GROWTH BY TRANSPLANTING
by Alexander Maclaren
'Then Joseph came and told Pharaoh, and said, My
father and my brethren, and their flocks, and their herds, and all that they
have, are come out of the land of Canaan; and, behold, they are in the land
of Goshen. And he took some of his brethren, even five men, and
presented them unto Pharaoh. And Pharaoh said unto his brethren, What is
your occupation? And they said unto Pharaoh, Thy servants are shepherds,
both we, and also our fathers. They said moreover unto Pharaoh, For to
sojourn in the land are we come; for thy servants have no pasture for their
flocks, for the famine is sore in the land of Canaan: now therefore,
we pray thee, let thy servants dwell in the land of Goshen. And Pharaoh
spake unto Joseph, saying, Thy father and thy brethren are come unto thee:
The land of Egypt is before thee; in the best of the land make thy father
and brethren to dwell; in the land of Goshen let them dwell: and if thou
knowest any men of activity among them, then make them rulers over my
cattle. And Joseph brought in Jacob his father, and set him before Pharaoh:
and Jacob blessed Pharaoh. And Pharaoh said unto Jacob, How old art thou?
And Jacob said unto Pharaoh, The days of the years of my pilgrimage
are an hundred and thirty years: few and evil have the days of the years of
my life been, and have not attained unto the days of the years of the life
of my fathers in the days of their pilgrimage. And Jacob blessed Pharaoh,
and went out from before Pharaoh. And Joseph placed his father and his
brethren, and gave them a possession in the land of Egypt, in the best of
the land, in the land of Rameses, as Pharaoh had commanded. And Joseph
nourished his father, and his brethren, and all his father's household, with
bread, according to their families.' -- GENESIS xlvii. 1-12.
1. The conduct of Joseph in reference to the
settlement in Goshen is
an example of the possibility of uniting worldly
prudence with high
religious principle and great generosity of nature.
He had promised
his brothers a home in that fertile eastern
district, which afforded
many advantages in its proximity to Canaan, its
adaptation to
pastoral life, and its vicinity to Joseph when in
Zoan, the capital.
But he had not consulted Pharaoh, and, however
absolute his
authority, it scarcely stretched to giving away
Egyptian territory
without leave. So his first care, when the wanderers
arrive, is to
manage the confirmation of the grant. He goes about
it with
considerable astuteness--a hereditary quality, which
is redeemed
from blame because used for unselfish purposes and
unstained by
deceit. He does not tell Pharaoh how far he had
gone, but simply
announces that his family are in Goshen, as if
awaiting the
monarch's further pleasure. Then he introduces a
deputation, no
doubt carefully chosen, of five of his brothers (as
if the whole
number would have been too formidable), previously
instructed how to
answer. He knows what Pharaoh is in the habit of
asking, or he knows
that he can lead him to ask the required question,
which will bring
out the fact of their being shepherds, and utilise
the prejudice
against that occupation, to ensure separation in
Goshen. All goes as
he had arranged. Thanks partly to the indifference
of the king, who
seems to have been rather a _roi faineant_ in the
hands of his
energetic _maire du palais_, and to have been
contented to
give, with a flourish of formality, as a command to
Joseph, what
Joseph had previously carefully suggested to him (vers.
6, 7). There
is nothing unfair in all this. It is good, shrewd
management, and no
fault can be found with it; but it is a new trait in
the ideal
character of a servant of God, and contrasts
strongly with the type
shown in Abraham. None the less, it is a legitimate
element in the
character and conduct of a good man, set down to do
God's work in
such a world. Joseph is a saint and a politician.
His shrewdness is
never craft; sagacity is not alien to consecration.
No doubt it has
to be carefully watched lest it degenerate; but
prudence is as
needful as enthusiasm, and he is the complete man
who has a burning
fire down in his heart to generate the force that
drives him, and a
steady hand on the helm, and a keen eye on the
chart, to guide him.
Be ye 'wise as serpents' but also 'harmless as
doves.'
2 We may note in Joseph's conduct also an instance
of a man in high
office and not ashamed of his humble relations. One
of the great
lessons meant to be taught by the whole patriarchal
period was the
sacredness of the family. That is, in some sense,
the keynote of
Joseph's history. Here we see family love, which had
survived the
trial of ill-usage and long absence, victorious over
the temptation
of position and high associates. It took some nerve
and a great deal
of affection, for the viceroy, whom envious and
sarcastic courtiers
watched, to own his kin. What a sweet morsel for
malicious tongues
it would be, 'Have you heard? He is only the son of
an old shepherd,
who is down in Goshen, come to pick up some crumbs
there!' One can
fancy the curled lips and the light laugh, as the
five brothers, led
by the great man himself, made their rustic
reverences to Pharaoh.
It is as if some high official in Paris were to walk
in half a dozen
peasants in blouse and sabots, and present them to
the president as
'my brothers.' It was a brave thing to do; and it
teaches a lesson
which many people, who have made their way in the
world, would be
nobler and more esteemed if they learned.
3. The brother's words to Pharaoh are another
instance of that
ignorant carrying out of the divine purposes which
we have already
had to notice. They evidently contemplate only a
temporary stay in
the country. They say that they are come 'to
_sojourn_'--the
verb from which are formed the noun often rendered
'_strangers_,' and
that which Jacob uses in verse 9, 'my _pilgrimage_.'
The reason for
their coming is given as the transient scarcity of
pasturage in Canaan,
which implies the intention of return as soon as
that was altered.
Joseph had the same idea of the short duration of
their stay; and
though Jacob had been taught by vision that the
removal was in order
to their being made a great nation, it does not seem
that his sons'
intentions were affected by that--if they knew it.
So mistaken are our
estimates. We go to a place for a month, and we stay
in it for
twenty years. We go to a place to settle for life,
and our tent-pegs
are pulled up in a week. They thought of five years,
and it was to be
nearly as many centuries. They thought of temporary
shelter and food;
God meant an education of them and their
descendants. Over all this
story the unseen Hand hovers, chastising, guiding,
impelling; and the
human agents are free and yet fulfilling an eternal
purpose, blind
and yet accountable, responsible for motives, and
mercifully ignorant
of consequences. So we all play our little parts. We
have no call to
be curious as to what will come of our deeds. This
end of the action,
the motive of it, is our care; the other end, the
outcome of it, is
God's business to see to.
4. We may also observe how trivial incidents are
wrought into God's
scheme. The Egyptian hatred of the shepherd class
secured one of the
prime reasons for the removal from Canaan--the
unimpeded growth of a
tribe into a nation. There was no room for further
peaceful and
separate expansion in that thickly populated
country. Nor would
there have been in Egypt, unless under the condition
of comparative
isolation, which could not have been obtained in any
other way. Thus
an unreasonable prejudice, possibly connected with
religious ideas,
became an important factor in the development of
Israel; and, once
again, we have to note the wisdom of the great
Builder who uses not
only gold, silver, and precious stones, but even
wood, hay,
stubble--follies and sins--for His edifice.
5. The interview of Jacob with Pharaoh is pathetic
and beautiful.
The old man comports himself, in all the later
history of Joseph, as
if done with the world, and waiting to go. 'Let me
die, since I have
seen thy face,' was his farewell to life. He takes
no part in the
negotiation about Goshen, but has evidently handed
over all temporal
cares to younger hands. A halo of removedness lies
round his grey
hairs, and to Pharaoh he behaves as one withdrawn
from fleeting
things, and, by age and nearness to the end,
superior even to a
king's dignity. As he enters the royal presence he
does not do
reverence, but invokes a blessing upon him. 'The
less is blessed of
the better.' He has nothing to do with court
ceremonials or
conventionalities. The hoary head is a crown of
honour, Pharaoh
recognises his right to address him thus by the
kindly question as
to his age, which implied respect for his years. The
answer of the
'Hebrew Ulysses,' as Stanley calls him, breathes a
spirit of
melancholy not unnatural in one who had once more
been uprooted, and
found himself again a wanderer in his old age. The
tremulous voice
has borne the words across all the centuries, and
has everywhere
evoked a response in the hearts of weary and
saddened men. Look at
the component parts of this pensive retrospect.
Life has been to him a 'pilgrimage'. He thinks of
all his wanderings
from that far-off day when at Bethel he received the
promise of
God's presence 'in all places whither thou goest,'
till this last
happy and yet disturbing change. But he is thinking
not only,
perhaps not chiefly, of the circumstances, but of
the spirit, of his
life. This is, no doubt, the confession 'that they
were strangers
and pilgrims' referred to in the Epistle to the
Hebrews. He was a
pilgrim, not because he had often changed his place
of abode, but
because he sought the 'city which hath foundations,'
and therefore
could not be at home here. The goal of his life lay
in the far
future; and whether he looked for the promises to be
fulfilled on
earth, or had the unformulated consciousness of
immortality, and
saluted the dimly descried coast from afar while
tossing on life's
restless ocean, he was effectually detached from the
present, and
felt himself an alien in the existing order. We have
to live by the
same hope, and to let it work the same estrangement,
if we would
live noble lives. Not because all life is change,
nor because it all
marches steadily on to the grave, but because our
true home--the
community to which we really belong, the metropolis,
the mother city
of our souls--is above, are we to feel ourselves
strangers upon
earth. They who only take into account the
transiency of life are
made sad, or sometimes desperate, by the unwelcome
thought. But they
whose pilgrimage is a journey home may look that
transiency full in
the face, and be as glad because of it as colonists
on their voyage
to the old country which they call 'home,' though
they were born on
the other side of the world and have never seen its
green fields.
To Jacob's eyes his days seem 'few.' Abraham's one
hundred and
seventy-five years, Isaac's one hundred and eighty,
were in his
mind. But more than these was in his mind. The law
of the moral
perspective is other than that of the physical. The
days in front,
seen through the glass of anticipation, are drawn
out; the days
behind, viewed through the telescope of memory, are
crowded
together. What a moment looked all the long years of
his struggling
life--shorter now than even had once seemed the
seven years of
service for his Rachel, that love had made to fly
past on such swift
wings! That happy wedded life, how short it looked!
A bright light
for a moment, and
'Ere a man could say "Behold!"
The jaws of darkness did devour it up.'
It is well to lay the coolness of this thought on
our fevered
hearts, and, whether they be torn by sorrows or
gladdened with
bliss, to remember 'this also will pass' and the
longest stretch of
dreary days be seen in retrospect, in their due
relation to
eternity, as but a moment. That will not paralyse
effort nor abate
sweetness, but it will teach proportion, and deliver
from the
illusions of this solid-seeming shadow which we call
life.
The pensive retrospect darkens as the old man's
memory dwells upon
the past. His days have not only been few--that
could be borne--but
they have been 'evil' by which I understand not
unfortunate so much
as faulty. We have seen in preceding pages the slow
process by which
the crafty Jacob had his sins purged out of him, and
became 'God's
wrestler.' Here we learn that old wrong-doing, even
when forgiven--or,
rather, when and because forgiven--leaves regretful
memories
lifelong. The early treachery had been long ago
repented of and
pardoned by God and man. The nature which hatched it
had been
renewed. But here it starts up again, a ghost from
the grave, and
the memory of it is full of bitterness. No lapse of
time deprives a
sin of its power to sting. As in the old story of
the man who was
killed by a rattlesnake's poison fang embedded in a
boot which had
lain forgotten for years, we may be wounded by
suddenly coming
against it, long after it is forgiven by God and
almost forgotten by
ourselves. Many a good man, although he knows that
Christ's blood
has washed away his guilt, is made to possess the
iniquities of his
youth. 'Thou shalt be ashamed and confounded, and
never open thy
mouth any more, when I am pacified toward thee for
all that thou
hast done.'
But this shaded retrospect is one-sided. It is true,
and in some
moods seems all the truth; but Jacob saw more
distinctly, and his
name was rightly Israel, when, laying his trembling
hands on the
heads of Joseph's sons, he laid there the blessing
of 'the God which
fed me all my life long, ... 'the Angel which
redeemed me from all
evil.' That was his last thought about his life, as
it began to be
seen in the breaking light of eternal day. Pensive
and penitent
memory may call the years few and evil, but grateful
faith even
here, and still more the cleared vision of heaven,
will discern more
truly that they have been a long miracle of loving
care, and that
all their seeming evil has been transmuted into
good.
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