bitter cry of Esau that he has himself
been duped. It was enough to rouse the anger of the mildest and
godliest of men, but Isaac does not storm and protest-"he trembles
exceedingly." He recognises, by a spiritual insight quite unknown to
Esau, that this is God’s hand, and deliberately confirms, with his
eyes open, what he had done in blindness: "I have blessed him: Yea,
and he shall be blessed." Had he wished to deny the validity of the
blessing, he had ground enough for doing so. He had not really given
it: it had been stolen from him. An act must be judged by its
intention, and he had been far from intending to bless Jacob. Was he
to consider himself bound by what he had done under a
misapprehension? He had given a blessing to one person under the
impression that he was a different person; must not the blessing go
to him for whom it was designed? But Isaac unhesitatingly yielded.
This clear recognition of God’s hand in the matter, and quick
submission to Him, reveals a habit of reflection, and a spiritual
thoughtfulness, which are the good qualities in Isaac’s otherwise
unsatisfactory character. Before he finished his answer to Esau, he
felt he was a poor feeble creature in the hand of a true and just
God, who had used even his infirmity and sin to forward righteous
and gracious ends. It was his sudden recognition of the frightful
way in which he had been tampering with God’s will, and of the grace
with which God had prevented him from accomplishing a wrong
destination of the inheritance, that made Isaac tremble very
exceedingly.
In this humble acceptance of the disappointment of his life’s love
and hope, Isaac shows us the manner in which we ought to bear the
consequences of our wrong-doing. The punishment of our sin often
comes through the persons with whom we have to do, unintentionally
on their part, and yet we are tempted to hate them because they pain
and punish us, father, mother, wife, child, or whoever else. Isaac
and Esau were alike disappointed. Esau only saw the supplanter, and
vowed to be revenged. Isaac saw God in the matter, and trembled. So
when Shimei cursed David, and his loyal retainers would have cut off
his head for so doing, David said, "Let him alone, and let him
curse: it may be that the Lord hath bidden him." We can bear the
pain inflicted on us by men when we see that they are merely the
instruments of a divine chastisement. The persons who thwart us and
make our life bitter, the persons who stand between us and our
dearest hopes, the persons whom we are most disposed to speak
angrily and bitterly to, are often thorns planted in our path by God
to keep us on the right way.
Isaac’s sin propagated itself with the rapid multiplication of all
sin. Rebekah overheard what passed between Isaac and Esau, and
although she might have been able to wait until by fair means Jacob
received the blessing, yet when she sees Isaac actually preparing to
pass Jacob by and bless Esau, her fears are so excited that she
cannot any longer quietly leave the matter in God’s hand, but must
lend her own more skilful management. It may have crossed her mind
that she was justified in forwarding what she knew to be God’s
purpose. She saw no other way of saving God’s purpose and Jacob’s
rights than by her interference. The emergency might have unnerved
many a woman, but Rebekah is equal to the occasion. She makes the
threatened exclusion of Jacob the very means for at last finally
settling the inheritance upon him. She braves the indignation of
Isaac and the rage of Esau, and fearless herself, and confident of
success, she soon quiets the timorous and cautious objections of
Jacob. She knows that for straightforward lying and acting a part
she was sure of good support in Jacob. Luther says, "Had it been me,
I’d have dropped the dish." But Jacob had no such tremors-could
submit his hands and face to the touch of Isaac, and repeat his lie
as often as needful.
An old man bedridden like Isaac becomes the subject of a number of
little deceptions which may seem, and which may be, very unimportant
in themselves, but which are seen to wear down the reverence due to
the father of a family, and which imperceptibly sap the guileless
sincerity and truthfulness of those who practise them. This
overreaching of Isaac by dressing Jacob in Esau’s clothes, might
come in naturally as one of those daily deceptions which Rebekah was
accustomed to practise on the old man whom she kept quite in her own
hand, giving him as much or as little insight into the doings of the
family as seemed advisable to her. It would never occur to her that
she was taking God in hand; it would seem only as if she were making
such use of Isaac’s infirmity as she was in the daily practice of
doing.
But to account for an act is not to excuse it. Underlying the
conduct of Rebekah and Jacob was the conviction that they would come
better speed by a little deceit of their own than by suffering God
to further them in His own way-that though God would certainly not
practise deception Himself, He might not object to others doing so
that in this emergency holiness was a hampering thing which might
just for a little be laid aside that they might be more holy
afterwards-that though no doubt in ordinary circumstances, and as a
normal habit, deceit is not to be commended, yet in cases of
difficulty, which call for ready wit, a prompt seizure, and delicate
handling, men must be allowed to secure their ends in their own way.
Their unbelief thus directly produced immorality-immorality of a
very revolting kind, the defrauding of their relatives, and
repulsive also because practised as if on God’s side, or, as we
should now say, "in the interests of religion."
To this day the method of Rebekah and Jacob is largely adopted by
religious persons. It is notorious that persons whose ends are good
frequently become thoroughly unscrupulous about the means they use
to accomplish them. They dare not say in so many words that they may
do evil that good may come, nor do they think it a tenable position
in morals that the end sanctifies the means; and yet their
consciousness of a justifiable and desirable end undoubtedly does
blunt their sensitiveness regarding the legitimacy of the means they
employ. For example, Protestant controversialists, persuaded that
vehement opposition to. Popery is good, and filled with the idea of
accomplishing its downfall, are often guilty of gross
misrepresentation, because they do not sufficiently inform
themselves of the actual tenets and practices of the Church of Rome.
In all controversy, religious and political, it is the same. It is
always dishonest to circulate reports that you have no means of
authenticating: yet how freely are such reports circulated to
blacken the character of an opponent, and to prove his opinions to
be dangerous. It is always dishonest to condemn opinions we have not
inquired into, merely because of some fancied consequence which
these opinions carry in them: yet how freely are opinions condemned
by men who have never been at the trouble carefully to inquire into
their truth. They do not feel the dishonesty of their position,
because they have a general consciousness that they are on the side
of religion, and of what has generally passed for truth. All keeping
back of facts which are supposed to have an unsettling effect is but
a repetition of this sin. There is no sin more hateful. Under the
appearance of serving God, and maintaining His cause in the world,
it insults Him by assuming that if the whole bare, undisguised truth
were spoken, His cause would suffer.
The fate of all such attempts to manage God’s matters by keeping
things dark, and misrepresenting fact, is written for all who care
to understand in the results of this scheme of Rebekah’s and
Jacob’s. They gained nothing, and they lost a great deal, by their
wicked interference. They gained nothing; for God had promised that
the birthright would be Jacob’s, and would have given it him in some
way redounding to his credit and not to his shame. And they lost a
great deal. The mother lost her son; Jacob had to flee for his life,
and, for all we know, Rebekah never saw him more. And Jacob lost all
the comforts of home, and all those possessions his father had
accumulated. He had to flee with nothing but his staff, an outcast
to begin the world for himself. From this first false step onwards
to his death, he was pursued by misfortune, until his own verdict on
his life was, "Few and evil have been the days of the years of my
life."
Thus severely was, the sin of Rebekah and Jacob punished. It
coloured their whole afterlife with a deep sombre hue. It was marked
thus, because it was a sin by all means to be avoided. It was
virtually the sin of blaming God for forgetting His promise, or of
accusing Him of being unable to perform it: so that they, Rebekah
and Jacob, had, forsooth, to take God’s work out of His hands, and
show Him how it ought to be done. The announcement of God’s purpose,
instead of enabling them quietly to wait for a blessing they knew to
be certain, became in their unrighteous and impatient hearts
actually an inducement to sin. Abraham was so bold and confident in
his faith, at least latterly, that again and again he refused to
take as a gift from men, and on the most honourable terms, what God
had promised to give him: his grandson is so little sure of God’s
truth, that he will rather trust his own falsehood; and what he
thinks God may forget to give him, he will steal from his own
father. Some persons have especial need to consider this sin-they
are tempted to play the part of Providence, to intermeddle where
they ought to refrain. Sometimes just a little thing is needed to
make everything go to our liking-the keeping back of one small fact,
a slight variation in the way of stating the matter, is enough-thine’s
want just a little push in the right direction: it is wrong, but
very slightly so. And so they are encouraged to close for a moment
their eyes and put to their hand.
Of all the parties in this transaction none is more to blame than
Esau. He shows now how selfish and untruthful the sensual man really
is, and how worthless is the generosity which is merely of impulse
and not bottomed on principle. While he so furiously and bitterly
blamed Jacob for supplanting him, it might surely have occurred to
him that it was really he who was supplanting Jacob. He had no
right, divine or human, to the inheritance. God had never said that
His possession should go to the oldest, and had in this case said
the express opposite. Besides, inconstant as Esau was, he could
scarcely have forgotten the bargain that so pleased him at the time,
and by which he had sold to his younger brother all title to his
father’s blessings.
Jacob was to blame for seeking to win his own by craft, but Esau was
more to blame for endeavouring furtively to recover what he knew to
be no longer his. His bitter cry was the cry of a disappointed and
enraged child, what Hosea calls the "howl" of those who seem to seek
the Lord, but are really merely crying out, like animals, for corn
and wine. Many that care very little for God’s love will seek His
favours; and every wicked wretch who has in his prosperity spurned
God’s offers will, when he sees how he has cheated himself, turn to
God’s gifts, though not to God, with a cry. Esau would now very
gladly have given a mess of pottage for the blessing that secured to
its receiver "the dew of heaven, the fatness of the earth, and
plenty of corn and wine." Like many another sinner, he wanted both
to eat his cake and have it. He wanted to spend his youth sowing to
the flesh, and have the harvest which those only can have who have
sown to the spirit. He wished both of two irreconcilable things-both
the red pottage and the birthright. He is a type of those who think
very lightly of spiritual blessings. while their appetites are
strong, but afterwards bitterly complain that their whole life is
filled with the results of sowing to the flesh and not to the
spirit.
"We barter life for pottage; sell true bliss
For wealth or power, for pleasure or renown;
Thus Esau-like, our Father’s blessing miss,
Then wash with fruitless tears our laded crown."
The words of the New Testament, in which it is said that Esau "found
no place for repentance, though he sought it carefully with tears,"
are sometimes misunderstood. They do not mean that he sought what we
ordinarily call repentance, a change of mind about the value of the
birthright. He had that; it was this that made him weep. What he
sought now was some means of undoing what he had done, of cancelling
the deed of which he repented. His experience does not tell us that
a man once sinning as Esau sinned becomes a hardened reprobate whom
no good influence can impress or bring to repentance, but it says
that the sin so committed leaves irreparable consequences-that no
man can live a youth of folly and yet find as much in manhood and
maturer years as if he had lived a careful and God-fearing youth.
Esau had irrecoverably lost that which he would now have given all
he had to possess; and in this, I suppose, he represents half the
men who pass through this world. He warns us that it is very
possible, by careless yielding to appetite and passing whim, to
entangle ourselves irrecoverably for this life, if not to weaken and
maim ourselves for eternity. At the time, your act may seem a very
small and secular one, a mere bargain in the ordinary course, a
little transaction such as one would enter into carelessly after the
day’s work is over, in the quiet of a summer evening or in the midst
of the family circle: or it may seem so necessary that you never
think of its moral qualities, as little as you question whether you
are justified in breathing; but you are warned that if there be in
that act a crushing out of spiritual hopes to make way for the free
enjoyment of the pleasures of sense-if there be a deliberate
preference of the good things of this life to the love of God-if,
knowingly, you make light of spiritual blessings, and count them
unreal when weighed against obvious worldly advantages-then the
consequences of that act will in this life bring to you great
discomfort and uneasiness, great loss and vexation, an agony of
remorse, and a life-long repentance. You are warned of this, and
most touchingly, by the moving entreaties, the bitter cries and
tears of Esau.
But even when our life is spoiled irreparably, a hope remains for
our character and ourselves-not certainly if our misfortunes
embitter us, not if resentment is the chief result of our suffering;
but if, subduing resentment, and taking blame to ourselves instead
of trying to fix it on others, we take revenge upon the real source
of our undoing, and extirpate from our own character the root of
bitterness. Painful and difficult is such schooling. It calls for
simplicity, and humility, and truthfulness-qualities not of frequent
occurrence. It calls for abiding patience; for he who begins thus to
sow to the spirit late in life must be content with inward fruits,
with peace of conscience, increase of righteousness and humility,
and must learn to live without much of what all men naturally
desire.
While each member of Isaac’s family has thus his own plan, and is
striving to fulfil his private intention, the result is, that God’s
purpose is fulfilled. In the human agency, such faith in God as
existed was overlaid with misunderstanding and distrust of God. But
notwithstanding the petty and mean devices, the short-sighted
slyness, the blundering unbelief, the profane worldliness of the
human parties in the transaction, the truth and mercy of God still
find a way for themselves. Were matters left in our hands, we should
make shipwreck even of the salvation with which we are provided. We
carry into our dealings with it the same selfishness, and
inconstancy, and worldliness which made it necessary: and had not
God patience to bear with, as well as mercy to invite us; had He not
wisdom to govern us in the use of His grace, as well as wisdom to
contrive its first bestowal, we should perish with the water of life
at our lips.
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