The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
Esau Marries Mahalath
Genesis 28:6–9 — Esau Marries Mahalath. Each verse below carries the full apparatus: the Berean Standard Bible, the vocalized original (tap any word), and a parsed breakdown of every term transcribed from the interlinear. Synthesized commentary, canonical threads, and the reading of Christ gather at the end, over the whole unit.
6Now Esau learned that Isaac had blessed Jacob and sent him to Paddan-aram to take a wife there, commanding him, “Do not marry a Canaanite woman,”
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
‘ê·śāw way·yar kî- yiṣ·ḥāq ’eṯ- ḇê·raḵ ya·‘ă·qōḇ wə·šil·laḥ ’ō·ṯōw pad·de·nāh ’ă·rām lā·qa·ḥaṯ- lōw ’iš·šāh miš·šām bə·ḇā·ră·ḵōw ’ō·ṯōw way·ṣaw ‘ā·lāw lê·mōr lō- ṯiq·qaḥ ’iš·šāh kə·nā·‘an mib·bə·nō·wṯ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-saw Esau that had-blessed Isaac (object) Jacob, and-sent-him toward-Paddan-Aram to-take for-himself from-there a-wife, in-his-blessing him he-commanded upon him, saying, "Not shalt-thou-take a-wife from-the-daughters-of Canaan,"
Where the English smooths the original
When, then, he sees Jacob sent away to obtain a wife, in accordance with the rule established by Abraham, he determines also to conform to it, and marries a daughter of Ishmael.
he failed to consider that Ishmael had been separated from the house of Abraham and family of promise by the appointment of God; so that it only furnished another proof that he had no thought of the religious interests of the chosen family, and was unfit to be the recipient of divine revelation.
This passage comes in, in the midst of Jacob’s story, to show the influence of good example. Esau now begins to think Jacob the better man, and disdains not to take him for his pattern in this particular instance of marrying a daughter of Abraham.
7and that Jacob had obeyed his father and mother and gone to Paddan-aram.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ya·‘ă·qōḇ way·yiš·ma‘ ’el- ’ā·ḇîw wə·’el- ’im·mōw way·yê·leḵ pad·de·nāh ’ă·rām
Literal — word-for-word from the original
and Jacob obeyed his-father and his-mother, and-went toward-Paddan-Aram.
Where the English smooths the original
And that Jacob obeyed his father and his mother,.... As it became him, and as it becomes all children to be obedient to their parents in all things lawful they command them; and it would have been well if Esau had been obedient to them also in a like case, the case of his marriage
Good examples impress even the profane and malicious.
It showed a partial reformation, but no repentance, for he gave no proofs of abating his vindictive purposes against his brotherJFB comments across vv. 6–9 as a block; this line bears on the contrast that v. 7's obedient Jacob throws into relief.
8And seeing that his father Isaac disapproved of the Canaanite women,
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
‘ê·śāw way·yar kî ’ā·ḇîw yiṣ·ḥāq rā·‘ō·wṯ bə·‘ê·nê kə·nā·‘an bə·nō·wṯ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-saw Esau that evil [were] the-daughters-of Canaan in-the-eyes-of Isaac his-father;
Where the English smooths the original
Who he perceived was displeased with the daughters of Canaan, or that they were "evil in his eyes" (i), offensive to him, and disapproved of by him, because of their ill manners: Rebekah is not mentioned, whose displeasure he cared not for.Gill's parenthetical (i) flags the literal Hebrew — "evil in his eyes" — the very idiom BSB smooths to "disapproved of."
Carnal hearts are apt to think themselves as good as they should be, because in some one matter they are not so bad as they have been.
Esau is induced, by the charge of his parents to Jacob, the compliance of the latter with their wishes, and by their obvious dislike to the daughters of Kenaan, to take Mahalath, a daughter of Ishmael, in addition to his former wives.
9Esau went to Ishmael and married Mahalath, the sister of Nebaioth and daughter of Abraham’s son Ishmael, in addition to the wives he already had.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
‘ê·śāw way·yê·leḵ ’el- yiš·mā·‘êl way·yiq·qaḥ ’eṯ- mā·ḥă·laṯ ’ă·ḥō·wṯ nə·ḇā·yō·wṯ baṯ- ’aḇ·rā·hām ben- yiš·mā·‘êl ‘al- lə·’iš·šāh nā·šāw lōw
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-went Esau to Ishmael, and-took (object) Mahalath the-daughter-of Ishmael son-of Abraham, the-sister-of Nebaioth, in-addition-to his-wives, to-himself for-a-wife.
Where the English smooths the original
He thought by this means to ingratiate himself with his father, and so to get another and a better blessing; but he takes no care to reconcile himself to God, nor observes his hand in the business. Besides, he mends one fault by committing another, and taking a third wife when he had one too many before
But, alas! he mends one fault by committing another, and taking a third wife, when he had one too many before.
but in this he acted an unwise part, on more accounts than one; partly as it was taking to wife the daughter of one that was cast out of his grandfather's house
In Genesis 36:3 , the name of Ishmael’s daughter, sister of Nebaioth, appears as Basemath. Here she is called MahalathCambridge lays out the Mahalath/Basemath naming crux that the English text passes over in silence.
The verse-by-verse work is done. What follows gathers the whole unit. All three layers below are machine-generated (⚙). Weigh them; they have no authority.
AI synthesis — woven from the public-domain voices above and the original text; generated and fallible.
The unit is built on a single repeated verb the English conceals. Twice the narrator writes way·yar, "and Esau saw" (H7200, verses 6 and 8), and once, of Jacob, way·yiš·ma‘, "and Jacob heard/obeyed" (H8085, verse 7). Esau perceives everything correctly — the blessing conferred, the charge given, the parents' displeasure — yet his is the eye of the spectator. Jacob simply hears, and hearing, goes. The Cambridge Bible reads the whole scene as Esau "prompted by the desire to obtain a blessing such as Isaac had given Jacob"; Matthew Henry's verdict is sharper, that "Good examples impress even the profane and malicious" — impress, but do not convert. The grammar is the argument: seeing is not hearing.
Isaac's command turns on the verb lâqach, "to take" (H3947): Jacob is sent to take (lā·qa·ḥaṯ) a wife, and Esau is told not to take (ṯiq·qaḥ) a Canaanite (verse 6). In verse 9 Esau seizes that very verb — way·yiq·qaḥ, "and he took" — and takes a daughter of Ishmael instead. Technically he obeys; she is no Canaanite. But Keil & Delitzsch press the failure: Esau "failed to consider that Ishmael had been separated from the house of Abraham and family of promise by the appointment of God." He kept the letter and missed the line of promise entirely. Worse, the preposition ‘al (H5921, verse 9) records that he added this wife upon the others — Poole notes he "mends one fault by committing another, and taking a third wife when he had one too many before," and Benson echoes it word for near-word. Reformation by addition, not repentance.
Where BSB says Isaac "disapproved of" the Canaanite women, the Hebrew is blunt: the daughters of Canaan were rā·‘ō·wṯ, "evil" (H7451), bə·‘ê·nê, "in the eyes of" Isaac (verse 8). Gill catches exactly this, glossing the verse as "evil in his eyes ... offensive to him," and even flagging the Latin of the older translators (malae in oculis). The same eye-language that governs Isaac's judgment runs through Esau's own seeing — the unit is saturated with eyes. Gill's closing observation lands the human note: "Rebekah is not mentioned, whose displeasure he cared not for." Esau angles only for the father whose blessing carries the inheritance.
The bride is named Mahalath here (H4258) but Bashemath in Genesis 36:3 — and, to thicken it, "Basemath" is the name of one of Esau's Hittite wives in Genesis 26:34. The Cambridge Bible lays the crux out plainly, that "Here she is called Mahalath" while in Genesis 36:3 "the name ... appears as Basemath." She is anchored by her brother Nebaioth (H5032, a rare name), whom Ellicott reads as the deliberate proof that Mahalath "shared in this precedence, and was not the daughter of any of Ishmael's subsequent wives, or of a concubine." The verbal threads outward — to Genesis 36:3, 25:13, and the Chronicler's lists — are anchored on these rare lexemes and are recorded as verbal links below.
Read under Sola Scriptura, this quiet appendix to the blessing-narrative is the Bible's most precise portrait of religion without repentance. Esau does everything the moralist would commend: he observes his father's wishes, abandons the offensive Canaanite match, and marries within Abraham's broader kindred. And the inspired narrator records it all without a single word of approval — because the text's own grammar exposes the fraud. Esau sees (H7200, twice) but never hears (H8085, the verb reserved for Jacob); he takes (H3947) the right ethnicity while missing the line of promise; he adds (H5921) a wife rather than mending a marriage. The Spirit's verdict is structural, not editorial — written into the repeated verbs themselves. This is the danger Hebrews 12:16–17 will name outright: the profane man who, having despised his birthright, "found no place for repentance, though he sought it carefully with tears." Verse 9 is one of those tears. (This reading is the tool's fallible synthesis, to be tested against the Word.)
Esau saw everything and heard nothing — he kept the letter of his father's word and lost the line of his father's God. [synthesis, not Scripture]
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
The bride taken here resurfaces in Esau's family register, where the same woman — daughter of Ishmael, sister of Nebaioth — is called Bashemath. The link rests on the rare name Nebaioth (H5032, only five occurrences) together with Ishmael (H3458) and the kinship terms sister (H269) and daughter (H1323), confirming this is the identical marriage, and exposing the Mahalath/Bashemath naming crux.
Genesis 36:3
basis: shared rare lexeme H5032 Nᵉbâyôwth (freq 5) anchoring the link, with H3458 Yishmâʻêʼl, H269 ʼâchôwth, H1323 bath (Verifier-computed)
Esau identifies his bride as "the sister of Nebaioth." Nebaioth is named as Ishmael's firstborn in the genealogy of Genesis 25:13, the basis for the commentators' insistence (Ellicott, Poole) that Mahalath was a full-line Ishmaelite of the first rank. The shared rare name Nebaioth (H5032) plus Ishmael (H3458) records the verbal connection.
Genesis 25:13
basis: shared rare lexeme H5032 Nᵉbâyôwth (freq 5) with H3458 Yishmâʻêʼl (Verifier-computed)
The very rare personal name Mahalath (H4258) appears only twice in the Hebrew Bible — here, and as a wife of Rehoboam in 2 Chronicles 11:18. The link is purely onomastic (a distinct woman of the same name centuries later), not a shared figure; it is recorded as a verbal lexeme match on the basis of the rare name, with the take/wife/daughter formula incidental.
2 Chronicles 11:18
basis: shared rare lexeme H4258 Machălath (freq 2 — only these two verses); supporting H1323 bath, H802 ʼishshâh, H3947 lâqach are common (Verifier-computed)
Verse 6 explicitly reports what Genesis 28:1–5 narrated: Isaac blessing Jacob and sending him to Paddan-aram to take a wife, with the charge against Canaanite marriage. The link is structural — the same scene retold from Esau's vantage. The shared words are the proper names of the episode (Esau, Isaac, Jacob, Aram) plus the place-name Paddan (H6307); we tier this structural rather than verbal because the connection is the shared narrative, not a quoted clause — even Paddan, though uncommon (11 occurrences), functions here as a recurring geographical marker of this one journey-cycle, not as a distinctive verbal echo.
Genesis 28:5 · Genesis 28:1
basis: shared narrative frame: H6215 ʻÊsâv, H3327 Yitschâq, H3290 Yaʻăqôb, H758 ʼĂrâm (common names) + H6307 Paddân (freq 11, a place-marker of the same journey, not a quotation) — downgraded from the Verifier's auto 'verbal' (Verifier-computed)
The "daughters of Canaan" that grieved Isaac (verse 8) and the "wives he already had" (verse 9) point back to Genesis 26:34–35, where Esau took Judith and Basemath the Hittites, "a grief of mind unto Isaac and to Rebekah." The thread is thematic — the offense Esau's new marriage fails to undo — sharing the motif and the wives (H802) rather than a rare lexeme.
Genesis 26:34
basis: shared motif of Esau's Canaanite/Hittite wives grieving Isaac; common lexeme H802 ʼishshâh (not rare)
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
Hebrews 12:16–17 names Esau explicitly as the warning: "that there be no fornicator, or profane person, as Esau, who for one morsel of meat sold his birthright. For ye know how that afterward, when he would have inherited the blessing, he was rejected: for he found no place of repentance, though he sought it carefully with tears." This unit shows the seeking — Esau's strained efforts to recover his father's favor by a more acceptable marriage — and its emptiness. The blessing belongs to the line of promise, and Christ is that promised Seed (Galatians 3:16); Esau's exclusion from the blessing is, typologically, exclusion from the inheritance fulfilled in Christ. This is a cross-Testament link (Greek NT to Hebrew narrative); the Verifier finds no shared original-language lexeme (expected — Strong's numbers cannot bridge the testaments), so the connection rests on the figural reading and the NT author's own explicit naming of Esau, not on a verbal match. The typological force is the NT's, not novel to this tool.
Hebrews 12:16-17 · Genesis 28:9
The contrast of Jacob and Esau in this passage — one heard and went in obedience toward the line of promise, the other saw and went on his own terms outside it — is taken up by Paul as the pattern of election: "Jacob have I loved, but Esau have I hated" (Romans 9:13, citing Malachi 1:2–3). The branch separated from the family of promise (Keil & Delitzsch's reading of Ishmael) and the branch cut off (Esau/Edom) together set in relief the single line preserved to bring forth the Christ. The link is typological and structural — election and the narrowing of the promised line — and being cross-Testament cannot rest on shared lexemes.
Romans 9:13 · Malachi 1:2-3
The biblical text is the Berean Standard Bible (BSB), public domain (CC0). Hebrew/Greek text, transliteration, morphology and Strong’s are transcribed from the Berean interlinear (CC0) + Strong’s lexicons (PD); the literal renderings, divergence notes, word notes and all synthesis are this tool’s own work (⚙) — fallible; verify them.
Named voices, quoted verbatim from public-domain works:
Honesty notes for this unit: (1) The Verifier auto-tiers any shared-lexeme match as "verbal / quotation," but that label is earned only where the shared lexeme is genuinely rare. We retained "verbal — confirmed" for the Nebaioth (H5032, 5 occurrences) and Mahalath (H4258, 2 occurrences) links, and deliberately downgraded the Genesis 28:5 / 28:1 connection to "structural." Its shared words are the episode's proper names (Esau, Isaac, Jacob, Aram) plus the place-name Paddan; Paddan is in fact uncommon (11 occurrences, which is what triggers the Verifier's auto 'verbal' label), but it recurs throughout this single journey-cycle as a geographical marker rather than as a quoted clause, so the honest tier is structural — the same scene retold from Esau's vantage, not a verbal quotation. (2) The Mahalath/2 Chronicles 11:18 thread is onomastic only — two unrelated women share a rare name; we say so rather than imply a typological tie. (3) The Mahalath-vs-Bashemath naming discrepancy between this verse and Genesis 36:3 (compounded by "Basemath" the Hittite wife in 26:34) is a real harmonization crux; the commentators (Cambridge, Ellicott, Gill via the Targum of Jonathan) resolve it by identifying the woman across her two names, but the divergence is genuine and we flag it rather than paper over it. (4) Both Christ links are cross-Testament (Greek↔Hebrew); per the rules they are tiered typological, never verbal, and rest on the NT's own naming of Esau and the figural reading — not on shared Strong's numbers, which cannot bridge the testaments. (5) Several commentators (Barnes, Keil & Delitzsch, Poole) disagree on whether Ishmael was 13 or 14 years dead; we report the range rather than adjudicate a chronology the text leaves open.
✦ = human, public-domain source, quoted and named. ⚙ = machine synthesis, to be verified. Flagged cross-references are left visible on purpose — the verifier working in the open. “Search the Scriptures daily, whether those things were so.” (Acts 17:11)