Verse 1
Genesis 27:1. When Isaac was old
— A hundred and thirty-seven
years old; but he lived forty
years after this. And his eyes
were dim — Whereby God brought
about his own purpose of
bestowing the blessing on Jacob.
He called Esau, his eldest son —
With a view to declare him his
heir. The promise of the
Messiah, and the land of Canaan,
was a great trust, first
committed to Abraham, inclusive
and typical of spiritual and
eternal blessings; this, by
divine direction, he transmitted
to Isaac. Isaac, either not
knowing, or not duly considering
the divine oracle concerning his
two sons, that the elder should
serve the younger, resolves to
entail all the honour and power
that was wrapped up in the
promise upon Esau his eldest
son. Esau had greatly grieved
his parents by his marriage, yet
they had not expelled him, but
it seems were pretty well
reconciled to him.
Verse 2
Genesis 27:2. I know not the day
of my death — How soon I may
die; a declaration which every
man may make, and which every
man ought well to consider, and
lay to heart. It is great mercy
and wisdom in God to conceal
from us the time of our
dissolution. Hereby foreboding
fear on the one hand, and vain
presumption on the other, are
prevented, and a strong motive
is afforded us always to live
and walk in the Spirit, and be
like men waiting for their lord,
that when Jesus cometh to call
us hence, we may be found
prepared to meet him.
“Is death uncertain?
Therefore be thou fix’d:
Fix’d as a sentinel; all eye,
all ear:
All expectation of the coming
foe.”
Verse 3
Genesis 27:3. Take me some
venison — In this Isaac
designed, not so much the
refreshment of his own spirits,
as the receiving a fresh
instance of his son’s filial
duty and affection to him,
before he bestowed the designed
favour upon him. That my soul
may bless thee before I die —
May confer my solemn,
extraordinary, and prophetic
blessing, and thereby may
declare and constitute thee the
heir of all the blessings
bestowed by God upon me and my
fathers. For it was no common
blessing that Isaac meant for
Esau, but that important
patriarchal benediction which
chiefly related to the peculiar
and extraordinary covenant which
God entered into with Abraham,
to be a God to him and his seed,
and to give them the land of
Canaan, and in particular to
that fundamental part of it,
that the Messiah should be of
his seed, and bless all the
families of the earth. Isaac,
out of a fond affection for
Esau, endeavoured to entail this
blessing on him, unmindful of
the oracle that the elder should
serve the younger.
Verse 6
Genesis 27:6. Rebekah spake unto
Jacob — Rebekah is here
contriving to procure the
blessing for Jacob, which was
designed for Esau. If the end
were good, the means were bad,
and no way justifiable. If it
were not a wrong to Esau to
deprive him of the blessing, he
himself having forfeited it by
selling the birthright, yet it
was a wrong to Isaac to take
advantage of his infirmity to
impose upon him: it was a wrong
to Jacob, whom she taught to
deceive by putting a lie in his
mouth. If Rebekah, when she
heard Isaac promise the blessing
to Esau, had gone to him, and
with humility and seriousness
put him in remembrance of that
which God had said concerning
their sons; if she had further
showed him how Esau had
forfeited the blessing, both by
selling his birthright, and by
marrying of strange wives; it is
probable Isaac would have been
prevailed with to confer the
blessing upon Jacob, and needed
not thus to have been cheated
into it. This had been
honourable and laudable, and
would have looked well in
history; but God left her to
herself to take this indirect
course, that he might have the
glory of bringing good out of
evil.
Verse 13
Genesis 27:13. Upon me be thy
curse — That is, I will warrant
the success; or, if the issue
turn out ill, I will stand
between thee and all danger.
This she speaks in confidence of
a good issue, probably through
faith in God’s promises; the
accomplishment of which,
however, she seeks in an
indirect and crooked way.
Verse 16
Genesis 27:16. The skins of the
kids of goats — It is observed
by Bochart, that, in the eastern
countries, goats’ hair is very
like the human.
Verse 19
Genesis 27:19. And Jacob said, I
am Esau — Who would have thought
this plain man could have played
such a part? His mother having
put him in the way of it, he
applies himself to those methods
which he had never accustomed
himself to, but had always
conceived an abhorrence of. But
lying is soon learned. I wonder
how honest Jacob could so
readily turn his tongue to say,
I am Esau, thy firstborn: and
when his father asked him,
(Genesis 27:24,) Art thou my
very son Esau? to reply, I am.
How could he say, I have done as
thou badest me, when he had
received no command from his
father, but was doing as his
mother bid him? How could he
say, Eat of my venison, when he
knew it came not from the field,
but from the fold? But
especially I wonder how he could
have the forehead to father it
upon God, and to use his name in
the cheat.
Verse 20
Genesis 27:20. The Lord thy God
brought it to me — Is this
Jacob? It is certainly written
not for our imitation, but our
admonition. Here we see how one
lie draws on another. Let him
that standeth, take heed lest he
fall.
Now let us see how Isaac gave
Jacob his blessing.
Verse 21
Genesis 27:21. Come near, that I
may feel thee — He had some
suspicion from his voice, and
too quick return, that it was
not Esau.
Verse 27
Genesis 27:27. He smelled the
smell of his raiment — Probably
scented with odoriferous flowers
and other perfumes, with which
they could easily be supplied
from Arabia, famed for aromatic
herbs. The smell of my son is as
the smell of a field — The
grateful odour of my son’s
apparel resembles that of a
field which God hath adorned
with a variety of fruits and
flowers, and this I consider as
a token and presage that he and
his posterity shall be blessed
with all sorts of blessings, and
become blessings to others.
Three things Jacob is here
blessed with, 1st, Plenty,
(Genesis 27:28,) heaven and
earth concurring to make him
rich. 2d, Power, (Genesis
27:29,) particularly dominion
over his brethren, namely, Esau
and his posterity. 3d,
Prevalency with God, and a great
interest in heaven, Cursed be
every one that curseth thee —
Let God be a friend to all thy
friends, and an enemy to all
thine enemies. Now, certainly,
more is comprised in this
blessing than appears at first;
it must amount to an entail of
the promise of the Messiah: that
was, in the patriarchal dialect,
the blessing; something
spiritual, doubtless, is
included in it. First, That from
him should come the Messiah,
that should have a sovereign
dominion on earth, See Numbers
24:19, Out of Jacob shall come
he that shall have dominion, the
star and sceptre, Genesis 27:17.
Jacob’s dominion over Esau was
to be only typical of this,
Genesis 49:10. Secondly, That
from him should come the Church,
that should be particularly
owned and favoured by Heaven. It
was part of the blessing of
Abraham when he was first called
to be the father of the
faithful, Genesis 12:3, I will
bless them that bless thee;
therefore, when Isaac afterward
confirmed the blessing to Jacob,
he called it, the blessing of
Abraham, Genesis 28:4.
Verse 29
Genesis 27:29. Let nations bow
down to thee — When the
Canaanites were subdued in the
times of Joshua and the judges,
and made tributary to the
Israelites; and more especially
when the Philistines, Moabites,
Ammonites, and Edomites became
subject to them, in the time of
David, this prophecy was
fulfilled; but, like many other
prophecies, it shall receive its
principal accomplishment in the
latter days of the Messiah’s
kingdom, when he shall have
dominion from sea to sea, and
from the river to the ends of
the earth; when all kings shall
fall down before him, and all
nations serve him, Psalms 72:8;
Psalms 72:11.
Verse 33
Genesis 27:33. Isaac trembled
very exceedingly — Being
perplexed and astonished to
consider herein God’s overruling
providences, and how strangely
his purpose of giving the
blessing to Esau had been
disappointed. Those that follow
the choice of their own
affections, rather than the
dictates of the divine will,
involve themselves in such
perplexities as these. But he
soon recovers himself, and
ratifies the blessing he had
given to Jacob; I have blessed
him, and he shall be blessed —
He might have recalled it; but
now, at last, he is sensible he
was in an error when he designed
it for Esau. Either recollecting
the divine oracle, or having
found himself more than
ordinarily filled with the Holy
Ghost when he gave the blessing
to Jacob, he perceived that God
did, as it were, say Amen to it.
Genesis 27:35-36. Thy brother
hath taken away thy blessing —
That which by birthright
belonged to thee, and which I
had fully resolved to have
bestowed on thee. He took away
my birthright — This was a false
accusation, for he himself had
sold it, and despised it,
Hebrews 12:16. This shows there
was yet no true repentance in
him.
Verse 39
Genesis 27:39. The fatness of
the earth — Mount Seir, the
heritage of Esau, was a fertile
place, refreshed with dews and
showers. By thy sword shalt thou
live — That is, thou shalt be
warlike, and live upon spoil.
This was remarkably fulfilled
both in Esau himself, and his
posterity. He was a cunning
hunter, a man of the field, and
his descendants got possession
of mount Seir by force and
violence, expelling thence the
Horites, the former inhabitants,
Deuteronomy 2:22. They were
almost continually at war with
the Jews, both before and after
the Babylonish captivity.
Josephus says, they were so fond
of broils, that they went to war
as others would do to a banquet.
Thou shalt serve thy brother —
God never permitted the Edomites
to lord it over the Israelites,
although he made use of almost
all the other neighbouring
nations successively to oppress
them. When thou shalt have
dominion — Shalt gain strength,
become powerful, and appoint a
king of thy own. Thou shalt
break his yoke from off thy neck
— “When the sons of Jacob,” says
the Jerusalem Targum here,
“attend to the law, and observe
the precepts, they shall impose
a yoke of servitude upon thy
neck; but when they shall turn
away themselves from studying
the law, and neglect the
precepts, behold, then thou
shalt shake off the yoke of
servitude.” This is no bad
exposition of the passage: for
it was David who brought the
Edomites under the yoke, and in
his time the Jews in a great
degree observed the law. But in
the reign of Jehoram, when they
were very corrupt, “the Edomites
revolted from under the dominion
of Judah, making themselves a
king,” 2 Chronicles 21:8; 2
Chronicles 21:10. We may observe
here, although Esau obtained a
blessing, it was far short of
Jacob’s. There is nothing in it
that points at Christ, nothing
that brings either Esau or his
posterity into the Church of
God, and without that, “the
fatness of the earth” and the
plunder of the field will stand
him in little stead. Thus Isaac,
by faith, blessed them both
according as their lot should
be. And surely the exact
accomplishment of these
prophetic declarations, which
were fulfilled many hundreds of
years after the death of Moses
who recorded them, must, if
properly considered, give us a
high idea of the Holy
Scriptures, and convince us that
they are truly the words of that
BEING who knoweth the end from
the beginning.
Verse 41-42
Genesis 27:41-42. Esau said in
his heart — What he afterward
uttered in words, The days of
mourning for my father are at
hand — According to the course
of nature. Isaac, however, lived
forty-four years after this. Thy
brother doth comfort himself —
With thoughts of revenge, (which
is sweet to all enraged mind,)
and with hopes of recovering his
birthright.
Verse 44-45
Genesis 27:44-45. Tarry with him
a few days — Which proved to be
above twenty years. Why should I
be deprived of you both in one
day? — Of one by murder, and the
other by the hand of justice,
(Genesis 9:6,) or by some
remarkable stroke of divine
vengeance, Acts 28:4.
Verse 46
Genesis 27:46. If Jacob take a
wife of the daughters of Heth —
As Esau has done. More artifice
still. This was not the thing
she was afraid of. But if we use
guile once, we shall be very
ready to use it again. It should
be carefully observed, that,
although a blessing came on
Jacob’s posterity by his vile
lying and dissimulation, yet it
brought heavy affliction upon
himself, and that for a long
term of years. So severely did
God punish him personally, for
“doing evil that good might
come.” |