“Look, I’m dying of starvation!” said Esau. “What good is my birthright to me now?” Genesis 25:32 (NLT)
These were the words of Esau when he sold his position as a firstborn to Jacob in the Bible. The back story is that Esau had gone hunting all day and returned home famished! This is quite understandable. In today's world, imagine leaving your house to go running or hiking for 10 hours without any food. Of course it makes sense that as soon as one comes in contact with something as delicious looking as a bowl of chicken noodle soup or yam porridge or broccoli cheddar soup, one would 'kill' to quench the siren of hunger blasting within our stomach and every fiber of our being!
Personally, I understand Esau's plight when it comes to hunger especially after denying myself of food for fasting purpose! Those last few hours before breaking is the testing of my endurance! There were times I triumphed over the temptation to satisfy my hunger pangs and there are times I failed woefully!
But back to Esau. As I read the above passage, I realized that even though Esau was starving, the moment he said, "I'm dying of starvation", his mind and body was overtaken by his confession that he couldn't reason beyond satisfying his desire for food. If only Esau had taken another 30 seconds to think about Jacob's request, Esau could have realized how ridiculous it was! AND, couldn't he have asked their mother for food? Did he need to interact with Jacob before he could eat a bowl of stew in his parent's house? Wasn't there a piece of bread or fruit lying around somewhere that he could have eaten rather than the bowel of stew in Jacob's hands? So many questions...so many questions!
It's the same with us. Many times we're tempted by the glitz and glamour of society that it's so hard to think outside the realm of such temptation. We're so enticed by the desire to have that it overtakes our senses, leaving us weak and vulnerable. Many of us read the story of Esau and condemn his choice/decision but in reality, we're not much different from him!
In America's current political arena, I'm speechless at the outright support of Christian folks for a person with a character that opposes what Christ stood for. By this, many of my Christian brothers and sisters are literally saying, "what good is my birthright for me now?" They are selling their birthright for a bowl of red stew
in the form of "tax breaks", "MAGA", "keeping America safe", "future political ambitions", etc., forgetting that there's a greater purpose--winning souls for eternity with Christ!
Churches are not excluded either. Many church leaders have sold and are selling their birthright for a bowl of red stew-- diluting God's word to please the crowd, speaking half truths to not offend a group of people, etc. Have we forgotten that church is where those who are spiritually sick come to receive their complete healing in Christ? How will the church help if it's dosing out diluted, ineffective medications to the spiritually sick?
Homes today, just like where this story takes place, are where the most damaging disregard for birthright occurs. Husbands are abandoning their birthright--their God-given duties as leaders of their household in pursuit of career and ego! "What good is my birthright to me now?" is the attitude of many men in their homes/ marriages! Men have relegated the position of leadership to their wives preferring to "work hard so I can provide for my family". How they are tempted by that bowl of red stew
called career. God didn't call husbands to the position of leadership in the home just for the purpose of "financial provision". The headship of a husband entails spiritual, emotional, financial, and physical covering for his family.
A husband who fails to regard these areas (spiritual, emotional, financial, and physical) as equally important is a man who disregards his birthright!
Before you go pumping your fist in the air, wives are not excluded. Many have sold their birthright for building an enviable career, wearing the latest fashion, staking the Benjamins
in their bank accounts, all at the expense of their God-given birthright!
Generations after Esau, many of us are as guilty of selling our birthright just as Esau did thousands of years ago. The good news is that Christ's forgiveness is readily available to cleanse us from our poor choices. We must trade that bowl of red stew
that only temporarily quenches our hunger for the love of Christ that helps and guides us to permanently live the full potential of our birthright, and not just in this life but for eternity!
Resisting the temptation of the bowl of red stew is easier said than done! I'm not writing this from a place of exclusion; in fact, I'm writing from a place of conviction as in, I am as guilty as Esau! Many times, I've given to temporary desires and ignored what's important and eternal but one thing I'm learning from Esau's story is the importance of exercising patience when confronted by situations. As mentioned earlier, was it possible that Esau could have asked their mother or the maid for food after Jacob made the ridiculous request? Even if the maid or their mother was not available, I believe that Esau could have satisfied his starvation without taking that bowl of red stew from Jacob but he lacked the patience to search for food elsewhere. The Bible says, "he showed contempt
for his rights as the firstborn."
I don't have all the answers for resisting temptation but I know that the Bible tells us to "Submit yourselves then, to God; resist the devil and he will flee," James 4:7. Successfully resisting the temptation to swap our birthright for a bowl of red stew
can only happen when we model our lives after Christ!
Shalom