At the close of Genesis, Jacob is buried in the land of promise, Joseph interprets His brothers’ evil under God’s sovereign purpose for good, and the covenant family is left waiting in faith for God to visit and bring them up from Egypt.
Jacob Is Buried in the Land of Promise, Joseph Reassures His Brothers, and God’s Sovereign Good Stands over Human Evil
At the close of Genesis, Jacob is buried in the land of promise, Joseph interprets His brothers’ evil under God’s sovereign purpose for good, and the covenant family is left waiting in faith for God to visit and bring them up from Egypt.
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At the close of Genesis, Jacob is buried in the land of promise, Joseph interprets His brothers’ evil under God’s sovereign purpose for good, and the covenant family is left waiting in faith for God to visit and bring them up from Egypt.
Genesis 50 teaches that God’s covenant purposes outlast death, that human evil never escapes divine sovereignty, and that faith lives forward even when the promise is not yet fully possessed. The first half of the chapter centers on Jacob’s burial. Though Jacob died in Egypt, He is carried to Canaan and buried with the patriarchs. This act is theologically decisive because it declares that Egypt, though a place of preservation, was never the final home of the covenant line.
The burial at Machpelah anchors the family in Abrahamic promise and shows that death itself is interpreted through covenant hope. The second major movement of the chapter is the brothers’ renewed fear. Even after reconciliation, they remain uncertain whether Joseph’s mercy was sustained only for their father’s sake. Their fear reveals both lingering guilt and the deep wounds of their past sin.
Joseph’s response is one of the clearest statements of providence in all Scripture. He does not deny their evil. He names it as evil. Yet He also declares that God intended the same chain of events for good, namely, the preservation of many lives. This is not a weak claim that God merely reacted well afterward. It is a strong assertion that divine purpose governed the history without becoming morally identical with the brothers’ sin.
Joseph also refuses to place Himself in the place of God. Vengeance, final judgment, and absolute moral reckoning belong to God, not to Joseph. Instead, Joseph comforts, provides, and speaks kindly. The chapter’s final movement continues the theme of faith beyond present fulfillment. Joseph dies in Egypt, but like Jacob, He does not let Egypt define the future.
He speaks of God’s sure visitation and insists that His bones be carried up when that day comes. Genesis therefore ends not with settled possession, but with oath-bound expectation. Thus Genesis 50 argues that covenant faith buries its dead in hope, reads evil under God’s sovereign good, refuses vengeance, and waits for God’s future visitation even when the promise remains only partially realized in the present.
Genesis 50 closes the book of Genesis and serves as both an ending and a bridge. It follows Jacob’s deathbed prophecies in Genesis 49 and now records the burial of Jacob, the renewed fear of Joseph’s brothers after their father’s death, Joseph’s climactic theological interpretation of their evil, and Joseph’s own death in Egypt. Within the broader structure of Genesis, this chapter gathers together many of the book’s great themes: promise, land, seed, pilgrimage, providence, burial hope, family fracture, reconciliation, and future expectation.
Historically in the narrative, Jacob dies in Egypt but is carried to Canaan for burial, showing that even after the family’s fruitful settlement in Goshen, the promised land remains covenantally central. The chapter then reopens the tension between Joseph and His brothers, because with Jacob gone the brothers fear Joseph may now retaliate. That fear becomes the occasion for Joseph’s fullest and most famous statement on divine sovereignty over human evil.
The chapter ends with Joseph’s death, but not with closure in the ordinary sense. Joseph does not ask to be buried permanently in Egypt. Instead, He makes the sons of Israel swear to carry up His bones when God visits them. Thus Genesis ends not with the promise fully realized, but with the covenant family preserved, buried in hope, and waiting for God’s future visitation.
Genesis 50 is therefore a chapter of completion, reassurance, providence, and unfinished expectation.
Joseph falls on His father’s face, weeps over Him, kisses Him, and commands the physicians to embalm Israel. The Egyptians mourn for Jacob seventy days.
After the days of mourning, Joseph asks Pharaoh’s household for permission to go up and bury His father in the grave Jacob prepared in Canaan. Pharaoh grants the request.
Joseph goes up to bury His father with His brothers, Pharaoh’s servants, elders of His house, elders of the land of Egypt, and a great company with chariots and horsemen. They come to the threshing floor of Atad beyond the Jordan and hold a very great lament. The Canaanites name the place Abel Mizraim because of the mourning of the Egyptians. Jacob’s sons carry Him to the cave of Machpelah, the burial place Abraham bought. After burying Jacob, Joseph and all who had gone with Him return to Egypt.
After Jacob’s death, Joseph’s brothers fear that Joseph may repay them for all the evil they did to Him. They send a message claiming that Jacob had instructed Joseph to forgive them, and then they come and fall before Joseph, offering themselves as His servants. Joseph weeps when they speak. He tells them not to fear, asking whether He is in the place of God.
He declares that though they meant evil against Him, God meant it for good, to bring about the saving of many lives. He reassures them, promises to provide for them and their little ones, and speaks kindly to them.
Joseph remains in Egypt with His father’s house and lives 110 years, seeing Ephraim’s children to the third generation and also the children of Machir son of Manasseh. Joseph tells His brothers that He is dying, but God will surely visit them and bring them up out of Egypt to the land He swore to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Joseph makes the sons of Israel swear to carry up His bones. Joseph dies, is embalmed, and is placed in a coffin in Egypt.
- 50:1–3: Joseph falls on His father’s face, weeps over Him, kisses Him, and commands the physicians to embalm Israel. The Egyptians mourn for Jacob seventy days.
- 50:4–6: After the days of mourning, Joseph asks Pharaoh’s household for permission to go up and bury His father in the grave Jacob prepared in Canaan. Pharaoh grants the request.
- 50:7–14: Joseph goes up to bury His father with His brothers, Pharaoh’s servants, elders of His house, elders of the land of Egypt, and a great company with chariots and horsemen. They come to the threshing floor of Atad beyond the Jordan and hold a very great lament. The Canaanites name the place Abel Mizraim because of the mourning of the Egyptians. Jacob’s sons carry Him to the cave of Machpelah, the burial place Abraham bought. After burying Jacob, Joseph and all who had gone with Him return to Egypt.
- 50:15–21: After Jacob’s death, Joseph’s brothers fear that Joseph may repay them for all the evil they did to Him. They send a message claiming that Jacob had instructed Joseph to forgive them, and then they come and fall before Joseph, offering themselves as His servants. Joseph weeps when they speak. He tells them not to fear, asking whether He is in the place of God. He declares that though they meant evil against Him, God meant it for good, to bring about the saving of many lives. He reassures them, promises to provide for them and their little ones, and speaks kindly to them.
- 50:22–26: Joseph remains in Egypt with His father’s house and lives 110 years, seeing Ephraim’s children to the third generation and also the children of Machir son of Manasseh. Joseph tells His brothers that He is dying, but God will surely visit them and bring them up out of Egypt to the land He swore to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Joseph makes the sons of Israel swear to carry up His bones. Joseph dies, is embalmed, and is placed in a coffin in Egypt.
Theological Focus
- Providence
- Covenant Hope
- Burial in Faith
- Divine Sovereignty over Evil
- Forgiveness and Reassurance
- Future Visitation
- Promise beyond Death
- Pilgrim Hope
- Covenant Theology
- Divine Sovereignty and Human Evil
- Death in Faith
- Future Hope
- Biblical Theology
Covenant Significance
Genesis 50 is covenantally decisive because it closes the patriarchal age with both Jacob and Joseph oriented toward the promised land rather than toward permanent settlement in Egypt. Jacob is buried in Machpelah with the patriarchs, and Joseph binds the future sons of Israel by oath to carry up His bones when God visits them. These acts frame the covenant family’s identity around God’s sworn promises to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
The chapter also reinforces that the preservation of the family in Egypt was never an end in itself. Egypt is temporary. The covenant future still points toward the land God promised. Joseph’s statement that God will surely visit Israel and bring them up is especially important, because it links Genesis directly to Exodus and shows that the promise remains alive beyond Joseph’s death.
Canonical Connections
Genesis 50 is covenantally decisive because it closes the patriarchal age with both Jacob and Joseph oriented toward the promised land rather than toward permanent settlement in Egypt. Jacob is buried in Machpelah with the patriarchs, and Joseph binds the future sons of Israel by oath to carry up His bones when God visits them. These acts frame the covenant family’s identity around God’s sworn promises to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
The chapter also reinforces that the preservation of the family in Egypt was never an end in itself. Egypt is temporary. The covenant future still points toward the land God promised. Joseph’s statement that God will surely visit Israel and bring them up is especially important, because it links Genesis directly to Exodus and shows that the promise remains alive beyond Joseph’s death.
Genesis 23:17-20
Genesis 45:5-8
Genesis 49:29-33
Exodus 13:19
Joshua 24:32
Genesis 45:5-8
Genesis 49:29-33
Exodus 13:19
Hebrews 11:22
Cross References
Vengeance is mine, and recompense, at the time when their foot slides; for the day of their calamity is at hand. Their doom rushes at them.”
It is better to go to the house of mourning than to go to the house of feasting; for that is the end of all men, and the living should take this to heart.
Yahweh appeared to Abram and said, “I will give this land to your offspring.” He built an altar there to Yahweh, who had appeared to him.
Isaac and Ishmael, his sons, buried him in the cave of Machpelah, in the field of Ephron, the son of Zohar the Hittite, which is near Mamre,
Live in this land, and I will be with you, and will bless you. For I will give to you, and to your offspring, all these lands, and I will establish the oath which I swore to Abraham your father.
Behold, Yahweh stood above it, and said, “I am Yahweh, the God of Abraham your father, and the God of Isaac. I will give the land you lie on to you and to your offspring.
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.
Now don’t be grieved, nor angry with yourselves, that you sold me here, for God sent me before you to preserve life. For these two years the famine has been in the land, and there are yet five years, in which there will be no plowing and...
By faith, Joseph, when his end was near, made mention of the departure of the children of Israel, and gave instructions concerning his bones.
“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.
Don’t say, “I will pay back evil.” Wait for Yahweh, and he will save you.
Genesis 50 brings the gospel trajectory of Joseph’s story into sharp focus. The brothers’ evil remains evil, yet God meant the same history for good, for the saving of many lives. That pattern anticipates the gospel with unusual clarity. In the fullness of Scripture, the most evil act, the rejection and death of the righteous Son, becomes under God’s sovereign purpose the means of salvation for many.
Joseph is not Christ, but His final theological interpretation points powerfully toward the cross and resurrection logic of God’s redemptive plan. The chapter also ends with hope fixed on God’s future visitation, preparing the reader to expect that the God of promise will yet act decisively for His people.
Primary Emphasis
Genesis 50 contributes to Christology through Joseph’s mature interpretation of suffering, evil, and preservation. The rejected brother who became the life-preserver now explicitly declares that human evil was overruled by God for saving good. This strongly anticipates the later biblical pattern in which the gravest human evil becomes the means by which God accomplishes salvation.
Joseph also refuses vengeance and instead provides for those who sinned against Him, which further strengthens the typological pattern of the rejected and exalted deliverer. The chapter’s future-oriented hope, especially the language of God’s visitation, also feeds the larger biblical expectation that God Himself will act decisively to bring His people up and out.
Chapter Contribution
Genesis 50 teaches that God’s covenant purposes outlast death, that human evil never escapes divine sovereignty, and that faith lives forward even when the promise is not yet fully possessed. The first half of the chapter centers on Jacob’s burial. Though Jacob died in Egypt, He is carried to Canaan and buried with the patriarchs. This act is theologically decisive because it declares that Egypt, though a place of preservation, was never the final home of the covenant line.
The burial at Machpelah anchors the family in Abrahamic promise and shows that death itself is interpreted through covenant hope. The second major movement of the chapter is the brothers’ renewed fear. Even after reconciliation, they remain uncertain whether Joseph’s mercy was sustained only for their father’s sake. Their fear reveals both lingering guilt and the deep wounds of their past sin.
Joseph’s response is one of the clearest statements of providence in all Scripture. He does not deny their evil. He names it as evil. Yet He also declares that God intended the same chain of events for good, namely, the preservation of many lives. This is not a weak claim that God merely reacted well afterward. It is a strong assertion that divine purpose governed the history without becoming morally identical with the brothers’ sin.
Joseph also refuses to place Himself in the place of God. Vengeance, final judgment, and absolute moral reckoning belong to God, not to Joseph. Instead, Joseph comforts, provides, and speaks kindly. The chapter’s final movement continues the theme of faith beyond present fulfillment. Joseph dies in Egypt, but like Jacob, He does not let Egypt define the future.
He speaks of God’s sure visitation and insists that His bones be carried up when that day comes. Genesis therefore ends not with settled possession, but with oath-bound expectation. Thus Genesis 50 argues that covenant faith buries its dead in hope, reads evil under God’s sovereign good, refuses vengeance, and waits for God’s future visitation even when the promise remains only partially realized in the present.
Godly reconciliation includes tangible reassurance, provision, and peace-speaking words.
God’s promises remain central even in death and burial practices.
God’s promises remain certain across generations.
Judgment belongs ultimately to God, not to offended humans taking His place.
God’s promises point forward to a future reality beyond present experience.
Faith trusts in God’s future fulfillment even when it is not yet seen.
True forgiveness acknowledges real wrong while refusing personal vengeance.
Grief is a natural and appropriate response to loss.
God’s people live in temporary settings while awaiting ultimate fulfillment.
God uses His servants and His providence to preserve life according to His covenant purposes.
God ensures that acts of faith are fulfilled according to His will.
God sovereignly works through human evil without becoming its author, accomplishing His good purposes.
5 Imperatives
- Go up and bury my father
- Do not fear
- Carry up my bones from here
- The chapter’s weight presses toward faith that acts on future promise even at the end of life
Sense embalm
Definition embalm
Why it matters The embalming of Jacob and later Joseph highlights that even in Egyptian death customs, the covenant family’s deeper hope is not in Egypt but beyond it.
Sense mourn
Definition mourn
Why it matters The extensive mourning for Jacob shows the weight of patriarchal death, yet the mourning is framed by burial hope rather than final despair.
Sense the cave of Machpelah
Definition the cave of Machpelah
Why it matters Machpelah anchors Jacob’s burial in the promised-land inheritance and ties the end of Genesis back to Abrahamic covenant hope.
Sense God will surely visit
Definition God will surely visit
Why it matters Joseph’s emphatic assurance that God will surely visit Israel is the chapter’s forward-looking covenant hinge into Exodus.
Sense go up, bring up
Definition go up, bring up
Why it matters The repeated language of going up from Egypt keeps the family’s hope oriented toward future return and covenant ascent.
Sense evil
Definition evil
Why it matters Joseph explicitly names the brothers’ action as evil, preserving moral accountability even within His theology of providence.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense intend, plan, devise, mean
Definition intend, plan, devise, mean
Why it matters The same verb is used for both the brothers’ intention and God’s intention, making the providential contrast one of the chapter’s deepest theological features.
Sense for good
Definition for good
Why it matters Joseph’s statement that God meant the evil for good articulates the saving aim of providence without confusing good and evil morally.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense to keep many people alive
Definition to keep many people alive
Why it matters The purpose of God’s good intention is explicitly life-preserving, making Joseph’s whole story culminate in salvation-through-providence language.
Sense am I in the place of God?
Definition am I in the place of God?
Why it matters Joseph refuses to seize God’s place in judgment, which is central to the chapter’s teaching on vengeance, providence, and mercy.
Sense comfort, console
Definition comfort, console
Why it matters Joseph’s promise to comfort the brothers reveals that providence in this chapter is not abstract doctrine but embodied reassurance and mercy.
Sense he spoke to their heart / spoke kindly to them
Definition he spoke to their heart / spoke kindly to them
Why it matters Joseph’s kind speech shows the personal, relational shape of reconciliation after fear and guilt.
Sense my bones
Definition my bones
Why it matters Joseph’s concern for His bones expresses death-in-faith and binds the future exodus to the patriarchal hope of return.
Sense coffin
Definition coffin
Why it matters Genesis ends with Joseph in a coffin in Egypt, leaving the story open and future-oriented toward God’s visitation and the carrying up of His bones.
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 50 warns that guilt may continue to trouble people even after mercy has been shown, and it reminds us that evil remains truly evil even when God sovereignly uses it for good.
- Treating Joseph’s words, 'You meant evil against me, but God meant it for good,' as though they erase the brothers’ moral responsibility, when Joseph explicitly still calls their act evil.
- Reading providence here as mere divine cleanup after the fact, rather than recognizing that Joseph presents God’s purpose as active and intentional in the same history.
- Reducing Jacob’s burial request to family sentiment instead of seeing it as a major act of covenant faith tied to the promised land.
- Assuming the brothers’ fear proves reconciliation never happened, when the chapter shows their guilt still lingering even after mercy has been extended.
- Ignoring Joseph’s refusal to stand 'in the place of God,' which is crucial for understanding vengeance, humility, and trust in divine justice.
- Treating Joseph’s burial hope as incidental, when His oath about His bones intentionally points the reader forward to the Exodus.
- How does Joseph’s interpretation of evil and good challenge the way You think about painful events in Your own life?
- Where are You tempted either to deny evil or to deny God’s sovereignty, and how does this chapter hold both truths together?
- What does it mean for You not to stand in the place of God when You have been wronged?
- How do Jacob’s burial and Joseph’s bones teach You to live and die with God’s future promise still in view?
- What would it look like for You to speak kindly and provide faithfully even toward those whose actions deeply wounded You?
- Preach Genesis 50 as a chapter of mature providence, showing that Scripture does not force us to choose between naming evil honestly and affirming God’s sovereign purpose over it.
- Use Joseph’s refusal of vengeance to teach that final justice belongs to God, while His people are called to kindness, provision, and peace where reconciliation has been worked.
- Help grieving believers see that burial, death, and mourning in Scripture can all be governed by covenant hope rather than despair.
- Encourage those haunted by past sin that guilt may linger long after mercy is offered, but the answer is not self-protective fear. It is receiving truthful reassurance and walking in it.
- Use Jacob’s burial and Joseph’s bones to show that the people of God must not let present comfort, even blessed comfort, become their final home.
- Point the church to Joseph’s words as one of Scripture’s most important passages for understanding suffering, providence, and the saving purposes of God.
- End Genesis pastorally by reminding believers that faith often closes one era not with visible completion, but with burial in hope and waiting for God’s sure visitation.
Genesis 50 brings the gospel trajectory of Joseph’s story into sharp focus. The brothers’ evil remains evil, yet God meant the same history for good, for the saving of many lives. That pattern anticipates the gospel with unusual clarity. In the fullness of Scripture, the most evil act, the rejection and death of the righteous Son, becomes under God’s sovereign purpose the means of salvation for many.
Joseph is not Christ, but His final theological interpretation points powerfully toward the cross and resurrection logic of God’s redemptive plan. The chapter also ends with hope fixed on God’s future visitation, preparing the reader to expect that the God of promise will yet act decisively for His people.
Genesis 50 brings the gospel trajectory of Joseph’s story into sharp focus. The brothers’ evil remains evil, yet God meant the same history for good, for the saving of many lives. That pattern anticipates the gospel with unusual clarity. In the fullness of Scripture, the most evil act, the rejection and death of the righteous Son, becomes under God’s sovereign purpose the means of salvation for many.
Joseph is not Christ, but His final theological interpretation points powerfully toward the cross and resurrection logic of God’s redemptive plan. The chapter also ends with hope fixed on God’s future visitation, preparing the reader to expect that the God of promise will yet act decisively for His people.
Genesis 50 brings the gospel trajectory of Joseph’s story into sharp focus. The brothers’ evil remains evil, yet God meant the same history for good, for the saving of many lives. That pattern anticipates the gospel with unusual clarity. In the fullness of Scripture, the most evil act, the rejection and death of the righteous Son, becomes under God’s sovereign purpose the means of salvation for many.
Joseph is not Christ, but His final theological interpretation points powerfully toward the cross and resurrection logic of God’s redemptive plan. The chapter also ends with hope fixed on God’s future visitation, preparing the reader to expect that the God of promise will yet act decisively for His people.
Genesis 50 brings the gospel trajectory of Joseph’s story into sharp focus. The brothers’ evil remains evil, yet God meant the same history for good, for the saving of many lives. That pattern anticipates the gospel with unusual clarity. In the fullness of Scripture, the most evil act, the rejection and death of the righteous Son, becomes under God’s sovereign purpose the means of salvation for many.
Joseph is not Christ, but His final theological interpretation points powerfully toward the cross and resurrection logic of God’s redemptive plan. The chapter also ends with hope fixed on God’s future visitation, preparing the reader to expect that the God of promise will yet act decisively for His people.
Genesis 50 brings the gospel trajectory of Joseph’s story into sharp focus. The brothers’ evil remains evil, yet God meant the same history for good, for the saving of many lives. That pattern anticipates the gospel with unusual clarity. In the fullness of Scripture, the most evil act, the rejection and death of the righteous Son, becomes under God’s sovereign purpose the means of salvation for many.
Joseph is not Christ, but His final theological interpretation points powerfully toward the cross and resurrection logic of God’s redemptive plan. The chapter also ends with hope fixed on God’s future visitation, preparing the reader to expect that the God of promise will yet act decisively for His people.
5
High
- Go up and bury my father
- Do not fear
- Carry up my bones from here
- The chapter’s weight presses toward faith that acts on future promise even at the end of life
Trace remnant preservation, covenant continuity, and mercy under judgment across Scripture.
Follow faith, believing response, trust, and persevering allegiance across Scripture.
Trace servant identity, obedient mission, and suffering service across Scripture.
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
Genesis 50 is covenantally decisive because it closes the patriarchal age with both Jacob and Joseph oriented toward the promised land rather than toward permanent settlement in Egypt. Jacob is buried in Machpelah with the patriarchs, and Joseph binds the future sons of Israel by oath to carry up His bones when God visits them. These acts frame the covenant family’s identity around God’s sworn promises to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
The chapter also reinforces that the preservation of the family in Egypt was never an end in itself. Egypt is temporary. The covenant future still points toward the land God promised. Joseph’s statement that God will surely visit Israel and bring them up is especially important, because it links Genesis directly to Exodus and shows that the promise remains alive beyond Joseph’s death.
Genesis 50 brings the gospel trajectory of Joseph’s story into sharp focus. The brothers’ evil remains evil, yet God meant the same history for good, for the saving of many lives. That pattern anticipates the gospel with unusual clarity. In the fullness of Scripture, the most evil act, the rejection and death of the righteous Son, becomes under God’s sovereign purpose the means of salvation for many.
Joseph is not Christ, but His final theological interpretation points powerfully toward the cross and resurrection logic of God’s redemptive plan. The chapter also ends with hope fixed on God’s future visitation, preparing the reader to expect that the God of promise will yet act decisively for His people.
Focus Points
- Providence
- Covenant Hope
- Burial in Faith
- Divine Sovereignty over Evil
- Forgiveness and Reassurance
- Future Visitation
- Promise beyond Death
- Pilgrim Hope
- Covenant Theology
- Divine Sovereignty and Human Evil
- Death in Faith
- Future Hope
- Biblical Theology
Cross References
Passages
Chapter opening: Genesis 50:1-14
Gen 50:1-3. When Jacob died, Joseph fell upon the face of his beloved father, wept over him, and kissed him. He then gave the body to the physicians to be embalmed, according to the usual custom in Egypt. The physicians are called his servants, because the reference is to the regular physicians in the service of Joseph, the eminent minister of state; and according to Herod.
2, 84, there were special physicians in Egypt for every description of disease, among whom the Taricheuta , who superintended the embalming, were included, as a special but subordinate class. The process of embalming lasted 40 days, and the solemn mourning 70 (Gen 50:3). This is in harmony with the statements of Herodotus and Diodorus when rightly understood (see Hengstenberg, Egypt and the Books of Moses , p.
67ff.)
Gen 50:1-3. When Jacob died, Joseph fell upon the face of his beloved father, wept over him, and kissed him. He then gave the body to the physicians to be embalmed, according to the usual custom in Egypt. The physicians are called his servants, because the reference is to the regular physicians in the service of Joseph, the eminent minister of state; and according to Herod.
2, 84, there were special physicians in Egypt for every description of disease, among whom the Taricheuta , who superintended the embalming, were included, as a special but subordinate class. The process of embalming lasted 40 days, and the solemn mourning 70 (Gen 50:3). This is in harmony with the statements of Herodotus and Diodorus when rightly understood (see Hengstenberg, Egypt and the Books of Moses , p.
67ff.)
Gen 50:1-3. When Jacob died, Joseph fell upon the face of his beloved father, wept over him, and kissed him. He then gave the body to the physicians to be embalmed, according to the usual custom in Egypt. The physicians are called his servants, because the reference is to the regular physicians in the service of Joseph, the eminent minister of state; and according to Herod.
2, 84, there were special physicians in Egypt for every description of disease, among whom the Taricheuta , who superintended the embalming, were included, as a special but subordinate class. The process of embalming lasted 40 days, and the solemn mourning 70 (Gen 50:3). This is in harmony with the statements of Herodotus and Diodorus when rightly understood (see Hengstenberg, Egypt and the Books of Moses , p.
67ff.)
Gen 50:4-5 At the end of this period of mourning, Joseph requested “the house of Pharaoh,” i. e. , the attendants upon the king, to obtain Pharaoh’s permission for him to go to Canaan and bury his father, according to his last will, in the cave prepared by him there. כּרה (Gen 50:5) signifies “to dig” (used, as in 2Ch 16:14, for the preparation of a tomb), not “to buy,” In the expression לי כּריתי Jacob attributes to himself as patriarch what had really been done by Abraham (Gen 24).
Joseph required the royal permission, because he wished to go beyond the border with his family and a large procession. But he did not apply directly to Pharaoh, because his deep mourning (unshaven and unadorned) prevented him from appearing in the presence of the king.
Gen 50:4-5 At the end of this period of mourning, Joseph requested “the house of Pharaoh,” i. e. , the attendants upon the king, to obtain Pharaoh’s permission for him to go to Canaan and bury his father, according to his last will, in the cave prepared by him there. כּרה (Gen 50:5) signifies “to dig” (used, as in 2Ch 16:14, for the preparation of a tomb), not “to buy,” In the expression לי כּריתי Jacob attributes to himself as patriarch what had really been done by Abraham (Gen 24).
Joseph required the royal permission, because he wished to go beyond the border with his family and a large procession. But he did not apply directly to Pharaoh, because his deep mourning (unshaven and unadorned) prevented him from appearing in the presence of the king.
Gen 50:6-9 After the king’s permission had been obtained, the corpse was carried to Canaan, attended by a large company. With Joseph there went up “ all the servants of Pharaoh, the elders of his house, and all the elders of the land of Egypt, ” i. e. , the leading officers of the court and state, “ and all the house of Joseph, and his brethren, and his father’s house, ” i.
e. , all the members of the families of Joseph, of his brethren, and of is deceased father, “ excepting only their children and flocks; also chariots and horsemen, ” as an escort for the journey through the desert, “ a very large army . ” The splendid retinue of Egyptian officers may be explained, in part from the esteem in which Joseph was held in Egypt, and in part from the fondness of the Egyptians for such funeral processions (cf.
Hengst . pp. 70, 71).
Gen 50:6-9 After the king’s permission had been obtained, the corpse was carried to Canaan, attended by a large company. With Joseph there went up “ all the servants of Pharaoh, the elders of his house, and all the elders of the land of Egypt, ” i. e. , the leading officers of the court and state, “ and all the house of Joseph, and his brethren, and his father’s house, ” i.
e. , all the members of the families of Joseph, of his brethren, and of is deceased father, “ excepting only their children and flocks; also chariots and horsemen, ” as an escort for the journey through the desert, “ a very large army . ” The splendid retinue of Egyptian officers may be explained, in part from the esteem in which Joseph was held in Egypt, and in part from the fondness of the Egyptians for such funeral processions (cf.
Hengst . pp. 70, 71).
Gen 50:6-9 After the king’s permission had been obtained, the corpse was carried to Canaan, attended by a large company. With Joseph there went up “ all the servants of Pharaoh, the elders of his house, and all the elders of the land of Egypt, ” i. e. , the leading officers of the court and state, “ and all the house of Joseph, and his brethren, and his father’s house, ” i.
e. , all the members of the families of Joseph, of his brethren, and of is deceased father, “ excepting only their children and flocks; also chariots and horsemen, ” as an escort for the journey through the desert, “ a very large army . ” The splendid retinue of Egyptian officers may be explained, in part from the esteem in which Joseph was held in Egypt, and in part from the fondness of the Egyptians for such funeral processions (cf.
Hengst . pp. 70, 71).
Gen 50:6-9 After the king’s permission had been obtained, the corpse was carried to Canaan, attended by a large company. With Joseph there went up “ all the servants of Pharaoh, the elders of his house, and all the elders of the land of Egypt, ” i. e. , the leading officers of the court and state, “ and all the house of Joseph, and his brethren, and his father’s house, ” i.
e. , all the members of the families of Joseph, of his brethren, and of is deceased father, “ excepting only their children and flocks; also chariots and horsemen, ” as an escort for the journey through the desert, “ a very large army . ” The splendid retinue of Egyptian officers may be explained, in part from the esteem in which Joseph was held in Egypt, and in part from the fondness of the Egyptians for such funeral processions (cf.
Hengst . pp. 70, 71).
Gen 50:10-11 Thus they came to Goren Atad beyond the Jordan, as the procession did not take the shortest route by Gaza through the country of the Philistines, probably because so large a procession with a military escort was likely to meet with difficulties there, but went round by the Dead Sea. There, on the border of Canaan, a great mourning and funeral ceremony was kept up for seven days, from which the Canaanites, who watched it from Canaan, gave the place the name of Abel-mizraim , i.
e. , meadow (אבל with a play upon אבל mourning) of the Egyptians. The situation of Goren Atad (the buck-thorn floor), or Abel-mizraim , has not been discovered. According to Gen 50:11, it was on the other side, i. e. , the eastern side, of the Jordan. This is put beyond all doubt by Gen 50:12, where the sons of Jacob are said to have carried the corpse into the land of Canaan (the land on this side) after the mourning at Goren Atad.
Gen 50:10-11 Thus they came to Goren Atad beyond the Jordan, as the procession did not take the shortest route by Gaza through the country of the Philistines, probably because so large a procession with a military escort was likely to meet with difficulties there, but went round by the Dead Sea. There, on the border of Canaan, a great mourning and funeral ceremony was kept up for seven days, from which the Canaanites, who watched it from Canaan, gave the place the name of Abel-mizraim , i.
e. , meadow (אבל with a play upon אבל mourning) of the Egyptians. The situation of Goren Atad (the buck-thorn floor), or Abel-mizraim , has not been discovered. According to Gen 50:11, it was on the other side, i. e. , the eastern side, of the Jordan. This is put beyond all doubt by Gen 50:12, where the sons of Jacob are said to have carried the corpse into the land of Canaan (the land on this side) after the mourning at Goren Atad.
Gen 50:12-13 There the Egyptian procession probably stopped short; for in Gen 50:12 the sons of Jacob only are mentioned as having carried their father to Canaan according to his last request, and buried him in the cave of Machpelah.
Gen 50:12-13 There the Egyptian procession probably stopped short; for in Gen 50:12 the sons of Jacob only are mentioned as having carried their father to Canaan according to his last request, and buried him in the cave of Machpelah.
Gen 50:14 After performing this filial duty, Joseph returned to Egypt with his brethren and all their attendants.
Gen 50:15-21 After their father’s death, Joseph’s brethren were filled with alarm, and said, “ If Joseph now should punish us and requite all the evil that we have done to him, ” sc. , what would become of us! The sentence contains an aposiopesis , like Psa 27:13; and לוּ with the imperfect presupposes a condition, being used “in cases which are not desired, and for the present not real, though perhaps possible” ( Ew .
§358). The brethren therefore deputed one of their number (possibly Benjamin) to Joseph, and instructed him to appeal to the wish expressed by their father before his death, and to implore forgiveness: “ O pardon the misdeed of thy brethren and their sin, that they have done thee evil; and now grant forgiveness to the misdeed of the servants of the God of thy father .
” The ground of their plea is contained in ועתּה “and now,” sc. , as we request it by the desire and direction of our father, and in the epithet applied to themselves, “servants of the God of thy father. ” There is no reason whatever for regarding the appeal to their father’s wish as a mere pretence. The fact that no reference was made by Jacob in his blessing to their sin against Joseph, merely proved that he as their father had forgiven the sin of his sons, since the grace of God had made their misdeed the means of Israel’s salvation; but it by no means proves that he could not have instructed his sons humbly to beg for forgiveness from Joseph, even though Joseph had hitherto shown them only goodness and love.
How far Joseph was from thinking of ultimate retribution and revenge, is evident from the reception which he gave to their request (Gen 50:17): “ Joseph wept at their address to him . ” viz. , at the fact that they could impute anything so bad to him; and when they came themselves, and threw themselves as servants at his feet, he said to them (Gen 50:19), “ Fear not, for am I in the place of God?
” i. e. , am I in a position to interfere of my own accord with the purposes of God, and not rather bound to submit to them myself? “ Ye had indeed evil against me in your mind, but God had it in mind for good (to turn this evil into good), to do (עשׂה like ואה Gen 48:11), as is now evident (lit. , as has occurred this day, cf. Deu 2:30; Deu 4:20, etc.) , to preserve alive a great nation (cf.
Gen 45:7). And now fear not, I shall provide for you and your families . ” Thus he quieted them by his affectionate words.
Gen 50:15-21 After their father’s death, Joseph’s brethren were filled with alarm, and said, “ If Joseph now should punish us and requite all the evil that we have done to him, ” sc. , what would become of us! The sentence contains an aposiopesis , like Psa 27:13; and לוּ with the imperfect presupposes a condition, being used “in cases which are not desired, and for the present not real, though perhaps possible” ( Ew .
§358). The brethren therefore deputed one of their number (possibly Benjamin) to Joseph, and instructed him to appeal to the wish expressed by their father before his death, and to implore forgiveness: “ O pardon the misdeed of thy brethren and their sin, that they have done thee evil; and now grant forgiveness to the misdeed of the servants of the God of thy father .
” The ground of their plea is contained in ועתּה “and now,” sc. , as we request it by the desire and direction of our father, and in the epithet applied to themselves, “servants of the God of thy father. ” There is no reason whatever for regarding the appeal to their father’s wish as a mere pretence. The fact that no reference was made by Jacob in his blessing to their sin against Joseph, merely proved that he as their father had forgiven the sin of his sons, since the grace of God had made their misdeed the means of Israel’s salvation; but it by no means proves that he could not have instructed his sons humbly to beg for forgiveness from Joseph, even though Joseph had hitherto shown them only goodness and love.
How far Joseph was from thinking of ultimate retribution and revenge, is evident from the reception which he gave to their request (Gen 50:17): “ Joseph wept at their address to him . ” viz. , at the fact that they could impute anything so bad to him; and when they came themselves, and threw themselves as servants at his feet, he said to them (Gen 50:19), “ Fear not, for am I in the place of God?
” i. e. , am I in a position to interfere of my own accord with the purposes of God, and not rather bound to submit to them myself? “ Ye had indeed evil against me in your mind, but God had it in mind for good (to turn this evil into good), to do (עשׂה like ואה Gen 48:11), as is now evident (lit. , as has occurred this day, cf. Deu 2:30; Deu 4:20, etc.) , to preserve alive a great nation (cf.
Gen 45:7). And now fear not, I shall provide for you and your families . ” Thus he quieted them by his affectionate words.
Gen 50:15-21 After their father’s death, Joseph’s brethren were filled with alarm, and said, “ If Joseph now should punish us and requite all the evil that we have done to him, ” sc. , what would become of us! The sentence contains an aposiopesis , like Psa 27:13; and לוּ with the imperfect presupposes a condition, being used “in cases which are not desired, and for the present not real, though perhaps possible” ( Ew .
§358). The brethren therefore deputed one of their number (possibly Benjamin) to Joseph, and instructed him to appeal to the wish expressed by their father before his death, and to implore forgiveness: “ O pardon the misdeed of thy brethren and their sin, that they have done thee evil; and now grant forgiveness to the misdeed of the servants of the God of thy father .
” The ground of their plea is contained in ועתּה “and now,” sc. , as we request it by the desire and direction of our father, and in the epithet applied to themselves, “servants of the God of thy father. ” There is no reason whatever for regarding the appeal to their father’s wish as a mere pretence. The fact that no reference was made by Jacob in his blessing to their sin against Joseph, merely proved that he as their father had forgiven the sin of his sons, since the grace of God had made their misdeed the means of Israel’s salvation; but it by no means proves that he could not have instructed his sons humbly to beg for forgiveness from Joseph, even though Joseph had hitherto shown them only goodness and love.
How far Joseph was from thinking of ultimate retribution and revenge, is evident from the reception which he gave to their request (Gen 50:17): “ Joseph wept at their address to him . ” viz. , at the fact that they could impute anything so bad to him; and when they came themselves, and threw themselves as servants at his feet, he said to them (Gen 50:19), “ Fear not, for am I in the place of God?
” i. e. , am I in a position to interfere of my own accord with the purposes of God, and not rather bound to submit to them myself? “ Ye had indeed evil against me in your mind, but God had it in mind for good (to turn this evil into good), to do (עשׂה like ואה Gen 48:11), as is now evident (lit. , as has occurred this day, cf. Deu 2:30; Deu 4:20, etc.) , to preserve alive a great nation (cf.
Gen 45:7). And now fear not, I shall provide for you and your families . ” Thus he quieted them by his affectionate words.
Gen 50:15-21 After their father’s death, Joseph’s brethren were filled with alarm, and said, “ If Joseph now should punish us and requite all the evil that we have done to him, ” sc. , what would become of us! The sentence contains an aposiopesis , like Psa 27:13; and לוּ with the imperfect presupposes a condition, being used “in cases which are not desired, and for the present not real, though perhaps possible” ( Ew .
§358). The brethren therefore deputed one of their number (possibly Benjamin) to Joseph, and instructed him to appeal to the wish expressed by their father before his death, and to implore forgiveness: “ O pardon the misdeed of thy brethren and their sin, that they have done thee evil; and now grant forgiveness to the misdeed of the servants of the God of thy father .
” The ground of their plea is contained in ועתּה “and now,” sc. , as we request it by the desire and direction of our father, and in the epithet applied to themselves, “servants of the God of thy father. ” There is no reason whatever for regarding the appeal to their father’s wish as a mere pretence. The fact that no reference was made by Jacob in his blessing to their sin against Joseph, merely proved that he as their father had forgiven the sin of his sons, since the grace of God had made their misdeed the means of Israel’s salvation; but it by no means proves that he could not have instructed his sons humbly to beg for forgiveness from Joseph, even though Joseph had hitherto shown them only goodness and love.
How far Joseph was from thinking of ultimate retribution and revenge, is evident from the reception which he gave to their request (Gen 50:17): “ Joseph wept at their address to him . ” viz. , at the fact that they could impute anything so bad to him; and when they came themselves, and threw themselves as servants at his feet, he said to them (Gen 50:19), “ Fear not, for am I in the place of God?
” i. e. , am I in a position to interfere of my own accord with the purposes of God, and not rather bound to submit to them myself? “ Ye had indeed evil against me in your mind, but God had it in mind for good (to turn this evil into good), to do (עשׂה like ואה Gen 48:11), as is now evident (lit. , as has occurred this day, cf. Deu 2:30; Deu 4:20, etc.) , to preserve alive a great nation (cf.
Gen 45:7). And now fear not, I shall provide for you and your families . ” Thus he quieted them by his affectionate words.
Gen 50:15-21 After their father’s death, Joseph’s brethren were filled with alarm, and said, “ If Joseph now should punish us and requite all the evil that we have done to him, ” sc. , what would become of us! The sentence contains an aposiopesis , like Psa 27:13; and לוּ with the imperfect presupposes a condition, being used “in cases which are not desired, and for the present not real, though perhaps possible” ( Ew .
§358). The brethren therefore deputed one of their number (possibly Benjamin) to Joseph, and instructed him to appeal to the wish expressed by their father before his death, and to implore forgiveness: “ O pardon the misdeed of thy brethren and their sin, that they have done thee evil; and now grant forgiveness to the misdeed of the servants of the God of thy father .
” The ground of their plea is contained in ועתּה “and now,” sc. , as we request it by the desire and direction of our father, and in the epithet applied to themselves, “servants of the God of thy father. ” There is no reason whatever for regarding the appeal to their father’s wish as a mere pretence. The fact that no reference was made by Jacob in his blessing to their sin against Joseph, merely proved that he as their father had forgiven the sin of his sons, since the grace of God had made their misdeed the means of Israel’s salvation; but it by no means proves that he could not have instructed his sons humbly to beg for forgiveness from Joseph, even though Joseph had hitherto shown them only goodness and love.
How far Joseph was from thinking of ultimate retribution and revenge, is evident from the reception which he gave to their request (Gen 50:17): “ Joseph wept at their address to him . ” viz. , at the fact that they could impute anything so bad to him; and when they came themselves, and threw themselves as servants at his feet, he said to them (Gen 50:19), “ Fear not, for am I in the place of God?
” i. e. , am I in a position to interfere of my own accord with the purposes of God, and not rather bound to submit to them myself? “ Ye had indeed evil against me in your mind, but God had it in mind for good (to turn this evil into good), to do (עשׂה like ואה Gen 48:11), as is now evident (lit. , as has occurred this day, cf. Deu 2:30; Deu 4:20, etc.) , to preserve alive a great nation (cf.
Gen 45:7). And now fear not, I shall provide for you and your families . ” Thus he quieted them by his affectionate words.
Gen 50:15-21 After their father’s death, Joseph’s brethren were filled with alarm, and said, “ If Joseph now should punish us and requite all the evil that we have done to him, ” sc. , what would become of us! The sentence contains an aposiopesis , like Psa 27:13; and לוּ with the imperfect presupposes a condition, being used “in cases which are not desired, and for the present not real, though perhaps possible” ( Ew .
§358). The brethren therefore deputed one of their number (possibly Benjamin) to Joseph, and instructed him to appeal to the wish expressed by their father before his death, and to implore forgiveness: “ O pardon the misdeed of thy brethren and their sin, that they have done thee evil; and now grant forgiveness to the misdeed of the servants of the God of thy father .
” The ground of their plea is contained in ועתּה “and now,” sc. , as we request it by the desire and direction of our father, and in the epithet applied to themselves, “servants of the God of thy father. ” There is no reason whatever for regarding the appeal to their father’s wish as a mere pretence. The fact that no reference was made by Jacob in his blessing to their sin against Joseph, merely proved that he as their father had forgiven the sin of his sons, since the grace of God had made their misdeed the means of Israel’s salvation; but it by no means proves that he could not have instructed his sons humbly to beg for forgiveness from Joseph, even though Joseph had hitherto shown them only goodness and love.
How far Joseph was from thinking of ultimate retribution and revenge, is evident from the reception which he gave to their request (Gen 50:17): “ Joseph wept at their address to him . ” viz. , at the fact that they could impute anything so bad to him; and when they came themselves, and threw themselves as servants at his feet, he said to them (Gen 50:19), “ Fear not, for am I in the place of God?
” i. e. , am I in a position to interfere of my own accord with the purposes of God, and not rather bound to submit to them myself? “ Ye had indeed evil against me in your mind, but God had it in mind for good (to turn this evil into good), to do (עשׂה like ואה Gen 48:11), as is now evident (lit. , as has occurred this day, cf. Deu 2:30; Deu 4:20, etc.) , to preserve alive a great nation (cf.
Gen 45:7). And now fear not, I shall provide for you and your families . ” Thus he quieted them by his affectionate words.
Gen 50:15-21 After their father’s death, Joseph’s brethren were filled with alarm, and said, “ If Joseph now should punish us and requite all the evil that we have done to him, ” sc. , what would become of us! The sentence contains an aposiopesis , like Psa 27:13; and לוּ with the imperfect presupposes a condition, being used “in cases which are not desired, and for the present not real, though perhaps possible” ( Ew .
§358). The brethren therefore deputed one of their number (possibly Benjamin) to Joseph, and instructed him to appeal to the wish expressed by their father before his death, and to implore forgiveness: “ O pardon the misdeed of thy brethren and their sin, that they have done thee evil; and now grant forgiveness to the misdeed of the servants of the God of thy father .
” The ground of their plea is contained in ועתּה “and now,” sc. , as we request it by the desire and direction of our father, and in the epithet applied to themselves, “servants of the God of thy father. ” There is no reason whatever for regarding the appeal to their father’s wish as a mere pretence. The fact that no reference was made by Jacob in his blessing to their sin against Joseph, merely proved that he as their father had forgiven the sin of his sons, since the grace of God had made their misdeed the means of Israel’s salvation; but it by no means proves that he could not have instructed his sons humbly to beg for forgiveness from Joseph, even though Joseph had hitherto shown them only goodness and love.
How far Joseph was from thinking of ultimate retribution and revenge, is evident from the reception which he gave to their request (Gen 50:17): “ Joseph wept at their address to him . ” viz. , at the fact that they could impute anything so bad to him; and when they came themselves, and threw themselves as servants at his feet, he said to them (Gen 50:19), “ Fear not, for am I in the place of God?
” i. e. , am I in a position to interfere of my own accord with the purposes of God, and not rather bound to submit to them myself? “ Ye had indeed evil against me in your mind, but God had it in mind for good (to turn this evil into good), to do (עשׂה like ואה Gen 48:11), as is now evident (lit. , as has occurred this day, cf. Deu 2:30; Deu 4:20, etc.) , to preserve alive a great nation (cf.
Gen 45:7). And now fear not, I shall provide for you and your families . ” Thus he quieted them by his affectionate words.
Gen 50:22-23 Death of Joseph. - Joseph lived to see the commencement of the fulfilment of his father’s blessing. Having reached the age of 110, he saw Ephraim’s שׁלּשׁים בּני “ sons of the third link, ” i. e. , of great-grandsons, consequently great-great-grandsons. שׁלּשׁים descendants in the third generation are expressly distinguished from “children’s children” or grandsons in Exo 34:7.
There is no practical difficulty in the way of this explanation, the only one which the language will allow. As Joseph’s two sons were born before he was 37 years old (Gen 41:50), and Ephraim therefore was born, at the latest, in his 36th year, and possibly in his 34th, since Joseph was married in his 31st year, he might have had grandsons by the time he was 56 or 60 years old, and great-grandsons when he was from 78 to 85, so that great-great-grandsons might have been born when he was 100 or 110 years old.
To regard the “sons of the third generation” as children in the third generation (great-grandsons of Joseph and grandsons of Ephraim), as many commentators do, as though the construct בּני stood for the absolute, is evidently opposed to the context, since it is stated immediately afterwards, that sons of Machir, the son of Manasseh, i. e. , great-grandsons, were also born upon his knees, i.
e. , so that he could take them also upon his knees and show them his paternal love. There is no reason for thinking of adoption in connection with these words. And if Joseph lived to see only the great-grandsons of Ephraim as well as of Manasseh, it is difficult to imagine why the same expression should not be applied to the grandchildren of Manasseh, as to the descendants of Ephraim.
Gen 50:22-23 Death of Joseph. - Joseph lived to see the commencement of the fulfilment of his father’s blessing. Having reached the age of 110, he saw Ephraim’s שׁלּשׁים בּני “ sons of the third link, ” i. e. , of great-grandsons, consequently great-great-grandsons. שׁלּשׁים descendants in the third generation are expressly distinguished from “children’s children” or grandsons in Exo 34:7.
There is no practical difficulty in the way of this explanation, the only one which the language will allow. As Joseph’s two sons were born before he was 37 years old (Gen 41:50), and Ephraim therefore was born, at the latest, in his 36th year, and possibly in his 34th, since Joseph was married in his 31st year, he might have had grandsons by the time he was 56 or 60 years old, and great-grandsons when he was from 78 to 85, so that great-great-grandsons might have been born when he was 100 or 110 years old.
To regard the “sons of the third generation” as children in the third generation (great-grandsons of Joseph and grandsons of Ephraim), as many commentators do, as though the construct בּני stood for the absolute, is evidently opposed to the context, since it is stated immediately afterwards, that sons of Machir, the son of Manasseh, i. e. , great-grandsons, were also born upon his knees, i.
e. , so that he could take them also upon his knees and show them his paternal love. There is no reason for thinking of adoption in connection with these words. And if Joseph lived to see only the great-grandsons of Ephraim as well as of Manasseh, it is difficult to imagine why the same expression should not be applied to the grandchildren of Manasseh, as to the descendants of Ephraim.
Gen 50:24-26 When Joseph saw his death approaching, he expressed to his brethren his firm belief in the fulfilment of the divine promise (Gen 46:4-5, cf. Gen 15:16, Gen 15:18.) , and made them take an oath, that if God should bring them into the promised land, they would carry his bones with them from Egypt. This last desire of his was carried out. When he died, they embalmed him, and laid him (ויּישׂם from ישׂם, like Gen 24:33 in the chethib ) “in the coffin,” i.
e. , the ordinary coffin, constructed of sycamore-wood (see Hengstenberg, pp. 71, 72), which was then deposited in a room, according to Egyptian custom ( Herod . 2, 86), and remained in Egypt for 360 years, until they carried it away with them at the time of the Exodus, when it was eventually buried in Shechem, in the piece of land which had been bought by Jacob there (Gen 33:19; Jos 24:32).
Thus the account of the pilgrim-life of the patriarchs terminates with an act of faith on the part of the dying Joseph; and after his death, in consequence of his instructions, the coffin with his bones became a standing exhortation to Israel, to turn its eyes away from Egypt to Canaan, the land promised to its fathers, and to wait in the patience of faith for the fulfilment of the promise. Chronological Survey of the Leading Events of the Patriarchal History Arranged according to the Hebrew Text, as a continuation of the Chronological Tables at p.
77, with an additional calculation of the year before Christ. The Events Year of Migration to Egypt Year of Entrance into Canaan Year from the Creation Year Before Christ Abram’s entrance into Canaan 1 2021 2137 Birth of Ishmael 11 2032 2126 Institution of Circumcision 24 2045 2113 Birth of Isaac 25 2046 2112 Death of Sarah 62 2083 2075 Marriage of Isaac 65 2086 2072 Birth of Esau and Jacob 85 2106 2052 Death of Abraham 100 2121 2037 Marriage of Esau 125 2146 2012 Death of Ishmael 148 2169 1989 Flight of Jacob to Padan Aram 162 2183 1975 Jacob’s Marriage 169 2190 1968 Birth of Joseph 176 2197 1961 Jacob’s return from Padan Aram 182 2203 1951 Jacob’s arrival at Shechem in Canaan ?
187 ? 2208 ? 1950 Jacob’s return home to Hebron 192 2213 1945 Sale of Joseph 193 2214 1944 Death of Isaac 205 2226 1932 Promotion of Joseph in Egypt 206 2227 1931 Removal of Israel to Egypt 1 215 2236 1922 Death of Jacob 17 232 2253 1905 Death of Joseph 71 286 2307 1851 Birth of Moses 350 565 2586 1572 Exodus of Israel from Egypt 430 645 2666 1492 The calculation of the years b.
c. is based upon the fact, that the termination of the 70 years’ captivity coincided with the first year of the sole government of Cyrus, and fell in the year 536 b. c. ; consequently the captivity commenced in the year 606 B. C.
Gen 50:24-26 When Joseph saw his death approaching, he expressed to his brethren his firm belief in the fulfilment of the divine promise (Gen 46:4-5, cf. Gen 15:16, Gen 15:18.) , and made them take an oath, that if God should bring them into the promised land, they would carry his bones with them from Egypt. This last desire of his was carried out. When he died, they embalmed him, and laid him (ויּישׂם from ישׂם, like Gen 24:33 in the chethib ) “in the coffin,” i.
e. , the ordinary coffin, constructed of sycamore-wood (see Hengstenberg, pp. 71, 72), which was then deposited in a room, according to Egyptian custom ( Herod . 2, 86), and remained in Egypt for 360 years, until they carried it away with them at the time of the Exodus, when it was eventually buried in Shechem, in the piece of land which had been bought by Jacob there (Gen 33:19; Jos 24:32).
Thus the account of the pilgrim-life of the patriarchs terminates with an act of faith on the part of the dying Joseph; and after his death, in consequence of his instructions, the coffin with his bones became a standing exhortation to Israel, to turn its eyes away from Egypt to Canaan, the land promised to its fathers, and to wait in the patience of faith for the fulfilment of the promise. Chronological Survey of the Leading Events of the Patriarchal History Arranged according to the Hebrew Text, as a continuation of the Chronological Tables at p.
77, with an additional calculation of the year before Christ. The Events Year of Migration to Egypt Year of Entrance into Canaan Year from the Creation Year Before Christ Abram’s entrance into Canaan 1 2021 2137 Birth of Ishmael 11 2032 2126 Institution of Circumcision 24 2045 2113 Birth of Isaac 25 2046 2112 Death of Sarah 62 2083 2075 Marriage of Isaac 65 2086 2072 Birth of Esau and Jacob 85 2106 2052 Death of Abraham 100 2121 2037 Marriage of Esau 125 2146 2012 Death of Ishmael 148 2169 1989 Flight of Jacob to Padan Aram 162 2183 1975 Jacob’s Marriage 169 2190 1968 Birth of Joseph 176 2197 1961 Jacob’s return from Padan Aram 182 2203 1951 Jacob’s arrival at Shechem in Canaan ?
187 ? 2208 ? 1950 Jacob’s return home to Hebron 192 2213 1945 Sale of Joseph 193 2214 1944 Death of Isaac 205 2226 1932 Promotion of Joseph in Egypt 206 2227 1931 Removal of Israel to Egypt 1 215 2236 1922 Death of Jacob 17 232 2253 1905 Death of Joseph 71 286 2307 1851 Birth of Moses 350 565 2586 1572 Exodus of Israel from Egypt 430 645 2666 1492 The calculation of the years b.
c. is based upon the fact, that the termination of the 70 years’ captivity coincided with the first year of the sole government of Cyrus, and fell in the year 536 b. c. ; consequently the captivity commenced in the year 606 B. C.