Footnotes
can be fun. “Jacob,” according to the footnotes in my translation, can mean two
things: “he grasps by the heel,” or “he cheats.” The Jacob character in these
stories does both. Which ought to be a hint that this is fiction – the
character’s name is a literary device that describes the way he’s going to
behave, which is pretty common in parables.
In fact,
the very first story about Jacob and Esau after their birth highlights the
cheating thing. Esau, when he grows up, is a man who enjoys hunting. Jacob is
described as “a quiet man, dwelling in tents,” (I wonder if that’s a euphemism
for “lazy ass”). One day Esau comes back from an unsuccessful hunt, and he’s
starving. Jacob happens to be making stew. So Esau asks his brother for
something to eat. Jacob refuses to give him anything to eat until he agrees to
sell Jacob his birthright (I assume his inheritance?). Esau, since he’s
starving, agrees and Jacob gives him stew. The author’s bias shows in the last
line of the story: “Thus Esau despised his birthright.” It would have been more
properly written as “Thus Jacob extorted Esau’s birthright.”
I should
say I feel real badly for Esau. He seems to be the only character in this whole
family that is not a complete shit. He’s a bit slow, but he’s dedicated to his
parents and his family, and all he seems to want is their approval. And his
reward is getting repeatedly fucked by his younger twin Jacob, who’s cleverer
and almost completely amoral.
Guess
which one God loves best. Come on, guess!
Moving
on, there’s a famine in the land where they live so Isaac’s family meanders
back to Gerar (where Abraham had told Abimelech that Sarah was just his
sister). Well, what works for dad works for the son – Isaac pretends Rebekah is
his sister instead of his wife. This time Abimelech tipped to the bullshit
before anyone accidentally married her (and it’s kind of unclear whether this
is the same Abimelech that Abraham had pulled this ruse on – it’s at least 60
years later, so that seems unlikely. A little research turned up speculation
that Abimelech was actually a title held by the Philistine kings, not a name). Oh,
and yeah, on the journey God promised Isaac (stop me if you’ve heard this) that
he’ll have tons of descendants and God’s gonna give them all this land. Just in
case someone forgot somewhere along the line.
At this
point I decided to do a little research on just what Christians think about
Abraham and Isaac lying about their wives all the time. Apparently it’s the
view that these stories illustrate how wonderful god’s grace is, that he sticks
by his peeps even when they screw up.
Sorry,
but I don’t buy it. Firstly, there is no implication in the text that God
disapproves of the behavior and is simply choosing to forgive it. Also, he
punishes the people who mistakenly take these women as wives (i.e. the victims
of the fraud) rather than the people perpetrating the fraud. Lastly, in every
case Abraham explicitly benefits from pimping his wife in the acquisition of
wealth, and Isaac benefits in that Abimelech issues an edict protecting him and
his wife from harm. Oh, and then Isaac gets blessed with a bumper harvest, and
becomes rich. The implication of the story is that God doesn’t regard these
lies as bad, and possibly even approves of them. Either that, or he’s perfectly
willing to reward bad behavior. Basically, it seems to be God’s position that
his followers are right because they’re his followers, and as long as they
worship and obey him he couldn’t give a fuck less how badly they behave
otherwise. Which… actually seems to be pretty consistent with Christian
theology.
After
his great harvest, Isaac is now richer than the king. So Abimelech asks him to
leave, and he heads down into the Valley of Gerar. There he re-digs some wells
that Abraham had dug when he came through here, has some disputes with native
herders over water rights, and eventually manages to dig a well that nobody disputes.
God comes and promises to bless him with a multitude of descendants, yadda
yadda yadda. Then Isaac and Abimelech make a treaty not to fuck with each
other, and Esau marries a couple local Hittite women.
Gonna
cut it off here for today. Kind of a dull section, I know, but things get more
interesting in the next chapter when Jacob starts fucking with his brother in
truly nonsensical ways.
No comments:
Post a Comment