4. Thus shall ye speak unto my lord Esau--The purport of the
message was that, after a residence of twenty years in Mesopotamia, he
was now returning to his native land, that he did not need any thing,
for he had abundance of pastoral wealth, but that he could not pass
without notifying his arrival to his brother and paying the homage of
his respectful obeisance. Acts of civility tend to disarm opposition
and soften hatred
(Ec 10:4).
Thy servant Jacob--He had been made lord over his brethren
(compare
Ge 27:29).
But it is probable he thought this referred to a spiritual superiority;
or if to temporal, that it was to be realized only to his posterity. At
all events, leaving it to God to fulfil that purpose, he deemed it
prudent to assume the most kind and respectful bearing.
JFB.
Picture Study Bible