The Power of the Father's Blessing is the Toldot.
The Hebrew text of the Torah
Welcome to Toldot (Generations), (Torah Portion). This is the
portion of Scripture that will be read in synagogues around the world during
the Shabbat (Saturday) service. Please read, you will be blessed!
TOLDOT
(Generations)
Genesis
25:19–28:9; Malachi 1:1–2:7; Romans 9:6–29
“And these are the generations [toldot] of Yitzchak [Isaac], Avraham’s
[Abraham] son: Avraham begat Yitzchak.” (Genesis 25:19)
Yitzchak (Isaac), the son of Sarah and Abraham,
carried on the legacy of his parents’ faith and obedience to Adonai.
After his mother died, Abraham sent his servant to bring home a wife for
Yitzchak from among Abraham’s kinsmen. At the well where the women of the town
would soon appear, the servant prayed for God’s help in locating the perfect
wife for Yitzchak. Just then, Rivkah (Rebecca) arrived and provided water
for him and his camels. Yitzchak was 40 when he married her.
Reading the Torah at the Bimah in the synagogue
Prayer Brings
Blessings
“Isaac prayed to the LORD on behalf of his wife, because she was
childless. The LORD answered his prayer [atar], and his wife
Rebekah became pregnant." (Genesis 25:21)
Here we discover that Rivkah is barren; in fact,
according to Jewish tradition, she was born without a womb. She is one
of seven women in the Torah who have difficulty conceiving but finally come to
bear children by the grace of God, in this case, in answer to her husband’s
prayer. It is traditionally believed that he prayed for 19 years.
Moreover, it is also believed that he prayed in unity with Rivkah. What a lesson for us today! Just because we pray
once and do not receive an answer does not mean we should stop praying!
God wants us to bring our requests to Him in the unity of faith.
The Hebrew expression used in Genesis 25:21 for
prayer (atar עָתַר), which can also mean to
dig, is related to the Hebrew word for pitchfork
(eter). The Talmud (Jewish Oral
Law) explains the connection: “As a pitchfork turns the sheaves of grain from
one position to another, so does the prayer of the righteous turn the
dispensations of the Holy One, blessed be He, from the attribute of anger to
the attribute of mercy.” Yitzchak’s prayer penetrated the foundation of heaven,
and just as grain is turned over with a pitchfork, so too was God’s judgment of
barrenness upon Rivkah “turned over” and reversed by God’s mercy because of
prayer.
A Jewish man prays at the Western.
Of course, the Bible makes it clear that we are to
be fruitful and multiply; however, though seed is sown, it is God who opens
the womb. “Behold, children are a heritage from
the Lord, the fruit of the womb is a reward. Like arrows in the hand of a
warrior, so are the children of one’s youth. Happy is the man who has his
quiver full of them; they shall not be ashamed, but shall speak with their
enemies in the gate.” (Psalm 127:3–5) Sarah, Abraham’s
wife, came up with her own solution for her barrenness — she suggested a
surrogate mother — Hagar. In her own efforts, she received Ishmael.
Hannah, another barren woman, went to the Temple and cried out to the
Lord for a child and she received the prophet Samuel. Rikvah did neither.
Instead, she turned to her husband who was
her spiritual covering to entreat the Lord on her behalf, and God
answered Isaac’s prayers for the miraculous gift of new life. Rivkah
found herself pregnant with not just one child — but twins — a double portion!
Birthright Bring
Blessings
“And the boys grew; and Esau was a cunning hunter, a man of the field;
and Jacob was a quiet man, dwelling in tents.” (Genesis 25:27)
The twin boys grew up with distinctive character
traits, which are reflected in their names. Yaacov (Jacob’s Hebrew name) is
related to the word eikev means the heel of the foot. He was so named because he
grabbed his brother’s heel at birth. This shows Jacob’s tenacity to win the
birthright and carry forward the spiritual blessings that God promised to his
father Abraham. Esau, however, was named Esav, from the Semitic root, seir, meaning thick-haired.
He was also nicknamed Adom, the
Hebrew word for red, since he was born “red
and hairy.” Adom is also related to adamah (land) and dam (blood) which conveys Esau’s love of living off
the land, hunting and thirst for blood.
The Mess of Pottage, by James Tissot
While Jacob had a quiet and seemingly
spiritual-minded nature, Esau had a carnal one, as shown in the way he so easily trades something of eternal spiritual value
(his birthright) for something that satisfies his physical hunger (a bowl of
lentils). To him, they were equal. “'Look,
I am about to die [of hunger],’ Esau said. ‘What good is the birthright to
me?’” (Genesis 27:24) Birthrights come with
responsibilities as well as blessings. Even though Jacob was not the
firstborn, he receives great blessings bestowed upon him by his father Isaac,
coupled with the responsibility to lead nations. “May
God give you heaven’s dew and earth’s richness—an abundance of grain and new
wine. May nations serve you and peoples bow down to you.” (Genesis
27:28–29) Esau, however, who is the firstborn son receives curses: “Your dwelling will be away from the earth’s richness,
away from the dew of heaven above. You will live by the sword and you
will serve your brother.” (Genesis 27:39–40) Jacob received his father’s firstborn blessing because it
was pre-ordained according to the will of God who said, “Jacob have I loved; but Esau I hated.” (Romans
9:13)
A 13-year-old boy prays at the Western (Wailing) Wall before reading
the Torah.
the Torah.
The Descendants of
Curses Bring More of the Same
Just as Cain’s jealousy turned into a murderous
plot to kill his brother Abel, Esau plotted to kill Jacob but without success. This
struggle between the brothers did not suddenly appear. Even in Rivkah’s
womb, the boys jostled with each other. Rivkah
sought wisdom from the Lord, who revealed to her a truth that continues to this
day: “Two nations are in your womb, and
two peoples from within you will be separated; one people will be stronger than
the other, and the older will serve the younger.” (Genesis 25:23)
Rabbis over the centuries have compared the jealous, hate-filled character
of Esau to the perpetual struggle between the descendants of both brothers.
Jacob’s descendants were birthed out of obedience to his father Isaac, who told
him not to marry a Canaanite woman, and he did not. Esau, on the other hand,
married two Canaanite women. One of Esau’s Canaanite offspring was Amalek
who became an archenemy of pre-state Israel by attacking Moses and the
Israelites while in the wilderness (Exodus 17). They also invaded Israel
during the time of the Judges: “Whenever the
Israelites planted their crops, the Midianites, Amalekites and other eastern
peoples invaded the country.” (Judges 6:3)
Reading from the Torah scroll
Many try to link the genealogy of Esau and the
Amalekites to the modern enemies of Israel. While this might be accurate
to some degree, the truth is that the spirit of Esau and the Amalekites to
destroy the heirs of blessing has remained alive among many nations. We saw
this hatred in modern pre-state Israel during the expulsion of Jews from
England (1290), the tortures of the Spanish Inquisition (1478–1834), and the
genocide of six million Jews in the Holocaust (1941–1945). We saw its vibrancy continue as surrounding nations
invaded the newly-formed modern Israel in 1948, again in 1967, and most
recently with terrorist groups that vow to claim the land “from the river to
the sea” for their own birthright.
Orthodox Jewish children pray at the Western (Wailing) Wall.
While half of the Jewish population has been wiped
out in recent decades and specific plans to remove them from the land
circulate today, ultimately the Lord will uphold His vows to Abraham, Isaac and
Jacob and their descendants: “I am the Lord, the
God of your father Abraham and the God of Isaac. I will give you [Jacob]
and your descendants the land on which you are lying. Your descendants
will be like the dust of the earth, and ... all peoples on earth will be
blessed through you and your offspring.” (Genesis 28:13–14)
Those who attack God’s everlasting plans through
Jacob are, in fact, placing curses over their own land. Isaac prayed
over Jacob, “May those who curse you be cursed”
(Genesis 27:29), and God assures us through the Prophet
Ezekiel that this curse continues to hold true. “Because
you have had an ancient hatred, and have shed the blood of the children of
Israel by the power of the sword at the time of their calamity, when their
iniquity came to an end, therefore, as I live,’ says the Lord God, ‘I will
prepare you for blood, and blood shall pursue you; since you have not hated
blood, therefore blood shall pursue you.’” (Ezekiel 35:5–6)
Christians stand with Israel at a rally in London.
The focus of this Parasha is not really curses, but
blessings. The Hebrew word for blessed (baruch)
is significant in this Parasha: out of 106 verses, baruch appears 34 times! This
word, baruch, comes from brachah (blessing), but with a small change in vowel, it
becomes breicha — a wellspring of water or even a pool. Today we
see that God has kept His promise to turn the barren places of this land into
wellsprings and pools of water: “I will
make rivers flow on barren heights, and springs within the valleys. I
will turn the desert into pools of water, and the parched ground into springs.”
(Isaiah 41:18)
Children at Eshbah farm in Israel's Negev Desert.
Inheriting the
Blessing
During the saga of Jacob and Esau, a famine came
over the Land. Although Abraham went down to Egypt for food at times
of famine, the Lord instructed Isaac to stay. “The
Lord appeared to Isaac and said, ‘Do not go down to Egypt; live in the land
where I tell you to live.’” (Genesis 26:2) Like
Abraham, Isaac obeyed the Lord and, indeed, was blessed by God for it. “Sojourn in this land, and I will be with thee, and will
bless thee; for unto thee, and unto thy seed, I will give all these lands, and
I will establish the oath which I swore unto Abraham thy father.” (Genesis
26:3) This shows us the wisdom of
seeking the Lord for solutions to our problems and not necessarily repeating
what our father before us did, or what seems the logical answer.
God may ask us to stay in a situation when everything and everyone is
telling us to get out—fast! If God is instructing us to stay, then even
in a famine we can “bloom where we are planted.”
An injured Israeli child
As the jealous and hateful spirit of Esau rises up
in Jerusalem and Israel at large, there is a temptation to think we here in
Israel should escape and “go down to Egypt” or perhaps to the US or Canada. But if
the Spirit of God tells us to stay, then we can know that He will protect us
and establish the oath He swore unto our forefathers to give us this Land. "For My thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are
your ways My ways," declares the LORD.” (Isaiah 55:8)
Lifting the Torah
Yeshua Brings the
Ultimate Blessing to the Promised Land
“Isaac reopened the wells that had been dug in the time of his father
Abraham, which the Philistines had stopped up after Abraham died, and he gave
them the same names his father had given them.” (Genesis 26:18)
As God tested Abraham's faith, Isaac likely
suffered some post traumatic stress from being tied up by his father and almost
sacrificed. But in this Parasha, we see that Isaac is a man of Godly
character with Godly vision who continues to carry on his father’s business
by re-digging the wells Abraham had dug on his way to Beer Sheva. Why are these
wells significant? They were vital sources of water in a harsh, dry
desert land. But here we see that these life-giving water holes had been
intentionally filled with dirt. This can
only be interpreted as a barbaric act, done to discourage and even endanger
life, in order to prevent Isaac from accessing his father’s wells. We
see similar discouragement from lack of water when the children of Israel
camped in the wilderness after their exodus from Egypt. When they finally
came to a well, they sang praises to Adonai: “From
there they went to Beer, which is the well where the LORD said to Moses,
‘Gather the people together, and I will give them water.’ Then Israel
sang this song: ‘Spring up, O well! ...’” (Numbers 21:16–17)
An ancient well outside the city gates of Beer Sheva
Abraham had purposefully named these wells after
God, to remind people that He is the source of all life. It
is with joy today that we draw from deep wells of living water. “With joy you will draw water from the wells of
salvation.” (Isaiah 12:3) When Yeshua ministered to the
Samaritan woman at a well, He made the bold claim of being the Jewish Messiah.
There, He proclaimed Himself to be the source of living waters that leads
to eternal life. “But whoever drinks the water I
give them will never thirst. Indeed, the water I give them will become in
them a spring of water welling up to eternal life." (John 4:14)
The ultimate heirs of blessing are the heirs of the promised Messiah, Yeshua
HaMashiach, who became the final sacrifice for all who trust and believe that
He is that promise. This salvation is a free gift that 99% of Jewish People do
not yet know about because no one has explained to them how the Hebrew
Scriptures reveal Yeshua as their promised Messiah. Nevertheless, the Bible promises that in these last days, as the Times
of the Gentiles come to a close, all of Israel will be saved. "I do not want you to be ignorant of this mystery,
brothers and sisters, so that you may not be conceited: Israel has experienced
a hardening in part until the full number of the Gentiles has come in, and in
this way all of Israel will be saved." (Romans 11:25–26)
You can be part of this end-time move of God by
praying to bring the Good News of Yeshua to the Holy Land."You will again have compassion on us; You will
tread our sins underfoot and hurl all our iniquities into the depths of the sea."
(Micah 7:19)
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