1Then JosephH3130 couldH3201 not controlH662 himself before all them that stoodH5324 by him; and he criedH7121, CauseH3318 every manH376 to go outH3318 from me. And there stoodH5975 no manH376 with him, while JosephH3130 made himself knownH3045 to his brethrenH251. 2And he weptH6963 H1065 aloudH5414: and the EgyptiansH4714 and the houseH1004 of PharaohH6547 heardH8085 H8085. 3And JosephH3130 saidH559 to his brethrenH251, I am JosephH3130; doth my fatherH1 yet liveH2416? And his brethrenH251 couldH3201 not answerH6030 him; for they were terrifiedH926 at his presenceH6440. 4And JosephH3130 saidH559 to his brethrenH251, Come nearH5066 to me, I pray you. And they came nearH5066. And he saidH559, I am JosephH3130 your brotherH251, whom ye soldH4376 into EgyptH4714. 5Now therefore be not grievedH6087, nor angryH2734 with yourselvesH5869, that ye soldH4376 me here: for GodH430 sentH7971 me before youH6440 to preserve lifeH4241. 6For these two yearsH8141 hath the famineH7458 been inH7130 the landH776: and yet there are fiveH2568 yearsH8141, in which there shall neitherH369 be tillageH2758 nor harvestH7105. 7And GodH430 sentH7971 me before youH6440 to preserveH7760 for you a posterityH7611 in the earthH776, and to save your livesH2421 by a greatH1419 deliveranceH6413. 8So now it was not you that sentH7971 me here, but GodH430: and he hath madeH7760 me a fatherH1 to PharaohH6547, and lordH113 of all his houseH1004, and a rulerH4910 throughout all the landH776 of EgyptH4714. 9HasteH4116 ye, and returnH5927 to my fatherH1, and sayH559 to him, Thus saithH559 thy sonH1121 JosephH3130, GodH430 hath madeH7760 me lordH113 of all EgyptH4714: come downH3381 to me, delayH5975 not: 10And thou shalt dwellH3427 in the landH776 of GoshenH1657, and thou shalt be nearH7138 to me, thou, and thy childrenH1121, and thy children’sH1121 childrenH1121, and thy flocksH6629, and thy herdsH1241, and all that thou hast: 11And there will I nourishH3557 thee; for yet there are fiveH2568 yearsH8141 of famineH7458; lest thou, and thy householdH1004, and all that thou hast, should come to povertyH3423. 12And, behold, your eyesH5869 seeH7200, and the eyesH5869 of my brotherH251 BenjaminH1144, that it is my mouthH6310 that speakethH1696 to you. 13And ye shall tellH5046 my fatherH1 of all my gloryH3519 in EgyptH4714, and of all that ye have seenH7200; and ye shall hasteH4116 and bring downH3381 my fatherH1 here. 14And he fellH5307 upon his brotherH251 Benjamin’sH1144 neckH6677, and weptH1058; and BenjaminH1144 weptH1058 upon his neckH6677. 15Moreover he kissedH5401 all his brethrenH251, and weptH1058 upon them: and afterH310 that his brethrenH251 talkedH1696 with him. 16And the reportH6963 of this was heardH8085 in Pharaoh’sH6547 houseH1004, sayingH559, Joseph’sH3130 brethrenH251 are comeH935: and it pleasedH3190 H5869 PharaohH6547 wellH3190 H5869, andH5869 his servantsH5650. 17And PharaohH6547 saidH559 to JosephH3130, SayH559 to thy brethrenH251, This doH6213 ye; loadH2943 your beastsH1165, and goH3212, returnH935 to the landH776 of CanaanH3667; 18And takeH3947 your fatherH1 and your householdsH1004, and comeH935 to me: and I will giveH5414 you the goodH2898 of the landH776 of EgyptH4714, and ye shall eatH398 the fatH2459 of the landH776. 19Now thou art commandedH6680, this doH6213 ye; takeH3947 for yourselves wagonsH5699 from the landH776 of EgyptH4714 for your little onesH2945, and for your wivesH802, and bringH5375 your fatherH1, and comeH935. 20AlsoH5869 regardH2347 not your possessionsH3627; for the goodH2898 of all the landH776 of EgyptH4714 is yours. 21And the childrenH1121 of IsraelH3478 didH6213 so: and JosephH3130 gaveH5414 them wagonsH5699, according to the commandmentH6310 of PharaohH6547, and gaveH5414 them provisionH6720 for the wayH1870. 22To all of them he gaveH5414 each manH376 changesH2487 of raimentH8071; but to BenjaminH1144 he gaveH5414 threeH7969 hundredH3967 pieces of silverH3701, and fiveH2568 changesH2487 of raimentH8071. 23And to his fatherH1 he sentH7971 after thisH2063 manner; tenH6235 donkeysH860 loadedH5375 with the good thingsH2898 of EgyptH4714, and tenH6235 female donkeysH2543 loadedH5375 with grainH1250 and breadH3899 and foodH4202 for his fatherH1 by the wayH1870. 24So he sentH7971 his brethrenH251 awayH7971, and they departedH3212: and he saidH559 to them, See that ye contend notH7264 by the wayH1870. 25And they went upH5927 from EgyptH4714, and cameH935 into the landH776 of CanaanH3667 to JacobH3290 their fatherH1, 26And toldH5046 him, sayingH559, JosephH3130 is yet aliveH2416, and he is governorH4910 over all the landH776 of EgyptH4714. And Jacob’s heartH3820 faintedH6313, for he believedH539 them not. 27And they toldH1696 him all the wordsH1697 of JosephH3130, which he had saidH1696 to them: and when he sawH7200 the wagonsH5699 which JosephH3130 had sentH7971 to carryH5375 him, the spiritH7307 of JacobH3290 their fatherH1 revivedH2421: 28And IsraelH3478 saidH559, It is enoughH7227; JosephH3130 my sonH1121 is yet aliveH2416: I will goH3212 and see himH7200 before I dieH4191.
Matthew Henry - Complete Commentary 1 Judah and his brethren were waiting for an answer, and could not but be amazed to discover, instead of the gravity of a judge, the natural affection of a father or brother.
I. Joseph ordered all his attendants to withdraw,
Gen 45:1. The private conversations of friends are the most free. When Joseph would put on love he puts off state, and it was not fit his servants should be witnesses of this. Thus Christ graciously manifests himself and his loving-kindness to his people, out of the sight and hearing of the world.
II. Tears were the preface or introduction to his discourse,
Gen 45:2. He had dammed up this stream a great while, and with much ado: but now it swelled so high that he could no longer contain, but
he wept aloud, so that those whom he had forbidden to see him could not but hear him. These were tears of tenderness and strong affection, and with these he threw off that austerity with which he had hitherto carried himself towards his brethren; for he could bear it no longer. This represents the divine compassion towards returning penitents, as much as that of the father of the prodigal,
Luke 15:20;
Hos 14:8,
Hos 14:9.
III. He very abruptly (as one uneasy till it was out) tells them who he was:
I am Joseph. They knew him only by his Egyptian name,
Zaphnath-paaneah, his Hebrew name being lost and forgotten in Egypt; but now he teaches them to call him by that:
I am Joseph; nay, that they might not suspect it was another of the same name, he explains himself (
Gen 45:4):
I am Joseph, your brother. This would both humble them yet more for their sin in selling him, and would encourage them to hope for kind treatment. Thus when Christ would convince Paul he said,
I am Jesus; and when he would comfort his disciples he said,
It is I, be not afraid. This word, at first, startled Joseph's brethren; they started back through fear, or at least stood still astonished; but Joseph called kindly and familiarly to them:
Come near, I pray you. Thus when Christ manifests himself to his people he encourages them to draw near to him with a true heart. Perhaps, being about to speak of their selling him, he would not speak aloud, lest the Egyptians should overhear, and it should make the Hebrews to be yet more an abomination to them; therefore he would have them come near, that he might whisper with them, which, now that the tide of his passion was a little over, he was able to do, whereas at first he could not but cry out.
IV. He endeavours to assuage their grief for the injuries they had done him, by showing them that whatever they designed God meant it for good, and had brought much good out of it (
Gen 45:5):
Be not grieved, nor angry with yourselves. Sinners must grieve, and be angry with themselves, for their sins; yea, though God by his power brings good out of them, for no thanks are due to the sinner for this: but true penitents should be greatly affected when they see God thus bringing good out of evil,
meat out of the eater. Though we must not with this consideration extenuate our own sins and so take off the edge of our repentance, yet it may be well thus to extenuate the sins of others and so take off the edge of our angry resentments. Thus Joseph does here; his brethren needed not to fear that he would avenge upon them an injury which God's providence had made to turn so much to his advantage and that of his family. Now he tells them how long the famine was likely to last -
five years; yet (
Gen 45:6) what a capacity he was in of being kind to his relations and friends, which is the greatest satisfaction that wealth and power can give to a good man,
Gen 45:8. See what a favourable colour he puts upon the injury they had done him:
God sent me before you, Gen 45:5,
Gen 45:7. Note, 1. God's Israel is the particular care of God's providence. Joseph reckoned that his advancement was not so much designed to save a whole kingdom of Egyptians as to preserve a small family of Israelites:
for the Lord's portion is his people; whatever becomes of theirs, they shall be secured. 2. Providence looks a great way forward, and has a long reach. Even long before the years of plenty, Providence was preparing for the supply of Jacob's house in the years of famine. The psalmist praises God for this (
Pss 105:17):
He sent a man before them, even Joseph. God sees his work from the beginning to the end, but we do not,
Qoh 3:11. How admirable are the projects of providence! How remote its tendencies! What wheels are there within wheels, and yet all directed by the eyes in the wheels, and the spirit of the living creature! Let us therefore judge nothing before the time. 3. God often works by contraries. The envy and contention of brethren threaten the ruin of families, yet, in this instance, they prove the occasion of preserving Jacob's family. Joseph could never have been
the shepherd and stone of Israel if his brethren had not shot at him, and hated him; even those that had wickedly sold Joseph into Egypt yet themselves reaped the benefit of the good God brought out of it; as those that put Christ to death were many of them saved by his death. 4. God must have all the glory of the seasonable preservations of his people, by what way soever they are effected.
It was not you that sent me hither, but God, Gen 45:8. As, on the one hand, they must not fret at it, because it ended so well, so on the other hand they must not be proud of it, because it was God's doing, and not theirs. They designed, by selling him into Egypt, to defeat his dreams, but God thereby designed to accomplish them.
Isa 10:7,
Howbeit he meaneth not so. V. He promises to take care of his father and all the family during the rest of the years of famine. 1. He desires that his father may speedily be made glad with the tidings of his life and dignity. His brethren must hasten to Canaan, and must inform Jacob that his son Joseph was
lord of all Egypt; (
Gen 45:9): they must tell him of all his glory there,
Gen 45:13. He knew it would be a refreshing oil to his hoary head and a sovereign cordial to his spirits. If any thing would make him young again, this would. He desires them to give themselves, and take with them to their father, all possible satisfaction of the truth of these surprising tidings:
Your eyes see that it is my mouth, Gen 45:12. If they would recollect themselves, they might remember something of his features, speech, etc., and be satisfied. 2. He is very earnest that his father and all his family should come to him to Egypt:
Come down unto me, tarry not, Gen 45:9. He allots his dwelling in Goshen, that part of Egypt which lay towards Canaan, that they might be mindful of the country from which they were to come out,
Gen 45:10. He promises to provide for him:
I will nourish thee, Gen 45:11. Note, It is the duty of children, if the necessity of their parents do at any time require it, to support and supply them to the utmost of their ability; and
Corban will never excuse them,
Mark 7:11. This is showing piety at home,
1Tim 5:4. Our Lord Jesus being, like Joseph, exalted to the highest honours and powers of the upper world, it is his will that all that are his should be with him where he is,
John 17:24. This is his commandment, that we be with him now in faith and hope, and a heavenly conversation; and this is his promise, that we shall be for ever with him.
VI. Endearments were interchanged between him and his brethren. He began with the youngest, his own brother Benjamin, who was but about a year old when Joseph was separated from his brethren; they wept on each other's neck (
Gen 45:14), perhaps to think of their mother Rachel, who died in travail of Benjamin. Rachel, in her husband, Jacob, had been lately weeping for her children, because, in his apprehension, they were not - Joseph gone, and Benjamin going; and now they were weeping for her, because she was not. After he had embraced Benjamin, he, in like manner, caressed them all (
Gen 45:15); and then
his brethren talked with him freely and familiarly of all the affairs of their father's house. After the tokens of true reconciliation follow the instances of a sweet communion.
16 Here is, 1. The kindness of Pharaoh to Joseph, and to his relations for his sake: he bade his brethren welcome (
Gen 45:16), though it was a time of scarcity, and they were likely to be a charge to him. Nay, because it pleased Pharaoh, it pleased his servants too, at least they pretended to be pleased because Pharaoh was. He engaged Joseph to send for his father down to Egypt, and promised to furnish them with all conveniences both for his removal thither and his settlement there. If the good of all the land of Egypt (as it was not better stocked than any other land, thanks to Joseph, under God) would suffice him, he was welcome to it all, it was all his own, even
the fat of the land (
Gen 45:18), so that they need not
regard their stuff, Gen 45:20. What they had in Canaan he reckoned but stuff, in comparison with what he had for them in Egypt; and therefore if they should be constrained to leave some of that behind them, let them not be discontented; Egypt would afford them enough to make up the losses of their removal. Thus those for whom Christ intends shares in his heavenly glory ought not to regard the stuff of this world: The best of its enjoyments are but stuff, but lumber; we cannot make sure of it while we are here, much less can we carry it away with us; let us not therefore be solicitous about it, nor set our eyes or hearts upon it. There are better things reserved for us in that blessed land whither our Joseph has gone to prepare a place.
II. The kindness of Joseph to his father and brethren. Pharaoh was respectful to Joseph, in gratitude, because he had been an instrument of much good to him and his kingdom, not only preserving it from the common calamity, but helping to make it considerable among the nations; for all their neighbours would say, Surely the Egyptians are a wise and an understanding people, that are so well stocked in a time of scarcity. For this reason Pharaoh never thought any thing too much that he could do for Joseph. Note, There is a gratitude owing even to inferiors; and when any have shown us kindness we should study to requite it, not only to them, but to their relations. And Joseph likewise was respectful to his father and brethren in duty, because they were his near relations, though his brethren had been his enemies, and his father long a stranger. 1. He furnished them for necessity,
Gen 45:21. He gave them wagons and provisions for the way, both going and coming; for we never find that Jacob was very rich, and, at this time, when the famine prevailed, we may suppose he was rather poor. 2. He furnished them for ornament and delight. To his brethren he gave two suits a piece of good clothes, to Benjamin five suits, and money besides in his pocket,
Gen 45:22. To his father he sent a very handsome present of the varieties of Egypt,
Gen 45:23. Note, Those that are wealthy should be generous, and devise liberal things; what is an abundance good for, but to do good with it? 3. He dismissed them with a seasonable caution:
See that you fall not out by the way, Gen 45:24. He knew they were but too apt to be quarrelsome; and what had lately passed, which revived the remembrance of what they had done formerly against their brother, might give them occasion to quarrel. Joseph had observed them to contend about it,
Gen 42:22. To one they would say, It was you that first upbraided him with his dreams; to another, It was you that stripped him of his fine coat; to another, It was you that threw him into the pit, etc. Now Joseph, having forgiven them all, lays this obligation upon them, not to upbraid one another. This charge our Lord Jesus has given to us,
that we love one another, that we live in peace, that whatever occurs, or whatever former occurrences are remembered, we fall not out. For, (1.) We are brethren, we have all one Father. (2.) We are his brethren, and we shame our relation to him
who is our peace, if we fall out. (3.) We are guilty,
verily guilty, and, instead of quarrelling with one another, have a great deal of reason to fall out with ourselves. (4.) We are, or hope to be, forgiven of God whom we have all offended, and therefore should be ready to forgive one another. (5.) We are
by the way, a way that lies through the land of Egypt, where we have many eyes upon us, that seek occasion and advantage against us, a way that leads to Canaan, where we hope to be for ever in perfect peace.
25 We have here the good news brought to Jacob. 1. The relation of it, at first, sunk his spirits. When, without any preamble, his sons came in, crying,
Joseph is yet alive, each striving which should first proclaim it, perhaps he thought they bantered him, and the affront grieved him; or the very mention of Joseph's name revived his sorrow, so that his heart fainted,
Gen 45:26. It was a good while before he came to himself. He was in such care and fear about the rest of them that at this time it would have been joy enough to him to hear that Simeon was released, and that Benjamin had come safely home (for he had been ready to despair concerning both these); but to hear that
Joseph is alive is too good news to be true; he faints, for he believes it not. Note, We faint, because we do not believe; David himself had fainted if he had not believed,
Pss 27:13. 2. The confirmation of it, by degrees, revived his spirit. Jacob had easily believed his sons formerly when they told him,
Joseph is dead; but he can hardly believe them now that they tell him,
Joseph is alive. Weak and tender spirits are influenced more by fear than hope, and are more apt to receive impressions that are discouraging than those that are encouraging. But at length Jacob is convinced of the truth of the story, especially when he sees the wagons which were sent to carry him (for seeing is believing), then his
spirit revived. Death is as the wagons which are sent to fetch us to Christ: the very sight of it approaching should revive us. Now Jacob is called Israel (
Gen 45:28), for he begins to recover his wonted vigour. (1.) It pleases him to think that Joseph is alive. He says nothing of Joseph's glory, of which they told him; it was enough to him that Joseph was alive. Note, Those that would be content with less degrees of comfort are best prepared for greater. (2.) It pleases him to think of going to see him. Though he was old, and the journey long, yet he would go to see Joseph, because Joseph's business would not permit him to come to see him. Observe, He says,
I will go and see him, not, I will go and live with him; Jacob was old, and did not expect to live long; But I will go and see him
before I die, and then let me depart in peace; let my eyes be refreshed with this sight before they are closed, and then it is
enough, I need no more to make me happy in this world. Note, It is good for us all to make death familiar to us, and to speak of it as near, that we may think how little we have to do before we die, that we may do it with all our might, and may enjoy our comforts as those that must quickly die, and leave them.