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Genesis Chapter
Forty-three
Genesis 43
Outlines
Jacob’s Second Journey to
Egypt
New King James Version
(NKJV)
INTRODUCTION TO
GENESIS 43
This chapter informs us
how that the famine continued in the land of Canaan, and the corn that Jacob's
family had from Egypt being consumed, Jacob pressed his sons to go down for
more, which they refused to do, unless Benjamin was sent with them, for whose
safety Judah offered to become a surety, Genesis 43:1; Jacob
with reluctance was prevailed upon to let him go, and dismissed them with a
present to the governor of Egypt, and with double money to buy corn with, and
with his blessing upon them, Genesis 43:11; upon
which they set out for Egypt; and when they came into the presence of Joseph,
he seeing Benjamin with them, ordered his steward to have them to his house,
and get dinner ready, it being his pleasure that they should dine with him that
day, Genesis 43:15; this
threw them into a fright, supposing they were going to be called to an account
for the money they found in their sacks; wherefore they related to the steward
very particularly the whole of that affair, who bid them not be uneasy, for he
had had their money; and as a proof that things would go well with them,
brought Simeon out to them, and treated them very kindly and gently, Genesis 43:18; and
having got their present ready against Joseph came home, they delivered it to
him with great veneration and submission; who asked of the welfare of their
father, and whether that was not their younger brother they spoke of, the sight
of whom so affected him, that he was obliged in haste to retire to his chamber,
and weep, Genesis 43:25; and
having washed his face, and composed himself, he returned and ordered dinner to
be brought, which was set on different tables, one for himself and the
Egyptians, and the other for his brethren, whom he placed according to their
age, to their great surprise; and sent them messes from his table to each, and
to Benjamin five times more than the rest, and they were so liberally
entertained, that they became cheerful and merry, Genesis 43:31.
Genesis 43:1. Now the famine was
severe in the land.
YLT 1And the famine [is] severe
in the land;
And the famine was
sore in the land.
In the land of Canaan; it
increased yet more and more: this is observed for the sake of what follows,
showing the reason and necessity of Jacob's sons taking a second journey into
Egypt.
Genesis 43:2. 2 And it came to pass, when they had eaten up
the grain which they had brought from Egypt, that their father said to them,
“Go back, buy us a little food.”
YLT 2and it cometh to pass, when
they have finished eating the corn which they brought from Egypt, that their
father saith unto them, `Turn back, buy for us a little food.'
And it came to
pass, when they had eaten up the corn which they had brought out of Egypt,....
Which, in so numerous a
family as Jacob's was, having so many children, grandchildren, and servants,
what nine men on so many asses could bring with them must be consumed in a
short time, how long cannot be said; no doubt they lived sparingly on it in
such a time of scarcity, to make it last as long as they could, and perhaps
only he, his children and grandchildren, might eat of it; the servants, as
Calvin observes, might live on meaner food, as acorns, herbs, and roots; and it
must not be thought that all this corn was eaten up entirely, and none left,
but the far greater part of it, and but very little remaining; or otherwise,
how should Jacob, and his sons' wives and children be supported until the
return of his sons from Egypt with fresh provisions? indeed it may be supposed,
that the land of Canaan produced some corn, though but little; and it is
certain there were other fruits which were serviceable for food, as appears
from Genesis 43:11,
their father
said, go again, buy us a little food;
just enough for him, and
them, and theirs, for the present; hoping that the famine would be over
quickly, and therefore orders them to go once more to Egypt, and buy some
provisions: they made no motion themselves to go, as it is highly probable they
determined they would not, since Jacob had resolved Benjamin should not go, but
waited for their father's motion, and which he did not make until necessity
obliged him.
Genesis 43:3. 3 But Judah spoke to him, saying, “The man
solemnly warned us, saying, ‘You shall not see my face unless your brother is
with you.’
YLT 3And Judah speaketh unto
him, saying, `The man protesting protested to us, saying, Ye do not see my face
without your brother [being] with you;
And Judah spake
unto him,....
Reuben the eldest son had
met with a repulse already, Genesis 42:36;
Simeon the next was now in Egypt, Genesis 42:24, and
Levi, perhaps on account of the affair of Shechem, Genesis 34:25, did
not yet stand well in his father's favour and affection; wherefore Judah being
next, with the consent of his brethren, undertakes to manage the affair with
him, who had doubtless an interest in him, as well as authority among his
brethren, and was a prudent man, and could speak well:
saying, the man
did solemnly protest unto us;
meaning Joseph, though he
then knew not that it was he; whom he calls "the man", not by way of
contempt, or as thinking and speaking meanly of him, but the reverse, the great
man, the honourable man, the governor of Egypt; and so the Septuagint version
adds, "the man, the lord of the land"; he in the strongest terms, and
in the most solemn manner, protested by the life of Pharaoh:
saying, ye shall
not see my face;
with acceptance, should
not be admitted to come near him, or treat with him, and purchase any corn of
him:
except your
brother be with you;
their youngest brother
Benjamin.
Genesis 43:4. 4 If you send our brother with us, we will go
down and buy you food.
YLT 4if thou art sending our
brother with us, we go down, and buy for thee food,
If thou wilt
send our brother with us,....
Give orders for his going
with us, and put him under our care:
we will go down
and buy thee food;
signifying, on the above
condition, that they were ready and willing to take a journey into Egypt, and
buy provisions for him and his family, otherwise not.
Genesis 43:5. 5 But if you will not send him, we will
not go down; for the man said to us, ‘You shall not see my face unless your
brother is with you.’”
YLT 5and if thou art not sending
-- we do not go down, for the man said unto us, Ye do not see my face without
your brother [being] with you.'
But if thou
wilt not send him, we will not go down,....
This they said not as
undutiful, and from a spirit of rebellion and disobedience to their father, or
of stubbornness and obstinacy, but because they durst not go down, nor could
they with any safety; they might expect to be taken up as spies, and put to
death as they were threatened; and besides, it would be in vain, and to no
purpose, since there was no likelihood of succeeding, or of getting any
provision:
for the man
said unto us, ye shall not see my face, except your brother be with you;
which they repeat both for
the confirmation of it, and as an apology for themselves, to clear them from
any charge of unfaithfulness.
Genesis 43:6. 6 And Israel said, “Why did you deal so
wrongfully with me as to tell the man whether you had still another
brother?”
YLT 6And Israel saith, `Why did
ye evil to me, by declaring to the man that ye had yet a brother?'
And Israel said,....
In answer to the speech of
Judah:
wherefore dealt
ye so ill with me;
had done that which
brought so much evil upon him, gave him so much grief and trouble, and threw
him into such perplexity and distress, that he knew not what to do, or course
to take:
as to tell the man whether ye had yet a brother?
which he thought was done
imprudently and unadvisedly, and that there was no need of it; which, had it
not been done, would have prevented this anxiety of mind he was now in, and the
mischief he feared would follow.1
Genesis 43:7. 7 But they said, “The man asked us pointedly
about ourselves and our family, saying, ‘Is your father still alive?
Have you another brother?’ And we told him according to these words.
Could we possibly have known that he would say, ‘Bring your brother down’?”
YLT 7and they say, `The man
asked diligently concerning us, and concerning our kindred, saying, Is your
father yet alive? have ye a brother? and we declare to him according to the
tenor of these things; do we certainly know that he will say, Bring down your
brother?'
Genesis 43:8. 8 Then Judah said to Israel his father, “Send
the lad with me, and we will arise and go, that we may live and not die, both
we and you and also our little ones.
YLT 8And Judah saith unto Israel
his father, `Send the youth with me, and we arise, and go, and live, and do not
die, both we, and thou, and our infants.
And Judah said
unto Israel his father, send the lad with me, and we will arise and go,....
Directly to Egypt for
corn; Judah calls Benjamin a lad, because the youngest brother, and tenderly
brought up by his father, who had an affectionate fondness for him as if he had
been a child; otherwise he must be thirty two years of age, for he was seven
years younger than Joseph, who was now thirty nine years of age; yea, Benjamin
must have children of his own, who went with him and his father into Egypt, Genesis 46:21; for
the computation of Benjamin's age, see Genesis 30:22,
that we may
live, and not die, both we, and thou, and also our little ones;
he argues, that if they
with Benjamin went down to Egypt for corn, there was a possibility, yea, a
probability that they would all live, even Benjamin also; but if not, they must
all in course die, and Benjamin likewise; and therefore it was most prudent and
advisable, for the sake of all their lives, of them and theirs, and for the
sake of Benjamin among the rest, for whom Jacob was so particularly concerned,
to let him go with them to Egypt for corn, since he must die if they did not
go, and he could but die if he did go; and there was great likelihood, if not a
certainty, he would not; at least Judah was confident he would not, as appears
by what follows.
Genesis 43:9. 9 I myself will be surety for him; from my hand
you shall require him. If I do not bring him back to you and set him
before you, then let me bear the blame forever.
YLT 9I -- I am surety [for] him,
from my hand thou dost require him; if I have not brought him in unto thee, and
set him before thee -- then I have sinned against thee all the days;
I will be
surety for him,....
Engage for his safe
return:
of my hand
shall thou require him;
I will be answerable for
him:
if I bring him
not to thee, and set him before thee:
do not return him from
Egypt, and bring him to Canaan, into his father's house and presence safe, and
sound:
then let me
bear the blame for ever;
of persuading his father
to let him go with him; all this he said, to show what care he would take of
him, and what confidence he had that no evil would befall him, that he would be
returned with them in safety; which he might ground upon the assurance that
Joseph had given, that they should not die if they brought their brother with
them, Genesis 42:20; and
perhaps Judah, as Schmidt thinks, might be under a special instinct of divine
Providence, which directed him to say these things: and it may be added, that
Jacob also might be under a divine impulse, which influenced him to regard what
Judah said, or otherwise his suretyship was but a poor security, and of little
avail.
Genesis 43:10. 10 For if we had not lingered, surely by now we
would have returned this second time.”
YLT 10for if we had not lingered,
surely now we had returned these two times.'
For except we
had lingered,....
Delayed going down to
Egypt, through the demur Jacob made of tending Benjamin with them:
surely now we
had returned this second time;
they would have made their
journey to Egypt, and returned again with their corn, and their brother
Benjamin too, as Judah supposed, before this time; so that by these delays they
were losing time, and involving themselves and families in distress for want of
corn.
Genesis 43:11. 11 And their father Israel
said to them, “If it must be so, then do this: Take some of the best
fruits of the land in your vessels and carry down a present for the man—a
little balm and a little honey, spices and myrrh, pistachio nuts and almonds.
YLT 11And Israel their father
saith unto them, `If so, now, this do: take of the praised thing of the land in
your vessels, and take down to the man a present, a little balm, and a little
honey, spices and myrrh, nuts and almonds;
And their
father said unto them,....
Being in some measure
convinced by their reasonings, and in part at least reconciled to let Benjamin
go with them, there being nothing to be done, he perceived, unless he consented
to it:
if it must
be so now, do this;
if nothing else will do
but Benjamin must go, which after all he was reluctant to, then he advises them
to do as follows:
take of the
best fruits in the land in your vessels;
such as were the peculiar
produce of the land of Canaan, and the best of it; for which it was most
famous, and praised, as the word used signifies; these Jacob advises to take
and put into their sacks they carried to bring back their corn in:
and carry down
the man a present;
the great man and governor
of Egypt, whose name was not known, little thinking it was his son Joseph; this
he proposed to be done, in order to procure his friendship, that he might carry
it kindly and respectfully to them, release Simeon, and send back Benjamin with
them. The present consisted of the following things:
a little balm:
or rosin, of which there
was great quantity in and about Gilead; See Gill on Jeremiah 8:22,
and a little
honey;
the land of Canaan in
general is called a land flowing with milk and honey; and some parts of it were
famous for it, as the, parts about Ziph, called from thence the honey of ZiphimF9Misn.
Machshirin, c. 5. sect. 9. : this is the first time mention is made of
"honey" in Scripture. Some sayF11"Et a Baccho mella
reperta ferunt", Ovid. Fast. l. 3. Bacchus was the inventor of it. JustinF12E
Trogo, l. 44. c. 4. makes a very ancient king of a people in the country, now
called Spain, to whom he gives the name of Gorgoris, to be the first that found
out the way of gathering honey; but by this it appears to be of a more early
date. Dr. ShawF13Travels, p. 339. No. 6. Ed. 2. thinks, that not
honey, properly so called, is meant, but a kind of "rob" made of the
juice of grapes, called by the Arabs "dibsa", a word near in sound
with, and from the same root as this. And who further observes, that Hebron
alone (the place were Jacob now was) sends every year to Egypt three hundred
camel loads, i.e. near two thousand quintals of this rob: and Leo Africanus
saysF14Descriptio Africae, l. 8. p. 682. , there is but little honey
to be found in Egypt, wherefore it made this part of the present the more
acceptable:
spices;
of various sorts, a
collection of them; though it is thought, by Bochart and others, that the
"storax" is particularly meant; the best of that sort being, as PlinyF15Nat.
Hist. l. 12. c. 25. says in Judea. The Targum and Jarchi take it to be
"wax", as do also other Jewish writers:
and myrrh;
the liquor called
"stacte", that drops from the myrrh tree. Some will have this
"lot", as the word is, the same with "ladanum"; one should
rather think that it should be the lotus or lote tree, the fruit of which,
PlinyF16Ib. l. 13. c. 17. says, is the size of a bean, and of a
saffron colour, and HerodotusF17Melpomene, sive, l. 4. c. 177. Vid.
Euterpe, sive, l. 2. c. 92. says, it is sweet like a date; but that it was
frequent in Egypt, and needed not be carried there. The Targum renders it
"chestnuts", and so Ben Melech, as it does what follows:
nuts, and
almonds,
the oil of nuts, and the
oil of almonds: the former design not common, but the pistachio nuts, as Jarchi
observes from R. Machir; and these, as PlinyF18Nat. Hist. l. 13. c.
5. says, were well known in Syria, and were good for food and drink, and
against the bites of serpents; and, as BochartF19Canaan, l. 1. c.
10. col. 389. observes, are frequently mentioned by naturalists along with
almonds, and as like unto them.
Genesis 43:12. 12 Take double money in your hand, and take back
in your hand the money that was returned in the mouth of your sacks; perhaps it
was an oversight.
YLT 12and double money take in
your hand, even the money which is brought back in the mouth of your bags, ye
take back in your hand, it may be it [is] an oversight.
And take double
money in your hand,....
Than what they carried
before, either to buy as much more as they then did; or rather because of the
greater scarcity of corn, as Jarchi observes, which made it doubly dearer; for
this seems to be different from the money they are also bid to take in return
for that found in their sacks, which was a third parcel, as follows:
and the money
that was brought again in the mouth of your sacks, carry it again in
your hand;
that it might be ready to
pay upon demand, should they be charged with nonpayment for the corn they had
before:
peradventure it
was an oversight;
a mistake of the
governors, or of those that were under him, concerned in the sale of the corn,
and receiving money for it, or of Jacob's sons; he could not tell how it was,
but some way or other he supposed a mistake was made.
Genesis 43:13. 13 Take your brother also, and arise, go back to
the man.
YLT 13`And take your brother, and
rise, turn back unto the man;
Take also your
brother,....
Their brother Benjamin,
committing him into their hands and to their care, hereby declaring his consent
and willingness that he should go with them:
and arise, go
again to the man;
the governor of Egypt, to
buy corn of him.
Genesis 43:14. 14 And may God Almighty give you mercy before
the man, that he may release your other brother and Benjamin. If I am bereaved,
I am bereaved!”
YLT 14and God Almighty give to
you mercies before the man, so that he hath sent to you your other brother and
Benjamin; and I, when I am bereaved -- I am bereaved.'
And God
Almighty give you mercy before the man,....
Who has the hearts of all
men in his hands, kings, princes, governors, even those who are the most cruel
and hardhearted, rough and severe in their tempers and dispositions, and such
an one they had represented this man to be; one that had spoke roughly to them,
and used them roughly: Jacob therefore sent him a present to soften his mind,
and now he puts up a prayer to God, and dismisses his sons with his good wishes
for them, that God would incline the heart of the governor to show kindness to
them, and let them have corn, nor use any of them ill: particularly:
that he may
send away your other brother and Benjamin;
release Simeon, and send
him and Benjamin aiming with them when they returned:
if I be
bereaved of my children, I am bereaved;
this he said, not as
utterly despairing of their return, but as expressive of his patient submission
to the divine will, be it as it may be.
Genesis 43:15. 15 So the men took that present and Benjamin,
and they took double money in their hand, and arose and went down to Egypt; and
they stood before Joseph.
YLT 15And the men take this
present, double money also they have taken in their hand, and Benjamin; and
they rise, and go down to Egypt, and stand before Joseph;
And the men
took the present,....
Their father directed them
to:
and they took
double money in their hand;
besides what they found in
their sacks mouths, which they also carried with them:
and Benjamin;
they took him likewise
with their father's leave:
and rose up,
and went down to Egypt, and stood before Joseph;
presented themselves to
him, and their petitions for more corn, as well as to answer to any questions
that should be asked them.
Genesis 43:16. 16 When Joseph saw Benjamin with them, he said
to the steward of his house, “Take these men to my home, and slaughter
an animal and make ready; for these men will dine with me at noon.”
YLT 16and Joseph seeth Benjamin
with them, and saith to him who [is] over his house, `Bring the men into the house,
and slaughter an animal, and make ready, for with me do the men eat at noon.'
And when Joseph
saw Benjamin with them,....
Whom he knew, though he
had not seen him twenty two years, and though he must be very much altered,
being but about ten years of age when Joseph was said into Egypt, yet being
with the rest of his brethren, whom he knew very well, concluded it must be
him:
he said to the
ruler of his house;
his steward, as be is
after called, not his son Manasseh, as the Targum of Jonathan:
bring these
men home;
to his own house, for
Joseph was now at or near the place where were the granaries of corn, and where
that was said and distributed:
and slay, and
make ready;
or "slay a
slaughter"F20טבח טבח
"macta mactationem", Drusius, Schmidt; "macta animalia",
Junius & Tremellius, Piscator. , that is, of beasts for food; a sheep, or a
lamb, or a calf, very probably, and order it to be dressed, boiled or roasted,
or both, that it might be fit for food: wherefore Aben Ezra must be mistaken
when Genesis 46:34; he
says, that the Egyptians in those times did not eat flesh, nor might any kill a
sheep; for it cannot be thought that Joseph could order a dinner for his
brethren, to whom as yet he did not choose to make himself known, in direct
violation of the customs and laws of Egypt, and who, it is plain by what
follows, dined as an Egyptian, and with the Egyptians, and not as an Hebrew,
and with his brethren as Hebrews; besides, for what purpose did Pharaoh get and
possess such herds and flocks of cattle, if not for food as well as other uses?
see Genesis 47:6;
though in later times they abstained from eating various animals, as PorphyryF21De
abstinentia, l. 4. sect. 6, 7. from Chaeremon relates, and particularly from
sheep and goats, according to JuvenalF24"-----lanatis
animalibus abstinet omnis Mensa, nefas illic foetus jugulare capellae."
Satyr 15. ver. 11, 12. :
for these
men shall dine with me at noon;
which was the usual time
of dining with the eastern people, as it is now with us, though with the Romans
at evening.
Genesis 43:17. 17 Then the man did as Joseph ordered, and the
man brought the men into Joseph’s house.
YLT 17And the man doth as Joseph
hath said, and the man bringeth in the men into the house of Joseph,
And the man did
as Joseph bade: and the man brought the men into Joseph's house.
Showed them the way to it,
and introduced them into it, and led them into some apartment in it, and
ordered every thing to be got ready for dinner as his master had bid him, being
a diligent and faithful servant: at old Cair is shown to travellersF25Radzivil,
Thevenot, Le Brun & Lucas apud Jablonski de Terra Goshen, Dissert. 5. sect.
6. the house of Joseph in the tower, and a very surprising well, said to be
made by him, and here, they say; the granaries were, in which the corn was laid
up.
Genesis 43:18. 18 Now the men were afraid because they were
brought into Joseph’s house; and they said, “It is because of the money,
which was returned in our sacks the first time, that we are brought in, so that
he may make a case against us and seize us, to take us as slaves with our
donkeys.”
YLT 18and the men are afraid
because they have been brought into the house of Joseph, and they say, `For the
matter of the money which was put back in our bags at the commencement are we
brought in -- to roll himself upon us, and to throw himself on us, and to take
us for servants -- our asses also.'
And the men
were afraid, because they were brought into Joseph's house,....
It not being usual, as
Jarchi observes, for those that came to buy corn to lodge there, but at an inn
in the city:
and they said,
because of the money that was returned in our sacks at the first time are we
brought in;
to examine and inquire of
them how they came to go away without paying for their corn, take up their
money again after they had laid it down, and take it away with them, and so
were guilty of tricking and defrauding, if not of theft:
that he may
seek occasion against us:
or "roll on us"F26להתנלל עלינו "ut devolvat
(hoc) in nos", Tigurine version. ; cast all the shame on them, and leave
the reproach and scandal of it on them:
and fall upon
us;
with hard words, and
severe menaces, if not with blows:
and take us for
bondmen, and our asses;
imprison them, which was
the punishment for fraud and theft, and take their asses as a forfeiture.
Genesis 43:19. 19 When they drew near to the steward of Joseph’s
house, they talked with him at the door of the house,
YLT 19And they come nigh unto the
man who [is] over the house of Joseph, and speak unto him at the opening of the
house,
And they came
near to the steward of Joseph's house,....
The same person before
called the ruler of his house, under whose direction they were; just before
they came to the house, as it seems by what follows, they made up to him as
having something to say to him:
and they
communed with him at the door of the house;
before they went into it,
being uneasy and eager to know what should be the meaning of their being
brought thither, which was unusual.
Genesis 43:20. 20 and said, “O sir, we indeed came down the
first time to buy food;
YLT 20and say, `O, my lord, we
really come down at the commencement to buy food;
And said, O sir,....
Or, "on me, my
lord"F1בי אדני
"in me Domine mi", Montanus. , one said in the name of the rest, perhaps
Judah, on me let the blame lie, if guilty of rudeness in making our address to
thee; or as the Vulgate Latin version, "we pray, sir, that thou wouldest
hear us"; and so Jarchi and Aben Ezra say the phrase is expressive of
beseeching, entreating, and supplicating:
we came indeed
down at the first time to buy food;
not to spy the land but to
buy corn, and not to get it by fraud or tricking but by paying for it the price
that was required.
Genesis 43:21. 21 but it happened, when we
came to the encampment, that we opened our sacks, and there, each man’s
money was in the mouth of his sack, our money in full weight; so we have
brought it back in our hand.
YLT 21and it cometh to pass, when
we have come in unto the lodging-place, and open our bags, that lo, each one's
money [is] in the mouth of his bag, our money in its weight, and we bring it
back in our hand;
And it came to
pass when we came to the inn,....
Upon the road, on the
first day's journey, to refresh themselves and their cattle:
that we opened
our sacks;
to give provender to our
cattle; by which it appears that they all did this, though it is only said of
one of them at the inn, and of all of them when they came home, Genesis 42:27,
and, behold, every
man's money was in the mouth of his sack, our money in full weight;
nothing wanting of it; it
being usual in those times to pay money by weight, and not by the tale of
pieces:
and we have
brought it again in our hand;
in order to pay it for the
corn we have had, having no design to defraud.
Genesis 43:22. 22 And we have brought down other money in our
hands to buy food. We do not know who put our money in our sacks.”
YLT 22and other money have we
brought down in our hand to buy food; we have not known who put our money in
our bags.'
And other money
have we brought down in our hands to buy food,....
Double money for a double
quantity, or because the price of corn was now doubled; and their bringing this
besides the other showed their honest and upright intentions:
we cannot tell
who put our money in our sacks;
we are quite ignorant of
it, and can by no means account for it, and therefore hope no blame will be
laid on us.
Genesis 43:23. 23 But he said, “Peace be with you, do
not be afraid. Your God and the God of your father has given you treasure in
your sacks; I had your money.” Then he brought Simeon out to them.
YLT 23And he saith, `Peace to
you, fear not: your God and the God of your father hath given to you hidden
treasure in your bags, your money came unto me;' and he bringeth out Simeon
unto them.
And he said,
peace be unto you, fear not,....
Do not be uneasy and
disturbed, you have nothing to fear, you are in no danger:
your God, and
the God of your father, hath given you treasure in your sacks;
the hidden treasure, as
the word signifies, found in their sacks; was there by the providence of God,
so disposing the heart of Joseph to order it to be put there, as the steward
interpreted it; who by being Joseph's family had got some knowledge of the true
God, and of his all wise and disposing Providence:
I had your
money;
he received it of them,
which he acknowledges, and that was sufficient to acquit them from guile and
theft, though he does not say that he put the money into their sacks, or by
whose order it was done:
and he brought
Simeon out unto them;
either out of prison, or
out of some other room to them, which was, no doubt, done by the direction of
Joseph.
Genesis 43:24. 24 So the man brought the men into Joseph’s
house and gave them water, and they washed their feet; and he gave their
donkeys feed.
YLT 24And the man bringeth in the
men into Joseph's house, and giveth water, and they wash their feet; and he
giveth provender for their asses,
And the man
brought the men into Joseph's house,....
After the above discourse
had passed between them, and he had made their minds easy, both with respect to
the money, and by bringing Simeon unbound to them:
and gave them
water, and they washed their feet;
which was usually done in
the eastern countries after travelling, and when about to take a meal, and was
both for refreshment and cleanliness:
and he gave
their asses provender;
thus were they hospitably
entertained, they and all that belonged to them.
Genesis 43:25. 25 Then they made the present ready for Joseph’s
coming at noon, for they heard that they would eat bread there.
YLT 25and they prepare the
present until the coming of Joseph at noon, for they have heard that there they
do eat bread.
And they made
ready the present against Joseph came at noon,....
They took it out of their
vessels or bags in which they brought it, having unladen their asses, and
disposed of it in a proper manner to present it to him when he came home at
noon to dine:
for they heard
that they should eat bread there;
dine there, bread being
put for all provision: this was told them, very probably, by the steward, or by
some of the servants in the house, or they overheard what Joseph said to the
steward, Genesis 43:16.
Genesis 43:26. 26 And when Joseph came home, they brought him
the present which was in their hand into the house, and bowed down
before him to the earth.
YLT 26And Joseph cometh into the
house, and they bring to him the present which [is] in their hand, into the
house, and bow themselves to him, to the earth;
And when Joseph
came home,....
In order to dine, it being
noontime:
they brought
him the present which was in their hand into the house;
everyone took a part of it
in his hand, and brought it to Joseph in the parlour where he was, and
delivered it to him as a present from their father, or from themselves, or it
may be as from both:
and bowed
themselves to him to the earth;
in the most prostrate and
humble manner, now again fulfilling his dream, and more completely than before,
for now all his eleven brethren were together, signified by the eleven stars in
the dream, that made obeisance to him, see Genesis 37:9.
Genesis 43:27. 27 Then he asked them about their
well-being, and said, “Is your father well, the old man of whom you
spoke? Is he still alive?”
YLT 27and he asketh of them of
peace, and saith, `Is your father well? the aged man of whom ye have spoken, is
he yet alive?'
And he asked
them of their welfare,....
Or "peace"F2לשלום "ad pacem", Montanus, "de pace",
Vatablus, Drusius, Piscator, Schmidt. , their prosperity, especially of the
health of their bodies, whether they were well and in good health after so long
a journey:
and said, is
your father well, the old man of whom ye spake?
when they were with him
before, and told him they were all the sons of one man, who dwelt in Canaan:
is he yet alive?
which he was very desirous
of knowing; for, being advanced in years, he might fear he was removed by death
in the time between their going and returning.
Genesis 43:28. 28 And they answered, “Your servant our father is
in good health; he is still alive.” And they bowed their heads down and
prostrated themselves.
YLT 28and they say, `Thy servant
our father [is] well, he is yet alive;' and they bow, and do obeisance.
And they answered,
thy servant our father is in good health, he is yet alive,....
Which is an answer to both
his questions; and by calling their father Joseph's servant, he did obeisance
to him in them, as well as by sending a present to him, which they delivered as
coming from him his servant; and it is not improbable that Jacob sent his
salutation to him as his servant, and so that part of the dream of Joseph's was
also fulfilled, which represented the sun doing obeisance to him, Genesis 37:9,
and they bowed
their heads, and made obeisance;
a second time, as they
did, no doubt, at every time they gave answer to Joseph's questions; and this
is again observed, to show the full completion of the above dream.
Genesis 43:29. 29 Then he lifted his eyes and saw his brother
Benjamin, his mother’s son, and said, “Is this your younger brother of
whom you spoke to me?” And he said, “God be gracious to you, my son.”
YLT 29And he lifteth up his eyes,
and seeth Benjamin his brother, his mother's son, and saith, `Is this your
young brother, of whom ye have spoken unto me?' and he saith, `God favour thee,
my son.'
And he lifted
up his eyes and saw his brother Benjamin,....
He had seen him before
when his brethren first presented themselves to him, but then took no
particular and special notice of him, only gave him a side look as it were, but
now he looked wistly at him:
his mother's
son;
the son of Rachel his
mother, and who was his only brother by his mother's side, the rest, though his
brethren, yet only by his father's side, not his mother's sons:
and said, is
this your younger brother, of whom ye spake unto me?
he knew he was the same,
but was willing to have it from their mouths, to lead on to what he had further
to say:
and he said;
after they had answered
his question, and told him it was he:
God be gracious
unto thee, my son;
speaking as a superior, a
governor, in which capacity he was a father to his inferiors; and as a man, a
relation, a brother, though not as yet discovered; he spoke in the most tender
and affectionate manner, and, as a religious good man, he wishes the best thing
he could for his brother, the grace and goodness of God; and which may be
understood in the largest and most expressive sense, as including all good
things, temporal, spiritual, and eternal.
Genesis 43:30. 30 Now his heart yearned for his brother; so
Joseph made haste and sought somewhere to weep. And he went into his
chamber and wept there.
YLT 30And Joseph hasteth, for his
bowels have been moved for his brother, and he seeketh to weep, and entereth
the inner chamber, and weepeth there;
And Joseph made
haste,....
To get out of the room
where he was with his brethren as fast as he could:
for his bowels
did yearn upon his brother;
his passions grew strong,
his affections were raised, his heart was full of tenderness, and there was
such a flow of love and joy at the sight of his brother, and the little
conversation he had with him, that he was ready to burst out, and must have
discovered himself if he had not immediately turned and got out of the room:
and he sought where
to weep;
a proper place to vent his
passion in tears of joy, and relieve himself
and he entered
into his chamber, and wept there;
where he could be the most
retired, and not likely to be overheard.
Genesis 43:31. 31 Then he washed his face and
came out; and he restrained himself, and said, “Serve the bread.”
YLT 31and he washeth his face,
and goeth out, and refraineth himself, and saith, `Place bread.'
And he washed
his face,....
From the tears on it, that
it might not be discerned that he had been weeping:
and went out;
of his chamber into the
room again, where his brethren were:
and refrained
himself;
from weeping, or showing
any excess of passion, love, joy, &c.
and said, set
on bread;
gave orders to his
servants to bring in dinner, and set it upon the table; bread, as before, being
put for all kind of food.
Genesis 43:32. 32 So they set him a place by himself, and them
by themselves, and the Egyptians who ate with him by themselves; because the
Egyptians could not eat food with the Hebrews, for that is an
abomination to the Egyptians.
YLT 32And they place for him by
himself, and for them by themselves, and for the Egyptians who are eating with
him by themselves: for the Egyptians are unable to eat bread with the Hebrews,
for it [is] an abomination to the Egyptians.
And they set on
for him by himself,....
A table was placed and
provisions set upon it in one part of the room for Joseph by himself; which was
done either because he was an Hebrew, and the Egyptians might not eat with him,
nor he with them; or rather for the sake of grandeur, he being the next man in
the kingdom to Pharaoh:
and for them by
themselves;
another table was placed
and spread for Joseph's brethren by themselves, the reason of which is after
given:
and for the
Egyptians, which did eat with him, by themselves;
a third table was laid for
such Egyptian noblemen and others, who were at this time Joseph's guests, or
used to dine with him:
because the
Egyptians might not eat bread with the Hebrews, for that is an
abomination unto the Egyptians;
the reason of which, as
given by the Targums of Onkelos and, Jonathan, is, because the creatures the
Egyptians worshipped the Hebrews eat; but it is a question whether such
creatures as oxen, sheep, goats, &c. which were eaten by the Hebrews, were
so early worshipped by the Egyptians; though they were in later times, and
particularly the Apis or ox, which is supposed by many to be worshipped on the
account of Joseph, and so after his time; rather the abhorrence the Egyptians
had the Hebrews in was on account of their being shepherds, on a political
account, they having before this time suffered much by the insurrections and
rebellions of such sort of persons among themselves, who set up a kingdom and
kings of their own, called the "Hycsi", or pastor kings: or else this
difference made between the Egyptians and Hebrews at eating, was not on account
of what they did eat, as of the certain rites and customs the Egyptians had
peculiar to themselves in dressing their food, and eating it; and therefore
would not eat with any of another nation; so that this was not any particular
distaste they had to the Hebrews, but was their usage towards men of all
nations; for so Herodotus saysF3Euterpe, sive, l. 2. c. 41. ,
that"no Egyptian, man or woman, might kiss the month of a Greek, or use a
knife, or spit, or pot;'that is, a knife a Greek had cut anything with, or a
spit he had roasted meat on, or a pot he had boiled it in; and adds,"nor
might taste of the flesh of an ox, cut with the knife of a Greek.'And indeed
they would not eat nor converse with any of another religionF4Chaeremon
apud Porphyr. de abstinentia, l. 4. sect. 6. , be they who they would.
Genesis 43:33. 33 And they sat before him, the firstborn
according to his birthright and the youngest according to his youth; and the
men looked in astonishment at one another.
YLT 33And they sit before him,
the first-born according to his birthright, and the young one according to his
youth, and the men wonder one at another;
And they sat
before him,....
At a table, so placed that
they were in his sight, and he had a full view of them:
the firstborn
according to his birthright, and the youngest according to his youth;
everyone according to his
age, Reuben, the firstborn, first, and so on to Benjamin the youngest: thus
they placed themselves as they used to be in their father's family, or they
were so placed by Joseph; and if this was the case, it may be a reason, and a
principal one, of what follows:
and the men
marvelled one at another;
not the Egyptians, the
guests of Joseph, seeing eleven brethren placed in this manner, and these being
Hebrews, taken so much notice of; but Joseph's brethren, who either wondered at
the manner of their being seated so regular, according to their age; or at the
honour done them to dine with the governor, and at the grandeur of the
entertainment, and at the separate manner in which the governor, and the nobles
of Egypt, sat at meals; or at what follows.
Genesis 43:34. 34 Then he took servings to them from before
him, but Benjamin’s serving was five times as much as any of theirs. So they
drank and were merry with him.
YLT 34and he lifteth up gifts
from before him unto them, and the gift of Benjamin is five hands more than the
gifts of all of them; and they drink, yea, they drink abundantly with him.
And he took and
sent messes unto there from before him,....
The several dishes were
brought before him, who cut them up, and sent to everyone their part and
portion, as was usual in those times and countries, and afterwards elsewhereF5Athenaei
Deipnosophist. l. 1. , for the master of the family or feast to divide the food
into parts, and to give to every guest his part; and these were called, from
their being sent, "missus", and from whence seems to be our English
word "messes", here used:
but Benjamin's
mess was five times so much as any of theirs;
which was done out of his
great affection to him, being his own brother both by father and mother's side;
and, as some think, to try his brethren, how they stood affected to Benjamin,
and observe if this did not raise their envy to him, as his father's particular
respect to him had raised it in them against himself; and that, if it should,
he might provide for his safety, lest they should use him in like manner as
they had used him. This undoubtedly was designed as a peculiar favour, and a
mark of special honour and respect, it being usual for princes to send messes
from their tables to such as they favoured; and particularly it was usual with
the Egyptians for their kings to have double messes more than the rest, in
honour of them, as HerodotusF6Erato, sive, l. 6. c. 57. relates:
Benjamin's mess consisted either of five parts, or it was five times bigger
than what was sent to the rest; not but that they had all what was sufficient;
there was no want to any, but great plenty of everything for them all; nor was
this designed Benjamin, that he should eat the larger quantity, only to show
him distinguishing respect:
and they drank,
and were merry with him;
after dinner they drank
wine liberally and plentifully, but not to excess and intemperance, yet so as
to be cheerful and in good spirits; their fears being all dissipated by this
generous entertainment they met with.
──《John Gill’s
Exposition of the Bible》