Joseph reveals Himself to the brothers who betrayed Him and declares that God sent Him ahead through their evil in order to preserve life, turning family ruin into the beginning of restoration.
Joseph Reveals Himself to His Brothers, Interprets Their Evil through God’s Purpose, and Calls the Family to Life in Egypt
Joseph reveals Himself to the brothers who betrayed Him and declares that God sent Him ahead through their evil in order to preserve life, turning family ruin into the beginning of restoration.
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Joseph reveals Himself to the brothers who betrayed Him and declares that God sent Him ahead through their evil in order to preserve life, turning family ruin into the beginning of restoration.
Genesis 45 teaches that God’s sovereign purpose can work through human evil without excusing that evil, and that true reconciliation becomes possible when sin is neither denied nor made ultimate over God’s life-preserving plan. Joseph’s self-revelation is emotionally overwhelming because it brings together years of grief, guilt, fear, and hidden providence in one moment.
His brothers stand speechless because they now face the brother they sold, not as victim, but as ruler. Joseph’s response is the theological heart of the chapter. He names their act truthfully, 'You sold me into Egypt,' yet He places that truth inside a larger framework, 'God sent me before You to preserve life.' This does not cancel their responsibility. It relativizes their evil beneath God’s greater purpose.
Joseph repeats this providential interpretation multiple times, stressing that the famine, His prior descent, and His present authority are all part of God’s design to preserve a remnant and secure great deliverance. This makes Genesis 45 one of the clearest Old Testament statements of compatibilist providence: human intention remains morally real, yet divine intention governs history toward saving ends.
Joseph’s words also show that reconciliation requires truth, nearness, and provision. He draws them near, speaks peace into their fear, and then moves immediately to preserve the entire household. His mercy is not abstract sentiment. It is embodied in food, wagons, land, and future security. Pharaoh’s positive response widens the scope of blessing and shows how God uses imperial structures to advance preservation for the covenant family.
The chapter closes with Jacob’s stunned unbelief turning to revived spirit when He hears Joseph’s words and sees Joseph’s wagons. Thus Genesis 45 argues that God’s providence is able to transform betrayal into preservation, that reconciliation is grounded in truth interpreted through divine purpose, and that the life God saves must then be gathered, nourished, and brought near.
Genesis 45 follows the moral climax of Genesis 44, where Judah offered Himself in Benjamin’s place and the brothers proved that they were no longer the same men who had sold Joseph. That moment of tested transformation prepares for Joseph’s self-revelation. Within the Joseph narrative, this chapter is one of the great turning points of all Genesis. What had been hidden is now made known.
The ruler of Egypt’s grain is revealed to be the brother they betrayed. Yet the chapter is not structured around vengeance, but around tears, providence, and preservation. Historically in the narrative, Genesis 45 begins the transition from family fracture to family restoration and from hidden survival strategy to open relocation into Egypt. Theologically, it is a chapter of unveiled identity, divine sovereignty, forgiveness-shaped speech, and the preservation of life.
Joseph does not deny the brothers’ evil, but He reinterprets it under the higher and prior purpose of God. The chapter also begins the formal movement of Jacob’s entire household toward Egypt, which will preserve them through famine and set the stage for the next major phase of redemptive history. Thus Genesis 45 is a chapter of revelation, reconciliation, providence, and life-giving summons.
Joseph can no longer control Himself before all who stand by Him, sends everyone else out, and reveals Himself to His brothers with loud weeping. He asks whether His father is still alive, but His brothers cannot answer because they are dismayed in His presence. Joseph draws them near, identifies Himself as the brother they sold into Egypt, and tells them not to be distressed or angry with themselves because God sent Him before them to preserve life.
He explains that two years of famine have passed and five remain, and that God sent Him ahead to preserve for them a remnant and keep them alive by a great deliverance.
Joseph instructs them to hurry back to Jacob and tell Him that God has made Joseph lord of all Egypt. He commands Jacob to come down and dwell in Goshen near Him with children, grandchildren, flocks, herds, and all that He has. Joseph promises to provide for them there during the remaining famine. He embraces Benjamin and weeps, Benjamin weeps on Him, and Joseph kisses all His brothers and weeps over them. Afterward His brothers talk with Him.
The report reaches Pharaoh’s house, and Pharaoh and His servants are pleased. Pharaoh instructs Joseph to tell His brothers to bring their father and households, promising them the best of the land of Egypt and commanding them not to worry about their goods because the best of all Egypt will be theirs.
Joseph gives wagons according to Pharaoh’s command, provides provisions for the journey, gives changes of clothes to all the brothers, and gives Benjamin extra garments and silver. He also sends provisions and ten donkeys loaded with the good things of Egypt for His father. As they depart, Joseph tells them not to quarrel on the way.
The brothers return to Canaan and tell Jacob that Joseph is still alive and ruler over all Egypt. Jacob’s heart initially grows numb because He does not believe them. But when they tell Him all Joseph’s words and He sees the wagons Joseph sent, the spirit of Jacob their father revives. Israel declares that it is enough, Joseph His son is still alive, and He will go to see Him before He dies.
- 45:1–8: Joseph can no longer control Himself before all who stand by Him, sends everyone else out, and reveals Himself to His brothers with loud weeping. He asks whether His father is still alive, but His brothers cannot answer because they are dismayed in His presence. Joseph draws them near, identifies Himself as the brother they sold into Egypt, and tells them not to be distressed or angry with themselves because God sent Him before them to preserve life. He explains that two years of famine have passed and five remain, and that God sent Him ahead to preserve for them a remnant and keep them alive by a great deliverance.
- 45:9–15: Joseph instructs them to hurry back to Jacob and tell Him that God has made Joseph lord of all Egypt. He commands Jacob to come down and dwell in Goshen near Him with children, grandchildren, flocks, herds, and all that He has. Joseph promises to provide for them there during the remaining famine. He embraces Benjamin and weeps, Benjamin weeps on Him, and Joseph kisses all His brothers and weeps over them. Afterward His brothers talk with Him.
- 45:16–20: The report reaches Pharaoh’s house, and Pharaoh and His servants are pleased. Pharaoh instructs Joseph to tell His brothers to bring their father and households, promising them the best of the land of Egypt and commanding them not to worry about their goods because the best of all Egypt will be theirs.
- 45:21–24: Joseph gives wagons according to Pharaoh’s command, provides provisions for the journey, gives changes of clothes to all the brothers, and gives Benjamin extra garments and silver. He also sends provisions and ten donkeys loaded with the good things of Egypt for His father. As they depart, Joseph tells them not to quarrel on the way.
- 45:25–28: The brothers return to Canaan and tell Jacob that Joseph is still alive and ruler over all Egypt. Jacob’s heart initially grows numb because He does not believe them. But when they tell Him all Joseph’s words and He sees the wagons Joseph sent, the spirit of Jacob their father revives. Israel declares that it is enough, Joseph His son is still alive, and He will go to see Him before He dies.
Theological Focus
- Providence
- Reconciliation
- Preservation of Life
- Divine Sovereignty and Human Evil
- Remnant
- Forgiveness-shaped Speech
- Family Restoration
- Revelation
- Covenant Preservation
- Remnant Theology
- Forgiveness and Truth
- Biblical Theology
- Christology Preparation
Covenant Significance
Genesis 45 is covenantally decisive because Joseph explicitly states that God sent Him ahead to preserve a remnant and keep the family alive through great deliverance. The covenant household is not merely surviving by chance. It is being intentionally preserved through God’s prior positioning of Joseph in Egypt. The call for Jacob and all His house to come to Goshen means the covenant family will now be gathered in the place of provision during the famine.
This relocation is essential for the continuation of the line and for the later multiplication of Israel. The chapter therefore advances the covenant through reconciliation, migration, and divinely arranged preservation.
Canonical Connections
Genesis 45 is covenantally decisive because Joseph explicitly states that God sent Him ahead to preserve a remnant and keep the family alive through great deliverance. The covenant household is not merely surviving by chance. It is being intentionally preserved through God’s prior positioning of Joseph in Egypt. The call for Jacob and all His house to come to Goshen means the covenant family will now be gathered in the place of provision during the famine.
This relocation is essential for the continuation of the line and for the later multiplication of Israel. The chapter therefore advances the covenant through reconciliation, migration, and divinely arranged preservation.
Genesis 37:26-28
Genesis 41:53-57
Genesis 44:18-34
Genesis 50:20
Psalm 105:16-23
Genesis 37:26-28
Genesis 44:18-34
Genesis 50:20
Acts 7:13-14
Cross References
“See now that I myself am he. There is no god with me. I kill and I make alive. I wound and I heal. There is no one who can deliver out of my hand.
I will make of you a great nation. I will bless you and make your name great. You will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you, and I will curse him who treats you with contempt. All the families of the earth will be blessed...
but those who wait for Yahweh will renew their strength. They will mount up with wings like eagles. They will run, and not be weary. They will walk, and not faint.
“For my thoughts are not your thoughts, and your ways are not my ways,” says Yahweh. “For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways, and my thoughts than your thoughts.
When a man’s ways please Yahweh, he makes even his enemies to be at peace with him.
A man’s heart plans his course, but Yahweh directs his steps.
Genesis 45 shines brightly in the gospel trajectory. The rejected brother stands in power before the guilty and does not destroy them. Instead, He reveals Himself, names their sin, interprets the whole history through God’s saving purpose, and provides life. That pattern powerfully anticipates Jesus Christ. The one rejected by His own is exalted by God and becomes the means by which the guilty are reconciled and preserved.
Joseph is not the final savior, but in this chapter He becomes one of the clearest anticipatory portraits of the rejected and exalted deliverer through whom God preserves a people for Himself.
Primary Emphasis
Genesis 45 contributes strongly to Christology through Joseph as the rejected brother who reveals Himself in mercy and becomes the means of life for those who wronged Him. Joseph’s interpretation of betrayal under divine purpose anticipates later biblical patterns in which human evil is overruled by God for saving ends. The chapter also contributes to the theology of revelation and reconciliation.
The hidden ruler is unveiled, the guilty are brought near, and life is granted through the very one they had cast away. In the larger canonical horizon, this pattern finds its fullest fulfillment in Christ, the rejected and exalted Son through whom God brings life, reconciliation, and preservation to those who stand guilty before Him.
Chapter Contribution
Genesis 45 teaches that God’s sovereign purpose can work through human evil without excusing that evil, and that true reconciliation becomes possible when sin is neither denied nor made ultimate over God’s life-preserving plan. Joseph’s self-revelation is emotionally overwhelming because it brings together years of grief, guilt, fear, and hidden providence in one moment.
His brothers stand speechless because they now face the brother they sold, not as victim, but as ruler. Joseph’s response is the theological heart of the chapter. He names their act truthfully, 'You sold me into Egypt,' yet He places that truth inside a larger framework, 'God sent me before You to preserve life.' This does not cancel their responsibility. It relativizes their evil beneath God’s greater purpose.
Joseph repeats this providential interpretation multiple times, stressing that the famine, His prior descent, and His present authority are all part of God’s design to preserve a remnant and secure great deliverance. This makes Genesis 45 one of the clearest Old Testament statements of compatibilist providence: human intention remains morally real, yet divine intention governs history toward saving ends.
Joseph’s words also show that reconciliation requires truth, nearness, and provision. He draws them near, speaks peace into their fear, and then moves immediately to preserve the entire household. His mercy is not abstract sentiment. It is embodied in food, wagons, land, and future security. Pharaoh’s positive response widens the scope of blessing and shows how God uses imperial structures to advance preservation for the covenant family.
The chapter closes with Jacob’s stunned unbelief turning to revived spirit when He hears Joseph’s words and sees Joseph’s wagons. Thus Genesis 45 argues that God’s providence is able to transform betrayal into preservation, that reconciliation is grounded in truth interpreted through divine purpose, and that the life God saves must then be gathered, nourished, and brought near.
God often strengthens faith through both word and tangible confirmation.
Forgiveness flows from understanding God’s sovereignty and extending grace.
God preserves His people through means He prepares in advance.
God sovereignly orchestrates events, even sinful actions, to accomplish His purposes.
God provides abundantly for His people through various means.
God restores broken relationships through truth and grace.
God restores hope and relationships that have been broken.
Human actions are accountable, yet God’s purposes prevail over them.
Reconciliation must be guarded through intentional unity and peace.
9 Imperatives
- Hurry and go up to my father
- Come down to me, do not delay
- You shall dwell in Goshen
- Bring Your households and all that You have
- Do not concern Yourselves with Your goods
- The chapter’s force presses toward swift movement into the sphere of God’s prepared life
Sense come near to me, please
Definition come near to me, please
Why it matters Joseph’s invitation to draw near marks the movement from exposed guilt toward relational restoration and reconciled nearness.
Sense you sold me
Definition you sold me
Why it matters Joseph names the brothers’ act directly, showing that reconciliation in this chapter does not bypass truth about evil.
Sense God sent me
Definition God sent me
Why it matters Joseph’s repeated statement that God sent Him is the chapter’s core providential formula and interprets the whole story under divine purpose.
Sense for preservation of life, for life
Definition for preservation of life, for life
Why it matters This term captures Joseph’s interpretation of why God sent Him ahead: the divine aim is the preservation of life amid famine and threat.
Sense remnant, survivors
Definition remnant, survivors
Why it matters Joseph’s use of remnant language gives the chapter strong covenant significance, showing that the family’s survival is part of God’s preserving purpose.
Sense great deliverance, great escape
Definition great deliverance, great escape
Why it matters Joseph frames the family’s future survival as no minor rescue, but as a great deliverance ordained by God.
Sense not you, but God
Definition not you, but God
Why it matters This phrase does not erase human agency, but it decisively asserts God’s superior authorship of the saving outcome.
Sense lord of all Egypt
Definition lord of all Egypt
Why it matters Joseph’s exalted rule in Egypt is presented as the providential office through which life will be preserved.
Sense Goshen
Definition Goshen
Why it matters Goshen becomes the designated place where the covenant family will be gathered and sustained during the famine.
Sense provide for, sustain, nourish
Definition provide for, sustain, nourish
Why it matters Joseph’s promise to provide for the household turns reconciliation into concrete life-sustaining mercy.
Sense weep
Definition weep
Why it matters Joseph’s loud weeping reveals that reconciliation is not cold theological abstraction but deeply embodied and emotionally costly.
Sense the spirit of Jacob revived
Definition the spirit of Jacob revived
Why it matters Jacob’s revived spirit marks the restoration of hope after years of grief and begins the family’s emotional and covenant turn toward Egypt.
Sense enough, sufficient
Definition enough, sufficient
Why it matters Israel’s cry, 'It is enough,' signals that the news of Joseph’s life is sufficient to turn Him from numb unbelief to determined hope.
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Lexicon data: MorphGNT Strong's Dictionary XML (CC0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Bible (CC BY 4.0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Lexicon (CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible Data (CC BY 4.0) · Full details
C.F. Keil & F. Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (1861–91) — public domain
- Genesis 45 warns that human evil is real and cannot be denied, yet it also warns against making sin ultimate, because God’s sovereign purpose stands above it and may expose guilt in order to lead to life.
- Treating Joseph’s statement about God sending Him as if it excuses the brothers’ sin, when Joseph explicitly still names their act as selling Him.
- Reading the chapter as cheap forgiveness without truth, when Joseph brings the brothers near only after their guilt has been exposed and their hearts tested.
- Reducing reconciliation here to emotion alone, while ignoring the concrete provisions, relocation, and preservation that accompany it.
- Missing the covenant significance of the remnant language and reading Joseph’s words only as personal family comfort.
- Assuming Pharaoh’s favor is merely political convenience rather than part of God’s wider providential arrangement for preserving Jacob’s house.
- Overlooking the importance of Jacob’s revived spirit, which signals not only emotional relief but a fresh turn in the covenant family’s future.
- How does Joseph’s way of naming both human evil and God’s purpose challenge simplistic ways of thinking about suffering and providence?
- Where do You need to stop denying real wrong while also refusing to make that wrong the final meaning of Your story?
- What does it look like to draw near in reconciliation after truth has finally come to light?
- How might God have been preserving something through circumstances that once looked only destructive to You?
- When God revives hope after long grief, are You willing to move toward the life and future He sets before You?
- Preach Genesis 45 as one of Scripture’s clearest chapters on providence, showing that God can work through evil without becoming its author and without excusing the guilty.
- Use Joseph’s words to teach a robust theology of reconciliation, one that tells the truth about sin yet refuses to let sin have the last word.
- Help believers interpret painful history not by denying betrayal, but by asking how God may have preserved life through it in ways still unfolding.
- Encourage families who carry deep fractures that real restoration often comes only after testing, truth, tears, and costly speech.
- Show that forgiveness in Scripture is not passive sentiment. It moves toward provision, nearness, and the practical good of those being restored.
- Use Jacob’s revived spirit to comfort those who have lived under long grief, reminding them that God can restore hope even after years of numbness.
- Point to Christ as the greater rejected brother who now reveals Himself not to destroy the guilty, but to reconcile and give life.
Genesis 45 shines brightly in the gospel trajectory. The rejected brother stands in power before the guilty and does not destroy them. Instead, He reveals Himself, names their sin, interprets the whole history through God’s saving purpose, and provides life. That pattern powerfully anticipates Jesus Christ. The one rejected by His own is exalted by God and becomes the means by which the guilty are reconciled and preserved.
Joseph is not the final savior, but in this chapter He becomes one of the clearest anticipatory portraits of the rejected and exalted deliverer through whom God preserves a people for Himself.
Genesis 45 shines brightly in the gospel trajectory. The rejected brother stands in power before the guilty and does not destroy them. Instead, He reveals Himself, names their sin, interprets the whole history through God’s saving purpose, and provides life. That pattern powerfully anticipates Jesus Christ. The one rejected by His own is exalted by God and becomes the means by which the guilty are reconciled and preserved.
Joseph is not the final savior, but in this chapter He becomes one of the clearest anticipatory portraits of the rejected and exalted deliverer through whom God preserves a people for Himself.
Genesis 45 shines brightly in the gospel trajectory. The rejected brother stands in power before the guilty and does not destroy them. Instead, He reveals Himself, names their sin, interprets the whole history through God’s saving purpose, and provides life. That pattern powerfully anticipates Jesus Christ. The one rejected by His own is exalted by God and becomes the means by which the guilty are reconciled and preserved.
Joseph is not the final savior, but in this chapter He becomes one of the clearest anticipatory portraits of the rejected and exalted deliverer through whom God preserves a people for Himself.
Genesis 45 shines brightly in the gospel trajectory. The rejected brother stands in power before the guilty and does not destroy them. Instead, He reveals Himself, names their sin, interprets the whole history through God’s saving purpose, and provides life. That pattern powerfully anticipates Jesus Christ. The one rejected by His own is exalted by God and becomes the means by which the guilty are reconciled and preserved.
Joseph is not the final savior, but in this chapter He becomes one of the clearest anticipatory portraits of the rejected and exalted deliverer through whom God preserves a people for Himself.
Genesis 45 shines brightly in the gospel trajectory. The rejected brother stands in power before the guilty and does not destroy them. Instead, He reveals Himself, names their sin, interprets the whole history through God’s saving purpose, and provides life. That pattern powerfully anticipates Jesus Christ. The one rejected by His own is exalted by God and becomes the means by which the guilty are reconciled and preserved.
Joseph is not the final savior, but in this chapter He becomes one of the clearest anticipatory portraits of the rejected and exalted deliverer through whom God preserves a people for Himself.
9
High
- Hurry and go up to my father
- Come down to me, do not delay
- You shall dwell in Goshen
- Bring Your households and all that You have
- Do not concern Yourselves with Your goods
- The chapter’s force presses toward swift movement into the sphere of God’s prepared life
Trace remnant preservation, covenant continuity, and mercy under judgment across Scripture.
Study kingdom reign, divine rule, and gospel kingdom proclamation across Scripture.
Trace servant identity, obedient mission, and suffering service across Scripture.
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
Genesis 45 is covenantally decisive because Joseph explicitly states that God sent Him ahead to preserve a remnant and keep the family alive through great deliverance. The covenant household is not merely surviving by chance. It is being intentionally preserved through God’s prior positioning of Joseph in Egypt. The call for Jacob and all His house to come to Goshen means the covenant family will now be gathered in the place of provision during the famine.
This relocation is essential for the continuation of the line and for the later multiplication of Israel. The chapter therefore advances the covenant through reconciliation, migration, and divinely arranged preservation.
Genesis 45 shines brightly in the gospel trajectory. The rejected brother stands in power before the guilty and does not destroy them. Instead, He reveals Himself, names their sin, interprets the whole history through God’s saving purpose, and provides life. That pattern powerfully anticipates Jesus Christ. The one rejected by His own is exalted by God and becomes the means by which the guilty are reconciled and preserved.
Joseph is not the final savior, but in this chapter He becomes one of the clearest anticipatory portraits of the rejected and exalted deliverer through whom God preserves a people for Himself.
Focus Points
- Providence
- Reconciliation
- Preservation of Life
- Divine Sovereignty and Human Evil
- Remnant
- Forgiveness-shaped Speech
- Family Restoration
- Revelation
- Covenant Preservation
- Remnant Theology
- Forgiveness and Truth
- Biblical Theology
- Christology Preparation
Cross References
Passages
Chapter opening: Genesis 45:1-15
The Recognition. - Gen 45:1. After this appeal, in which Judah, speaking for his brethren, had shown the tenderest affection for the old man who had been bowed down by their sin, and the most devoted fraternal love and fidelity to the only remaining son of his beloved Rachel, and had given a sufficient proof of the change of mind, the true conversion, that had taken place in themselves, Joseph could not restrain himself any longer in relation to all those who stood round him.
He was obliged to relinquish the part which he had hitherto acted for the purpose of testing his brothers’ hearts, and to give full vent to his feelings. “ He called out: Cause every man to go out from me. And there stood no man (of his Egyptian attendants) with him, while Joseph made himself known to his brethren, ” quia effusio illa affectuum et στοργῆς erga fratres et parentem tanta fuit, ut non posset ferre alienorum praesentiam et aspectum ( Luther ).
Gen 45:2-3 As soon as all the rest were gone, he broke out into such loud weeping, that the Egyptians outside could hear it; and the house of Pharaoh, i. e. , the royal family, was told of it (cf. Gen 45:2 and Gen 45:16). He then said to his brethren: “ I am Joseph. Is my father still alive? ” That his father was still living, he had not only been informed before (Gen 43:27), but had just been told again; but his filial heart impels him to make sure of it once more.
“ But his brethren could not answer him, for they were terrified before him: ” they were so smitten in their consciences, that from astonishment and terror they could not utter a word.
Gen 45:2-3 As soon as all the rest were gone, he broke out into such loud weeping, that the Egyptians outside could hear it; and the house of Pharaoh, i. e. , the royal family, was told of it (cf. Gen 45:2 and Gen 45:16). He then said to his brethren: “ I am Joseph. Is my father still alive? ” That his father was still living, he had not only been informed before (Gen 43:27), but had just been told again; but his filial heart impels him to make sure of it once more.
“ But his brethren could not answer him, for they were terrified before him: ” they were so smitten in their consciences, that from astonishment and terror they could not utter a word.
Gen 45:4-7 Joseph then bade his brethren approach nearer, and said: “ I am Joseph, your brother, whom he sold into Egypt. But now be not grieved nor angry with yourselves (בּעיניכם אל־חר as in Gen 31:35) that ye sold me hither; for God hath sent me before you to preserve life . ” Sic enim Joseph interpretatur venditionem. Vos quidem me vendidistis, sed Deus emit, asseruit et vindicavit me sibi pastorem, principem et salvatorem populorum eodem consilio, quo videbar amissus et perditus ( Luther ).
“ For, ” he continues in explanation, “ now there are two years of famine in the land, and there are five years more, in which there will be no ploughing and reaping. And God hath sent me before you to establish you a remnant (cf. 2Sa 14:7) upon the earth (i. e. , to secure to you the preservation of the tribe and of posterity during this famine), and to preserve your lives to a great deliverance, ” i.
e. , to a great nation delivered from destruction, cf. Gen 50:20. פּליטה that which has escaped, the band of men or multitude escaped from death and destruction (2Ki 19:30-31). Joseph announced prophetically here, that God had brought him into Egypt to preserve through him the family which He had chosen for His own nation, and to deliver them out of the danger of starvation which threatened them now, as a very great nation.
Gen 45:4-7 Joseph then bade his brethren approach nearer, and said: “ I am Joseph, your brother, whom he sold into Egypt. But now be not grieved nor angry with yourselves (בּעיניכם אל־חר as in Gen 31:35) that ye sold me hither; for God hath sent me before you to preserve life . ” Sic enim Joseph interpretatur venditionem. Vos quidem me vendidistis, sed Deus emit, asseruit et vindicavit me sibi pastorem, principem et salvatorem populorum eodem consilio, quo videbar amissus et perditus ( Luther ).
“ For, ” he continues in explanation, “ now there are two years of famine in the land, and there are five years more, in which there will be no ploughing and reaping. And God hath sent me before you to establish you a remnant (cf. 2Sa 14:7) upon the earth (i. e. , to secure to you the preservation of the tribe and of posterity during this famine), and to preserve your lives to a great deliverance, ” i.
e. , to a great nation delivered from destruction, cf. Gen 50:20. פּליטה that which has escaped, the band of men or multitude escaped from death and destruction (2Ki 19:30-31). Joseph announced prophetically here, that God had brought him into Egypt to preserve through him the family which He had chosen for His own nation, and to deliver them out of the danger of starvation which threatened them now, as a very great nation.
Gen 45:4-7 Joseph then bade his brethren approach nearer, and said: “ I am Joseph, your brother, whom he sold into Egypt. But now be not grieved nor angry with yourselves (בּעיניכם אל־חר as in Gen 31:35) that ye sold me hither; for God hath sent me before you to preserve life . ” Sic enim Joseph interpretatur venditionem. Vos quidem me vendidistis, sed Deus emit, asseruit et vindicavit me sibi pastorem, principem et salvatorem populorum eodem consilio, quo videbar amissus et perditus ( Luther ).
“ For, ” he continues in explanation, “ now there are two years of famine in the land, and there are five years more, in which there will be no ploughing and reaping. And God hath sent me before you to establish you a remnant (cf. 2Sa 14:7) upon the earth (i. e. , to secure to you the preservation of the tribe and of posterity during this famine), and to preserve your lives to a great deliverance, ” i.
e. , to a great nation delivered from destruction, cf. Gen 50:20. פּליטה that which has escaped, the band of men or multitude escaped from death and destruction (2Ki 19:30-31). Joseph announced prophetically here, that God had brought him into Egypt to preserve through him the family which He had chosen for His own nation, and to deliver them out of the danger of starvation which threatened them now, as a very great nation.
Gen 45:4-7 Joseph then bade his brethren approach nearer, and said: “ I am Joseph, your brother, whom he sold into Egypt. But now be not grieved nor angry with yourselves (בּעיניכם אל־חר as in Gen 31:35) that ye sold me hither; for God hath sent me before you to preserve life . ” Sic enim Joseph interpretatur venditionem. Vos quidem me vendidistis, sed Deus emit, asseruit et vindicavit me sibi pastorem, principem et salvatorem populorum eodem consilio, quo videbar amissus et perditus ( Luther ).
“ For, ” he continues in explanation, “ now there are two years of famine in the land, and there are five years more, in which there will be no ploughing and reaping. And God hath sent me before you to establish you a remnant (cf. 2Sa 14:7) upon the earth (i. e. , to secure to you the preservation of the tribe and of posterity during this famine), and to preserve your lives to a great deliverance, ” i.
e. , to a great nation delivered from destruction, cf. Gen 50:20. פּליטה that which has escaped, the band of men or multitude escaped from death and destruction (2Ki 19:30-31). Joseph announced prophetically here, that God had brought him into Egypt to preserve through him the family which He had chosen for His own nation, and to deliver them out of the danger of starvation which threatened them now, as a very great nation.
Gen 45:8 “ And now (this was truly the case) it was not you that sent me hither; but God ( Ha-Elohim , the personal God, on contrast with his brethren) hath made me a father to Pharaoh (i.e., his most confidential counsellor and friend; cf. 1 Macc. 11:32, Ges. thes . 7), and lord of all his house, and a ruler throughout all the land of Egypt; ” cf. Gen 41:40-41.
Gen 45:9-11 Joseph then directed his brethren to go up to their father with all speed, and invite him in his name to come without delay, with all his family and possessions, into Egypt, where he would keep him near himself, in the land of Goshen (see Gen 47:11), that he might not perish in the still remaining five years of famine. הוּרשׁ: Gen 45:11, lit., to be robbed of one’s possessions, to be taken possession of by another, from ירשׁ to take possession.
Gen 45:9-11 Joseph then directed his brethren to go up to their father with all speed, and invite him in his name to come without delay, with all his family and possessions, into Egypt, where he would keep him near himself, in the land of Goshen (see Gen 47:11), that he might not perish in the still remaining five years of famine. הוּרשׁ: Gen 45:11, lit., to be robbed of one’s possessions, to be taken possession of by another, from ירשׁ to take possession.
Gen 45:9-11 Joseph then directed his brethren to go up to their father with all speed, and invite him in his name to come without delay, with all his family and possessions, into Egypt, where he would keep him near himself, in the land of Goshen (see Gen 47:11), that he might not perish in the still remaining five years of famine. הוּרשׁ: Gen 45:11, lit., to be robbed of one’s possessions, to be taken possession of by another, from ירשׁ to take possession.
Gen 45:12-13 But the brethren were so taken by surprise and overpowered by this unexpected discovery, that to convince them of the reality of the whole affair, Joseph was obliged to add, “Behold, your eyes see, and the eyes of my brother Benjamin, that it is my mouth that speaketh unto you. And tell my father all my glory in Egypt, and all that ye have seen, and bring my father quickly hither.”
Gen 45:12-13 But the brethren were so taken by surprise and overpowered by this unexpected discovery, that to convince them of the reality of the whole affair, Joseph was obliged to add, “Behold, your eyes see, and the eyes of my brother Benjamin, that it is my mouth that speaketh unto you. And tell my father all my glory in Egypt, and all that ye have seen, and bring my father quickly hither.”
Gen 45:14-15 He then fell upon Benjamin’s neck and wept, and kissed all his brethren and wept on them, i.e., whilst embracing them; “ and after that, his brethren talked with him .” כּן אחרי: after Joseph by a triple assurance, that what they had done was the leading of God for their own good, had dispelled their fear of retribution, and, by embracing and kissing them with tears, had sealed the truth and sincerity of his words.
Gen 45:14-15 He then fell upon Benjamin’s neck and wept, and kissed all his brethren and wept on them, i.e., whilst embracing them; “ and after that, his brethren talked with him .” כּן אחרי: after Joseph by a triple assurance, that what they had done was the leading of God for their own good, had dispelled their fear of retribution, and, by embracing and kissing them with tears, had sealed the truth and sincerity of his words.
Gen 45:16-18 Invitation to Jacob to Come into Egypt. - Gen 45:16. The report of the arrival of Joseph’s brethren soon found it sway into the palace, and made so favourable an impression upon Pharaoh and his courtiers, that the king sent a message through Joseph to his brethren to come with their father and their families (“ your houses ”) into Egypt, saying that he would give them “ the good of the land of Egypt, ” and they should eat “ the fat of the land .
” טוּב, “the good,” is not the best part, but the good things (produce) of the land, as in Gen 45:20, Gen 45:23, Gen 24:10; 2Ki 8:9. חלב, fat, i. e. , the finest productions.
Gen 45:16-18 Invitation to Jacob to Come into Egypt. - Gen 45:16. The report of the arrival of Joseph’s brethren soon found it sway into the palace, and made so favourable an impression upon Pharaoh and his courtiers, that the king sent a message through Joseph to his brethren to come with their father and their families (“ your houses ”) into Egypt, saying that he would give them “ the good of the land of Egypt, ” and they should eat “ the fat of the land .
” טוּב, “the good,” is not the best part, but the good things (produce) of the land, as in Gen 45:20, Gen 45:23, Gen 24:10; 2Ki 8:9. חלב, fat, i. e. , the finest productions.
Gen 45:16-18 Invitation to Jacob to Come into Egypt. - Gen 45:16. The report of the arrival of Joseph’s brethren soon found it sway into the palace, and made so favourable an impression upon Pharaoh and his courtiers, that the king sent a message through Joseph to his brethren to come with their father and their families (“ your houses ”) into Egypt, saying that he would give them “ the good of the land of Egypt, ” and they should eat “ the fat of the land .
” טוּב, “the good,” is not the best part, but the good things (produce) of the land, as in Gen 45:20, Gen 45:23, Gen 24:10; 2Ki 8:9. חלב, fat, i. e. , the finest productions.
Gen 45:19-20 At the same time Pharaoh empowered Joseph (“thou art commanded”) to give his brethren carriages to take with them, in which to convey their children and wives and their aged father, and recommended them to leave their goods behind them in Canaan, for the good of all Egypt was at their service. From time immemorial Egypt was rich in small, two-wheeled carriages, which could be used even where there were no roads (cf.
Gen 50:9; Exo 14:6. with Isa 36:9). “ Let not your eye look with mourning (תּחס) at your goods; ” i. e. , do not trouble about the house-furniture which you are obliged to leave behind. The good-will manifested in this invitation of Pharaoh towards Jacob’s family was to be attributed to the feeling of gratitude to Joseph, and “is related circumstantially, because this free and honourable invitation involved the right of Israel to leave Egypt again without obstruction” ( Delitzsch ).
Gen 45:19-20 At the same time Pharaoh empowered Joseph (“thou art commanded”) to give his brethren carriages to take with them, in which to convey their children and wives and their aged father, and recommended them to leave their goods behind them in Canaan, for the good of all Egypt was at their service. From time immemorial Egypt was rich in small, two-wheeled carriages, which could be used even where there were no roads (cf.
Gen 50:9; Exo 14:6. with Isa 36:9). “ Let not your eye look with mourning (תּחס) at your goods; ” i. e. , do not trouble about the house-furniture which you are obliged to leave behind. The good-will manifested in this invitation of Pharaoh towards Jacob’s family was to be attributed to the feeling of gratitude to Joseph, and “is related circumstantially, because this free and honourable invitation involved the right of Israel to leave Egypt again without obstruction” ( Delitzsch ).
Gen 45:21-24 The sons of Israel carried out the instructions of Joseph and the invitation of Pharaoh (Gen 45:25-27). But Joseph not only sent carriages according to Pharaoh’s directions, and food for the journey, he also gave them presents, changes of raiment, a suit for every one, and five suits for Benjamin, as well as 300 shekels of silver. שׂמלות חלפות: change of clothes, clothes to change; i.
e. , dress clothes which were worn on special occasions and frequently changed (Jdg 13:12-13, Jdg 13:19; 2Ki 5:5). “ And to his father he sent like these; ” i. e. , not changes of clothes, but presents also, viz. , ten asses “carrying of the good of Egypt,” and ten she-asses with corn and provisions for the journey; and sent them off with the injunction: אל־תּרגּזוּ :noitcnu, μὴ ὀργἱζεσθε (lxx), “do not get angry by the way.
” Placatus erat Joseph fratribus, simul eos admonet, ne quid turbarum moveant. Timendum enim erat, ne quisque se purgando crimen transferre in alios studeret atque its surgeret contentio ( Calvin ).
Gen 45:21-24 The sons of Israel carried out the instructions of Joseph and the invitation of Pharaoh (Gen 45:25-27). But Joseph not only sent carriages according to Pharaoh’s directions, and food for the journey, he also gave them presents, changes of raiment, a suit for every one, and five suits for Benjamin, as well as 300 shekels of silver. שׂמלות חלפות: change of clothes, clothes to change; i.
e. , dress clothes which were worn on special occasions and frequently changed (Jdg 13:12-13, Jdg 13:19; 2Ki 5:5). “ And to his father he sent like these; ” i. e. , not changes of clothes, but presents also, viz. , ten asses “carrying of the good of Egypt,” and ten she-asses with corn and provisions for the journey; and sent them off with the injunction: אל־תּרגּזוּ :noitcnu, μὴ ὀργἱζεσθε (lxx), “do not get angry by the way.
” Placatus erat Joseph fratribus, simul eos admonet, ne quid turbarum moveant. Timendum enim erat, ne quisque se purgando crimen transferre in alios studeret atque its surgeret contentio ( Calvin ).
Gen 45:21-24 The sons of Israel carried out the instructions of Joseph and the invitation of Pharaoh (Gen 45:25-27). But Joseph not only sent carriages according to Pharaoh’s directions, and food for the journey, he also gave them presents, changes of raiment, a suit for every one, and five suits for Benjamin, as well as 300 shekels of silver. שׂמלות חלפות: change of clothes, clothes to change; i.
e. , dress clothes which were worn on special occasions and frequently changed (Jdg 13:12-13, Jdg 13:19; 2Ki 5:5). “ And to his father he sent like these; ” i. e. , not changes of clothes, but presents also, viz. , ten asses “carrying of the good of Egypt,” and ten she-asses with corn and provisions for the journey; and sent them off with the injunction: אל־תּרגּזוּ :noitcnu, μὴ ὀργἱζεσθε (lxx), “do not get angry by the way.
” Placatus erat Joseph fratribus, simul eos admonet, ne quid turbarum moveant. Timendum enim erat, ne quisque se purgando crimen transferre in alios studeret atque its surgeret contentio ( Calvin ).
Gen 45:21-24 The sons of Israel carried out the instructions of Joseph and the invitation of Pharaoh (Gen 45:25-27). But Joseph not only sent carriages according to Pharaoh’s directions, and food for the journey, he also gave them presents, changes of raiment, a suit for every one, and five suits for Benjamin, as well as 300 shekels of silver. שׂמלות חלפות: change of clothes, clothes to change; i.
e. , dress clothes which were worn on special occasions and frequently changed (Jdg 13:12-13, Jdg 13:19; 2Ki 5:5). “ And to his father he sent like these; ” i. e. , not changes of clothes, but presents also, viz. , ten asses “carrying of the good of Egypt,” and ten she-asses with corn and provisions for the journey; and sent them off with the injunction: אל־תּרגּזוּ :noitcnu, μὴ ὀργἱζεσθε (lxx), “do not get angry by the way.
” Placatus erat Joseph fratribus, simul eos admonet, ne quid turbarum moveant. Timendum enim erat, ne quisque se purgando crimen transferre in alios studeret atque its surgeret contentio ( Calvin ).
Gen 45:25-28 When they got back, and brought word to their father, “Joseph is still living, yea (וכי an emphatic assurance, Ewald , §3306) he is ruler in all the land of Egypt, his heart stopped, for he believed them not;” i. e. , his heart did not beat at this joyful news, for he put no faith in what they said. It was not till they told him all that Joseph had said, and he saw the carriages that Joseph had sent, that “ the spirit of their father Jacob revived; and Israel said: It is enough!
Joseph my son is yet alive: I will go and see him before I die . ” Observe the significant interchange of Jacob and Israel. When once the crushed spirit of the old man was revived by the certainty that his son Joseph was still alive, Jacob was changed into Israel, the “conqueror overcoming his grief at the previous misconduct of his sons” ( Fr. v. Meyer ).
Gen 45:25-28 When they got back, and brought word to their father, “Joseph is still living, yea (וכי an emphatic assurance, Ewald , §3306) he is ruler in all the land of Egypt, his heart stopped, for he believed them not;” i. e. , his heart did not beat at this joyful news, for he put no faith in what they said. It was not till they told him all that Joseph had said, and he saw the carriages that Joseph had sent, that “ the spirit of their father Jacob revived; and Israel said: It is enough!
Joseph my son is yet alive: I will go and see him before I die . ” Observe the significant interchange of Jacob and Israel. When once the crushed spirit of the old man was revived by the certainty that his son Joseph was still alive, Jacob was changed into Israel, the “conqueror overcoming his grief at the previous misconduct of his sons” ( Fr. v. Meyer ).
Gen 45:25-28 When they got back, and brought word to their father, “Joseph is still living, yea (וכי an emphatic assurance, Ewald , §3306) he is ruler in all the land of Egypt, his heart stopped, for he believed them not;” i. e. , his heart did not beat at this joyful news, for he put no faith in what they said. It was not till they told him all that Joseph had said, and he saw the carriages that Joseph had sent, that “ the spirit of their father Jacob revived; and Israel said: It is enough!
Joseph my son is yet alive: I will go and see him before I die . ” Observe the significant interchange of Jacob and Israel. When once the crushed spirit of the old man was revived by the certainty that his son Joseph was still alive, Jacob was changed into Israel, the “conqueror overcoming his grief at the previous misconduct of his sons” ( Fr. v. Meyer ).