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Genesis Chapter
Forty-seven
Genesis 47
Chapter Contents
Joseph presents his brethren to Pharaoh. (1-6) Jacob
blesses Pharaoh. (7-12) Joseph's dealings with the Egyptians during the famine.
(13-26) Jacob's age. His desire to be buried in Canaan. (27--31)
Commentary on Genesis 47:1-6
Though Joseph was a great man, especially in Egypt, yet
he owned his brethren. Let the rich and great in the world not overlook or
despise poor relations. Our Lord Jesus is not ashamed to call us brethren. In
answer to Pharaoh's inquiry, What is your calling? they told him that they were
shepherds, adding that they were come to sojourn in the land for a time, while
the famine prevailed in Canaan. Pharaoh offered to employ them as shepherds,
provided they were active men. Whatever our business or employment is, we
should aim to excel in it, and to prove ourselves clever and industrious.
Commentary on Genesis 47:7-12
With the gravity of old age, the piety of a true
believer, and the authority of a patriarch and a prophet, Jacob besought the
Lord to bestow a blessing upon Pharaoh. He acted as a man not ashamed of his
religion; and who would express gratitude to the benefactor of himself and his
family. We have here a very uncommon answer given to a very common question.
Jacob calls his life a pilgrimage; the sojourning of a stranger in a foreign
country, or his journey home to his own country. He was not at home upon earth;
his habitation, his inheritance, his treasures were in heaven. He reckons his
life by days; even by days life is soon reckoned, and we are not sure of the
continuance of it for a day. Let us therefore number our days. His days were
few. Though he had now lived one hundred and thirty years, they seemed but a
few days, in comparison with the days of eternity, and the eternal state. They
were evil; this is true concerning man. He is of few days and full of trouble;
since his days are evil, it is well they are few. Jacob's life had been made up
of evil days. Old age came sooner upon him than it had done upon some of his
fathers. As the young man should not be proud of his strength or beauty, so the
old man should not be proud of his age, and his hoary hairs, though others
justly reverence them; for those who are accounted very old, attain not to the
years of the patriarchs. The hoary head is only a crown of glory, when found in
the way of righteousness. Such an answer could not fail to impress the heart of
Pharaoh, by reminding him that worldly prosperity and happiness could not last
long, and was not enough to satisfy. After a life of vanity and vexation, man
goes down into the grave, equally from the throne as the cottage. Nothing can
make us happy, but the prospect of an everlasting home in heaven, after our
short and weary pilgrimage on earth.
Commentary on Genesis 47:13-26
Care being taken of Jacob and his family, which mercy was
especially designed by Providence in Joseph's advancement, an account is given
of the saving the kingdom of Egypt from ruin. There was no bread, and the
people were ready to die. See how we depend upon God's providence. All our
wealth would not keep us from starving, if rain were withheld for two or three
years. See how much we are at God's mercy, and let us keep ourselves always in
his love. Also see how much we smart by our own want of care. If all the
Egyptians had laid up corn for themselves in the seven years of plenty, they
had not been in these straits; but they regarded not the warning. Silver and
gold would not feed them: they must have corn. All that a man hath will he give
for his life. We cannot judge this matter by modern rules. It is plain that the
Egyptians regarded Joseph as a public benefactor. The whole is consistent with
Joseph's character, acting between Pharaoh and his subjects, in the fear of
God. The Egyptians confessed concerning Joseph, Thou hast saved our lives. What
multitudes will gratefully say to Jesus, at the last day, Thou hast saved our
souls from the most tremendous destruction, and in the season of uttermost
distress! The Egyptians parted with all their property, and even their liberty,
for the saving of their lives: can it then be too much for us to count all but
loss, and part with all, at His command, and for His sake, who will both save
our souls, and give us an hundredfold, even here, in this present world? Surely
if saved by Christ, we shall be willing to become his servants.
Commentary on Genesis 47:27-31
At last the time drew nigh that Israel must die. Israel,
a prince with God, had power over the Angel, and prevailed, yet must die.
Joseph supplied him with bread, that he might not die by famine, but that did
not secure him from dying by age or sickness. He died by degrees; his candle
gradually burnt down to the socket, so that he saw the time drawing nigh. It is
an advantage to see the approach of death, before we feel it, that we may be
quickened to do, with all our might, what our hands find to do. However, death
is not far from any of us. Jacob's care, as he saw the day approach, was about
his burial; not the pomp of it, but he would be buried in Canaan, because it
was the land of promise. It was a type of heaven, that better country, which he
declared plainly he expected, Hebrews 11:14. Nothing will better help to make
a death-bed easy, than the certain prospect of rest in the heavenly Canaan
after death. When this was done, Israel bowed himself upon the bed's head,
worshipping God, as it is explained, see Hebrews 11:21, giving God thanks for all his
favours; in feebleness thus supporting himself, expressing his willingness to
leave the world. Even those who lived on Joseph's provision, and Jacob who was
so dear to him, must die. But Christ Jesus gives us the true bread, that we may
eat and live for ever. To Him let us come and yield ourselves, and when we draw
near to death, he who supported us through life, will meet us and assure us of
everlasting salvation.
¢w¢w Matthew Henry¡mConcise Commentary on Genesis¡n
Genesis 47
Verse 3
[3] And
Pharaoh said unto his brethren, What is your occupation? And they said unto
Pharaoh, Thy servants are shepherds, both we, and also our fathers.
What is your occupation? ¡X Pharaoh takes it for granted they had something to do. All that have a
place in the world should have an employment in it according to their capacity,
some occupation or other. Those that need not work for their bread, yet must
have something to do to keep them from idleness.
Verse 4
[4] They said moreover unto Pharaoh, For to sojourn in the land are we come;
for thy servants have no pasture for their flocks; for the famine is sore in
the land of Canaan: now therefore, we pray thee, let thy servants dwell in the
land of Goshen.
To sojourn in the land are we cane ¡X Not to settle there for ever; only to sojourn, while the famine
prevailed so in Canaan, which lay high, that it was not habitable for
shepherds, the grass being burnt up much more than in Egypt, which lay low, and
where the corn chiefly failed, but there was tolerable good pasture.
Verse 8
[8] And
Pharaoh said unto Jacob, How old art thou?
How old art thou? ¡X A
question usually put to old men, for it is natural to us to admire old age, and
to reverence it. Jacob's countenance no doubt shewed him to be old, for be had
been a man of labour and sorrow. In Egypt people were not so long-lived as in
Canaan, and therefore Pharaoh looks upon Jacob with wonder.
Verse 9
[9] And
Jacob said unto Pharaoh, The days of the years of my pilgrimage are an hundred
and thirty years: few and evil have the days of the years of my life been, and
have not attained unto the days of the years of the life of my fathers in the
days of their pilgrimage.
Observe 1. Jacob calls his life a pilgrimage,
looking upon himself as a stranger in this world, and a traveller towards
another. He reckoned himself not only a pilgrim now he was in Egypt, a strange
country in which he never was before, but his life even in the land of his
nativity was a pilgrimage. 2. He reckoned his life by days; for even so it is
soon reckoned, and we are not sure of the continuance of it for a day to an
end, but may be turned out of this tabernacle at less than an hours warning. 3.
The character he gives of them was, (1.) That they were few. Though he had now
lived 130 years, they seemed to him but as a few days, in comparison of the
days of eternity, in which a thousand years are but as one day; (2.) That they
were evil. This is true concerning man in general, Job 14:1, he is of few days and full of trouble:
Jacob's life particularly had been made up of evil days. the pleasantest days
of his life were yet before him. (3.) That they were short of the days of his
fathers; not so many, not so pleasant as their days. Old age came sooner upon
him than it had done upon some of his ancestors.
Verse 10
[10] And Jacob blessed Pharaoh, and went out from before Pharaoh.
And Jacob blessed Pharaoh ¡X Which was not only an act of civility but an act of piety; he prayed for
him, as one having the authority of a prophet and a patriarch: and a
patriarch's blessing was not a thing to be despised, no not by a potent prince.
Verse 21
[21] And
as for the people, he removed them to cities from one end of the borders of
Egypt even to the other end thereof.
He removed them to cities ¡X He transplanted them, to shew Pharaoh's sovereign power over them, and
that they might, in time, forget their titles to their lands, and be the easier
reconciled to their new condition of servitude. How hard soever this seems to
have been upon them, they themselves were sensible of it as a great kindness,
and were thankful they were not worse used.
Verse 28
[28] And
Jacob lived in the land of Egypt seventeen years: so the whole age of Jacob was
an hundred forty and seven years.
Jacob lived seventeen years after he came
into Egypt, far beyond his own expectation: seventeen years he had nourished
Joseph, for so old he was when he was sold from him, and now, seventeen years
Joseph nourished him. Observe how kindly Providence ordered Jacob's affairs;
that when he was old, and least able to bear care and fatigue, he had least
occasion for it, being well provided for by his son without his own forecast.
Verse 29
[29] And
the time drew nigh that Israel must die: and he called his son Joseph, and said
unto him, If now I have found grace in thy sight, put, I pray thee, thy hand
under my thigh, and deal kindly and truly with me; bury me not, I pray thee, in
Egypt:
And the time drew nigh that Israel must die ¡X Israel, that had power over the angel, and prevailed, yet must yield to
death. He died by degrees; his candle was not blown out, but gradually burnt
down, so that he saw, at some distance, the time drawing nigh. He would be
buried in Canaan, not because Canaan was the land of his nativity, but in
faith, because it was the land of promise, which he desired thus, as it were to
keep possession of 'till the time should come when his posterity should be
masters of it: and because it was a type of heaven, that better country, which
he was in expectation of. When this was done, Israel bowed himself upon the
bed's head - Worshipping God, as it is explained, Hebrews 11:21, giving God thanks for all his
favours, and particularly for this, that Joseph was ready, to put his hand upon
his eyes. Thus they that go down to the dust should, with humble thankfulness,
bow before God, the God of their mercies.
¢w¢w John Wesley¡mExplanatory Notes on
Genesis¡n
47 Chapter 47
Verse 3
What is your occupation?
--
Pharaoh¡¦s question to the brethren of Joseph
I. Evidently
implying THAT EACH OF US HAS, OR IS INTENDED TO HAVE, AN ¡§OCCUPATION.¡¨ Now the
word ¡§occupation,¡¨ in its primary meaning, signifies ¡§employment¡¨ or
¡§business¡¨; and the text leads us to infer that each individual amongst us has
some such employment or business, for the due discharge of which we are
accountable to Him whose Providence has imposed it upon us. Had man been sent
into the world with no other object than merely to spend a few days or years in
this fleeting scene, and then to pass off the stage of life and cease for ever
to exist, the question as to any occupation he might have need never be raised.
The more easily and pleasantly such a life could be got over, the better. With
regard to the things of the present life, hear what the Scriptures declare:
¡§Seest thou a man,¡¨ says Solomon, ¡§diligent in his business, he shall stand
before kings; he shall not stand before mean men¡¨ (Proverbs 22:29). The Apostle Paul, while
urging the Romans to ¡§fervency of spirit in the service of God,¡¨ enforces the
important admonition to be ¡§not slothful in business¡¨ Romans 12:11). If from precepts we pass
on to examples, we find the duty of ¡§ diligence in business¡¨ strikingly set
before us in the conduct of the holy men of old, the saints and servants of the
Lord. And surely, brethren, with regard to things of infinitely higher moment,
it must be needless to remind professing Christians that they have a word
entrusted to them, an ¡§occupation¡¨ which demands unwearied attention, incessant
watchfulness, and fervent prayer. Throughout, by precept as well as by example,
we are urged to ¡§work out our salvation with fear and trembling¡¨ Philippians 2:12).
II. To inquire
into THE NATURE OF THIS OCCUPATION WITH RESPECT TO DIFFERENT CLASSES OF
INDIVIDUALS. Altogether unoccupied we cannot be: if the service of God does not
engage our attention, the service of Satan will. But when the question is
proposed--¡§What is your occupation?¡¨ from how few, comparatively, have we the
comfort of receiving the reply--¡§I am occupied about my Father¡¦s business!¡¨
Now, let us take a briefreview of some of the various occupations in which
different individuals are engaged.
1. Look at the man whose whole time is taken up in the accumulation
of earthly riches and possessions, and ask him what is his occupation? He will
tell you of the labour and fatigue which he has undergone, in search of his
much-loved idols, and what reward can such a man expect, in return for all his
worldly and selfish schemes? Truly, except he repent, he will find that he has
been only ¡§treasuring up unto himself wrath against the day of wrath and
revelation of the righteous judgment of God.¡¨
2. Look, again, at the man whose thoughts and time are engrossed
with the pursuit of worldly ambition and consequence; and ask him what is his
occupation? He will answer that his great object is to get himself a name upon
earth. Truly may they be said to grasp at a shadow, and soon lose the reality.
¡§Them that honour Me,¡¨ says God, ¡§I will honour; and they that despise
Me¡¨--however high they may stand with the world--¡§shall be lightly esteemed¡¨ (1 Samuel 2:30).
3. Look, once again, at the man whose whole time is devoted to
earthly pleasures and sinful enjoyments, and ask him ¡§what is his occupation.¡¨
His course of life answers for itself. You see him busied in the frivolous and
unprofitable amusements of the world, and eagerly pursuing its vanities and
follies. ¡§What fruit have ye in those things whereof ye have cause to be
ashamed? for the end of those things is death¡¨ (Romans 6:21). But now, go and ask the
Christian ¡§what is his occupation.¡¨ ¡§This,¡¨ he will say, ¡§this is my
occupation, and these are the happy fruits of it; I have tried God, and I have
not found Him a hard master: I have put His promises to the proof, and not one
of them has failed; I now know that He ¡¥is able to do exceeding abundantly
above all that I could ask or think.¡¦ In His blessed service, therefore, through
Divine grace, will I be occupied henceforth and for ever.¡¨ Let this occupation
be yours. (S. Coates, M. A.)
On occupation
Activity is the life of nature. The planets rolling in their
orbits, the earth revolving on her axis; the atmosphere purified by winds, the
ocean by tides; the vapours rising from the ground and returning in freshening
flowers, exhaled from the sea, and poured again by rivers into its bosom,
proclaim the universal law. Turn to animated existence. See the air, the land,
and the waters in commotion with countless tribes eagerly engaged in attack, in
defence, in the construction of habitations, in the chase of prey, in
employment suited to their sphere and conducive to their happiness. Is man born
an exception to the general rule? Man is born to labour. For labour, man while
yet innocent was formed (Genesis 2:15). To that exertion which was
ordained to be a source of unmitigated delight, painful contention and overwhelming
fatigue, when man apostatised from his God, were superadded (Genesis 3:17-18). In the early years of
the world employments now confined to the lowest classes were deemed not unbecoming
persons of the most elevated rank. From every individual in his dominions, and
from each according to his vocation, Pharaoh looked for diligent exertion. From
every, individual among us, as throughout His boundless empire, the supreme
Lord of all demands habitual labour in the daily employment of the talents
entrusted to our management. Let us then, in the first place, contemplate the
motives under the guidance of which we are, each of us, to labour: secondly,
some of the general lines of human labour as connected with their attendant
temptations; and thirdly, the principal benefits immediately resulting from
occupation.
I. WHATSOEVER YE
DO, DO ALL TO THE GLORY OF GOD. Behold the universal motive of a Christian!
Through the exuberance of the free bounty of God. To whom ought the gift to be
consecrated? To Him who bestowed it. For whose glory ought it to be employed?
For the glory of the Giver. To live unto Christ is to glorify God. To glorify
God through Christ with your body and your spirit, which are His, is the
appointed method of attaining the salvation which Christ has purchased.
II. ADVERT TO THE
GENERAL LINES OF HUMAN LABOUR, AND TO THEIR ATTENDANT TEMPTATIONS.
III. Consider
briefly SOME OF THE BENEFITS RESULTING TO THE INDIVIDUAL FROM OCCUPATION and
you will confess that, if God enjoined labour as a judgment, he enjoined it
also in mercy.
1. Labour, in the first place, not only is the medium of
acquisition; but naturally tends to improvement. Whether the body is to be
strengthened or the mind to be cultivated; by the labour of to-day are
augmented the faculties of attaining similar objects to-morrow.
2. Labour is, in the next place, a powerful preservative from sin.
The unoccupied hand is a ready instrument of mischief.
3. Occupation, originating in Christian principles and directed to
Christian purposes, is essential, not only to the refreshing enjoyment of
leisure (for the rest that refreshes is rest after toil); but to the
acquisition of genuine composure, of serenity of conscience, of that peace of
God which passeth all understanding.
IV. LET NOT OUR
INVESTIGATIONS BE CLOSED WITHOUT SOME BRIEF AND PRACTICAL REMARKS.
1. Consider with attention proportioned to the importance of the
subject the universal obligation to labour. If you wish to withdraw your
shoulder from the burden; suspect the soundness of your Christian profession.
For those whom you love, even at the desire of those whom you love, you delight
to labour. Do you love God, and loiter when He commands you to work for Him?
2. Be frequent in proposing to yourself the inquiry, ¡§What is my
occupation?¡¨ Satisfy yourself, not merely that you are occupied in employments
acceptable to God. To labour in trifles is not Christian occupation. To labour
in sin is to labour for the devil. (T. Gisborne, M. A.)
Occupation
I. OUR NEED OF AN
OCCUPATION. Divine provision implies human need. It also measures and meets it.
1. Economically. Work is to the race an absolute condition of
existence. Since the fall the ground yields a full fruit only to labour (Genesis 3:17; Genesis 3:19). Only on condition that he
works can man be fed (Proverbs 6:6; Proverbs 6:10). Idleness is an anomaly, a
blunder, and a sin.
2. Physiologically. The health and growth of our powers depend on
it. The body was not made to be still. It requires motion, and craves for it. A
mind inert becomes enfeebled, whereas intellectual activity tends to
intellectual strength. So also in the spiritual ,department: the spiritual
nature grows by exercise, and languishes in inactivity. Opportunities of loving
increase the capacity to love.
3. Morally: Idleness is the natural ally of immorality. The laziest
lives are notoriously the most vicious. Good, honest work has a double action.
It keeps down appetite and it keeps out of temptation¡¦s way.
II. THE OCCUPATION
WE NEED. Occupation, like other good things, may be abused, and so become the
occasion of evil. This happens--
1. When our occupation is followed to the point of drudgery.
Distinguish work from toil. The one strengthens our powers, the other wastes
them.
2. When our occupation is one-sided. A tree that makes much wood
makes little fruit. A man who over-works his body neglects his mind. A man
absorbed in secular matters neglects and will soon bring atrophy to his moral
nature. Activity in one direction cannot be exaggerated but at the expense of
neglect in another. We can do only one thing well at a time. The Christian who
thrives finds time somehow for spiritual exercises, and the exclusive consideration
of spiritual things.
III. THE PROPER END
OF ALL OCCUPATION. There must be not only work and lawful work, but the doing
of this with lofty purpose. The true work is work done as service to God--¡§as
to the Lord and not to men.¡¨ Application:
1. Recognize the universal obligation to work.
2. Try to find your enjoyment in your work.
3. Labour not for the meat that perisheth, but for that which
endureth unto eternal life. (J. Edgar Henry, M. A.)
Verse 5-6
In the best of the land make thy father and brethren to dwell
The best gifts of God bestowed on His people
1.
In
the first place, GOD GIVETH THE BEST UNTO HIS TRUE ISRAEL. He gives them a land
of rest, He gives them a land of safety, He gives them a land of abundance, and
He giveth them the best things in that land. He not only pardons them, but His
pardon is a costly pardon. He not only gives them righteousness, but He gives
them a glorious righteousness. Does He supply their wants? It is all fulness He
gives them; even for the supply of the little ones, as you observe in the
twenty-fourth verse: ¡§And it shall come to pass, in the increase, that ye shall
give the fifth part unto Pharaoh; and four parts shall be your own, for the
seed of the field, and for your food, and for them of your households, and for
food for your little ones,¡¨ unfolding this great truth--that the supply which
is in Christ, is not only for the least, but for the least wants of the least;
that there is nothing minute in God¡¦s sight. He has provided for helplessness
of body, for nervousness of spirit, for a distracted mind, for strong inward
temptations, for outward trials, for domestic afflictions, for everything that
concerns us in that straight way, the straightness of which at times no one can
enter into but the Lord Jesus Christ Himself.
II. But now
observe, secondly, WHY IT IS GOD DOES THIS.
1. Wherever God acteth, He acted as God--greatly; what He doeth, He
doeth as God, worthy God. You and I act below ourselves; God never can act
below Himself. The great God in His forgiveness is great; in His righteousness
He is great; in the abundant supplies of His grace He is great; in the freeness
of His salvation He is great; in the sympathies of His love He is great; and
that because He is God (see Isaiah 55:7-9; Hosea 11:8-9).
2. But there is another reason; that is, the love which He bears
towards His Israel. Who can describe what that love is?
3. But there is another reason, and I think, if I were to lose sight
of that, I should lose sight of the Gospel itself; every blessing that the
Israel of God enjoy, they enjoy for the true Joseph¡¦s sake. It is not for their
sakes, but it is for Christ¡¦s sake.
III. THE PRACTICAL
REARING OF THIS IMPORTANT SUBJECT.
1. Great cause for deep thankfulness.
2. Then there is in the subject that which should lead to great
stirring up of desire. We should desire that we may enter into the best of the
land.
3. I am sure we have great cause for deep abasement as we think of
the subject. God has given us the best; what have we given Him? (J. H.Evans,
M. A.)
Verse 7
And Joseph brought in Jacob his father
Joseph and his father
I.
JOSEPH
HONOURED HIS FATHER JACOB BY SHOWING HIM THE UTMOST RESPECT (Genesis 46:29).
II. JOSEPH
HONOURED HIS FATHER BY SHOWING HIS LOVE FOR HIM. One of our martyr-Presidents
never stood higher in the nation¡¦s eyes than when he turned around, after his
inauguration, and, before all the assembled thousands, greeted his mother with
a filial kiss.
III. JOSEPH
HONOURED HIS FATHER BY HIS PURE AND NOBLE LIFE. Words of respect are
comparatively worthless unless they have a life behind them.
IV. JOSEPH
HONOURED HIS FATHER BY PRESENTING HIM SO PROMPTLY TO PHARAOH. He shows not a
particle of shame of his rusticity, Jacob¡¦s homespun must have contrasted
strangely with Pharaoh¡¦s purple; Jacob¡¦s uncouth phrases of country-life with
the king¡¦s polished diction. Joseph knew well enough how such people were ordinarily
despised at the court, and yet how he omits no chance to show to Pharaoh how
much he loved and honoured his father. The story is told of the Dean of
Canterbury, afterwards Archbishop Tillotson, that one day after he had attained
his churchly honours, an old man from the country, with uncouth manners, called
at his door and inquired for John Tillotson. The foot man was about to dismiss
him with scorn for presuming to ask in that familiar way for his master, when
the Archbishop caught sight of his visitor and flew down the stairs to embrace
the old man before all the servants, exclaiming with tones of genuine delight,
¡§It is my beloved father!¡¨ We all admire such exhibitions of filial love, which
overcomes the fear of the cool conventionalities of the world, and we find from
our lesson that Pharaoh was touched by his prime minister¡¦s loyalty to his poor
relations, for he gave him this royal token of his pleasure: ¡§The land of Egypt
is before thee; in the best of the land make thy father and thy brethren to
dwell;¡¨ &c. (F. E. Clark.)
An interview with royalty
I desire to linger awhile on this thrilling scene. There are wise,
good lessons in it.
1. I look upon it first of all and see an attractive picture of
venerable old age. ¡§The hoary head is a crown of glory,¡¨ says Solomon, ¡§if it
he found in the way of righteousness.¡¨ Age invests many things with a beauty of
its own. An aged oak, wide-spread, gnarled, and weather-warped, stalwart,
green, and stately; or an ancient castle, weatherworn and storm-swept, moss-clad
and ivy-covered, its grey towers still standing bold and brave to all the winds
of heaven; but of all attractive pictures that old time can draw, nothing is
more winsome than the silver locks and mellowed features of godly old age. They
remind me of some retired Greenwich or Chelsea veteran who can tell the tale of
scars and wounds, of hair-breath escapes, of brave comrades, of stirring
campaigns, of hard-fought battles; only this has been a holier war, followed by
a dearer peace and more sweet reward and victories than ever followed Trafalgar
or Waterloo. So with the godly character. It is beautiful in all its stages
from youth to manhood; hut surely, fairest of all when age, experience, and
grace hath ripened it into saintliness, and something of the heavenly shines
outward from the soul within. As I look upon this aged patriarch confronting
all the splendours of Pharaoh¡¦s court, I see him standing on the utmost border,
waiting to be ushered into the presence of a grand Monarch, into a fairer palace,
and among a richer and nobler throng, and where he himself will be the wearer
of a richer crown. As I look upon this strange scene in Pharaoh¡¦s palace, I see
that there is something grander and more powerful in moral worth than in any
kind or amount of material power or possessions. In the epistle to the Hebrews
I find this sentence, ¡§Without contradiction, the less is blessed of the
greater.¡¨ Jacob has something and can procure something which makes the monarch
less than he, something which makes him better and greater than the king. It is
the blessing of God. It is power with God. It is that influence from heaven and
with heaven which belongs to moral goodness and virtue, and especially to aged
piety everywhere and at all times. And Jacob blessed Pharaoh. Never forget that
righteousness is far away greater than the riches.
2. And once more, as I look upon that striking scene in Pharaoh¡¦s
palace and listen to the aged patriarch¡¦s words, I think of his testimony
concerning life. He calls it a pilgrimage. Young men! have you ever thought of
that? Behind you there is a stern uncompromising power that is always
muttering, ¡§Move on! Move on! March through the moments! hurry through the
hours! tramp along the days! tread through the mouths! stride along the years!
You can¡¦t halt! You can¡¦t step backward. Move on!¡¨ Oh, but this is a tremendous
view of human life! God help us from this hour to walk aright; to keep the path
of duty, the ways of the Lord, lest the later stages of our pilgrimage find us
in swamp and quagmire, scorching desert or thorny jungle when our strength is
exhausted and the dull night winds blow!
3. I notice, too, that Jacob calls his days evil days. He means by
that they had been sorrowful, full of trouble and care. Well, his was a hard
life, he had had disappointment and distress beyond the common. If you will
read his history you will find that his own conduct had to answer largely for
his cares; his sins were the seed of his sorrows; his wrong-doing caused the
very most of his rough usage, and nobody knew that better than Jacob did
himself. Sin is the mother of sorrow, and its seeds sown in the life are sure
to bring a harvest of pain. There is an Australian weapon called the boomerang,
which is thrown so as to describe a series of curves and comes back at last to
the feet of the thrower. Sin is a boomerang which we throw off into space, but
it turns upon its author, and strikes the soul that launched it.
4. Learn another lesson from this striking picture--a lesson of
God¡¦s sure faithfulness. Jacob with all his faults had served and trusted God.
His troubles and distresses had helped to bring him more fully into pious
confidence and patient faith; and his trust in God brought about all things
right at last. (J. J. Wray.)
Jacob and Pharaoh
1. The chief value of this narrative is that it affords one of the
most impressive of all illustrations of the providential purposes of God.
2. We gain here some insight into the business regulations of a
successful government. Pharaoh appears to have been a model king. He managed
the state on business principles. The first question he asked these strangers
who had come to settle in his kingdom was, ¡§What is your occupation?¡¨ Such a
government expects its subjects to be men of business. No idlers were wanted
there in time of famine; none but men of ability, active habits, prudence,
capacity.
3. We find in this scene an example of courtesy. There is a touching
simplicity and an air of vivid reality in this picture, which leads to
intuitive recognition of its genuineness. Jacob respected Pharaoh¡¦s office, and
Pharaoh respected Jacob¡¦s age.
4. We have here also a model for conversation.
5. This scene suggests a sad retrospect. Jacob as a prince had
prevailed with God. He had gained the birthright, but he had not escaped the
consequences of his own sins. Men do not escape the fruits of sin by receiving
honours in the kingdom of God. God¡¦s grace may brighten the future, but nothing
else than righteous living can make happy memories; and the shadows of youthful
transgression stretch across a long life.
6. We have in this scene a remainder of our eternal relations with
God. (A. E. Dunning.)
Jacob and Pharaoh
I. A STRANGE
MEETING. Meetings of historical characters and their results an interesting
study (Diogenes and Alexander, Columbus and Ferdinand, Luther and Charles V.,
Milton and Galileo, &c.). None more remarkable than this.
1. Strange circumstances led to it.
2. A strange introduction given to it. Joseph presented five of his
brethren to the king. These probably were the five eldest, who were at this
time advanced in life.
3. Strange conversation marked it. Pharaoh, apparently overwhelmed
by the venerable aspect of Jacob, inquired his age. Jacob, talking to a much
younger man, calls his own life short.
4. Strange consequences flowed from it. Nearly 400 years ago this
meeting left its mark on history, never to be effaced. Consequences to Israel
and Egypt.
5. After the farewell was spoken they appear to have never seen each
other again.
II. A STRANGE
CONTRAST,
1. A patriarch, and a prince. The one the head of God¡¦s chosen
people, now numbering a few souls, to become a nation; the other the head of a
mighty people, already a great nation.
2. A servant of God, and a worshipper of idols. The one the head of
a people who were to become great and powerful; the other the king of a nation
that should afterwards be humbled.
3. An Israelitish shepherd, and an Egyptian monarch. The occupation
of the one an abomination to the other.
4. A poor man, and a rich man. The one, through his son, the
benefactor and the deliverer of the other.
5. A very aged man, and a man in the prime of life. Age of Pharaoh
uncertain, but the age of Jacob 130 years.
III. A STRANGE
COMMENT, i.e., on life.
1. It is a pilgrimage. Not a settled, permanent, certain ,state. A
journey from the cradle to the grave. Among strange people, scenes, trials, and
joys. Over hills of prosperity and across plains of content, down valleys of
sorrow and poverty.
2. Counted by days. The unit of measurement very short. Know not
what a day may bring forth.
3. Few. Yet 130 years. How few are our years! Few as compared with
eternity; or even with life of many (Methuselah, &c.). Few, compared with
hopes, projects, &c.
4. Evil. Full of sin, sorrow, &c. Little done that is good. Man
born to trouble. Uncertain. Full of changes.
5. Yet the longest life only a pilgrimage, and reckoned by days.
Learn:
1. The best meeting for us is the meeting of the penitent sinner
with the merciful Saviour. Arrangements are made for it, good results will
inevitably flow from it. The closet is the audience-chamber.
2. The best contrast for us is between the old state of nature and
the new state of grace. May we all realize it, and enjoy its blessings.
3. Then our new life, hopes, &c., will be a comment on the
Saviour¡¦s power, and on the work of the Holy Spirit (written epistles,
&c.). And when this short pilgrimage is over, we shall, in eternity,
comment upon the wonderful love of God, and the blessed life in heaven. (J.
C. Gray.)
Joseph introduces Jacob and his family to Pharaoh
I. THE
INTRODUCTION.
1. Of Joseph¡¦s brethren. In this appears--
2. Of Joseph¡¦s father.
II. THE RECEPTION.
1. Of the brethren.
2. Of Jacob. (T. H. Leale.)
Joseph¡¦s filial conduct
I. SEEKING ROYAL
FAVOUR.
1. Approaching the king.
2. Speaking for others.
3. Presented to the king.
II. SECURING ROYAL
AID.
1. Kindly inquiry (Genesis 47:3).
2. Truthful statement (Genesis 47:4).
3. Generous permission (Genesis 47:6).
III. DISPENSING
ROYAL BOUNTY.
1. The father honoured (Genesis 47:7).
2. A home bestowed (Genesis 47:11).
3. The family nourished (Genesis 47:12). (American Sunday
School Times.)
Growth by transplanting
I. The conduct of
Joseph in reference to the settlement in Goshen is an example of THE
POSSIBILITY OF UNITING WORLDLY PRUDENCE WITH HIGH RELIGIOUS PRINCIPLE AND GREAT
GENEROSITY OF NATURE. He had promised his brothers a home in that fertile
Eastern district, which afforded many advantages in its proximity to Canaan,
its adaptation to pastoral life, and its vicinity to Joseph when in Zoan, the
capital. But he had not consulted Pharaoh, and, however absolute his authority,
it scarcely stretched to giving away Egyptian territory without leave. So his
first care, when the wanderers arrive, is to manage the confirmation of the
grant. He goes about it with considerable astuteness--a hereditary quality,
which is redeemed from blame because used for unselfish purposes and unstained
by deceit. He does not tell Pharaoh how far he had gone, but simply announces
that his family are in Goshen, as if awaiting the monarch¡¦s further pleasure.
Then he introduces a deputation, no doubt carefully chosen, of five of his
brothers (as if the whole number would have been too formidable), previously
instructed how to answer. He knows what Pharaoh is in the habit of asking, or
he knows that he can lead him to ask the required question, which will bring
out the fact of their being shepherds, and utilize the prejudice against that
occupation, to insure separation in Goshen. All goes as he had arranged. Joseph
is a saint and a politician. His shrewdness is never craft; sagacity is not
alien to consecration. No doubt it has to be carefully watched lest it
degenerate; but prudence is as needful as enthusiasm, and he is the complete
man who has a burning fire down in his heart to generate the force that drives
him, and a steady hand on the helm, and a keen eye on the chart, to guide him.
Be ye ¡§wise as serpents,¡¨ but also ¡§harmless as doves.¡¨
II. WE MAY SEE IN
JOSEPH¡¦S CONDUCT ALSO AN INSTANCE OF A MAN IN HIGH OFFICE AND NOT ASHAMED OF
HIS HUMBLE RELATIONS. It is as if some high official in Paris were to walk in
half-a-dozen peasants in blouse and sabots, and present them to the president
as ¡§my brothers.¡¨ It was a brave thing to do; and it teaches a lesson which
many people in America and England, who have made their way in the world, would
be nobler and more esteemed if they learned.
III. The brothers¡¦
word to Pharaoh is another instance of THAT IGNORANT CARRYING OUT OF THE DIVINE
PURPOSES WHICH WE HAVE ALREADY HAD TO NOTICE. They thought of five years, and
it was to be nearly as many centuries. They thought of temporary shelter and
food; God meant an education of them and their descendants. Over all this story
the unseen Hand hovers, chastising, guiding, impelling; and the human agents
are free and yet fulfilling an eternal purpose, blind and yet accountable,
responsible for motives, and mercifully ignorant of consequences. So we all
play our little parts. We have no call to be curious as to what will come of
our deeds. This end of the action, the motive of it, is our care; the other
end, the outcome of it, is God¡¦s business to see to.
IV. We may also
observe HOW TRIVIAL INCIDENTS ARE WROUGHT INTO GOD¡¦S SCHEME. The Egyptian
hatred of the shepherd class secured one of the prime reasons for the removal
from Canaan, the unimpeded growth of a tribe into a nation.
V. THE INTERVIEW
OF JACOB WITH PHARAOH IS PATHETIC AND BEAUTIFUL. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
Jacob before Pharaoh
I. THE IMPRESSIVE
SPECTACLE OF A VENERABLE OLD AGE.
1. Picture the old man¡¦s attitude of soul toward God, and death, and
the world to come.
2. His retrospect of life, and how he now sees events in their true
proportions and bearings.
3. His own subdued passions and amiable spirit.
4. His concern for, and interest in, the rising generation.
II. THE
SUPERIORITY OF MORAL OVER MATERIAL GREATNESS AND WORTH. ¡§Jacob blessed Pharaoh¡¨
(Hebrews 8:7).
III. A LESSON ON
LIFE¡¦S EVANESCENCE AND VANITY (Genesis 47:9).
1. A natural reflection.
2. It may be a morbid and evil reflection. Better to imitate the
Psalmist¡¦s thankful hopefulness (Psalms 23:1-6).
IV. A LESSON OF
TRUST IN GOD TO BRING ABOUT ALL THINGS RIGHT AT LAST. (T. G. Horton.)
Jacob and Pharaoh
I. THE PATRIARCH
JACOB, IN HIS OLD AGE, A SOJOURNER IN EGYPT.
II. JACOB AND THE
PHARAOH OF EGYPT.
III. JOSEPH, THE
AFFECTIONATE SON AND NOBLE BROTHER.
1. The reality of Joseph¡¦s love for his brothers, as well as for his
lather, is found in the abundant provision he made for them all.
2. This evidence of Joseph¡¦s forgiveness of his brother¡¦s great
wrong to him, and of his care for them, completes the picture of one of the
most beautiful characters presented in history.
3. And this perfection of character, combining so many qualities,
presents him to us not only as a beautiful model of manliness, of filial and
fraternal love, but also as one of the most perfect types of our great
exemplar, the Lord Jesus Christ.
Lessons:
1. God¡¦s faithfulness to His people.
2. Notwithstanding the Divine love, God¡¦s people are not exempt from
suffering.
3. A good son maketh the heart of his father to rejoice.
4. Let us learn more perfectly the duty of loving one another. (D.
C. Hughes, M. A.)
Verse 8
Pharaoh said unto Jacob, How old art thou?
--
Old year¡¦s theme: ¡§How old art thou?"
I. A COMMON
QUESTION.
II. A SOLEMN
QUESTION.
1. It is the solemnity of memory.
2. It is the solemnity of responsibility.
3. The question ought to create a solemn gratitude.
III. JACOB¡¦S
ANSWER.
IV. HIS LIFE
MEASURED. ¡§Days.¡¨ It is best not to take life in the lump, but to study it in
detail.
V. HIS LIFE
DESCRIBED.
VI. HIS LIFE
SHORT.
1. He compared them with the ages of his fathers, and they seemed
few.
2. Perhaps he compared them also with the great age of the world.
3. Compared with the solemn eternity, how short is our mortal
career!
VII. HIS LIFE EVIL.
A biography whose lines were written in tears.
VIII. HIS LIFE A
PILGRIMAGE. (Chas. F. Deems, D. D.)
Time reckoned
Life always seems short in the retrospect; and that light of past
experience is the only true light. He only who has paced the ground knows it.
Life¡¦s true measure is not years, but epochs of progress towards the ideal
which the Creator has set before us. As the tree¡¦s chronicles are its rings, so
those of the soul are its definite expansions.
I. Ask yourself,
how far am I advanced in my KNOWLEDGE OF TRUTH. Do I know God yet? Do I know
Christ and Him crucified? Do I discern spiritual things, or am I yet but a babe
¡§crying for the light¡¨?
II. How much have
I developed in CHARACTER, grown in spiritual size, toward the statue of the
perfect man in Christ Jesus?
III. What RECORD
have I made in my Lord¡¦s service? Veteran means old; but the soldier attains
the title not by years--rather by the campaigns and battles in which he was
found faithful. What noble fights have I made against evil? What service
rendered the needy? What comfort brought the sick? What help to discouraged
souls? (The Homiletic Review.)
How old art thou?
The wise reckoning of time will be of essential use to us--it may
save us from overwhelming and eternal disaster.
I. How OLD ART
THOU, O CHRISTIAN, computed by God¡¦s standard?
1. OLD enough to be brought under infinite obligations to God¡¦s
redeeming, converting, and preserving grace.
2. Old enough to have made great attainments in the Divine life.
3. Old enough to have learned the ways of a deceitful heart, and the
power of the adversary of God and man.
4. Old enough to have caught the heavenly spirit of the Master, and
from the land of Beulah to get now and then a ravishing view of the unutterable
glory beyond.
II. How OLD ART
THOU, O IMPENITENT SINNER?
1. Old enough to have run up a fearful account against thy soul in
¡§the book of God¡¦s remembrance.¡¨
2. Old enough to make the work of future repentance extremely bitter
and difficult.
3. Old enough to make it well-nigh certain, if you still persist in
impenitent sin, that you will never retrace your guilty steps and take hold on
life. (J. M. Sherwood, D. D.)
What is your age?
We do not care to know how old you are by the almanac. You may
keep this secret, as some are wont to do. But we would like to know to-day what
is your age, by some standard, other than that of time.
I. ARE YOU
MEASURING LIFE BY WEALTH? Longevity is not promised to the rich as such, nor to
the poor; but those who observe the law of God, which is life to them that keep
it (Proverbs 4:22; Deuteronomy 32:47).
II. ARE YOU
MEASURING LIFE BY REPUTATION? Let it be a name for being and doing good, and do
not run after even this, but let it follow you, as it certainly will if you
keep such an aim before you, though you may, modestly, not consent to it. Two
immortalities are possible to you and me--one in this, and another in the other
world.
III. ARE YOU
MEASURING LIFE BY ITS LENGTH? The sum of one¡¦s years who has spent none of them
for the service of God is equal to zero. His life is a blank.
IV. THE WISEST,
SAFEST, TRUEST ESTIMATE OF LIFE.
1. Reflection. The thoughts he expresses are a good index of one¡¦s
age.
2. Moderation.¡¦ It is folly to rush through life at break-neck
speed. He who goes softly, goes safely; and he who goes safely, goes far.
3. Religion (Proverbs 4:7). (W. H. Luckenbach.)
Pharaoh¡¦s question to Jacob
I. Let us
consider THE QUESTION PUT BY PHARAOH TO JACOB--¡§How old art thou?¡¨ The
propriety of looking back to and of considering the past period of our
existence is pointed out in Scripture. Of my younger hearers I might ask, ¡§How
old art thou?¡¨ They could probably give an accurate reply to the question--¡§I
am seven, eight, ten, or fifteen years old.¡¨ Well, then, let me ask, what of
that? or rather how much does it imply? What sins and neglect does it not
remind you of? What duties does it not suggest? Or, I might speak to persons in
middle life, or who are verging on its confines. You may have found prosperity,
or at least some measure of comfort and respectability attendant on steadiness,
sobriety and industry. Your temporal affairs may have been on the whole
prosperous; your children may, like olive-branches, have grown up around you.
Then, assuredly there is reason for thankfulness, and ground for acknowledging
the goodness and long-suffering of a Father in heaven. There is yet a third and
less numerous class, to whom the question in the text ought to be
impressive--¡§How old art thou?¡¨ You have witnessed changes in society, almost
revolutions of opinion. Many with whom you were once intimate have been
removed; the haunts of youth are peopled almost entirely by strangers. All
things admonish thee to prepare for meeting God; to set thy house in order; to
improve the time that remains.
II. Let us now
turn to JACOB¡¦S REPLY, in answer to Pharaoh¡¦s question.
1. As to its length, life may be spoken of as made up of
comparatively few days. Looking forward, half, or even a quarter of a century,
may seem a protracted time; looking back, it appears greatly diminished.
2. Jacob¡¦s address to Pharaoh embodied the statement that man¡¦s days
upon earth may be considered as not only ¡§few,¡¨ but also as ¡§evil.¡¨ Nothing,
indeed, which God has given to man ought to be viewed as in itself and as
essentially evil. Present comfort, length of days, intercourse with society,
diligence in business, temperate enjoyment, are all good, all lawful; but sin
has interposed. The spiritual eyesight is clouded, and the spiritual energy has
become benumbed. Man himself may be truly spoken of as man¡¦s worst foe. (A.
R. Bonar, D. D.)
The pilgrim and the king
History presents to us few more striking contrasts than the Hebrew
pilgrim and the Egyptian king. ¡§The things seen and temporal, and the things not
seen and eternal,¡¨ have seldom stood more fairly in front of each other than
there. The old shepherd who had no possession on earth but a Divine
promise--the king who wielded the sceptre of the most splendid monarchy in the
world. But there was something in that old pilgrim which made him a meet
companion for kings--a king, too, of an elder and mightier line. From the first
dawn ofcivilization there were men moving about the pathways of that eastern
world, playing indeed a chief part on its theatre, who had absolutely no right
or power but that which their sense of a Divine vocation conferred upon them;
and no means of influence, but such as the recognition of their spiritual
calling by the princes among whom they lived, bestowed. Abraham, Isaac, Jacob,
were emphatically, God¡¦s prophets. They had nothing if they had not that seal.
The whole secret of their power was the belief that the God of Heaven was with
them; that they were the friends and living organs of that supreme and only
Lord. These lofty and earnest shepherds seemed to step down from a superior
sphere; and some of its lustre streamed round them as they moved on God¡¦s
errands around the already darkening pathways of the world. Jacob stood before
the Egyptian monarch as the embodiment of that which had faded into a dim
tradition in Egypt; it belonged to the glorious golden age of which all peoples
had memories, out of which they were beginning to weave for themselves dreams
of a paradise restored. The chief prince of the world felt humbled before this
lonely, lofty pilgrim; as the representative of a mightier than Pharaoh was
troubled by the calm glances of a poorer, sadder, more godlike pilgrim, who
stood for judgment helpless before his bar. Spiritual power is the supreme
power, and none know it like monarchs of genius.
¡§Don¡¦t talk to me against the divinity of Christ,¡¨ said Napoleon;
¡§I know what man can do, and He was more than man who has done all this.¡¨ The
men who, like Pharaoh, Nebuchadnezzar, Napoleon, stand on the very pinnacle of
earthly greatness, are the men who are most perplexed and awe-struck by the
sense that there is a power above them which sweeps through their armies as
magnetism sweeps through mountains, and has an armoury of words more mighty
infinitely than their spears and swords. Something of this spiritual grandeur
invested this aged and weary pilgrim, and drew the likeness of a crown around
his brow as he stood before the Egyptian king. Aged he was, and bowed, and sad,
and weary. He halted, too, as one who had been sore wounded in the battle of
life. There were furrows seamed on his brow, and channels worn in his cheeks,
which were eloquent of tears and cares. The expression of high intellectual
power on his brow must have been dimmed somewhat by the traces of that suffering
which made him the ¡§man of sorrows¡¨ of his time. There was a promise in his
face which his life of schemes and snares, fears and flights, had half broken;
and yet there was a look of faith and a glow of hope which seemed to carry on
the promise, and to lay it up with God to preserve and to complete. A strange,
bewildering man. So sad, so broken; so grand, so powerful. A prince having
power with man and with God, and bearing it in his gesture; a man who had
prevailed, sore buffeted, in the battle in which Pharaoh and all his people had
gone down into the dust. And he stood there before the world¡¦s chief potentate,
who knew no superior will upon earth to his own. There was a nobleness of a
kind about Pharaoh also. The man who on such a throne had an eye for the
dignity of such a pilgrim was no vulgar king. He was a man of far-reaching
plans and high achievements; and as he sat there smooth, sleek, royally garbed
and tended, at the height of human power and splendour, and gazed on the sad
old man before him, a sense of something in the universe to which his mortal
might was but as a marsh-fire to a star, stole over him, and he bowed beneath
the blessing of a superior hand. And what now of the pilgrim, and what of the
king? Where is the state and the splendour of the Pharaohs? Their cities are
buried beneath the sands of the desert; the dust of time has settled on their
names. Their temples, their palaces, their treasures, are ruins; their wrecks
have mingled with the sands of the Lybian waste. Their tombs alone endure, sad
sentinels of the desert; sole witnesses that men of such state and splendour
once lived in Egypt, and covered its soil with the monuments of their power and
pride. And the pilgrim? His name after four thousand years shines more brightly
than ever on the roll of earth¡¦s most mighty and illustrious spirits. Ages have
but confirmed the title which he won in that long and stern night-wrestle with
the angel. His little company who dwelt round him in his tents grew rapidly
into a nation, which has exercised in all ages a transcendent influence on the
progress of the world. And to this day the noblest and most cultivated in
Christendom pore earnestly over his history, and find in the way in which he
won his princedom fresh inspirations of courage and of hope. (J. B. Brown,
B. A.)
The measurement of years
There is a right way and a wrong way of measuring a door, or a
wall, or an arch, or a tower; and so there is a right way and a wrong way of
measuring our earthly existence. It is with reference to this higher meaning
that I confront you, this morning, with the stupendous question of the text,
and ask: ¡§How old art thou?¡¨
I. There are many
who measure their life by mere WORLDLY GRATIFICATION. When Lord Dundas was
wished a happy new year, he said: ¡§It will have to be a happier year than the
past, for I hadn¡¦t one happy moment in all the twelve months that have gone.¡¨
But that has not been the experience of most of us. We have found that though
the world is blighted with sin, it is a very bright and beautiful place to
reside in. We have had joys innumerable. There is no hostility between the
Gospel and the merriments and the festivities of life. If there is any one who
has a right to the enjoyments of the world, it is the Christian, for God has
given him a lease to everything in the promise: ¡§ All are yours.¡¨ But I have to
tell you that a man who measures his life on earth by mere worldly
gratification is a most unwise man. Our life is not to be a game of chess. It
is not a dance in lighted hall, to quick music. It is not the froth of an ale
pitcher. It is not the settings of a wine cup. It is not a banquet with
intoxication and roystering. It is the first step on a ladder that mounts into
the skies, or the first step on a road that plunges in a horrible abyss. So
that in this world we are only keying up the harp of eternal rapture, or
forging the chain of an eternal bondage.
II. Again: I
remark that there are many who measure their life on earth by THEIR SORROWS AND
THEIR MISFORTUNES. Through a great many of your lives the ploughshare hath gone
very deep, turning up a terrible furrow. The brightest life must have its
shadows, and the smoothest path its thorns. On the happiest brood the hawk
pounces. No escape from trouble of some kind. Misfortune, trial, vexation, for
almost every one. Pope, applauded of all the world, has a stoop in the shoulder
that annoys him so much that he has a tunnel dug, so that he may go unobserved
from garden to grotto, and from grotto to garden. Canno, the famous Spanish
artist, is disgusted with the crucifix that the priest holds before him,
because it is such a poor specimen of sculpture. And yet it is unfair to
measure a man¡¦s life by his misfortunes, because where there is one stalk of
nightshade, there are fifty marigolds and harebells; where there is one cloud
thunder-charged, there are hundreds that stray across the heavens, the glory of
land and sky asleep in their bosom.
III. Again: I
remark that there are many people who measure their life on earth by the AMOUNT
OF MONEY THEY HAVE ACCUMULATED. They say: ¡§The year 1847, 1857, 1867, was
wasted.¡¨ Why? Made no money. Now, it is all cant and insincerity to talk
against money as though it had no value. It is refinement, and education, and
ten thousand blessed surroundings. It is the spreading of the table that feeds
your children¡¦s hunger. It is the lighting of the furnace that keeps you warm.
Bonds, and mortgages, and leases have their use, but they make a poor yardstick
with which to measure life.
IV. But I remark:
there are many who measure their life by their MORAL AND SPIRITUAL DEVELOPMENT.
It is not sinful egotism for a Christian man to say: ¡§I am purer than I used to
be. I am more consecrated to Christ than I used to be. I have got over a great
many of the bad habits in which I used to indulge. I am a great deal better man
than I used to be.¡¨ It is not base egotism for a soldier to say: ¡§I know more
about military tactics than I used to before I took a musket in my hand, and
learned to ¡¥present arms,¡¦ and when I was a pest to the drill-officer.¡¨ It is
not base egotism for a sailor to say: ¡§I know how better to ¡¥pull¡¦ the windlass
and clue down the mizzen topsail than I used to before I had ever seen a ship.¡¨
And there is no sinful egotism when a Christian man, fighting the battles of
the Lord, or, if you will have it, voyaging towards a haven of eternal rest,
says: ¡§I know more about spiritual tactics, and about voyaging towards heaven,
than I used to.¡¨
V. I remark
again: there are many who are measuring life by the AMOUNT OF GOOD THEY CAN DO.
John Bradford said he counted that day nothing at all in which he had not, by
pen or tongue, done some good. Contrast the death scene of a man who has
measured life by the worldly standard with the death scene of a man who has
measured life by the Christian standard. Quin, the actor, in his last moments
said: ¡§I hope this tragic scene will soon be over, and I hope to keep my
dignity to the last.¡¨ Malherbe said, in his last moments, to the confessor;
¡§Hold your tongue I your miserable style puts me out of conceit of heaven.¡¨
Lord Chesterfield, in his last moments, when he ought to have been praying for
his soul, bothered himself about the proprieties of the sick-room, and said:
¡§Give Dayboles a chair.¡¨ Godfrey Kneller spent his last hours on earth in
drawing a diagram of his own monument. Compare the silly and horrible departure
of such men with the seraphic glow on the face of Edward Payson, as he said in
his last moment: ¡§The breezes of heaven fan me. I float in a sea of glory.¡¨
This is a good day in which to begin a new style of measurement. How old art
thou? You see the Christian way of measuring life and the worldly way of
measuring it. I leave it to you to say which is the wisest and best way. (Dr.
Talmage.)
How old art thou?
I. HOW LONG HAVE
YOU BEEN CONVERSANT WITH LIFE¡¦S SUFFERINGS? Take even the life of a believer. A
devout pastor, closing tranquilly a prosperous career, intermingled with words
of faith and hope the significant declaration, ¡§It is a fight to be born, a
fight to live, and a fight to die.¡¨ And what do such facts teach us? They
forbid idolatry of pleasures so disappointing and so piercing. They direct us
for happiness to God and glory. They commend to our aspiration a better
country, which is a heavenly--a country where possessions are unimperilled,
bliss embittered, and sorrows are forgotten as the stream of brooks that pass
away.
II. How LONG HAVE
YOU BEEN CONVERSANT WITH SIN? Who can look back on his past course and not be
ashamed in the retrospect? What shortcomings--excesses--follies I What time
lost l What privileges perverted! What cleavings to the dust! It is well to
mourn over our trespasses. If this sorrow be sincere, it will be salutary.
III. HOW LONG HAVE
YOU BEEN CONVERSANT WITH LIFE¡¦S MERCIES? God was merciful to Jacob; and what
have been His mercies to you? They have not been few nor small. He has clothed
you, fed you, sheltered you. When you have been sick, He has healed you; when
you have been imperilled, He has rescued you. In the review of your past life every
stage of it demands the acknowledgment, ¡§Hitherto hath the Lord helped me.¡¨
IV. I trust that
many of you have not only been born, BUT BORN AGAIN--¡§born not of corruptible
seed but of incorruptible, by the Word of God which liveth and abideth for
ever.¡¨ In that case we have to ask concerning a new life--a divine life, ¡§How
old art thou?¡¨ How LONG HAVE YOU BEEN IN CHRIST? Since when have you turned
from idols--idolized sins and pleasures--to serve the living and the true God?
But whether or not you have this mercy in possession, know assuredly that you
have it in offer. (D. King, LL. D.)
Two ways of measuring life
There was a very old man--eighty-three years of age--and somebody
said to the old man, ¡§How old are you?¡¨ He said, ¡§I am three years old.¡¨ ¡§Three
years old?¡¨ was the reply. ¡§Why, you are eighty-thee!¡¨ ¡§No,¡¨ he said. ¡§My body
is eighty-three years old, but my soul is only three years old. My old life is
eighty years old, but my new life is three years old. I did not begin to live
till three years ago. So my soul is only three years old.¡¨ A person was asked,
¡§Where were you born--in Brighton?¡¨ The man said, ¡§I was born in London, and I
was born in Liverpool!¡¨ ¡§How can you be born in two places? ¡§ was the reply.
¡§If you were born in London, you could not be born in Liverpool.¡¨ ¡§I was,¡¨ said
the man; ¡§and I will let you see how that was. My body was born in London, but
my soul was born in Liverpool. It was not till I lived in Liverpool that I
cared about my soul!¡¨ (J. Vaughan, M. A.)
Good deeds healthy
Ancient Grecian and Roman ladies used to reckon their age from the
date of their marriage. Many wise persons have reckoned their years from the
time that they really began to live as they ought. Mere existence can hardly be
said to be living.
¡§We
live in deeds, not years--in thoughts, not breaths,
In
feelings, not in figures on a dial:
We
should count time by heart-throbs: he lives most
Who
feels most, thinks the noblest, acts the best.¡¨
A good man was once told he might live six years if he gave up
working, but he would die in two or three years if he continued to work. He
replied he had much rather spend the shorter time on earth in trying to do
good. But hard work seldom shortens life. John Wesley was an indefatigable
worker, and when he was seventy-three years old he said he was better and
stronger than he was at twenty-three years of age; and he attributed this,
under God, to his early rising, his activity, his undisturbed sleep, and his
even temper. Said he, ¡§I feel and grieve, but I fret at nothing.¡¨ Some,
however, who do not observe and obey the laws of health, are cut off in the
midst of their days. Young people should feel, ¡§It is time to seek the Lord,¡¨
for religion alone prepares for a really happy and profitable existence; then
it ever becomes more and more difficult to turn to God and to live aright the
longer these duties are neglected; moreover, no one should give to the world
and to Satan the best of their days and energies, and then hope to give to God
and to their spiritual and eternal duties and interests, the paltry and
miserable residue of their existence. When Care was old, he said his greatest
pleasure arose from the remembrance of the good deeds he had done (see also, Proverbs 16:31; Leviticus 19:32).
Knowing the time of life
When Mr. Moggridge (universally known as Old Humphrey) was a lad,
his father taught him how to know what o¡¦clock it was. When the boy could tell
the time, his father said, ¡§I have taught you to know the time of the day; I
must now teach you how to find out the time of your life. The Bible describes
the years of man to be threescore and ten or fourscore years. Now, life is very
uncertain, and you may not live a single day longer; but if we divide the
fourscore years of an old man¡¦s life into twelve parts, like the dial of the
clock, it will allow almost seven years for every figure. When a boy is seven
years old, then it is one o¡¦clock in his life; and this is the case with you:
when you arrive at fourteen years, it will be two o¡¦clock with you; and when at
twenty-one, it will be three o¡¦clock, should it please God thus to spare your
life. In this manner you may always know the time of your life, and looking at
the clock may perhaps remind you of it. My great grandfather, according to this
calculation, died at twelve o¡¦clock; my grandfather at eleven, and my father at
ten. At what hour you and I shall die, Humphrey, is only known to Him to whom
all things are known.¡¨
How old art thou?
A venerable lady was once asked her age. ¡§Ninety-three,¡¨ was the
reply. ¡§The Judge of all the earth does not mean that I shaft have any excuse
for not being prepared to meet Him.¡¨
Verse 9
And Jacob said unto Pharaoh, The days of the years of my
pilgrimage are an hundred and thirty years: few and evil have the days of the
years of my life been
A pensive retrospect
I.
LIFE
HAS BEEN TO HIM A PILGRIMAGE. He thinks of all his wanderings from that far-off
day when at Bethel he received the promise of God¡¦s presence ¡§in all places
whither thou goest,¡¨ till this last happy and yet disturbing change. But he is
thinking not only, perhaps not chiefly, of the circumstances, but of the
spirit, of his life. This is, no doubt, the confession ¡§that they were
strangers and pilgrims¡¨ referred to in the Epistle to the Hebrews. He was a
pilgrim, not because he had often changed his place of abode, but because he
sought the city which had foundations, and therefore, could not be at home
here. The goal of his life lay in the far future; and whether he looked for the
promises to be fulfilled on earth, or had the unformulated consciousness of
immortality, and saluted the dimly descried coast from afar while tossing on
life¡¦s restless ocean, he was effectually detached from the present, and felt
himself an alien in the existing order. We have to live by the same hope, and
to let it work the same estrangement, if we would live noble lives. Not because
all life is change, nor because it all marches steadily on to the grave, but
because our true home--the community to which we really belong, the metropolis,
the mother city of our souls--is above, are we to feel ourselves strangers upon
earth. They who only take into account the transiency of life are made sad, or
sometimes desperate, by the unwelcome thought. But they whose pilgrimage is a
journey home may look that transiency full in the face, and be as glad because
of it as colonists on their voyage to the old country which they call ¡§home,¡¨
though they were born on the other side of the world and have never seen its
green fields.
II. To JACOB¡¦S
EYES HIS DAYS SEEM FEW. Abraham¡¦s one hundred and seventy-five years, Isaac¡¦s
one hundred and eighty, were in his mind. But more than these was in his mind.
The law of the moral perspective is other than that of the physicial. The days
in front, seen through the glass of anticipation, are drawn out; the days
behind, viewed through the telescope of memory, are crowded together. What a
moment looked all the long years of his struggling life--shorter now than even
had once seemed the seven years of service for his Rachel, that love had made
to fly past on such swift wings! That happy wedded life, how short it looked! A
bright light for a moment, and
¡§Ere
a man could say ¡¥ Behold!¡¦
The
jaws of darkness did devour it up.¡¨
It is well to lay the coolness of this thought on our fevered
hearts, and, whether they be torn by sorrows or gladdened with bliss, to
remember ¡§this also will pass¡¨ and the longest stretch of dreary days be seen
in retrospect, in their due relation to eternity, as but a moment. That will
not paralyze effort nor abate sweetness, but it will teach preparation, and
deliver from the illusions of this solid-seeming shadow which we call life.
III. THE PENSIVE
RETROSPECT DARKENS, AS THE OLD MAN¡¦S MEMORY DWELLS UPON THE PAST. His days have
not only been few--that could be borne--but they have been ¡§evil,¡¨ by which I
understand not unfortunate so much as faulty. We have seen in former lessons
the slow process by which the crafty Jacob had his sins purged out of him, and
became ¡§God¡¦s wrestler.¡¨ Here we learn that old wrong-doing, even when forgiven--or,
rather, when and because for-given--leaves regretful memories life-long. The
early treachery had been long ago repented of and pardoned by God and man. The
nature which hatched it had been renewed. But here it starts up again, a ghost
from the grave, and the memory of it is full of bitterness. No lapse of time
deprives a sin of its power to sting. As in the old story of the man who was
killed by a rattlesnake¡¦s poison fang imbedded in a boot which had lain
forgotten for years, we may be wounded by suddenly coming against it long after
it is forgiven by God and almost forgotten by ourselves. Many a good man,
although he knows that Christ¡¦s blood has washed away his guilt, is made to
possess the iniquities of his youth. ¡§Thou shalt be ashamed and confounded, and
never open thy mouth any more, when I am pacified toward thee for all that thou
hast done.¡¨
IV. BUT THIS
SHADED RETROSPECT IS ONE-SIDED. It is true, and in some moods seems all the
truth; but Jacob saw more distinctly, and his name was rightly Israel, when,
laying his trembling hands on the heads of Joseph¡¦s sons, he laid there the
blessing of ¡§the God which fed me all my life long, . . . the Angel which
redeemed me from all evil.¡¨ That was his last thought about his life as it
began to be seen in the breaking light of eternal day. Pensive and penitent
memory may call the years few and evil, but grateful faith even here, and still
more the cleared vision of heaven, will discern more truly that they have been
a long miracle of loving care, and that all their seeming evil has ¡§been
transmuted into good. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
The nothingness of life
The patriarch called his days few and evil, not because his life
was shorter than his father¡¦s, but because it was nearly over. When life is
past, it is all one whether it has lasted two hundred years or fifty. And it is
the fact that life is mortal which makes it under all circumstances equally
feeble and despicable.
I. THIS SENSE OF
THE NOTHINGNESS OF LIFE IS MUCH DEEPENED WHEN WE CONTRAST IT WITH THE CAPABILITIES
OF US WHO LIVE IT. Our earthly life gives promise of what it does not
accomplish. It promises immortality, yet it is mortal; it contains life in
death and eternity in time, and it attracts us by beginnings which faith alone
brings to an end.
II. Such being the
unprofitableness of this life viewed in itself, IT IS PLAIN HOW WE SHOULD
REGARD IT WHILE WE GO THROUGH IT. We should remember that it is scarcely more
than an accident of our being--that it is no part of ourselves, who are
immortal. The regenerate soul is taken into communion with saints and angels,
and its ¡§life is hid with Christ in God.¡¨ It looks at this world as a spectator
might look at some show or pageant, except when called upon from time to time
to take a part. (J. H.Newman, D. D.)
Jacob¡¦s retrospect
Jacob looked back on his life and saw but three things--God, love,
grief. These were all he had to speak of. They were a trinity of the past; they
dwarfed everything else.
I. ¡§GOD appeared
unto me at LUZ.¡¨ This one first and great appearance of God was memorable in
all his life, because it was the first. It stamped itself upon his life; even
in old age the memory of it was not obscured, effaced, or weakened, but was
with him in the valley of the shadow of death.
II. Less august,
but even more affecting, was the second of his three experiences--LOVE. Of all
whom he had known, only two names remained to him in the twilight between this
life and the other--God and Rachel. The simple mention of Rachel¡¦s name by the
side of that of God is itself a monument to her.
III. The third of
these experiences was that RACHEL WAS BURIED. When Rachel died, the whole world
had but one man in it, and he was solitary, and his name was Jacob.
Application:
1. See how perfectly we are in unity with the life of this, one of
the earliest men. How perfectly we understand him! How the simplest experiences
touch us to the quick!
2. The filling up of life, however important in its day, is in
retrospect very insignificant.
3. The significance of events is not to be judged by their outward
productive force, but by their productiveness in the inward life.
4. In looking back through the events of life, though they are
innumerable, yet those that remain j last are very few--not because all the
others have perished, but because they group themselves and assume moral unity
in the distance. (H. W. Beecher.)
The retrospect
1. The character given of human life. He considers this life as a
pilgrimage.
2. The estimate of its worth. He counted the days of the years of
his life to be few and evil.
3. The consequent necessity of provision for its ultimate result.
I. We are to
consider this life under the figure which the text sets before us. It is a
pilgrimage. Let us dwell for a short time on the practical view of life which
is taken by the true believer.
1. He does not regard this world as his home. There are many who
live in it as if they were permanently fixed in it. But the Christian pilgrim
is conscious that he has a home to which he is travelling. ¡§There remaineth a
rest for the people of God.¡¨
II. We notice the
estimate which true wisdom gives us of the real worth of this life, regarded in
itself. ¡§Few and evil,¡¨ said the patriarch, ¡§have the days of the years of my
life been.¡¨ Life is short. And oh! how short!--how limited! ¡§The days of our
years are threescore years and ten¡¨; sometimes with difficulty they reach to
fourscore years. But how few of our race reach even the nearer limit! But the
wise estimate of human life is not only that it is short in its duration, but that
it is evil in its nature. It is evil, as it is the scene of continual trial and
affliction, as it is chequered by calamities of various kinds, which bow down
the spirit, and gradually render the end of life desirable. But we observe,
again, that life is full of evil, because it is full of sin. Jacob knew his own
heart well, and the contemplation of his own history could afford him no
self-satisfaction. Let the votary of this world make a fair estimate of his
days. ¡§They are few and evil.¡¨ Can you make better of them? The cutting
conviction of your heart, when you look within, is that they are so. You have
no means of lengthening their duration. You cannot dismiss their oppressive
sorrows.
III. We notice,
then, the absolute need of a provision for the ultimate result of life. In
conclusion, the subject suggests to us a few practical remarks.
1. It becomes all those who make a Christian profession diligently
to examine their own ground of hope for a better world.
2. Again, we are called upon by our professed principles to take
care that we are not bound down by an improper attachment to the perishing
goods of this world.
3. We are called upon by our principles, as pilgrims towards another
and a better world, to do our utmost as faithful stewards of the gifts of God
in alleviating the sufferings and the sorrows of our fellow-creatures.
4. There is a duty incumbent on us also to use every fair
opportunity of inculcating on our fellow-men the consideration of the true
character of this life and its speedy termination. (E. Craig.)
The greatness and the littleness of human life
I. CONTRAST THIS
POOR VANISHING LIFE OF OURS WITH THE GREAT CAPABILITIES OF OUR SOULS.
II. CONSIDER SOME
FACTS OF HUMAN EXPERIENCE.
1. Consider the case of a man who dies full of days,
2. Consider the case of a man who dies before his time.
3. Consider the ease of the death-beds of some of the saints.
III. OUR DUTY IN
THE PRESENCE OF THESE FACTS.
1. Seek eternal life.
2. Look forward to the compensations of another world. (T. H.Leale.)
Jacob before Pharaoh
I. LIFE AS A
DISCIPLINE.
1. The changes of life often bring us nearer to the changeless God.
2. Bereavements teach us to set our affections on things above.
3. The heavy trials of life often remind of past sin and cause
despondency, and yet reveal the wisdom and love of God.
II. LIFE AS A
PILGRIMAGE.
1. Life is long in anticipation, but short in retrospect.
2. Life is bright in anticipation, and sad in retrospect.
3. Life as a pilgrimage is an incentive to effort (Hebrews 11:13 - 1 Peter 2:11-25).
4. Life as a pilgrimage is an encouragement to endurance.
Conclusion:
1. What cause we have for gratitude, trust, hope!
2. To what are you looking forward?
3. What effect has your hope upon your life (1 John 3:3)?
4. Who is your guide? Self, Satan, or God? (A. F. Joscelyne, B.
A.)
Human life in retrospect
I. HUMAN LIFE IS
RETROSPECT IS SADDENING.
1. Unsettled.
2. Brief. The shorter perhaps the better.
3. Evil. Because--
II. IT STANDS IN
CONTRAST WITH IT IN PROSPECT. Hope makes life to the young a settled, lengthened,
and joyous thing.
III. IT SUGGESTS
THE IDEA OF A BETTER EXISTENCE. Underlying this wail of the old patriarch,
there was an impression of a life settled, long, and blessed. This impression
was the standard by which he measured the ever-changing, brief, and unblessed
past. Truly, a belief in a future life is almost necessary to reconcile us to
the present. (Homilist.)
Man¡¦s life on earth a pilgrimage
I. THAT THE LIFE
OF MAN UPON EARTH IS A PILGRIMAGE.
II. THAT MAN¡¦S
DAYS IN THIS PILGRIMAGE STATE ARE FEW AND EVIL.
III. THE CAUSE OF
THIS AND WHETHER, AND HOW FAR, THE EVIL ADMITS OF A CURE. Inferences:
1. Is this a pilgrimage state? Then why should we be so much
attached to or affected with anything here--a country where we are pilgrims?
2. Are our days few? Then let us make haste, for we have a great
work to do.
3. Are they evil? Then why are we in love with them? Why unwilling
to go where days are evil no more?
4. Has God provided a cure? Then let us take care we do not reject
it. (J. Benson.)
Life
I. LIFE IN ITS
GENERAL CHARACTER.
1. It is evil. This may be understood as including two things--sin
and affliction. Sin is evil and only evil, and that continually. This is man¡¦s
true misery, and the only way to save man from misery is to save him from sin.
Affliction is not misery; it may not have the sting of moral guilt in it, and
therefore, although in itself an evil, by God¡¦s merciful guidance it may become
the means of great good to us.
2. This leads us to remark that another feature in man¡¦s natural
life is that it is met by the great redemption of Christ Jesus the Lord. The
man who uttered the words of my text spoke also of the Divine Messenger who
redeemed him from all evil.
3. Life may become a pilgrimage to heaven. You may travel through the
wilderness to Canaan; you may now set out for a city which hath foundations,
whose Maker and Builder is God. Will you?
II. LIFE AS TO THE
PERIOD OF TIME IN WHICH IT FALLS.
1. What a contrast between the time when the patriarch lived and our
own!
2. And what is its state?
3. It is a time of great discovery and rapid and well-nigh universal
communication.
4. The missionary work of the Church has only been preparatory; soon
it will break forth in its proper strength.
5. The Church is being tried as silver is tried; every man¡¦s work is
being tried of what sort it is.
6. There is a yearning in the Church of God for union; this we hail
with delight!
III. LIFE IS ITS
INDIVIDUALITY. ¡§My life.¡¨
1. Consider your life as a gift from God with its consequent responsibilities.
2. Your life as the time of your salvation.
3. But, again, let me remind you that your life is the opportunity
for Christian activity.
IV. AND, LASTLY,
LIFE AS TO ITS BREVITY, AND THE DIVISION OF ITS DURATION.
1. Its shortness. It is not only a vanity, but a short-lived vanity.
2. But think for a moment of its swiftness. Have you ever seen a
shadow run along the ground, darkening the places beautified by the beams of
the sun, but quickly disappearing? Such is man¡¦s life; ¡§for he fleeth as it
were a shadow, and continueth not.¡¨ A weaver¡¦s shuttle is very swift in its
motion; in a moment it is thrown from one side of the web to the other; yet our
days are swifter than a weaver¡¦s shuttle. ¡§My days are swifter than a post,¡¨
says one; ¡§they flee away as the eagle that hasteth to the prey¡¨; the eagle
flying, not with his ordinary flight, for that is not sufficient to represent
the swiftness of our days, but as when he flies upon his prey, which is with an
extraordinary swiftness. (T. E. Thoresby.)
Life: its duration, shortness, and uncertainty
I. The general
life of man was in ancient times, that is, in the first ages of the world, MUCH
LONGER THAN AT PRESENT. AS old as Methuselah has passed into a proverb. He
lived 969 years. Adam lived 930 years. Noah lived longer than Adam by 20 years.
He died at the age of 950. Lamech lived 777 years. But, after the flood, we
scarcely read of one who lived up to even 200. And it is thought by some that,
when God brought about the flood, He at the same time, by a Divine decree,
shortened man¡¦s life. The three patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, little
surpassed this age; and we know that many of those connected with them sank
into their graves at a very much earlier age.
II. THE LIFE OF
MAN NOW IS NOT ONLY SHORT, BUT UNCERTAIN. The death that happens, happens
frequently in a place when we least expect it. Those who we think are going to
die many times earlier, and those who we think have years of life before them
drop unexpectedly into the grave.
III. THE LIFE OF
MAN IS CHEQUERED WITH EVIL. ¡§Few and evil have the days of the years of my life
been.¡¨ All people have their troubles. To use the expressive language of
Scripture, ¡§Man is born to trouble as the sparks fly upward.¡¨ As Christians we
are expressly warned to be prepared for trouble. ¡§In the world,¡¨ says our Lord
to His then immediate disciples, and doubtless He meant the same truth to be
conveyed to us, ¡§in the world,¡¨ says He, ¡§ye shall have tribulation.¡¨
And, again, intimating the same truth, He says, ¡§Behold I send you forth as
sheep in the midst of wolves.¡¨ But I need not accumulate texts on a truth so
evident, and so fully verified by experience. Who is there without trouble? Who
has not heavy cares on his mind? Who can, with joyous mind, say that his fond
expectations have not been disappointed? (W. Lupton, M. A.)
The shortness of life
I. IT IS SHORT IN
COMPARISON WITH THE LIVES OF THE EARLY MEMBERS OF THE HUMAN FAMILY.
II. HUMAN LIFE IS
SHORT IN COMPARISON WITH OUR EXPECTATIONS OF ITS CONTINUANCE.
III. HUMAN LIFE IS
SHORT IN COMPARISON WITH ETERNITY.
IV. HUMAN LIFE IS
SHORT IN COMPARISON WITH THE WEIGHTY INTERESTS WHICH ARE AFFECTED AND
UNALTERABLY SETTLED BY IT.
V. HUMAN LIFE IS
NOT ONLY SHORT, BUT ALTOGETHER UNSATISFACTORY.
1. The shortness of life is a consoling reflection to the Christian.
2. The shortness of life should admonish those who are impenitent
immediately to enter on the work of their salvation. (I. Foot, D. D.)
Two views of life
I. THERE IS A
SENSE IN WHICH LIFE MAY BE REGARDED AS EVIL.
1. It appears so when we consider the disparity between the good it
affords and the good we desire. ¡§The earth hath He given to the children of
men,¡¨ and it is a goodly inheritance. Its sights and sounds are dear to our
hearts; we love it as our first home--the only home we have hitherto known.
But, like Jacob and his fathers when they sojourned in the promised land, we
seek a better country; this world, with all its beauty, glory, and grandeur,
does not satisfy our hearts. Our spiritual instincts make it impossible for us
to find here perfect rest; they point us to the future, and are a prophecy of
the world that shall be revealed.
2. Life may appear evil when we compare what it is with what in many
cases it might be. Men spoil their own lives, and then complain that life is
evil; they mar and rend the picture, and murmur because its beauty has
disappeared; they run the ship upon the rocks, and weep to find her a wreck;
they crush the flower with a rude hand, and are disappointed because it withers.
II. But the words
of Jacob do not exhaust the subject; IN THE HIGHEST, TRUEST SENSE LIFE IS GOOD
AND NOT EVIL.
1. It is the gift of God. He thought it right, and wise, and kind
that we should be. Our existence appeared to Him a good and desirable thing;
and what is good in His sight is and must be so in reality, for He sees things
as they are, and not as they seem.
2. Our life is under His control. Let us then trust His perfect
love. Seeing that He is with us in the ship, we will not fear the voyage,
stormy though it be.
3. Our present life is connected with an endless future. (T.
Jones.)
The days of our pilgrimage
Pilgrimage is the broad condition of every life-course that passes
upward, as well as onward, and has its bourne in God. Pharaoh speaks of years
of life, Jacob of pilgrimage. Pharaoh measured existence by days of power and
pleasure, by banquets, triumphs, and festivals of the gods. Jacob by the stages
where, after stern battle, he had left a lust, a vice, a weakness buried; by
the waning of the stars which lit his night of sorrow, and the rosy flush in
the east which was already brightening, breaking into the morning of his
everlasting day. It is a very wonderful fact that God¡¦s elect, His friends, in
the early dawn of history, were men who lived upon promises, and who possessed
absolutely not one clod of the land which God called their own, except the cave
where they buried their dead. Very splendid, very wealthy, was their
inheritance Genesis 13:14-17). But the cave which
they bought of Ephron (Genesis 23:1-20.)was their only
possession in the land which yet was all their own. Pilgrimage of the hardest,
sternest character was their portion; and the wonder is that they never made a
moan over it, and never reproach the justice and fidelity of the Lord. Bravely
they accepted their lot as pilgrims; and they blessed the angel who had guided
their pilgrimage when their heads were bowed in death. What had they then which
was a richer possession than those graves? Well, they had the land; all its
beauty and splendour, morning pomp and golden evening mists, moonlight that
silvered its ridges, shadows that slept in its hollows, stars that watched its
wolds through the dewy night, and the myriad gems that glittered a laughing
welcome to the rising day. They had that; it was all their own. They lived with
Nature as God¡¦s children alone can live with her, and were filled with her
blessing. Yes! they had the land, as we may all have the land, as no lustful
heathen could have the land; and with hearts bursting with joy and thankfulness
they praised His name, whose bounty and tenderness had laid all this wealth of
beauty and splendour at their feet. Yes! they had the land, and they held it by
the tenure of praise. And the things which were seen were prophets to them of
the things which were not seen. Through the vestibule they looked into the
temple; they had vision of fairer homes, of brighter suns, in the world to
which they had the mysterious entrance; where, too, they had seen the
white-winged troops of angels gleaming in the celestial sunlight, and whence
they had heard the voice of the Invisible King. The pilgrims held in fee two
worlds. They had the promise of the life that now is (compare Lot and Abraham),
and of the life that is to come. And bravely Jacob bears witness before Pharaoh
of his pilgrim life and lot. To Pharaoh earth was the home; men were pilgrims
in the shades. Here the sunlight, the sun warmth, the joy of a home; there,
behind the veil, the king could see only a rout of shivering, shuddering
ghosts. Jacob had his pilgrimage here; his home, his kingdom, in eternity. Some
sense of this perhaps flashed on the king as he gazed. It was a strange puzzle
to him. Nebuchadnezzar, Herod, Pilate, Felix, were all perplexed by it in their
times. These pilgrims, landless, penniless, powerless, were after all heaven¡¦s
priests and kings. But there is something special in the experience which this
pilgrim confesses before the king. ¡§Few and evil have the days of the years of
my life been.¡¨ A sad and weary old man. Would faithful Abraham or pious Isaac
have borne this testimony? The life of the one was nobler, purer, grander, than
Jacob¡¦s; the life of the other more simple and serene. The old age of either
would have been fairer and brighter to look upon. Jacob¡¦s experience, on the
other hand, has much to do with the habit of his nature and the sins and
follies of his life. It is one of the most profoundly interesting biographies
in history; because of the breadth of human experience it covers, the heights
and the depths through which this princely pilgrim passed. He had a keen and
subtle intellect, easily tempted to display itself in cunning, but with a
lordly power in its compass when set on its noblest use. While he had a
craving, grasping appetite for riches, and intense power of acquisition, joined
with a grand faculty of spiritual insight and constant vision of the realities
of the unseen world. A power at once to grope and to soar; now the huckster,
now the seer. Two powerful natures struggling within for the mastery; the
spirit wresting the victory from the flesh through bitter anguish and wasting
pain. This false brother, this crafty steward, this scheming chief, this
foolish father, had terrible lessons to learn at the hand of the Angel who was
redeeming him from all evil; and it is the glory of the man that he had
patience, courage, and faith to learn them, and to bless the Angel who had
redeemed him as he bowed on his bed¡¦s head in death. He was such a pilgrim as
most of us may be, with the double nature strongly developed. He might have
made a successful venture of this life, as men count success, if God would have
let him. But God endowed him with a nature which marred his prosperity, which
would be aiming at unseen blessings, far-off fruits of birthright, and
everlasting results. It is the battle of the two natures, both so strong and in
such high development, which makes the striking interest of the patriarch¡¦s
history. Few and evil were his days compared with his fathers, for his heart
was rent by contending passions, his home was torn by hostile factions. The
patriarch had won his freedom when he stood before Pharaoh; but the marks of
the struggle, the dim eye, the furrowed brow, the sad lip, were on him. (J.
B. Brown, B. A.)
Disappointment in life
A recent writer, who spent some years on the banks of the Nile and
on its waters, and who mixed freely with the inhabitants of Egypt, says: ¡§¡¥Old
Jacob¡¦s speech to Pharaoh really made me laugh, because it is so exactly like
what a Fellah says to a Pacha, ¡¥Few and evil have the days of the years of my
life been,¡¦ Jacob being a most prosperous man, but it is manners to say all
that.¡¨ But Eastern manners need scarcely be called in to explain a sentiment
which we find repeated by one who is generally esteemed the most self-sufficing
of Europeans. ¡§I have ever been esteemed,¡¨ Goethe says, ¡§one of Fortune¡¦s
chiefest favourites; nor will I complain or find fault with the course my life
has taken. Yet, truly, there has been nothing but toil and care; and I may say
that, in all my seventy-five years, I have never had a month of genuine
comfort. It has been the perpetual rolling of a stone, which I have always had
to raise anew.¡¨ Jacob¡¦s life had been almost ceaseless disquiet and
disappointment. A man who had fled his country, who had been cheated into a
marriage, who had been compelled by his own relative to live like a slave, who
was only by flight able to save himself from a perpetual injustice, whose sons
made his life bitter--one of them by the foulest outrage a father could suffer,
two of them by making him, as he himself said, to stink in the nostrils of the
inhabitants of the land he was trying to settle in, and all of them by
conspiring to deprive him of the child he most dearly loved--a man who at last,
when he seemed to have had experience of every form of human calamity, was
compelled by famine to relinquish the land for the sake of which he had endured
all and spent all, might surely be forgiven a little plaintiveness in looking
back upon his past. The wonder is to find Jacob to the end unbroken, dignified,
and clear-seeing, capable and commanding, loving and full of faith. (M.
Dods, D. D.)
Jacob¡¦s pilgrimage
It was very true of the past of Jacob¡¦s life that it had been a
pilgrimage, for he had been twenty-one years a stranger in the land of
Padan-aram, and even after his return to Canaan he had not dwelt continuously
in one place. For years, indeed, he had been at Hebron, near the Machpelah
cave, where the ashes of his fathers were entombed; but now again he was away
from the only spots of earth in Shechem and in Hebron which legally he could
call his own. So with literal exactness he could say that his life had been a
pilgrimage. But the expression had a forward as well as a backward look. It
told that he was seeking a home beyond the grave, that he was desiring the
better country, ¡§even the heavenly,¡¨ and that his hopes were anchored there. It
indicated that his feelings regarding his fathers were not so distinct and
definite indeed, but of the same kind as those of Baxter when he wrote
concerning a venerable relative who died at the age of a hundred years: ¡§She is
gone after many of my choicest friends, and I am following even at the door.
Had I been to enjoy them only here, it would have been but a short comfort
mixed with many troubles which all our failings and sins, and some degree of
unsuitableness between the nearest and dearest, cause. But I am going after
them, to that blessed society where life and light and love, and therefore
harmony, concord, and joy are perfect and everlasting.¡¨ Thrice happy they who
can look forward to such an end of their pilgrimage! (W. M. Taylor, D. D.)
The shortness of life
Remember that life at the longest is very short. Therefore, do at
once that which you feel you ought to do at all. Yea, do first that which is
most important. Seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness. Young man,
do not leave it to a future day, but do it now, that all your life may be one
of usefulness and enjoyment. Men of middle-age, you have a vivid sense of the
rapidity with which your years have gone, but they will go just as rapidly in
the future as in the past, and you will be on your death-bed before you know
it; therefore, ¡§what thy hands find to do, do it with thy might.¡¨ Men of
old-age, you have to make haste, for you have no time to lose. The ancient law
said kindly as to the sale of an estate, ¡§according to the number of the years
thou shalt diminish the price¡¨; the nearer they were to the Jubilee, the
cheaper were they to sell their land. So the nearer you come to the end of your
days, you ought to hold earthly things more loosely, and prize heavenly things
more highly. When your business day is drawing to a close, you hasten to finish
your work, and sometimes you do more in the last hour than in all that went
before. As your paper becomes more filled you write more closely, to get all in
that you want to say. And in the same way, the older you grow, you should
become the more earnest in the service of your God in Christ. And if you have
not yet begun to serve Him, I beseech you to begin now! When Napoleon came on
the field of Marengo, it was late in the afternoon, and he saw that the battle
was really lost. But looking at the western sun, he said, ¡§There is just time
to recover the day! ¡§ and giving out his orders with that rapid energy for
which, combined with quick perception of what an emergency needed, he was so
remarkable, he turned a defeat into a victory. So your sun is nearing its
setting, but there is time, in the present opportunity, to ¡§recover the day.¡¨
Avail yourself of it, therefore, at once, lest your life should end in utter blank,
eternal failure. (W. M. Taylor, D. D.)
A backward look
A backward look is very different from a forward look in life. A
quarter of a century, or a half-century, would seem a long way ahead to a young
person; but how short it seems when it is remembered by those who have passed
it! And our estimates of value vary as much as our estimates of time, in
looking forward or backward. It is not those things which we thought most of
while we were striving for them, that seem of highest worth when we have them,
or when we remember how they missed us. Among the memories of Jacob, his
pleasantest, we may be sure, were not his cheating Esau, or his deceiving his
father, or his getting the advantage of Laban. Nor was it saddest to him to
remember his disappointment in the loss of Joseph. There can be no doubt that
the one-tenth which Jacob gave to the Lord was more of a treasure to him in
memory than the nine-tenths he held on to; and that his being lamed at Penuel
was a pleasanter recollection than his standing up so firmly to lie to Isaac at
Beer-sheba. The days of the years of our lives will seem few enough at the best
when we come to their close. Whether they are then to seem evil, or not, will
depend on the use we now make of them. No day spent in the Lord¡¦s service, no
self-denial or generous act for others, will ever be counted evil in its
memory. Now is the time to make ready for a pleasant old age--if our lives
should be long spared. (H. C. Trumbull.)
Jacob¡¦s confession
We have a comment upon this answer, in Hebrews 11:13-14, where it is called a
¡§confession,¡¨ and its implication is insisted on: ¡§They that say such things
declare plainly that they seek a country.¡¨ We may see in it a charming example
of spirituality, and how such a state of mind will find a way of introducing
religion, even in answer to the most simple and common questions. We go into
the company of a great man, and come away without once thinking of introducing
religion: nay, it would seem to us almost rude to attempt it. But wherefore?
Because of our want of spiritual-mindedness. If our spirits were imbued with a
sense of Divine things, we should think of the most common concerns of life in
a religious way; and so thinking of them, it would be natural to speak of them.
Jacob, in answer to this simple question, introduces several important truths,
and that without any force or awkwardness. He insinuates to Pharaoh that he and
his fathers before him were strangers and pilgrims upon the earth--that their
portion was not in this world, but in another--that the life of man, though it
extended to a hundred and thirty years, was but a few days--that those few days
were mixed With evil; all which, if the king properly reflected on it, would
lead him to set light by the earthly glory with which he was loaded, and to
seek a crown which fadeth not away. (A. Fuller.)
Reflections on life
When I look back to the earlier and middle periods of my life, and
now, in my old age, think how few are left of those who were young with me, I
always think of a summer residence at a bathing-place. When you arrive, you
make acquaintance and friends of those who have already been there some time,
and who leave in a few weeks. The loss is painful. Then you turn to the second
generation, with which you live a good while and become most intimate. But this
goes also, and leaves us alone with the third, which comes just as we are going
away, and with which we have nothing to do. I have been esteemed one of Fortune¡¦s
chiefest favourites; nor will I complain or find fault with the course my life
has taken. Yet, truly there has been nothing but toil and care; and I may say
that in all my seventy-five years I have never had a month of genuine comfort.
It has been the perpetual rolling of a stone, which I have always had to raise
anew. (Goethe.)
Life a pilgrimage
If men have been termed pilgrims and life a journey, then we may
add that the Christian pilgrimage far surpasses all others in the following
important particulars: in the goodness of the road, in the beauty of the
prospects, in the excellence of the company, and in the vast superiority of the
accomodation provided for the Christian traveller when he has finished his
course. (H. G. Salter.)
Theodore Monod said he would like the epitaph on his tombstone to
be ¡§Here Endeth the First Lesson.¡¨ (S. Smiles.)
The true indication of old age
¡§Old age,¡¨ remarks Bishop Patrick, ¡§is not to be known by a
withered face, but by a mortified spirit; not by the decays of the natural
body, but by the weakness of the body of sin; not by the good we have enjoyed,
but by the good we have done; and if we be prepared for death, we have lived
long enough; if our life be a death, then no death can be untimely to us.¡¨
The course of a Christless life
The whole course of a man¡¦s life out of Christ is nothing but a
continual trading in vanity, running a circle of toil and labour, and reaping
no profit at all. (Archbishop Leighton.)
Home after the journey of life
Mr Hughes tells a characteristic anecdote of starting one winter¡¦s
night with his friend, Charles Kingsley, to walk down to Chelsea, and of their
being caught in a dense fog before they had reached Hyde Park Corner. ¡§Both of
us,¡¨ Mr. Hughes adds, ¡§knew the way well, but we lost it half-a-dozen times,
and Kingsley¡¦s spirit seemed to rise as the fog thickened!¡¨ ¡§Isn¡¦t this like
life?¡¨ he said, after one of our blunders; ¡§a deep yellow fog all round, with a
dim light here and there shining through. You grope your way on from one lamp to
another, and you go up wrong streets and back again. But you get home at
last--there¡¦s always light enough for that.¡¨ (Clerical Library.)
Verse 12
And Joseph nourished his father, and his brethren, and all his
father¡¦s household, with bread
Types of the Holy Eucharist
I.
WHO
WAS THIS THAT FED HIS BRETHREN IN THE TIME OF DEARTH? Acts 7:11). Joseph, ¡§separate from his
brethren¡¨ (Genesis 49:26), ¡§sold to be a bond
servant¡¨ (Psalms 105:17), tried, afflicted, and
imprisoned, so that ¡§the iron entered into his soul¡¨ (Psalms 105:18), was a true type of Jesus
our Lord, Who became a ¡§stranger unto His brethren, an alien unto His mother¡¦s
children¡¨ (Psalms 69:8; Psalms 88:7; Psalms 88:18), Who took upon Him the form
of a servant¡¨ (Philippians 2:7), was afflicted and
smitten (Isaiah 53:4-5, and cf. Psalms 88:8). Then, too, as Joseph
brought out of prison (Psalms 105:19-20). set over all the land
of Egypt (Genesis 41:41; Genesis 41:43; Psalms 105:21), saluted as
Zaphnath-pasneah (Genesis 41:45), ¡§the Saviour of the
world¡¨ (Neals), sustained the life of all nations by miraculous supplies of
bread (Genesis 41:57): even so Jesus our Lord,
the true Joseph, ¡§taken from prison and from judgment¡¨ (Isaiah 53:8), entrusted with all power
(Mt Ephesians 1:20-23), ¡§exalted to the right
hand of God to be a Prince and a Saviour¡¨ (Acts 5:31), now feeds countless thousands
throughout all the world, with Himself, the Living Bread, in the Holy
Eucharist.
II. WHOM DID
JOSEPH FEED?
1. All countries--for ¡§all countries came into Egypt to Joseph for
to buy corn: because that the famine was so sore in all lands¡¨ (Genesis 41:57). So in one sense our True
Joseph ¡§giveth food to all flesh¡¨ (Psalms 136:25), and ¡§openeth His hand,
and filleth all things living with plenteousness¡¨ (Psalms 145:16; Psalms 104:27; Psalms 28:1-9).
2. Joseph fed his people, the Egyptians, for ¡§when all the land of
Egypt was famished, the people cried to Pharaoh for bread: and Pharaoh said
unto all the Egyptians, Go unto Joseph; what he saith unto you, do . . . And
Joseph opened all the storehouses, and sold unto the Egyptians¡¨ Genesis 41:55-56). ¡§And when money failed
. . . all the Egyptians came unto Joseph, and said, Give us bread . . . And
Joseph gave them bread¡¨ Genesis 47:15; Genesis 47:17). So now Jesus our Lord,
the True Joseph, prepares a table in the wilderness of this world, at which He
feeds His people, not with common food, but with spiritual good things, help,
benedictions, knowledge, grace, ¡§to deliver their soul from death and to feed
them in the time of dearth¡¨ (Psalms 33:18), so that they may eat and
crave for that still greater food, the Holy Eucharist, of which He spake (Psalms 81:11), ¡§open thy mouth,¡¨ &c.
3. But Joseph specially cared for his brethren--his kinsfolk
according to the flesh--for he brought them into his house and feasted them Genesis 43:17; Genesis 43:34), he gave them provision
for the way (Genesis 42:25). So now our own Joseph,
Jesus our Lord, hath special care for His elect (Wisdom of Solomon 3:9), the saints of the
Most High whom He is not ashamed to call His brethren (Hebrews 2:11), He brings them into His
house, He makes them to sit down to meat, at His table in His kingdom, He comes
forth and serves them, saying, ¡§Come, eat of My bread and drink of the wine that
I have mingled¡¨ (Proverbs 9:5), ¡§for My flesh is meat
indeed and My blood is drink indeed¡¨ (John 6:55). Thus do the poor eat andare
satisfied. They are full, yet hungry still.
III. WHEN DID
JOSEPH FEED THEM?
1. ¡§When the dearth was in all lands,¡¨ ¡§and the famine was over all
the face of the earth,¡¨ and was ¡§sore in all lands¡¨ (Genesis 41:54; Genesis 41:56-57), ¡§and there was no
bread in all the land: for the famine was very sore, so that the land of Egypt
and all the land of Canaan fainted by reason of the famine¡¨ Genesis 47:13), then ¡§Joseph nourished
his father and his brethren and all his father¡¦s household, with bread.¡¨ So
now, ¡§in the time of dearth,¡¨ when there is a sore and grievous famine in the
weary land of this world and multitudes are perishing with hunger, because they
cannot satisfy the cravings of their immortal spirit with the husks that the
swine do eat Luke 15:16), our True Joseph feedeth the
hungry, satisfieth the fainting soul with Himself, the bread of God, and saith
to every soul that is hungering and thirsting after righteousness (Matthew 5:6), ¡§Open thy mouth wide, and I
will fill it¡¨ (Psalms 81:11.)
2. After he had ¡§made himself strange unto them¡¨ (Genesis 42:7-8), he nourishes them with
bread. So now Jesus our Lord appears ¡§in another form,¡¨ and makes Himself
strange as it were unto us by veiling His beauty and His brightness under the
veils of bread and wine, as it is written, ¡§Verily Thou art a God that hidest
Thyself, O God of Israel, the Saviour¡¨ Isaiah 45:15).
3. When his brethren had repented of their wickedness and fault, and
were sorry for their sin--for they said, ¡§We are verily guilty concerning our
brother.¡¨ So now it is when we have confessed our wickedness, and are sorry for
our sins (Psalms 38:18; Psalms 51:3), when we have examined
ourselves (1 Corinthians 11:28; 1 Corinthians 11:31-32), when we ¡§do
truly and earnestly repent us of our sins . . . and have made our humble
confession to Almighty God, meekly kneeling upon our knees¡¨; then is it that
our dear Lord vouchsafes to feed and nourish us with that True Wine that maketh
glad the heart of man, and that True Bread that strengtheneth man¡¦s heart, in
the Holy Communion.
IV. WHERE DID
JOSEPH NOURISH HIS BRETHREN WITH BREAD?
1. He fed and feasted them in his house, at his princely table,
albeit sitting apart from them (Genesis 43:16-17; Genesis 43:32); whereas the Greater One
than Joseph, even Jesus our King, receiveth sinners and eateth with them Luke 15:2) at His own royal table of
Sacred Communion (Luke 22:30), in His house the Church (1 Timothy 3:15; Hebrews 3:6).
2. Also Joseph gave his brethren provision for the way (Genesis 42:25; Genesis 45:21): so our Blessed Lord
invites us to draw nigh unto the altar of God, and ¡§strengthen ourselves with
the Bread of Life¡¨ now, whilst we are in the way, saying, ¡§Arise and eat¡¨ of My
Flesh and drink of My Blood, ¡§because the journey is too great for thee¡¨ (1 Kings 19:7).
3. He fed and nourished them in Goshen (Genesis 46:28; Genesis 47:1; Genesis 47:4; Genesis 47:27; Genesis 50:8; Genesis 50:22); so it is in the true
Goshen that Jesus our King Eternal feeds His brethren at the marriage Supper of
the Lamb (Revelation 19:1-21.), and reveals Himself
to them face to face.
V. How DID JOSEPH
NOURISH HIS BRETHREN?
1. He fed his brethren at no expense to themselves--for ¡§Joseph
commanded to fill their sacks with corn, and to restore every man¡¦s money into
his sack, and to give them provision for the way; and thus did he unto Genesis 42:25, and cf Genesis 43:12; Genesis 43:21-24; Genesis 45:20-24; Genesis 47:11-12; Genesis 47:27; Genesis 50:21 not once nor twice. So
Jesus our Saviour feeds us with His own most Blessed Body and Blood, and
satisfies our mouth with good things, ¡§without money and without price¡¨ (Isaiah 55:1-2), again and yetagain
throughout our earthly pilgrimage.
2. He nourished them with corn (Genesis 42:19; Genesis 50:25), and wine Genesis 43:34), and bread (Genesis 47:12), and so ¡§saved their lives
by a great deliverance¡¨; and yet the food which Joseph provided was perishable
in its nature, and they who partook of it died at their appointed time. Whereas
our True Joseph--Who is the Corn of Wheat (John 12:24), the Wine that cheereth God
and man (Judges 9:13), and theBread of God which
cometh down from heaven, and giveth life unto the John 6:33)--gives us Food which is
incorruptible, and is the seed of immortality, seeing that ¡§This is the Bread
which cometh down from heaven that a man may eat thereof, and not die,¡¨ ¡§if any
man eat of this Bread he shall live for ever.¡¨ (W. F. Shaw, B. D.)
Verses 13-26
Joseph gathered up all the money that was found in the land of
Egypt, and in the Land of Canaan, for the corn which they bought: and Joseph
brought the money into Pharaoh¡¦s house
The morality of Joseph¡¦s administration
The significance of the transaction is obvious; it brought men
back to first principles; made them feel, in a very practical way, their
absolute dependence on God, and on that one man through whom God was pleased to
deal with them.
But what are we to think about its morality? Was Joseph right in buying men?
The following considerations, are, to my own mind, satisfactory.
1. Joseph was acting under Divine guidance in an extraordinary
emergency. It was not his own wisdom that foresaw the plenty and the famine,
and which devised the plan he was raised up to carry out. It was God who gave
him the message to Pharaoh, and it was God more than Pharaoh who exalted him to
absolute power.
2. It is unreasonable to impute mean motives or cruelty to a man
whose character, before this time and after it, was so singularly noble and
good.
3. The people themselves proposed this arrangement, and they
accepted it with gratitude. ¡§And they said, Thou hast saved our lives: let us
find grace in the sight of my lord, and we will be Pharaoh¡¦s servants.¡¨
4. Left to themselves, where would they have been? Even supposing
that every farmer from the cataracts to the seaboard had been as fully
persuaded that famine was coming as men generally are that they must soon die,
yet greed and the craving for present indulgence would have got the better of
their prudence during the years of plenty; and long before the fourth year of
continuous famine, Egypt would have become one grave. As it was, Joseph saved
their lives, and saved them also from the utter moral ruin into which years of
indolent pauperism would have sunk them. ¡§As for the people, he removed them to
cities from one end of the borders of Egypt, even to the other end.¡¨ I
understand this to mean, not that Joseph transported the population of the
Delta to the vicinity of the Cataracts, and vice versa, but that he
brought them in from the fields, where they could do nothing, and provided them
some form of work in the towns. The fact is recorded to the honour of Joseph.
When our own government has had to deal with famine, it has exhausted its
ingenuity in making work for the relieved. ¡§So far, then, is Joseph¡¦s plan of
selling instead of giving the corn to the people, from being a matter of
reprehension, that we ought to be astonished at a course of proceeding which
anticipated the discoveries of the nineteenth century after Christ, and at the
strength of mind which enabled the minister of the Egyptian crown to forego the
vulgar popularity which profuse but unreasonable bounty can always secure.¡¨
5. The arrangement, as described by the sacred narrative, was a
highly beneficent one. The record is very brief and subordinate, but its
meaning becomes sufficiently clear on candid examination. (A. M.Symington,
D. D.)
Joseph¡¦s policy vindicated
1. The believer in the divine inspiration of the Scriptures is not
bound to vindicate the policy of Joseph in every particular.
2. It would be manifestly unfair to judge Joseph¡¦s policy by the
principles of modern political economy or by those of New Testament enforcement
and obligation. We must put him in the environment of his age, and we have no
right to expect from him conformity to a standard which was not at that time in
existence.
3. The policy itself was approved by those who had the best means of
judging of its character, and who, as being directly and immediately concerned,
would have felt its hardships if there had been any in the case. But, so far
from regarding him as an oppressor, the people hailed him as a benefactor.
4. It must not be forgotten that Egypt is an exceptional country,
and that, from the constant dependence of the people on the irrigation of their
fields, and the continual changes made in the surface of the country by the
annual inundation of the river, in the way of obliterating landmarks, and
removing part of the soil from the one side of the Nile to the other, the
holding of all the lands by the crown would have special public advantages
which could not well be either enjoyed or appreciated by the inhabitants of
other territories. In conversation upon this subject the other day with the
venerable author of ¡§The Land and the Book,¡¨ I discovered that he was inclined
to find the explanation of Joseph¡¦s settlement with the people for their lands
in the unusual character of the country itself; and from what he then said I
gathered that he would fully agree with Bishop Browne, when, in the ¡§Speaker¡¦s
Commentary,¡¨ he alleges, ¡§The peculiar nature of the land, its dependence on
the overflow of the Nile, and the unthrifty habits of the cultivators, made it
desirable to establish a system of centralization, perhaps to introduce some
general principle of irrigation, in modern phraseology, to promote the
prosperity of the country by great government works, in preference to leaving
all to the uncertainty of individual enterprise. If this were so, then the
saying ¡¥Thou hast saved our lives¡¦ was no language of Eastern adulation, but
the verdict of a grateful people.¡¨
5. For the rest, this policy of Joseph¡¦s did not create a scarcity
for the advantage either of himself or of the monarch, but it provided the
means of meeting a scarcity; it did not withhold corn, and so earn the curse of
the people, but it frankly brought it out as it was required, and sold it at a
price that was mutually agreed upon; it did not insist on everything in the
bond, no matter what hardship might be thereby occasioned, for, so far as
appears, Joseph not only gave the people seed for their fields, but also gave
them back their cattle, which he had meanwhile preserved to them; above all, it
neither bought what was not in existence, nor sold what was not in actual
possession, and so it had in it nothing which makes it in any respect a
parallel case to those speculative combinations among ourselves with which some
have sought to classify it. True, it left the government owners of the land,
but, as we have seen, that was the most convenient settlement both for the
carrying out of systematic works for the prevention of similar national
calamities in the future, and for the stoppage of all litigation over matters
of boundary; and one-fifth part of the produce, considering the fertility of
the soil, was not an exorbitant rental, especially if it included all government
imposts of every sort. (W. M. Taylor, D. D.)
Joseph¡¦s conduct
This part of Joseph¡¦s conduct has been thought by some very
exceptionable, as tending to reduce a nation to poverty and slavery. I am not
sure that it was entirely right, though the parties concerned appear to have
cast no reflection upon him. If it were not, it only proves that Joseph, though
a good and great man, yet was not perfect. The following remarks, if they do
not wholly exculpate him from blame, may at least serve greatly to extenuate
the evil of his conduct:
Verse 27-28
And Israel dwelt in the land of Egypt, in the country of Goshen
The children of Israel in Goshen
I.
THEIR
QUIET POSSESSION OF THE LAND.
1. They had the means and appliances of prosperity,
2. They enjoyed their freedom by a firm and honourable tenure.
II. THEIR
PROSPERITY, (T. H. Leale.)
Verse 29-30
Bury me not, I pray thee, in Egypt
Lessons -
1.
Approaching
death should make men put their houses in order, and prepare for the grave.
2. The best of sons are best trusted with the interring of parents.
3. Favour, benevolence, and fidelity dying parents may beg of
surviving children.
4. Parents may bind children not to bury them in places inconvenient
(Genesis 47:29).
5. The law of nature may appoint burial with fathers, much more the
law of faith.
6. The faith of the Patriarchs did work as to the place of burial to
appoint it.
7. The testamental word of parents, though hard, yet should be
sacred with good sons (Genesis 47:30).
8. Holy worship of God is meet from dying saints, for His gracious
disposal to the grave. (G. Hughes, B. D.)
Prepared for death
Montmorency, constable of France, having been mortally wounded at
an engagement, was exhorted by those who stood around him to die like a good
Christian, and with the same courage which he had shown in his lifetime. To
this he most nobly replied in the following manner:--¡§Gentlemen and
fellow-soldiers, I thank you all very kindly for your anxious care and concern
about me; but the man who has been enabled to endeavour to live well for
fourscore years past can never need to seek now how to die well for a quarter
of an hour.¡¨ (Dictionary of Religious Anecdote.)
Ready for death
At the time when His Majesty, George the Third, desirous that
himself and family should repose in a less public sepulchre than that of
Westminster Abbey, had ordered a royal tomb to be constructed at Windsor, Mr.
Wyatt, his architect, waited upon him with a detailed report and plan of the
building, and of the manner in which ¡§he proposed to arrange its various
recesses.¡¨ The king minutely examined the whole, and when finished, Mr. Wyatt,
in thanking His Majesty said he had ventured to occupy so much of His Majesty¡¦s
time and attention with these details in order that it might not be necessary
to bring so painful a subject again under his notice. To this the good king
replied, ¡§Mr. Wyatt, I request that you will bring the subject before me
whenever you please. I shall attend with as much pleasure to the building of a
tomb to receive me when I am dead as I would to the decoration of a
drawing-room to hold me while living, for, Mr. Wyatt, if it please God that I
shall live to be ninety or a hundred years old I am willing to stay; but if it
please God to take me this night I am ready to obey the summons.¡¨ (Dictionary
of Religious Anecdote.)
Love of home in death
It is almost the universal custom in America, and seems to be
growing in favour here, for great men to be buried in the place where they have
mostly lived, and among their own kith and kin. Washington lies at Mount
Vernon; Lincoln at Springfield; Emerson and Hawthorne under the pines of New
England; Irving on the banks of the Hudson; Clay in Kentucky. They are laid to
rest not in some central city or great structure, but where they have lived,
and where their families and neighbours may accompany them in their long sleep.
(One Thousand New Illustrations.)
Preparation for death
This may suggest to those who have family arrangements to make,
that they should not defer the making of them until they come to be in the
article of death, but should settle their affairs while yet they are in full
health, in the possession of a sound mind, and in calm, unbiassed spirit. If,
for example, a will has to be made by a man--and every man, if he have anything
to leave, both for his own sake and for the sake of those who are most nearly
related to him, should make a will--why should he postpone the making of it
until he come to die? It will not bring death any sooner if he should make it
at once, and it may prevent many evils if it is made now. Then, if God should
greatly prosper him in future years, and should thus alter his circumstances,
let him destroy the former will and make another, lest terrible injustice and
hardship be done to the survivors by putting them back into a scale of living
to which they have not for long been accustomed, and leaving them with a
pitiful provision instead of an ample sustenance such as could easily have been
provided. I have known cases of great suffering just from this cause. Let every
man keep his affairs well in hand, so that those around him shall have to mourn
only his departure when he dies, and shall have no cause to blame him for want
of thought for his nearest and his dearest relations. If there is anything that
you feel you ought to do in the way of settling your affairs, so as to secure
peace and comfort among the members of your family when you die, do it at once,
for the uncertainty of life is proverbial, and you know not what a day may
bring forth. You cannot read the newspapers for a week together without
discovering that many unseemly squabbles over the division of property might
have been prevented if those who in business were so energetic in the making of
money had possessed only the foresight to arrange calmly, and in circumstances
in which there could be no ground for the insinuation either of undue influence
on the part of ethers, or of incompetence on their own, for its division. If
there is anything you feel impelled to say or do before you die, then say or do
it now, and the older you are, let the now be only the more emphatic. (W. M.
Taylor, D. D.)
Jacob¡¦s request to be buried in Canaan
This request was rooted in something deeper than the merely
natural desire of a man to have his body laid beside those of his nearest
kindred. Under the New Testament dispensation, indeed, we have learned that it
makes no matter where our bodies are buried, for by His brief occupancy of the
tomb of Joseph the Lord Jesus Christ has consecrated the whole earth as a
cemetery for His people; and by His resurrection from the grave He has given us
the assurance that they that sleep in Him, wheresoever their resting-places
are, shall hear His voice at the last great day, and shall come forth in
spiritual and incorruptible forms to meet Him in the skies. The mere locality
of our grave, therefore, is of comparatively small importance, whether we are
laid away under the arctic snows, like the brave explorers who accompanied the
dauntless Franklin, or beneath the shade of tropical shrubs on the rim of the
Dark Continent, like those missionary martyrs who by their sepulchres have
taken possession of the Machpelah in that new Land of Promise, or in the dark,
unfathomed caves of ocean, with the white foam of the waves for our shroud, and
the whistling of the winds for our requiem. It is all one to the Christian
where his body is laid. And yet even the Christian has the natural desire to be
laid beside his kindred; so that in all our cemeteries we have family lots, and
in many of our old country homesteads we come yet upon the quiet and secluded
enclosure where the ashes of the first settlers and those of their successors
lie. But Jacob¡¦s desire that his body should be laid in Machpelah had a deeper
root than nature. The land of Canaan was his by God¡¦s covenant. He had not yet
obtained it. For aught that he could see, he was to die without entering on its
possession; but even in his death he would show that he still believed that his
children would have its ownership, and therefore he made Joseph swear that he
would bury him in the sepulchre of his fathers. Nor was this all. He wanted his
sons and his descendants to know that Egypt was not their rest. He desired to
fix their minds on Canaan, and to fan in their hearts the desire to return
thither when God should open up the way. (W. M. Taylor, D. D.)
Buried where born
The inclination to return in old age to the place which is
endeared by the recollections of infancy is very general. It is mentioned by
Goldsmith, with that finished delicacy of description which scarcely admits of
improvement, and by Chalien, in some of the most beautiful lines in the French
language. It is thus described in some of the practical prose of Chateaubriand:
¡§After having wandered over the globe, man, by an affecting species of
instinct, likes to return and die on the spot which gave him birth, and to sit
for a moment, on the border of the grave, under the same tree which overshadowed
his cradle.¡¨ As John Leyden lay dying in India, whither he had gone to make his
fortune, his heart dwelt on its child-memories, and his last words were about
the little rural hamlet where he was born..
¢w¢w¡mThe Biblical Illustrator¡n