
In our continuing study of Genesis, our focus shifts briefly from Jacob’s family to that of his twin brother, Esau. Esau is the father of the nation of Edom. He was a handsome man but lived by following his sinful human nature. Beginning with him, the...
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How firm a foundation, ye saints of the Lord is made for your faith
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in his excellent way. Welcome to through the Bible with Dr. J. Vernon McGee and I'm glad you're on the Bible bus for our five year journey through the whole Word of God. Now in this study, we're going to stop in Genesis 36 and and take a closer look at the lives of Isaac and Rebecca's twin sons, Esau and Jacob. Even before they were born, God told Rebecca that two nations would come from these two boys. And whether we realize it or not, when we follow today's headlines about the Middle east, we're often watching the long story unfold between Abraham's sons Isaac and Ishmael and his grandsons Jacob and Esau. It's a powerful reminder that history isn't random. God has a plan and his hand is steadily at work across generations, nations and even the headlines today. Before we begin our study, let's take a few minutes to hear from some of our fellow members of our through the Bible family. First, a note from amy in the U.S. she writes, our church has recently gone through a rather traumatic split after our pastor resigned. Suddenly people were not only caught off guard, but then sides were quickly taken up. The enemy of our souls is working feverishly to destroy the need for steadfast faith in Christ and a firm foundation of His Word is paramount. And as a facilitator to our senior women's group, my only plan is to gather the women together for hymns, prayers and reading through the Book of Colossians until the Lord sends me a clear message of where and how to proceed. I have always loved listening to J. Vernon McGee and know his teachings are a reliable resource. I look forward to studying Colossians with the women. Prayers needed and appreciated. Well, let's be praying. Let's be praying for Amy, her church, and for many others facing no doubt similar trials. Remembering that even when the enemy works and does divide, God remains faithful to heal and restore. Here's a note. This is from a listener, this time in India just a few months ago, my youngest daughter in law wasn't convinced about my faith, but through God's mercy she came to know Christ. In December to soon after, she began sharing God's Word with a sister and that conversation became a turning point in her sister's life. Seeing the change in my daughter in law's attitude and faith, the sister was drawn toward God's love and began attending our group meetings. As my daughter in law grew in her faith, she encouraged the sister to read the Bible pray and listen to God's Word regularly. It was inspiring to watch her transformation. This journey has brought our entire family closer together and we are experiencing the power of God's love in action. I often face challenges from villagers and relatives, but over time, the situation has softened. People now see the peace and joy in our family and have started asking questions about God. It fills my heart with gratitude to witness how God is opening new doors for His Word. And then finally a note from Nathan in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. He tells us this. Your program came at just the right time for me. I was feeling really discouraged with everything happening in our country. I had started to doubt God's justice. But the study of God's sovereignty even in hard times really struck me. It reminded me of an essential truth. God is still in control even when everything seems chaotic. Since then, I've been praying for our nation with a heart truly full of hope. Well, what powerful reminders of how God is at work in hearts and families and churches and nations. We have so much to thank him for and so much to pray about too. So if you'd like to join our World Prayer team praying for listeners in more than 250 languages around the world, you can do it by signing signing up@ttb.org or calling 1-865 Bible for more information. And now let's give this time to the Lord. Heavenly Father, thank you for your word. Meet us where we are and open our hearts to understand it and help us trust you as we learn and grow. We ask this in Jesus name, amen. Here's Dr. J. Vernon McGee with our study of Genesis 36 on through the Bible.
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Now today we come in our study to the 36th chapter of the book of Genesis. And it deals entirely with Esau, the entire chapter. And the Spirit of God follows this pattern all the way through this book. In fact, it's followed all the way through the Scripture. The seed that is being followed is Christ. Paul makes that clear. There are seeds, not many, but one Christ. And so as you go through the scripture, beginning actually with Adam and Eve and Seth and then come on down to Abraham and Isaac and now Jacob, the method and the pattern that is followed, God will give the rejected line first and it's dismissed as far as any purpose is concerned in the scripture. And then the other line is picked up after that. So that is the place and the purpose of the 36th chapter. Now, when we left off last time, we were talking in the 35th chapter about the death of Rachel. And I'M sure that many folk who have heard me speak on this section before have said, well, you certainly failed to give your usual eulogy of Rachel. And that's true. I didn't tell the truth. It didn't have time. But I do want to come back to make a connection here that's going to be very important later on. Rachel was the one fine thing in the life of Jacob, even in those years in Pad and Aram that are sorted in so many ways where there's so much evidence of just the flesh of self. But he loved Rachel, no question about that. And he was willing to do most anything for her. He was totally devoted to her. He permitted her, for instance, to keep those images that she'd taken from her father. I don't think Aaliyah would have gotten by with her or anyone else would have. But he was indulgent with her. He loved her. And she had this boy, first Joseph, then she had this boy Benjamin. And it was at the birth of Benjamin that she died. His life meant her death in this particular connection. And it was a great heartbreak to Jacob. To begin with. The other 10 boys were no joy to him at all. God reminded him, I think, every day and 24 hours every day that it was sinful to have more than one wife. He didn't need all of them. That wasn't God's method. God will overrule. Of course he does, in your life, friends, and he does mine. Thank God he'll overrule. But it doesn't mean God approved of this at all. In fact, these facts reveal he didn't approve of it and especially what happened to Joseph. Now, he loved Joseph and Benjamin. Very frankly, the other boys were jealous of that. He should not have shown such partiality to Joseph because he had experienced that in his own home. And he was the one that his own father more or less pushed aside. And he knew the trouble it had caused and he should not have practiced it, but he did. And ordinarily don't defend Jacob. But after all, when Rachel died and she says, call this boy Benoni's the son of my Sarah. And I think Jacob would have said, yes, he's the son of Rachel Sorrow. But when he looked down at the little fella and I guess he looked like Rachel, probably had her eyes reminded him of Rachel. He said, I can't call him. He's not the son of my sorrow. He's the only one I got to lean on now. He's the son of my right hand. He's my walking Stick, he's my staff. I'm going to lean on him and you'll find out. This is very important later on because this is part of the great sorrow this man was called to go through later on. All of this around one fact, and that is God did not approve of this. And God does not approve of that which is wrong in our lives, friends, we think we get by with it, but we actually do not get by with it at all. And Jacob did not get by with it, but his lovely Rachel now is gone, buried at Bethlehem. And this chapter 35 that we had last time, did you notice that it is a chapter that is made prominent by deaths. First the death of Deborah, the maid of Rebecca, and then in that the suggestion of the death of Rebecca herself, and now the death of lovely Rachel. Then the sons of Jacob are mentioned here, and he had no joy in them. And lo and behold, it closes with the death of Isaac. So that here is a chapter that the most prominent thing in it are the deaths, the funerals of these different ones, three in this chapter. Now, when we come to chapter 36 of Genesis, we now turn to Esau. And it's all given over to Esau. It's almost humorous in places, by the way. And may I say that this would not be too interesting for a great many of us. This would be a marvelous study for someone who wanted to follow through through on these names, follow through on those that came from them. You find some of the names that are mentioned here that are names you hear out there on that great Arabian desert today. We've all heard of Omar, the tent maker, and he belonged out there. We've heard of Temon, Kenaz and Zepho. Well, you read the 15th verse here and you find out all of them are mentioned here. The family of Esau, that's where they are, out in that desert now. They settled in the land of Edom. And Edom is south and east of the Dead Sea. It's in a mountainous area. And the capital of Edom, the rock hewn city of Petra, is there today. Prophecies given concerning that remarkable prophecy that stands fulfilled. In fact, it's fulfilled there today. God said it would be just exactly as it is. It's a prophecy. We'll see when we get to it. Isaiah and Jeremiah and Ezekiel all mention this particular section and this particular nation. Now, this nation came from Esau. And three times in this chapter it's made very clear to us that Esau is the father of Edom and that they are synonymous terms if you look at verse 8, for instance, thus dwelt Esau in Mount Seir. Esau is Edom. Somebody says, well, what's the difference? Well, the difference is just simply this. When you look at this boy Esau as we first met him in the family of Isaac, and we see him there, the outdoor, rugged type, athletic type, fine looking boy, by the way, I'm sure that our snap judgment would be my, there's a fine boy. And outwardly it might look that way. But if there ever was a man of the flesh, he's the man of the flesh. Several years ago, a Christian girl talked to me about she'd met a fine looking young man. And tell the truth, they both were fine looking young people. She had been born in China, not of missionaries. Father was in the oil business and had made very wealthy. And she had met this young man. He was a bank clerk. And I was a bank clerk when I was a young fellow. And I knew something about it. I knew one thing. He was a very poor boy. And I know a lot of bank clerks look around for a good marriage, especially among customers that have daughters, that the customer has money in the bank. So this boy had met this girl and he was a handsome, brute, fine looking, rugged type. To me he looked like Esau. I have an ocean. Esau looked very much like it. And she was a Christian girl, had been led to the Lord by missionaries out in China years ago. And so she insisted she was going to marry him. And I said I would not marry him. I had counsel with him. She said, I believe that he'll come to the Lord. I talked with him. He had no notion of coming to the Lord. He was wanting to marry that girl. She was beautiful and had money and he was a man of the flesh. And she married him. And I didn't perform it, I can assure you. In fact, she was provoked with me at the time. But later on she came back and she was telling me they got a divorce. She said, I never met a person in my life, Dr. McGee, that was so given over to the things that were secular and carnal and of the flesh. She said, I never dreamed that there could be any person anywhere that in his entire life never had a high, noble, spiritual, wonderful thought. Why, she said he was as crude as they come that he gave a good impression on the surface. She said he would open the door of the car for me to get in. He was quite lovely when we were courting, but he was as crude as any person I've ever met. Well, may I say to you, that's Esau. And when you see Esau in the family there, maybe you. If you were an attractive young lady and he wanted to date you, chances are you date him because he was attractive. But he was a man of the flesh. That's who he is. Now, somebody might want to argue with me about that and argue with God about it. You made a mistake in setting this man aside. Well, God says, and he always protects himself. Over in the little book of Obadiah, you find that Esau is unveiled. Now, Esau is Edom. That's what Moses says here. Esau is Edom. All right, go down the centuries. In fact, you'll have to go down over a thousand years. And one little Esau now is about a hundred thousand Edomites. Each one of them is a little Esau. Now take a look at the nation, and you see what came from Esau. It is like putting Esau under the microscope. Or as the photographer out here in Hollywood told me about a picture of mine, he says, I want to blow it up. I didn't know what he really meant by that. At first I thought that it was so bad he wanted to put a stick of dynamite under it. But what he meant was he wanted to take a small one and make it a great big picture. All right, if you want to see a real picture of Esau, go to Obadiah. And what do you see there again? A nation filled with pride. And God says, though you be lifted up like the eagle. And you make your nest yonder in the tops of the mountains, God says, I'll bring you down. And what is pride of heart that they were guilty of? Well, it's the Declaration of Independence of a soul that says, I can live without God, and I don't need God. That's Esau. And you'll have to wait till we get over there. And then when you come to the last book of the Old Testament, God says, jacob, have I loved, and Esau have I hated. And God never said that till you go down over a thousand years. Now, God knew it at the beginning, but you didn't know it, and I didn't know it. And when they worked their way out in history, you can be sure God's accurate. Esau turned out. And so three times in this chapter, we are told Esau is Edom. And he says that three times. So we make sure that we get it. But that's not the funny part of that. In fact, that's not funny. But this is. Let me read verse One. Now, these are the generations of Esau. Who is Edom. Well, even verse one says it, that would make four times. Now, we are told Esau took his wives of the daughters of Canaan. Adah the daughter of Elon, the Hittite. And then here they go. I am not going through this exercise of just pronouncing names. And we are told verse six. And Esau took his wives, his sons, his daughters, and all the persons of his house and his cattle, all his beasts, all his substance which he had got in the land of Canaan. And he went into the country from the face of his brother Jacob. For their riches were more than that they might dwell together. And the land wherein they were strangers could not bear them because of their cattle. Now, you remember Abraham and Lot had that same problem. In other words, there would not be enough grazing land for them. Each one of them had too many cattle. And therefore, Esau left the promised land. And he left it on his own. But circumstances, the economic situation forced him to do that. Now, verse eight. Where we began a moment ago, thus dwelt Esau in Mount Seir. Esau as Edom. Now it tells where he went. And I have already located that place for you. Now we follow that family. And if you follow them down, verse 12. And Timnah was concubine to Eliphaz, Esau's son, and she bare it to Eliphaz Amalek. Now, here's the beginning of the Amalekites. Now, all those tribes that are there in the desert, and they have come down through the centuries, they pushed out in many directions after the fall of Carthage and after the prominence of the church in those early years in North Africa. Actually, the strongest center of the church at one time was in North Africa. But all those tribes they pushed across North Africa, you see, they all belong to this family. They come from Hagar and Abraham. Then they come from Esau. And there's been the intermarriage and the different tribes. And that's where you get all these Ites, the Amalekites and the Perizzites and all of them. And you have all those Arab tribes out there today. Actually, they belong to the same family that Abraham belonged to and that Israel belongs to. I said to an Arab that I met. He expressed hostility to the nation Israel. And he didn't like something I had said in a service. And he's a Christian Arab, too. And he told me how he hated the nation Israel and all that. And I just said to him, I said, yeah, but he's Your brother, believe me, that did antagonize him. He said, I have no relation with him at all. I said, but you do. You belong to the same stock. You're both Semitic people. And I said, you're a Semite as much as they are. Well, you had to admit that was true. You see, this chapter happens to be very important. After all, the Spirit of God used a great deal of printer's ink here to tell you about this. And, you know, I haven't got down to that part which is humorous yet. And we better get there. And here it is, verse 15. These were Dukes of the sons of Esau. And you have here Duke Omer, Duke Zepho, Duke Kenaz, Duke Korah, Duke Gaetam, and Duke Amalek. Where in the world did they get these dukes? Well, here's the beginning of nobility. They just assumed it. Each one of them became a duke. And believe me, here we go. And it's not just a nickname they mean business by. This is the beginning of nobility. Now, where did it begin? In the family of Esau. And again, we come back to it in verse 19. That is this one statement. These are the sons of Esau, who is Edom, and these are their dukes. My, they got dukes in the family now. And a great many people in this country can trace their ancestry right back to royalty. You wonder if anybody came from over there, from those who ran stores and worked in vineyards and made pottery and ran a shoe shop. Everybody seems to have come from royalty. Well, I'll tell you, Esau turned out quite a few of them. And if you think that is going pretty far, he went farther than that. Will you notice verse 31? And these are the kings that reigned in the land of Edom before there reigned any king over the children of Israel. The business of having kings. I don't think this was God's arrangement at all to put a king over them like this. But here they go. They have kings over them also. And isn't this quite interesting? This was before the children of Israel had kings. Where did they get the idea? They got the idea from these people. In fact, that's the thing they told Samuel later on. They said, we want kings, just like our neighbors round about us. And they could have said, our brother down here, the Edomites, they happen to have kings, and we'd like to have kings also. This was the thing that they did. We find in this section here many things that have to do with certain tribes that actually could be followed today. For anyone that would be interested in following the study of anthropology or the study of ethnology. Here they are. And that lends importance to a chapter like this that goes back, gives a family history, probably farther back than anyone else could go. And this is the rejected line. Immediately after this, we'll take this line that's going to lead to Christ. Let me read verse 40 again. And these are the names of the dukes that came of Esau, according to their families, after their places by their names. Here's some more dukes, friends. Duke Timnah, Duke Alva, Duke Jesus. When they got together, don't you know that that was quite a matter of bowing and scraping to each other and introducing each other. I want you to meet my brother here. He's Duke Alva. I want you to meet my friend here. He's Duke Timnah. We're dukes. And then some of them were kings. And I doubt whether you could even get in to meet them. But now notice how this chapter closes. We have here Duke Magdiel, Duke Iram. These be the Dukes of Edom according to their habitations in the land of their possession. Now this is down in the land of Edom. And now this chapter closes as it began. He is Esau, the father of the Edomites. We see the working out of that in the book of Obadiah and then in the last book of the Old Testament. This is quite remarkable, friend, and something you just can't bypass. We'll have to leave off there. We'll pick up at the next chapter next time, my beloved.
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Well, we got more in this great study of Genesis, so invite a friend to hop aboard the Bible bus, maybe via our app or over@ttb.org or call 1-865Bible. If we can help you find a local radio station. I'm Steve Schwetz, and I'll meet you right back here next time. As we continue to make our way through the Bible, Jesus made it home.
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All to be my home.
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Sin had left.
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The Crimson Savior.
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Through the Bible, exists to take God's whole word to the whole world. And we invite you to stand with us with your faithful prayer and financial support. Where will God's word go today?
Podcast Host: Jason Collins
Guest Teacher: Dr. J. Vernon McGee
This episode centers on Genesis 36, examining the life and lineage of Esau, the twin brother of Jacob. Dr. J. Vernon McGee discusses how Genesis 36 focuses entirely on Esau’s descendants—the Edomites—contrasting the "rejected" line with the chosen line leading to Christ. The episode draws connections between ancient family lines and current world affairs, illustrating how the Bible’s genealogies are relevant to understanding history and present-day conflicts, particularly in the Middle East.
“The seed that is being followed is Christ. Paul makes that clear. There are seeds, not many, but one—Christ.” (04:18)
“Rachel was the one fine thing in the life of Jacob... he was totally devoted to her... It was at the birth of Benjamin that she died. His life meant her death in this particular connection.” (05:23)
“If there ever was a man of the flesh, he’s the man of the flesh... That’s Esau.” (11:24)
“Their riches were more than that they might dwell together… Esau left the promised land. And he left it on his own. But circumstances, the economic situation forced him to do that.” (18:16)
“This is the beginning of nobility. Now, where did it begin? In the family of Esau. And again, we come back to it in verse 19... these are their dukes. My, they got dukes in the family now.” (20:36)
“Three times in this chapter it’s made very clear to us that Esau is the father of Edom and that they are synonymous terms... Esau is Edom.” (14:46)
“All those tribes that are there in the desert... they all belong to this family. They come from Hagar and Abraham. Then they come from Esau. And there’s been the intermarriage and the different tribes.” (19:32)
“When they got together, don’t you know that that was quite a matter of bowing and scraping to each other and introducing each other. I want you to meet my brother here. He’s Duke Alva…” (24:00)
“History isn’t random. God has a plan and his hand is steadily at work across generations, nations, and even the headlines today.” —Host (01:45)
“When Rachel died… she says, call this boy Benoni’s the son of my sorrow… but when he looked down at the little fella… he said, I can’t call him…he’s the son of my right hand.” —Dr. McGee (07:14)
“God says, though you be lifted up like the eagle, and you make your nest yonder in the tops of the mountains, God says, I’ll bring you down. And what is pride of heart that they were guilty of? Well, it’s the Declaration of Independence of a soul...” —Dr. McGee (15:54)
“Where in the world did they get these dukes? Well, here’s the beginning of nobility. They just assumed it.” —Dr. McGee (20:57)
Genesis 36, often overlooked for its genealogies, is shown here to have substantial theological, historical, and practical importance. Dr. McGee weaves together biblical insight, relatable anecdotes, humor, and prophetic foresight to reveal how the "rejected" line of Esau set the stage for historic and modern Middle Eastern dynamics—and illustrates enduring lessons about pride, family, and God’s sovereignty.