Isn’t it hard to imagine that Esau came out of Rebekah’s womb, covered with hair?
Infants are usually smooth-skinned, perhaps a bit wrinkled, with sometimes hair on their head, maybe some eyebrows. I’ve just never seen a hairy baby before. Also, just the thought of Jacob grasping Esau’s heel, coming out of the womb – just sounds so awesome – a hairy baby coming out, with his brother grasping his heel.
Also, Esau despised his birthright. He sold his birthright to his brother for some lentil stew?
Jacob probably knew that Esau despised his birthright, so, he took advantage of that fact by asking his brother to sell it to him in exchange for the stew.
Was it the Lord’s will for Jacob to do this?
Why couldn’t Jacob simply shared, given his brother something to eat without mentioning the birthright?
On a different note, anybody have a good recipe for lentil stew? I also wonder what was used to season the lentil stew. I wonder how lentil stew tasted when it was made during old testament times. I wonder if we ate it, if we’d think it was good.
~Cecelia Dowdy~
21Isaac prayed to the Lord on behalf of his wife, because she was childless. The Lord answered his prayer, and his wife Rebekah became pregnant. 22The babies jostled each other within her, and she said, “Why is this happening to me?” So she went to inquire of the Lord.
Sheep are utterly dependent upon the shepherd: if one gets lost, it is unable to find its way back home.
Prayers are said in conjunction with its presence on one’s person. When we humans put things into perspective
we will soon realize that science is no different from metaphysics
and spirituality.