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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Genesis 45:4

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Genesis 45:4

And Joseph said unto his brethren, Come near to me, I pray you. And they came near. And he said, I [am] Joseph your brother, whom ye sold into Egypt.

4. whom ye sold ] The narrative of J is here, as in Gen 45:5, followed, according to which Joseph was sold by his brethren.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

Gen 45:4

Joseph said unto his brethren, Come near to me, I pray you

Separation ending in union

It was by a strange and seemingly circuitous route that these brethren of Joseph were brought near to him.

Between Joseph and his brethren there was an immeasurable distance–all the difference between a nature given over to God and one abandoned to the force of evil passion. We may see in this narrative a type of the ways and means God still employs for bringing the wandering brothers of Josephs great Antitype near to Him.


I.
In order that the brothers may be really drawn near to Joseph, they have first to be separated from him by their own sin.


II.
The next step towards bringing them near is their own want.


III.
When they get into Josephs presence they are suddenly subjected to the most unlooked-for and crushing trials.


IV.
They are smitten to the heart with the recollection of bygone sins; these are brought to their remembrance as sins against their brother.


V.
They were alone with Joseph when he made himself known to them. (W. HayAitken, M. A.)

Josephs treatment of his brethren


I.
THERE IS AN ILLUSTRATION HERE OFFERED ON THE RETRIBUTIVE POWER OF AN AWAKENED CONSCIENCE.


II.
NOTICE, ALSO, THE ILLUSTRATION OFFERED OF THE SEEKING LOVE OF GOD. It is Joseph who makes all the advances here. I pray you: it is the monarch who invites, the judge who pleads. Without all contradiction the less is blessed of the better. It was always so. Adam had hardly eaten of the forbidden fruit before the voice of the Lord was heard in the garden asking for him. Our Maker takes no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but would rather that the wicked should turn unto Him and live.


III.
HERE, TOO, IS AN ILLUSTRATION OF THE EXACT DESIGN OF THE GOSPEL. Men need many things: as those brethren needed food then, for themselves, their families, and their beasts. But Joseph knew that temporary relief would amount to little. What they most wanted for all the long future was simply himself in reconciliation. Come near to me is exactly what Jesus Christ has always been saying to such as labour and are heavy laden.


IV.
So COMPLETE IS OUR ILLUSTRATION IN THIS STORY, THAT IT LIKEWISE EXHIBITS THE NEED OF LAW-WORK IN REDEMPTION. Much as he yearned over them, he would not even for an instant relieve them of the salutary consciousness of so grievous a sin. Hence his earliest words were: I am Joseph, your brother, whom ye sold into Egypt. No doubt he meant to bring these men into greatest perplexity, and fill them with consternation. The first revelation of the Gospel is very much like a reiteration of the law. In some respects the rays from Calvary resemble those from Sinai; just as in some respects sunshine resembles lightning; but sunshine never strikes, and lightning often clears out a poison of impurity and so makes sunshine more welcome.


V.
MARK THE EXCELLENT ILLUSTRATION WE HAVE HERE OF THE REVELATION OF DIVINE GRACE. When those brothers in that awful interview stood suppliant and frightened at the feet of the ruler, there was pictured something very like the literal fulfilment of a dream they must have remembered, when Joseph told them of the eleven wheat-sheaves he had seen bowing before the one upright. I am your brother: this one disclosure covered the whole ground. Sold–but a brother; a monarch–but a brother; a judge–but a brother! I am Joseph: here he probably began to talk in their own language; they heard the familiar accents of their home-speech. Benjamin recognizes his own mothers son.


VI.
THERE IS AN ILLUSTRATION IN THIS STORY OF THE COMPLETENESS OF PARDON, AND RELIEF FROM PAIN. Watch how solicitous Joseph is lest his brothers should be grieved or angry with themselves any longer over that old, acknowledged, but not forgotten sin. When our Saviour perceives that true repentance is already in the heart of a sinner; when He knows that he understands his whole responsibility for his sins; then He is prepared to administer for his comfort some of the sweet assurances he has of Gods wisdom in causing even mans wrath to praise Him. Christ seems to say then: I am the Lord of glory, whom ye with wicked hands have crucified and slain; but God has over-ruled even this crime to His own glory and your redemption; be not grieved with yourself therefore, over-much, for Divine foreknowledge sent Me before you to preserve life.


VII.
SEE HERE WHAT AN ILLUSTRATION WE HAVE OF THE SINFULNESS AND FOLLY OF REJECTING THE GOSPEL. Of course, there is nothing in the story which suggests the thought; but there is room for imagination just to make the conjecture: how would it seem? Suppose Simeon, just out of prison, had turned his back upon Josephs offer! Suppose Benjamin, just delivered from accusation, had refused to have Josephs arms around his neck! Suppose Judah, his eyes still moist with pleading, had rejected Josephs kiss! And some have resisted the loving pleading and gracious tenderness of the Son of God who gave His life a ransom for us. (Charles S. Robinson, D. D.)

Joseph and his brethren


I.
We think that the condition and posture of Judah and his brethren at the feet of the throne of Joseph, trembling in alarm, well describe THE CONDITION AND POSITION OF EVERY TRULY AWAKENED SINNER.

1. By different methods Joseph had at last awakened the consciences of his ten brethren. The point which seemed to have been brought out most prominently before their consciences was this: We are verily guilty concerning our brother, in that we saw the anguish of his soul, when he besought us, and we would not hear; therefore is this distress come upon us. And though, in the speech which Judah made, it was not necessary to accuse themselves of crime, yet in the confession, God hath found out the iniquity of thy servants, Joseph could see evidently enough that the recollection of the pit and of the sale to the Ishmaelites was vividly before their minds eye. Now, when the Lord the Holy Ghost arouses sinners consciences, this is the great sin which he brings to mind: Of sin because they believed not on Me. Once the careless soul thought it had very little to answer for: I have not done much amiss, said he; a speedy reformation may wipe out all that has been awry, and my faults will soon be forgotten and forgiven; but now, on a sudden, the conscience perceives that the soul is guilty of despising, rejecting, and slaughtering Christ.

2. A second thought, however, which tended to make Josephs brethren feel in a wretched plight was this: that they now discovered that they were in Josephs hands. There stood Joseph, second to none but Pharaoh in all the empire of Egypt. Legions of warriors were at his beck and command; if he should say, take these men, bind them hand and foot, or cut them in pieces, none could interpose; he was to them as a lion, and they were as his prey, which he could rend to pieces at his will. Now to the awakened sinner, this also is a part of his misery: that he is entirely in the hands of that very Christ whom he once despised; for that Christ who died has now become the judge of the quick and dead, He has power over all flesh, that He may give eternal life to as many as His Father has given Him. The Father judgeth no man, He has committed all judgment to the Son. Dost thou see this, sinner, He whom thou despised is thy Master?

3. Under a sense of all these things–note what the ten brethren did. They began to plead. Ah! nothing makes a man pray like a sense of sin.


II.
We turn, however, now to remark, that THE SINGULARLY ROUGH BEHAVIOUR OF JOSEPH IS A NOTABLE REPRESENTATION OF THE WAY IN WHICH CHRIST DEALS WITH SOULS UNDER CONVICTION OF SIN. Joseph always was their brother, always loved them, had a heart full of compassion to them even when he called them spies. Kind words were often hastening to his lips, yet for their good he showed himself to be as a stranger and even as an enemy, so that he might bring them very low and prostrate before the throne. Jesus Christ often does this with truly awakened souls whom He means to save. Perhaps to some of you who are to-day conscious of guilt but not of mercy, Christ seems as a stern and angry Judge; you think of Him as one who can by no means spare the guilty; your only idea of Him is of one who would say to you, Get thee behind Me, Satan, thou savourest not the things that be of God. You went to Him in prayer; but instead of getting an answer He seemed to shut up your prayer in prison and keep it like Simeon bound before your eyes. Yea, instead of telling you that there was mercy, He said to you as with a harsh voice, It is not meet to take the childrens bread and cast it unto dogs. He appeared to shut his ear to your petitions and to hear none of your requests, and to say to you, Except ye renounce a right eye sin and a right arm pleasure, and give up your Benjamin delights, ye shall see My face no more, and you have come to think, poor soul, that Christ is hard and stern, and whereas He is ever the gentle Mediator receiving sinners and eating with them, whereas His usual voice is Come unto Me all ye that labour and are heavy laden and I will give you rest, to you He seemeth no such person, for He has put on a disguise, and ye understand not who and what He is. But you will perceive, brethren, in reading the narrative, that even when Joseph disguised himself there was still much kindness discoverable in his conduct; so to the awakened sinner, even while Jesus appears to deal hardly, there is something sweet and encouraging amid it all. Do you not remember what Joseph did for his brethren? Though he was their judge he was their host too; he invited them to a great feast; he gave to Benjamin five times as much as to any of them; and they feasted even at the kings table, So has it been with you. Christ has rebuked and chastened you, but still He has sent you messes from his royal table. Ay, and there is another thing He has done for you, He has given you corn to live upon while under bondage. You would have despaired utterly if it had not been for some little comfort that He afforded you; perhaps you would have put an end to your life–you might bare gone desperately into worse sin than before, had it not been that He filled your sack at seasons with the corn of Egypt. But mark, He has never taken any of your money yet, and He never will. He has always put your money in the sacks mouth. You have come with your resolutions and with your good deeds, but when He has given you comfort He has always taken care to show you that He did not confer it because of any good thing you had in your hands. When you went down and brought double money with you, yet the double money too was returned. He would have nothing of you; He has taught you as much as that, and you begin to feel now that if He should bless you, it must be without money and without price. Ay, poor soul, and there is one other point upon which thine eye may rest with pleasure; He has sometimes spoken to thee comfortably. Did not Joseph say to Benjamin, God be gracious unto thee, my son? And so, sometimes, under a consoling sermon, though as yet you are not saved, you have had a few drops of comfort. Oh! ye have gone sometimes out of the house of prayer as light as the birds of the air, and though you could not say He is mine and I am His, yet you had a sort of inkling that the match would come off one day. He had said–God be gracious to thee, my son. You half thought, though you could not speak it loud enough to let your heart distinctly hear it, you half thought that the day would come when your sins would be forgiven; when the prisoner should leap to lose his chains; when you should know Joseph your brother to have accepted and loved your soul. I say, then, Christ disguises himself to poor awakened sinners just as Joseph did, but even amidst the sternness of His manner for awhile, there is such a sweet mixture of love, that no troubled one need run into despair.


III.
JOSEPH AFTERWARDS REVEALED HIMSELF TO HIS BRETHREN, AND SO THE LORD JESUS DOES IN DUE TIME SWEETLY REVEAL HIMSELF TO POOR CONSCIENCE-STRICKEN PENITENT SINNERS.

1. Notice that this discovery was made secretly. Christ does not show Himself to sinners in a crowd; every man must see the love of Christ for himself; we go to hell in bundles, but we go to heaven one by one. Each man must personally know in his own heart his own guilt; and privately and secretly, where no other heart can join with him, he must hear words of love from Christ. Go and sin no more. Thy sins which are many are all forgiven thee.

2. Mark, that as this was done in secret, the first thing Joseph showed them was his name. I am Joseph. Blessed is that day to the sinner when Christ says to him, I am Jesus, I am the Saviour; when the soul discerns instead of the lawgiver, the Redeemer; when it looks to the wounds which its own sin has made, and sees the ransom-price flowing in drops of gore; looks to the head its own iniquity had crowned with thorns, and sees beaming there a crown of glory provided for the sinner.

3. Having revealed his name, the next thing he did was to reveal his relationship–I am Joseph, your brother. Oh, blessed is that heart which sees Jesus to be its brother, bone of our bone, flesh of our flesh, the son of Mary as well as the Son of God.

4. And then will you please to notice, that having thus proved his affection, he gave them an invitation to approach. Come near to me, I pray you. You are getting away in the corner. You want to hide away in the chamber alone; you do not want to tell anybody ,about your sorrow. Jesus says, Come near to Me, I pray you. Do not hold your griefs away from Me. Tell Me what it is you want. Confess to Me your guilt; ask Me for pardon, if you want it. Come near to Me, do not be afraid. I could not smite with a hand that bought you; I could not spurn you with the foot that was nailed for you to the tree. Come to Me! Ah! this is the hardest work in the world, to get a sinner to come near to Christ.

5. I want you to notice again, having given the invitation, what consolation Joseph gave! He did not say, I am not angry with you; I forgive you; he said something sweeter than that–Be not angry with yourselves, as much as to say, As for me, ye need not question about that: be not grieved nor angry with yourselves. So my blessed, my adorable Master, says to a poor, cast down, dejected sinner–As for My forgiving you, that is done. My heart is made of tenderness, My bowels melt with love; forgive yourself; be not grieved nor angry with yourself: it is true you have sinned, but I have died; it is true you have destroyed yourself, but I have saved you.

6. Last of all, having thus given them the consolation, he gave a quietus for their understanding in an explanation. He says, It was not you, it was God that sent me hither. So doth Christ say to the poor soul that feels itself guilty of the Lords crucifixion. It was not you, says He, it was God that sent Me to preserve your lives with a great deliverance. Man was the second agent in Christs death, but God was the great first worker, for He was delivered by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God; man did it to destroy righteousness, but God did it to save even the ungodly. Man hath the crime, but God hath the triumphing; man rules, but God over-rules. (C. H. Spurgeon.)

Forgiveness of injury

A little boy being asked what forgiveness is, gave the beautiful answer: It is the odour that flowers breathe when they are trampled upon. Philip the Good, when some of his courtiers would have persuaded him to punish a prelate who had used him ill, he declined, saying, It is a fine thing to have revenge in ones power; but it is a finer thing not to use it.

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Come near to me; be not afraid of me, but come nearer to me with cheerfulness and confidence, that you may be assured that I am he, and that we may more freely and privately discourse together, so as none others may hear. It is probable that Joseph sat in state, and that they hitherto kept a due distance from him.

Sold into Egypt, i.e. sold unto them that brought me into Egypt, and sold me there: see Gen 37:28; 39:1. So they sold him into Egypt occasionally and eventually.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

And Joseph said unto his brethren, come near to me, I pray you,…. Very probably Joseph sat in a chair of state while they were under examination, and through reverence of him they kept at a proper distance; or being frightened at what he had said, he might observe them drawing back, as Jarchi remarks, and so encourages them in a kind and tender manner to return and come nearer to him, and the rather, that they might more privately converse together without being overheard; as also that they might, by approaching him discern and call to mind some of his features still remaining, by which they might be assured he was Joseph indeed:

and they came near, and he said, I [am] Joseph your brother; not only his name was Joseph, but he was that Joseph that was their brother; he claims and owns the relation between them, which must be very affecting to them, who had used him so unkindly:

whom ye sold into Egypt: which is added, not so much to put them in mind of and upbraid them with their sin, but to assure them that he was really their brother Joseph; which he could not have related had he not been he, as well as to lead on to what he had further to say to them for their comfort.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

4. Come near to me, I pray you. This is more efficacious than any mere words, that he kindly invites them to his embrace. Yet he also tries to remove their care and fear by the most courteous language he can use. He so attempers his speech, indeed, that he mildly accuses, and again consoles them; nevertheless, the consolation greatly predominates, because he sees that they are on the point of desperation, unless he affords them timely relief. Moreover, in relating that he had been sold, he does not renew the memory of their guilt, with the intention of expostulating with them; but only because it is always profitable that the sense of sin should remain, provided that immoderate terror does not absorb the unhappy man, after he has acknowledged his fault. And whereas the brethren of Joseph were more than sufficiently terrified, he insists the more fully on the second part of his purpose; namely, that he may heal the wound. This is the reason why he repeats, that God had sent him for their preservation; that by the counsel of God himself he had been sent beforehand into Egypt to preserve them alive; and that, in short, he had not been sent into Egypt by them, but had been led thither by the hand of God. (176)

(176) Only two years of the famine had now elapsed, and there were yet five years in which there should be “neither earing nor harvest,” so that this was indeed but the commencement of the grievous suffering to which Jacob’s family would have been exposed, but for the extraordinary interposition of Divine providence in their favor. The word earing is an obsolete Saxon term by which our translators have rendered the Hebrew word חריש, ( charish,) which means ploughing, or preparing the ground for seed. — Ed

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

(4) I am Joseph your brother.There is much force in the assurance that he was still their brother. For they stood speechless in terrified surprise at finding that the hated dreamer, upon the anguish of whose soul they had looked unmoved, was now the ruler of a mighty empire. But with magnanimous gentleness he bids them neither to grieve nor be angry with themselves; for behind their acts there had been a watchful Providence guiding all things for good.

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

4. Come near He notices their confusion and alarm, and their shrinking from his presence, and now kindly seeks to allay their fears and strengthen their hearts .

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

Gen 45:4 And Joseph said unto his brethren, Come near to me, I pray you. And they came near. And he said, I [am] Joseph your brother, whom ye sold into Egypt.

Ver. 4. I am Joseph your brother. ] Therefore you are to expect no hard sentence from a brother’s mouth. Christ “is not ashamed,” nor will be at the last day, “to call us brethren,” He that was willingly judged for me, said that good woman, a will surely give no hard sentence against me. We may say boldly to him, as Ruth did to Boaz, “Spread thy skirt over me, for thou art a near kinsman” Rth 3:9

a Pattern of Piety.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: Gen 45:4-15

4Then Joseph said to his brothers, “Please come closer to me.” And they came closer. And he said, “I am your brother Joseph, whom you sold into Egypt. 5Now do not be grieved or angry with yourselves, because you sold me here, for God sent me before you to preserve life. 6For the famine has been in the land these two years, and there are still five years in which there will be neither plowing nor harvesting. 7God sent me before you to preserve for you a remnant in the earth, and to keep you alive by a great deliverance. 8Now, therefore, it was not you who sent me here, but God; and He has made me a father to Pharaoh and lord of all his household and ruler over all the land of Egypt. 9Hurry and go up to my father, and say to him, ‘Thus says your son Joseph, “God has made me lord of all Egypt; come down to me, do not delay. 10You shall live in the land of Goshen, and you shall be near me, you and your children and your children’s children and your flocks and your herds and all that you have. 11There I will also provide for you, for there are still five years of famine to come, and you and your household and all that you have would be impoverished.”‘ 12Behold, your eyes see, and the eyes of my brother Benjamin see, that it is my mouth which is speaking to you. 13Now you must tell my father of all my splendor in Egypt, and all that you have seen; and you must hurry and bring my father down here.” 14Then he fell on his brother Benjamin’s neck and wept, and Benjamin wept on his neck. 15He kissed all his brothers and wept on them, and afterward his brothers talked with him.

Gen 45:5 “Now do not be grieved or angry with yourselves, because you sold me here” The term “grieved” (BDB 780, KB 864, Niphal IMPERFECT used in a JUSSIVE sense) in the Niphal stem is used in 1Sa 20:3; 1Sa 20:34; 2Sa 19:2 and Neh 8:10-11. The basic meaning is “hurt,” “pain,” or “grieve.”

The term “angry” is the term “burn” (BDB 354, KB 351, Qal JUSSIVE, cf. Gen 31:36; Gen 39:19; Exo 32:11).

Joseph is about to make one of the most astonishing faith statements found anywhere in the Bible. This verse is the theological purpose of the Joseph account! In the midst of abuse and treachery he was able to see the hand of God (Elohim) by faith. Gen 45:5-9 form one of the strongest affirmations of the goodness and presence of God even amidst the struggles and problems of life.

Just an added comment on this powerful, wonderful text. My question has always been, “Does God act in these ways only toward the covenant family?”It is obvious that God does whatever is necessary to support the family of Abraham (cf. Romans 9-11), but what about ordinary believers? Is His love for eternity (i.e., redemption) or for time and eternity? Is He with us in the same way? This world is an evil, rebellious place (see The Goodness of God by Wenham). Believers suffer; believers are persecuted; believers are killed! From the NT it seems true that God is with us and for us even amidst circumstances that are unexplainable (see The Christian’s Secrets of a Happy Life, by Hannah Whithall Smith). It is a faith presupposition and a Scriptural revelation that believers are precious to God! Life is a mystery, but the unseen (yet not unknown) hand of God is with us moment by moment. Our peace must rest in Him, His Word, His Son, not in circumstances (cf. 1Co 10:13; 1Co 13:8-13). We are the family of Abraham (cf. Rom 2:28-29)!

Gen 45:6 “For the famine has been in the land these two years, and there are still five years in which there will be neither plowing or harvesting” This goes back to the revelation through Pharaoh’s dream that there would be seven severe years of famine.

Gen 45:7 Joseph’s statement in Gen 45:7, referring to the remnant (BDB 984) being preserved, relates to his activity, not to the later theological use of the term “remnant” which refers to the believing, faithful portion of the Hebrew people.

SPECIAL TOPIC: THE REMNANT, THREE SENSES

NASB, NKJV,

NJBby a great deliverance”

NRSVmany survivors”

TEVdescendants survive”

LXX”a great remnant (posterity)”

JPSOan extraordinary deliverance”

This is literally “escape” (BDB 812, cf. Jer 25:35) and the ADJECTIVE “great” (BDB 152). Joseph’s aid to his family, by being raised to leadership in Egypt, is described as a great deliverance engineered by YHWH (cf. Gen 45:5; Gen 45:8; Gen 50:20).

Gen 45:8 “and He has made me” The theological problem related to the doctrine of predestination is not that God knows and effects human actions (as well as physical events), but to what extent is He responsible (duplicitous) for human sin? Theologians (Strong, Systematic Theology, 2nd ed. pp. 423-425; Erickson, Christian Theology, 2nd ed. pp. 424-426) have offered several theories which show God’s involvement in, but not initiation of, sinful acts (cf. Jas 1:14; 1Jn 2:16).

1. He can prevent an act (cf. Gen 20:16)

2. He can permit an act (cf. Psa 81:12-13; Rom 1:24; Rom 1:26; Rom 1:28)

3. He can direct an act (cf. Gen 37:21-22; Gen 45:5; Gen 45:7-8; Gen 50:20)

4. He can limit an act (cf. 1Co 10:13)

SPECIAL TOPIC: ELECTION/PREDESTINATION AND THE NEED FOR A THEOLOGICAL BALANCE (Calvinism) Versus Human Free Will (Arminianism)

“a father to Pharaoh and a lord of all his household and ruler over all the land of Egypt” This seems to be a threefold description of Joseph’s job assignment in Egypt.

1. he had a unique relationship with Pharaoh. This has become an archaeologically documented title as far back as 3000 B.C. It seems to refer to the position of Grand Vizier.

2. “lord of all his household” seems to be a reference to the management of Pharaoh’s personal property (cf. Gen 41:40; Gen 47:20-26).

3. “ruler over all the land of Egypt” seems to express his relationship in governmental administration (cf. Gen 41:41; Gen 41:48-49; Gen 41:55-56; Gen 42:6-7).

Roland deVaux, Ancient Israel, vol. 1, p. 49, shows how the term “father” came to be used as a title for one of Pharaoh’s chief advisors. Fathers were the principal teachers of children after they had reached a certain age of maturity, before this it was the mother’s task. In the spiritual realm, priests took the term “father” to describe themselves (Hebrew wisdom teachers in Proverbs also took this title, as did priests in Jdg 17:10; Jdg 18:19).

Gen 45:9 Joseph addresses his brothers with several commands.

1. hurry, BDB 554, KB 553, Piel IMPERATIVE, cf. Gen 45:13

2. go up, BDB 748, KB 828, Qal IMPERATIVE

3. come down, BDB 432, KB 434, Qal IMPERATIVE

4. do not delay, BDB 763, KB 840, Qal IMPERFECT used in a JUSSIVE sense

Gen 45:10 “You shall live in the land of Goshen” It is uncertain from the following verses whether this refers to an announcement on behalf of Joseph (cf. Gen 46:31) or simply logic as to where shepherds lived. The land of Goshen (BDB 177) is located on the upper eastern side of the Nile, close to the land of Canaan. It is later called the land of Rameses (cf. Gen 47:6; Gen 47:11). It was the livestock-producing area of Egypt (cf. Gen 46:32-34).

“and you shall be near me” This verse is often used as an evidence for the Pharaohs whom Joseph served being part of the “Shepherd Kings,” or Hyksos, who conquered Egypt by means of the compound bow and horse drawn chariot. They ruled Egypt from 1720 to 1580 B.C. We know that they were Semitic in origin and, therefore, it may have been easier for another Semite, such as Joseph, to rise in their ranks. Throughout Egyptian history, Semitic people have held important places in government. The capital of the Hyksos empire was located in Tanis or Zoan (cf. Psa 78:12; Psa 78:43). This is very close to the land of Goshen. However, the later native Egyptian Pharaohs had their capital 400 miles south in the city of Thebes. The dating of Joseph’s administration in Egypt is still uncertain and this cannot be used as conclusive evidence.

Gen 45:12 “Behold, your eyes see, and the eyes of my brother Benjamin see, that it is my mouth which is speaking to you” The exact meaning of each of these phrases is somewhat uncertain (probably he is not using an interpreter), but the overall thrust is easy to ascertain. Benjamin was uniquely related to Joseph because they were both sons of Rachel. The phrase “my mouth” seems to be used as an idiom for authority (cf. Gen 45:21 and the interpretation of Rashi).

“Benjamin” Rachel originally named him “son of my sorrow” because she died while giving him birth (cf. Gen 35:18). However, Jacob changed his name to “the son of my right hand.” Because of Jacob’s unique love for Rachel, both Joseph and Benjamin were very special to him.

Gen 45:13 “all my splendor” This is the Hebrew word kabod (BDB 458). Its basic meaning (BDB 458 II) is “heavy” (cf. Gen 41:31, NASB, “severe”; Exo 4:10, “heavy of tongue”).

It came to be used of that which is valuable. Note the following usages.

1. riches, Gen 31:1; Isa 10:3; Isa 61:6

2. splendor/success, Gen 45:13

3. beauty, Isa 35:2

4. severe famine, Gen 12:10; Gen 41:13; Gen 43:1; Gen 47:4; Gen 47:13

5. honor, Num 24:11

6. much, Gen 50:10-11 (i.e., mourning)

SPECIAL TOPIC: GLORY (OT)

Gen 45:14 “Then he fell on his brother Benjamin’s neck and wept, and Benjamin wept on his neck” The excesses of Jewish interpretation, even in a helpful commentator like Rashi, can be seen in this verse. They say that Joseph wept because of the destruction of the tabernacle at Shiloh, which was in Joseph’s later land allotment (cf. Joshua). Benjamin wept because of the destruction of the temple, for Jerusalem which is really located in the tribal allocation of Benjamin. This shows the tendency of Jewish exegesis to completely remove the historical setting of the verse and apply it to any major event in the life of Israel.

Fuente: You Can Understand the Bible: Study Guide Commentary Series by Bob Utley

whom ye sold. Words adopted by Stephen (Act 7:9).

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

I am Joseph: Gen 37:28, Gen 50:18, Mat 14:27, Act 9:5

Reciprocal: Gen 39:1 – Joseph Gen 50:17 – wept Jdg 11:7 – Did not ye hate Est 4:14 – whether Psa 105:17 – Joseph Pro 19:21 – nevertheless Act 7:9 – sold Act 9:17 – Brother

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge