Psalm 001 Footnotes

Psalm 1 Footnotes

(See Psalm 001 Literally Rendered)

NOTE: Some footnote topics cover numerous texts. They have been recorded, and will be copied into documents discussing those topics. If you see footnote repetition from one text to another, this will explain why.

Regarding the accuracy of these conclusions: Were I gifted by the Spirit of Yehovah to do this work, it would be infallible, as was the case for all ministerially gifted persons in the Bible. No true prophet of God ever erred while prophesying. No true teacher of God ever taught any erroneous teaching. The standards of God have not changed, and the Spirit of God hasn’t weakened over the centuries. Since I am not gifted, my conclusions contain numerous errors, and must be considered and challenged if you (the reader) will not be deceived. I know some answers are correct, but I will have to change some answers as I learn more and as folks like you show me that my proposed answers need changing. If you don’t like this factor of uncertainty, ask Yehovah to give me a ministerial gift along these lines in His Word so that I can give infallible responses. If He does so, you will then be responsible to believe whatever He communicates through me. In the meantime, don’t be a sucker.

Regarding Hebrew words: If you see what appears to be computer nonsense when a Hebrew word is being discussed, your computer does not have the font to view it. If you desire to see the same article with the Hebrew word being visible and correct, let me know; I will send you a PDF form of the same document. (You will need an Adobe Acrobat reader to see it, which is freely available from the Adobe web site.)

1 Happy gives the sense of this word more than blessed, since blessed is covered with a much more frequently used different word. While some find fault with the origins of the word happy, it is a good word, describing one who is content, settled and pleased.

2 Translators were very sloppy with these tenses. Yet, the tenses are a vital part of this text (and indeed for all others).

Continue reading “Psalm 001 Footnotes”

Baptism

Baptism

One of the Basic Foundational Truths
For Understanding Anything about Biblical Faith

 

 

1. Introduction

2. Romans 6

3. Colossians 2

4. 1 Corinthians 10: Exodus 14

5. 1 Peter 3:18‑22

6. Immersion of Objects in Sacrifices

7. Jewish Traditional Baptism: Orthodox Pictorial Baptism

8. A Suggestion For a Present‑Day Pictorial Baptism

9. Conclusion

1. Introduction


While many are baptized in local churches, few know why. Some are too young to learn reasons, and others have been taught reasons outside of the Bible. Some haven’t been taught anything. Not knowing the reason for baptism Spiritually accomplishes nothing. Doctrines that equate baptism with Salvation create an idolatrous ritual.

Only the blood of the Perfect One can wash away sin; water cannot.

The following erroneous, non-Biblical reasons are given for baptism:

A. Baptism bears witness that one is Born Again; it is a public act to show an inward rebirth.

B. Baptism washes away sin.

C. Baptism is a testimony.

D. Believer’s baptism is an ordinance, like the Lord’s Supper.

E. Baptism enters one into the Body of Messiah.

F. Baptism is needed for membership into the Body of Messiah.

G. One is filled with the Holy Ghost at baptism.

Certain groups ‘play down’ Baptism, teaching the following errors:

A. Baptism was for Jews, not for Christians.

B. Baptism ended with the disciples.

C. One can be a ‘good Christian’ and not get Baptized.

These and many more views, including ‘Baptism for the dead’, reflect how far Baptism has come from the original pattern. Consider some Scriptural reasons for Baptism.

 

2. Romans 6:1‑14

What shall we say then? Shall we continue in sin, that grace may abound? Absolutely not! How shall we who are dead to sin live any longer in it? Know ye not that so many of us as were baptized into Messiah Yeshua were baptized into His death? Therefore we are buried with Him by baptism into death that just as Messiah was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life. For if we have been planted together in the likeness of His death, we shall be also of the resurrection, knowing this–that our old man is crucified with Him that the body of sin might be destroyed, that henceforth we should not serve sin. Now if we be dead with Messiah, we believe that we shall also live with Him knowing that Messiah, being raised from the dead, dieth no more. Death hath no more dominion over Him. For in that He died, He died unto sin once. But in that He liveth, He liveth unto God. Likewise reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin but alive unto God through Messiah Yeshua our Lord. Let not sin therefore reign in your mortal body that ye should obey it in the lusts thereof. Neither yield ye your members instruments of unrighteousness unto sin. But yield yourselves unto God as those who are alive from the dead, and your members instruments of righteousness unto God. For sin shall not have dominion over you! For ye are not under the law, but under grace.

Consider this portion, one section at a time. The question raised concerns continuing in sin, a point brought forward from chapter 5. “How shall we who are dead to sin live any longer in it?” “So many of us as were baptized into Messiah Yeshua were baptized into His death.”

Yeshua is Salvation. Anyone who will be saved must enter into Him.

This text, the heart of the letter to the Romans, is referring to Israelis (the ‘we’ versus ‘ye also’). The Israelis will believe on Him as the blood sacrifice for sin some time during the Tribulation. They will know Him as the Lamb and will grasp His Salvation. This Romans text awaits fulfillment, though it is written in the past and present tenses, as a careful reader may notice.

The Israelis who are Saved by His Blood, by His Grace, are ready to ‘cross over’ and to enter into His death. They will cross over in the future from slavery to sin to freedom to righteousness via His death. They entered into His death via baptism: that is, they were immersed into His death. While this is pictured (only pictured) by water-style baptism, the real event that the picture portrays must be accomplished by the Spirit of Yehovah. He will take a person (who is determined to enter into Yeshua’s death for the above reasons) into that death so that the person can be part of the resurrection (explained below).

When the Spirit of God accomplishes this pictured goal (that is, when the person being immersed believes), the person will then come up out of the water to walk in ‘newness of life’—that is, with a refusal to sin and an insistence on walking righteously.

This must not be confused with Salvation, since that happens outside of this type of baptism.

Reason (1) for Baptism:

(1) They are baptized into His death.

Non-Jewish believers are baptized for the same reasons, in the same manner.

Once they enter into His death by Baptism, verse 4 shows that they are buried with Him. Then, “…as Messiah was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also are to walk in newness of life.” No one can be raised up from the dead who has not died. No one can walk in newness of life who has not been born from above.

What does “walking in newness of life” mean? The oldness was in sin and in refusal to consistently do right before Yehovah. If one Israeli still lives the old way in sin, all Israel is responsible:

Joshua 7:1 But the children of Israel committed a trespass in the accursed thing. for Achan, the son of Carmi, the son of Zabdi, the son of Zerah, of the tribe of Judah, took of the accursed thing. And the anger of Yehovah was kindled against the children of Israel.

Joshua 7:10 And Yehovah said unto Joshua, “Get thee up! Why liest thou thus upon thy face? 11Israel hath sinned! And they have also transgressed my covenant which I commanded them! For they have even taken of the accursed thing, and have also stolen, and dissembled also, and they have put it even among their own stuff!”

Yehovah held all Israel responsible for the sin of one person (and his family).

Reason (2) for Baptism:

(2) The Israelis are immersed into His death so that they will be buried with Him. Thus, they enter into His death, thereby taking part in it. (This is not an end; it is part of a means. Staying dead is of no benefit. They do not physically die to do this; they are being associated with that death by the Spirit of Yehovah in this process.)

They will also walk in newness of life, with the righteousness of Messiah, Who Himself was raised up from the dead.

The death of the Messiah was followed by the resurrection, as verse 5 shows. The Saints who follow Messiah into His death and burial (by picture, and by the Spirit of Yehovah) will participate in His resurrection.

A character called “our old man” is mentioned in verse 6. He is the original nature of the Israelis (the body of Israel). From the time Israel (the people) was first born until the events just before Israel’s baptism, Israel will still have this nature of sin.

When all living Israelis enter into Messiah’s death and burial, their old man will be crucified with Him. This will accomplish the destruction of the body of sin “that henceforth we should not serve sin.” The conclusion is, “He that is dead is freed from sin.”

I have never seen a corpse sin.

That brings us to reason (3):

(3) One who is dead is freed from slavery to sin, and will no longer serve sin.

All who are alive from the dead will be parts of one Body, and will be tools of Righteousness serving God as God’s property. Sin will not have power and authority over them. They are now slaves of Righteousness (verse 18). They will now have the answer of a good conscience toward God!

Other reasons for Baptism follow.

3. Colossians 2:8‑15 

Beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit after the tradition of men, after the rudiments of the world, and not after Messiah. For all the fullness of deity bodily dwells in Him. And ye are complete in Him Who is the head of all principality and power, in Whom ye also are circumcised with the circumcision made without hands in putting off the body of the sins of the flesh by the circumcision of Messiah—buried with Him in baptism in which ye are also risen with Him through the faith of the operation of God Who has raised Him from the dead. And, being dead in your sins and the uncircumcision of your flesh, He has made-you-alive together with Him having forgiven you all trespasses, blotting out the handwriting of ordinances that was against us, that was contrary to us, and took it out of the way, nailing it [the handwriting] to His cross; and, having spoiled principalities and powers, He made a show of them openly, triumphing over them in it!

The Circumcision Covenant made between Yehovah and Avraham’s lineage continues today. Physical circumcision is practiced widely by many people groups for medical cleanliness, while among Israelis, it still has Covenant implications. Yehovah commanded the Israelis to circumcise the foreskin of their (plural) heart (singular). This is not a physical operation on a physical heart, but a real operation on the heart (mind) of the Body of Israel, in which the mind of sin will be removed.

The Colossians text refers to the circumcision of these non-Jewish folks. It is “made without hands in putting off the body of the sins of the flesh by the circumcision of Messiah, buried with Him in baptism.” Heart circumcision is what Baptism pictures. So, we have another reason for baptism:

(4) Baptism pictures putting off the body of the sins of the flesh and becoming free from that body, literally accomplished by Messiah’s circumcising the group’s heart (mind), the group being buried with Him (by the Spirit of Yehovah), and being resurrected with Him into newness of life.

This disconnection from the body of sin is also for non-Jewish Believers, so that they will be joined to the living Body of Messiah. All legal ordinance violations against those who enter into Messiah’s death and who will participate in His resurrection are revoked. (They had better not go back into sin after this!)

Saints are buried with Him in Baptism, and are also risen with Him through the faith of the operation [working] of God. He is the doctor who performs the work that gets rid of the ‘Body of the sins of the flesh’ of this entire group, and does this by circumcising their (plural) mind (singular). The Biblical faith is always group oriented! Only a very self-centered faith thinks mainly of ‘me’.

 

4. 1 Corinthians 10:1‑4 and Exodus 14 

Moreover, brethren, I would not that ye should be ignorant how that all our fathers were under the cloud and all passed through the sea, and were all baptized unto Moses in the cloud and in the sea, and did all eat the same spiritual food, and did all drink the same spiritual drink. For they drank of that spiritual Rock that followed them. And that Rock was Messiah.

[With Pharaoh hot in pursuit of and catching up to the Israelis, the Israelis became angry at Moses. At their comments, Moses replies, verse 13:] And Moshe said unto the people, “Fear ye not! Stand still and see the salvation of Yehovah that He will show to you today! For the Egyptians whom ye have seen today, ye shall see them again no more forever. Yehovah shall fight for you, and ye shall hold your peace!” And Yehovah said unto Moshe, ‘Why shout thou unto me? Speak unto the children of Israel that they go forward. But lift thou up thy rod and stretch out thine hand over the sea, and divide it. And the children of Israel shall go on dry ground through the midst of the sea. And I, behold, I will harden the hearts of the Egyptians. And they shall follow them. And I will get me honour upon Pharaoh and upon all his host, upon his chariots and upon his horsemen. And the Egyptians shall know that I am Yehovah when I have gotten me honour upon Pharaoh, upon his chariots and upon his horsemen.” And the Angel of God who went before the camp of Israel removed and went behind them. And the pillar of the cloud went from before their faces and stood behind them. And it came between the camp of the Egyptians and the camp of Israel. And it was a cloud and darkness, but it gave light by night so that the one came not near the other all the night. And Moshe stretched out his hand over the sea. And Yehovah caused the sea to go by a strong east wind all that night, and made the sea dry. And the waters were divided. And the children of Israel went into the midst of the sea upon the dry. And the waters were a wall unto them on their right hand and on their left. And the Egyptians pursued and went in after them to the midst of the sea–all Pharaoh’s horses, his chariots and his horsemen. And it came to pass that in the morning watch Yehovah looked unto the host of the Egyptians through the pillar of fire and of the cloud. And He troubled the army of the Egyptians and took off their chariot wheels so that they drove them heavily, so that the Egyptians said, “We shall flee from the faces of Israel! For Yehovah fights for them against the Egyptians!”

All (Israelis) were baptized into Moshe in the cloud and in the sea (1 Corinthians 10:2). Baptism is not something new. The Children of Israel went into the midst of the sea upon the dry ground with the waters being a wall on their left and right (Exodus 14:22). The Egyptians, their enemies and slavemasters, wanted them in bondage; Yehovah wanted them free. The Israelis were slaves to false gods in Egypt; Yehovah wanted them for His own property. The Passover (during which the blood was applied picturing Salvation) had already happened. The people still needed to be freed from the Egyptians in order to walk in newness of life. The ‘old man of sin’ had to be put to death. They were slaves until the Egyptian army was destroyed.

The Song of Moshe (Exodus 15) is also the story of baptism. Exodus 15:9 shows future plans of an enemy: “The enemy said, I will pursue, I will overtake, I will divide the spoil; my lust shall be satisfied upon them; I will draw my sword; my hand shall destroy them.” Verse 10 shows the effect of baptism on the old man of sin: “Thou didst blow with Thy wind! The sea covered them! They sank as lead in the mighty waters.” The Egyptian army acted as the Israelis’ ‘old man of sin’ in that it kept them physical slaves. Yehovah could have created their New Man for them in this picture, though the Israelis continued as if they were still slaves in Egypt with that ‘old man of sin’ accompanying them. Yehovah was not pleased with them, though He had just saved them. They were still destroyed like Lot’s wife, at a later date after their rescue.

Another reason for baptism:

(5) Baptism is into death in order to result in freedom to walk in newness of life (with the slavemaster of righteousness).

 

5. 1 Peter 3:18‑22

For Messiah also hath once suffered for sins–the righteous for the unrighteous–that He might bring us to God, being put to death in the flesh but made alive by the Spirit, by which also He went and preached unto the spirits in prison who at one time were disobedient, when once the longsuffering of God waited in the days of Noah while the ark was being prepared in which few–that is, eight souls were saved by water, the like figure whereunto baptism doth also now save us (not the putting away of the filth of the flesh, but the answer of a good conscience toward God) by the resurrection of Messiah Yeshua Who is gone into heaven and is on the right hand of God, angels and authorities and powers being made subject unto Him.

Those who entered into the Ark were “saved by water.” The Ark was a type (picture) of Messiah. Folks are saved by being in Messiah. Peter explains further: “the like figure whereunto baptism does also now save us by the resurrection of Messiah Yeshua;” but he explains that it has nothing to do with the putting away of the filth of the flesh. That was accomplished by Yeshua paying with His blood on the cross. Baptism ‘saves’ ‘by the answer of a good conscience toward God.’ Thus,

(6) Baptism is immersion into Yeshua, being placed into the Salvation Ark, in order to have the answer of a good conscience toward God.

While Noah was already born of God before entering the Ark, his obedience gave the answer of a good conscience toward God. All who are in Messiah and are being obedient will have a very good conscience answering Him.

As when Israel crossed the Red sea becoming free of Egyptian pursuers,

(7) Baptism pictures freedom from bondage, especially to sin.

The first of the Ten Commandments is: “I am Yehovah thy God who brought thee out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery.” How good it will be when Israel lives according to his baptism, no longer living in sin! All who are born of God have sought to be freed from sin, and will avoid it as a terrible disease. Baptism pictures that transfer of ownership from a sin slavemaster to a righteousness slavemaster!

 

 

6. Immersion of Objects in Sacrifices

Exodus 12:21 And Draw called to all elders of Israel. And he said unto them,  “Draw-ye and take-ye a flock to you—to your families. And slaughter-ye the Skip-Over! 22And ye shall take a bunch of hyssop. And ye shall immerse in blood that is in a basin. And ye shall cause-to-touch unto the lintel and unto two of the doorposts from the blood that is in the basin.” “And ye, ye shall not exit—a man from the opening of his house—unto morning. 23And Yehovah will cross-over to smite Double-Adversity. And He will see the blood upon the lintel and upon two of the doorposts. And Yehovah will Skip-Over above the opening. And He will not give the slaughterer to come unto your houses to smite.”

Hyssop is a type. I proposed that it typified the lack of a fly (a reference to Satan in an Exodus 12 footnote based on its name: ayzov). If this type is correct, immersing the hyssop in the blood shows another picture. Dipping “there-is-no-fly” in the blood of the perfect sacrifice and applying it to the upper lintel and the two sideposts of the opening of the House pictures the Millennium in which there will be no tempter, no troubler that can enter into all the House of Israel once the blood has been applied.

In another footnote (to Numbers 19), I went further:

When I checked back on my work, I saw that this would not fit. So I began looking again. I found the following:

bwz, zowb is a noun meaning a flow, issue, discharge (semen, blood), flux. It comes from a root verb meaning to flow, gush, issue, discharge; pine away (fig.). If this is the case, c¨z2t means I will discharge (that is, cause something to be given off as if menstrual blood). This would fit how hyssop was used to apply the blood of the lambs and goats to the openings of the houses in the first Passover.

What would be given off? Since the life of the flesh is in the blood, menstrual blood represents what is dead, without life. Those parts of Israel and the claiming rest of the kingdom in which there is no life will be discharged, like menstrual blood.

Leviticus 4:6 And the priest shall immerse his finger into the blood. And he shall sprinkle the faces of the Veil of the Holy-[One] seven strokes from the blood to the faces of Yehovah.

This text contains circuitous Hebrew. The direct object of the verb shall sprinkle is the faces of the Veil, though that direct object is placed beyond to the faces of Yehovah. I therefore placed the sentence in grammatical order in the English translation.

This text does not specify which finger. (This is unusual.)

The curious word for finger in Hebrew is etzba (ending in an ayin). (Whenever I find a type mysterious so that I can’t solve it by references, I always look at the Hebrew word itself to determine if the answer is inherent in the word. I have solved numerous types by this means.) Since etzba has four letters (instead of the normal three letters for a root), and since it starts with aleph, my first thought was that it was a first-person future singular form of a verb. That would leave the root to be tzava, a word used five times in the Bible, and all in Daniel. Translators thought it meant to wet. I thought them wrong. It seemed curiously related to another word, sava, meaning to become full (from eating a good meal). Hebrew often relates in this way: the sheen and the tzadi being related by sound. If two of three Hebrew letters are in the same position in two root verbs, and the third letter in each verb root has a similar sounding letter, the meanings of te two verb roots will tend to be related. I thus proposed that tzava meant saturated (filled with water) rather than just wet. If this is the case, the word for finger would mean I will saturate. If I err in any of these premises, the whole result will be an error. If I am correct, however, the whole result will hold.

With the supposition that I have rightly concluded, the type of the priest immersing his finger in the blood shows that Yehovah will saturate the priest and the entire priesthood with what that blood typifies. Since all Israel is called to be priests of Yehovah, all Israel will therefore by saturated by this blood.

The bull in this text typifies one who will be perfect, who is the son of a herd, and therefore comes from among the Israelis, and who will give his life to cover the sin of the anointed priest and the people. The bull is a larger animal, indicating a higher rank among the Israelis.

Some will quickly conclude that this bull typifies Messiah Yeshua. I do not agree with this conclusion unless it is backed up with proof. I know that the Lamb of God is Messiah Yeshua, and is typified by the Passover lamb or goat. But I have learned that assuming answers to types is a good way to never find the right answer.

A group can be the antitype of this bull, or a high-ranking person can be the antitype. We must await more information before concluding. Consider the following text:

Psalms 22:12 Many bulls have compassed me. Strong-[ones] of Bashan have beset me round.

Persons are being called bulls in this text showing readers that bulls can picture (typify) persons. Though these bulls are bad guys, still the picture does show persons like bulls. The bull in our text is good and is perfect.

If the bull typifies a group of leaders in Israel who will be perfect before Yehovah and who will be sacrificed (slaughtered) because of their righteous stand, the priest’s dipping his finger in the blood of this bull will portray two results. The priest will participate in this slaughter/sacrifice of righteous Israeli leaders, and thus will be culpable, and the priest will be saturated with this blood (as if drinking it), turning the heroism of those represented by the bull into a life-saving act that will lead to the Salvation of the priest, the priesthood, and the rest of the Israelis. Yehovah will ‘saturate’ them with the innocence of this blood, and they will turn from the work of their violence to faith in Yehovah through the innocence of this sacrifice, an effect that the stoning of Stephen eventually had on Saul of Tarshish.

Leviticus 4:16 And the anointed priest shall bring from the blood of the bull unto the Tent of Appointment. 17And the priest shall immerse his finger from the blood. And he shall sprinkle seven strokes to the faces of Yehovah, faces of the veil. 18And he shall give from the blood upon the horns of the altar that is to the faces of Yehovah Who is in the Tent of Appointment. And he will pour all the blood unto a foundation of the altar of the ascension that opened the Tent of Appointment. 19And he shall elevate all his fat from him. And he shall incense the-altarward. 20And he shall do to the bull just-as he did to the bull of the sin-sacrifice. He shall do so to him. And the priest shall cover upon them. And he shall be forgiven to them. 21And he shall exit the bull unto outside to the camp. And he shall burn him just-as he burned the first bull. He is the sin-sacrifice of the congregation.

The same type will hold for this text as for the one above (if that one is correct). The priest will immerse his finger; Yehovah will saturate the priest with this innocence blood, and will saturate all the priesthood, and all Israel. This time, the entire congregation of Israel will fully profit from this sin sacrifice (slaughter) of the righteous leaders of Israel.

Leviticus 14:1 And Yehovah spoke unto Moshe to say, 2This shall be the Teaching of the ‘scourgee’ in the day of his ‘encleaning.’ And he shall be brought unto the priest. 3And the priest shall go-out unto the outside to the camp. And the priest shall see. And behold the stroke of the scourge is healed from the scourged-one. 4And the priest shall command. And he shall take for the ‘encleanee’ two clean living birds {feminine, and no reflection on the lifestyle of the birds}, a cedar tree and worm crimson and hyssop. 5And the priest shall command. And he shall slaughter the one bird unto a sherd vessel upon waters of lives. 6The live bird─he will take her and the tree of the cedar and the crimson of the worm and the hyssop. And he will immerse them and the live bird into the blood of the slaughtered bird upon the waters of the lives. 7And he will sprinkle upon the ‘encleanee’ from the scourge seven times. And he will ‘enclean’ him. And he will send the live bird upon the faces of the field. 8And the ‘encleanee’ will launder his garments and shave all his hair and bathe in water. And he shall be clean. And after, he will come unto the camp. And he will dwell outside to his tent seven days.

Understanding this text requires several explanations. The ‘scourgee’ is the person with the supposed leprosy disease (it isn’t any form of modern leprosy). To be ‘encleaned’ is to be declared clean.

The purpose of this immersion typifies being fully immersed into death. (See Romans 6:4 for the complete explanation.) The living bird was immersed into death, into the blood of the sacrificed bird, just as Messiah was both immersed into death and rose from the dead. Messiah was dead, yet he was alive in Sheol and doing a function until His resurrection.

Baptism is immersing a person or an item into another person or item with both identification and an accompanying change of state (if the immersion’s picture truly represents the person or item immersed).

The live bird will be let go, let free to fly away. This is the picture of the resurrection.

While this explains the birds, it doesn’t explain the cedar tree, worm crimson or hyssop.

Consider the literal meanings of each:

  • I will make-lean a tree
  •  Two earthworms
  •  I will discharge (as menstrual blood)

The tree associated with Israel and the Saints (the olive tree of Romans 11) pictures the Kingdom of God/Kingdom of the Heavens, a kingdom that will appear to grow very fast, very fat, and very large. Yeshua will greatly diminish the appearance of the kingdom to its rightful size during the Tribulation. It will be very small when He is finished, and will have no dead branches on it. The olive will then be very fruitful.

I propose that the two earthworms picture two very humble beings, since an earthworm is always prostrate (in a position of Biblical worship), are down in the soil, and serve the soil just as man was assigned and designed to do. Yehovah saw to it that their blood is the same color as human blood.

I cannot presently verify that these two earthworms typify the two prophets whose importance will be so great during the Tribulation, but I am considering this. Humility doesn’t mean a reluctance to speak and do the Truth in the face of total opposition. I can also propose that the two earthworms represent the Jews and non-Jews at this time.

I mentioned a proposed type of hyssop in a section above: “I will discharge,” referring to menstrual blood, blood that never produced life.

Each of the above is immersed in the blood of a clean bird (without specifying the type of bird):

  • A tree that Yehovah has made lean is immersed in the blood
  •  Two earthworms are immersed in the blood
  •  What Yehovah will discharge. That immersion in the blood that gives life will still give no life; thus, Yehovah will discharge those represented by that blood of menstruation.

I have no difficulty seeing the living and dead birds as one bird that died and whose blood was shed, yet the living bird who carried all uncleanness away. If this represents the Messiah, that same blood will cleanse the lean version of the olive tree, will give boldness to the two earthworms (whether representing the two prophets, or the Jews and non-Jews who have believed), and will discharge all those who claimed life, but who did not respond to the Way, the Truth or the Life.

Leviticus 14:15 And the priest shall take from the log of the oil. And he shall pour upon the left palm of the priest. 16And the priest shall immerse his right finger from the oil that is upon his left palm. And he shall sprinkle from the oil with his finger seven times to the faces of Yehovah. 17And the priest will give from the excess of the oil that is upon his palm upon the tip of the right ear of the ‘encleanee’ and upon the thumb of his right hand and upon the big-toe of his right foot upon the blood of the transgression-sacrifice. 18And he will give the remnant in the oil that is upon the palm of the priest upon the head of the ‘encleanee.’ And the priest will cover upon him to the faces of Yehovah. 19And the priest will do the sin-sacrifice. And he will cover upon the ‘encleanee’ from his uncleanness. And he will slaughter the ascending-sacrifice after.

The priest poured this oil into the left palm of his hand so that he would dip it out with his right hand. The rest of the oil in his palm was placed on the head one being rendered clean.

The priest didn’t immerse his right finger straight into the log of oil since this would ruin the type, and he would not have oil in the palm of his hand to put on the one being rendered clean. I have viewed oil as a type of preparedness.

The priest immersed his right finger from the oil, then sprinkled at Yehovah’s faces seven times. If a finger participates, a hand participates. If a hand participates, the whole arm participates. If an arm participates, the entire priest participates. If a priest participates, the priesthood participates along with all Israel. Thus, all Israel took from this innocent blood, and sprinkled it in the faces of Yehovah. The text doesn’t specify which finger except to state, the right finger. Thus, which finger is responsible isn’t the issue. It is a finger on the right hand, indicating that it wasn’t some branch away from the main priests who did this, but was one of the main, acting priests.

Leviticus 14:48 And if coming, the priest will come and see and behold the stroke did not spread in the house after plastering the house, and the priest shall ‘enclean’ [render or declare clean] the house because the stroke is healed. 49And he shall take to sin the house two birds and a tree of cedar and two worms and hyssop. 50And the priest shall slaughter the one bird unto a vessel of sherd upon waters of lives. 51And he shall take the tree of the cedar and the hyssop and two of the worms and the living bird. And he shall immerse them in the blood of the slaughtered bird and in the waters of the lives. And he shall sprinkle unto the house seven times. 52And he shall sin the house via the blood of the bird and via the waters of the lives and via the living bird and via the tree of the cedar and via the hyssop and via the two worms. 53And he shall send the living bird unto outside to the city unto the faces of the field. And he shall cover upon the house. And he shall be clean.

(The text of the same chapter, an earlier set of verses has proposed explanations of the various types.)

Numbers 19:14 This is the Teaching. Adam when he will die in a tent, every comer unto the tent and everyone who is in the tent—he will be unclean seven of days. 15And every open vessel that there is no fastener twisted upon him, he is unclean. 16And everyone upon the faces of the field who will touch into/via a pierced of a sword or into/via a dead-[one] or into/via a bone of adam or into/via a grave shall be unclean seven of days. 17And they shall take for an unclean-[one] from an ash of the burning of the sin-sacrifice. And he shall give waters of lives upon him unto a vessel. 18And he shall take hyssop. And a clean man shall immerse in water. And he shall sprinkle upon the tent and upon all the vessels and upon the beings who were there and upon the toucher via a bone or via a pierced-[one] or via a dead-[one] or via a grave. 19And the clean-[one] shall sprinkle upon the unclean-[one] in the third day and in the seventh day. And he shall sin him in the seventh day. And he shall launder his garments. And he shall wash via water. And he shall be clean in the evening. 20And a man who will be unclean and he will not sin-himself, and that being shall be cut from the midst of the congregation! For he uncleaned the Sanctuary of Yehovah! He did not sprinkle waters of menstruation upon him! He is unclean! 21And she shall be for a statute of Hider. And a sprinkler of the waters of the menstruation shall launder his garments. And the toucher via waters of the menstruation will be unclean until the evening.

This text refers to the necessary steps for an unclean person (who became unclean through touching something else that is unclean) becoming clean. They involve the following steps:

  • Undisclosed they take sin-sacrifice ashes from the altar, and place the ashes in a vessel.
  • An undisclosed he will pour waters of lives on the ashes in the vessel. This forms a combination that is identified as waters of menstruation (see verse 20). Thus, the man is being sprinkled with menstrual waters; he is certainly being recognized as unclean.
  • The same undisclosed he will take hyssop.
  • A clean man will immerse the hyssop in water. (That may not be apparent in the English text, but the Hebrew construction is normal for this understanding.) If hyssop typifies “I will discharge” (referring to Yehovah doing the discharging, as with menstrual blood), that very means of the discharge will be immersed in waters of menstruation.
  • The clean man will sprinkle the waters of lives combination with the sin sacrifice ashes upon the Tent and upon all the vessels, and upon the beings who were present when the person became unclean, and upon the unclean person. Thus, when one becomes unclean, the entire Congregation becomes in need of the menstruation waters (the Tent and the vessels being types of the Congregation and persons in that Congregation of Yehovah).
  • The clean person must accomplish two more sprinklings: in the third day and in the seventh day. The third day, then, typifies a major event, and the seventh day another different major event in a week of turning Israel from unclean to clean.
  • The seventh-day sprinkling sins the unclean person. He thus must launder his garments, and he must wash with water.
  • He will be clean in the evening.
  • The sprinkler of the waters of the menstruation must launder his garments.
  • Whoever touches those waters of menstruation will be unclean until the evening.

Immersing the “I will discharge” in the menstruation waters is a major baptism form. While a reader might be tempted to think of the menstrual waters as cleaning the hyssop, it doesn’t do that. If it did, anyone upon whom those waters came would be clean. They are not; they are unclean. Those waters were the waters of lives (which, if imbibed with faith, give everlasting life), but the ashes of the sin sacrifices were mixed with them. They thus became intimately connected with sin sacrifices, and they became unclean. Yet, they are necessary for one becoming clean. Thus, the sin sacrifice and the waters of lives are both necessary for anyone becoming clean; one or the other won’t do.

Next, the person must become entirely sinned (verse 20). He must “sin himself” (thus making himself entirely a sinner). He must have the waters of menstruation sprinkled on him; and the only way those waters can be sprinkled is by the immersion (baptism) of the hyssop (“I will discharge”) into the waters of menstruation. The person must recognize that Yehovah will indeed slough off every Israeli sinner who will not become clean, immersing His discharging into the very waters that alone can render him (or her) clean, waters that first make the person totally unclean.

 

7. Jewish Traditional Baptism: Orthodox Pictorial Baptism

I have heard that one form is as follows. (I could not prove this if I had to do so.) One comes to a place of much water and enters it approaching the one who will immerse. Words are exchanged; the immerser brings the convert completely under the water and up three times. The convert is given a (1) new Hebrew name. The convert (2) leaves the water a different way than he came in. (3) His clothes worn during immersion are buried or burned. A New Name. A new Walk. A New Lifestyle.

 

8. A Suggestion For A Present‑Day Pictorial Baptism

One comes to the immerser. The one being baptized is asked to give reasons for baptism (to make sure he understands), and also is asked concerning Salvation, sin, etc. Scriptures may be read for the sake of any who may be watching. The person is immersed in the Name of the Father, Yehovah (down and up once); in the Name of the Son, Yeshua our God (down and up the second time); and the Name of the Holy Spirit, Yehovah (down and up the third time), according to the “Shma” (‘Hearken, Israel! Yehovah, Elohenu [our Gods], Yehovah, is one!’). The person then exits the water another way and changes clothes. The old garments of baptism are buried or burned.


9. Conclusion

Rituals are for the thoughtless. Good comes if one turns both from sin and slavery to sin, from true uncleanness to cleanness before Yehovah. Individuals and individualism are rarely what is important in the Bible. A Congregation, and Body—the entire group is subject to the uncleanness of one of its members.

Biblical immersions are for very different reasons, and give very different pictures. Confusing them, mixing them together, or giving wrong interpretations of them will lead to results that will not benefit, and that will mislead others, including to death.

 

Various Cups in the Bible

The Various Cups of the Bible

 

 

A. Two Special Cases

Diviner’s Cup

 

Genesis 44:1 And [Joseph] commanded whoever is over his house, saying, “Fill the men’s sacks of food just as they will be able to carry. And put silver of a man into his sack’s mouth. 2And thou wilt put my goblet—the silver goblet—in the mouth of the sack of the little, and the silver of his break.” And he did according to the speech that Joseph spoke. 3The morning is light. And they sent the men, they and their asses. 4They exited the city. They didn’t distance, and Joseph said to whoever is over his house, “Arise! Pursue after the men and overtake them. And say unto them, ‘Why ‘peaced’ ye bad under good? 5Is not this in which my lord will drink? And he, divining, will divine via him! Ye bad-did what ye did!” 6And he overtook them. And he spoke these same words unto them. 7And they said unto him, “Why will my lord speak according to these words? Profanity to thy slaves from doing according to this speech! 8Behold, we returned unto thee the silver that we found in the mouth of our sacks from the land of Canaan. And how shall we steal silver or gold from thy lord’s house? 9With whom he will be found from thy servants, and he shall die! And we, we also shall be slaves to my lord!” 10And he said, “And also now he is established according to your speeches! He with whom he shall be found will be a slave to me! And ye, ye shall be innocent.” 11And they hurried. And they descended, a man with his sack to the land. And they opened a man his sack. 12And he dug. He began in the big and he finished in the little. And he found the goblet in Benjamin’s sack. 13And they tore their clothes. And a man loaded upon his ass. And they returned to the city. 14And Judah came, and his brethren to Joseph’s house. (And he, he is still there). And they fell to his faces landward. 15And Joseph said to them, “What deed is this that ye did? Did ye not know that, divining, a man who is as I will divine?” 16And Judah said, “What will we say unto my lord? What will we speak? And what will we justify ourselves? The Elohim found the iniquity of thy slaves. Behold, we are slaves to my lord, also we and also whom the goblet is found in his hand.” 17And he said, “Profanity to me from doing this! The man in whose hand the goblet is found—he shall be a slave to me! And ye—ascend ye to peace unto your father!”

 

Joseph commanded that another type of cup be placed in Benjamin’s food sack. He called it the cup by which he would divine (a strictly occult term). Joseph was not into the occult; he feared Yehovah. Yet he prophetically filled a role that Yeshua will fill regarding Israel, for Yeshua’s prophecies will seem to be divination to the Israelis once they start happening before and during the Tribulation.

 

This very cup was used to save the lives of Joseph’s family, but Joseph’s brothers were terror-stricken by this cup’s presence in Benjamin’s sack. The same will occur when Yeshua sets His ‘divining tools’ into Israel’s ‘food sack’ during the Tribulation.

 

 

Drinking the Blood of Men

2 Samuel 23:15 And David lusted. And he said, “Who will water me, waters from the Beit-Lekhem well that are in the gate?” 16And three of the valiant-[ones] broke through into the camp of Palestinians. And they drew water from the Beit-Lekhem well that is in the gate. And they carried and came unto David. And he was not willing to drink them. And he poured them to Yehovah. 17And he said, “My profanity to her is to me, Yehovah, from my doing this—the blood of the men walking via their beings.” And he was not willing to drink them. Three valiant-[ones] did these.

 

1 Chronicles 11:17 And David lusted. And he said, “Who will water me, waters from the Beit-Lekhem well that are in the gate?” 18And three broke through into the camp of Palestinians. And they drew water from the Beit-Lekhem well that is in the gate. And they carried and came unto David. And David was not willing to drink them. And he poured them to Yehovah. 19And he said, “My profanity to her is to me from my Gods from doing this—will I drink the blood of these men walking via their beings? For they brought them via their beings!” And he was not willing to drink them. Three of the valiant-[ones] did these.
If anyone (or any group) risks his life to do a service for another, that person is offering his blood. If the benefactor willingly or unwillingly receives the benefit, the benefactor has drunk the blood of the one who took the risk.

 

While this is how Yehovah views simple heroism, there is another issue. If the service done is for entertainment and not to sustain life, attempt to restore health, or for some truly heroic purpose, the recipient of the entertainment has also drunk the blood of that person (whether the person died or not), and this is the same as enjoying blood sports in historic Roman arenas for personal entertainment. It is a great act of contempt against Yehovah, since the image of God has been risked for entertainment purposes.

 

Some make it their life’s work to take risks (Hollywood stunt personnel, race car drivers, etc.); they are in a different category. Those who willingly join the riskiest forms of the armed services (like the Navy Seals) are also the greatest risk takers. There is a major distinction between these two types of volunteers, however. A Navy Seal is risking his life for his country. That can include saving innocent lives; any lives they save by their risks fall under the drinking blood option above. Anyone whose life is saved by another, and who thus drinks that hero’s or heroine’s blood, is doing right by drinking. Anyone who derives entertainment from acts of heroism personally done for them (I am therefore not referring to race car drivers who love the thrill and do it for personal enjoyment, not to save lives), and no other benefit, is violently drinking the blood of others, and will receive appropriate condemnation.

 

This cup of the blood of men is another cup. Yeshua volunteered His life to save the lives of many and to everlastingly save many. All who grasp that Salvation, taking advantage of it, are drinking Yeshua’s blood.

 

 

B. Humanly Caused Cups

The Cup of Violence

Proverbs 4:17 For they eat the bread of wickedness, and drink the wine of violence.

 

The wine of violence is not from Yehovah; that is a manmade cup.

 

 

The Cup of Waters

Psalms 73:10 “Therefore He shall return His people here!” and “The waters of fullness shall be sucked-out for them!”

 

This is not a legitimate cup. Bad guys make these two statements in their sarcasm and bitter vituperations against Yehovah.

 

 

C. Deity-Caused Cups

The Cup of Wrath

Isaiah 51:15 “And I am Yehovah thy Gods, calmer of the sea, and his waves roared! Yehovah of Hosts is His Name! 16And I put my words into thy mouth! And I blanketed thee in the shadow of my hand to plant heavens and to foundation land and to say to Zion, ‘Thou art my People!’” 17Awaken thyself [feminine]! Awaken thyself [feminine]! Stand-thou [feminine], Jerusalem who drank the cup of His heat from the hand of Yehovah! Thou drank, thou drained the cheating of a cup of self-reeling! 18There is no guide to her from all sons she childed! And there is no grasper into her hand from all sons she reared! 19 “Twice, behold, I called thee! Who will be wandered to thee? The devastation and the shattering and the famine and the sword? Who? I will console thee!” 20Thy sons took-cover. They lay in the head of all streets as a luster of a net, the full-ones of the heat of Yehovah, rebuke of thy Gods! 21Therefore hearken-thou [feminine] this [feminine], humble-one [feminine], and drunk-one [feminine], and not from wine. 22So said thy Lords Yehovah and thy Gods! He will fight His people! “Behold, I took from thine hand the cup of self-reeling, the cheating of a cup of my heat! Thou wilt not gather-again to drink her again! 23And I will put her into the hand of thy grievers who said to thy being, ‘Prostrate! And we have crossed-over!’ And thou didst put thy body as land and as the outside for crossers-over!”

 

The word kavah in Hebrew has the flavour of spoiling and robbing, but these are best covered by other words. It is more akin to cheating with the following acceptations: to deprive by trickery; defraud; mislead, fool: illusions that cheat the eye; elude, escape: cheat death. Yehovah ‘cheated’ potential victims of the devastating cup of Yehovah’s heat (fury) they were about to drink. They didn’t know He did that, as if he had defrauded them, tricked them, etc. Yet, He saved their lives. It would be like a hero who takes the place of a prisoner who has been sentenced to death without the prisoner knowing what occurred, only to find later that the hero died in that person’s place.

 

The cup of heat is the cup of fury.

 

Psalm 11:5 Yehovah shall test a righteous-[one]. And His being hated a culpable-[one] and a lover of violence! 6He will rain traps, fire and brimstone and a spirit/wind of pouring-out-flights [where folks must flee their homes and lands] upon culpable-[ones], a portion of their cup! 7For Yehovah is righteous. He loved righteousnesses. They shall envision straightness within Him.

 

One aspect of Yehovah’s fury when that cup of iniquity is full is shown by Yehovah forcing folks out of their homes. If the fury is great enough, He will destroy the entire land (as He did with Sodom, etc.). Otherwise, losing homes and being taken captive will be the result.

 

Psalms 75:8 For a cup is in the hand of Yehovah. And the foaming wine was full, mixed. And He poured from this. But her dregs shall go-forth. All the culpable of the land shall drink!

 

This shows the location of the cup: “in the hand of Yehovah.” Yehovah pours, though in other texts He sometimes gives others that responsibility. He did so with Yeshua, and He did so with Jeremiah.

 

The dregs of the cup (the particulate matter at the bottom) also must go from the cup; it will be entirely emptied. All culpable folks (guilty before Yehovah) will drink from this cup. Most cups will be connected with races. This one is connected with all members of all races.

 

Jeremiah 25:15 For so said Yehovah Gods of Israel unto me, “Take this cup of the wine of the fury from my hand. And water her with him: all the races that I am sending thee unto them. 16And they shall drink. And they shall stagger. And they shall praise themselves from the faces of the sword that I am sending between them.” 17And I took the cup from the hand of Yehovah. And I watered all the races that Yehovah sent me unto them: 18Jerusalem and cities of Judah and her kings, her princes—to give them to her sword to desolation, to her shriek and to her worthlessness as this day, 19Pharaoh king of Egypt and his servants and his princes and all his people, 20and all the mixture and all kings of the land of Utz, and all kings of the land of Palestinians, and Ashkelon and Azzah (Gaza) and Ekron and the remnant of Ashdod, 21Edom and Moab and the sons of Ammon, 22and all kings of Tyre and all kings of Zidon and kings of the island that is in-over the sea, 23Dedan and Tema and Buz and all cutters of corners, 24and all kings of a [desert] crosser and all kings of abiding [desert] crossers in the desert, 25and all kings of Zimri and all kings of Elam and all kings of Medes, 26and all the near and far kings of the north, a man unto his brother, and all the kingdoms of the land that are upon faces of the soil. And King Sheshach shall drink after them.” 27And thou shalt say unto them, ‘So said Yehovah of hosts, Gods of Israel, “Drink-ye! And be-drunk-ye! And vomit-ye! And fall-ye! And ye shall not arise from the faces of the sword that I am sending between you!” 28And he shall be that they shall refuse to take the cup from thy hand to drink. And thou shalt say unto them, ‘So said Yehovah of hosts, “Drinking, ye shall drink!”

 

This cup is singular, and includes all kingdoms on the faces of the planet starting with Israel and ending with a King Sheshach. This one cup of Yehovah’s fury will be passed from one to the other by the hand of Jeremiah (who already did this, but the kings of the world have no clue, since these kings will not be born and reign for many centuries). Yehovah sends historical prophets to deliver messages to future persons, at times; time is no barrier to Yehovah.

 

Revelation 14:6-10 will cover these events from the angle of Babylon and the cups.

 

Jeremiah 49:12 For so said Yehovah,  “Behold, who it is not their justice to drink the cup—drinking, they shall drink. And thou art he—innocent—thou shalt be innocent? Thou shalt not be innocent! For, drinking, thou shalt drink!”

 

This text is speaking to Edom, including Petra (Botzrah). Yehovah is warning that Edom will most certainly drink from the cup of His wrath.

 

Lamentations 4:21 Rejoice and be glad, Daughter of Edom, my dweller in the land of Utz! A cup shall cross-over also upon thee! Thou shalt-be-drunk. And thou stripped-naked thyself!

 

This cup of Yehovah’s wrath causes drinkers to be drunk. That drunkenness is from shock at the terrible and successful attacks of enemies or at the furious destructions of Yehovah.

 

A land stripping naked indicates a total loss of armour and the exposure of all sensitive body parts that not only can feel very great pain, but can quickly bring the body to death when harmed.

 

Obadiah 1:15 For the Day of Yehovah is approached upon all the races. Just-as thou did, He will do to thee! Thy retribution shall return via thy head! 16For just-as ye drank upon the mountain of my Holy-[One], all the races shall continually drink! And they shall drink, and they shall swallow. And they shall be as they were not!

 

Yehovah guarantees that the bad-guy races will drink, will swallow, and will obtain the retribution for their deeds. The end result is the erasure of their society. (He also protects His own who are among the races from being killed by His wrath; His wrath is very specific. That doesn’t mean they don’t suffer; they certainly do as they see their possessions, homes, family, friends, neighbours, etc. be destroyed or go into slavery at the hands of a very angry enemy.)

 

Habakkuk 2:16 Thou art filled: lightness [unimportance] from glory! Drink—also thou—and thy foreskin shall circle upon thee! A cup of the right of Yehovah and vomiting of shame is upon thy glory.

 

The cup is associated with vomiting and shame. Once Yehovah pours that cup, the group upon which it is poured will lose its importance (glory), and will be brought to great shame and sickness. Nakedness will also result—the nakedness of a group that is suddenly without any defense from attack—not even the clothing that the group would put on. (This is in contrast to another text commanding a group to put on the whole armour of God.)

 

Revelation 16:1 And I heard a great voice from the Temple saying to the seven angels, “Go your ways, and pour out the vials of the wrath of God upon the land!”

 

This text doesn’t mention the cup, but instead but instead, vials. These are shallow bowls. They contain the wrath of God. The entire chapter of Revelation 16 covers these.

 

Psalm 79:6 Pour out thy wrath upon the races that have not known thee and upon the kingdoms that have not called upon thy Name! 

 

 

The Cup of Waste and Desolation

Ezekiel 23:31 “Thou hast walked in the way of thy sister; therefore will I give her cup into thine hand.” 32Thus says the Lord Yehovah, “Thou shalt drink of thy sister’s deep and large cup. Thou shalt be laughed to scorn and had in derision. It contains much. 33Thou shalt be filled with drunkenness and sorrow, with the cup of waste and desolation, with the cup of thy sister Samaria.

 

This cup is deep and large. When a group finally drinks it, the result is waste and desolation, meaning that the previously occupied and busy land is now a destroyed ghost town. The population has suffered slaughter and has been taken captive. All the building, the business and the manufacturing goes into recycling, and into giving future archaeologists something to dig.

 

 

The Cup of Staggering

Psalms 60:3 Thou showed Thy people hardness. Thou made-us-drink wine of staggering!

 

Yehovah will sometimes make a people drunk (and thus easily conquered) if that people becomes vile and lovers of sin. (A people that is idolatrous doesn’t necessarily fall into this category.)

 

 

The Cup of Reeling

Zechariah 12:2 Behold, I am putting Jerusalem a goblet of reeling to all the peoples around. And he will also be upon Yehudah via a siege upon Jerusalem.

 

 

The Cup of Tears

Psalms 80:5 Thou hast fed them bread of a tear. And Thou hast watered them via the tears of a third-one.

 

This cup contains tears. The group that drinks this cup will deeply weep.

 

Psalms 102:9 For I ate ash as bread. And I mingled my drink via weeping 11from the faces of Thy indignation and Thy fury. For Thou carried me, and Thou slung me!

 

While the contents of this cup are not given (though they are mingled—that is, a mixed drink), they were mingled via weeping.

 

 

The Cup of Iniquity of a Particular Race

Genesis 15:16 But in the fourth generation they shall come hither again: for the iniquity of the Amorites is not yet full.

 

A text might not mention a cup, while alluding to it. The iniquity of the Amorites was stored in a cup. Yehovah will force them to drink their own iniquity once that cup has become full. Other texts discussed in this document show that all races have cups, and all will drink from their own cups once they are full.

 

 

The Cup of (Being) Babylon

Jeremiah 51:7 Babylon is a gold cup in hand of Yehovah. She is inebriating all the land from her wine. Races drank. Therefore the races shall praise themselves!

 

“All the land” includes all continents and islands. Babylon itself is this gold cup. Yehovah holds this cup, and will give drink to all the races. The races will become drunk. They will then praise themselves in their drunken stupor. (Certain forms of insanity include symptoms in which insane persons declare that they are able to do what they truly cannot do, and that they are what they are not. Thus, they commend themselves for what they did not and cannot do.)

 

 

The Cup of the Wrath of Babylon’s Fornication

Revelation 14:8 And there followed another angel, saying, “Babylon is fallen! Is fallen! That great city! For she made all races to drink of the wine of the wrath of her fornication!” 9And the third angel followed them, saying with a loud voice, “If any man worship the beast and his image, and receive his mark in his forehead, or in his hand, 10the same shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God that is poured out without mixture into the cup of His indignation! And he shall be tormented with fire and brimstone in the presence of the holy angels and in the presence of the Lamb!”

 

This text describes “wine of the wrath of fornication.” The other cups did not specify the offenses. Thus, this is a particular cup for a particular offense.

 

Babylon is a city (one in the past, and will be one in the future). Thus, fornication with a city requires other cities (or locations). It is as if those cities are ‘living together’ unmarried, but acting as if they are. Two cities with very different gods can always do trade. It is when they begin to take on the idolatries of each other that they are committing fornication.

 

Babylon did not know that she caused others to drink of the wine of wrath, since Babylon will have no investment in the Word of Yehovah and in belief of Yehovah. This is from Yehovah’s angle; He is saying that she caused them to drink of that wine of wrath.

 

The text then speaks of individuals: “If any man worship the beast and his image, and receive his mark in his forehead, or in his hand, 10the same shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God that is poured out without mixture into the cup of His indignation!” This wine of the wrath of God will occur in this life, and will continue into the Lake of Fire and Sulfur. This cup differs from the previous cup, since this cup is only for individuals, while the previous cup is for races. Thus, this text does give evidence or proof that individuals also drink from a cup from Yehovah.

 

The lack of mixture is a lack of cutting the strength of the wine; they will get it in its full potency.

 

I have not seen or heard of anyone drinking a liquid that was identified as this wine. That doesn’t mean it isn’t literal, since I also have not heard of anyone literally drinking of the waters of life; yet the Bible guarantees that that is literal water that folks will drink. (I can do some supposing at this point. This is only a guess. Suppose that each person will drink of a literal cup at the judgment after the Millennium, and the cup contains the full measure of the wrath of Yehovah toward that person even as that person waits then to enter the Lake of Fire and Sulfur.)

 

The cup itself is called “the cup of His indignation.” Therefore, sinning fills the cup of Yehovah’s indignation. Indignation means a strong passion or emotion of displeasure or antagonism excited by a real or supposed injury or insult to oneself or others, or by the intent to do such injury. For Yehovah, the definition would then be, Indignation means a strong passion of displeasure and antagonism excited by a real injury and insult to Himself and to justice including the intent to do such injury against Yehovah and justice. The word indignation in Hebrew is stronger than hatred. It is akin to outrage. It is the word katsaf, and represents a fervent drive to cut such a person off from the land of the living. Outraging Yehovah just isn’t smart.

 

Every person potentially has a cup of Yehovah’s indignation. That cup fills every time a person sins. The cup never empties (unless everlasting Salvation occurs), and thus the longer the person lives, the fuller that cup gets. This is one reason why Yehovah cut down longevity.

 

Revelation 16:19 And the great city was divided into three parts. And the cities of the races fell. And great Babylon came in remembrance before God to give unto her the cup of the wine of the fierceness of His wrath.

 

This cup is called “the cup of the wine of the fierceness of His wrath.” Therefore, it is akin to the Lake of Fire and Sulfur, since this lake is the expression of the fierceness of His wrath.

 

Revelation 18:6 Reward her even as she rewarded you, and double unto her double according to her works. Fill to her double in the cup that she filled.

 

Babylon is again considered in this text. You refers to the Israelis. They are told to reward Babylon just as she did to them. She doubled the punishments and torments of the Israelis; her cup filled as she sinned. Her cup’s portion will be doubled. She will thus drink double.

 

 

The Cup of the Waters of Poison

Jeremiah 8:14 Concerning what are we sitting? Assemble! And we have come unto cities of the fortification! And we were silenced there. For Yehovah our Gods silenced us. And He watered us waters of poison! For we sinned to Yehovah.

 

These Israelis are admitting that they sinned, and that Yehovah watered them with waters of poison. This is a very surprising text (to me). The next text explains:

 

Jeremiah 9:15 Therefore so said Yehovah of hosts Gods of Israel, “Behold, I am feeding them—this people—wormwood. And I will water them waters of poison.”

 

Yehovah promises to water them with waters of poison.

 

Jeremiah 23:15 Therefore so said Yehovah of hosts concerning the prophets, “Behold I am feeding them wormwood. And I am watering them waters of poison. For blasphemy exited to all the land from with prophets of Jerusalem!”

 

 

D. Cups That Lead to Benefit Or Avoid Suffering

The Cup of Yeshua

Matthew 20:22 But Yeshua answered and said, “Ye don’t know what ye ask. Are ye able to drink of the cup of which I shall drink and to be baptized with the baptism with which I am baptized?” They say unto Him, “We are able!” 23And He says unto them, “Ye shall indeed drink of my cup and be baptized with the baptism with which I am baptized. But to sit on my right hand and on my left is not mine to give. But it shall be given to them for whom it is prepared of my Father.”

 

That cup is the wine of the wrath of Yehovah on account of Israel’s accrued sins since the last pouring of the last cup.

 

Mark 10:38 But Yeshua said unto them, “Ye don’t know what ye ask. Can ye drink of the cup of which I drink, and be baptized with the baptism with which I am baptized?” 39And they said unto him, “We can.” And Yeshua said unto them, “Ye shall indeed drink of the cup of which I drink and ye shall be baptized with the baptism that I am baptized.”

 

Matthew 26:39 And He went a little further. And He fell on His face. And He prayed, saying, “My Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me. Nevertheless not as I will, but as Thou.”

 

Matthew 26:42 He went away again the second time. And He prayed, saying, “My Father, if this cup will not pass away from me except I drink it, Thy will be done.”

 

This cup is set for Israel. Israel had accrued iniquity upon iniquity by this time. The cup was full. Yehovah had given it to Yeshua to pour out, so that Israel would reap the full measure of iniquity. That would have meant Israel’s being torn to shreds, taken captive, and the Israelis being tossed out of the land. Yeshua did not desire to pour that cup. He knew that He could avoid pouring it by drinking it: taking Israel’s iniquities upon Himself. That is what He did.

 

Mark 14:36 And He said, “Abba (Father), all things are possible unto Thee. Take this cup away from me. And not what I will, but what Thou wilt.”

 

Luke 22:42 Saying, “Father, if thou be willing, remove this cup from me. And not my will be done, but thine.”

 

John 18:11 Then Yeshua said unto Peter, “Put up thy sword into the sheath. The cup which my Father hath given me—shall I not drink it?”

 

Yeshua personally suffered the way that all Israel would have suffered, being turned over to the Gentiles to be beaten, humiliated, cursed, bloodied, accused, and set for death.

 

 

The Cup of Vinegar

Matthew 27:34 They gave Him vinegar to drink mingled with poison. And when He had tasted thereof, He would not drink.

 

Had Yeshua taken from that cup, He would have died a suicide.

 

Matthew 27:48 And straightway one of them ran and took a sponge. And he filled it with vinegar. And he put it on a reed. And he gave Him to drink.

 

Yeshua was willing to drink from this cup. It was not poison, but was a type.

 

Psalms 69:21 And they gave poison into my [bread] breaking. And for my thirst they watered me [gave me to drink] vinegar!

 

Vinegar is from the verb, to be cruel. This cup, then, is the cup of cruelty. Humans give this cup to others.

 

 

The Cup of Blessing

Psalms 23:5 Thou shalt order a table to my faces in front of mine afflicters. Thou hast greased my head with oil. My cup is abundance.

 

A few of the cups are very good. It appears that more cups are disasters; more texts give warnings because more groups are headed for destruction.

 

This cup is abundance. It is a blessing because Yehovah has promised it (thus invoking it) and given it.

 

Psalms 36:8 They shall be abundantly satisfied with the fatness of thy house; and thou shalt make them drink of the river of thy pleasures.

 

1 Corinthians 10:16 The cup of blessing that we bless, is it not the communion [joint participation] of the blood of Messiah? The bread that we break, is it not the communion of the Body of Messiah?

 

The cup itself is the Covenant, and that Covenant was sealed in Yeshua’s blood. That Covenant, then, includes the Saints’ joint participation in Yeshua’s blood. That is a blessing, since it not only is unto everlasting life, but it also provides for whatever Saints (as a group) need to live Godly and to demonstrate faith (together as a group) to others so that they can be benefited (if they will desire).

 

1 Corinthians 10:21 Ye cannot drink the cup of the Lord and the cup of devils. Ye cannot be partakers of the Lord’s table and of the table of devils.

 

That cup of blessing is not available to those who are drinking from the cup of devils. Thus, the devils also have a cup.

 

 

The Cup of Yehovah’s Measure

Psalms 16:5 Yehovah is the measure of my portion and my cup. Thou art the Maintainer of my lot!

 

Can Yehovah be a cup? He can be anything He desires to be, but not all things are reasonable for Him to be. Yehovah is a Rock. I don’t see where He is a cup.

 

If this is the case, the division of the first statement would be, “Yehovah is the measure of my portion” and “Yehovah is the measure of my cup.” (The alternative would be a division like this: “Yehovah is the measure of my portion” and “Yehovah is my cup.”) I do not agree with the alternative because another psalm states, “My cup runs over.” If Yehovah were the cup, how could He run over? He fills all things. Therefore I will go with the first: “Yehovah is the measure of my portion” and “Yehovah is the measure of my cup.”

 

If Yehovah is the measure of any cup, and Yehovah is infinite, that cup’s measure cannot be limited, though the cup can overflow with blessings.

 

 

The Cup of Salvations

Psalms 116:13 I will carry the cup of Salvations. And I will call via Name Yehovah.

 

This cup contains more than one salvation. Each one is a rescue from death. Carrying that cup indicates that it is being transported for the sake of others, not just for the sake of the carrier. (Salvation is from the Jews.)

 

 

The Cup of the Waters of Life

John 4:9 The Samaritan woman therefore says to Him, “How dost thou, being a Jew, ask from me, a woman of Samaria, to drink?” For Jews have no intercourse with Samaritans. 10Yeshua answered and said to her, “If thou had known the gift of God and Who it is who says to thee, ‘Give me to drink,’ thou would have asked Him, and He would have given waters of life to thee! 11The woman says to Him, “Sir, thou hast nothing to draw, and the well is deep. From where, then, hast thou the waters of life? 12Art thou greater than our father Jacob who gave us the well, and drank of it himself, and his sons and his cattle?” 13Yeshua answered. And He said to her, “Everyone who drinks of this water will thirst again. 14But whoever will drink of the water that I will give him shall in no wise thirst forever. But rather, the water that I will give to him shall become a fountain of water in him springing up into everlasting life.”

 

Yeshua addressed this woman concerning the waters of life. While no cup is mentioned in this text, and while an artesian well is mentioned, I have still chosen to categorize this as a cup.

 

1 Corinthians 10:4 And they did all drink the same spiritual drink. For they drank of that spiritual Rock that followed them. And that Rock was Messiah.

 

Again, no cup is mentioned. The Rock is mentioned, and the waters of life came from that Rock.

 

 

The Cup of Consolation

Jeremiah 16:7 They shall not split to them upon mourning to console him concerning a dead-[one]. And they shall not water them a cup of consolations concerning his father and concerning his mother.

 

This cup of consolations is what one person can ‘pour’ upon another when they are both mourning over a dead person for whom they greatly cared. Yehovah is indicating what will not happen. (They will suffer many deaths, but the deceased loved ones will not be buried, and individuals will not separate from the group to console others in mourning. Instead, dead bodies will be everywhere.

 

 

The Cup of the New Covenant

Matthew 26:27 And He took the cup. And gave thanks. And He gave it to them, saying, “Drink ye all of it. 28For this is my blood of the new Covenant that is shed for many for the remission of sins.”

 

This text gives the appearance that the cup is His blood. Another text will correct this view, showing that the cup is the Covenant that is in His blood.

 

Luke 22:17 And He took the cup. And He gave thanks. And He said, “Take this and divide it among yourselves. 18For I say unto you, I will not drink of the fruit of the vine until the kingdom of God shall come.” 19And He took bread. And He gave thanks. And He broke it and gave unto them, saying, “This is my Body that is given for you. Do this in remembrance of me.” 20Likewise also the cup after supper, saying, “This cup is the new Covenant in my blood that is shed for you.”

 

(Body does not refer to Yeshua’s physical body; it refers to what is later called “the Body of Christ,” having all living Israel as its core, and having additions in Saints from all races.)

 

This text mentions two cups, but the first cup isn’t described. The second is the New Covenant, and that is in His blood. Thus, it refers to the shedding of His blood on the cross. Yet, the cup is not His blood. It is the Covenant. Thus, that cup represents that Covenant.

 

Who drinks that cup, and what does it contain? The cup Yeshua passed contained wine at this Passover meal. Yet, what are the contents of that cup that Yeshua is describing? The cup contains Yeshua’s blood. This will directly link to the other section in this document in which King David refuses to drink the blood of valiant persons who risked their lives to obtain good-tasting water for him. Everyone who takes advantage of Salvation provided by Yeshua’s blood being shed drinks His blood.

 

John 6:49 “Your fathers did eat manna in the wilderness, and are dead. 50This is the bread that comes down from the heavens so-that a man may eat thereof and not die. 51I am the living bread that came down from the heavens. If any man eat of this bread, he shall live forever. And the bread that I will give is my flesh, that I will give for the life of the world.” 52The Jews therefore strove among themselves, saying, “How can this man give us his flesh to eat?” 53Then Yeshua said unto them, “Faith! Faith, I say unto you, except ye eat the flesh of the Son of man and drink His blood, ye have no life in you. 54Whoso eats my flesh and drinks my blood has everlasting life. And I will raise him up at the last day. 55For my flesh is certainly food and my blood is certainly drink. 56He who eats my flesh and drinks my blood dwells in me, and I in him. 57As the living Father has sent me, and I live by the Father, so he who eats me—even he shall live by me. 58This is that bread that came down from the heavens—not as your fathers did eat manna, and are dead. He who eats of this bread shall live forever.”

 

Thus, anyone taking advantage of Yeshua’s sacrifice is drinking His blood.

 

Mark 14:23 And He took the cup. And when He had given thanks, He gave it to them. And they all drank of it. 24And He said unto them, “This is my blood of the new Covenant that is shed for many.”

 

1 Corinthians 11:25 Also, after the same manner, He took the cup when He had supped, saying, “This cup is the new Covenant in my blood. Do ye this in remembrance of me as oft as ye drink it.” 26For as often as ye eat this bread and drink this cup, ye do show the Lord’s death until He comes. 27Therefore whosoever shall eat this bread and drink this cup of the Lord unworthily shall be guilty of the Body and blood of the Lord. 28But a man shall examine himself, and so he shall eat of that bread and drink of that cup.

 

 

The Cup into the Spirit

1 Corinthians 12:13 For we are all immersed into one Body by one Spirit, whether we are Jews or Greeks, whether we are slaves or free. And we all have been made to drink into one Spirit.

 

This corresponds to the waters of life from the following text:

 

John 7:37 In that great last day of the feast, Yeshua stood. And He shouted, saying, “If any man thirst, he shall come unto me and drink. 38He who believes on me, as the Scripture has said, rivers of the waters of life shall flow out of his belly.” 39But He spoke this of the Spirit that they who believe on Him shall receive. For the Holy Spirit was not yet given, because Yeshua was not yet glorified.

 

Thus, drinking of the Spirit of Yehovah is drinking of the waters of life. While no cup is mentioned, a drink is still used.

 

Genesis 27 – The Blessing of Jacob and Esau

The Blessing of Jacob and Esau

Background and Printed Text: Genesis 27:1-28:9

Genesis 27:1 And he was, because He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) was old. And his eyes were weak from seeing. And he called Hairy (Esau) his big son. And he said unto him, “My son!” And he said unto him, “Behold I!” 2And he said, “Behold, na, I was old. I did not know a day of my death. 3And now, carry, na, thy utensils, thy quiver and thy bow, and exit the field. And hunt for me a hunting. 4And make for me tasties just as I loved. And bring to me. And I ate so that my being will bless thee before I will die.” 5And Multiple-Pouring (Rivka) hearkened into the word of He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) unto Hairy (Esau) his son. And Hairy (Esau) walked the field to hunt hunting to bring.

6And Multiple-Pouring (Rivka) said unto He-Will-Heel (Jacob) her son to say, “Behold, I hearkened to thy papa speaking unto Hairy (Esau) thy brother to say, 7‘Bring to me hunting. And make for me tasties. And I have eaten. And I have blessed thee to the faces of Yehovah to the faces of my death.’ 8And now, my son, hearken into my voice to what I am commanding thee. 9Walk, na, unto the flock. And take for me from there two good kids of goats. And I have made them tasties for thy papa just as he loved. 10And thou wilt bring to thy papa. And he will eat in order that he will bless thee to the faces of his death.” 11And He-Will-Heel (Jacob) said unto Multiple-Pouring (Rivka) his mother, “Behold, Hairy (Esau) my brother is a man of hair. And I am a smooth man. 12Perhaps my papa will grope me. And I will be in his eyes as a wander-wander-causer. And I will bring upon me light-esteeming and not a blessing.” 13And his mama said to him, “Thy light-esteeming is upon me, my son. But hearken into my voice. And walk. Take for me!”

14And he walked. And he took. And he came to his mama. And his mama made tasties just as his papa loved. 15And Multiple-Pouring (Rivka) took the favorite garments of Hairy (Esau) her big son that are with her in the inside. And She clothed He-Will-Heel (Jacob) her little son. 16And she clothed upon his hands skins of kids of the goats, and upon the smooth of his necks. 17And she gave the tasties and the bread that she made into the hand of He-Will-Heel (Jacob) her son.

18And he came unto his papa. And he said, “My papa!” And he said, “Behold I! Who art thou? My son?” 19And He-Will-Heel (Jacob) said unto his papa, “I am Hairy (Esau) thy firstborn. I made just as thou spoke unto me. Arise, na. Sit and eat from my hunting so-that thy being will bless me!” 20And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) said unto his son, “What is this? Thou hurried to find, my son?” And he said, “Because Yehovah thy Gods caused-an-encounter to my faces!” 21And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) said unto He-Will-Heel (Jacob), “Approach, na, and I have groped thee, my son! Art thou this my son Hairy (Esau), if not?” 22And He-Will-Heel (Jacob) approached unto He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) his papa. And He groped him. And he said, “The voice is a voice of He-Will-Heel (Jacob), and the hands are the hands of Hairy (Esau)!” 23And he did not recognize him. For his hands were as the hands of Hairy (Esau) his brother, hairs. And he blessed him.

24And he said, “Thou art this my son Hairy (Esau)!” And he said, “I!” 25And he said, “Approach to me. And I have eaten from hunting, my son, so that my being will bless thee.” And He approached to him. And he ate. And he brought to him wine. And he drank.

26And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) his papa said unto him, “Approach, na, and kiss to me, my son!” 27And he approached. And he kissed to him. And he fragranced the fragrance of his garments. And he blessed him, and said to him, “See! The fragrance of my son is as the fragrance of a field that Yehovah blessed him! 28And the Gods will give to thee from dew of the heavens and from the oils of the land and the multiplicity of grain and new-wine. 29Peoples shall serve thee, and folks shall prostrate to thee. Be a valiant-one to thy brothers. And sons of thy mama shall prostrate to thee. Thy cursers are cursed, and thy blessers are blessed.”

And he said to his papa, “My father shall arise and he has eaten from the hunting of his son in order that thy being will bless me!” 32And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) his papa said to him, “Who art thou?” And he said, “I am thy son, thy firstborn, Hairy (Esau)!” 33And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) quaked a big quake unto very much! And he said, “Who? Where is he, the hunter of hunting? And he brought to me. And I ate from all before thou wilt come. And I blessed him. Also, he will be blessed!”

34As Hairy (Esau) hearkened to the words of his papa. And he screamed a big and bitter scream unto very much! And he said to his papa, “Bless me, also I, my papa!” 35And he said, “Thy brother came via deceit. And he took thy blessing!” 36And he said, “Is because he called his name ‘He-Will-Heel (Jacob)’? And he ‘heeled’ me this, strokes. He took my ‘firstbornness,’ and behold now he took my blessing!”

And he said, “Hast thou not neared for me a blessing?” 37And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) answered. And he said to Hairy (Esau), “Behold, I put him a valiant-one to thee! And I gave all his brothers to him for slaves! And I sustained him grain and new-wine. And where to thee? What will I do, my son?” 38And Hairy (Esau) said unto his papa, “One blessing—he is to thee, my papa! Bless me, also I, my papa!” And Hairy (Esau) lifted his voice. And he wept. 39And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) his papa answered. And he said unto him, “Behold, thy settlement will be from oils of the land and from dew of the heavens from above. 40And thou shalt live upon thy sword. And thou shalt serve thy brother. And he shall be just as thou shalt descend. And thou shalt break his yoke from upon thy neck!”

41And Hairy (Esau) grudged He-Will-Heel (Jacob) concerning the blessing that his papa blessed him. And Hairy (Esau) said in his heart, “Days of mourning of my papa shall approach! And I have killed He-Will-Heel (Jacob), my brother!” 42And He told to Multiple-Pouring (Rivka) words of Hairy (Esau) her big son. And she sent. And she called to He-Will-Heel (Jacob) her little son. And she said unto him, “Behold, Hairy (Esau) thy brother consoles himself to thee to kill thee! 43And now, my son, hearken into my voice. And arise. Flee for thee unto White my brother Haranward. 44And thou shalt dwell with him a few days until-that heat of thy brother shall return, 45until the nose of thy brother shall return from with thee. And he will forget what thou did to him. And I will send. And I will take thee from there. Why will I be bereft indeed of both of you one day?”

46And Multiple-Pouring (Rivka) said unto He-Will-Laugh (Isaac), “I abhorred in my lives from the faces of the daughters of Heth (Shatter)! If He-Will-Heel (Jacob) is taking a woman from the daughters of Heth (Shatter) as these, from the daughters of the land, why are lives to me?” [Chapter 28] 1And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) called He-Will-Heel (Jacob). And he blessed him. And he commanded him. And he said to him, “Thou shalt not take a woman from the daughters of Merchant (Canaan)! 2Arise! Walk toward the High Extension (Padanaram) houseward of They-Wasted-A-Mighty-One (Bethuel) father of thy mother. And take a woman to thee from there from daughters of White (Laban), brother of thy mother. 3And Mighty-One-My-Breasts (El Shaddai) will bless thee. And He has ‘fruited’ thee. And He has multiplied thee. And thou shalt be to a congregation of peoples! 4And He will give to thee blessings of Father-Of-A-Crowd—to thee and to thy seed with thee to thy inheriting the land of thy sojournings that Elohim gave to Father-Of-A-Crowd.

5And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) sent He-Will-Heel (Jacob). And he walked toward High Extension (Padanaram) unto White (Laban) son of They-Wasted-A-Mighty-One (Bethuel) the Syrian, brother of Multiple-Pouring (Rivka), mother of He-Will-Heel (Jacob) and Hairy. 6And Hairy saw that He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) blessed He-Will-Heel (Jacob). And he will send him to High Extension (Padanaram) to take a woman to him from there with his blessing him. And he commanded concerning him to say, “Thou shalt not take a woman from daughters of Merchant (Canaan)!” 7And He-Will-Heel (Jacob) hearkened unto his papa and to his mama. And he walked to High Extension (Padanaram). 8And Hairy saw that daughters of Merchant (Canaan) are bad in the eyes of He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) his father. 9And Hairy walked unto Mighty-One-Will-Hearken (Ishmael). And he took to himself What-Hast-Thou-Pierced (Mahalath) daughter of Mighty-One-Will-Hearken (Ishmael) son of Father-Of-A-Crowd sister of Productive-[Ones] (Nebajoth) {fem.} upon his women for a woman.

I. The Game Request (verses 1-5)

Isaac was old and nearly blind. He didn’t know the day he would die. It was very important for him to bless his firstborn child before his death. Isaac told him to take his equipment, exit the field (go out into the field), hunt, and make good-tasting things that he loved. Isaac then promised Esau that Isaac’s being would bless him before Isaac dies.

Rebekah hearkened carefully to this conversation. Esau went on his way to hunt and to bring that to his papa.

Questions

1.   When these men blessed their children before their deaths, were they wishing good things on them and requesting what they would do after their fathers’ deaths?

2.   Why did Isaac want to eat very good food made by his son Esau before his being would bless Esau?

3.   Was Rebekah doing wrong by carefully listening and overhearing her husband’s conversation with Esau?

4.   Did Esau desire the blessing of his father? Explain.

II. The Plot (verses 6-12)

Rivka (Rebecca, Rebekah) told Jacob about the conversation in detail. She then commanded Jacob to hearken to her. She told Jacob to take two goat kids from the flock. Rivka will then make the tasty foods in the very way Isaac loves. Jacob will bring them to Isaac, and Isaac will bless Jacob just before he dies.

Jacob saw a problem with this idea. Esau was covered with hair, and Jacob was nearly hairless, being smooth-skinned. He was used to Isaac feeling things and persons now that he was nearly blind. This will appear to be ‘leading Isaac down the wrong path,’ and thus causing him to wander from the truth. Isaac might view Jacob as far less important than before (lightly esteeming him), and Isaac might refuse to bless him. Rivka answered, “Thy light-esteeming is upon me, my son. But hearken into my voice. And walk. Take for me!”

Questions

1.   Did Rebekah (Rivka) do wrong by telling her son Jacob what Isaac and Esau had said?

2.   Rebekah plotted to fix the meal for Jacob and make it taste so good and so much like what Esau would make, that Isaac would bless Jacob thinking he was blessing Esau. Was this plot evil?

3.   Jacob was a grown man. Rivka commanded him to get the two goat kids for her. Do grown men have to obey their mothers?

4.   Jacob’s main objection to the plan of his mama was that he might appear to Isaac as one who caused his nearly blind papa to wander if he were caught, and that he might cause his father to esteem him as worth very little instead of obtaining a blessing. Were Jacob’s motives right?

5.   Rebekah was willing to be lightly esteemed for this action. Would you be willing to do what is right even if you knew you would suffer for doing it?

6.   Did Rebekah ignore all the harm that this would do to Esau, showing coldness and a lack of love for him?

7.   Why didn’t Rebekah just tell Isaac, and convince him to change his mind regarding the blessing of Esau?

8.   Why was this so important to Rebekah?

III. Preparations (verses 14-17)

Jacob walked. He took the goat kids as directed. Rivka (Rebekah) fixed the food the way Isaac loved it.

Rivka next took Esau’s favorite garments that were inside her tent. She put them on Jacob her younger son. She fastened the goatskins that she had removed from the goat kids onto Jacob’s hands and his neck spots that were smooth so that they felt like part of his hands and his neck. She placed the good food and fresh bread into Jacob’s hand.

Questions

1.   Why the text mention that he walked?

2.   The text states that she took Esau’s favorite garments in order to bring this plot about. Wouldn’t Esau’s knowing this completely destroy the trust he had for his mother?

3.   How did she attach the skins to Jacob so that they felt like Esau’s skin of his hands and the parts of his neck?

4.   How much work did she have to do to make sure that Jacob received that blessing?

IV. The Deed (verses 18-23)

Jacob brought to his father what his mother had fixed. He then called, “My papa!” Isaac asked him, “Who art thou? My son?” Jacob answered, “I am Esau, thy firstborn. I made just as thou spoke unto me. Arise, na. Sit and eat from my hunting so-that thy being will bless me!”

Isaac asked if he (thinking he was Esau) had hurried to find game! He was back so soon! Jacob responded, “Because Yehovah thy Gods caused-an-encounter to my faces!”

Isaac still seemed puzzled, and told ‘Esau’ to approach so that Isaac could grope him. “Art thou this my son Hairy (Esau), if not?”

Jacob approached, and Isaac felt him. He then remarked, “The voice is a voice of Jacob, and the hands are the hands of Esau!” Yet, Isaac didn’t recognize him; the hands were hairy like Esau’s. So, Isaac blessed Jacob.

Questions

1.   Why did Isaac ask, “Who art thou? My son?”

2.   Jacob lied when he said, “I am Esau thy firstborn.” Did he do wrong?

3.   What does “caused an encounter” mean?

4.   In verse 20, Jacob said, “Because Yehovah thy Gods caused-an-encounter to my faces!” Jacob brought Yehovah into this lie, giving Yehovah credit when Yehovah did not do it. Did Jacob sin by doing this?

5. Verses 21 and 22 show Isaac trying to discern (carefully figure out) whether he is truly speaking with Esau. He groped him (felt him in a very personal way), feeling his hands and his neck. In verse 22, Jacob remarks, “The voice is Jacob’s voice, but the hands are the hands of Esau.” Why didn’t Isaac realize that this was not Esau?

V. The Details (verses 24-25)

Isaac next stated, “Thou art this my son Esau!” to which Jacob replied, “I!”

Isaac told him to approach. Isaac now will eat from this hunting, and his being will bless ‘Esau’. Jacob approached. Isaac ate. Jacob brought wine; Isaac drank.

Questions

(No Questions)

VI. The Blessing (verses 26-29)

After eating, Isaac told ‘Esau’ to approach and to kiss him. Jacob did both. Isaac smelled the fragrance of his garments. He then blessed ‘Esau’.

Isaac said to Jacob, “See! The fragrance of my son is as the fragrance of a field that Yehovah blessed him!”

Isaac continued, “And the Gods will give to thee from dew of the heavens and from the oils of the land and the multiplicity of grain and new-wine. Peoples shall serve thee, and folks shall prostrate to thee. Be a valiant-one to thy brothers. And sons of thy mama shall prostrate to thee. Thy cursers are cursed, and thy blessers are blessed.” All the work that both Rivka and Jacob did was to obtain these few statements!

Questions

1.   Why do adults want to be kissed by their children who are grown?

2.   Do young children like to be kissed by their parents?

3.   Why did Isaac want his son to kiss him?

4.   Why did this part of the blessing start with the word “See”? Whom is Isaac commanding to see, and to whom is Isaac speaking when he says, “The fragrance of my son is as the fragrance of a field that Yehovah blessed him”?

5.   What is the fragrance of a field like if Yehovah blessed the field?

6.   What is important about being given from the dew of the heavens?

7.   The next statement in its entirety goes like this: “the Gods will give to thee from the oils of the land.” Why types of oils are these, and why would these be important?

8.   Who is “the Gods,” and why is this plural?

9.   What is important about “the multiplicity of grain”?

10. What is good about the multiplicity of new wine?

11. What does “peoples shall serve thee” mean?

12. What does “folks shall prostrate to thee” mean?

13. Isaac thought that he was passing the Abrahamic blessing on to Esau. Would this have been right to do?

14. The command to “be a valiant one to thy brothers” will be fulfilled by what types of actions?

15. Who are these brothers?

16. What does “sons of thy mama shall prostrate to thee” mean?

17. Who is a curser of Jacob?

18. What is a ‘blesser’ of Jacob?

19. The last part mentions cursers and blessers. Why doesn’t it mention any other category?

20. How will cursers be cursed and blessers be blessed?

VII. The Return (verses 30-31)

Esau arrived back just as Isaac finished blessing Jacob. Esau made the tasties for his father. He then brought them to him.

Questions

1.   Why didn’t someone (besides Rivka and Jacob) tell Esau that his father had already eaten?

2.   What would have happened if Esau had returned while Jacob was feeding Isaac?

VIII. The Exposure (verses 31-33)

Esau told his father to arise and eat from his hunting so that Isaac’s being will bless Esau. Isaac was confused. “Who art thou?” And Esau responded, “I am thy son, thy firstborn, Esau!” Isaac began to greatly shake. He said, “Who?” Then he asked, “Where is he, the hunter of hunting? And he brought to me. And I ate from all before thou wilt come. And I blessed him. Also, he will be blessed!”

Questions

1.   Why did Esau answer the question, “Who art thou?” with “I am thy son, thy firstborn, Esau,” using three different ways to describe who he was?

2.   Why did Isaac greatly quake, and what does that mean?

3.   Why did he then say, “Who?”

4.   Why did he ask, “Where is he, the hunter of hunting?”

5.   Why did Isaac tell Esau, “And he brought to me, and I ate from all before thou wilt come”?

6.   Why did Isaac tell Esau, “And I blessed him”?

7.   When Isaac said, “Also, he will be blessed,” what was Isaac doing?

8.   Did Isaac need to say, “Also, he will be blessed,” or could he have said to Esau, “Cursed be the deceiver! Thy blessing will go to thee, my son, and thou shalt be blessed!”?

IX. The Facts and the Lie (verses 34-36)

Esau hearkened to his papa’s words. Esau then screamed a very big, bitter and long scream.

Then he said to his father, “Bless me—also I—my papa!” Isaac responded, “Thy brother came via deceit. And he took thy blessing!” Esau bitterly responded, “Is because he called his name ‘He-Will-Heel (Jacob)’? And he ‘heeled’ me this, strokes. He took my firstbornness, and behold now he took my blessing!”

Questions

1.   Why start a sentence with as?

2.   What does hearken mean?

3.   Why did Esau react so strongly (by screaming a big and bitter scream) when he heard that Jacob was blessed?

4.   For what was Esau asking when he said to his papa, “Bless me, also I, my papa”?

5.   Did Isaac realize why Esau was so upset?

6.   Was Isaac telling Esau about Jacob’s evil deed in verse 35?

7.   What does “he ‘heeled’ me this, strokes” mean?

8.   When Esau said, “Is because he called his name ‘He-Will-Heel’? And he ‘heeled’ me this, strokes. He took my ‘firstbornness,’ and behold now he took my blessing,” was Esau speaking the truth?

X. The Lesser Blessing (verses 36-40)

Esau figured that Isaac should have a blessing just for him that Isaac ‘neared’—that is, brought near to occur. Isaac responded, “Behold, I put him a valiant-one to thee! And I gave all his brothers to him for slaves! And I sustained him grain and new-wine. And where to thee? What will I do, my son?” Esau took this very hard: “One blessing—he is to thee, my papa! Bless me, also I, my papa!” He wept loudly.

Isaac then began to give Esau a blessing: “Behold, thy settlement will be from oils of the land and from dew of the heavens from above. And thou shalt live upon thy sword. And thou shalt serve thy brother. And he shall be just as thou shalt descend. And thou shalt break his yoke from upon thy neck!”

Questions

1.   What does “Hast thou not neared for me a blessing?” mean?

2.   What does “I put him a valiant-one to thee” mean?

3.   The text states, “I gave all his brothers to him for slaves.” How many brothers did Jacob have? Explain.

4.   What does “I sustained him grain and new-wine” mean?

5.   Explain “And where to thee?”:

6.   What was Isaac expressing when he said, “What will I do, my son?”

7.   Isaac finally gave Esau a blessing. What happened so that Isaac was able to do that?

8.   What does “thy settlement will be from oils of the land” mean?

9.   What does “thy settlement will be from dew of the heavens from above” mean?

10. What does “thou shalt live upon thy sword” mean?

11. What will be one of Esau’s main services that he will do?

12. Explain “And he shall be just as thou shalt descend. And thou shalt break his yoke from upon thy neck!”

13. What is a yoke?

14. Will Esau’s breaking Jacob’s yoke from upon his neck be good, or will it be bad?

XI. The Second Plot and the Plan (verses 41-45)

Esau held a grudge against Jacob because of the blessing that Isaac had given him.

Esau hatched a plan in his heart (mind). “Days of mourning of my papa shall approach! And I have killed Jacob my brother!”

Someone told Rivka what Esau said in his mind! Rivka sent for and called Jacob. She said to him, “Behold, Esau thy brother consoles himself to thee to kill thee! And now, my son, hearken into my voice. And arise. Flee for thee unto White (Laban) my brother Haranward. And thou shalt dwell with him a few days until-that heat of thy brother shalt return, until the nose of thy brother shall return from with thee. And he will forget what thou did to him. And I will send. And I will take thee from there. Why will I be bereft indeed of both of you one day?”

Questions

1.   Esau formed a grudge against Jacob over the blessing that his papa, Isaac, had given to Jacob. Did Esau care that much about the blessing itself?

2.   What are “days of mourning” in “days of mourning of my papa shall approach”?

3.   What does Esau mean by “And I have killed Jacob, my brother”?

4.   Esau plotted the murder of Jacob because he hated Jacob over the blessing. What does this tell readers about Esau’s character?

5.   Who told Rebekah the words that Esau spoke in his heart (mind)?

6.   Why did the one who read Esau’s mind tell Rebekah?

7.   Why didn’t He just stop Esau from the murder plan?

8.   What does “Esau thy brother consoles himself to thee to kill thee” mean?

9.   What does “until-that heat of thy brother shall return” mean?

10. What does “until the nose of thy brother shall return from with thee” mean?

11. In verse 45, Rebekah states, “until the nose of thy brother shall return from with thee. And he will forget what thou did to him.” Wasn’t Rebekah responsible for what Jacob did to Esau?

12. What does bereft mean?

13. What does Rebekah mean by “Why will I be bereft indeed of both of you one day?”

XII. The Protest and the Third Blessing (verse 46-chapter 28:4)

Rivka was very upset because of the daughters of Heth. They were such bad women, that Rivka abhorred in her lives from seeing them. Yet, Jacob might take a wife from these daughters of the land. Her lives would then be intolerable.

Isaac called Jacob. He blessed him. He also commanded him: “Thou shalt not take a woman from the daughters of Canaan! Arise! Walk toward the High Extension toward the house of Bethuel, father of thy mother. And take a woman to thee from there from daughters of Laban, brother of thy mother. And El Shaddai will bless thee. And He has ‘fruited’ thee. And He has multiplied thee. And thou shalt be to a congregation of peoples! And He will give to thee blessings of Avraham—to thee and to thy seed with thee to thy inheriting the land of thy sojournings that Elohim gave to Avraham.”

Questions

1.   What does “I abhorred in my lives from the faces of the daughters of Heth” mean?

2.   What was wrong with these women, and what did they have to do with Rebekah?

3.   What did Rivka fear, according to verse 46?

4.   Was Rivka racist against the local women?

5.   How did Isaac remedy Rivka’s fear?

6.   Genesis 28:1 states that Isaac blessed him (Jacob). What did he say or do that was this blessing?

7.   Where did Isaac command Jacob to obtain a woman?

8.   Is marrying a first cousin a wise thing to do today? Explain.

9.   Why did Isaac want Jacob to marry his cousin?

10. What does El Shaddai mean?

11. How did Isaac know that El Shaddai would bless Jacob?

12. What does “He has ‘fruited’ thee” mean?

13. What will happen if El Shaddai multiplies him?

14. What is a congregation of peoples?

15. Who is “thy seed with thee”?

XIII. Esau’s Attempt at Making Things Right (verses 5-9)

Isaac sent Jacob, fully blessed. Jacob did as he was told; he began walking toward the house of Bethuel.

Esau saw that Isaac blessed Jacob. He saw that Isaac will even send Jacob with his blessing to obtain a woman from Padanaram, from Laban. Esau had heard Isaac tell Jacob not to take a woman from the daughters of Canaan. Esau also saw that Jacob hearkened unto his father and his mother. Now Esau knew the truth—”the daughters of Canaan are bad in the eyes of Isaac his father.” Esau therefore went to Ishmael to obtain another woman!

He took Mahalath to be his woman in addition to the two women he already had.

Questions

1.   Esau saw that Isaac blessed Jacob (rather than tell him off for deceiving him). He also saw Isaac send Jacob to Padanaram to take a woman. (Esau had gotten his own Canaanite women without the permission or consent of his parents. If he had sought permission, Isaac would have warned him not to take Canaanite women just as Avraham had warned his slave not to take a woman of the Canaanites for Isaac). Esau saw that Isaac gave Jacob a command, and Jacob obeyed. Esau saw that the daughters of Canaan were bad in the eyes of Isaac his father. What did Esau do with all this information, and was his action good?

2.   Jacob was a grown man. Did he have to hearken to his parents?

3.   Many today engage in premarital sexual intercourse (having sexual intercourse before marriage, also known as fornication). Many women get pregnant by this means, and many men are responsible for bringing children into the world without being fathers. Some of these women then become religious, and few of the men care about religion. Some modern churches have mainly women attending. Many of these women have come to church because they want something in their lives besides the emptiness that they caused by their own actions. (I am not thinking of a woman who was raped.) Very, very few truly desire Godliness. Whom do these men and women more resemble: Jacob, Esau, or the daughters of Heth?

4.   Will you be more like Jacob, Esau, or the daughters of Heth? Speak the truth.

5.   If Mahalath means What Hast Thou Pierced, why might a girl baby be named this?

6.   Were Esau’s parents consoled by Mahalath?

Genesis 27 – The Blessing of Jacob and Esau QA Supplied

The Blessing of Jacob and Esau

Questions and Proposed Answers Supplied

Background and Printed Text: Genesis 27:1-28:9

Genesis 27:1 And he was, because He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) was old. And his eyes were weak from seeing. And he called Hairy (Esau) his big son. And he said unto him, “My son!” And he said unto him, “Behold I!” 2And he said, “Behold, na, I was old. I did not know a day of my death. 3And now, carry, na, thy utensils, thy quiver and thy bow, and exit the field. And hunt for me a hunting. 4And make for me tasties just as I loved. And bring to me. And I ate so that my being will bless thee before I will die.” 5And Multiple-Pouring (Rivka) hearkened into the word of He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) unto Hairy (Esau) his son. And Hairy (Esau) walked the field to hunt hunting to bring.

6And Multiple-Pouring (Rivka) said unto He-Will-Heel (Jacob) her son to say, “Behold, I hearkened to thy papa speaking unto Hairy (Esau) thy brother to say, 7‘Bring to me hunting. And make for me tasties. And I have eaten. And I have blessed thee to the faces of Yehovah to the faces of my death.’ 8And now, my son, hearken into my voice to what I am commanding thee. 9Walk, na, unto the flock. And take for me from there two good kids of goats. And I have made them tasties for thy papa just as he loved. 10And thou wilt bring to thy papa. And he will eat in order that he will bless thee to the faces of his death.” 11And He-Will-Heel (Jacob) said unto Multiple-Pouring (Rivka) his mother, “Behold, Hairy (Esau) my brother is a man of hair. And I am a smooth man. 12Perhaps my papa will grope me. And I will be in his eyes as a wander-wander-causer. And I will bring upon me light-esteeming and not a blessing.” 13And his mama said to him, “Thy light-esteeming is upon me, my son. But hearken into my voice. And walk. Take for me!”

14And he walked. And he took. And he came to his mama. And his mama made tasties just as his papa loved. 15And Multiple-Pouring (Rivka) took the favorite garments of Hairy (Esau) her big son that are with her in the inside. And She clothed He-Will-Heel (Jacob) her little son. 16And she clothed upon his hands skins of kids of the goats, and upon the smooth of his necks. 17And she gave the tasties and the bread that she made into the hand of He-Will-Heel (Jacob) her son.

18And he came unto his papa. And he said, “My papa!” And he said, “Behold I! Who art thou? My son?” 19And He-Will-Heel (Jacob) said unto his papa, “I am Hairy (Esau) thy firstborn. I made just as thou spoke unto me. Arise, na. Sit and eat from my hunting so-that thy being will bless me!” 20And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) said unto his son, “What is this? Thou hurried to find, my son?” And he said, “Because Yehovah thy Gods caused-an-encounter to my faces!” 21And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) said unto He-Will-Heel (Jacob), “Approach, na, and I have groped thee, my son! Art thou this my son Hairy (Esau), if not?” 22And He-Will-Heel (Jacob) approached unto He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) his papa. And He groped him. And he said, “The voice is a voice of He-Will-Heel (Jacob), and the hands are the hands of Hairy (Esau)!” 23And he did not recognize him. For his hands were as the hands of Hairy (Esau) his brother, hairs. And he blessed him.

24And he said, “Thou art this my son Hairy (Esau)!” And he said, “I!” 25And he said, “Approach to me. And I have eaten from hunting, my son, so that my being will bless thee.” And He approached to him. And he ate. And he brought to him wine. And he drank.

26And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) his papa said unto him, “Approach, na, and kiss to me, my son!” 27And he approached. And he kissed to him. And he fragranced the fragrance of his garments. And he blessed him, and said to him, “See! The fragrance of my son is as the fragrance of a field that Yehovah blessed him! 28And the Gods will give to thee from dew of the heavens and from the oils of the land and the multiplicity of grain and new-wine. 29Peoples shall serve thee, and folks shall prostrate to thee. Be a valiant-one to thy brothers. And sons of thy mama shall prostrate to thee. Thy cursers are cursed, and thy blessers are blessed.”

30And he was just as He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) finished to bless He-Will-Heel (Jacob). And He-Will-Heel (Jacob) was but exiting exiting from with the faces of He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) his papa. And Hairy (Esau) his brother came from his hunt. 31And he made, also he, tasties. And he brought to his papa.

And he said to his papa, “My father shall arise and he has eaten from the hunting of his son in order that thy being will bless me!” 32And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) his papa said to him, “Who art thou?” And he said, “I am thy son, thy firstborn, Hairy (Esau)!” 33And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) quaked a big quake unto very much! And he said, “Who? Where is he, the hunter of hunting? And he brought to me. And I ate from all before thou wilt come. And I blessed him. Also, he will be blessed!”

34As Hairy (Esau) hearkened to the words of his papa. And he screamed a big and bitter scream unto very much! And he said to his papa, “Bless me, also I, my papa!” 35And he said, “Thy brother came via deceit. And he took thy blessing!” 36And he said, “Is because he called his name ‘He-Will-Heel (Jacob)’? And he ‘heeled’ me this, strokes. He took my firstbornness, and behold now he took my blessing!”

And he said, “Hast thou not neared for me a blessing?” 37And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) answered. And he said to Hairy (Esau), “Behold, I put him a valiant-one to thee! And I gave all his brothers to him for slaves! And I sustained him grain and new-wine. And where to thee? What will I do, my son?” 38And Hairy (Esau) said unto his papa, “One blessing—he is to thee, my papa! Bless me, also I, my papa!” And Hairy (Esau) lifted his voice. And he wept. 39And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) his papa answered. And he said unto him, “Behold, thy settlement will be from oils of the land and from dew of the heavens from above. 40And thou shalt live upon thy sword. And thou shalt serve thy brother. And he shall be just as thou shalt descend. And thou shalt break his yoke from upon thy neck!”

41And Hairy (Esau) grudged He-Will-Heel (Jacob) concerning the blessing that his papa blessed him. And Hairy (Esau) said in his heart, “Days of mourning of my papa shall approach! And I have killed He-Will-Heel (Jacob), my brother!” 42And He told to Multiple-Pouring (Rivka) words of Hairy (Esau) her big son. And she sent. And she called to He-Will-Heel (Jacob) her little son. And she said unto him, “Behold, Hairy (Esau) thy brother consoles himself to thee to kill thee! 43And now, my son, hearken into my voice. And arise. Flee for thee unto White my brother Haranward. 44And thou shalt dwell with him a few days until-that heat of thy brother shall return, 45until the nose of thy brother shall return from with thee. And he will forget what thou did to him. And I will send. And I will take thee from there. Why will I be bereft indeed of both of you one day?”

46And Multiple-Pouring (Rivka) said unto He-Will-Laugh (Isaac), “I abhorred in my lives from the faces of the daughters of Heth (Shatter)! If He-Will-Heel (Jacob) is taking a woman from the daughters of Heth (Shatter) as these, from the daughters of the land, why are lives to me?” [Chapter 28] 1And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) called He-Will-Heel (Jacob). And he blessed him. And he commanded him. And he said to him, “Thou shalt not take a woman from the daughters of Merchant (Canaan)! 2Arise! Walk toward the High Extension (Padanaram) houseward of They-Wasted-A-Mighty-One (Bethuel) father of thy mother. And take a woman to thee from there from daughters of White (Laban), brother of thy mother. 3And Mighty-One-My-Breasts (El Shaddai) will bless thee. And He has ‘fruited’ thee. And He has multiplied thee. And thou shalt be to a congregation of peoples! 4And He will give to thee blessings of Father-Of-A-Crowd—to thee and to thy seed with thee to thy inheriting the land of thy sojournings that Elohim gave to Father-Of-A-Crowd.

5And He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) sent He-Will-Heel (Jacob). And he walked toward High Extension (Padanaram) unto White (Laban) son of They-Wasted-A-Mighty-One (Bethuel) the Syrian, brother of Multiple-Pouring (Rivka), mother of He-Will-Heel (Jacob) and Hairy. 6And Hairy saw that He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) blessed He-Will-Heel (Jacob). And he will send him to High Extension (Padanaram) to take a woman to him from there with his blessing him. And he commanded concerning him to say, “Thou shalt not take a woman from daughters of Merchant (Canaan)!” 7And He-Will-Heel (Jacob) hearkened unto his papa and to his mama. And he walked to High Extension (Padanaram). 8And Hairy saw that daughters of Merchant (Canaan) are bad in the eyes of He-Will-Laugh (Isaac) his father. 9And Hairy walked unto Mighty-One-Will-Hearken (Ishmael). And he took to himself What-Hast-Thou-Pierced (Mahalath) daughter of Mighty-One-Will-Hearken (Ishmael) son of Father-Of-A-Crowd sister of Productive-[Ones] (Nebajoth) {fem.} upon his women for a woman.

I. The Game Request (verses 1-5)

Isaac was old and nearly blind. He didn’t know the day he would die. It was very important for him to bless his firstborn child before his death. Isaac told him to take his equipment, exit the field (go out into the field), hunt, and make good-tasting things that he loved. Isaac then promised Esau that Isaac’s being would bless him before Isaac dies.

Rebekah hearkened carefully to this conversation. Esau went on his way to hunt and to bring that to his papa.

Questions

1.   When these men blessed their children before their deaths, were they wishing good things on them and requesting what they would do after their fathers’ deaths? When the Bible records the blessings and statements of fathers over their children before they die, those blessings and statements are prophetic. That means that they are the very words of Yehovah, the very testimony of Yeshua. What these fathers say will occur. They are not wishing good things on them; they are telling them what will happen to their children once they become a great race. (That means that they are speaking what will happen many centuries later.) They are also not telling them what to do for their immediate families, but what Yehovah will do with them much later, and what the races will do at that future time.

2.   Why did Isaac want to eat very good food made by his son Esau before his being would bless Esau? Isaac loved Esau. He also loved the way Esau could fix wild game.

Esau was a disappointing son:

  • He was a fornicator; he had sexual intercourse with women without being married to them.
  • He was secular; he didn’t care about Spirit things, about God, about covenants made by God, about the future, about other things important to Yehovah.
  • He took two bad women as his women (wives); they caused much frustration to Isaac and Rivka.

       Isaac wanted to give a blessing from Yehovah to Esau, his firstborn son. His being (his body, his soul and his spirit) had a hard time with this, however, because Esau… didn’t care about these things… unless it involved what he could gain now. Esau was a good cook, however. This greatly pleased Isaac. Thus, if Isaac made him some tasties, he could recall this son and his learning and experiences as a child, with fond memories of this area of his success. He could then bless him. I propose that this is why he desired that Esau make this food.

3.   Was Rebekah doing wrong by carefully listening and overhearing her husband’s conversation with Esau? She wasn’t doing wrong. She and her man (husband) are one flesh. If Isaac had desired to keep the conversation a complete secret, he could have taken Esau away from the camp before telling him.

4.   Did Esau desire the blessing of his father? Explain. He did desire it. He hoped it would be in the form of some type of wealth. (He didn’t care about Spiritual things.)

II. The Plot (verses 6-12)

Rivka (Rebecca, Rebekah) told Jacob about the conversation in detail. She then commanded Jacob to hearken to her. She told Jacob to take two goat kids from the flock. Rivka will then make the tasty foods in the very way Isaac loves. Jacob will bring them to Isaac, and Isaac will bless Jacob just before he dies.

Jacob saw a problem with this idea. Esau was covered with hair, and Jacob was nearly hairless, being smooth-skinned. He was used to Isaac feeling things and persons now that he was nearly blind. This will appear to be ‘leading Isaac down the wrong path,’ and thus causing him to wander from the truth. Isaac might view Jacob as far less important than before (lightly esteeming him), and Isaac might refuse to bless him. Rivka answered, “Thy light-esteeming is upon me, my son. But hearken into my voice. And walk. Take for me!”

Questions

1.   Did Rebekah do wrong by telling her son Jacob what Isaac and Esau had said? No. She had to tell him what she heard so that he would see the urgency of his and her action.

2.   Rebekah plotted to fix the meal for Jacob and make it taste so good and so much like what Esau would make, that Isaac would bless Jacob thinking he was blessing Esau. Was this plot evil? No. It was not evil. Jacob purchased the birthright, and the blessing came with it. Plotting to obtain what already belongs to the one plotting isn’t evil. It is right.

3.   Jacob was a grown man. Rivka commanded him to get the two goat kids for her. Do grown men have to obey their mothers? No, they don’t have to obey. Even children don’t have to obey their parents if they command their children to sin. Most children will obey their parents even if they tell them to do wrong, because they fear their parents. As they grow, however, they can learn to only obey what is right. Most parents command their children to do right, and want them to do right. Children of such parents should obey commands of their parents until they are of age and living on their own.

4.   Jacob’s main objection to the plan of his mama was that he might appear to Isaac as one who caused his nearly blind papa to wander if he were caught, and that he might cause his father to esteem him as worth very little instead of obtaining a blessing. Were Jacob’s motives right? The Bible rarely pays attention to motives (to the reasons why a person does what he or she does). Motives will not matter in the judgments in which every person will be judged. What a person does is what counts in the Bible.

Jacob’s actions were right.

5.   Rebekah was willing to be lightly esteemed for this action. Would you be willing to do what is right even if you knew you would suffer for doing it? (Answers are individual.)

6.   Did Rebekah ignore all the harm that this would do to Esau, showing coldness and a lack of love for him? She knew Esau would be fine. She knew that Jacob must obtain the blessing. Any harm that Esau felt would be because of hurt feelings. Her concern wasn’t for his feelings. Her concern was for her husband and for the promise that Yehovah made!

7.   Why didn’t Rebekah just tell Isaac, and convince him to change his mind regarding the blessing of Esau?

  • Isaac had promised the blessing to Esau. Isaac could not go back on his word.
  • Isaac couldn’t stop Esau from hunting at this point.
  • Isaac would not have felt that giving the blessing to Jacob now was the right thing to do.
  • Rebekah could not risk Isaac’s not listening to her. Yehovah would then have to stop him from making the promise, and that might mean the end of his life.
  • Rebekah did not desire to step between Isaac and Esau; she only desired to make certain that Jacob obtained what Yehovah promised.
  • Rebekah did not want to risk Isaac being heart-broken over this issue; she determined instead to solve it, and see what took place.

8.   Why was this so important to Rebekah? She knew the outcome centuries after her time! She knew that this was extremely important in the history of the world. She did not minimize the Word of Yehovah (like so many who read the Bible do today); she knew that this was a matter of lives and deaths. She feared Yehovah.

III. Preparations (verses 14-17)

Jacob walked. He took the goat kids as directed. Rivka (Rebekah) fixed the food the way Isaac loved it.

Rivka next took Esau’s favorite garments that were inside her tent. She put them on Jacob her younger son. She fastened the goatskins that she had removed from the goat kids onto Jacob’s hands and his neck spots that were smooth so that they felt like part of his hands and his neck. She placed the good food and fresh bread into Jacob’s hand.

Questions

1.   Why the text mention that he walked? He did what his mama said. He also had a lot on his mind. Thus, his walking was a time for him to think.

2.   The text states that she took Esau’s favorite garments in order to bring this plot about. Wouldn’t Esau’s knowing this completely destroy the trust he had for his mother? Again, this was not Rebekah’s concern. Even if Esau never trusted her again, she had to do this and take the risk. Too many lives were at stake.

3.   How did she attach the skins to Jacob so that they felt like Esau’s skin of his hands and the parts of his neck? The text doesn’t tell how she did it. Like so many things in the Bible, humans were given abilities to do what would be almost impossible or impossible in order to do what was necessary. Yehovah has given humans abilities far beyond what they know. He has given you abilities far beyond what you know. Some discover their own abilities, and use them selfishly and destructively. A few in the history of the world discovered what Yehovah gave to them and used those abilities to benefit others and to fear Yehovah.

4.   How much work did she have to do to make sure that Jacob received that blessing?

  • The fire had to be right.
  • Two goat kids had to be slaughtered, skinned carefully, gutted, cleaned, separated into pieces (for the tasties), deboned, and soaked.
  • Grain had to be ground into flour, and then mixed with the right ingredients for it to rise.
  • The bread had to be baked at the right temperature (their stoves had no temperature guages).
  • Other items had to be gathered, like the wine.
  • A tray was prepared; Isaac was nearly blind.
  • The cooking of the meat had to be just right, and seasoned exactly right to taste like wild game that Esau would prepare.
  • The skins had to be cut, cleaned, and prepared, being kept supple, so that they stuck on Jacob and felt like human skin.
  • The clothing had to be arranged for Jacob’s wearing so that it was like Esau.
  • All this had to be done before Esau returned.

IV. The Deed (verses 18-23)

Jacob brought to his father what his mother had fixed. He then called, “My papa!” Isaac asked him, “Who art thou? My son?” Jacob answered, “I am Esau, thy firstborn. I made just as thou spoke unto me. Arise, na. Sit and eat from my hunting so-that thy being will bless me!”

Isaac asked if he (thinking he was Esau) had hurried to find game! He was back so soon! Jacob responded, “Because Yehovah thy Gods caused-an-encounter to my faces!”

Isaac still seemed puzzled, and told ‘Esau’ to approach so that Isaac could grope him. “Art thou this my son Hairy (Esau), if not?”

Jacob approached, and Isaac felt him. He then remarked, “The voice is a voice of Jacob, and the hands are the hands of Esau!” Yet, Isaac didn’t recognize him; the hands were hairy like Esau’s. So, Isaac blessed Jacob.

Questions

1.   Why did Isaac ask, “Who art thou? My son?” Isaac was practically blind. He knew the voice of Jacob. Yet, he was unsure of the identity of this speaker.

2.   Jacob lied when he said, “I am Esau thy firstborn.” Did he do wrong? Jacob did not do wrong. He was participating in the plot to save many lives. Yehovah had prophesied, and Isaac was about to prophesy a lie over Esau. Jacob did right. Lying is wrong when it isn’t being used to save the innocent from the hands of the guilty. Had Isaac begun to bless Esau with the blessing that Yehovah promised to Jacob, Yehovah might have taken Isaac’s life to stop him from speaking a false prophecy. All the blessings of the Godly fathers mentioned in the Bible to their children were prophetic.

3.   What does “caused an encounter” mean? Jacob, disguised as Esau was explaining why he returned so soon. He told his papa that Yehovah “caused an encounter”—that he had very quickly encountered (run into, met up with) game—with the animal he was hunting.

4.   In verse 20, Jacob said, “Because Yehovah thy Gods caused-an-encounter to my faces!” Jacob brought Yehovah into this lie, giving Yehovah credit when Yehovah did not do it. Did Jacob sin by doing this? Jacob did not sin. The encounter was with his mother! She told him what to do and where to go.

Yehovah loved Jacob. Had Jacob sinned, Yehovah would have corrected (chastised) him. Yehovah hates sin. Yehovah determined to save lives. Jacob is doing that.

5. Verses 21 and 22 show Isaac trying to discern (carefully figure out) whether he is truly speaking with Esau. He groped him (felt him in a very personal way), feeling his hands and his neck. In verse 22, Jacob remarks, “The voice is Jacob’s voice, but the hands are the hands of Esau.” Why didn’t Isaac realize that this was not Esau? The text doesn’t say. Isaac had conflicting evidence, and he stayed with evidence that indicated that this was Esau his firstborn.

Most folks believe what they want to believe. They don’t challenge things that are inconsistent or wrong. That is why few will ever find Truth.

V. The Details (verses 24-25)

Isaac next stated, “Thou art this my son Esau!” to which Jacob replied, “I!”

Isaac told him to approach. Isaac now will eat from this hunting, and his being will bless ‘Esau’. Jacob approached. Isaac ate. Jacob brought wine; Isaac drank.

Questions

(No Questions)

VI. The Blessing (verses 26-29)

After eating, Isaac told ‘Esau’ to approach and to kiss him. Jacob did both. Isaac smelled the fragrance of his garments. He then blessed ‘Esau’.

Isaac said to Jacob, “See! The fragrance of my son is as the fragrance of a field that Yehovah blessed him!”

Isaac continued, “And the Gods will give to thee from dew of the heavens and from the oils of the land and the multiplicity of grain and new-wine. Peoples shall serve thee, and folks shall prostrate to thee. Be a valiant-one to thy brothers. And sons of thy mama shall prostrate to thee. Thy cursers are cursed, and thy blessers are blessed.” All the work that both Rivka and Jacob did was to obtain these few statements!

Questions

1.   Why do adults want to be kissed by their children who are grown? It reminds them of when the children were very young and very affectionate. It reminds them of the relationship they had with their children. Adults who loved their children invested in them in many ways. They feel connected to them. A kiss is a reminder. There will be many other reasons, depending on the adults.

2.   Do young children like to be kissed by their parents? Most like to be kissed, especially if the kiss is not obtrusive—that is, if the kiss doesn’t demand that they get up, come, or do something that might embarrass them or intrude on them. Most children like to be kissed while they go about whatever they are doing, especially if the kiss is on the top or back of the head. This shows children that they are doing fine, that they have the approval of the parent, and that they are loved. There will be other reasons, depending on the children.

3.   Why did Isaac want his son to kiss him? I can see several reasons, but I cannot be certain if they are all true:

  • Isaac remembered when Esau was a child, and wanted to remember him that way while blessing him.
  • Isaac wanted the direct affection of his son.
  • Isaac wanted to ‘fragrance’ (smell) the fragrance of his garments; those smells are good, and they reminded him of good things.
  • Isaac wanted something that would temporarily replace the difficult feelings Isaac had for Esau because of the bad choices of women that Esau had taken.

4.   Why did this part of the blessing start with the word “See”? Whom is Isaac commanding to see, and to whom is Isaac speaking when he says, “The fragrance of my son is as the fragrance of a field that Yehovah blessed him”? It is as if Isaac is speaking to his own being, telling his being to see. The word see in the Bible is like it is in English. It can refer to sight, using the eyes, or it can refer to understanding. Thus, even a blind person can see that way. (I see!)

5.   What is the fragrance of a field like if Yehovah blessed the field? It will be loaded with flowers, each one giving a very good smell. It will have the smell of watered soil—a smell that is also very pleasant. Some plants give a good smell without flowers.

6.   What is important about being given from the dew of the heavens? In certain regions of the world, rainfall isn’t very abundant. If the only time plants were watered was when it rained, there would be very few plants. There are some areas where the amount of dew is very great. Dew is like rain in some ways, but it is far gentler. It also is useful to smaller bugs and creatures in ways that rain isn’t.

Some desert regions obtain dew in the mornings. Those regions can grow some special and beautiful plants.

The Land of Israel is like this in places. Dews can be very heavy, and will give plants very good growth.

7.   The next statement in its entirety goes like this: “the Gods will give to thee from the oils of the land.” Why types of oils are these, and why would these be important? These oils are the kind used for food. They are not like crude oil used for gasoline (petroleum) and machine oil. Thus, they are oils like olive oil, sunflower seed oil, etc.

Skin and hair can dry out in desert locations. Parts of Israel are desert locations. Oils for skin and hair keep the skin softer and in better shape; oils for hair keep the hair from becoming brittle and falling out. Good food oils are also good skin and hair oils, and eating good oils will help the skin. Cultures that have access to good oils normally enjoy good health.

8.   Who is “the Gods,” and why is this plural? The Gods refers to Elohim. He is called Gods because He is all the Gods there are. (All other gods are false gods.) He introduced Himself plurally from the beginning.

9.   What is important about “the multiplicity of grain”? That means that there will be much grain production and much grain variation. Grains are also known as cereals. The following are grains:

  • brown rice
  • wild rice
  • buckwheat
  • bulgur (cracked wheat)
  • oatmeal
  • popcorn
  • amaranth
  • millet
  • quinoa
  • sorghum
  • triticale

       Whole grains are good for health. They contain fiber/fibre which is good for digestion and intestinal health.

10. What is good about the multiplicity of new wine? New wine is freshly fermented wine from juices of fruits. If a land produces many types of grape vines and other fruits, many wines can then be produced. Except for folks who tend to be alcoholic, wine can be a very healthful product and a real friend. Children regularly (daily) drink wine with adults in numerous countries around the world, and few become drunk. American Indians, on the other hand, have a genetic tendency to rapidly become drunk and hooked on alcohol; wine would be a poison for them.

The Israelis do not tend to find wine an enemy; it is a friend. Yehovah will bless Israel will many types of wine.

11. What does “peoples shall serve thee” mean? This means that various cultural groups will work hard (as slaves) to benefit the race of the one being blessed by Isaac. (Jacob is being blessed; Esau will not obtain this blessing.) In the blessing given to Avraham, Avraham will be a blessing to the races! Thus, Avraham’s offspring, including Jacob, will work hard (as slaves) to benefit the races!

12. What does “folks shall prostrate to thee” mean? This means that groups of individuals will lay down flat and face down toward Jacob, physically showing humility and the willingness to serve (slave) for Jacob. This is exactly the same as worship. Jacob will receive their slaving, and Jacob will slave for them in turn.

13. Isaac thought that he was passing the Abrahamic blessing on to Esau. Would this have been right to do? No! Esau and the race he produced will not have anything to do with fearing Yehovah! That would have been a disaster! It would also have been directly against what Yehovah told Rebekah when the two children were in her womb:

Genesis 25:23 And Yehovah said to her, “Two races are in thy belly. And two folks will be separated from thine internals. And a folk will be-bolder than a folk. And a many will serve a younger.”

14. The command to “be a valiant one to thy brothers” will be fulfilled by what types of actions? When Jacob’s offspring prove themselves very bold, very tough, very willing to benefit others at the risks of their own lives, very willing to stand firm on what is right, their brothers will recognize them as valiant.

15. Who are these brothers? They are Esau’s race (the Edomites), as well as Lot’s races (the Moabites and Ammonites), and others who are related to Lot and Avraham.

16. What does “sons of thy mama shall prostrate to thee” mean? It means that Esau’s offspring will prostrate to (worship, lay down flat in front of) Jacob’s offspring and Jacob himself. (Jacob will be resurrected!)

17. Who is a curser of Jacob? That is anyone or any group that desires to see Jacob and/or his offspring harmed or annihilated. Every Nazi and neo-Nazi group, the Klu Klux Klan, all ‘White Supremacist’ group, many Islamic/Moslem groups, and all groups that practice Replacement Theology (teachings of the Bible where Jacob and Israel are replaced by Christians and their groups) participate in cursing Israel. They desire Israel to be gone from the earth. Some feel great hatred toward the Jews; others do not have hatred toward them, but they want to be in Israel’s place in the Bible. So, they read texts that were designed for Israel as if God meant those texts for themselves. Thus, they curse Israel by ignoring the Jews when they read the texts.

18. What is a ‘blesser’ of Jacob? That is a person who will benefit Jacob and Jacob’s offspring, the Jews/Israelis, and thus, Israel. Benefiting Jacob is benefiting Yeshua.

19. The last part mentions cursers and blessers. Why doesn’t it mention any other category? There is no other category before Yehovah. The Tribulation period will involve only two types of persons: cursers and blessers. Everyone will fit in one of these two categories.

20. How will cursers be cursed and blessers be blessed? When Yehovah curses someone, that person will be damned, and thus sent to the Lake of fire and burning sulfur to suffer there forever. If Yehovah will bless someone, He will give that person Salvation from everlasting death, and will provide everlasting life and very good things.

VII. The Return (verses 30-31)

Esau arrived back just as Isaac finished blessing Jacob! Esau made the tasties for his father. He then brought them to him.

Questions

1.   Why didn’t someone (besides Rivka and Jacob) tell Esau that his father had already eaten? Others besides Rivka, Jacob and Isaac would not have known that Esau was preparing the meal for Isaac. Esau had hunted and prepared many times before.

2.   What would have happened if Esau had returned while Jacob was feeding Isaac? That would have been a problem, but that would not have occurred. (Can you think of why?)

VIII. The Exposure (verses 31-33)

Esau told his father to arise and eat from his hunting so that Isaac’s being will bless Esau. Isaac was confused. “Who art thou?” And Esau responded, “I am thy son, thy firstborn, Esau!” Isaac began to greatly shake. He said, “Who?” Then he asked, “Where is he, the hunter of hunting? And he brought to me. And I ate from all before thou wilt come. And I blessed him. Also, he will be blessed!”

Questions

1.   Why did Esau answer the question, “Who art thou?” with “I am thy son, thy firstborn, Esau,” using three different ways to describe who he was? He answered as if his father had begun to forget. Esau also must have been frustrated by this question; he had worked very hard to quickly prepare this meal.

2.   Why did Isaac greatly quake, and what does that mean? To quake is to shake violently. It can be from a very strong emotion.

Isaac quaked because he realized that he had been deceived and fooled.

3.   Why did he then say, “Who?” He was so startled at this identification!

4.   Why did he ask, “Where is he, the hunter of hunting?” He was speaking of the character that Jacob had played—the ‘Esau’ who had brought the meal to him. This response was as if there were now two Esaus.

5.   Why did Isaac tell Esau, “And he brought to me, and I ate from all before thou wilt come”? He needed to explain why he couldn’t eat what Esau had fixed.

6.   Why did Isaac tell Esau, “And I blessed him”? Isaac didn’t need to tell him this, but Esau would have asked him. Esau knew that the purpose of this meal was to bless. Isaac wasn’t trying to hide anything from Esau; Isaac was shocked himself over what had happened.

7.  When Isaac said, “Also, he will be blessed,” what was Isaac doing? Isaac was confirming the blessing on Jacob and removing it from Esau! He was telling his firstborn son, Esau, that Jacob will keep that blessing that Isaac gave to him thinking he was Esau.

8.   Did Isaac need to say, “Also, he will be blessed,” or could he have said to Esau, “Cursed be the deceiver! Thy blessing will go to thee, my son, and thou shalt be blessed!”? It seems that Isaac remembered what Yehovah had told his wife, Rivka (Rebekah) when the twins were in her womb. If this is true, had Isaac blessed Esau with the promise that Yehovah gave to Jacob, Isaac would have been speaking directly the opposite of what Yehovah had said. In that case, Yehovah might have ‘taken Isaac out’ (killed him) to stop him from pronouncing a false prophecy. Yehovah might have even taken Esau out, but Esau had to have children, so that wouldn’t work. Yehovah might have stopped Isaac’s mouth so that he couldn’t speak until he was willing to bless Jacob. Many things might have happened, but Isaac was wise. He did the simplest. He had to confirm the blessing to Jacob.

IX. The Facts and the Lie (verses 34-36)

Esau hearkened to his papa’s words. Esau then screamed a very big, bitter and long scream.

Then he said to his father, “Bless me—also I—my papa!” Isaac responded, “Thy brother came via deceit. And he took thy blessing!” Esau bitterly responded, “Is because he called his name ‘He-Will-Heel (Jacob)’? And he ‘heeled’ me this, strokes. He took my firstbornness, and behold now he took my blessing!”

Questions

1.   Why start a sentence with as? This is not normally a proper way to start a sentence. This is describing how Esau responded as he hearkened to the words of his papa. Thus, the text is telling us readers what happened as he did this.

2.   What does hearken mean? To hearken is to both listen and obey or listen and believe, as in this case.

3.   Why did Esau react so strongly (by screaming a big and bitter scream) when he heard that Jacob was blessed? Esau thought that Jacob had obtained Esau’s inheritance of cattle, sheep, asses, camels, slaves, money, and so on. Esau did not know that all the blessing was about future things that had nothing to do with personal wealth. Esau only cared about personal wealth. He didn’t care about things of God or of future events that didn’t directly affect him.

4.   For what was Esau asking when he said to his papa, “Bless me, also I, my papa”? He was asking for his father to give him some inheritance items! He thought he had lost all because his brother had taken his stuff. He had no idea that Jacob had taken nothing from the possessions of his father.

5.   Did Isaac realize why Esau was so upset? I propose that he had no idea. He saw his son coveting the blessing, when Esau only coveted the inheritance. Had Isaac known, he could have told him something like this, “Thine inheritance has not been touched; thou wilt inherit my substance, my son.” Instead, Isaac heard Esau coveting the blessing, and Isaac was touched since Esau was never interested in those things.

6.   Was Isaac telling Esau about Jacob’s evil deed in verse 35? No. Jacob had done no evil deed. He was telling Esau what had happened. The deceit was necessary to save lives.

7.   What does “he ‘heeled’ me this, strokes” mean? Esau is saying that Jacob either used his heel to knock Esau out of the way, or he grabbed Jacob by the heel to come ahead of Esau. In either case, Esau is claiming that Jacob used wrong means to get ahead of Esau. Strokes is from the Hebrew word paam, and means times. It expresses the rhythm of a wind-up clock or wind-up watch (long before there were watches or clocks).

7.   When Esau said, “Is because he called his name ‘He-Will-Heel’? And he ‘heeled’ me this, strokes. He took my ‘firstbornness,’ and behold now he took my blessing,” was Esau speaking the truth? He wasn’t speaking the truth. He was speaking his own bitterness against his brother. He sold his ‘firstbornness’ (his position as the firstborn son), and the blessing went with the position.

X. The Lesser Blessing (verses 36-40)

Esau figured that Isaac should have a blessing just for him that Isaac ‘neared’—that is, brought near to occur. Isaac responded, “Behold, I put him a valiant-one to thee! And I gave all his brothers to him for slaves! And I sustained him grain and new-wine. And where to thee? What will I do, my son?” Esau took this very hard: “One blessing—he is to thee, my papa! Bless me, also I, my papa!” He wept loudly.

Isaac then began to give Esau a blessing: “Behold, thy settlement will be from oils of the land and from dew of the heavens from above. And thou shalt live upon thy sword. And thou shalt serve thy brother. And he shall be just as thou shalt descend. And thou shalt break his yoke from upon thy neck!”

Questions

1.   What does “Hast thou not neared for me a blessing?” mean? Esau figured that Isaac should have a blessing just for him. He wanted a blessing that Isaac ‘neared’—that is, that he made to come to pass right then. Esau looked for the inheritance, not for a blessing.

2.   What does “I put him a valiant-one to thee” mean? This means that Esau (or better, Esau’s offspring) will see Jacob (or better, Jacob’s offspring) as valiant. A person who is valiant has a good and consistent character, and is willing to risk life and health to do right according to that character. This is like being tough, but it includes being true to one’s word and being brave when bravery doesn’t seem to make sense.

3.   The text states, “I gave all his brothers to him for slaves.” How many brothers did Jacob have? Explain. Jacob had one brother. Jacob’s offspring, however, will have many brothers, including all of Esau’s offspring. These blessings are prophetic. They tell of things to come, in this case.

4.   What does “I sustained him grain and new-wine” mean? It appears at first to mean that Isaac will sustain Jacob (keep him alive and strong), and will benefit him with grain (like wheat, rice, etc.) and new wine (freshly fermented fruit juices). Yet, Isaac is an old man. He cannot do this. Since this is prophetic, the real speaker is Yehovah. He will sustain Jacob. He will benefit him with good grain crops. He will provide him with good fruits and vines so that wine will be plentiful and good.

5.   Explain “And where to thee?”: This is a very brief way of saying the fuller statement, “And where will I obtain a blessing to give to thee?”

6.   What was Isaac expressing when he said, “What will I do, my son?” He is expressing frustration. He didn’t know what he should do. If Yehovah didn’t give him a prophetic statement, he couldn’t make something up with which to bless him.

7.   Isaac finally gave Esau a blessing. What happened so that Isaac was able to do that? The Spirit of Yehovah gave Isaac the words to speak over Esau. Thus, Isaac then prophesied over him.

8.   What does “thy settlement will be from oils of the land” mean? These oils are of the food type, not of the petroleum (gasoline) type. A settlement is a place where folks settle—where they set themselves to live. If Esau’s settlement (singular) will be from oils, Esau will settle where plants that produce food oils grow. Such plants include the following:

  • Olive trees (producing olive oil)
  • Peanuts (producing peanut oil)
  • Sunflowers (producing sunflower oil)
  • Safflower (producing safflower oil)

       There are many other plants that are good for oils. Because Esau will live where water is scarce, some plants won’t be often grown. Corn is good for corn oil, but corn requires a higher amount of rain or watering. Even sunflowers and peanuts require larger amounts of rain. There are plants in the Middle East, where Esau will dwell, that produce oil without requiring so much rainfall.

9.   What does “thy settlement will be from dew of the heavens from above” mean? Esau’s land will be watered more from dew than from rain. There are areas of the world that receive very little rain, but obtain good water for plants from dew. The far western part of California is like this. Watermelons grow in the far western part of California just from dew, since it rarely rains there. The watermelons are very tasty, and are not like those that grow in the rest of the country. In a similar way, Esau’s offspring will live where dews will be heavy and good even when the yearly rainfall is very small and the region is a desert.

10. What does “thou shalt live upon thy sword” mean? The following will fit this description:

  • Esau will constantly be fighting others, and others will constantly be fighting Esau
  • Esau will always have to be on guard and ready to fight, though there may be years of peace
  • Esau will be very good at guarding others, handling weapons, and expert in war and protection. (Thus, Esau will be military, or will serve as a police force or armed guards.)
  • Esau will become expert at making beautiful and useful swords, weapons and armour.

       You will probably think of other occupations that will fit this description. I do not know which one or ones will describe what Esau will be doing, but the sword will always be part of Esau’s offsprings’ lives.

11. What will be one of Esau’s main services that he will do? Esau will serve (that is, slave for) his brother Jacob. Thus, Esau’s offspring will obey orders from Jacob’s offspring.

This may sound like a bad arrangement, but it won’t have to be. Jacob’s offspring will do only right during the Millennium (the 1,000 years when Messiah Yeshua will reign over all the kings and lords of the planet), and they will do right at times before that time. Esau’s descendants and Jacob’s descendants will have times of peace together. Even if they are hostile toward each other, however, Esau’s descendants will finally be slaves of Jacob’s descendants.

12. Explain “And he shall be just as thou shalt descend. And thou shalt break his yoke from upon thy neck!” When Esau’s descendants are slaves to Jacob’s descendants, Esau will descend—that is, will go down. The text doesn’t say whether this will be due to a loss of wealth, or whether it will be actually going down hill to do something. The word descend is used in both cases. Esau will go down in some way, however. Esau’s descendants will rebel against slavery to Jacob’s descendants, and will break Jacob’s yoke (his slavery hold) from upon his neck. Esau will become freed from slavery to Jacob.

13. What is a yoke?

Yoke

A Yoke is a way to harness animals (and sometimes persons) so that they can carry a load and pull without being hurt.

14. Will Esau’s breaking Jacob’s yoke from upon his neck be good, or will it be bad? Esau will think it is good. It will be bad, however, since Esau’s offspring will be true enemies of Israel. Yehovah will make Esau’s land, the land of Edom, a permanent waste.

Malachi 1:3 “And I [Yehovah] hated Esau! And I laid his mountains and his heritage waste for the dragons of the wilderness!” 4Whereas Edom says, “We are impoverished, but we will return and build the desolate places,” thus says Yehovah of armies, “They shall build, but I will throw down! And they shall call them ‘The border of wickedness’ and ‘The people against whom Yehovah has indignation forever!’”

XI. The Second Plot and the Plan (verses 41-45)

Esau held a grudge against Jacob because of the blessing that Isaac had given him.

Esau hatched a plan in his heart (mind). “Days of mourning of my papa shall approach! And I have killed Jacob my brother!”

Someone told Rivka what Esau said in his mind! Rivka sent for and called Jacob. She said to him, “Behold, Esau thy brother consoles himself to thee to kill thee! And now, my son, hearken into my voice. And arise. Flee for thee unto White (Laban) my brother Haranward. And thou shalt dwell with him a few days until-that heat of thy brother shalt return, until the nose of thy brother shall return from with thee. And he will forget what thou did to him. And I will send. And I will take thee from there. Why will I be bereft indeed of both of you one day?”

Questions

1.   Esau formed a grudge against Jacob over the blessing that his papa, Isaac, had given to Jacob. Did Esau care that much about the blessing itself? Esau didn’t care about the blessing itself. I can think of several reasons why Esau was so angry:

  • Esau was angry at first because he thought that Jacob had gotten his inheritance and its valuables. Esau didn’t care about spiritual blessings.
  • Esau was later angry after finding the truth of the contents of the blessing because the blessing sounded bad for him—that he would be a slave to his brother. That would make most brothers angry.
  • Esau didn’t like being tricked by his brother even if Esau had sold the birthright.
  • Esau didn’t like his father’s decision to keep the big blessing with Jacob; that gave Esau the impression that Isaac favored Jacob over him.
  • Esau didn’t like going through the work of fixing a good meal for his father, then having his father reject the meal because Jacob had found out and had gotten a meal to him first.

       The blessing’s contents were not important to Esau, but the idea that Jacob got a better blessing that Esau really bothered Esau.

2.   What are “days of mourning” in “days of mourning of my papa shall approach”? Those are the days just after Isaac dies. They normally will last about 40 days. When folks died, those who loved them didn’t have a funeral as we understand it. They prepared the bodies themselves, they buried the bodies, then they mourned for days. That did them much more good than a funeral does now. They mourned by sitting with others who were mourning, sometimes sitting in silence, sometimes expressing things that were important about the person who died.

3.   What does Esau mean by “And I have killed Jacob, my brother”? He is planning the murder of his brother!

4.   Esau plotted the murder of Jacob because he hated Jacob over the blessing. What does this tell readers about Esau’s character? This tells readers that his character was violent, vengeful, and ungodly. He was willing to murder his brother over stuff! He did not fit into the plan of God to bless all races. He was willing to murder his nearest of kin in his own race!

Character is a choice. You have complete control over your character. Your environment (those things that are around you, including all persons and circumstances) have absolutely nothing to do with the character you will determine to form for yourself. Will you be angry? Will you be bitter? Will you be kind? Will you be giving? Will you love deeply? Will you be jealous? Will you be hard-working? Will you be lazy? Will you be cruel? Will you show mercy? Will you fear Yehovah? Will you only want to fit in with those around you? Will you do drugs? Will you use others for your own fun? Will you listen carefully to others? Will you only want to win? You will choose your character. You can also change your character, but you can’t undo what you did.

Esau’s character was very bad.

5.   Who told Rebekah the words that Esau spoke in his heart (mind)? The only being that can read minds is Yehovah! Others may be able to figure what another person is most likely thinking, but that isn’t the same as reading a mind. Only Yehovah can do that. (No human, no angel, and no demon can read a human’s mind.)

6.   Why did the one who read Esau’s mind tell Rebekah? Yehovah told Rebekah because He wanted Jacob to live. He had plans for Jacob.

7.   Why didn’t He just stop Esau from the murder plan? Yehovah also had plans for Esau. Stopping him might involve killing him, and Yehovah did not desire to do that.

8.   What does “Esau thy brother consoles himself to thee to kill thee” mean? The only way Esau could ‘get over’ the anger and bitterness he had toward Jacob over the blessing was to tell himself that he would soon murder Jacob. That made him feel better.

9.   What does “until-that heat of thy brother shall return” mean?  This is very bad wording in English, but it is the way the Hebrew text expresses it.

  • “Until-that” means until the event or circumstance occurs.
  • “Heat” is great anger.
  • “Shall return” means shall turn—shall go back to the way it was before it became so different.

       Thus, the statement, “until-that heat of thy brother shall return,” means until the time when thy brother’s great anger will become very little, or will be gone.

10. What does “until the nose of thy brother shall return from with thee” mean? When a person becomes very angry, the anger shows in the person’s nose! (Watch when folks become angry; see if you can see this.) The nose becomes changed, as if it is extended to the person against whom is the anger. The nose stays with the person.

When one says, “He is nosey,” that refers to looking into another person’s business and life in a way that is not appropriate. In a similar way, when a person becomes angry at another person, the angry person will tend to watch everything that the other person does as if it is that person’s business. The angry person will sometimes try to catch the other person doing something wrong. The angry person’s nose is with the other person!

If the angry person’s nose returns from being with the other person, that means that the anger has subsided—has become far less.

11. In verse 45, Rebekah states, “until the nose of thy brother shall return from with thee. And he will forget what thou did to him.” Wasn’t Rebekah responsible for what Jacob did to Esau? Esau didn’t know (or care about) the details of what Rebekah did; he cared only for what Jacob had done. Rebekah was responsible, and so were Jacob and even Isaac. Esau’s focus was on Jacob.

12. What does bereft mean? It is the same as being bereaved. That means that someone for whom one greatly cared has died.

13. What does Rebekah mean by “Why will I be bereft indeed of both of you one day?” She is thinking ahead. If Esau kills Jacob, Esau will then have to flee, since he cannot stay with the family after committing murder of a family member. Thus, Rebekah will lose both her sons in one day. Jacob’s temporarily going away is far better.

XII. The Protest and the Third Blessing (verse 46-chapter 28:4)

Rivka was very upset because of the daughters of Heth. They were such bad women, that Rivka abhorred in her lives from seeing them. Yet, Jacob might take a wife from these daughters of the land. Her lives would then be intolerable.

Isaac called Jacob. He blessed him. He also commanded him: “Thou shalt not take a woman from the daughters of Canaan! Arise! Walk toward the High Extension toward the house of Bethuel, father of thy mother. And take a woman to thee from there from daughters of Laban, brother of thy mother. And El Shaddai will bless thee. And He has ‘fruited’ thee. And He has multiplied thee. And thou shalt be to a congregation of peoples! And He will give to thee blessings of Avraham—to thee and to thy seed with thee to thy inheriting the land of thy sojournings that Elohim gave to Avraham.”

Questions

1.   What does “I abhorred in my lives from the faces of the daughters of Heth” mean? This means that Rivka found life to be so bad because of these women! She couldn’t stand life!

2.  What was wrong with these women, and what did they have to do with Rebekah? The text doesn’t say what was wrong.

In societies like those described in the Bible, everyone had to work. The slaves worked, but so did those who owned the slaves. They often worked side by side. In very wealthy and sedentary societies (places where folks worked together staying in one place and not moving for the sake of herds and flocks), slaves might do all the work while their owners did little or no work. That wasn’t the way of Avraham, Isaac or Jacob. They all had to work together; their lives depended on each other.

Rivka had to work, and Esau’s women had to work. When folks work together, they also talk together, and they are amused together. These women behaved in ways that terribly bothered and distressed Rivka. She couldn’t just avoid them; they were part of the group since Esau had taken them for his women.

3.   What did Rivka fear, according to verse 46? She feared that Jacob might take a woman of the same type, since that seemed to be the only kind of women that were local.

4.   Was Rivka racist against the local women? No, she wasn’t against their race. She was against their behaviors.

5.   How did Isaac remedy Rivka’s fear? He called and commanded Jacob to not take a woman from the daughters of Canaan.

6.   Genesis 28:1 states that Isaac blessed him (Jacob). What did he say or do that was this blessing? The text doesn’t say. The Bible only covers information that is important for readers to know. Many things happened in the lives of these folks, but the Bible only covers very few details. Readers only need to know that Isaac blessed Jacob. This will show readers that Isaac is not angry with Jacob, and neither is Yehovah.

7.   Where did Isaac command Jacob to obtain a woman? He commanded him to take a cousin, one of Laban’s daughters!

8.   Is marrying a first cousin a wise thing to do today? Explain. It isn’t a good idea today. That can lead to disease problems, since having children with one who is a close relative is very risky. It wasn’t risky back then. Humans didn’t have genetic dangers that arise because of genes—the ‘codes’ that are exchanged when a new baby is made in sexual intercourse. Long ago, the genes had few problems. In our time, when genes are exchanged (the sperm and the egg that get together in sexual intercourse each have sets, and those sets go through something that is like shuffling a deck of cards—various traits, like eye color, skin color, etc. are shuffled), bad results (like being a bleeder) are fewer if the one who gave the sperm is not related to the one who has the egg. Folks could be related back then, and few problems arose.

9.   Why did Isaac want Jacob to marry his cousin? Isaac knew the quality and sense of Rivka. He knew that Laban’s daughters would not be like the Canaanite women, but instead would have sense.

10. What does El Shaddai mean? This name means Mighty One, My Breasts. It is a name that describes what a breastfeeding baby would understand. Its mother is its mighty one, and she has the source of nourishment: milk in her breasts. This is a very affectionate term for Yehovah.

11. How did Isaac know that El Shaddai would bless Jacob? Isaac knew that the promises of Yehovah would go through Jacob. If Yehovah didn’t bless Jacob, Jacob would probably be ordinary in life, and would be a common citizen of some other group. Since Yehovah would make a great race from him, Yehovah would bless him. Isaac also was again prophesying this.

12. What does “He has ‘fruited’ thee” mean? I coined (made up) the word ‘fruited,’ since I don’t think this is a real word. It means to make a person fruitful, where fruit has to do with having children (as well as other things).

Fruit in the Bible also refers to good works, the kind of actions that are morally and ethically right and helpful to others and before Yehovah.

13. What will happen if El Shaddai multiplies him? He will become a race!

14. What is a congregation of peoples? Most congregations are made of individuals. A congregation of peoples will be a get-together of many cultures to work together for the benefit of the congregation!

15. Who is “thy seed with thee”?  That is Messiah Yeshua, as the following text explains:

Galatians 3:16 The promises were made to Abraham and his seed. He doesn’t say, “And to seeds,” as of many, but, “And to thy seed,” as of one, which is Messiah.

Thus, Avraham, Isaac, Jacob and Yeshua will all inherit the land in which Avraham, Isaac and Jacob sojourned. Since Yeshua will be an owner, He will make it a very good land for all its inhabitants, an exciting land for its inhabitants and guests!

XIII. Esau’s Attempt at Making Things Right (verses 5-9)

Isaac sent Jacob, fully blessed. Jacob did as he was told; he began walking toward the house of Bethuel.

Esau saw that Isaac blessed Jacob. He saw that Isaac will even send Jacob with his blessing to obtain a woman from Padanaram, from Laban. Esau had heard Isaac tell Jacob not to take a woman from the daughters of Canaan. Esau also saw that Jacob hearkened unto his father and his mother. Now Esau knew the truth—”the daughters of Canaan are bad in the eyes of Isaac his father.” Esau therefore went to Ishmael to obtain another woman!

He took Mahalath to be his woman in addition to the two women he already had.

Questions

1.   Esau saw that Isaac blessed Jacob (rather than tell him off for deceiving him). He also saw Isaac send Jacob to Padanaram to take a woman. (Esau had gotten his own Canaanite women without the permission or consent of his parents. If he had sought permission, Isaac would have warned him not to take Canaanite women just as Avraham had warned his slave not to take a woman of the Canaanites for Isaac). Esau saw that Isaac gave Jacob a command, and Jacob obeyed. Esau saw that the daughters of Canaan were bad in the eyes of Isaac his father. What did Esau do with all this information, and was his action good? Esau went and took another woman! His action wasn’t good or bad. It didn’t remedy anything. It just brought another woman into the picture. It didn’t change Esau.

2.   Jacob was a grown man. Did he have to hearken to his parents? He didn’t have to do that. He knew that his parents were wise, however. He had received great blessings from them both. He had no reason to go against them. He desired a good wife.

3.   Many today engage in premarital sexual intercourse (having sexual intercourse before marriage, also known as fornication). Many women get pregnant by this means, and many men are responsible for bringing children into the world without being fathers. Some of these women then become religious, and few of the men care about religion. Some modern churches have mainly women attending. Many of these women have come to church because they want something in their lives besides the emptiness that they caused by their own actions. (I am not thinking of a woman who was raped.) Very, very few truly desire Godliness. Whom do these men and women more resemble: Jacob, Esau, or the daughters of Heth? They resemble the daughters of Heth!

4.   Will you be more like Jacob, Esau, or the daughters of Heth? Speak the truth. (Answers will vary.)

5.   If Mahalath means What Hast Thou Pierced, why might a girl baby be named this? I can think of some ideas, though I don’t know:

  • This might be an affectionate name for a baby whose cuteness pierced through hard-hearted relatives;
  • This might be an affectionate name for a baby whose cuteness pierced through soft-hearted relatives;
  • It might be an angry name given because the mother might have been raped…

       I can only guess without being told by One who knows.

6.   Were Esau’s parents consoled by Mahalath? The text doesn’t say that they were. I don’t see how this changed anything regarding the other two women.

Genesis 23 – Funeral Arrangements QA Supplied

Funeral Arrangements

(Genesis 23, Questions and Answers Supplied)

 

Background and Printed Text: Genesis 23:1-20

Genesis 23:1 And the lives of Sarah were 100 year and twenty year and seven years, the years of the lives of Sarah. 2And Sarah died in the City-of-Four. He is Hebron in the land of Canaan. And Avraham came to mourn for Sarah and to weep for her.

3And Avraham arose from upon the faces of his dead-one. And he spoke unto the sons of Khet to say, 4 “I am a sojourner and a dweller with you. Give to me a possession of a tomb with you, and I will entomb my dead-one from my faces.”  5And the sons of Khet answered Avraham to say to him, 6“Hearken-to us, my lord! Thou art a prince of Elohim in our midst. Entomb thy dead-one in a choice of our tombs. A man from us will not obstruct his tomb from thee from entombing thy dead-one.” 7And Avraham arose. And he prostrated to the people of the land, to the sons of Khet. 8And he spoke with them to say, “If there is with your being to entomb my dead from to my faces, hearken-ye to me and encounter-ye for me in Ephron the son of Tzokhar. 9And he has given to me the cave of the Makhpaylah that is to him that is in the edge of his field. He will give her to me in your midst for a possession of a tomb via the full silver.”

10And Ephron dwelt in the midst of the sons of Khet. And Ephron the Kheti answered Avraham in the ears of the sons of Khet to all comers of the gate of his city to say, 11“No my lord. Hearken-to me! I gave the field to thee and the cave that is in him. I gave her to thee to the eyes of the sons of my people. I gave her to thee to entomb from thy dead.” 12And Avraham prostrated to the faces of the people of the land. 13And he spoke unto Ephron in the ears of the people of the land to say, “But if thou— were— hearken-to me. I gave silver of the field. Take from me, and I have entombed my dead there.” 14And Ephron answered Avraham to say to him, 15“My Lord, hearken to me. A land of 400 shekels of silver is between thee and between me. What is he? Entomb thy dead-one.” 16And Abraham hearkened unto Ephron. And Abraham weighed to Ephron the silver that he had named in the audience of the sons of Heth, four hundred shekels of silver, crossed-over to a merchant.

17And the field of Ephron that is in Machpelah that is to the faces of Mamre, the field and the cave that is in him and all the tree that is in the field that is in all his borders around arose 18to Abraham for an acquisition to the eyes of the sons of Heth, and all comers of the gate of his city. 19And afterward, Avraham entombed Sarah his woman into the cave of the field of Machpelah upon the faces of Mamre. He is Hevron in the land of Canaan. 20And the field stood, and the cave that is in him, to Avraham for a possession of a tomb from the sons of Khet.

I. Sarah’s Death (verses 1-2)

Sarah had her first son at age 91 (see Genesis 17:17 and 17:21). She therefore had 36 years with her son before she died.

She died in the city of Hebron. Avraham came to mourn and weep for her.

Questions

1.   Why is the English so strange in verse 1? The Hebrew language often uses the singular when the numbers are large. Therefore, it uses “100 year” instead of 100 years.

       Something else is different about this verse. Instead of the normal Hebrew expression (“100 and 20 and 7 years”), it is divided up into three parts: “100 year and twenty year and seven years,” as if she had three separate parts to her lives (plural). If this is correct, she had one life that lasted 100 years, one that lasted 20 years, and one that lasted 7 years. This was one lifetime, but changes occurred for her when one part of her life turned to another. No other place in the Bible does this.

2.   Why are her lives plural (instead of ‘life’)? Everyone’s lives are plural. Your lives are plural. You are living as a child at this time. Your life will change once you become a teenager. It will again change when you are a younger adult. It will change again when you become an older adult, and when you become a very old adult.

3.   Why does the text twice mention, “the lives of Sarah”? This tells the reader that this is very important information. She truly had these years of her lives in these blocks of time.

4.   Where is Hebron?

Graphic1

       (See if you can find it on this map. Note the location of the Salt Sea, also known as the Dead Sea.) The Sea in the upper left corner is the Mediterranean Sea. The next map will show where that is. Africa touches the Mediterranean to the south.

Graphic2

5.   Wasn’t Avraham present when Sarah died? If he had to come mourn for her, he must not have been. He was over a large group of cowboys and shepherds, and could have been away on business when this occurred.

6.   What does mourn mean? This is all that is involved in greatly missing a person (or an item) who has died, feeling very sad for the loss, expressing sadness (sorrow), etc.

7.   What does weep mean? That is what we call crying, when tears are shed. When the Bible uses cry, it normally means to call out loud.

II. Approaching the People for a Burying Place (verses 3-9)

Avraham mourned and wept over Sarah.

He then arose, and spoke unto the sons of Khet on whose land he was grazing the cattle and sheep. He needed a place to put her body.

Avraham told the sons of Heth that he is a sojourner and a dweller with them. He asked them to give him a possession of a tomb.

The sons of Heth recognized Avraham as a prince of Elohim among them. They told him to choose one of their tombs to place his dead one. None of their men would keep him from taking one of their tombs.

Avraham stood, and he then prostrated before the people of the land, the sons of Heth.

Avraham spoke to them; if there was ‘with their being’ to entomb his dead from his faces, that is, from his sight, if they would encounter in (speak directly with) Ephron the son of Tzokhar, that will result in his giving the cave of the Makh-pay-lah located in the edge of his field. Ephron will give her (the cave) to Avraham in the midst of their land for a possession of a tomb, and at the full price of its value in silver.

Questions

1.   How long did Avraham mourn and weep for Sarah before he began to discuss with the sons of Heth regarding a burial place? The text doesn’t say. Bodies of the dead needed to be placed into the ground (or preserved) very soon, since the smell would very quickly become very bad.

2.   Why didn’t Avraham use the word sell instead of give? His request, “Give to me a possession of a tomb with you,” was not a request for free land. The expression, “Give,” in Hebrew, might be for pay, or it might not. He didn’t use the word sell because even with an exchange of money, the local people needed to give him a possession. If they sold him the land, they might later reclaim it. If they gave him a possession, he would have it and a clear title (ownership that no one would dispute).

3.   Did the sons of Heth (Khet, in Hebrew, meaning hot in English) believe in Elohim? Just because they spoke of Avraham as a prince of Elohim doesn’t mean they believed in Elohim. Many today speak of ‘Jesus’, and very few know anything about Him that is right. They don’t believe in Him, but they really think they do. The same was true in Avraham’s day. The sons of Khet didn’t believe in Avraham’s Elohim; they had their own elohim (gods) in which to believe.

4.   Why was Avraham friendly with them (if they didn’t believe in Elohim)? Men and women who fear Elohim (who fear Yehovah) will certainly be very gracious and kind to neighbours who don’t believe in Him; Yehovah is kind to them! Anyone who claims to believe in the Biblical God but who holds a grudge against someone because that person doesn’t believe in the Biblical God doesn’t know anything that is important about the Biblical God.

5.   What did the sons of Khet mean by, “Thou art a prince of Elohim”? They knew that Avraham believed in Elohim, and they saw how Elohim had blessed him, making him a ruler over many cowboys and shepherds. He therefore was a prince over his cowhands and sheephands. Since he was living in the midst of the sons of Khet, he was therefore a prince among them. He treated them very well, and was a true friend.

6.   Why would no one among the sons of Khet obstruct Avraham’s choosing any tomb among them, since tombs were often very expensive and difficult to construct? They greatly respected Avraham. He had been a friend to them.

7.   Why did Avraham prostrate to the people of the land, and who are they? They are the common folks, and in this case are the sons of Khet. Avraham prostrated to them to show his willingness to serve them, and to show that he was humble and not arrogant.

8.   Why didn’t Avraham ask Ephron for himself? If Ephron might feel as if he had to acquiesce if Avraham directly approached him. If his fellow citizens approached him, the refusal would be much softer.

9.   Did did Avraham insist on paying the full price, and refused to seek a bargain? Avraham was a prophet. He knew that this land would be his at a later time. Had he obtained the land at a bargain price, that would have given reasons for dwellers in the region to see Avraham and his offspring as cheats rather than as good neighbours.

       Early Americans purchased land from American Indian groups for prices far below the land values. This now is a problem, since modern American Indians know how their ancestors were cheated. Avraham had no desire to give reasons to Middle Eastern occupants to see Avraham and his offspring as cheaters.

III. The Supposed Price (verses 10-16)

Ephron was now present. He spoke to Avraham in front of witnesses: the sons of Khet and all comers to the city gate.

He first spoke as if he were in an argument with Avraham: “No my lord. Hearken-to me!”  He then stated, “gave the field to thee and the cave that is in him.”  He next stated, “I gave her to thee to the eyes of the sons of my people.”  Still, as if that wasn’t enough, he stated, “I gave her to thee to entomb from thy dead.”

Avraham prostrated himself (went flat down on his stomach) to the faces of (straight in front of) the people of the land. He spoke unto Ephron so that the people of the land could hear: “But if thou— were— hearken-to me. I gave silver of the field. Take from me, and I have entombed my dead there.”  Avraham determined to purchase the field, not take it as a gift.

Ephron then spoke of the price and his and Avraham’s relationship: “My Lord, hearken to me. A land of 400 shekels of silver is between thee and between me. What is he? Entomb thy dead-one.”

Avraham then hearkened to Ephron and weighed the silver to him that Ephron had determined. The silver was the same kind that “crossed over to a merchant,”  the same kind used in stores.

Questions

1.   Where was Ephron before this? The text doesn’t say. The way the text is worded, it seems that the sons of Khet went and spoke to him, and that he then came to speak directly with Avraham. He then could tell Avraham face to face that he was giving the field and the cave to him.

2.   Why did Ephron answer Avraham “in the ears of the sons of Ket to all comers of the gat of his city”? He wanted witnesses to hear that he was giving that field and its cave to Avraham. He also knew that having witnesses hear this was important to Avraham.

3.   Why did Ephron start by saying, “No, my lord. Hearken to me”? It was as if Ephron and Avraham had disagreed. It was a very friendly disagreement in which Ephron had given the field and its cave to Avraham, but Avraham had wanted to purchase it.

4.   Why did Ephron state, “I gave” three times? He was determined to make sure that all realized that he had done this.

5.   What does “to the eyes of the sons of my people” mean? It means directly in front of and in full view of the citizens who were his people.

6.   The expression, “to entomb from thy dead” is not the way speakers of the English language would say this. What does it mean? The word from means away, at a distance. Thus, “to entomb from thy dead” means “to place into a tomb in order to be at a distance that that Avraham is no longer where her dead body is located.

7.   Explain “But if thou— were— hearken-to me”:  It is as if Avraham is having a very difficult time with words. He wanted Ephron to take silver for the field, not to give it to him as a gift.

8.   Why did Avraham insist on giving silver for the field instead of taking it as a gift? Avraham knew that folks from Epron’s people in later generations would resent (feel a strong anger) the gift to Avraham and his people, and they might reclaim the field and the cave as their own, as if Avraham never truly gained title (official ownership) to it. He had to make certain that the transaction (act of doing business) was both legal and public.

9.   Was 400 shekels of silver a lot? No. That is why Ephron said, “A land of 400 shekels of silver is between thee and between me. What is he?”

10. Why was the fact that the silver was crossed over to a merchant important? This showed that it was normal currency, not something that might later be viewed as an unusual currency by which Avraham got a great bargain, cheating Ephron.

IV. The Receipt (verses 17-20)

The text explains what arose to Avraham for an acquisition (something that a person acquires: gets, obtains, and now owns):

  • The field of Ephron located in Machpelah, straight in front of Mamre
  • The field and the cave in the field
  • All the tree (we would say trees) in the field in all the fields borders.

The sons of Khet and all covers of the gate of this city saw this transaction.

Avraham entombed Sarah in the cave of this field. The other name of this location is Hevron (most call it Hebron) in the land of Canaan (named after the most powerful race present, the Canaanites). The text again stated that the field and its cave stood for a possession of a tomb from the sons of Khet.

Questions

1.   Why are so many words used to indicate that Avraham truly acquired the field from the sons of Khet by legal means? Yehovah knows the future. He knew that this acquisition would be challenged in a future generation.

       There is another reason. This is the only part of the entire land that Avraham acquired. Yehovah made a Covenant (a vow that is made with a god/God as a witness to enforce the vow) with Avraham. This Covenant stated that Avraham would acquire all of this land. That never happened, and Avraham died. Either Yehovah did not keep His word (which isn’t true) or He will keep it by resurrecting (bringing back to life in a human body) Avraham from the dead and giving him the land!