Значение слова "ESAU" найдено в 16 источниках
найдено в "Crosswordopener"

• ___ Wood (character in a tongue twister)

• ___ was a cunning hunter (Genesis 25:27)

• ___ was a cunning hunter: Genesis

• ___ Wood sawed wood (old tongue-twister)

• ___ Wood sawed wood (start of a tongue twister)

• ___ Wood sawed wood (tongue twister)

• ___ Wood would saw wood... (part of a classic tongue twister)

• ___ Wood would saw wood (part of an old tongue twister)

• 'Genesis' man

• 'Genesis' name

• Cunning hunter in Genesis

• Cunning hunter of the Bible

• Genesis twin

• Hairy man in Genesis

• Hairy man of the Bible

• Hairy one of the Bible

• I saw ___ kissing Kate... (tongue twister)

• I saw ___ kissing Kate (start of a tongue twister)

• I saw ___ sawing wood...

• I saw ___ sawing wood... (old tongue twister)

• My Brother ___ (Grateful Dead hit)

• My Brother ___ (Grateful Dead song)

• My Brother ___(Grateful Dead tune)

• What profit shall this birthright do to me? asker

• 1996 Philip Kerr technothriller

• 1997 Philip Kerr best-selling mystery

• 1997 Philip Kerr novel

• A biblical first son

• A son of Isaac

• A son-in-law of Eton

• Abraham's grandson

• Adah's husband

• Adah's spouse

• Aholibamah's husband

• An uncle of Joseph

• Ancestor of the Edomites

• Bible twin

• Bible's hairy man

• Bible's hairy twin

• Biblical hairy one

• Biblical barterer

• Biblical birthright barterer

• Biblical birthright seller

• Biblical brother

• Biblical brother of Jacob

• Biblical brother whose name means hairy

• Biblical father of Eliphaz and Reuel

• Biblical figure whose name means hairy in Hebrew

• Biblical hunter

• Biblical loser in a deal

• Biblical name from the Hebrew for hairy

• Biblical name meaning hairy

• Biblical patsy

• Biblical pottage buyer

• Biblical pottage purchaser

• Biblical pottage recipient

• Biblical son who sold his birthright

• Biblical trader

• Biblical twin

• Birthright barterer

• Birthright salesman

• Birthright sellar

• Birthright seller in the Bible

• Birthright seller in the Old Testament

• Birthright seller of Genesis

• Birthright seller, in Genesis

• Birthright trader

• Birthright-for-pottage trader

• Brother in Genesis

• Brother of Isaac

• Brother of Jacob

• Brother-in-law of Rachel

• Certain hairy brother

• Dupe in Genesis

• Duped twin

• Early pottage fancier

• Edom

• Edomite ancestor

• Elder son of Isaac and Rebekah

• Eldest son of Isaac

• Eliphaz's father

• Famous seller of pottage

• Father of Eliphaz

• Father of Jacob

• Father of the Edomites

• Favored son of Isaac

• Favorite son of Isaac

• Forefather of the Edomites

• Genesis birthright seller

• Genesis brother

• Genesis gent

• Genesis hunter

• Genesis redhead

• Grandfather of Amalek

• Grandons of Abraham

• Grandson of Sarah

• Granduncle of Onan

• Hairy biblical baby

• Hairy Biblical character

• Hairy one of Genesis

• Hairy twin

• Hairy twin in Genesis

• Hairy twin of the Bible

• Hairy twin who sold his birthright

• He arrived just before Jacob

• He sold his birthright

• He sold his birthright to Jacob

• He sold out to Jacob

• He was also known as Edom

• He was told to live by the sword

• Hebrew for Hairy

• Hirsute Genesis character

• Hirsute son of Rebekah

• His twin duped him

• His twin tricked him

• Hunter in Genesis

• Husband of Adah

• Husband of Adah and Bashemath

• Husband of Judith

• Isaac and Rebekah's eldest

• Isaac and Rebekah's firstborn

• Isaac s eldest

• Isaac's boorish kid

• Isaac's elder

• Isaac's elder son

• Isaac's first

• Isaac's first son

• Isaac's first-born

• Isaac's hairy son

• Isaac's slightly older son

• Isaac's son

• Ishmael's son-in-law

• Issachar's uncle

• Jacob grasped at his heel during birth

• Jacob s twin

• Jacob tricked him

• Jacob's biblical twin

• Jacob's brother

• Jacob's hairy brother

• Jacob's sibling

• Jacob's slightly older brother

• Jacob's twin brother

• Jacob's twin brother, in the Bible

• Jacob's twin in the Bible

• Jacob's twin, in the Old Testament

• Jacob's womb-mate

• Judith's husband

• Kate kisser in a tongue twister

• Lentil-eater of Genesis

• Levi's uncle

• Literary birthright seller

• Mess of pottage buyer

• Name meaning hairy

• Name meaning hairy in Hebrew

• Name that means hairy

• Nephew of Ishmael

• Nephew of Laban

• Noted twin

• Old Testament man of the field

• Old Testament outdoorsman

• Old Testament pottage fan

• Old Testament twin

• One kissing Kate, in a tongue twister

• One of Abraham's grandsons

• One of Isaac and Rebekah's sons

• One of Isaac's boys

• One of Isaac's twins

• One of Isaac's two sons

• One of Rebekah's boys

• One reconciled in Gen. 33

• Person kissing Kate, in a tongue twister

• Philip Kerr thriller

• Philip Kerr thriller set in Nepal

• Philip Kerr thriller, or Genesis hunter

• Pottage purchaser

• Rebecca and Isaac's eldest

• Rebecca's son

• Rebekah's elder son

• Rebekah's eldest

• Rebekah's first son

• Rebekah's firstborn

• Rebekah's older son in the bible

• Rebekah's son

• Reconciler in Genesis 33

• Sarah's son's first son

• Seesaw sitter in a rhyme

• Seesaw sitter of rhyme

• Seesaw sitter of tongue-twisterdom

• Seesaw sitter of verse

• Seesaw user of rhyme

• Seller of a birthright

• Seller of a famous mess of pottage

• Seller of his birthright, in Gen. 25

• Son in Genesis

• Son of Isaac

• Son of Isaac and Rebecca

• Son of Isaac and Rebekah

• Son of Rebecca

• Son of Rebekah

• The you in you will serve your brother

• The Bible's cunning hunter

• The Bible's hairy one

• The hairy twin, in the Bible

• Tricked twin

• Tricked twin in the Bible

• Tricked twin in the Torah

• Twin brother of Jacob

• Twin in a perennial best-seller

• Twin in Genesis

• Twin in the Bible

• Twin in the Old Testament

• Twin in the Torah

• Twin of Jacob

• Twin who made a bad deal

• Uncle of Joseph

• Uncle of Judah

• Uncle of Levi

• Uncle of Zebulun

• Venison preparer in the Bible

• Whom she saw...on a seesaw, in a children's ditty

• Womb-mate of Jacob

• (Old Testament) the eldest son of Isaac who would have inherited the Covenant that God made with Abraham and that Abraham passed on to Isaac

• He traded his birthright to his twin brother Jacob for a mess of pottage


найдено в "Catholic encyclopedia"
Esau: translation

Esau
The eldest son of Isaac and Rebecca, the twin-brother of Jacob

Catholic Encyclopedia..2006.

Esau
    Esau
     Catholic_Encyclopedia Esau
    (‘sw, hairy).
    The eldest son of Isaac and Rebecca, the twin-brother of Jacob. The struggle of the two brothers, when still within Rebecca's womb, was prophetic of the lifelong opposition, deepening at times into hatred, which marked the relations between Esau and Jacob (Gen., xxv, 22 sq.). Esau, who came forth first, when grown up, became a skilful hunter, and was much loved by Isaac, who ate of his hunting (Gen., xxv, 24-28). "Coming faint out of the field", and much moved by the sight and savour of the pottage boiled by his brother, Esau said to Jacob, "Give me of this red pottage". No doubt already informed as to the import of the oracle revealed to Rebecca, Jacob was quick to draw advantage from the greed of his famished brother. Consenting to the condition imposed, Esau not only exchanged his first birthright for the red pottage, but even confirmed the sale by an oath, saying, "Lo, I die; what will the first birthright avail me? .....And so taking bread and the pottage of lentils, he ate, and drank, and went his way; making little account of having sold his first birthright" (Gen., xxv, 29-34). That this transaction was widely known is justly inferred from the very name (Edom, red), which, though rarely given to Esau himself, is almost universally applied to his descendants. "Esau, being forty years old, married wives, Judith, the daughter of Beeri the Hethite, and Basemath the daughter of Elon of the same place" (Gen., xxvi, 34). This selection of Chanaanite wives, who "both offended the mind of Isaac and Rebecca" (Gen., xxvi, 35), seemed to have caused peculiar suffering to Rebecca, who, speaking with her husband, declared, "I am weary of my life because of the daughters of Heth: if Jacob take a wife of the stock of this land I choose not to live" (Gen., xxvii, 46). Old and with eyes so dim he could not see, Isaac ordered Esau to take quiver and bow, so that after having prepared a savoury dish with the fruit of his hunting, he might receive the parting blessing, belonging to the eldest son. Esau, yielding ready obedience, went "into the field to fulfil his father's commandment". (Gen., xxvii, 1-5.) Meanwhile, clothed with the very good garments of his older brother, with hands and neck so carefully covered under the tender hides of the kids as to resemble the hairy skin of Esau, Jacob, following in every deetail the advice of Rebecca, knelt before Isaac, offered the savoury dish, and begged and obtrained the coveted blessing. Great then was the astonishment, and genuine the indignation, of the disappointed Esau, who "roared out with a great cry", on hearing the deceived Isaac declare, "thy brother came deceitfully and got thy blessing". Though sympathizing with his grief­stricken son, Isaac, realizing more fully the import of the oracle communicated to Rebecca, felt impelled to add: "I have blessed him, and he shall be blessed"; "I have appointed him thy lord, and have made all his brethren his servants". (Gen., xxvii, 6-37.) The restraining influence of the father's presence is admirably portrayed in the few words uttered by Esau: "the days will come of the mourning of my father, and I will kill my brother Jacob" (Gen., xxvii, 41). That this exclamation revealed a deep-seated purpose, the evident anxiety of Rebecca, the hasty flight of Jacob to Haran, and his long stay with his uncle Laban, clearly demonstrated. (Gen., xxvii, 42-xxxi, 38.) Indeed, even after a self-imposed exile of twenty years, the carefully instructed messengers sent to Esau in the land of Seir (Gen., xxxii, 3) and the strategic division of his household and flocks into two companies clearly indicate Jacob's abiding sense of distrust (Gen., xxxii, 4-8.
    After extending a cordial welcome to his returning brother, Esau parted from Jacob and "returned, that day, the way that he came, to Seir" (Gen., xxxiii, 1-16), where he and his descendants became exceedingly rich (Gen., xxxvi, 1-8). The very name Edomite, given to the descendants of Esau (Edom), has served to perpetuate the remembrance of the circumstances attending Esau's birth and the sale of his first birthright. From the noteworthy preference of Jacob to Esau (Gen., xxv, 22 sq.), St. Paul (Rom., ix, 4-16) shows that in the mystery of election and grace God is bound to no particular nation and is influenced by no prerogative of birth or antecedent merit. When Isaac, old and full of days, had died, we find Esau with Jacob at Hebron, there to bury their father in the cave of Machpelah (Gen., xxxv, 28-29).
    PALIS in VIG., Dict. de la Bible, s. v.; COWAN in HASTINGS, Dict. of the Bible, s. v.; DODS, Isaac, Jacob, and Joseph (London, 1880).
    DANIEL P. DUFFY
    Transcribed by WGKofron With thanks to St. Mary's Church, Akron, Ohio

The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VIII. — New York: Robert Appleton Company..1910.



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