Znaleziono 435 Wyniki dla: Jacob and Esau

  • Then Isaac said, "Serve me your game, son, that I may eat of it and then give you my blessing." Jacob served it to him, and Isaac ate; he brought him wine, and he drank. (Genesis 27, 25)

  • As Jacob went up and kissed him, Isaac smelled the fragrance of his clothes. With that, he blessed him, saying, "Ah, the fragrance of my son is like the fragrance of a field that the LORD has blessed! (Genesis 27, 27)

  • Jacob had scarcely left his father, just after Isaac had finished blessing him, when his brother Esau came back from his hunt. (Genesis 27, 30)

  • "Who are you?" his father Isaac asked him. "I am Esau," he replied, "your first-born son." (Genesis 27, 32)

  • On hearing his father's words, Esau burst into loud, bitter sobbing. "Father, bless me too!" he begged. (Genesis 27, 34)

  • Esau exclaimed, "He has been well named Jacob! He has now supplanted me twice! First he took away my birthright, and now he has taken away my blessing." Then he pleaded, "Haven't you saved a blessing for me?" (Genesis 27, 36)

  • But Esau urged his father, "Have you only that one blessing, father? Bless me too!" Isaac, however, made no reply; and Esau wept aloud. (Genesis 27, 38)

  • Esau bore Jacob a grudge because of the blessing his father had given him. He said to himself, "When the time of mourning for my father comes, I will kill my brother Jacob." (Genesis 27, 41)

  • When Rebekah got news of what her older son Esau had in mind, she called her younger son Jacob and said to him: "Listen! Your brother Esau intends to settle accounts with you by killing you. (Genesis 27, 42)

  • Rebekah said to Isaac: "I am disgusted with life because of the Hittite women. If Jacob also should marry a Hittite woman, a native of the land, like these women, what good would life be to me?" (Genesis 27, 46)

  • Isaac therefore called Jacob, greeted him with a blessing, and charged him: "You shall not marry a Canaanite woman! (Genesis 28, 1)

  • Then Isaac sent Jacob on his way; he went to Paddan-aram, to Laban, son of Bethuel the Aramean, and brother of Rebekah, the mother of Jacob and Esau. (Genesis 28, 5)


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