Okami wrote:Basically it's that God loved Jacob so much, that every other love fell short of that love in a sense that it could look as though it were taking on the form of hatred. Hatred in this sense is not literal.
Nate (post: 1451465) wrote:So then God destroyed Esau's country out of love? That hardly makes sense. At the very least, "I turned his country into wasteland and left his inheritance to jackals" sounds like pretty literal hatred to me. I don't see how that could be taken as a positive thing at all.
And if that's how God loved Esau then man I hope God doesn't love me like that.
Midori wrote:And Esau had plenty of reasons for God to hate him. He sold his birthright, which was the covenant God had for Isaac's family, for a bowl of stew. It is said he 'despised' his birthright. It was him who rejected God, which cause God to reject him. He all but threw away the grace God gave to his family.
Rusty Claymore wrote:Yeah, turning someone's country into a dragon infested wasteland doesn't seem very loving, but Esau didn't follow God, and there are consequences for that. I'd say it's like punishing a child for doing something wrong. If you let your child get away with everything, you're spoiling it, not loving it.
Exodus 20:5b-6 (NIV 2010) wrote:I, the LORD your God, am a jealous God, punishing the children for the sin of the parents to the third and fourth generation of those who hate me, but showing love to a thousand generations of those who love me and keep my commandments.
Septimus (post: 1451549) wrote:The bigger context is not just that Esau sinned. Everyone sins. God did not signal out any other individual and say "ooop. I hate you." The verse is speaking about a very specific action - that of giving away his birthright, symbolic to rejecting our birthright as children of God. Rejecting God is essentially the "unforgivable sin" and so the verse refers to this.
And Esau had plenty of reasons for God to hate him. He sold his birthright, which was the covenant God had for Isaac's family, for a bowl of stew. It is said he 'despised' his birthright. It was him who rejected God, which cause God to reject him. He all but threw away the grace God gave to his family.
So, considering the context, God loving Jacob and hating Esau has nothing to do with the human emotions of love and hate. It has everything to do with God choosing one man and his descendants and rejecting another man and his descendants."
Midori (post: 1451573) wrote:I think by Joseph you mean Jacob, right?
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