PARASHA 006 MAIN PAGE
B'resheet/Genesis
Toldot
25:19-28:9
Isaac
and Rebecca endure twenty childless years, until their prayers
are answered and
Rebecca conceives. She experiences a difficult pregnancy
as the “children struggle inside her”; YEHOVAH tells her
that “there are two nations in your womb,” and that the younger
will prevail over the elder.
Esau
emerges first; Jacob is born clutching
Esau’s heel. Esau grows up to
be “a cunning hunter, a man of the field”;
Jacob
is “a wholesome man,” a dweller in the tents of learning. Isaac
favors Esau; Rebecca loves Jacob. Returning exhausted and hungry
from the hunt one day, Esau sells his birthright (his rights as
the firstborn) to Jacob for a pot of red lentil stew.
In Gerar, in the land of
the Philistines,
Isaac presents Rebecca as his sister, out of fear that he
will be killed by someone coveting her beauty. He farms the land,
reopens the wells dug by his father Abraham, and digs a series
of his own wells: over the first two there is strife with the
Philistines, but the waters of the third well are enjoyed in
tranquility.
Esau marries two Hittite
women. Isaac grows old and blind, and expresses his desire to
bless Esau before he dies. While Esau goes off to hunt for his father’s
favorite food, Rebecca dresses Jacob in Esau’s clothes, covers
his arms and neck with goatskins to simulate the feel of his hairier
brother, prepares a similar dish, and sends Jacob to his father.
Jacob receives his father’s blessings for “the dew of the heaven and
the fat of the land” and mastery over his brother. When Esau returns and
the deception is revealed, all Isaac can do for his weeping son
is to predict that he will live by his sword, and that when Jacob
falters, the younger brother will forfeit his supremacy over the elder.
Jacob leaves home for
Charan
to flee Esau’s wrath and to find a wife in the family of his mother’s
brother, Laban.
Esau marries a third wife—Machalath, the daughter of Ishmael.
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