Paying for the Birthright

Jacob said, “First sell me your birthright.”
And Esau said, “I am at the point of death, so of what use is my birthright to me?”
Genesis 25:31-32 (The Contemporary Torah, JPS 2006)

Regarding Esau selling his birthright, there’s a fascinating story in Jewish tradition.

When Esau says “I am at the point of death,” we often think he’s being dramatic about being hungry. But some have suggested that something *happened* to him — perhaps an injury.

One teaching says that this may describe a hunting accident; Esau is bleeding out, linking his nickname and the soup and his blood together – all red.

In which case, Jacob isn’t swindling Esau out of his birthright. He is offering to pay a price for it, even though he would naturally obtain the birthright anyway if Esau died.

Jacob nurses Esau back to health, but maintains the birthright because he rightly paid for it.

And she…

Did he not say to me, ‘She is my sister’? And she, even she herself said, ‘He is my brother.’ In the [a]integrity of my heart and innocence of my hands I have done this.”
Genesis 20:

Genesis 20:5 contains an extra “she” (and-she and-even-she) that most translations render as “she herself,” but the Midrash points out that this is intended to demonstrate how much Abimelech was convinced Sarah was Abrahams sister and that he was innocent.

“Did he not say to me: She is my sister? And she, also she…” – she, his donkey drivers, his camel drivers, the members of his household, and the members of her household, all of them said so.
Bereshit Rabbah 52:6

“EVERYBODY said it!”