7.1. Introduction
The Jacob – Esau story is cleverly interwoven at its beginning with the preceding Abraham story and likewise later at its end with the following Joseph story, in which it almost gets the upper hand again with the last chapter of Genesis.
Abraham has been portrayed to us as a role model throughout. Where there is strife and contention in the Abraham stories, he himself is the victim rather than the perpetrator (esp. clearly: 21:11). With Jacob it is different: he is divided. On the one hand he is also a great role model (his patient service for Rachel or his achievements in the reconciliation with Esau, finally his struggle with God at the Jabbok, which earns him the honorary name Israel), on the other hand he seems to be willing to use any means to reach his goal: the exploitation of Esau’s exhaustion, the deception in obtaining the blessing, finally the rejection of Laban. Who comes from the NT and reads the stories of Jacob, the hair sometimes stands on end, and one wonders why Yahweh looks on without comment. Also Rebekka plays here, differently than in the Abraham story, a quite ambivalent role.
But one must not read these stories from this point of view. Jacob and the other characters are not the actors, with whom God occasionally turns a blind eye. But God’s plan with his people, i.e. the fulfillment of the promise given to Abraham, is the guideline. God brings this to a good end, even with the help of problematic maneuvers by various actors. What God intends to do must happen, even if it involves cunning and trickery. Individual ethics should not be the standard here, but the history of salvation. That is why these stories can be described so honestly and realistically. Yahweh fulfills his promises. If possible, with great role models like Abraham. But there is another way: Even cunning and malice can ultimately only serve his plan.
