The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 19: The Return to Canaan
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At last Jacob came to his journey's end, "unto Isaac his father
unto Mamre, . . . which is Hebron, where Abraham and Isaac
sojourned." Here he remained during the closing years of his father's
life. To Isaac, infirm and blind, the kind attentions of this
long-absent son were a comfort during years of loneliness and
bereavement.
Jacob and Esau met at the deathbed of their father. Once the
elder brother had looked forward to this event as an opportunity
for revenge, but his feelings had since greatly changed. And
Jacob, well content with the spiritual blessings of the birthright,
resigned to the elder brother the inheritance of their father's
wealth—the only inheritance that Esau sought or valued. They
were no longer estranged by jealousy or hatred, yet they parted,
Esau removing to Mount Seir. God, who is rich in blessing, had
granted to Jacob worldly wealth, in addition to the higher good
that he had sought. The possessions of the two brothers "were
more than that they might dwell together; and the land wherein
they were strangers could not bear them because of their cattle."
This separation was in accordance with the divine purpose concerning
Jacob. Since the brothers differed so greatly in regard to
religious faith, it was better for them to dwell apart.
Esau and Jacob had alike been instructed in the knowledge of
God, and both were free to walk in His commandments and to
receive His favor; but they had not both chosen to do this. The
two brothers had walked in different ways, and their paths would
continue to diverge more and more widely.
There was no arbitrary choice on the part of God by which
Esau was shut out from the blessings of salvation. The gifts of
His grace through Christ are free to all. There is no election but
one's own by which any may perish. God has set forth in His
word the conditions upon which every soul will be elected to
eternal life—obedience to His commandments, through faith in
Christ. God has elected a character in harmony with His law,
and anyone who shall reach the standard of His requirement
will have an entrance into the kingdom of glory. Christ Himself
said, "He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life: and he
that believeth not the Son shall not see life." John 3:36. "Not
everyone that saith unto Me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom
of heaven; but he that doeth the will of My Father which is
in heaven." Matthew 7:21. And in the Revelation He declares, [p. 208] "Blessed are they that do His commandments, that they may have
right to the tree of life, and may enter in through the gates into
the city." Revelation 22:14. As regards man's final salvation, this
is the only election brought to view in the word of God.
Every soul is elected who will work out his own salvation
with fear and trembling. He is elected who will put on the armor
and fight the good fight of faith. He is elected who will watch
unto prayer, who will search the Scriptures, and flee from temptation
He is elected who will have faith continually, and who
will be obedient to every word that proceedeth out of the mouth
of God. The provisions of redemption are free to all; the results
of redemption will be enjoyed by those who have complied with
the conditions.
Esau had despised the blessings of the covenant. He had valued
temporal above spiritual good, and he had received that
which he desired. It was by his own deliberate choice that he was
separated from the people of God. Jacob had chosen the inheritance
of faith. He had endeavored to obtain it by craft, treachery,
and falsehood; but God had permitted his sin to work out its
correction. Yet through all the bitter experience of his later years,
Jacob had never swerved from his purpose or renounced his choice.
He had learned that in resorting to human skill and craft to secure
the blessing, he had been warring against God. From that night
of wrestling beside the Jabbok, Jacob had come forth a different
man. Self-confidence had been uprooted. Henceforth the early
cunning was no longer seen. In place of craft and deception, his
life was marked by simplicity and truth. He had learned the
lesson of simple reliance upon the Almighty Arm, and amid trial
and affliction he bowed in humble submission to the will of God.
The baser elements of character were consumed in the furnace
fire, the true gold was refined, until the faith of Abraham and
Isaac appeared undimmed in Jacob.
The sin of Jacob, and the train of events to which it led, had
not failed to exert an influence for evil—an influence that revealed
its bitter fruit in the character and life of his sons. As these sons
arrived at manhood they developed serious faults. The results of
polygamy were manifest in the household. This terrible evil tends
to dry up the very springs of love, and its influence weakens
the most sacred ties. The jealousy of the several mothers had [p. 209] embittered the family relation, the children had grown up
contentious and impatient of control, and the father's life was
darkened with anxiety and grief.
There was one, however, of a widely different character—the
elder son of Rachel, Joseph, whose rare personal beauty seemed
but to reflect an inward beauty of mind and heart. Pure, active,
and joyous, the lad gave evidence also of moral earnestness and
firmness. He listened to his father's instructions, and loved to
obey God. The qualities that afterward distinguished him in
Egypt—gentleness, fidelity, and truthfulness—were already
manifest in his daily life. His mother being dead, his affections clung
the more closely to the father, and Jacob's heart was bound up in
this child of his old age. He "loved Joseph more than all his
children."
But even this affection was to become a cause of trouble and
sorrow. Jacob unwisely manifested his preference for Joseph, and
this excited the jealousy of his other sons. As Joseph witnessed
the evil conduct of his brothers, he was greatly troubled; he
ventured gently to remonstrate with them, but only aroused still
further their hatred and resentment. He could not endure to see
them sinning against God, and he laid the matter before his father,
hoping that his authority might lead them to reform.
Jacob carefully avoided exciting their anger by harshness or
severity. With deep emotion he expressed his solicitude for his
children, and implored them to have respect for his gray hairs,
and not to bring reproach upon his name, and above all not to
dishonor God by such disregard of His precepts. Ashamed that
their wickedness was known, the young men seemed to be
repentant, but they only concealed their real feelings, which were
rendered more bitter by this exposure.
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