Genesis
36:1 - 37:1
Esau's Greatness
In Reformed
circles we say
that there is value in the public READING as well as in the
public preaching of the word. But what were you thinking as you
heard this read? Perhaps you looked forward to the preaching and
had enough confidence in your pastor to believe that he could
help you understand the point of this passage. Perhaps, more
appropriately, you had confidence in God that he had a reason for
including this in Scripture.
But while waiting
to find
out what that reason was, what did hearing this passage do? We
hate to say it sometimes, but our reaction to such a passage is
"So what? Big deal. What a pointless list of names. Let's
get on to the important stuff."
Well, guess what?
That's a
good reaction. So what?!? So Esau had wives and children. So he
became a mighty nation. In the eyes of the world that's
something, but what does this have to do with the promise made to
Abraham? How does this lead up to the birth of the seed of
Abraham? How does this lead up to Jesus? It doesn't. It's a dead
end. It may look impressive to some, but to those who are waiting
for the promises of God to be fulfilled, it's nothing. So what.
Big deal. Thus we are taught the meaninglessness of life apart
from the promises of God which are fulfilled in Christ.
- Esau Rejects the Abrahamic Promise (1-8)
- He Intermarries with the Canaanites (2-5)
- Esau, who already has wives, takes some
wives from the Canaanites (2)
- This is worse than what he's done before
- Remember what happened after Isaac
gave Jacob the blessing which had been meant for Esau.
- Gen 28.6ff - Esau saw that Isaac had
blessed Jacob and sent him away to Padan Aram to take himself a wife
from there, and that as he blessed him he gave him a
charge, saying, "You shall not take a wife from the daughters of
Canaan," 7and that Jacob had obeyed his father and his
mother and had gone to Padan Aram. 8Also Esau saw that the
daughters of Canaan did not please his father Isaac. 9So
Esau went to Ishmael and took Mahalath the daughter of Ishmael,
Abraham's son, the sister of Nebajoth, to be his wife in addition to
the wives he had.
- At least then he was TRYING to please
his father and to regain the blessing that he had thrown away.
- Now he shrugs and takes Canaanite wives.
- Why?
- Isaac's dead
- He never understood the blessing
anyway
- He always looked at the blessing
in terms of material things
- So now he's got material things.
Clearly he's gotten "blessed" on his own and doesn't need the family
blessing.
- Thus Esau forfeits any right to the
promise made to Abraham.
- After all, why didn't Abraham want Isaac
to marry a Canaanite?
- Why didn't Isaac want his sons to take
wives from among them.
- Because God had promised that one day
Abraham's descendants would destroy the Canaanites.
- And how do you sort out who's who if the
families are intermarried?
- By this action, Esau takes himself out of
the Abrahamic family and aligns his descendants with Canaan.
- He has no faith in the promise made to
Abraham
- He does not fear that his descendants will
be destroyed
- Children! Is there anyone in this world
worth giving up God's promises for?
- Of course not!
- Yet this is what Esau does.
- You know better don't you?
- When it comes time for you to marry,
you will seek out someone who also believes in the promises of God, who
also knows Jesus the Savior.
- He Takes His Family Out of the Land (6)
- This same heart of unbelief is manifested
as Esau takes his wives, sons, daughters, servants, everything out of
the Promised Land.
- He is saying, "This place that God
promised to Abraham and his descendants … I reject it. It is of no
importance."
- Remember Jacob's sons
- They are born outside the Promised
Land
- But he brings them in
- He leads his household into the realm
of salvation
- Esau's sons are born IN the Promised Land
and he takes them OUT
- This land
- We have come to see it as the place of
God's presence
- We have come to see it as a picture of
the heavenly inheritance that is held out to those who have faith in
the promises
- Esau cares nothing for it.
- Thus he identifies himself with the
children of this world and turns his back on God.
- Why?
- He Loves Possessions More than God's Promise
(7,8)
- The deceitfulness of riches
- He decides that he and Jacob have too many
possessions to dwell together.
- Just like Abraham and Lot
- And remember what happened to Lot
- Esau is not instructed by that
example, but let us be.
- What folly! What hardness of heart! What a
horrible misunderstanding of the Promised Land.
- Esau remains true to his character until
the end
- He sold his birthright to Jacob for
something to eat.
- Now he leaves God's presence because
he's just too rich to dwell in the land of promise
- But what shall it profit him even if
he gains the whole world yet loses his soul?
- Let us be instructed by Esau's folly. What
good does his wealth do him now? If it was really keeping him from
living in the Promised Land, better to give it all up and stay in the
place of God's presence.
- Notice that it is not the possessions in
themselves, for Jacob has many possessions too (v. 7).
- But it is the LOVE of those possessions
and their DECEITFULNESS
- Esau allows his desire to keep these
earthly things to turn him from the land of God
- His possessions lie to him and say
they are important when they are destine like him to perish.
- People of God, let us have a better
assessment of things than Esau
- What shall we compare the kingdom of God
to? It is like a pearl of great price, and when a man finds it he sells
all that he has to gain it.
- The kingdom of God, which your father
gives you, is worth more than all earthly wealth.
- Let nothing come between you and the
gaining of it.
- Esau's Descendants (9-43)
- The Sons of Esau (9-19)
- Esau has many sons.
- But as we said, so what?
- None of these sons is the promised Seed
- None of these sons comes in fulfilment of
the promise God made to Abraham that he would have many descendants
- Oh, yes, according to the flesh they
are sons of Abraham
- But they are not children according to
the promise (And that's what Romans 4 says is important)
- Their father has cut them off from
that promise.
- So it doesn't matter. This list of names
is meaningless.
- Well, not quite meaningless.
- Esau's first son is named Eliphaz -
"My God is fine gold"
- That about sums up Esau's heart,
doesn't it?
- Things get more impressive with the
grandsons
- They become chiefs (15ff.)
- They start to have authority in the
land of Edom where Esau has come to dwell.
- But so what?
- They have authority as men have authority
and may be great in the eyes of men.
- In the eyes of God they are nothing. They
are not part of his plan in calling out a people for salvation.
- The Sons of Seir (20-30)
- Then suddenly we get the sons of Seir (20)
- Who are they and what do they have to do
with Esau?
- Seir was a Horite, whatever that means.
- In any event Seir and his descendants
inhabited the land right alongside Esau and his descendants.
- And so, in the middle of ESAU'S genealogy,
you get the name's of a bunch of foreigners.
- Esau is just getting mixed in with the
rest of the world. You can't even tell them apart anymore.
- They are just all together part of the
people that God has rejected in favor of the sons of Israel.
- You see, there are only really two camps
to belong to
- The people of God
- And the people of this world.
- That's what we've been seeing from the
beginning of this book.
- Esau has left his identity as a son of
Isaac and Abraham behind. He's a son of the world and will be
destroyed, just as the rest.
- So it is to this day.
- We divide the world in so many ways -
geographically, politically, socially, econmically, culturally,
ethnically.
- But God sees only two camps - those
who are his and everyone else.
- To leave the camp of God is to join
the world.
- Let us rather be steadfast in clinging
to the promises of God which are fulfilled in Christ.
- Let us therefore recognize ourselves
as ONE camp, ONE body of the ONE Lord
- And let our identity even in this life
not be in terms of where we live or how we vote or what we look at or
what racial origin we have. But let our identity be that we are the
people of God, called out as separate from the world, even as we live
in the world and look superficially similar to others in it. To God, we
are a wholly different people.
- The Kings of Edom (31-39)
- Even more impressive we have kings
reigning in Edom, the land of Esau. (31)
- And these kings reign "before any king
reigned over the children of Israel"
- They get their kings first.
- But so what?
- God promised Abraham "kings shall come
from your body" but these aren't those kings
- Better to wait for the kings that will
come according to promise
- Better to wait for the one King who
will come from Abraham
- Where are the kings of Edom now?
- But Christ, the true king of Abraham
is reigning still
- And you and I are kings and priests in
him
- Thus the promise to Abraham is
fulfilled in us not in them.
- So, so what if Esau gets kings before
Jacob gets even one?
- The king that comes from Jacob will
reign forever.
- And on closer inspection, these kings
aren't so hot anyway
- How do we know they're the descendants
of Esau and not of Seir the Horite? We don't. You can't tell them
apart.
- Even if one of them is, the next one
doesn't have to be. Notice that there is no succession
- Bela son of Beor reigned (32)
- When he died, what happened? Did
his son reign?
- No. Jobab the son of Zerah of
Bozrah reigned in his place (33)
- And so on down.
- This isn't a dynasty.
- This isn't a father king passing
on the throne to his son.
- It's just a bunch of RANDOM kings
reigning
- This is the opposite of what we've
seen in Abraham
- Abraham passes the covenant down
to Isaac
- Isaac passes the covenant down to
Jacob
- By the end of this book, Jacob
will pass the covenant down to his 12 sons.
- What a wonderful picture of Christ
passing the blessings of God down to us.
- What a wonderful picture of us
passing the blessings of Christ down to our children.
- That whole picture is missing in
these kings of Edom
- They don't seem much like kings do
they?
- So Esau gets the first kings, but big
deal.
- Jacob gets the better kings, and the king
that reigns for ever and ever.
- God is faithful.
- Jacob doesn't need to fret and worry that
God's blessing is coming to Esau first.
- The blessing that God reserves for Jacob
is greater than anything bestowed on Esau
- And that's the way it is
- We look at people in the world and it
may seem they have more blessings than we.
- Many seem to live lives of ease and
comfort while we, perhaps, struggle and wait for the kingdom that is to
come.
- But whatever, they have is NOTHING
compared to what is reserved in heaven for us.
- They may get theirs first
- But we get ours at last, and better,
and forever.
- The Chiefdoms of Edom (40-43)
- At the end of it all, we name some more
chiefs, describing the areas over which they were chiefs.
- We can't even go out on the high note of
naming kings.
- Already Esau's glory begins to wane.
- He's not much more than a set of chiefs
after all.
- For this, he forfeited the Promised Land?
- Jacob Embraces the Inheritance (37:1)
- Jacob Dwells as a Stranger in the Land
- This is the last verse of the passage
- It may seem like it goes with the next
passage.
- But verse two starts "This is the
history of Jacob" or "this is the genealogy…" or "these are the
generations."
- And in Genesis that's our signal that
a new part of the book has begun.
- Clearly Moses, inspired by the Spirit,
wants you to consider this verse in light of the genealogy of Esau
- It's a breath of fresh air, isn't it?
- What a contrast after the tedious,
long-winded, tale of Esau denying the faith, turning his back on the
promises, and seeking his own desires.
- Jacob, by contrast, dwells in the land
where his father had dwelt
- He takes up Isaac's faith.
- He shows that he is the heir of the
promise to Abraham.
- The covenant has passed down to him.
- His offspring will inherit this land.
- Believing this, he remains in it.
- He lives in a tent
- He doesn't go off to build a permanent
dwelling place for himself somewhere else.
- He lives in a temporary sort of
shelter here.
- And by this he testifies that he is
not looking for an earthly city or a permanent home on this earth.
- But he is waiting for the city which
has foundations, whose builder and maker is God.
- So he testifies to us across the centuries
in the face of all this nonsense that Esau has just put us through.
- He gives you a pilgrim identity.
- This world is not your permanent home, but
your citizenship is in heaven and you wait for that kingdom to come
down out of heaven at the last day.
- No longer do you express this faith by
dwelling as nomads, living in a tent, moving from place to place
- But in your hearts you are pilgrims,
holding lightly to the things you own and the dwellings you live in.
You are ready to leave them at a moment's notice when that which is
truly valuable appears.
- This is the heart of Jacob, which you
bear, contrasted with the heart of Esau
- You love the promises of God.
- You long for the appearing of Christ.
- You would give up all your earthly
possessions to gain him (for what good are the things that are passing
away?)
- And you confer this pilgrim identity
on your children as well.
- In Jacob Will God's Promises Be Fulfilled
- Thus the promises of God which pass Esau
by, these will come at last to Jacob.
- He will become a mighty nation
- First the nation of Israel
- Finally the "nation" of God's people
- Kings will come from his body
- First David and Solomon, etc.
- But ultimately Christ
- And in Christ a whole kingdom of kings
- His descendants will inherit the land
- First the physical land of Canaan
- Then his spiritual descendants will
enter heaven itself
- This is what Esau rejects and loses out on
- This is what Jacob clings to as more
valuable than all earthly things.
This is what comes
to you
who like Jacob cling by faith to what God offers in Christ and
wait with hope for the day of his coming.
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