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VISITS OF JOSEPH’S BRETHREN
Genesis 42-44
"Fear not: for am I in the place of God? But as for you, ye
thought evil against me; but God meant it unto good."- Gen 50:19-20.
THE purpose of God to bring Israel into Egypt was accomplished by
the unconscious agency of Joseph’s natural affection for his
kindred. Tenderness towards home is usually increased by residence
in a foreign land; for absence, like a little death, sheds a halo
round those separated from us. But Joseph could not as yet either
revisit his old home or invite his father’s family into Egypt. Even,
indeed, when his brothers first appeared before him, he seems to
have had no immediate intention of inviting them as a family to
settle in the country of his adoption, or even to visit it. If he
had cherished any such purpose or desire he might have sent down
wagons at once, as he at last did, to bring his father’s household
out of Canaan. Why, then, did he proceed so cautiously? Whence this
mystery, and disguise, and circuitous compassing of his end? What
intervened between the first and last visit of his brethren to make
it seem advisable to disclose himself and invite them? Manifestly
there had intervened enough to give Joseph insight into the state of
mind his brethren were in, enough to satisfy him they were not the
men they had been, and that it was safe to ask them and would be
pleasant to have them with him in Egypt. Fully alive to the elements
of disorder and violence that once existed among them, and having
had no opportunity of ascertaining whether they were now altered,
there was no course open but that which he adopted of endeavouring
in some unobserved way to discover whether twenty years had wrought
any change in them.
For effecting this object he fell on the expedient of imprisoning
them, on pretence of their being spies. This served the double
purpose of detaining them until he should have made up his mind as
to the best means of dealing with them, and of securing their
retention under his eye until some display of character might
sufficiently certify him of their state of mind. Possibly he adopted
this expedient also because it was likely deeply to move them, so
that they might be expected to exhibit not such superficial feelings
as might have been elicited had he set them down to a banquet and
entered into conversation with them over their wine, but such as men
are surprised to find in themselves, and know nothing of in their
lighter hours. Joseph was, of course, well aware that in the
analysis of character the most potent elements are only brought into
clear view when the test of severe trouble is applied, and when men
are thrown out of all conventional modes of thinking and speaking.
The display of character which Joseph awaited he speedily obtained.
For so new an experience to these free dwellers in tents as
imprisonment under grim Egyptian guards worked wonders in them. Men
who have experienced such treatment aver that nothing more
effectually tames and breaks the spirit: it is not the being
confined for a definite time with the certainty of release in the
end, but the being shut up at the caprice of another on a false and
absurd accusation; the being cooped up at the will of a stranger in
a foreign country, uncertain and hopeless of release. To Joseph’s
brethren so sudden and great a calamity seemed explicable only on
the theory that it was retribution for the great crime of their
life. The uneasy feeling which each of them had hidden in his own
conscience, and which the lapse of twenty years had not materially
alleviated, finds expression: "And they said one to another, We are
verily guilty concerning our brother, in that we saw the anguish of
his soul, when he besought us, and we would not hear; therefore is
this distress come upon us." The similarity of their position to
that in which they had placed their brother stimulates and assists
their conscience. Joseph, in the anguish of his soul, had protested
his innocence, but they had not listened; and now their own
protestations are treated as idle wind by this Egyptian. Their own
feelings, representing to them what they had caused Joseph to
suffer, stir a keener sense of their guilt than they seem ever
before to have reached. Under this new light they see their sin more
clearly, and are humbled by the distress into which it has brought
them.
When Joseph sees this, his heart warms to them. He may not yet be
quite sure of them. A prison-repentance is perhaps scarcely to be
trusted. He sees they would for the moment deal differently with him
had they the opportunity, and would welcome no one more heartily
than himself, whose coming among them had once so exasperated them.
Himself keen in his affections, he is deeply moved, and his eyes
fill with tears as he witnesses their emotion and grief on his
account. Fain would he relieve them from their remorse and
apprehension-why, then, does he forbear? Why does he not at this
juncture disclose himself? It has been satisfactorily proved that
his brethren counted their sale of him the great crime of their
life. Their imprisonment has elicited evidence that that crime had
taken in their conscience the capital place, the place which a man
finds some one sin or series of sins will take, to follow him with
its appropriate curse, and hang over his future like a cloud-a sin
of which he thinks when any strange thing happens to him, and to
which he traces all disaster-a sin so iniquitous that it seems
capable of producing any results however grievous, and to which he
has so given himself that his life seems to be concentrated there,
and he cannot but connect with it all the greater ills that happen
to him. Was not this, then, security enough that they would never
again perpetrate a crime of like atrocity? Every man who has almost
at all observed the history of sin in himself, will say that most
certainly it was quite insufficient security against their ever
again doing the like. Evidence that a man is conscious of his sin,
and, while suffering from its consequences, feels deeply its guilt,
is not evidence that his character is altered.
And because we believe men so much more readily than God, and think
that they do not require, for form’s sake, such needless pledges of
a changed character as God seems to demand, it is worth observing
that Joseph, moved as he was even to tears, felt that common
prudence. forbade him to commit himself to his brethren without
further evidence of their disposition. They had distinctly
acknowledged their guilt, and in his hearing had admitted that the
great calamity that had befallen them was no more than they
deserved; yet Joseph, judging merely as an intelligent man who had
worldly interests depending on his judgment, could not discern
enough here to justify him in supposing that his brethren were
changed men. And it might sometimes serve to expose the
insufficiency of our repentance were clear-seeing men the judges of
it, and did they express their opinion of its trustworthiness. We
may think that God is needlessly exacting when He requires evidence
not only of a changed mind about past sin, but also of such a mind
being now in us as will preserve us from future sin; but the truth
is, that no man whose common worldly interests were at stake would
commit himself to us on any less evidence. God, then, meaning to
bring the house of Israel into Egypt in order to make progress in
the Divine education He was giving to them, could not introduce them
into that land in a state of mind which would negative all the
discipline they were there to receive.
These men then had to give evidence that they not only saw, and in
some sense repented of, their sin, but also that they had got rid of
the evil passion which had led to it. This is what God means by
repentance. Our sins are in general not so microscopic that it
requires very keen spiritual discernment to perceive them. But to be
quite aware of our sin, and to acknowledge it, is not to repent of
it. Everything falls short of thorough repentance which does not
prevent us from committing the sin anew. We do not so much desire to
be accurately informed about our past sins, and to get right views
of our past selves; we wish to be no longer sinners, we wish to pass
through some process by which we may be separated from that in us
which has led us into sin. Such a process there is, for these men
passed through it.
The test which revealed the thoroughness of his brothers’ repentance
was unintentionally applied by Joseph. When he hid his cup in
Benjamin’s sack, all that he intended was to furnish a pretext for
detaining Benjamin, and so gratifying his own affection. But, to his
astonishment, his trick effected far more than he intended; for the
brothers, recognising now their brotherhood, circled round Benjamin,
and, to a man, resolved to go back with him to Egypt. We cannot
argue from this that Joseph had misapprehended the state of mind in
which his brothers were, and in his judgment of them had been either
too timorous or too severe; nor need we suppose that he was hampered
by his relations to Pharaoh, and therefore unwilling to connect
himself too closely with men of whom he might be safer to be rid;
because it was this very peril of Benjamin’s that matured their
brotherly affection. They themselves could not have anticipated that
they would make such a sacrifice for Benjamin. But throughout their
dealings with this mysterious Egyptian, they felt themselves under a
spell, and were being gradually, though perhaps unconsciously,
softened, and in order to complete the change passing upon them,
they but required some such incident as this of Benjamin’s arrest.
This incident seemed by some strange fatality to threaten them with
a renewed perpetration of the very crime they had committed against
Rachel’s other son. It threatened to force them to become again the
instrument of bereaving their father of his darling child, and bring
about that very calamity which they had pledged themselves should
never happen. It was an incident, therefore, which, more than any
other, was likely to call out their family love.
The scene lives in every one’s memory. They were going gladly back
to their own country with corn enough for their children, proud of
their entertainment by the lord of Egypt; anticipating their
father’s exultation when he heard how generously they had been
treated and when he saw Benjamin safely restored, feeling that in
bringing him back they almost compensated for having bereaved him of
Joseph. Simeon is revelling in the free air that blew from Canaan
and brought with it the scents of his native land, and breaks into
the old songs that the strait confinement of his prison had so long
silenced-all of them together rejoicing in a scarcely hoped-for
success; when suddenly, ere the first elation is spent, they are
startled to see the hasty approach of the Egyptian messenger, and to
hear the stern summons that brought them to a halt, and boded all
ill. The few words of the just Egyptian, and his calm, explicit
judgment, "Ye have done evil in so doing," pierce them like a keen
blade-that they should be suspected of robbing one who had dealt so
generously with them; that all Israel should be put to shame in the
sight of the stranger! But they begin to feel relief as one brother
after another steps forward with the boldness of innocence; and as
sack after sack is emptied, shaken, and flung aside, they already
eye the steward with the bright air of triumph; when, as the very
last sack is emptied, and as all breathlessly stand round, amid the
quick rustle of the corn, the sharp rattle of metal strikes on their
ear, and the gleam of silver dazzles their eyes as the cup rolls out
in the sunshine. This, then, is the brother of whom their father was
so careful that he dared not suffer him out of his sight! This is
the precious youth whose life was of more value than the lives of
all the brethren, and to keep whom a few months longer in his
father’s sight Simeon had been left to rot in a dungeon! This is how
he repays the anxiety of the family and their love, and this is how
he repays the extraordinary favour of Joseph! By one rash childish
act had this fondled youth, to all appearance, brought upon the
house of Israel irretrievable disgrace, if not complete extinction.
Had these men been of their old temper, their knives had very
speedily proved that their contempt for the deed was as great as the
Egyptian’s; by violence towards Benjamin they might have cleared
themselves of all suspicion of complicity; or, at the best, they
might-have considered themselves to be acting in a fair and even
lenient manner if they had surrendered the culprit to the steward,
and once again carried back to their father a tale of blood. But
they were under the spell of their old sin. In all disaster, however
innocent they now were, they saw the retribution of their old
iniquity; they seem scarcely to consider whether Benjamin was
innocent or guilty, but as humbled, God-smitten men, "they rent
their clothes, and laded every man his ass, and returned to the
city."
Thus Joseph in seeking to gain one brother found eleven-for now
there could be no doubt that they were very different men from
those. brethren who had so heartlessly sold into slavery their
father’s favourite-men now with really brotherly feelings, by
penitence and regard for their father so wrought together into one
family, that this calamity, intended to fall only on one of their
number, did in falling on him fall on them all. So far from wishing
now to rid themselves of Rachel’s son and their father’s favourite,
who had been put by their father in so prominent a place in his
affection, they will not even give him up to suffer what seemed the
just punishment of his theft, do not even reproach him with having
brought them all into disgrace and difficulty, but, as humbled men
who knew they had greater sins of their own to answer for, went
quietly back to Egypt, determined to see their younger brother
through his misfortune or to share his bondage with him. Had these
men not been thoroughly changed, thoroughly convinced that at all
costs upright dealing and brotherly love should continue; had they
not possessed that first and last of Christian virtues, love to
their brother, then nothing could so certainly have revealed their
want of it as this apparent theft of Benjamin’s. It seemed in itself
a very likely thing that a lad accustomed to plain modes of life,
and whose character it was to "ravin as a wolf," should, when
suddenly introduced to the gorgeous Egyptian banqueting-house with
all its sumptuous furnishings, have coveted some choice specimen of
Egyptian art, to carry home to his father as proof that he could not
only bring himself back in safety, but scorned to come back from any
expedition empty-handed. It was not unlikely either that, with his
mother’s own superstition, he might have conceived the bold design
of robbing this Egyptian, so mysterious and so powerful, according
to his brothers’ account, and of breaking that spell which he had
thrown over them: he may thus have. conceived the idea of achieving
for himself a reputation in the family, and of once for all
redeeming himself from the somewhat undignified, and to one of his
spirit somewhat uncongenial, position of the youngest of a family.
If, as is possible, he had let any such idea ooze out in talking
with his brethren as they went down to Egypt, and only abandoned it
on their indignant and urgent remonstrance, then when the cup,
Joseph’s chief treasure according to his own account, was discovered
in Benjamin’s sack, the case must have looked sadly against him even
in the eyes of his brethren. No protestations of innocence in a
particular instance avail much when the character and general habits
of the accused point to guilt. It is quite possible, therefore, that
the brethren, though willing to believe Benjamin, were yet not so
thoroughly convinced of his innocence as they would have desired.
The fact that they themselves had found their money returned in
their sacks, made for Benjamin; yet in most cases, especially where
circumstances corroborate it, an accusation even against the
innocent takes immediate hold and cannot be summarily and at once
got rid of.
Thus was proof given that the house of Israel was now in truth one
family. The men who, on very slight instigation, had without
compunction sold Joseph to a life of slavery, cannot now find it in
their heart to abandon a brother who, to all appearance, was worthy
of no better life than that of a slave, and who had brought them all
into disgrace and danger. Judah had no doubt pledged himself to
bring the lad back without scathe to his father, but he had done so
without contemplating the possibility of Benjamin becoming amenable
to Egyptian law. And no one can read the speech of Judah-one of the
most pathetic on record-in which he replies to Joseph’s judgment
that Benjamin alone should remain in Egypt, without perceiving that
he speaks not as one who merely seeks to redeem a pledge, but as a
good son and a good brother. He speaks, too, as the mouth-piece of
the rest, and as he had taken the lead in Joseph’s sale, so he does
not shrink from standing forward and accepting the heavy
responsibility which may now light upon the man who represents these
brethren. His former faults are redeemed by the courage, one may say
heroism, he now shows. And as he spoke, so the rest felt. They could
not bring themselves to inflict a new sorrow on their aged father;
neither could they bear to leave their young brother in the hands of
strangers. The passions which had alienated them from one another,
and had threatened to break up the family, are subdued. There is now
discernible a common feeling that binds them together, and a common
object for which they willingly sacrifice themselves. They are,
therefore, now prepared to pass into that higher school to which God
called them in Egypt. It mattered little what strong and equitable
laws they found in the land of their adoption, if they had no taste
for upright living; it mattered little what thorough national
organisation they would be brought into contact with in Egypt, if in
point of fact they owned no common brotherhood, and were willing
rather to live as units and every man for himself than for any
common interest. But now they were prepared, open to teaching, and
docile.
To complete our apprehension of the state of mind into which the
brethren were brought by Joseph’s treatment of them, we must take
into account the assurance he gave them, when he made himself known
to them, that it was not they but God who had sent him into Egypt.
and that God had done this for the purpose of preserving the whole
house of Israel. At first sight this might seem to be an injudicious
speech, calculated to make the brethren think lightly of their
guilt, and to remove the just impressions they now entertained of
the unbrotherliness of their conduct to Joseph. And it might have
been an injudicious speech to impenitent men; but no further view of
sin can lighten its heinousness to a really penitent sinner. Prove
to him that his sin has become the means of untold good, and you
only humble him the more, and more deeply convince him that while he
was recklessly gratifying himself and sacrificing others for his own
pleasure, God has been mindful of others, and, pardoning him, has
blessed them. God does not need our sins to work out His good
intentions, but we give Him little other material; and the discovery
that through our evil purposes and injurious deeds God has worked
out His beneficent will, is certainly not calculated to make us
think more lightly of our sin or more highly of ourselves.
Joseph in thus addressing his brethren did, in fact, but add to
their feelings the tenderness that is in all religious conviction,
and that springs out of the consciousness that in all our sin there
has been with us a holy and loving Father, mindful of His children.
This is the final stage of penitence. The knowledge that God has
prevented our sin from doing the harm it might have done does
relieve the bitterness and despair with which we view our life, but
at the same time it strengthens the most effectual bulwark between
us and sin-love to a holy, over-ruling God. This, therefore, may
always be safely said to penitents: Out of your worst sin God can
bring good to yourself or to others, and good of an apparently
necessary kind; but good of a permanent kind can result from your
sin only when you have truly repented of it, and sincerely wish you
had never done it. Once this repentance is really wrought in you,
then, though your life can never be the same as it might have been
had you not sinned, it may be, in some respects, a more richly
developed life, a life fuller of humility and love. You can never
have what you sold for your sin; but the poverty your sin has
brought may excite within you thoughts and energies more valuable
than what you have lost, as these men lost a brother but found a
Saviour. The wickedness that has often made you bow your head and
mourn in secret, and which is in itself unutterable shame and loss,
may, in God’s hand, become food against the day of famine. You
cannot ever have the enjoyments which are possible only to those
whose conscience is laden with no evil remembrances, and whose
nature, uncontracted and unwithered by familiarity with sin, can
give itself to enjoyment with the abandonment and fearlessness
reserved for the innocent. No more at all will you have that
fineness of feeling which only ignorance of evil can preserve; no
more that high and great conscientiousness which, once broken, is
never repaired; no more that respect from other men which for ever
and instinctively departs from those who have lost self-respect. But
you may have a more intelligent sympathy with other men and a keener
pity for them; the experience you have gathered too late to save
yourself may put it in your power to be of essential service to
others. You cannot win your way back to the happy, useful,
evenly-developed life of the comparatively innocent, but the life of
the true-hearted penitent, is yet open to yon. Every beat of your
heart now may be as if it throbbed against a poisoned dagger, every
duty may shame you, every day bring weariness and new humiliation,
but let no pain or discouragement avail to defraud you of the good
fruits of true reconciliation to God and submission to His lifelong
discipline. See that you lose not both lives, the life of the
comparatively innocent and the life of the truly penitent.
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