The Last Shall Be First
Explore how God astonishingly flips the script on the status quo.
Explore how God astonishingly flips the script on the status quo.
By Dr. Eli Lizorkin-Girzhel (read bio)
Reading time: 7 min. Impact: Eternity.
Many major Genesis stories consistently challenge primogeniture—the ancient cultural norm where the firstborn son inherits the family’s wealth, title, and authority, leaving younger siblings with diminished prospects. By repeatedly elevating the younger or less-favored sibling, Genesis reveals a divine pattern that subverts human expectations, affirming God’s authority to choose the unlikely to fulfill His promises. For those feeling overlooked or marginalized, these accounts offer profound hope: God sees potential where humanity sees weakness, transforming the “last” into the “first” to accomplish His redemptive purposes.
The rivalry between Cain and Abel sets a dramatic foundation for this motif. Cain, the elder, and Abel, the younger, present offerings to God, but only Abel’s sacrifice finds favor, while Cain’s is rejected (Gen 4:4-5). The text remains silent on why God prefers Abel’s offering, cloaking the decision in mystery and emphasizing divine prerogative. Cain’s jealousy festers into murderous rage, ending Abel’s life in a tragic clash not over inheritance but over God’s approval. Abel, the younger, is exalted in God’s eyes, while Cain’s status as firstborn proves irrelevant.
The narrative of Ishmael and Isaac further illustrates God’s rejection of primogeniture. Ishmael, Abraham’s firstborn through Hagar, holds the natural claim as the elder son (Gen 16:1-4). Yet God designates Isaac, born later to Sarah, as the heir of the covenant, declaring, “Through Isaac shall your offspring be named” (Gen 17:21). The expulsion of Ishmael and Hagar (Gen 21:1-14) is harsh by human standards, but it solidifies God’s choice by prioritizing divine promise over cultural norms. Isaac’s elevation as the younger son mirrors Abel’s favor, reinforcing the pattern of God choosing the unexpected to advance His plan.
The story of Jacob and Esau brings the theme of reversal into sharp focus, rich with tension and human complexity. Even before birth, the twins struggle in Rebekah’s womb, prompting her to seek God’s guidance. The oracle she receives is cryptic: “Two nations are in your womb… one will be stronger than the other” (Gen 25:23). The Hebrew text is ambiguous, leaving it unclear whether the “abundant one” serves the “young one” or vice versa, adding layers to Rebekah’s later actions. Esau is born first, but Jacob, grasping his brother’s heel, earns his name (Ya’akov, from “heel”). Years later, Jacob exploits Esau’s hunger, trading a bowl of red lentil stew for the birthright (Gen 25:29-34). Esau’s impulsive trade is compounded by his marriages to Hittite women, which distress Isaac and Rebekah (Gen 26:34-35), raising fears about his suitability to lead their covenant family. Although Jacob is not without faults, he later deceives Isaac to obtain the firstborn’s blessing (Gen 27:1-40), which represents a material blessing of prosperity and authority. Yet Isaac always intended the covenant blessing of Abraham—promising land and descendants—for Jacob (Gen 28:3-4), confirmed by God in Jacob’s dream of the heavenly stairway (Gen 28:13-14).
The brief but vivid story of Perez and Zerah echoes this pattern in a single, dramatic moment. As Tamar labors, Zerah extends his hand, marked with a scarlet thread to signify firstborn status (Gen 38:27-30). Yet Perez emerges first, claiming precedence. Divine will renders the scarlet thread, a human attempt to define priority, irrelevant, akin to Jacob supplanting Esau. Perez’s unexpected rise carries weight as an ancestor of David (Ruth 4:18-22), tying this reversal to God’s broader covenant plan.
Joseph’s narrative expands the motif to a broader sibling dynamic. As one of Jacob’s younger sons, Joseph receives divine favor through dreams predicting his dominance (Gen 37:5-11). His brothers, envious of their father’s affection and Joseph’s visions, betray him, selling him into slavery. Yet God orchestrates Joseph’s rise to power in Egypt, where his brothers eventually bow before him (Gen 50:18), fulfilling his dreams. Unlike Esau’s shortsighted trade, Joseph’s perseverance aligns with divine providence, enabling him to save his family from famine. Reuben, the firstborn, fades into obscurity, while Joseph’s elevation underscores God’s pattern of favoring the unlikely.
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The blessing of Manasseh and Ephraim provides a final, symbolic iteration of the motif in the Book of Genesis. When Jacob blesses Joseph’s sons, he crosses his hands, giving the greater blessing to Ephraim, the younger, over Manasseh (Gen 48:8-20). Joseph protests—“Not this way, my father!”—but Jacob’s deliberate act reinforces God’s prerogative. The crossed hands, like Jacob’s heel-grasping or Zerah’s scarlet thread, symbolize divine reversal, tying this story to the broader pattern.
Beyond Genesis, the story of Moses and Aaron in Exodus further illustrates God’s reversal of expected roles (Ex 4:10-16, 7:1-7). Aaron, the elder brother, is a skilled speaker, while Moses, the younger, doubts his eloquence, claiming, “I am slow of speech and tongue” (Ex 4:10). Humanly, Aaron seems better suited for leadership, yet God chooses Moses to lead Israel out of Egypt and receive the covenant at Sinai. God appoints Aaron as Moses’ mouthpiece, declaring, “You shall be as God to him” (Ex 4:16), but Moses holds the primary role as God’s chosen deliverer. This reversal highlights God’s pattern of empowering the less favored or self-doubting to fulfill His purposes, subverting expectations of seniority or natural ability.
The selection of David as king over Israel provides a striking example of divine reversal (1 Sam 16:1-13). Jesse presents his elder sons to Samuel, assuming the firstborn, Eliab, or others like Abinadab or Shammah, would be chosen. Yet God rejects them, declaring, “The Lord looks on the heart” (1 Sam 16:7). David, the youngest, tending sheep and initially overlooked, is anointed king. His rise from the “least” to Israel’s greatest king mirrors the Genesis pattern, showing God’s preference for the humble and unexpected.
This theme of reversal extends beyond individuals to God’s chosen communities. In Deuteronomy 7:7-8, God selects Israel not for their power but because they are “the fewest of all peoples,” whom He loves in order to fulfill His covenant with Abraham. This mirrors the younger siblings’ rise in Genesis, as Israel embodies the “last” made “first.” In the New Testament, Paul describes the Corinthian church as “not many wise, not many mighty” (1 Cor 1:26-29), yet chosen to shame the strong. Like Jacob or Joseph, these communities reflect God’s preference for the overlooked, showing His pattern of reversal shapes not just individuals but entire peoples, offering hope to those who feel insignificant.
The motif of divine reversal finds its pinnacle in Jesus Christ. Born in humble Bethlehem, He is no worldly conqueror (Mic 5:2). Scorned and crucified, He is the “stone the builders rejected” (Psa 118:22; 1 Pet 2:6-7), yet His resurrection makes Him the cornerstone of God’s kingdom. His life and death embody the “last” becoming “first,” echoing the Genesis pattern and offering salvation to all. In Matthew 20:16 we read about Jesus’ famous saying:
“So the last shall be first, and the first last.”
This verse comes from the Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard (Matthew 20:1-16), where Jesus teaches about the Kingdom of Heaven. The parable shows that the least significant or latest may be exalted, while the prominent or earliest may be humbled.
The sibling rivalries in Genesis—Cain and Abel, Ishmael and Isaac, Jacob and Esau, Perez and Zerah, Joseph and his brothers, and Ephraim and Manasseh—reveal a profound theological truth: God’s sovereign choice often overturns human expectations. Time and again, Genesis subverts the cultural norm of primogeniture, elevating the younger, the overlooked, or the unlikely to fulfill His redemptive purposes.
These narratives are not merely ancient family disputes but divine object lessons. Abel’s favor, Isaac’s election, Jacob’s blessing, Perez’s breach, Joseph’s exaltation, and Ephraim’s precedence all point to a recurring pattern—God delights in choosing the weak to shame the strong (1 Cor. 1:27). This theme extends beyond Genesis, finding echoes in Moses over Aaron, David over his brothers, Israel among the nations, and ultimately in Christ, the rejected Stone who became the Cornerstone.
For those who feel marginalized or inadequate, Genesis offers a message of hope: God’s ways are not ours. He does not measure worth by birth order, human merit, or societal status. His choices are rooted in grace, His purposes in redemption. Whether in the impulsive folly of Esau, the patient endurance of Joseph, or the crossed hands of Jacob, we see that God writes His story through the unexpected.
The ultimate reversal is Christ—the despised and crucified who became the exalted King. In Him, the last are made first, the humble are lifted, and the overlooked are called. Genesis invites us to trust a God who specializes in surprising reversals, turning human weakness into divine triumph. Hold fast to His promises, for He is faithful to fulfill them—often in ways we least expect.
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Comments (176)
Thank you so much for your insight on this. I had never seen this point in "The last will be first".
May the Lord continue to give us light.
Thanks Dr. Eli Lizorkin for great article and interesting theme, which may be continued with another point of view on relationships between siblings in the Old Testament and in the New Testament
In my humble opinion, statement “ So the last shall be first, and the first last” , especially in context of Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard (Matthew 20:1-16) is about: that every soul in spiritual journey in material world has it’s own tasks, own labor, own deadline to be completed, and the reward shall be equal for all workers, that so called “penny”, and it will be beyond our human experience.
Anna, thank you for your support and this comment!
Much more interesting than competing relations between brothers is assembly between them.
“Cursed be their anger, so fierce. And their fury so cruel! I will scatter them in Jacob and disperse them in Israel (Genesis 49:7)”
“But he turned and rebuked them, and said. Ye know not what manner of spirit ye are of” ( St Luke 9:55)
“But Jesus answered and said. Ye know not what ye ask”( St Matthew 20:22)
Thank you! Be blessed! Shalom!
Amen!
Does that mean we, the Gentiles. shall be the first to enter the Kingdom of G-d?
Everyone is asking this :-). I think it is taking the point a step too far. Not because Gentiles is a problem somehow, no. But because if something is true in Genesis, it does not mean that it needs to apply to every situation and every time. But who knows? Maybe I am not right here :-).
I did enjoy reading your essay "The First Shall Be The Last. I remember thinking many years ago about how the first born son seldom lived up to God's standard for leadership. I thought it was odd since man places so much store on the first born son. I concluded that fathers gave more care t rearing up later children based on the mistakes they made with the first one. I never thought of it in terms of the first shall be last.
Thank you for your delightful small bite teachings
Thank you and God bless you!
I am so grateful to those of you who have decided to help me grow this ministry! May God bless you and keep you! If you are interested in making a contribution of any size, whether one- time or ongoing, please click here.
Kind of like Jesus being the second Adam…
See comments above :-). Yes, and no.
Thank you for this wonderful teaching. I thought about the foolishness of what we preach, (1 Cor.) Christ crucified, not grand cathedrals, traditions and ceremonies, but the humble cross, where Jesus suffered and died, now exalted hallelujah ! I love learning and seeing Jesus in the OT and our Father’s unfolding of His plan pointing to salvation in Jesus. I am without adequate words to express how thankful I am that I have been grafted in and belong to the body of Christ
Thank you for your comment, Jeanette!
A man had two sons. The younger demanded his share of the inheritance and went far away, squandering it on reckless living. When famine came, he was left destitute, feeding swine, longing for scraps. In desperation, he returned to his father, confessing his unworthiness. The father, moved with compassion, embraced him and restored him with joy. The elder son, who had stayed and labored faithfully, refused to join the celebration, resenting his brother’s welcome. Though near in body, his heart was far from the father’s love. In the end, the younger, once lost, found his place in the father’s house, while the elder, though outwardly obedient, remained outside—proving that proximity without love can leave one more lost than the prodigal.
Perhaps it is connected, perhaps not.
Authentic hebrew manuscripts found in Cochin, India, transcribed and translated by Van Rensburgs, include Revelation where Yeshua three times describes himself as being „the first and the last“, instead of alpha and omega, or alef and tav as we could expect:
Rev 1:8, 21:6 and 22:13 reads „Ani hu ha rishon vehaacharon techilat vehasof“, translated as „I am the first and the last, the beginning and the end“. From this we may learn that believers both from Jews and all the nations are united, if in Yeshua. https://www.hebrewgospels.com/revelation
Shalom, Marcela! Thank you for your support and this comment! It is indeed very helpful and people should have access to it. In my brief examination of this document (a few years ago) I arrived at a conclusion that this is a translation into Hebrew (not original Hebrew document). The reason for this (and I can explain it in more detail later) is that whoever translated this into Hebrew knew EXTREMELY well, but didn't know Judaism (almost at all!). This has led to the omission of numerous important details. I remember finding 2-3 examples like that in the Book of Revelation in this document and concluding there is NO WAY this is anything more than a translation (most probably from Judeo-Greek).
The Last, we who believe and have not seen.
The first, those who walked with the Son of Man
John 20:29
Bill, thank you for your comment.
I am so grateful to those of you who have decided to help me grow this ministry! May God bless you and keep you! If you are interested in making a contribution of any size, whether one- time or ongoing, please click here.