You may be thinking of Jacob, to whom his brother traded the birthright in return for a bowl of red soup ... a clear demonstration of how unimportant it was to him.
Answer 2
The Question conflates two separate incidents. The birthright itself was sold to Jacob willingly, by the brother himself (Esau), not by Isaac their father.
Years later, Jacob posed as Esau in Isaac's presence (Genesis ch.27) and received blessings that would have been given to Esau. Jacob is not to blame, for the following reasons:
1) The word of God had informed their mother Rebecca that Jacob the younger son would be the favored one; the one to prevail (Genesis 25:23). Acting on this, she commanded Jacob to pose as Esau and seek Isaac's blessings (27:6-10), despite his preferring not to do so (27:11).
2) When Esau willingly sold Jacob his birthright (25:31-34), he thereby relinquished any claim to Isaac's chief blessing which would go to the firstborn. The fact that he later complained (27:36) doesn't change this; and he did receive a blessing of his own (27:39).
3) Isaac had not been informed that Esau sold Jacob the birthright. When he was later told this, he understood why God had allowed Jacob to get the chief blessing, and he continued blessing Jacob on later occasions (ch.28). Moreover, God Himself gives Israel (Jacob) the title of firstborn (Exodus 4:22 with Rashi commentary).
The Question conflates two separate incidents. The birthright itself was sold to Jacob willingly, by the brother himself (Esau), not by Isaac their father.
Years later, Jacob posed as Esau in Isaac's presence (Genesis ch.27) and received blessings that would have been given to Esau. Jacob is not to blame, for the following reasons:
1) The word of God had informed their mother Rebecca that Jacob the younger son would be the favored one; the one to prevail (Genesis 25:23).
2) When Esau willingly sold Jacob his birthright (25:31-34), he thereby relinquished any claim to Isaac's chief blessing.
3) Isaac had not been informed that Esau sold Jacob the birthright. When he was later told this, he understood why God had allowed Jacob to get the chief blessing.
See also the Related Link.
Esau and Jacob. Their father's name was Isaac. The story is found in Genesis 25:19-24
Jacob tricked Issac, his father, into thinking that he was Esau by putting a fur on his arms and wearing Esau's clothes because Issac was blind.
Esau gave away his 'birthright' as the first born male for a bow of lentils (red stew). Jacob, however, did not buy it but tricked his father Isaac into bestowing it upon him.
The birthright promise was passed on by his father, Isaac to him. The story begins in Genesis 25.
zeuses father is kronos and his mother is rhea who tricked kronos into not eating the sixth child (in fear of being overthrown) he in fact did this to all of his kids she tricked him into eating a rock instead Zeus grew up and ended up overthrowing his father rescuing his brothers and sisters leaving him leader of the Olympians and the universe
Esau desired to kill Jacob because he was angry that Jacob had tricked him into giving up his birthright and receiving the blessing from their father, Isaac. Esau felt betrayed and sought revenge against his brother.
...because he ate his brothers and sisters and tried to eat him. his mother hid Zeus away and tricked chronus into eating a rock. so when Zeus was an adult he killed his father
Ruben lost his birthright as the firstborn son because he defiled his father's bed by sleeping with one of his father's concubines, which was considered a serious offense in their cultural and religious beliefs. This act was seen as dishonorable and disrespectful, leading to the loss of his right to inherit the privileges that typically came with being the eldest son.
Jacob stole his brother Esau's birthright and blessing. The birthright included a double portion of their father's inheritance, while the blessing was a verbal declaration of prosperity and leadership within the family.
In her love for Theseus, yes.
Jacob tricked his father Isaac.
Father Serra had 2 brothers