The Bible Recap - Day 020 (Genesis 25-26) - Year 4
Episode Date: January 20, 2022SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! Seriously, go there. - Join our PATREON community for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - A...cts 17:11 - Romans 8 - Psalm 116 - Hosea 11 - Credits SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today!
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
I want to start today out with a bit of encouragement.
I love seeing they are all looking to scripture for truth.
In Acts 1711, Luke praised the Bereans who did this.
He said, Now the Bereans Jews were of more noble character than those in Thessalonica,
for they received the message with great eagerness and examined the scriptures every day
to see if what Paul said was true.
Please do that with everything I say here, because first of all,
there may be times when I'm just playing wrong about something.
I go to great lengths to avoid that, but it's bound to happen at some point, and then at other times I may not communicate something in the clearest way
possible, and it may end up being confusing. So please forgive me for any missteps I make in
communication, and know that I make every effort to speak truth with clarity, and keep searching
the scriptures, because I'm not the final word on anything. Today in our reading, we opened with Abraham remarrying after Sarah's death.
His second wife is named Ketura, and even though he was super old, he had six more kids,
which brings us to a grand total of eight.
But all his inheritance goes to Isaac, as God told him, because Isaac is the child through
which God would establish his promise to Abraham.
He was also the only child of Abraham's first wife.
Abraham died at 175 years old.
His son with Heghar, Ishmael, died a few decades later when he was 137.
We encountered a few lines of genealogies there, but resist the urge to skip past those.
Let your eyes fall on every word.
You won't remember it all, but once you've seen
something several times, it will start to stick with you little by little. Then we
got bits and pieces of a few storylines throughout the rest of our reading today. I'm
going to follow the Isaac storyline first, then I'll jump back to the part about
his kids, so I'm not necessarily always going to recap in the exact order we're
reading it, I'm just summarizing. In chapter 26, God appears to Isaac just like he did to Abraham.
And then, right after God's promise to him, he starts lying.
He manifests the same sins of his father Abraham, calling his wife his sister.
But this time, it wasn't even half true.
And some commentators say this could have also been the same King Abemaleck
that Abraham dealt with about this same thing.
In both of these stories, we see that King Abemalech actually has a higher view of God's holiness than Abraham and Isaac seem to.
In response to Isaac's sin, God shows him mercy.
God protects and blesses him, and quickly, within a year, Isaac has soared and reaped 100 fold. Because of his success, King of Bimalect tried to get rid of him,
which is one thing we'll see a lot of.
Anytime this family that God has established a relationship with starts to flourish,
the people around them notice.
They become jealous of them or afraid of them.
They want them dead and gone.
But then God appears to Isaac again,
at the very first well his father Abraham had taken possession of back in chapter 21,
Bershiba, and God promises again to bless and multiply him.
This promise that was originally for Isaac's father Abraham must extend through Isaac because he is the child of the promise, the only child of Abraham and Sarah. As we learned yesterday, Isaac got married at age 40,
and today we saw that he and Rebecca
had their first child when he was 60.
This actually all happened 15 years before Abraham died,
but sometimes Genesis likes to give these weird,
flash forward moments, so just bear with it.
Anyway, Rebecca was barren for 20 years,
but Isaac knows the God who grants life,
so he intercedes on behalf of Rebecca,
and God answered his prayers with a yes.
Sometimes God answers with a no,
but all of God's answers to our prayers,
whether yes, no, or wait,
served to establish his very good plans.
In this instance, in order for God to fulfill
his promise of many offspring to Abraham and Isaac,
God would have to open Rebecca's womb.
And when he did, Rebecca became pregnant with twins.
I wonder if these were the very first twins ever.
Rebecca had a lot of questions about what was happening, and I love that she took her questions to God, and he answered her.
God's answer was kind of perplexing, though, because he basically told her that his plan for these two
children would go against the cultural norms of their day.
The older son would not take prominence.
Instead, the younger son would rule.
This would be kind of like if Prince Charles died
and the throne passed straight on from Queen Elizabeth
to Prince Harry, skipping over all of Prince William
and his kids.
Then, through a whole tangled mess of sin,
God accomplished His purposes to that end.
We saw part of that unfolding today
and we'll see the rest tomorrow.
The part we saw today was where Esau's impatience
and Jacob's scheming added up to a transferred birthright,
which is the thing bestowed on the firstborn,
in signals inheritance and prominence.
Using a bowl of stew, God kind of flipped the script.
I relate to Esau a lot here. If you want to see me sin, wait for me to get tired and hungry.
Give me a string of nights where I've only had a couple hours sleep each night and all my wisdom
goes out the window. I would be wise to remember Esau's lot in life. Also, this promise for the younger
child, I want to point out that this isn't just a
one-off situation as far as God is concerned.
This has actually started to be a bit of a theme he establishes in Scripture.
Let me point out a few other times this has happened so far.
The offering of Abel, the younger child, was accepted while Cain, the firstborn, was
not.
Isaac, Abraham's second son, got the promises that normally would have gone to Ishmael. And then it happens again here with Jacob and Esau. Here's my take on what
this is showing us. There are a few places in Scripture that establish Jesus as our older
brother. Romans 8 says he is the firstborn among many brothers. And if he's the first
born and we're the younger brothers and sisters, then he should get
all the inheritance. But guess what? He shares. We know this because Romans 8 also tells us that we
share in his inheritance. This reminds me of what we saw in Job where the daughters got part of
the inheritance too. We wrapped up today's reading with a little section on Esau. Like his dad Isaac,
he married at 40.
Sometimes when people talk about sexual purity,
they say it's an outdated idea
because the Bible was written when people got married young
at like 13 or 14.
And maybe some of them did,
but according to the few marriage ages we do have recorded,
that's not necessarily the case.
There's one thing I wanna make sure we don't miss
in this final short paragraph.
Esau married two hit-ite women.
Not only did he marry two women, which is descriptive, not prescriptive, meaning it's telling us what he did, not telling us what to do,
but in addition to that, both of these women were outside the family God had set his blessing on.
His brother Jacob was committed to God's plan for this family, but Esau was indifferent or possibly even antagonistic to it.
Rest assured though, even his rebellion fits into the big picture.
What was your God's shot for today?
I loved seeing how God is no respecter of persons.
He shows attention and favor to those who are not in the position of honor, the so-journers
in the land, and the latter born kids.
Granted, I am the youngest child in my family,
so maybe that's why I caught my attention,
but I've seen this aspect of God's character
extend far beyond birth order.
For instance, my homeless friends know things about God
I couldn't possibly understand.
They're more content in him than I'll probably ever be.
And I have a friend whose child has debilitating mental and physical issues,
and sometimes he'll just be alone in a room and start laughing or smiling.
And even though science would deem his brain inferior to mine,
I think he knows things about God. I don't have the capacity to understand.
The God who made the human brain is certainly not limited to the number of its
functions that we're currently aware of.
I think there's a special way God communicates Himself to those who are in situations that
seem less desirable or more impossible.
God is endeared to the needy, the lowly.
And that's all of us, really.
Psalm 116 tells us He bends down to listen, and Hosea 11 tells us that he bends down to
feed us.
The more I can be aware of my neediness of him, the more I'll delight in his nearness and
provision, and the more my heart will remember that he's where the joy is.
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