Genesis 33:11

Take, I pray thee, my blessing that is brought to thee; because God hath dealt graciously with me, and because I have enough. And he urged him, and he took it.

Cross-reference

In Genesis 33:9, Esau says 'I have enough' — Jacob echoes his brother's words, both expressing contentment in their reunion.

Genesis 32:13–20 Historical context

Genesis 32:13-20 describes Jacob preparing these exact gifts to send ahead to Esau — this is the moment Esau finally accepts them.

Genesis 30:43 Historical context

Genesis 30:43 describes Jacob's enormous prosperity under Laban — the material basis for his claim here that God has been gracious and he has everything.

Genesis 32:5 Historical context

In Genesis 32:5, Jacob begins his appeasement strategy by sending word of his prosperity to Esau — the opening move that leads to this face-to-face gift offering.

In 2 Corinthians 8:4, the Macedonians urgently pleaded to give — same eager, insistent generosity Jacob models here when pressing Esau to accept his gift.

In 1 Samuel 25:27, Abigail brings David a present with similar language — offering a gift to appease and reconcile after conflict.

In 2 Kings 5:16, Elisha refuses Naaman's gift — both involve men of God responding to offered gifts with a testimony of divine sufficiency. Elisha refuses; Jacob accepts but declares 'I have all.'