JOSEPH, THE PARDONER AND PRESERVER
by Alexander Maclaren
II
THE noble words in which Joseph dissipates his
brothers' doubts
have, as their first characteristic, the recognition
of the God by
whom his career had been shaped, and, for their
next, the
recognition of the purpose for which it had been.
There is a world
of tenderness and forgivingness in the addition made
to his first
words in verse 4, 'Joseph, _your brother_.' He owns
the mystic
bond of kindred, and thereby assures them of his
pardon for their
sin against it. It was right that he should remind
them of their
crime, even while declaring his pardon. But he rises
high above all
personal considerations and graciously takes the
place of soother,
instead of that of accuser. Far from cherishing
thoughts of anger or
revenge, he tries to lighten the reproaches of their
own
consciences. Thrice over in four verses he traces
his captivity to
God. He had learned that wisdom in his long years of
servitude, and
had not forgotten it in those of rule.
There will be little disposition in us to visit
offences against
ourselves on the offenders, if we discern God's
purpose working
through our sorrows, and see, as the Psalmist did,
that even our
foes are 'men which are Thy hand, O Lord.' True, His
overruling
providence does not make their guilt less; but the
recognition of it
destroys all disposition to revenge, and injured and
injurer may one
day unite in adoring the result of what the One
suffered at the
other's hands. Surely, some Christian persecutors
and their victims
have thus joined hands in heaven. If we would
cultivate the habit of
seeing God behind second causes, our hearts would be
kept free from
much wrath and bitterness.
Joseph was as certain of the purpose as of the
source of his
elevation. He saw now what he had been elevated for,
and he eagerly
embraced the task which was a privilege. No doubt,
he had often
brooded over the thought, 'Why am I thus lifted up?'
and had felt
the privilege of being a nation's saviour; but now
he realises that
he has a part to play in fulfilling God's designs in
regard to the
seed of Abraham. Cloudy as his outlook into the
future may have
been, he knew that great promises affecting all
nations were
intertwined with his family, separation from whom
had been a sorrow
for years. But now the thought comes to him with
sudden illumination
and joy: 'This, then, is what it all has meant, that
I should be a
link in the chain of God's workings.' He knows
himself to be God's
instrument for effecting His covenant promises. How
small a thing
honour and position became in comparison!
We cannot all have great tasks in the line of God's
purposes, but we
can all feel that our little ones are made great by
being seen to be
in it. The less we think about chariots and gold
chains, and the
more we try to find out what God means by setting us
where we are,
and to do that, the better for our peace and true
dignity. A true
man does not care for the rewards of work half as
much as for the
work itself. Find out what God intends, and never
mind whether He
puts you in a dungeon or in a palace. Both places
lie on the road
which He has marked and, in either, the main thing
is to do His
will.
Next comes the swiftly devised plan for carrying out
God's purpose.
It sounds as if Joseph, with prompt statesmanship,
had struck it out
then and there. At all events, he pours it forth
with contagious
earnestness and haste. Note how he says over and
over again 'My
father,' as if he loved to dwell on the name, but
also as if he had
not yet completely realised the renewal of the
broken ties of
brotherhood. It was some trial of the stuff he was
made of, to have
to bring his father and his family to be stared at,
and perhaps
mocked at, by the court. Many a successful man would
be very much
annoyed if his old father, in his country clothes,
and hands
roughened by toil, sat down beside him in his
prosperity. Joseph had
none of that baseness. Jacob would come, if at all,
as a half-
starved immigrant, and would be 'an abomination to
the Egyptians.'
But what of that? He was 'my father,' and his son
knows no better
use to make of his dignity than to compel reverence
for Jacob's grey
hairs, which he will take care shall _not_ be
'brought down
with sorrow to the grave.' It is a very homely
lesson--never be
ashamed of your father. But in these days, when
children are often
better educated than their parents, and rise above
them in social
importance, it is a very needful one.
The first overtures of reconciliation should come
from the side of
the injured party. That is Christ's law, and if it
were Christians'
practice, there would be fewer alienations among
them. It is
Christ's law, because it is Christ's own way of
dealing with us. He,
too, was envied, and sold by His brethren. His
sufferings were meant
'to preserve life.' Stephen's sermon in the
Sanhedrin dwells on
Joseph as a type of Christ; and the typical
character is seen not
least distinctly in this, that He against whom we
have sinned pleads
with us, seeks to draw us nearer to Himself, and to
lead us to put
away all hard thoughts of Him, and to cherish all
loving ones
towards Him, by showing us how void His heart is of
anger against
us, and how full of yearning love and of gracious
intention to
provide for us a dwelling-place, with abundance of
all needful good,
beside Himself, while the years of famine shall
last.
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