
Apparently Esau had the best and happiest lot. Notice what he escaped. - For him  there were no few and evil days of pilgrimage; nor the pressure of famine; nor  the going down into Egypt; nor the forty years of wanderings in the desert; nor  the vicissitudes of the Judges. All these he escaped and must have congratulated  himself merrily. But he had no vision of God; no communion with Jehovah; no  contact with the messengers of heaven.
What he enjoyed. - A line of  dukes; a royal dynasty, which was old when Israel's first king ascended the  throne; a rich and fertile territory; peace and comfort. He reminds us of the  Psalmist's picture of the man of this world, whose portion is in this life, and  who is filled with hid treasure. But Esau never awoke satisfied with God's  likeness; nor ever enjoyed the blessedness of the man who is "a prince with  God."
How he bore himself. - His heart was generous, full of good nature,  jovial, and free-handed. When the land could not bear both Jacob and himself, he  went off into another, and settled down in Mount Seir. It was no hardship with  him to leave the land of promise. Most would, doubtless, have preferred his  society to Jacob's; but God did not (Mal 1:2-3).
What made the lot of  these brothers so different. - The one lived for the world; the other was a  citizen of the heavenly Jerusalem, a pilgrim to the City of God. The one was an  ordinary man of the world; the other had been selected of God as the channel of  blessing to mankind. The flower and fruit which are to be propagated require the  special attention of the gardener's knife. What solemn words! (Amos 3:2).