As Jacob nears death, He prophetically blesses and judges His sons according to their character and history, establishes the future shape of Israel’s tribes, and locates the royal hope of the covenant line in Judah.
Jacob Blesses His Sons, Exposes Their Character, and Sets the Future Shape of Israel under Prophetic Covenant Word
As Jacob nears death, He prophetically blesses and judges His sons according to their character and history, establishes the future shape of Israel’s tribes, and locates the royal hope of the covenant line in Judah.
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As Jacob nears death, He prophetically blesses and judges His sons according to their character and history, establishes the future shape of Israel’s tribes, and locates the royal hope of the covenant line in Judah.
Genesis 49 teaches that God’s covenant future unfolds through real human character, real moral consequence, and real divine promise, so that the tribes of Israel emerge not as interchangeable units but as differentiated branches shaped by both history and prophecy. Jacob begins by calling His sons to hear what will happen in days to come, signaling that His words are not merely retrospective observations but future-oriented covenant speech.
The first major theological movement of the chapter is moral reckoning. Reuben loses preeminence because of sexual defilement. Simeon and Levi are judged because of violent wrath. This shows that natural privilege, especially firstborn privilege, can be forfeited by sin. Genesis has hinted at this already, but Jacob now makes it explicit and programmatic for tribal future.
The second movement is the emergence of Judah. Judah’s section is the chapter’s center of gravity. He is praised, associated with lion-like rule, and given the language of scepter and ruler’s staff. This marks a decisive narrowing of royal expectation within the covenant family. The promise is no longer simply that kings may come from Jacob, as in Genesis 35.
Now the royal line is anchored specifically in Judah. The language of the peoples’ obedience reaching to the one associated with Judah stretches the horizon beyond a merely local tribal blessing and gives the chapter its enduring messianic significance. The third movement is tribal diversity. Each son is addressed distinctly. Some receive land-tinged imagery, some military imagery, some abundance imagery, some danger imagery.
This shows that covenant identity does not flatten all distinction. God orders His people with differentiated callings and outcomes. The fourth movement is Joseph’s extraordinary blessing. Joseph, though not the royal line, receives lavish fruitfulness language and is interpreted through divine names of strength, shepherding, and stability. The one who suffered attack is shown upheld by God.
Thus the chapter also confirms that suffering under God’s hand may culminate in enduring blessing. Finally, Jacob’s burial charge reanchors the whole chapter in covenant hope. Though the tribes’ futures are being spoken while the family lives in Egypt, Jacob insists on burial with the patriarchs in the promised-land tomb. Thus Genesis 49 argues that covenant destiny includes judgment for sin, differentiated tribal futures, royal hope in Judah, abundant blessing upon Joseph, and death itself faced in faith toward the promise.
Genesis 49 stands as one of the most important patriarchal chapters in all of Genesis. Jacob is near death in Egypt, and after blessing Ephraim and Manasseh in Genesis 48, He now gathers His twelve sons in order to speak over them concerning what will happen in days to come. This chapter is therefore not merely a series of sentimental farewell statements. It is covenantal, prophetic, and tribal in significance.
Within the structure of Genesis, it serves as the formal transition from the patriarchal family narratives to the future shape of Israel as a people composed of tribes with differentiated destinies. The chapter also gathers up earlier narrative threads and renders judgment on them. Reuben’s instability, Simeon and Levi’s violence, Judah’s rise, Joseph’s fruitfulness, and Benjamin’s fierceness are not sudden themes introduced here.
They are the mature prophetic reading of what Genesis has already shown. Historically in the narrative, the family remains in Egypt, but Jacob’s words reach far beyond Egypt into the future of the tribes in the land, the coming royal line, and the long-range trajectory of Israel. Theologically, Genesis 49 is a chapter of blessing, judgment, tribal identity, kingship promise, and covenant continuity at the threshold of death.
It interprets the sons not only as individuals but as founders of future tribal realities. Above all, the chapter is climactic because the line of royal hope is attached explicitly to Judah, making this one of the clearest forward-moving messianic texts in Genesis.
Jacob summons His sons to gather and listen so that He may tell them what will happen in days to come. The chapter opens with solemn prophetic assembly language.
Reuben, though firstborn and originally preeminent in dignity and strength, is declared unstable as water and will not excel because He defiled His father’s bed by going up onto it.
Simeon and Levi are paired together in violent brotherhood. Jacob denounces their anger and cruelty in the Shechem massacre and declares they will be divided and scattered in Israel.
Judah is praised by His brothers, associated with the lion, promised enduring rule, and given the famous word that the scepter shall not depart from Judah nor the ruler’s staff from between His feet until Shiloh comes, and to Him shall be the obedience of the peoples. The section closes with imagery of abundance, wine, and royal prosperity.
Zebulun is associated with seashore dwelling and orientation toward trade and ships.
Issachar is likened to a strong donkey who bows to burden and forced labor after seeing that rest and land are pleasant.
Dan shall judge His people, yet is compared to a serpent by the road who strikes the horse’s heels. Jacob suddenly interjects, 'I wait for Your salvation, O Lord.' 49:19 — Gad will be raided by raiders, yet He will raid at their heels.
Asher’s food will be rich, yielding royal delicacies.
Naphtali is a doe let loose who bears beautiful words.
Joseph is a fruitful bough by a spring whose branches run over the wall. Though archers attacked Him bitterly, His bow remained firm by the hands of the Mighty One of Jacob, from there the Shepherd, the Stone of Israel. Jacob heaps upon Joseph blessings of heaven above, the deep below, and blessings of breast and womb, placing extraordinary abundance upon His head.
Benjamin is a ravenous wolf, devouring prey in the morning and dividing spoil in the evening.
The twelve sons are identified as the tribes of Israel, and Jacob blesses them, each with the blessing appropriate to Him.
Jacob commands them to bury Him with His fathers in the cave of Machpelah with Abraham, Sarah, Isaac, Rebekah, and Leah. After finishing His commands, He draws up His feet into the bed, breathes His last, and is gathered to His people.
- 49:1–2: Jacob summons His sons to gather and listen so that He may tell them what will happen in days to come. The chapter opens with solemn prophetic assembly language.
- 49:3–4: Reuben, though firstborn and originally preeminent in dignity and strength, is declared unstable as water and will not excel because He defiled His father’s bed by going up onto it.
- 49:5–7: Simeon and Levi are paired together in violent brotherhood. Jacob denounces their anger and cruelty in the Shechem massacre and declares they will be divided and scattered in Israel.
- 49:8–12: Judah is praised by His brothers, associated with the lion, promised enduring rule, and given the famous word that the scepter shall not depart from Judah nor the ruler’s staff from between His feet until Shiloh comes, and to Him shall be the obedience of the peoples. The section closes with imagery of abundance, wine, and royal prosperity.
- 49:13: Zebulun is associated with seashore dwelling and orientation toward trade and ships.
- 49:14–15: Issachar is likened to a strong donkey who bows to burden and forced labor after seeing that rest and land are pleasant.
- 49:16–18: Dan shall judge His people, yet is compared to a serpent by the road who strikes the horse’s heels. Jacob suddenly interjects, 'I wait for Your salvation, O Lord.' 49:19 — Gad will be raided by raiders, yet He will raid at their heels.
- 49:20: Asher’s food will be rich, yielding royal delicacies.
- 49:21: Naphtali is a doe let loose who bears beautiful words.
- 49:22–26: Joseph is a fruitful bough by a spring whose branches run over the wall. Though archers attacked Him bitterly, His bow remained firm by the hands of the Mighty One of Jacob, from there the Shepherd, the Stone of Israel. Jacob heaps upon Joseph blessings of heaven above, the deep below, and blessings of breast and womb, placing extraordinary abundance upon His head.
- 49:27: Benjamin is a ravenous wolf, devouring prey in the morning and dividing spoil in the evening.
- 49:28: The twelve sons are identified as the tribes of Israel, and Jacob blesses them, each with the blessing appropriate to Him.
- 49:29–33: Jacob commands them to bury Him with His fathers in the cave of Machpelah with Abraham, Sarah, Isaac, Rebekah, and Leah. After finishing His commands, He draws up His feet into the bed, breathes His last, and is gathered to His people.
Theological Focus
- Covenant Prophecy
- Moral Consequence
- Royal Promise
- Tribal Identity
- Blessing and Judgment
- Messianic Hope
- Faith unto Death
- Covenant Continuity
- Covenant Theology
- Providence
- Kingship
- Biblical Theology
Covenant Significance
Genesis 49 is covenantally decisive because it gives the most developed tribal-prophetic shaping of Jacob’s sons in Genesis and explicitly places the royal line in Judah. The chapter also shows that covenant privilege does not erase moral consequence: Reuben, Simeon, and Levi all suffer loss or dispersion in relation to their sins. Joseph receives abundant blessing, yet Judah receives the scepter.
This distribution of blessing and rule is crucial for the later development of Israel’s history. The chapter also formally identifies the sons as the tribes of Israel, making this a foundational tribal charter text. Jacob’s burial request at the end anchors the whole scene in the promised-land future and shows that even while in Egypt the covenant horizon remains fixed on God’s sworn inheritance.
Canonical Connections
Genesis 49 is covenantally decisive because it gives the most developed tribal-prophetic shaping of Jacob’s sons in Genesis and explicitly places the royal line in Judah. The chapter also shows that covenant privilege does not erase moral consequence: Reuben, Simeon, and Levi all suffer loss or dispersion in relation to their sins. Joseph receives abundant blessing, yet Judah receives the scepter.
This distribution of blessing and rule is crucial for the later development of Israel’s history. The chapter also formally identifies the sons as the tribes of Israel, making this a foundational tribal charter text. Jacob’s burial request at the end anchors the whole scene in the promised-land future and shows that even while in Egypt the covenant horizon remains fixed on God’s sworn inheritance.
Genesis 29:31-35
Genesis 34:25-31
Genesis 35:22-26
Genesis 38:24-30
Deuteronomy 33:1-29
Genesis 25:23
Genesis 38:24-30
Genesis 48:17-20
Deuteronomy 33:1-29
Cross References
The sons of Reuben, the Gadites, and the half-tribe of Manasseh, of valiant men, men able to bear buckler and sword, and to shoot with bow, and skillful in war, were forty-four thousand seven hundred sixty, that were able to go out to war....
When your days are fulfilled, and you sleep with your fathers, I will set up your offspring after you, who will proceed out of your body, and I will establish his kingdom. He will build a house for my name, and I will establish the throne...
About Joseph he said, “His land is blessed by Yahweh, for the precious things of the heavens, for the dew, for the deep that couches beneath, for the precious things of the fruits of the sun, for the precious things that the moon can...
and the dust returns to the earth as it was, and the spirit returns to God who gave it.
Abraham gave up his spirit, and died at a good old age, an old man, and full of years, and was gathered to his people. Isaac and Ishmael, his sons, buried him in the cave of Machpelah, in the field of Ephron, the son of Zohar the Hittite,...
Isaac gave up the spirit and died, and was gathered to his people, old and full of days. Esau and Jacob, his sons, buried him.
By faith, Jacob, when he was dying, blessed each of the sons of Joseph, and worshiped, leaning on the top of his staff. By faith, Joseph, when his end was near, made mention of the departure of the children of Israel, and gave instructions...
A shoot will come out of the stock of Jesse, and a branch out of his roots will bear fruit.
The sixth lot came out for the children of Naphtali, even for the children of Naphtali according to their families. Their border was from Heleph, from the oak in Zaanannim, Adami-nekeb, and Jabneel, to Lakkum. It ended at the Jordan. The...
Among all these soldiers there were seven hundred chosen men who were left-handed. Every one of them could sling a stone at a hair and not miss.
Gilead lived beyond the Jordan. Why did Dan remain in ships? Asher sat still at the haven of the sea, and lived by his creeks.
But you, Bethlehem Ephrathah, being small among the clans of Judah, out of you one will come out to me that is to be ruler in Israel; whose goings out are from of old, from ancient times.
I see him, but not now. I see him, but not near. A star will come out of Jacob. A scepter will rise out of Israel, and shall strike through the corners of Moab, and crush all the sons of Sheth.
Genesis 49 greatly strengthens the gospel trajectory by locating the royal hope of the covenant family in Judah. The one to whom the scepter belongs becomes the focal point of messianic expectation, and the obedience of the peoples stretches the vision far beyond an ordinary tribal future. At the same time, the chapter shows that God’s redemptive plan moves through deeply imperfect people, judged honestly yet governed by promise.
In the fullness of Scripture, the lion-like royal hope of Judah finds its fulfillment in Jesus Christ, the greater Son from Judah’s line, to whom ultimate rule and the gathering of the nations belong.
Primary Emphasis
Genesis 49 contributes profoundly to Christology, especially through Judah. The scepter and ruler’s staff language, together with the expectation that obedience of the peoples will come to the one associated with Judah, makes this one of the earliest and most significant royal-messianic texts in Scripture. The lion imagery later reverberates through biblical theology as a sign of regal strength and victorious rule.
Joseph also contributes typologically, as the fruitful and attacked yet divinely upheld son, but the chapter’s primary christological line runs through Judah. In the broader canonical frame, the Messiah comes from Judah’s line, and Genesis 49 gives one of the foundational prophetic trajectories for that reality.
Chapter Contribution
Genesis 49 teaches that God’s covenant future unfolds through real human character, real moral consequence, and real divine promise, so that the tribes of Israel emerge not as interchangeable units but as differentiated branches shaped by both history and prophecy. Jacob begins by calling His sons to hear what will happen in days to come, signaling that His words are not merely retrospective observations but future-oriented covenant speech.
The first major theological movement of the chapter is moral reckoning. Reuben loses preeminence because of sexual defilement. Simeon and Levi are judged because of violent wrath. This shows that natural privilege, especially firstborn privilege, can be forfeited by sin. Genesis has hinted at this already, but Jacob now makes it explicit and programmatic for tribal future.
The second movement is the emergence of Judah. Judah’s section is the chapter’s center of gravity. He is praised, associated with lion-like rule, and given the language of scepter and ruler’s staff. This marks a decisive narrowing of royal expectation within the covenant family. The promise is no longer simply that kings may come from Jacob, as in Genesis 35.
Now the royal line is anchored specifically in Judah. The language of the peoples’ obedience reaching to the one associated with Judah stretches the horizon beyond a merely local tribal blessing and gives the chapter its enduring messianic significance. The third movement is tribal diversity. Each son is addressed distinctly. Some receive land-tinged imagery, some military imagery, some abundance imagery, some danger imagery.
This shows that covenant identity does not flatten all distinction. God orders His people with differentiated callings and outcomes. The fourth movement is Joseph’s extraordinary blessing. Joseph, though not the royal line, receives lavish fruitfulness language and is interpreted through divine names of strength, shepherding, and stability. The one who suffered attack is shown upheld by God.
Thus the chapter also confirms that suffering under God’s hand may culminate in enduring blessing. Finally, Jacob’s burial charge reanchors the whole chapter in covenant hope. Though the tribes’ futures are being spoken while the family lives in Egypt, Jacob insists on burial with the patriarchs in the promised-land tomb. Thus Genesis 49 argues that covenant destiny includes judgment for sin, differentiated tribal futures, royal hope in Judah, abundant blessing upon Joseph, and death itself faced in faith toward the promise.
Each individual or group has a distinct role within God’s plan.
God’s promises extend beyond individual lifetimes.
God’s people are defined by their relationship to His promises across generations.
God’s promises continue through specific individuals and tribes.
God’s people are composed of individuals with varied roles and characteristics.
God’s favor is expressed in different ways across His people.
God establishes His purposes through His chosen line.
Faith endures to the end, shaping how believers approach death.
God’s purposes are fulfilled through imperfect and varied individuals.
Sin has real consequences, including the loss of privilege.
God judges sin but also extends grace to fulfill His purposes.
God establishes a royal line culminating in the Messiah.
God works through diverse circumstances and personalities to accomplish His purposes.
Death is not the end but a transition within God’s covenant purposes.
A faithful life concludes in trust and reverence toward God.
6 Imperatives
- Gather Yourselves together
- Listen to Israel Your father
- Bury me with my fathers
- The chapter’s weight presses toward hearing God’s truth about one’s future and dying in covenant faith
Sense in days to come, in the latter days
Definition in days to come, in the latter days
Why it matters This opening phrase marks Jacob’s speech as prophetic and future-oriented, extending beyond immediate family sentiment to covenant destiny.
Sense unstable as water
Definition unstable as water
Why it matters Jacob’s description of Reuben explains why firstborn privilege is forfeited. Natural priority without moral steadiness cannot sustain covenant leadership.
Sense preeminent in dignity and preeminent in strength
Definition preeminent in dignity and preeminent in strength
Why it matters The phrase highlights what Reuben should have been, making His loss of preeminence all the more sobering and morally instructive.
Sense weapons of violence
Definition weapons of violence
Why it matters Used of Simeon and Levi, the phrase interprets their prior zeal as corrupted by cruelty and therefore unsuitable for unified preeminence.
Sense cursed be their anger
Definition cursed be their anger
Why it matters Jacob does not curse the brothers personally in the same way He condemns their anger, isolating the moral force of their violent wrath as the chief issue.
Sense scepter, rod, tribal staff
Definition scepter, rod, tribal staff
Why it matters The declaration that the scepter shall not depart from Judah is one of the foundational royal-messianic statements in the Old Testament.
Sense ruler’s staff, lawgiver, one who decrees
Definition ruler’s staff, lawgiver, one who decrees
Why it matters Paired with the scepter, this term deepens Judah’s royal authority, linking Him not only to rule but to ordered governance.
Sense Shiloh / he to whom it belongs
Definition Shiloh / he to whom it belongs
Why it matters This difficult but central term anchors the future-directed hope of Judah’s line and has long been understood as carrying major royal-messianic significance.
Sense obedience of the peoples, gathering of the peoples
Definition obedience of the peoples, gathering of the peoples
Why it matters The phrase stretches Judah’s significance beyond local tribal dominance toward a wider horizon of peoples gathered under His line.
Sense lion’s cub
Definition lion’s cub
Why it matters Judah’s lion imagery contributes to the royal symbolism that later echoes through biblical kingship and messianic expectation.
Sense Joseph is a fruitful son/bough
Definition Joseph is a fruitful son/bough
Why it matters Joseph’s blessing centers on fruitfulness sustained by God despite opposition, reinforcing His role as the abundantly blessed and preserved son.
Sense the Mighty One of Jacob
Definition the Mighty One of Jacob
Why it matters This divine title in Joseph’s blessing interprets His endurance and stability as the result of God’s mighty sustaining hand.
Sense the Stone of Israel
Definition the Stone of Israel
Why it matters The title emphasizes God as the enduring foundation and stability behind Joseph’s fruitfulness and Israel’s survival.
Sense shepherd
Definition shepherd
Why it matters Appearing in Joseph’s blessing, the shepherd title deepens the portrait of God as sustaining guardian of the covenant line.
Sense this is what their father spoke to them and blessed them
Definition this is what their father spoke to them and blessed them
Why it matters This summary verse makes clear that the whole chapter, even its rebukes and limitations, belongs to Jacob’s blessing act under covenant authority.
Sense he was gathered to his people
Definition he was gathered to his people
Why it matters Jacob’s death is framed not merely as physical ending but as covenantal gathering, underscoring continuity with the fathers in faith.
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 49 warns that sin has lasting consequences even within the covenant family, and that natural privilege, strength, or birth order cannot secure future preeminence where moral corruption or violence have ruled.
- Treating Jacob’s words as vague fatherly wishes rather than covenantal and prophetic speech about what will happen in days to come.
- Reading the blessings as uniformly positive, when several sons receive strong rebuke, limitation, or judgment shaped by earlier sins.
- Assuming Reuben’s firstborn status still governs the future, when the chapter explicitly removes His preeminence.
- Flattening Judah and Joseph into the same kind of prominence, when the chapter differentiates Joseph’s abundant fruitfulness from Judah’s royal authority.
- Reducing Judah’s scepter language to ordinary tribal leadership only, while ignoring its major royal and messianic force.
- Skipping Jacob’s burial command as an appendix rather than seeing it as a final act of covenant faith tied to the promised land.
- What does Genesis 49 teach You about the long reach of character and the way past actions can shape future influence?
- How does Reuben’s loss of preeminence challenge complacency in those who assume position or privilege will carry them?
- What does the judgment on Simeon and Levi teach about the danger of weaponized anger and undisciplined zeal?
- How does Judah’s rise encourage You that God can redirect the future of deeply flawed people according to His purpose?
- What would it look like for You to face death, like Jacob, still anchored in God’s promise rather than in Your present surroundings?
- Preach Genesis 49 as a chapter of prophetic realism, showing that God blesses, judges, and orders His people truthfully rather than sentimentally.
- Use Reuben, Simeon, and Levi to warn against sexual sin, instability, and violent anger, especially where men assume natural standing will protect them.
- Help the church see that not all blessing takes the same form. Judah receives rule, Joseph receives abundant fruitfulness, and the tribes are not made identical.
- Use Judah’s prophecy to trace the royal line forward and show how Genesis itself begins to focus messianic hope in a specific tribe.
- Encourage believers through Joseph’s blessing that those long attacked or opposed may still be upheld by the Mighty One of Jacob and made fruitful by God.
- Teach families that speaking blessing over the next generation must include truth about character, not only affection.
- Use Jacob’s burial request to pastor believers toward dying in faith, with hearts still set on the inheritance God promised.
Genesis 49 greatly strengthens the gospel trajectory by locating the royal hope of the covenant family in Judah. The one to whom the scepter belongs becomes the focal point of messianic expectation, and the obedience of the peoples stretches the vision far beyond an ordinary tribal future. At the same time, the chapter shows that God’s redemptive plan moves through deeply imperfect people, judged honestly yet governed by promise.
In the fullness of Scripture, the lion-like royal hope of Judah finds its fulfillment in Jesus Christ, the greater Son from Judah’s line, to whom ultimate rule and the gathering of the nations belong.
Genesis 49 greatly strengthens the gospel trajectory by locating the royal hope of the covenant family in Judah. The one to whom the scepter belongs becomes the focal point of messianic expectation, and the obedience of the peoples stretches the vision far beyond an ordinary tribal future. At the same time, the chapter shows that God’s redemptive plan moves through deeply imperfect people, judged honestly yet governed by promise.
In the fullness of Scripture, the lion-like royal hope of Judah finds its fulfillment in Jesus Christ, the greater Son from Judah’s line, to whom ultimate rule and the gathering of the nations belong.
Genesis 49 greatly strengthens the gospel trajectory by locating the royal hope of the covenant family in Judah. The one to whom the scepter belongs becomes the focal point of messianic expectation, and the obedience of the peoples stretches the vision far beyond an ordinary tribal future. At the same time, the chapter shows that God’s redemptive plan moves through deeply imperfect people, judged honestly yet governed by promise.
In the fullness of Scripture, the lion-like royal hope of Judah finds its fulfillment in Jesus Christ, the greater Son from Judah’s line, to whom ultimate rule and the gathering of the nations belong.
Genesis 49 greatly strengthens the gospel trajectory by locating the royal hope of the covenant family in Judah. The one to whom the scepter belongs becomes the focal point of messianic expectation, and the obedience of the peoples stretches the vision far beyond an ordinary tribal future. At the same time, the chapter shows that God’s redemptive plan moves through deeply imperfect people, judged honestly yet governed by promise.
In the fullness of Scripture, the lion-like royal hope of Judah finds its fulfillment in Jesus Christ, the greater Son from Judah’s line, to whom ultimate rule and the gathering of the nations belong.
Genesis 49 greatly strengthens the gospel trajectory by locating the royal hope of the covenant family in Judah. The one to whom the scepter belongs becomes the focal point of messianic expectation, and the obedience of the peoples stretches the vision far beyond an ordinary tribal future. At the same time, the chapter shows that God’s redemptive plan moves through deeply imperfect people, judged honestly yet governed by promise.
In the fullness of Scripture, the lion-like royal hope of Judah finds its fulfillment in Jesus Christ, the greater Son from Judah’s line, to whom ultimate rule and the gathering of the nations belong.
6
High
- Gather Yourselves together
- Listen to Israel Your father
- Bury me with my fathers
- The chapter’s weight presses toward hearing God’s truth about one’s future and dying in covenant faith
Study kingdom reign, divine rule, and gospel kingdom proclamation across Scripture.
Follow faith, believing response, trust, and persevering allegiance across Scripture.
Track judgment as covenant accountability, divine justice, and eschatological reckoning.
Trace remnant preservation, covenant continuity, and mercy under judgment across Scripture.
Trace servant identity, obedient mission, and suffering service across Scripture.
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
Genesis 49 is covenantally decisive because it gives the most developed tribal-prophetic shaping of Jacob’s sons in Genesis and explicitly places the royal line in Judah. The chapter also shows that covenant privilege does not erase moral consequence: Reuben, Simeon, and Levi all suffer loss or dispersion in relation to their sins. Joseph receives abundant blessing, yet Judah receives the scepter.
This distribution of blessing and rule is crucial for the later development of Israel’s history. The chapter also formally identifies the sons as the tribes of Israel, making this a foundational tribal charter text. Jacob’s burial request at the end anchors the whole scene in the promised-land future and shows that even while in Egypt the covenant horizon remains fixed on God’s sworn inheritance.
Genesis 49 greatly strengthens the gospel trajectory by locating the royal hope of the covenant family in Judah. The one to whom the scepter belongs becomes the focal point of messianic expectation, and the obedience of the peoples stretches the vision far beyond an ordinary tribal future. At the same time, the chapter shows that God’s redemptive plan moves through deeply imperfect people, judged honestly yet governed by promise.
In the fullness of Scripture, the lion-like royal hope of Judah finds its fulfillment in Jesus Christ, the greater Son from Judah’s line, to whom ultimate rule and the gathering of the nations belong.
Focus Points
- Covenant Prophecy
- Moral Consequence
- Royal Promise
- Tribal Identity
- Blessing and Judgment
- Messianic Hope
- Faith unto Death
- Covenant Continuity
- Covenant Theology
- Providence
- Kingship
- Biblical Theology
Cross References
Passages
Chapter opening: Genesis 49:1-12
The Blessing. - Gen 49:1, Gen 49:2. When Jacob had adopted and blessed the two sons of Joseph, he called his twelve sons, to make known to them his spiritual bequest. In an elevated and solemn tone he said, “ Gather yourselves together, that I may tell you that which shall befall you (יקרא for יקרה, as in Gen 42:4, Gen 42:38) at the end of the days! Gather yourselves together and hear, ye sons of Jacob, and hearken unto Israel your father!
” The last address of Jacob-Israel to his twelve sons, which these words introduce, is designated by the historian (Gen 49:28) “the blessing,” with which “their father blessed them, every one according to his blessing. ” This blessing is at the same time a prophecy. “Every superior and significant life becomes prophetic at its close” ( Ziegler ). But this was especially the case with the lives of the patriarchs, which were filled and sustained by the promises and revelations of God.
As Isaac in his blessing (Gen 27) pointed out prophetically to his two sons, by virtue of divine illumination, the future history of their families; “so Jacob, while blessing the twelve, pictured in grand outlines the lineamenta of the future history of the future nation” ( Ziegler ). The groundwork of his prophecy was supplied partly by the natural character of his twelve sons, and partly by the divine promise which had been given by the Lord to him and to his fathers Abraham and Isaac, and that not merely in these two points, the numerous increase of their seed and the possession of Canaan, but in its entire scope, by which Israel had been appointed to be the recipient and medium of salvation for all nations.
On this foundation the Spirit of God revealed to the dying patriarch Israel the future history of his seed, so that he discerned in the characters of his sons the future development of the tribes proceeding from them, and with prophetic clearness assigned to each of them its position and importance in the nation into which they were to expand in the promised inheritance. Thus he predicted to the sons what would happen to them “in the last days,” lit.
, “at the end of the days” (ἐπ ̓ ἐσχάτων τῶν ἡμερῶν, lxx), and not merely at some future time. אחרית, the opposite of ראשׁית, signifies the end in contrast with the beginning (Deu 11:12; Isa 46:10); hence הימים אחרית in prophetic language denoted, not the future generally, but the last future (see Hengstenberg’s History of Balaam , pp. 465-467, transl.) , the Messianic age of consummation (Isa 2:2; Eze 38:8, Eze 38:16; Jer 30:24; Jer 48:47; Jer 49:39, etc.
: so also Num 24:14; Deu 4:30), like ἐπ ̓ ἐσχάτων τῶν ἡμερῶν (2Pe 3:3; Heb 1:2), or ἐν ταῖς ἐσχάταις ἡμέραις (Act 2:17; 2Ti 3:1). But we must not restrict “the end of the days” to the extreme point of the time of completion of the Messianic kingdom; it embraces “the whole history of the completion which underlies the present period of growth,” or “the future as bringing the work of God to its ultimate completion, though modified according to the particular stage to which the work of God had advanced in any particular age, the range of vision opened to that age, and the consequent horizon of the prophet, which, though not absolutely dependent upon it, was to a certain extent regulated by it” ( Delitzsch ).
For the patriarch, who, with his pilgrim-life, had been obliged in the very evening of his days to leave the soil of the promised land and seek a refuge for himself and his house in Egypt, the final future, with its realization of the promises of God, commenced as soon as the promised land was in the possession of the twelve tribes descended from his sons. He had already before his eyes, in his twelve sons with their children and children’s children, the first beginnings of the multiplication of his seed into a great nation.
Moreover, on his departure from Canaan he had received the promise, that the God of his fathers would make him into a great nation, and lead him up again to Canaan (Gen 46:3-4). The fulfilment of this promise his thoughts and hopes, his longings and wishes, were all directed. This constituted the firm foundation, though by no means the sole and exclusive purport, of his words of blessing.
The fact was not, as Baumgarten and Kurtz suppose, that Jacob regarded the time of Joshua as that of the completion; that for him the end was nothing more than the possession of the promised land by his seed as the promised nation, so that all the promises pointed to this, and nothing beyond it was either affirmed or hinted at. Not a single utterance announces the capture of the promised land; not a single one points specially to the time of Joshua.
On the contrary, Jacob presupposes not only the increase of his sons into powerful tribes, but also the conquest of Canaan, as already fulfilled; foretells to his sons, whom he sees in spirit as populous tribes, growth and prosperity on the soil in their possession; and dilates upon their relation to one another in Canaan and to the nations round about, even to the time of their final subjection to the peaceful sway of Him, from whom the sceptre of Judah shall never depart. The ultimate future of the patriarchal blessing, therefore, extends to the ultimate fulfilment of the divine promises-that is to say, to the completion of the kingdom of God.
The enlightened seer's-eye of the patriarch surveyed, “as though upon a canvas painted without perspective,” the entire development of Israel from its first foundation as the nation and kingdom of God till its completion under the rule of the Prince of Peace, whom the nations would serve in willing obedience; and beheld the twelve tribes spreading themselves out, each in his inheritance, successfully resisting their enemies, and finding rest and full satisfaction in the enjoyment of the blessings of Canaan. It is in this vision of the future condition of his sons as grown into tribes that the prophetic character of the blessing consists; not in the prediction of particular historical events, all of which, on the contrary, with the exception of the prophecy of Shiloh, fall into the background behind the purely ideal portraiture of the peculiarities of the different tribes.
The blessing gives, in short sayings full of bold and thoroughly original pictures, only general outlines of a prophetic character, which are to receive their definite concrete form from the historical development of the tribes in the future; and throughout it possesses both in form and substance a certain antique stamp, in which its genuineness is unmistakeably apparent. Every attack upon its genuineness has really proceeded from an a priori denial of all supernatural prophecies, and has been sustained by such misinterpretations as the introduction of special historical allusions, for the purpose of stamping it as a vaticinia ex eventu , and by other untenable assertions and assumptions; such, for example, as that people do not make poetry at so advanced an age or in the immediate prospect of death, or that the transmission of such an oration word for word down to the time of Moses is utterly inconceivable-objections the emptiness of which has been demonstrated in Hengstenberg’s Christology i.
p. 76 (transl.) by copious citations from the history of the early Arabic poetry.
Gen 49:3-4 Reuben, my first-born thou, my might and first-fruit of my strength; pre-eminence in dignity and pre-eminence in power . - As the first-born, the first sprout of the full virile power of Jacob, Reuben, according to natural right, was entitled to the first rank among his brethren, the leadership of the tribes, and a double share of the inheritance (Gen 27:29; Deu 21:17).
(שׂאת: elevation, the dignity of the chieftainship; עז, the earlier mode of pronouncing עז, the authority of the first-born.) But Reuben had forfeited this prerogative. “ Effervescence like water - thou shalt have no preference; for thou didst ascend thy father’s marriage-bed: then hast thou desecrated; my couch has he ascended . ” פּחז: lit. , the boiling over of water, figuratively, the excitement of lust; hence the verb is used in Jdg 9:4; Zep 3:4, for frivolity and insolent pride.
With this predicate Jacob describes the moral character of Reuben; and the noun is stronger than the verb פחזת of the Samaritan, and אתרעת or ארתעת efferbuisti , aestuasti of the Sam. Vers. , ἐξύβρισας of the lxx, and ὑπερζέσας of Symm . תּותר is to be explained by יתר: have no pre-eminence. His crime was, lying with Bilhah, his father’s concubine (Gen 35:22).
חלּלתּ is used absolutely: desecrated hast thou, sc. , what should have been sacred to thee (cf. Lev 18:8). From this wickedness the injured father turns away with indignation, and passes to the third person as he repeats the words, “my couch he has ascended. ” By the withdrawal of the rank belonging to the first-born, Reuben lost the leadership in Israel; so that his tribe attained to no position of influence in the nation (compare the blessing of Moses in Deu 33:6).
The leadership was transferred to Judah, the double portion to Joseph (1Ch 5:1-2), by which, so far as the inheritance was concerned, the first-born of the beloved Rachel took the place of the first-born of the slighted Leah; not, however, according to the subjective will of the father, which is condemned in Deu 21:15. , but according to the leading of God, by which Joseph had been raised above his brethren, but without the chieftainship being accorded to him.
Gen 49:3-4 Reuben, my first-born thou, my might and first-fruit of my strength; pre-eminence in dignity and pre-eminence in power . - As the first-born, the first sprout of the full virile power of Jacob, Reuben, according to natural right, was entitled to the first rank among his brethren, the leadership of the tribes, and a double share of the inheritance (Gen 27:29; Deu 21:17).
(שׂאת: elevation, the dignity of the chieftainship; עז, the earlier mode of pronouncing עז, the authority of the first-born.) But Reuben had forfeited this prerogative. “ Effervescence like water - thou shalt have no preference; for thou didst ascend thy father’s marriage-bed: then hast thou desecrated; my couch has he ascended . ” פּחז: lit. , the boiling over of water, figuratively, the excitement of lust; hence the verb is used in Jdg 9:4; Zep 3:4, for frivolity and insolent pride.
With this predicate Jacob describes the moral character of Reuben; and the noun is stronger than the verb פחזת of the Samaritan, and אתרעת or ארתעת efferbuisti , aestuasti of the Sam. Vers. , ἐξύβρισας of the lxx, and ὑπερζέσας of Symm . תּותר is to be explained by יתר: have no pre-eminence. His crime was, lying with Bilhah, his father’s concubine (Gen 35:22).
חלּלתּ is used absolutely: desecrated hast thou, sc. , what should have been sacred to thee (cf. Lev 18:8). From this wickedness the injured father turns away with indignation, and passes to the third person as he repeats the words, “my couch he has ascended. ” By the withdrawal of the rank belonging to the first-born, Reuben lost the leadership in Israel; so that his tribe attained to no position of influence in the nation (compare the blessing of Moses in Deu 33:6).
The leadership was transferred to Judah, the double portion to Joseph (1Ch 5:1-2), by which, so far as the inheritance was concerned, the first-born of the beloved Rachel took the place of the first-born of the slighted Leah; not, however, according to the subjective will of the father, which is condemned in Deu 21:15. , but according to the leading of God, by which Joseph had been raised above his brethren, but without the chieftainship being accorded to him.
Gen 49:5-7 “Simeon and Levi are brethren: ” emphatically brethren in the full sense of the word; not merely as having the same parents, but in their modes of thought and action. “ Weapons of wickedness are their swords . ” The ἅπαξ lec. מכרת is rendered by Luther , etc. , weapons or swords, from כּוּר = כּרה, to dig, dig through, pierce: not connected with μάχαιρα.
L. de Dieu and others follow the Arabic and Aethiopic versions: “plans;” but חמס כּלי, utensils , or instruments, of wickedness, does not accord with this. Such wickedness had the two brothers committed upon the inhabitants of Shechem (Gen 34:25.) , that Jacob would have no fellowship with it. “ Into their counsel come not, my soul; with their assembly let not my honour unite .
” סוד, a council, or deliberative consensus . תּחד, imperf . of יחד; כּבודי, like Psa 7:6; Psa 16:9, etc. , of the soul as the noblest part of man, the centre of his personality as the image of God. “ For in their wrath have they slain men, and in their wantonness houghed oxen . ” The singular nouns אישׁ and שׁור, in the sense of indefinite generality, are to be regarded as general rather than singular, especially as the plural form of both is rarely met with; of אישׁ, only in Psa 141:4; Pro 8:4, and Isa 53:3; of שׁור־שׁור, only in Hos 12:12.
רצון: inclination, here in a bad sense, wantonness. עקּר: νευροκοπεῖν, to sever the houghs (tendons of the hind feet), - a process by which animals were not merely lamed, but rendered useless, since the tendon once severed could never be healed again, whilst as a rule the arteries were not cut so as to cause the animal to bleed to death (cf. Jos 11:6, Jos 11:9; 2Sa 8:4).
In Gen 34:28 it is merely stated that the cattle of the Shechemites were carried off, not that they were lamed. But the one is so far from excluding the other, that it rather includes it in such a case as this, where the sons of Jacob were more concerned about revenge than booty. Jacob mentions the latter only, because it was this which most strikingly displayed their criminal wantonness.
On this reckless revenge Jacob pronounces the curse, “ Cursed be their anger, for it was fierce; and their wrath, for it was cruel: I shall divide them in Jacob, and scatter them in Israel . ” They had joined together to commit this crime, and as a punishment they should be divided or scattered in the nation of Israel, should form no independent or compact tribes.
This sentence of the patriarch was so fulfilled when Canaan was conquered, that on the second numbering under Moses, Simeon had become the weakest of all the tribes (Num 26:14); in Moses’ blessing (Deut 33) it was entirely passed over; and it received no separate assignment of territory as an inheritance, but merely a number of cities within the limits of Judah (Jos 19:1-9). Its possessions, therefore, became an insignificant appendage to those of Judah, into which they were eventually absorbed, as most of the families of Simeon increased but little (1Ch 4:27); and those which increased the most emigrated in two detachments, and sought out settlements for themselves and pasture for their cattle outside the limits of the promised land (1Ch 4:38-43).
Levi also received no separate inheritance in the land, but merely a number of cities to dwell in, scattered throughout the possessions of his brethren (Josh 21:1-40). But the scattering of Levi in Israel was changed into a blessing for the other tribes through its election to the priesthood. Of this transformation of the curse into a blessing, there is not the slightest intimation in Jacob’s address; and in this we have a strong proof of its genuineness.
After this honourable change had taken place under Moses, it would never have occurred to any one to cast such a reproach upon the forefather of the Levites. How different is the blessing pronounced by Moses upon Levi (Deu 33:8.) But though Jacob withdrew the rights of primogeniture from Reuben, and pronounced a curse upon the crime of Simeon and Levi, he deprived none of them of their share in the promised inheritance.
They were merely put into the background because of their sins, but they were not excluded from the fellowship and call of Israel, and did not lose the blessing of Abraham, so that their father’s utterances with regard to them might still be regarded as the bestowal of a blessing (Gen 49:28).
Gen 49:5-7 “Simeon and Levi are brethren: ” emphatically brethren in the full sense of the word; not merely as having the same parents, but in their modes of thought and action. “ Weapons of wickedness are their swords . ” The ἅπαξ lec. מכרת is rendered by Luther , etc. , weapons or swords, from כּוּר = כּרה, to dig, dig through, pierce: not connected with μάχαιρα.
L. de Dieu and others follow the Arabic and Aethiopic versions: “plans;” but חמס כּלי, utensils , or instruments, of wickedness, does not accord with this. Such wickedness had the two brothers committed upon the inhabitants of Shechem (Gen 34:25.) , that Jacob would have no fellowship with it. “ Into their counsel come not, my soul; with their assembly let not my honour unite .
” סוד, a council, or deliberative consensus . תּחד, imperf . of יחד; כּבודי, like Psa 7:6; Psa 16:9, etc. , of the soul as the noblest part of man, the centre of his personality as the image of God. “ For in their wrath have they slain men, and in their wantonness houghed oxen . ” The singular nouns אישׁ and שׁור, in the sense of indefinite generality, are to be regarded as general rather than singular, especially as the plural form of both is rarely met with; of אישׁ, only in Psa 141:4; Pro 8:4, and Isa 53:3; of שׁור־שׁור, only in Hos 12:12.
רצון: inclination, here in a bad sense, wantonness. עקּר: νευροκοπεῖν, to sever the houghs (tendons of the hind feet), - a process by which animals were not merely lamed, but rendered useless, since the tendon once severed could never be healed again, whilst as a rule the arteries were not cut so as to cause the animal to bleed to death (cf. Jos 11:6, Jos 11:9; 2Sa 8:4).
In Gen 34:28 it is merely stated that the cattle of the Shechemites were carried off, not that they were lamed. But the one is so far from excluding the other, that it rather includes it in such a case as this, where the sons of Jacob were more concerned about revenge than booty. Jacob mentions the latter only, because it was this which most strikingly displayed their criminal wantonness.
On this reckless revenge Jacob pronounces the curse, “ Cursed be their anger, for it was fierce; and their wrath, for it was cruel: I shall divide them in Jacob, and scatter them in Israel . ” They had joined together to commit this crime, and as a punishment they should be divided or scattered in the nation of Israel, should form no independent or compact tribes.
This sentence of the patriarch was so fulfilled when Canaan was conquered, that on the second numbering under Moses, Simeon had become the weakest of all the tribes (Num 26:14); in Moses’ blessing (Deut 33) it was entirely passed over; and it received no separate assignment of territory as an inheritance, but merely a number of cities within the limits of Judah (Jos 19:1-9). Its possessions, therefore, became an insignificant appendage to those of Judah, into which they were eventually absorbed, as most of the families of Simeon increased but little (1Ch 4:27); and those which increased the most emigrated in two detachments, and sought out settlements for themselves and pasture for their cattle outside the limits of the promised land (1Ch 4:38-43).
Levi also received no separate inheritance in the land, but merely a number of cities to dwell in, scattered throughout the possessions of his brethren (Josh 21:1-40). But the scattering of Levi in Israel was changed into a blessing for the other tribes through its election to the priesthood. Of this transformation of the curse into a blessing, there is not the slightest intimation in Jacob’s address; and in this we have a strong proof of its genuineness.
After this honourable change had taken place under Moses, it would never have occurred to any one to cast such a reproach upon the forefather of the Levites. How different is the blessing pronounced by Moses upon Levi (Deu 33:8.) But though Jacob withdrew the rights of primogeniture from Reuben, and pronounced a curse upon the crime of Simeon and Levi, he deprived none of them of their share in the promised inheritance.
They were merely put into the background because of their sins, but they were not excluded from the fellowship and call of Israel, and did not lose the blessing of Abraham, so that their father’s utterances with regard to them might still be regarded as the bestowal of a blessing (Gen 49:28).
Gen 49:5-7 “Simeon and Levi are brethren: ” emphatically brethren in the full sense of the word; not merely as having the same parents, but in their modes of thought and action. “ Weapons of wickedness are their swords . ” The ἅπαξ lec. מכרת is rendered by Luther , etc. , weapons or swords, from כּוּר = כּרה, to dig, dig through, pierce: not connected with μάχαιρα.
L. de Dieu and others follow the Arabic and Aethiopic versions: “plans;” but חמס כּלי, utensils , or instruments, of wickedness, does not accord with this. Such wickedness had the two brothers committed upon the inhabitants of Shechem (Gen 34:25.) , that Jacob would have no fellowship with it. “ Into their counsel come not, my soul; with their assembly let not my honour unite .
” סוד, a council, or deliberative consensus . תּחד, imperf . of יחד; כּבודי, like Psa 7:6; Psa 16:9, etc. , of the soul as the noblest part of man, the centre of his personality as the image of God. “ For in their wrath have they slain men, and in their wantonness houghed oxen . ” The singular nouns אישׁ and שׁור, in the sense of indefinite generality, are to be regarded as general rather than singular, especially as the plural form of both is rarely met with; of אישׁ, only in Psa 141:4; Pro 8:4, and Isa 53:3; of שׁור־שׁור, only in Hos 12:12.
רצון: inclination, here in a bad sense, wantonness. עקּר: νευροκοπεῖν, to sever the houghs (tendons of the hind feet), - a process by which animals were not merely lamed, but rendered useless, since the tendon once severed could never be healed again, whilst as a rule the arteries were not cut so as to cause the animal to bleed to death (cf. Jos 11:6, Jos 11:9; 2Sa 8:4).
In Gen 34:28 it is merely stated that the cattle of the Shechemites were carried off, not that they were lamed. But the one is so far from excluding the other, that it rather includes it in such a case as this, where the sons of Jacob were more concerned about revenge than booty. Jacob mentions the latter only, because it was this which most strikingly displayed their criminal wantonness.
On this reckless revenge Jacob pronounces the curse, “ Cursed be their anger, for it was fierce; and their wrath, for it was cruel: I shall divide them in Jacob, and scatter them in Israel . ” They had joined together to commit this crime, and as a punishment they should be divided or scattered in the nation of Israel, should form no independent or compact tribes.
This sentence of the patriarch was so fulfilled when Canaan was conquered, that on the second numbering under Moses, Simeon had become the weakest of all the tribes (Num 26:14); in Moses’ blessing (Deut 33) it was entirely passed over; and it received no separate assignment of territory as an inheritance, but merely a number of cities within the limits of Judah (Jos 19:1-9). Its possessions, therefore, became an insignificant appendage to those of Judah, into which they were eventually absorbed, as most of the families of Simeon increased but little (1Ch 4:27); and those which increased the most emigrated in two detachments, and sought out settlements for themselves and pasture for their cattle outside the limits of the promised land (1Ch 4:38-43).
Levi also received no separate inheritance in the land, but merely a number of cities to dwell in, scattered throughout the possessions of his brethren (Josh 21:1-40). But the scattering of Levi in Israel was changed into a blessing for the other tribes through its election to the priesthood. Of this transformation of the curse into a blessing, there is not the slightest intimation in Jacob’s address; and in this we have a strong proof of its genuineness.
After this honourable change had taken place under Moses, it would never have occurred to any one to cast such a reproach upon the forefather of the Levites. How different is the blessing pronounced by Moses upon Levi (Deu 33:8.) But though Jacob withdrew the rights of primogeniture from Reuben, and pronounced a curse upon the crime of Simeon and Levi, he deprived none of them of their share in the promised inheritance.
They were merely put into the background because of their sins, but they were not excluded from the fellowship and call of Israel, and did not lose the blessing of Abraham, so that their father’s utterances with regard to them might still be regarded as the bestowal of a blessing (Gen 49:28).
Gen 49:8-12 Judah, the fourth son, was the first to receive a rich and unmixed blessing, the blessing of inalienable supremacy and power. “ Judah thou, thee will thy brethren praise! thy hand in the neck of thy foes! to thee will thy father’s sons bow down! ” אתּה, thou, is placed first as an absolute noun, like אני in Gen 17:4; Gen 24:27; יודוּך is a play upon יהוּדה like אודה in Gen 29:35.
Judah, according to Gen 29:35, signifies: he for whom Jehovah is praised, not merely the praised one. “This nomen , the patriarch seized as an omen , and expounded it as a presage of the future history of Judah. ” Judah should be in truth all that his name implied (cf. Gen 27:36). Judah had already shown to a certain extent a strong and noble character, when he proposed to sell Joseph rather than shed his blood (Gen 37:26.)
; but still more in the manner in which he offered himself to his father as a pledge for Benjamin, and pleaded with Joseph on his behalf (Gen 43:9-10; Gen 44:16.) ; and it was apparent even in his conduct towards Thamar. In this manliness and strength there slumbered the germs of the future development of strength in his tribe. Judah would put his enemies to flight, grasp them by the neck, and subdue them (Job 16:12, cf.
Exo 23:27; Psa 18:41). Therefore his brethren would do homage to him: not merely the sons of his mother, who are mentioned in other places (Gen 27:29; Jdg 8:19), i. e. , the tribes descended from Leah, but the sons of his father-all the tribes of Israel therefore; and this was really the case under David (2Sa 5:1-2, cf. 1Sa 18:6-7, and 1Sa 18:16). This princely power Judah acquired through his lion-like nature.
Gen 49:8-12 Judah, the fourth son, was the first to receive a rich and unmixed blessing, the blessing of inalienable supremacy and power. “ Judah thou, thee will thy brethren praise! thy hand in the neck of thy foes! to thee will thy father’s sons bow down! ” אתּה, thou, is placed first as an absolute noun, like אני in Gen 17:4; Gen 24:27; יודוּך is a play upon יהוּדה like אודה in Gen 29:35.
Judah, according to Gen 29:35, signifies: he for whom Jehovah is praised, not merely the praised one. “This nomen , the patriarch seized as an omen , and expounded it as a presage of the future history of Judah. ” Judah should be in truth all that his name implied (cf. Gen 27:36). Judah had already shown to a certain extent a strong and noble character, when he proposed to sell Joseph rather than shed his blood (Gen 37:26.)
; but still more in the manner in which he offered himself to his father as a pledge for Benjamin, and pleaded with Joseph on his behalf (Gen 43:9-10; Gen 44:16.) ; and it was apparent even in his conduct towards Thamar. In this manliness and strength there slumbered the germs of the future development of strength in his tribe. Judah would put his enemies to flight, grasp them by the neck, and subdue them (Job 16:12, cf.
Exo 23:27; Psa 18:41). Therefore his brethren would do homage to him: not merely the sons of his mother, who are mentioned in other places (Gen 27:29; Jdg 8:19), i. e. , the tribes descended from Leah, but the sons of his father-all the tribes of Israel therefore; and this was really the case under David (2Sa 5:1-2, cf. 1Sa 18:6-7, and 1Sa 18:16). This princely power Judah acquired through his lion-like nature.
Gen 49:8-12 Judah, the fourth son, was the first to receive a rich and unmixed blessing, the blessing of inalienable supremacy and power. “ Judah thou, thee will thy brethren praise! thy hand in the neck of thy foes! to thee will thy father’s sons bow down! ” אתּה, thou, is placed first as an absolute noun, like אני in Gen 17:4; Gen 24:27; יודוּך is a play upon יהוּדה like אודה in Gen 29:35.
Judah, according to Gen 29:35, signifies: he for whom Jehovah is praised, not merely the praised one. “This nomen , the patriarch seized as an omen , and expounded it as a presage of the future history of Judah. ” Judah should be in truth all that his name implied (cf. Gen 27:36). Judah had already shown to a certain extent a strong and noble character, when he proposed to sell Joseph rather than shed his blood (Gen 37:26.)
; but still more in the manner in which he offered himself to his father as a pledge for Benjamin, and pleaded with Joseph on his behalf (Gen 43:9-10; Gen 44:16.) ; and it was apparent even in his conduct towards Thamar. In this manliness and strength there slumbered the germs of the future development of strength in his tribe. Judah would put his enemies to flight, grasp them by the neck, and subdue them (Job 16:12, cf.
Exo 23:27; Psa 18:41). Therefore his brethren would do homage to him: not merely the sons of his mother, who are mentioned in other places (Gen 27:29; Jdg 8:19), i. e. , the tribes descended from Leah, but the sons of his father-all the tribes of Israel therefore; and this was really the case under David (2Sa 5:1-2, cf. 1Sa 18:6-7, and 1Sa 18:16). This princely power Judah acquired through his lion-like nature.
Gen 49:8-12 Judah, the fourth son, was the first to receive a rich and unmixed blessing, the blessing of inalienable supremacy and power. “ Judah thou, thee will thy brethren praise! thy hand in the neck of thy foes! to thee will thy father’s sons bow down! ” אתּה, thou, is placed first as an absolute noun, like אני in Gen 17:4; Gen 24:27; יודוּך is a play upon יהוּדה like אודה in Gen 29:35.
Judah, according to Gen 29:35, signifies: he for whom Jehovah is praised, not merely the praised one. “This nomen , the patriarch seized as an omen , and expounded it as a presage of the future history of Judah. ” Judah should be in truth all that his name implied (cf. Gen 27:36). Judah had already shown to a certain extent a strong and noble character, when he proposed to sell Joseph rather than shed his blood (Gen 37:26.)
; but still more in the manner in which he offered himself to his father as a pledge for Benjamin, and pleaded with Joseph on his behalf (Gen 43:9-10; Gen 44:16.) ; and it was apparent even in his conduct towards Thamar. In this manliness and strength there slumbered the germs of the future development of strength in his tribe. Judah would put his enemies to flight, grasp them by the neck, and subdue them (Job 16:12, cf.
Exo 23:27; Psa 18:41). Therefore his brethren would do homage to him: not merely the sons of his mother, who are mentioned in other places (Gen 27:29; Jdg 8:19), i. e. , the tribes descended from Leah, but the sons of his father-all the tribes of Israel therefore; and this was really the case under David (2Sa 5:1-2, cf. 1Sa 18:6-7, and 1Sa 18:16). This princely power Judah acquired through his lion-like nature.
Gen 49:8-12 Judah, the fourth son, was the first to receive a rich and unmixed blessing, the blessing of inalienable supremacy and power. “ Judah thou, thee will thy brethren praise! thy hand in the neck of thy foes! to thee will thy father’s sons bow down! ” אתּה, thou, is placed first as an absolute noun, like אני in Gen 17:4; Gen 24:27; יודוּך is a play upon יהוּדה like אודה in Gen 29:35.
Judah, according to Gen 29:35, signifies: he for whom Jehovah is praised, not merely the praised one. “This nomen , the patriarch seized as an omen , and expounded it as a presage of the future history of Judah. ” Judah should be in truth all that his name implied (cf. Gen 27:36). Judah had already shown to a certain extent a strong and noble character, when he proposed to sell Joseph rather than shed his blood (Gen 37:26.)
; but still more in the manner in which he offered himself to his father as a pledge for Benjamin, and pleaded with Joseph on his behalf (Gen 43:9-10; Gen 44:16.) ; and it was apparent even in his conduct towards Thamar. In this manliness and strength there slumbered the germs of the future development of strength in his tribe. Judah would put his enemies to flight, grasp them by the neck, and subdue them (Job 16:12, cf.
Exo 23:27; Psa 18:41). Therefore his brethren would do homage to him: not merely the sons of his mother, who are mentioned in other places (Gen 27:29; Jdg 8:19), i. e. , the tribes descended from Leah, but the sons of his father-all the tribes of Israel therefore; and this was really the case under David (2Sa 5:1-2, cf. 1Sa 18:6-7, and 1Sa 18:16). This princely power Judah acquired through his lion-like nature.
Gen 49:13 Zebulun, to the shore of the ocean will he dwell, and indeed (והוּא isque ) towards the coast of ships, and his side towards Zidon (directed up to Zidon). ” This blessing on Leah’s sixth son interprets the name Zebulun (i. e. , dwelling) as an omen , not so much to show the tribe its dwelling-place in Canaan, as to point out the blessing which it would receive from the situation of its inheritance (compare Deu 33:19).
So far as the territory allotted to the tribe of Zebulun under Joshua can be ascertained from the boundaries and towns mentioned in Jos 19:10-16, it neither reached to the Mediterranean, nor touched directly upon Zidon (see my Comm. on Joshua). It really lay between the Sea of Galilee and the Mediterranean, near to both, but separated from the former by Naphtali, from the latter by Asher.
So far was this announcement, therefore, from being a vaticinium ex eventu taken from the geographical position of the tribe, that it contains a decided testimony to the fact that Jacob’s blessing was not written after the time of Joshua. ימּים denotes, not the two seas mentioned above, but, as Jdg 5:17 proves, the Mediterranean, as a great ocean (Gen 1:10).
“The coast of ships:” i. e. , where ships are unloaded, and land the treasures of the distant parts of the world for the inhabitants of the maritime and inland provinces (Deu 33:19). Zidon , as the old capital, stands for Phoenicia itself.
Gen 49:14-15 “Issachar is a bony ass, lying between the hurdles. He saw that rest was a good (טוב subst.) , and the land that it was pleasant; and bowed his shoulder to bear, and became a servant unto tribute . ” The foundation of this award also lies in the name שׂכר ישּׂא, which is probably interpreted with reference to the character of Issachar, and with an allusion to the relation between שׂכר and שׂכיר, a daily labourer, as an indication of the character and fate of his tribe.
“Ease at the cost of liberty will be the characteristic of the tribe of Issachar” ( Delitzsch ). The simile of a bony, i. e. , strongly-built ass, particularly adapted for carrying burdens, pointed to the fact that this tribe would content itself with material good, devote itself to the labour and burden of agriculture, and not strive after political power and rule.
The figure also indicated “that Issachar would become a robust, powerful race of men, and receive a pleasant inheritance which would invite to comfortable repose. ” (According to Jos. de bell. jud. iii. 3, 2, Lower Galilee, with the fruitful table land of Jezreel, was attractive even to τὸν ἥκιστα γῆς φιλόπονον). Hence, even if the simile of a bony ass contained nothing contemptible, it did not contribute to Issachar’s glory.
Like an idle beast of burden, he would rather submit to the yoke and be forced to do the work of a slave, than risk his possessions and his peace in the struggle for liberty. To bend the shoulder to the yoke, to come down to carrying burdens and become a mere serf, was unworthy of Israel, the nation of God that was called to rule, however it might befit its foes, especially the Canaanites upon whom the curse of slavery rested (Deu 20:11; Jos 16:10; 1Ki 9:20-21; Isa 10:27).
This was probably also the reason why Issachar was noticed last among the sons of Leah. In the time of the Judges, however, Issachar acquired renown for heroic bravery in connection with Zebulun (Jdg 5:14-15, Jdg 5:18). The sons of Leah are followed by the four sons of the two maids, arranged, not according to their mothers or their ages, but according to the blessing pronounced upon them, so that the two warlike tribes stand first.
Gen 49:14-15 “Issachar is a bony ass, lying between the hurdles. He saw that rest was a good (טוב subst.) , and the land that it was pleasant; and bowed his shoulder to bear, and became a servant unto tribute . ” The foundation of this award also lies in the name שׂכר ישּׂא, which is probably interpreted with reference to the character of Issachar, and with an allusion to the relation between שׂכר and שׂכיר, a daily labourer, as an indication of the character and fate of his tribe.
“Ease at the cost of liberty will be the characteristic of the tribe of Issachar” ( Delitzsch ). The simile of a bony, i. e. , strongly-built ass, particularly adapted for carrying burdens, pointed to the fact that this tribe would content itself with material good, devote itself to the labour and burden of agriculture, and not strive after political power and rule.
The figure also indicated “that Issachar would become a robust, powerful race of men, and receive a pleasant inheritance which would invite to comfortable repose. ” (According to Jos. de bell. jud. iii. 3, 2, Lower Galilee, with the fruitful table land of Jezreel, was attractive even to τὸν ἥκιστα γῆς φιλόπονον). Hence, even if the simile of a bony ass contained nothing contemptible, it did not contribute to Issachar’s glory.
Like an idle beast of burden, he would rather submit to the yoke and be forced to do the work of a slave, than risk his possessions and his peace in the struggle for liberty. To bend the shoulder to the yoke, to come down to carrying burdens and become a mere serf, was unworthy of Israel, the nation of God that was called to rule, however it might befit its foes, especially the Canaanites upon whom the curse of slavery rested (Deu 20:11; Jos 16:10; 1Ki 9:20-21; Isa 10:27).
This was probably also the reason why Issachar was noticed last among the sons of Leah. In the time of the Judges, however, Issachar acquired renown for heroic bravery in connection with Zebulun (Jdg 5:14-15, Jdg 5:18). The sons of Leah are followed by the four sons of the two maids, arranged, not according to their mothers or their ages, but according to the blessing pronounced upon them, so that the two warlike tribes stand first.
Gen 49:16-17 “ Dan will procure his people justice as one of the tribes of Israel. Let Dan become a serpent by the way, a horned adder in the path, that biteth the horse’s heels, so that its rider falls back . ” Although only the son of a maid-servant, Dan would not be behind the other tribes of Israel, but act according to his name (ידין דּן), and as much as any other of the tribes procure justice to his people (i.
e. , to the people of Israel; not to his own tribe, as Diestel supposes). There is no allusion in these words to the office of judge which was held by Samson; they merely describe the character of the tribe, although this character came out in the expedition of a portion of the Danites to Laish in the north of Canaan, a description of which is given in Judg 18, as well as in the “romantic chivalry of the brave, gigantic Samson, when the cunning of the serpent he overthrew the mightiest foes” ( Del .)
שׁפיפן: κεράστης, the very poisonous horned serpent, which is of the colour of the sand, and as it lies upon the ground, merely stretching out its feelers, inflicts a fatal wound upon any who may tread upon it unawares ( Diod. Sic. 3, 49; Pliny. 8, 23).
Gen 49:16-17 “ Dan will procure his people justice as one of the tribes of Israel. Let Dan become a serpent by the way, a horned adder in the path, that biteth the horse’s heels, so that its rider falls back . ” Although only the son of a maid-servant, Dan would not be behind the other tribes of Israel, but act according to his name (ידין דּן), and as much as any other of the tribes procure justice to his people (i.
e. , to the people of Israel; not to his own tribe, as Diestel supposes). There is no allusion in these words to the office of judge which was held by Samson; they merely describe the character of the tribe, although this character came out in the expedition of a portion of the Danites to Laish in the north of Canaan, a description of which is given in Judg 18, as well as in the “romantic chivalry of the brave, gigantic Samson, when the cunning of the serpent he overthrew the mightiest foes” ( Del .)
שׁפיפן: κεράστης, the very poisonous horned serpent, which is of the colour of the sand, and as it lies upon the ground, merely stretching out its feelers, inflicts a fatal wound upon any who may tread upon it unawares ( Diod. Sic. 3, 49; Pliny. 8, 23).
Gen 49:18 But this manifestation of strength, which Jacob expected from Dan and promised prophetically, presupposed that severe conflicts awaited the Israelites. For these conflicts Jacob furnished his sons with both shield and sword in the ejaculatory prayer, “ I wait for Thy salvation, O Jehovah! ” which was not a prayer for his own soul and its speedy redemption from all evil, but in which, as Calvin has strikingly shown, he expressed his confidence that his descendants would receive the help of his God.
Accordingly, the later Targums ( Jerusalem and Jonathan ) interpret these words as Messianic, but with a special reference to Samson, and paraphrase Gen 49:18 thus: “Not for the deliverance of Gideon, the son of Joash, does my soul wait, for that is temporary; and not for the redemption of Samson, for that is transitory; and not for the redemption of Samson, for that is transitory; but for the redemption of the Messiah, the Son of David, which Thou through Thy word hast promised to bring to Thy people the children of Israel: for this Thy redemption my soul waits. ”
Gen 49:19 “Gad - a press presses him, but he presses the heel . ” The name Gad reminds the patriarch of גּוּד to press, and גּדוּד the pressing host, warlike host, which invades the land. The attacks of such hosts Gad will bravely withstand, and press their heel, i. e. , put them to flight and bravely pursue them, not smite their rear-guard; for עקב does not signify the rear-guard even in Jos 8:13, but only the reserves (see my commentary on the passage).
The blessing, which is formed from a triple alliteration of the name Gad , contains no such special allusions to historical events as to enable us to interpret it historically, although the account in 1Ch 5:18. proves that the Gadites displayed, wherever it was needed, the bravery promised them by Jacob. Compare with this 1Ch 12:8-15, where the Gadites who come to David are compared to lions, and their swiftness to that of roes.
Gen 49:20 “ Out of Asher (cometh) fat, his bread, and he yieldeth royal dainties .” לחמו is in apposition to שׁמנה, and the suffix is to be emphasized: the fat, which comes from him, is his bread, his own food. The saying indicates a very fruitful soil. Asher received as his inheritance the lowlands of Carmel on the Mediterranean as far as the territory of Tyre, one of the most fertile parts of Canaan, abounding in wheat and oil, with which Solomon supplied and household of king Hiram (1Ki 5:11).
Gen 49:21 “ Naphtali is a hind let loose, who giveth goodly words . ” The hind or gazelle is a simile of a warrior who is skilful and swift in his movements (2Sa 2:18; 1Ch 12:8, cf. Psa 18:33; Hab 3:19). שׁלהה here is neither hunted, nor stretched out or grown slim; but let loose, running freely about (Job 39:5). The meaning and allusion are obscure, since nothing further is known of the history of the tribe of Naphtali, than that Naphtali obtained a great victory under Barak in association with Zebulun over the Canaanitish king Jabin, which the prophetess Deborah commemorated in her celebrated song (Judg 4 and 5).
If the first half of the verse be understood as referring to the independent possession of a tract of land, upon which Naphtali moved like a hind in perfect freedom, the interpretation of Masius (on Josh 19) is certainly the correct one: “ Sicut cervus emissus et liber in herbosa et fertili terra exultim ludit, ita et in sua fertili sorte ludet et excultabit Nephtali . ” But the second half of the verse can hardly refer to “beautiful sayings and songs, in which the beauty and fertility of their home were displayed.
” It is far better to keep, as Vatablius does, to the general thought: tribus Naphtali erit fortissima, elegantissima et agillima et erit facundissima . Turning to Joseph, the patriarch’s heart swelled with grateful love, and in the richest words and figures he implored the greatest abundance of blessings upon his head.
Gen 49:22 “ Son of a fruit-tree is Joseph, son of a fruit-tree at the well, daughters run over the wall . ” Joseph is compared to the branch of a fruit-tree planted by a well (Psa 1:3), which sends it shoots over the wall, and by which, according to Ps 80, we are probably to understand a vine. בּן an unusual form of the construct state for בּן, and פּרת equivalent to פּריּה with the old feminine termination ath , like זמרת, Exo 15:2.
- בּנות are the twigs and branches, formed by the young fruit-tree. The singular צעדה is to be regarded as distributive, describing poetically the moving forward, i. e. , the rising up of the different branches above the wall ( Ges. §146, 4). עלי, a poetical form, as in Gen 49:17.
Gen 49:23-24 “ Archers provoke him, and shoot and hate him; but his bow abides in strength, and the arms of his hands remain pliant, from the hands of the Mighty One of Jacob, from thence, from the Shepherd, the Stone of Israel . ” From the simile of the fruit-tree Jacob passed to a warlike figure, and described the mighty and victorious unfolding of the tribe of Joseph in conflict with all its foes, describing with prophetic intuition the future as already come (vid.
, the perf. consec .) The words are not to be referred to the personal history of Joseph himself, to persecutions received by him from his brethren, or to his sufferings in Egypt; still less to any warlike deeds of his in Egypt ( Diestel ): they merely pointed to the conflicts awaiting his descendants, in which they would constantly overcome all hostile attacks.
מרר: Piel , to embitter, provoke, lacessere . רבּוּ: perf. o from רבב to shoot. בּאיתן: “in a strong, unyielding position” ( Del .) פּזז: to be active, flexible; only found here, and in 2Sa 6:16 of a brisk movement, skipping or jumping. זרעי: the arms, “without whose elasticity the hands could not hold or direct the arrow. ” The words which follow, “from the hands of the Mighty One of Jacob,” are not to be linked to what follows, in opposition to the Masoretic division of the verses; they rather form one sentence with what precedes: “pliant remain the arms of his hands from the hands of God,” i.
e. , through the hands of God supporting them. “The Mighty One of Jacob,” He who had proved Himself to be the Mighty One by the powerful defence afforded to Jacob; a title which is copied from this passage in Isa 1:24, etc. “From thence,” an emphatic reference to Him, from whom all perfection comes - “from the Shepherd (Gen 48:15) and Stone of Israel. ” God is called “the Stone,” and elsewhere “the Rock” (Deu 32:4, Deu 32:18, etc.)
, as the immoveable foundation upon which Israel might trust, might stand firm and impregnably secure.
Gen 49:23-24 “ Archers provoke him, and shoot and hate him; but his bow abides in strength, and the arms of his hands remain pliant, from the hands of the Mighty One of Jacob, from thence, from the Shepherd, the Stone of Israel . ” From the simile of the fruit-tree Jacob passed to a warlike figure, and described the mighty and victorious unfolding of the tribe of Joseph in conflict with all its foes, describing with prophetic intuition the future as already come (vid.
, the perf. consec .) The words are not to be referred to the personal history of Joseph himself, to persecutions received by him from his brethren, or to his sufferings in Egypt; still less to any warlike deeds of his in Egypt ( Diestel ): they merely pointed to the conflicts awaiting his descendants, in which they would constantly overcome all hostile attacks.
מרר: Piel , to embitter, provoke, lacessere . רבּוּ: perf. o from רבב to shoot. בּאיתן: “in a strong, unyielding position” ( Del .) פּזז: to be active, flexible; only found here, and in 2Sa 6:16 of a brisk movement, skipping or jumping. זרעי: the arms, “without whose elasticity the hands could not hold or direct the arrow. ” The words which follow, “from the hands of the Mighty One of Jacob,” are not to be linked to what follows, in opposition to the Masoretic division of the verses; they rather form one sentence with what precedes: “pliant remain the arms of his hands from the hands of God,” i.
e. , through the hands of God supporting them. “The Mighty One of Jacob,” He who had proved Himself to be the Mighty One by the powerful defence afforded to Jacob; a title which is copied from this passage in Isa 1:24, etc. “From thence,” an emphatic reference to Him, from whom all perfection comes - “from the Shepherd (Gen 48:15) and Stone of Israel. ” God is called “the Stone,” and elsewhere “the Rock” (Deu 32:4, Deu 32:18, etc.)
, as the immoveable foundation upon which Israel might trust, might stand firm and impregnably secure.
Gen 49:25-26 “ From the God of thy father, may He help thee, and with the help of the Almighty, may He bless thee, (may there come) blessings of heaven from above, blessings of the deep, that lieth beneath, blessings of the breast and of the womb. The blessing of thy father surpass the blessings of my progenitors to the border of the everlasting hills, may they come upon the head of Joseph, and upon the crown of the illustrious among his brethren .
” From the form of a description the blessing passes in Gen 49:25 into the form of a desire, in which the “from” of the previous clause is still retained. The words “and may He help thee,” “may He bless thee,” form parentheses, for “who will help and bless thee. ” ואת is neither to be altered into ואל (and from God), as Ewald suggests, in accordance with the lxx, Sam.
, Syr. , and Vulg. , nor into מאת as Knobel proposes; and even the supplying of מן before את from the parallel clause ( Ges. §154, 4) is scarcely allowable, since the repetition of מן before another preposition cannot be supported by any analogous case; but את may be understood here, as in Gen 4:1; Gen 5:24, in the sense of helpful communion: “and with,” i. e.
, with (in) the fellowship of, “the Almighty, may He bless thee, let there be (or come) blessings,” etc. The verb תּחיין follows in Gen 49:26 after the whole subject, which is formed of many parallel members. The blessings were to come from heaven above and from the earth beneath. From the God of Jacob and by the help of the Almighty should the rain and dew of heaven (Gen 27:28), and fountains and brooks which spring from the great deep or the abyss of the earth, pour their fertilizing waters over Joseph’s land, “so that everything that had womb and breast should become pregnant, bring forth, and suckle.
” הרים from הרה signifies parentes ( Chald. , Vulg. ); and תּאוה signifies not desiderium from אוה, but boundary from תּאה, Num 34:7-8, = תּוה, 1Sa 21:14; Eze 9:4, to mark or bound off, as most of the Rabbins explain it. על גּבר to be strong above, i. e. , to surpass. The blessings which the patriarch implored for Joseph were to surpass the blessings which his parents transmitted to him, to the boundary of the everlasting hills, i.
e. , surpass them as far as the primary mountains tower above the earth, or so that they should reach to the summits of the primeval mountains. There is no allusion to the lofty and magnificent mountain-ranges of Ephraim, Bashan, and Gilead, which fell to the house of Joseph, either here or in Deu 33:15. These blessings were to descend upon the head of Joseph, the נזיר among his brethren, i.
e. , “the separated one,” from נזר separavit . Joseph is so designated, both here and Deu 33:16, not on account of his virtue and the preservation of his chastity and piety in Egypt, but propter dignitatem, qua excellit, ab omnibus sit segregatus ( Calv .) , on account of the eminence to which he attained in Egypt. For this meaning see Lam 4:7; whereas no example can be found of the transference of the idea of Nasir to the sphere of morality.
Gen 49:25-26 “ From the God of thy father, may He help thee, and with the help of the Almighty, may He bless thee, (may there come) blessings of heaven from above, blessings of the deep, that lieth beneath, blessings of the breast and of the womb. The blessing of thy father surpass the blessings of my progenitors to the border of the everlasting hills, may they come upon the head of Joseph, and upon the crown of the illustrious among his brethren .
” From the form of a description the blessing passes in Gen 49:25 into the form of a desire, in which the “from” of the previous clause is still retained. The words “and may He help thee,” “may He bless thee,” form parentheses, for “who will help and bless thee. ” ואת is neither to be altered into ואל (and from God), as Ewald suggests, in accordance with the lxx, Sam.
, Syr. , and Vulg. , nor into מאת as Knobel proposes; and even the supplying of מן before את from the parallel clause ( Ges. §154, 4) is scarcely allowable, since the repetition of מן before another preposition cannot be supported by any analogous case; but את may be understood here, as in Gen 4:1; Gen 5:24, in the sense of helpful communion: “and with,” i. e.
, with (in) the fellowship of, “the Almighty, may He bless thee, let there be (or come) blessings,” etc. The verb תּחיין follows in Gen 49:26 after the whole subject, which is formed of many parallel members. The blessings were to come from heaven above and from the earth beneath. From the God of Jacob and by the help of the Almighty should the rain and dew of heaven (Gen 27:28), and fountains and brooks which spring from the great deep or the abyss of the earth, pour their fertilizing waters over Joseph’s land, “so that everything that had womb and breast should become pregnant, bring forth, and suckle.
” הרים from הרה signifies parentes ( Chald. , Vulg. ); and תּאוה signifies not desiderium from אוה, but boundary from תּאה, Num 34:7-8, = תּוה, 1Sa 21:14; Eze 9:4, to mark or bound off, as most of the Rabbins explain it. על גּבר to be strong above, i. e. , to surpass. The blessings which the patriarch implored for Joseph were to surpass the blessings which his parents transmitted to him, to the boundary of the everlasting hills, i.
e. , surpass them as far as the primary mountains tower above the earth, or so that they should reach to the summits of the primeval mountains. There is no allusion to the lofty and magnificent mountain-ranges of Ephraim, Bashan, and Gilead, which fell to the house of Joseph, either here or in Deu 33:15. These blessings were to descend upon the head of Joseph, the נזיר among his brethren, i.
e. , “the separated one,” from נזר separavit . Joseph is so designated, both here and Deu 33:16, not on account of his virtue and the preservation of his chastity and piety in Egypt, but propter dignitatem, qua excellit, ab omnibus sit segregatus ( Calv .) , on account of the eminence to which he attained in Egypt. For this meaning see Lam 4:7; whereas no example can be found of the transference of the idea of Nasir to the sphere of morality.
Gen 49:27 “Benjamin - a world, which tears in pieces; in the morning he devours prey, and in the evening he divides spoil . ” Morning and evening together suggest the idea of incessant and victorious capture of booty ( Del .) The warlike character which the patriarch here attributes to Benjamin, was manifested by that tribe, not only in the war which he waged with all the tribes on account of their wickedness in Gibeah (Judg 20), but on other occasions also (Jdg 5:14), in its distinguished archers and slingers (Jdg 20:16; 1Ch 8:40, 1Ch 8:12; 2Ch 14:8; 2Ch 17:17), and also in the fact that the judge Ehud (Jdg 3:15.)
, and Saul, with his heroic son Jonathan, sprang from this tribe (1Sa 11:1-15 and 13; 2Sa 1:19.)
Gen 49:28 The concluding words in Gen 49:28, “ All these are the tribes of Israel, twelve, ” contain the thought, that in his twelve sons Jacob blessed the future tribes. “ Every one with that which was his blessing, he blessed them, ” i.e., every one with his appropriate blessing (אשׁר accus . dependent upon בּרך which is construed with a double accusative); since, as has already been observed, even Reuben, Simeon, and Levi, though put down through their own fault, received a share in the promised blessing.
Gen 49:29-33 Death of Jacob. - After the blessing, Jacob again expressed to his twelve sons his desire to be buried in the sepulchre of his fathers (Gen 24), where Isaac and Rebekah and his own wife Leah lay by the side of Abraham and Sarah, which Joseph had already promised on oath to perform (Gen 47:29-31). He then drew his feet into the bed to lie down, for he had been sitting upright while blessing his sons, and yielded up the ghost, and was gathered to his people (vid.
, Gen 25:8). ויּגוע instead of ויּמת indicates that the patriarch departed from this earthly life without a struggle. His age is not given here, because that has already been done at Gen 47:28.
Gen 49:29-33 Death of Jacob. - After the blessing, Jacob again expressed to his twelve sons his desire to be buried in the sepulchre of his fathers (Gen 24), where Isaac and Rebekah and his own wife Leah lay by the side of Abraham and Sarah, which Joseph had already promised on oath to perform (Gen 47:29-31). He then drew his feet into the bed to lie down, for he had been sitting upright while blessing his sons, and yielded up the ghost, and was gathered to his people (vid.
, Gen 25:8). ויּגוע instead of ויּמת indicates that the patriarch departed from this earthly life without a struggle. His age is not given here, because that has already been done at Gen 47:28.
Gen 49:29-33 Death of Jacob. - After the blessing, Jacob again expressed to his twelve sons his desire to be buried in the sepulchre of his fathers (Gen 24), where Isaac and Rebekah and his own wife Leah lay by the side of Abraham and Sarah, which Joseph had already promised on oath to perform (Gen 47:29-31). He then drew his feet into the bed to lie down, for he had been sitting upright while blessing his sons, and yielded up the ghost, and was gathered to his people (vid.
, Gen 25:8). ויּגוע instead of ויּמת indicates that the patriarch departed from this earthly life without a struggle. His age is not given here, because that has already been done at Gen 47:28.
Gen 49:29-33 Death of Jacob. - After the blessing, Jacob again expressed to his twelve sons his desire to be buried in the sepulchre of his fathers (Gen 24), where Isaac and Rebekah and his own wife Leah lay by the side of Abraham and Sarah, which Joseph had already promised on oath to perform (Gen 47:29-31). He then drew his feet into the bed to lie down, for he had been sitting upright while blessing his sons, and yielded up the ghost, and was gathered to his people (vid.
, Gen 25:8). ויּגוע instead of ויּמת indicates that the patriarch departed from this earthly life without a struggle. His age is not given here, because that has already been done at Gen 47:28.