'Then Joseph could not refrain himself before all
them that stood by him; and he cried, Cause every man to go out from me. And
there stood no man with him, while Joseph made himself known unto his
brethren. And he wept aloud: and the Egyptians and the house of Pharaoh
heard. And Joseph said unto his brethren, I am Joseph; doth my father yet
live? And his brethren could not answer him; for they were troubled at his
presence. 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. Now therefore be not grieved, nor angry with yourselves, that ye sold
me hither: for God did send me before you to preserve life. For these two
years hath the famine been in the land: and yet there are five years, in the
which there shall neither be earing nor harvest. And God sent me before you
to preserve you a posterity in the earth, and to save your lives by a great
deliverance. So now it was not you that sent me hither, but God: and He hath
made me a father to Pharaoh, and lord of all his house, and a ruler
throughout all the land of Egypt. Haste ye, and go up to my father, and say
unto him. Thus saith thy son Joseph, God hath made me lord of all Egypt:
come down unto me, tarry not: And thou shalt dwell in the land of Goshen,
and thou shalt be near unto me, thou, and thy children, and thy children's
children, and thy flocks, and thy herds, and all that thou hast: And there
will I nourish thee; for yet there are five years of famine; lest thou, and
thy household, and all that thou hast, come to poverty. And, behold, your
eyes see, and the eyes of my brother Benjamin, that it is my mouth that
speaketh unto you. And ye shall tell my father of all my glory in Egypt, and
of all that ye have seen; and ye shall haste and bring down my father
hither. And he fell upon his brother Benjamin's neck, and wept; and Benjamin
wept upon his neck. Moreover he kissed all his brethren, and wept upon them:
and after that his brethren talked with him.' -- GENESIS xlv. 1-15.
I
If the writer of this inimitable scene of Joseph's
reconciliation
with his brethren was not simply an historian, he
was one of the
great dramatic geniuses of the world, master of a
vivid minuteness
like Defoe's, and able to touch the springs of tears
by a pathetic
simplicity like his who painted the death of Lear.
Surely theories
of legend and of mosaic work fail here.
1. We have, first, disclosure. The point at which
the impenetrable,
stern ruler breaks down is significant. It is after
Judah's torrent
of intercession for Benjamin, and self-sacrificing
offer of himself
for a substitute and a slave. Why did this touch
Joseph so keenly?
Was it not because his brother's speech shows that
filial and
fraternal affection was now strong enough in him to
conquer self? He
had sent Joseph to the fate which he is now ready to
accept. He and
the rest had thought nothing of the dagger they
plunged into their
father's heart by selling Joseph; but now he is
prepared to accept
bondage if he may save his father's grey head an
ache. The whole of
Joseph's harsh, enigmatical treatment had been
directed to test
them, and to ascertain if they were the same fierce,
cruel men as of
old. Now, when the doubt is answered, he can no
longer dam back the
flood of forgiving love. The wisest pardoning
kindness seeks the
assurance of sorrow and change in the offender,
before it can safely
and wholesomely enjoy the luxury of letting itself
out in tears of
reconciliation. We do not call Joseph a type of
Christ; but the
plain process of forgiveness in his brotherly heart
is moulded by
the law which applies to God's pardon as to ours.
All the wealth of
yearning pardon is there, before contrition and
repentance; but it
is not good for the offender that it should be
lavished on him,
impenitent.
What a picture that is of the all-powerful ruler,
choking down his
emotion, and hurriedly ordering the audience chamber
to be cleared!
How many curious glances would be cast over their
shoulders, by the
slowly withdrawing crowd, at the strange group--the
viceroy, usually
so calm, thus inexplicably excited, and the huddled,
rude shepherds,
bewildered and afraid of what was coming next, in
this unaccountable
country! How eavesdroppers would linger as near as
they durst, and
how looks would be exchanged as the sounds of
passionate weeping
rewarded their open ears! The deepest feelings are
not to be
flaunted before the world. The man who displays his
tears, and the
man who is too proud to shed them, are both wrong;
but perhaps it is
worse to weep in public than not to weep at all.
'I am Joseph.' Were ever the pathos of simplicity,
and the simplicity
of pathos, more nobly expressed than in these two
words?--(There
are but two in the Hebrew.) Has the highest dramatic
genius ever
winged an arrow which goes more surely to the heart
than that?
The question, which hurries after the disclosure,
seems strange and
needless; but it is beautifully self-revealing, as
expressive of
agitation, and as disclosing a son's longing, and
perhaps, too, as
meant to relieve the brothers' embarrassment, and,
as it were, to
wrap the keen edge of the disclosure in soft wool.
2. We have, next, conscience-stricken silence. No
wonder his
brethren 'could not answer' and 'were troubled at
his presence.'
They had found their brother a ruler; they had found
the ruler their
brother. Their former crime had turned what might
have been a joy
into a terror. Already they had come to know and
regret it. It might
seem to their startled consciences as if now they
were about to
expiate it. They would remember the severity of
Joseph's past
intercourse; they see his power, and cannot but be
doubtful of his
intentions. Had all his strange conduct been
manoeuvring to get
them, Benjamin and all, into his toils, that one
blow might perfect
his revenge? Our suspicions are the reflections of
our own hearts.
So there they stand in open-mouthed, but dumb,
wonder and dread. It
would task the pencil of him who painted, on the
mouldering
refectory wall at Milan, the conflicting emotions of
the apostles,
at the announcement of the betrayer, to portray that
silent company
of abased and trembling criminals. They are an
illustration of the
profitlessness of all crime. Sin is, as one of its
Hebrew names
tells us, missing the mark--whether we think of it
as fatally
failing to reach the ideal of conduct, or as always,
by a divine
nemesis, failing to hit even the shabby end it aims
at. 'Every rogue
is a roundabout fool.' They put Joseph in the pit,
and here he is on
a throne. They have stained their souls, and
embittered their
father's life for twenty-two long years, and the
dreams have come
true, and all their wickedness has not turned the
stream of the
divine purpose, any more than the mud dam built by a
child diverts
the Mississippi. One flash has burned up their whole
sinful past,
and they stand scorched and silent among the ruins.
So it always is.
Sooner or later the same certainty of the futility
of his sin will
overwhelm every sinful man, and dumb
self-condemnation will stand in
silent acknowledgment of evil desert before the
throne of the
Brother, who is now the Prince and the Judge, on
whose fiat hangs
life or death. To see Christ enthroned should be
joy; but it may be
turned into terror and silent anticipation of His
just condemnation.
3. We have encouragement and complete forgiveness.
That invitation
to come close up to him, with which Joseph begins
the fuller
disclosure of his heart, is a beautiful touch. We
can fancy how
tender the accents, and how, with some lightening of
fear, but still
hesitatingly and ashamed, the shepherds,
unaccustomed to courtly
splendours, approached. The little pause while they
draw near helps
him to self-command, and he resumes his words in a
calmer tone. With
one sentence of assurance that he is their brother,
he passes at
once into that serene region where all passion and
revenge die,
unable to breathe its keen, pure air. The comfort
which he addresses
to their penitence would have been dangerous, if
spoken to men blind
to the enormity of their past. But it will not make
a truly
repentant conscience less sensitive, though it may
alleviate the
aching of the wound, to think that God has used even
its sin for His
own purposes. It will not take away the sense of the
wickedness of
the motive to know that a wonderful providence has
rectified the
consequences. It will rather deepen the sense of
evil, and give new
cause of adoration of the love that pardons the
wrong, and the
providence that neutralises the harm.
Joseph takes the true point of view, which we are
all bound to
occupy, if we would practise the Christian grace of
forgiveness. He
looks beyond the mere human hate and envy to the
divine purpose.
'The sword is theirs; the hand is Thine.' He can
even be grateful to
his foes who have been unintentionally his
benefactors. He thinks of
the good that has come out of their malice, and
anger dies within
him.
Highest attainment of all, the good for which he is
grateful is not
his all-but-regal dignity, but the power to save and
gladden those
who would fain have slain, and had saddened him for
many a weary
year. We read in these utterances of a lofty piety
and of a
singularly gentle heart, the fruit of sorrow and the
expression of
thoughts which had slowly grown up in his mind, and
had now been
long familiar there. Such a calm, certain grasp of
the divine
shaping and meaning of his life could not have
sprung up all at once
in him, as he looked at the conscience-stricken
culprits cowering
before him. More than natural sweetness and
placability must have
gone to the making of such a temper of forgiveness.
He must have
been living near the Fountain of all mercy to have
had so full a cup
of it to offer. Because he had caught a gleam of the
divine pardon,
he becomes a mirror of it; and we may fairly see in
this ill-used
brother, yearning over the half-sullen sinners, and
seeking to open
a way for his forgiveness to steal into their
hearts, and rejoicing
over his very sorrows which have fitted him to save
them alive, and
satisfy them in the days of famine, an adumbration
of our Elder
Brother's forgiving love and saving tenderness.
4. The second part of Joseph's address is occupied
with his message
to Jacob, and shows how he longed for his father's
presence. There
is something very natural and beautiful in the
repeated exhortations
to haste, as indicating the impatient love of a
long-absent son. If
his heart was so true to his father, why had he sent
him no message
for all these years? Egypt was near enough, and for
nine years now
he had been in power. Surely he could have gratified
his heart. But
he could not have learned by any other means his
brethren's
feelings, and if they were still what they had been,
no intercourse
would be possible. He could only be silent, and
yearn for the way to
open in God's providence, as it did.
The message to Jacob is sent from 'thy son Joseph,'
in token that
the powerful ruler lays his dignity at his father's
feet. No
elevation will ever make a true son forget his
reverence for his
father. If he rise higher in the world, and has to
own an old man,
away in some simple country home, for his sire, he
will be proud to
do it. The enduring sanctity of the family ties is
not the least
valuable lesson from our narrative for this
generation, where social
conditions are so often widely different in parents
and in children.
There is an affectionate spreading out of all his
glory before his
father's old eyes; not that he cared much about it
for himself,
since, as we have seen, elevation to him meant
mainly work, but
because he knew how the eyes would glisten at the
sight. His mother,
who would have been proud of him, is gone, but he
has still the joy
of gladdening his father by the exhibition of his
dignity. It
bespeaks a simple nature, unspoiled by prosperity,
to delight thus
in his father's delight, and to wish the details of
all his
splendour to be told him. A statesman who takes most
pleasure in his
elevation because of the good he can do by it, and
because it will
please the old people at home, must be a pure and
lovable man. The
command has another justification in the necessity
to assure his
father of the wisdom of so great a change. God had
set him in the
Promised Land, and a very plain divine injunction
was needed to
warrant his leaving it. Such a one was afterwards
given in vision;
but the most emphatic account of his son's honour
and power was none
the less required to make the old Jacob willing to
abandon so much,
and go into such strange conditions.
We have another instance of the difference between
man's purposes
and God's counsel in this message. Joseph's only
thought is to
afford his family temporary shelter during the
coming five years of
famine. Neither he nor they knew that this was the
fulfilment of the
covenant with Abraham, and the bringing of them into
the land of
their oppression for four centuries. No shadow of
that future was
cast upon their joy, and yet, the steady march of
God's plan was
effected along the path which they were ignorantly
preparing. The
road-maker does not know what bands of mourners, or
crowds of
holiday makers, or troops of armed men may pass
along it.
5. This wonderfully beautiful scene ends with the
kiss of full
reconciliation and frank communion. All the fear is
out of the
brothers' hearts. It has washed away all the envy
along with it. The
history of Jacob's household had hitherto been full
of sins against
family life. Now, at last, they taste the sweetness
of fraternal
love. Joseph, against whom they had sinned, takes
the initiative,
flinging himself with tears on the neck of Benjamin,
his own
mother's son, nearer to him than all the others,
crowding his pent-
up love in one long kiss. Then, with less of
passionate affection,
but more of pardoning love, he kisses his contrite
brothers. The
offender is ever less ready to show love than the
offended. The
first step towards reconciliation, whether of man
with man or of man
with God, comes from the aggrieved. We always hate
those whom we
have harmed; and if enmity were ended only by the
advances of the
wrong-doer, it would be perpetual. The injured has
the prerogative
of praying the injurer to be reconciled. So was it
in Pharaoh's
throne-room on that long past day; so is it still in
the audience
chamber of heaven. 'He that might the vantage best
have took found
out the remedy.' 'We love Him, because He first
loved us.'
The pardoned men find their tongues at last.
Forgiveness has opened
their lips, and though their reverence and thanks
are no less, their
confidence and familiarity are more. How they would
talk when once
the terror was melted away! So should it be with the
soul which has
tasted the sweetness of Christ's forgiving love, and
has known 'the
kisses of His mouth.' Long, unrestrained, and happy
should be the
intercourse which we forgiven sinners keep up with
our Brother, the
Prince of all the land. 'After that his brethren
talked with him.'
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