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About Abraham's descendants
Abraham had another wife whose name was Keturah. These are the names of the children Keturah gave birth to for Abraham. They were called Zimran, Jokshan, Medan, Midian, Ishbak and Shuah.
Keturah's son Jokshan was the father of Sheba and Dedan. Dedan's descendants became so many that there were three groups. They were called the Asshurim, the Letushim and the Leummim people.
Keturah's son Midian had five sons. They were called Ephah, Epher, Hanoch, Abida and Eldaah.
Keturah was the ancestor of all those people.
5-6 While Abraham was still alive he gave presents to his sons, the sons of Hagar and Keturah. Then he sent all those sons away from his son Isaac. He sent them to the east to live there.
Then Abraham said, “When I die, all my cattle, sheep, goats, camels, donkeys and all my silver and gold and other things will all belong to Isaac.”
About Abraham's death
Abraham lived for 175 years. They were good years. And then he died. His sons Isaac and Ishmael buried him in the cave called Machpelah that was near Mamre's place. First of all the cave had belonged to Ephron, the one whose father was Zohar the Hittite. 10 Abraham had bought the cave from the Hittite people and both Abraham and his wife Sarah were buried there.
11 After Abraham died, God blessed his son Isaac. He lived near the waterhole called “The Owner of the Waterhole is Alive and He Sees Me.”
About Ishmael's descendants
12 Ishmael was Abraham's first son. His mother was Hagar, Sarah's Egyptian servant. 13 He had twelve sons. The first was called Nebaioth. The names of the others were Kedar, Adbeel, Mibsam, 14 Mishma, Dumah, Massa, 15 Hadad, Tema, Jetur and Naphish and the last one was Kedemah. 16 Those twelve men were the ancestors of separate tribes and their villages and camping places were called by their names.
17 Their father Ishmael was a very old man now, and when he was 137 years old he died.
18 Ishmael's descendants lived in the land between Havilah and Shur. That was their country, and when people went from Egypt over to Assyria they went through there. Ishmael's family lived away from Isaac's family and from Abraham's other descendants.
About Isaac's family
About Jacob and Esau
19 This is the story of Abraham's son Isaac. 20 Isaac was forty years old when he married Rebecca. Rebecca was the daughter of Bethuel who was an Aramean from Mesopotamia. And Rebecca's brother was Laban. 21 Rebecca had no children. So Isaac prayed to Yahweh for her to have children. Yahweh heard his prayer and Rebecca became pregnant. 22 She knew that she was going to have twins. Before they were born they struggled together inside her.
Rebecca said, “Oh dear, what has happened to me?” So she prayed to Yahweh about the children.
23 Yahweh said to her,
“There are two people inside you.
They will be the ancestors of two nations.
Their people will be against each other and live separately.
One brother will be stronger than the other,
and the older brother will work for the younger one.”
24 Twin boys were born. 25 The first one was reddish and his skin was hairy, so he was named Esau, because Esau means “hairy.” 26 When the second one was born, he was holding on tightly to the heel of the first. So he was named Jacob, because Jacob means “he is holding the heel.” But when people talk about others and say, “He is holding the heel,” that means, “he is tricking people.” Their father Isaac was sixty years old when they were born.
27 The two boys grew up. Esau was good at hunting and he loved being out in the bush. But Jacob was a quiet man who liked to stay at home. 28 Isaac loved Esau more, because he liked eating the animals he killed, but Rebecca loved Jacob.
29 One day Jacob was cooking some bean soup and Esau came back from hunting. He was hungry 30 and he said to his younger brother Jacob, “I am very hungry. Give me some of that red soup.” That is why Esau had two names. One was Esau and the other was Edom, because Edom means “red.”
31 “Yes, I will give you some,” Jacob answered. “But you must tell me that I am the firstborn and the leader now, and not you.”
32 Esau said, “All right! I am dying of hunger, so what good is it to me if I am the firstborn?”
33 Jacob said, “I want you to make a promise and not change it. You must promise me that I will be the firstborn and the leader now.” So Esau agreed and made the promise. 34 Then Jacob gave him some damper and some of the soup he had cooked. Esau ate the damper and drank the soup and he got up and left, saying, “What does it matter? Let him be the firstborn!”