"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)
Abraham dies at 175 years, a good old age, an old man full of years, and is gathered to his people. His sons Isaac and Ishmael bury him beside Sarah in the cave of Machpelah. After the account of Ishmael's twelve sons, the narrative turns to Isaac. Rebekah is barren. Isaac prays to the LORD on her behalf and she conceives. The babies jostling within her are so turbulent that she asks the LORD why. The answer is a prophecy that will shape the rest of Genesis and much of Israel's subsequent history: 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.
Twin boys are born. The first is red and hairy, named Esau. The second comes out gripping Esau's heel, named Jacob, heel-grasper, or supplanter. The boys grow up differently: Esau a skilled hunter, a man of the open country; Jacob a quiet man who stayed among the tents. One day Esau comes in from the fields famished. He sells his birthright to Jacob for a bowl of red stew, because he despised his birthright. St. Paul will use Esau's choice in Romans 9 as an example of how election operates on God's terms rather than human expectation. The Catechism sees in Jacob's eventual election not a preference for deceit but the sovereign freedom of God to work through the unlikely instrument (CCC 218).
Brothers and sisters, Esau despised his birthright. He traded the permanent for the temporary, the inheritance for the immediate. Hunger is real. The stew smells good. The long-term matters less when the short-term is pressing. The spiritual life requires the practice of deferring the immediate for the permanent: the discipline that says the birthright matters more than the stew. What birthright are you in danger of trading today?
Lord God, do not let us be like Esau who despised his birthright for a meal. Give us the long view that values the inheritance above every immediate satisfaction. And let us receive the blessings you have reserved for those who wait on your timing. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.