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Life
Issues: A Mess of Pottage
Early on in "A Mess of Pottage,"
Halah confides to Jess of her wish to see her young fresh faced
brother Jacob lead the tribe in preference to her older, bigger
and hairier tribesman brother, Esau. Esau, according to tradition,
is the rightful heir.
Halah is tired of the nomadic
lifestyle that her father Isaac encouraged. She sees Esau,
the hunter, as a continuation of the old order of having to
move on though it feels like we just got there.
Jacob stands for progress and staying put.
During the episode, Jacob tricks
Esau to give up his birth rite to lead the tribe in return
for pottage (a strange, oldish word for porridge).
Upon the failure of the whole pottage plan, Jacob
then schemes with his mother, Rebekah, to get Isaac to grant
him the leadership of the tribe. Isaac, very sick and blind,
is under the misapprehension that he is granting the leadership
to Esau. When Isaac learns of his mistake, he is heartbroken
and dies.
What Halah wants
Halah battles with her conscience right the way through the
episode.
She knows what she wants and she
knows how to get it. She just changes her mind half way through.
What she wants is for Jacob to be the leader. Her mother, Rebekah,
also keeps telling her that Jacob would be a more befitting
leader than Esau. Besides, Rebekah, Jacob and even Halah want
to find a nice patch of land and put their feet up. Enough
of this hunting and gathering nonsense.
As
Halah learns of the below the belt tactics that
Jacob has been up to, however, she starts to wonder whether
Jacob would really be such a good leader after all. This business
has certainly shown her a side of him that is none too pleasant.
Halah does not want to be involved
in her mother and Jacobs devious plot to trick Isaac
but her hand is, in many ways, forced by her mother. By this
stage it is certainly clear that Halah is going to have to
make a crunch decision as to where her loyalties lie. She goes
for the underdog and good on her too!
What Halah feels is right
Halah has observed how Esau is loyal to his father. He realises
the ritual expected of him and follows the protocol, as Isaac
would wish.
Halah sees that Esau actually
has done more to deserve the birth rite than that scheming
no-good Jacob.
She is thus caught in a quandary.
She wants Jacob to rule because
it would mean that she would get to live the lifestyle of her
choice.
She feels that Esau has been wronged
and she thinks it is right that he should rule the tribe.
Sometimes what we want does not
fit in with what we think is right.
Has
this happened to you?
In this situation, we should listen
to our conscience first and act accordingly.
If Halah had decided to stay with
Jacob and Rebekah, she would be as good as agreeing with the
way they went about cheating the birth rite. Esau would be
left to wander off alone with just the trees, birds and occasional
bandit for company, feeling oh so lonely and quite aggrieved
I would imagine. And rightly so, too.
He would be asking himself what
had he done that was so wrong? After all hed tried to
be a good son to his dad hadnt he - and this is what
happens it just isnt fair!
By taking a stand and going off
with Esau, Halah is acting upon what she believes is right.
She is standing up to be counted and telling the rest of her
family that " No. It certainly is not OK what you did
to poor Esau, and taking advantage of father and all on his
death bed both of them certainly deserve a lot better."
She is showing loyalty to Esau
but she is also showing loyalty to what she believes in and
this shows true character. Like Annie in The Good Samaritan,
Halah is prepared to act upon what she truly believes is right
although it may not be the easiest path to take at the time.
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