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But Isaac, when he saw how
envy had changed the temper of Abimelech retired to a place called the Valley,
not far from Gerar: and as he was digging a well, the shepherds fell upon him,
and began to fight, in order to hinder the work; and because he did not desire
to contend, the shepherds seemed to get the him, so he still retired, and dug
another and when certain other shepherds of Abimelech began to offer him
violence, he left that also, still retired, thus purchasing security to himself
a rational and prudent conduct.
At length the gave him leave
to dig a well without disturbance. He named this well Rehoboth, which denotes
a large space; but of the former wells, one was called Escon, which
denotes strife, the other Sitenna, name signifies enmity.
3. It was now that
Isaac's affairs increased, and in a flourishing condition; and this his great
riches. But Abimelech, thinking in opposition to him, while their living made
them suspicious of each other, and retiring showing a secret enmity also, he
afraid that his former friendship with Isaac would not secure him, if Isaac
should endeavor the injuries he had formerly offered him; he therefore renewed
his friendship with him, Philoc, one of his generals. And when he had obtained
every thing he desired, by reason of Isaac's good nature, who preferred the
earlier friendship Abimelech had shown to himself and his father to his later
wrath against him, he returned home.
4. Now when Esau, one
of the sons of Isaac, whom the father principally loved, was now come to the
age of forty years, he married Adah, the daughter of Helon, and Aholibamah, the
daughter of Esebeon; which Helon and Esebeon were great lords among the
Canaanites: thereby taking upon himself the authority, and pretending to have
dominion over his own marriages, without so much as asking the advice of his
father; for had Isaac been the arbitrator, he had not given him leave to marry
thus, for he was not pleased with contracting any alliance with the people of
that country; but not caring to be uneasy to his son by commanding him to put
away these wives, he resolved to be silent.
5. But when he was old,
and could not see at all, he called Esau to him, and told him, that besides his
blindness, and the disorder of his eyes, his very old age hindered him from his
worship of God [by sacrifice]; he bid him therefore to go out a hunting, and
when he had caught as much venison as he could, to prepare him a supper
(32) that after this he might make
supplication to God, to be to him a supporter and an assister during the whole
time of his life; saying, that it was uncertain when he should die, and that he
was desirous, by prayers for him, to procure, beforehand, God to be merciful to
him.
6. Accordingly, Esau
went out a hunting. But Rebeka (33)
thinking it proper to have the supplication made for obtaining the favor of God
to Jacob, and that without the consent of Isaac, bid him kill kids of the
goats, and prepare a supper. So Jacob obeyed his mother, according to all her
instructions. Now when the supper was got ready, he took a goat's skin, and put
it about his arm, that by reason of its hairy roughness, he might by his father
be believed to be Esau; for they being twins, and in all things else alike,
differed only in this thing.
This was done out of his fear,
that before his father had made his supplications, he should be caught in his
evil practice, and lest he should, on the contrary, provoke his father to curse
him. So he brought in the supper to his father. Isaac perceivest to be
Esau.
" So suspecting no deceit, he
ate the supper, and betook himself to his prayers and intercessions with God;
and said, "O Lord of all ages, and Creator of all substance; for it was thou
that didst propose to my father great plenty of good things, and hast
vouchsafed to bestow on me what I have; and hast promised to my posterity to be
their kind supporter, and to bestow on them still greater blessings; do thou
therefore confirm these thy promises, and do not overlook me, because of my
present weak condition, on account of which I most earnestly pray to thee.
Be gracious to this my son;
and preserve him and keep him from every thing that is evil. Give him a happy
life, and the possession of as many good things as thy power is able to bestow.
Make him terrible to his enemies, and honorable and beloved among his friends."
7. Thus did Isaac pray
to God, thinking his prayers had been made for Esau. He had but just finished
them, when Esau came in from hunting. And when Isaac perceived his mistake, he
was silent: but Esau required that he might be made partaker of the like
blessing from his father that his brother had partook of; but his father
refused it, because all his prayers had been spent upon Jacob: so Esau lamented
the mistake. However, his father being grieved at his weeping, said, that "he
should excel in hunting and strength of body, in arms, and all such sorts of
work; and should obtain glory for ever on those accounts, he and his posterity
after him; but still should serve his brother."
8. Now the mother
delivered Jacob, when she was afraid that his brother would inflict some
punishment upon him because of the mistake about the prayers of Isaac; for she
persuaded her husband to take a wife for Jacob out of Mesopotamia, of her own
kindred, Esau having married already Basemmath, the daughter of Ismael, without
his father's consent; for Isaac did not like the Canaanites, so that he
disapproved of Esau's former marriages, which made him take Basemmath to wife,
in order to please him; and indeed he had a great affection for her.
Footnotes
(30) The birth of Jacob and Esau is here said to be after
Abraham's death: it should have been after Sarah's death. The order of the
narration in Genesis, not always exactly according to the order of time, seems
to have led Josephus into this error, as Dr. Bernard observes here.
(31) For Seir in Josephus, the coherence requires that we
read Esau or Seir, which signify the same thing.
(32) The supper of savory meat, as we call it, Genesis 27:4,
to be caught by hunting, was intended plainly for a festival or a sacrifice;
and upon the prayers that were frequent at sacrifices, Isaac expected, as was
then usual in such eminent cases, that a divine impulse would come upon him, in
order to the blessing of his son there present, and his foretelling his future
behavior and fortune. Whence it must be, that when Isaac had unwittingly
blessed Jacob, and was afterwards made sensible of his mistake, yet did he not
attempt to alter it, how earnestly soever his affection for Esau might incline
him to wish it might be altered, because he knew that this blessing came not
from himself, but from God, and that an alteration was out of his power. A
second afflatus then came upon him, and enabled him to foretell Esau's future
behavior and foretell Esaus future behavior and fortune also.
(33) Whether Jacob or his mother Rebeka were most blameable
in this imposition upon Isaac in his old age, I cannot determine. However the
blessing being delivered as a prediction of future events, by a Divine impulse,
and foretelling things to befall to the posterity of Jacob and Esau in future
ages, was for certain providential; and according to what Rebeka knew to be the
purpose of God, when he answered her inquiry,
"before the
children were born," Genesis 25:23,
"that one people should
be stronger than the other people; and the elder, Esau, should serve the
younger, Jacob."
Whether Isaac knew or
remembered this old oracle, delivered in our copies only to Rebeka; or whether,
if he knew and remembered it, he did not endeavor to alter the Divine
determination, out of his fondness for his elder and worser son Esau, to the
damage of his younger and better son Jacob, as Josephus elsewhere supposes,
Antiq. B. II. Ch. 7. Sect. 3; I cannot certainly
say. If so, this might tempt Rebeka to contrive, and Jacob to put this
imposition upon him. However, Josephus says here, that it was Isaac, and not
Rebeka, who inquired of God at first, and received the forementioned oracle,
Sect. 1; which, if it be the true reading, renders Isaac's procedure more
inexcusable. Nor was it probably any thing else that so much encouraged Esau
formerly to marry two Canaanitish wives, without his parents' consent, as
Isaac's unhappy fondness for him.
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