The Bible Recap - Day 027 (Genesis 43-45) - Year 7
Episode Date: January 27, 2025FROM TODAY’S RECAP: - The Bible KNEEcap - Join the RECAPtains! Note: We provide links to specific resources; this is not an endorsement of the entire website, author, organization, etc. Their view...s may not represent our own. SHOW NOTES: - Follow The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | TikTok | YouTube - Follow Tara-Leigh Cobble: Instagram - Read/listen on the Bible App or Dwell App - Learn more at our Start Page - Become a RECAPtain - Shop the TBR Store - Credits PARTNER MINISTRIES: D-Group International Israelux The God Shot TLC Writing & Speaking DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for The Bible Recap.
When we left off yesterday, nine of Jacob's sons had just returned to Canaan with food
from Egypt in the midst of a famine.
Joseph kept Simeon behind as a hostage in Egypt in hopes of getting to see his brother
Benjamin, but Jacob refused to let his son Benjamin go to Egypt.
Today we pick up with Jacob and his sons finishing off the grain they got from Egypt.
Jacob finally agrees to let his sons go back to Egypt for more food and take his younger
son Benjamin with them, but only after Judah pledges to bear the blame if anything happens.
Jacob sends them off with some local treats,
things that probably make Joseph homesick
when he sees them, as well as double the money
so that they could pay back
what they found in their grain bags.
They thought it was God's punishment,
but Jacob chooses to optimistically believe for once
and give the benefit of the doubt,
saying maybe it was just an oversight.
He resolves to leave the matter in God's hands.
When they arrive in Egypt, Joseph sees that his full brother Benjamin is with them, so
he orders them to his home.
He's planning a feast, but they think they're in trouble.
Wouldn't you?
This is terrifying.
In their panic, they try to explain to his servant what happened, but he already knows
because he was in on it.
Simeon, the hostage, joins them, and then, in front of all eleven brothers, Joseph offers
Benjamin a special blessing.
Then Joseph seats all the brothers in exact order, from oldest to youngest.
Verse 33 says, the men looked at one another in
amazement when this happened. If there were 11 brothers, many of whom were very
close in age, what are the chances that some rando in Egypt could accurately
arrange them precisely according to birth order? They're astonished. Then Joseph
continues to give Benjamin special treatment in front of them, giving him five
times the portion sizes.
Part of this could be because Benjamin is his only full brother and he wants to bless
him, but part of it is likely to test the brothers to see if they have grown.
Will they still be jealous when the younger brother gets preferential treatment, or have
they really learned from their experiences?
After the meal, they prepare to head back to Canaan. And that's when Joseph doubles
down on the money-in-the-bag trick with the added bonus of putting his silver cup in Benjamin's
bag. But this time, they don't discover it on their own. Joseph sends his squad out to
find them and accuse them of theft. They deny it and try to reason with him, but then the bags are opened up one by one, oldest to youngest, because Joseph's
squad wants to heighten the suspense. This is like a movie. The tense music swells and
then they find the cup in Benjamin's bag. Dun dun dun. This is the moment of testing.
Would they sell their brother out like they literally did before? The camera pans to Judah, who made a promise to his dad.
He knows he's going to have to take the fall for this,
which means he's probably going to die or at least become an Egyptian slave for life.
They all head back into the city again to face the music, and Joseph confronts them.
Joseph briefly mentions that he can practice divination, and there are a few things this could mean.
It could be an empty threat to throw them off.
It could mean he does practice divination
since that's a common practice in Egypt,
even though that doesn't mean God would approve of it.
Or it could be a reference to his ability
to discern the truth through divine intervention
and discernment, like with his dream interpretations.
Divination hasn't yet been forbidden by God, but it's still disrespectful at best and
wicked at worst to seek answers and guidance from spirits instead of God
himself. I'm inclined to think Joseph is bluffing here, kind of like police
interrogators do when they're trying to get a confession out of someone. Look, we
know you did it, we have it on tape. We're just waiting for you to confess.
But they can't confess because they're innocent, at least of stealing the cup.
Judah confesses that they do all have guilt, all of them. For 10 of them, he's likely
referring to the guilt of Joseph's presumed death. And for Benjamin, it's possible Judah
thinks Benjamin did steal the cup.
We don't know. Either way, he gives a beautiful speech to Joseph, which really shows exactly
how much God has humbled and shaped his heart and brought repentance through all he has
endured. From the guilt of selling Joseph, to losing his wife and two sons, to having
his own hypocrisy revealed when he
slept with his daughter-in-law.
This is the guy who originally suggested they sell Joseph into slavery, and now he's the
one offering himself in Benjamin's place.
This moment is a picture of Christ, and it's fitting because Christ, the older brother,
offered himself for the guilt of us, the younger brother.
We talked about this a few days ago with Reuben, and here we're seeing it again.
This story is peppered with pictures of Christ.
At the end of Judah's speech, Joseph loses it. He can't fake it anymore, and he tells them he's
their brother. He speaks to them in Hebrew without an interpreter. He tries to calm their fears,
but he can't calm their shock. It's like they're seeing a ghost. Then he tells them all to move to
Egypt so they can escape the last five years of the famine. And Pharaoh even offers to provide
everything for them, the best of the land. Back in Canaan, Jacob is dumbfounded when his sons
bring this news to him.
But when the caravan arrives, it confirms what they've said.
Jacob is old, but he's excited to see his son Joseph again after 20 plus years.
What was your God shot today?
I saw how God invites us into freedom.
And in this story, I'm particularly talking about emotional freedom, the kind that only
comes from trusting Him.
In 45, 5-8, Joseph says,
Do not be distressed or angry with yourselves because you sold me here, for God sent me
before you to preserve life.
It was not you who sent me here, but God.
Joseph leans on the sovereignty of God to put their regret to death, freeing
everyone with the reminder that their sins haven't derailed God's plans or
his promises. When Jesus died and rose again, he paid the penalty for our sins,
past, present, and future. For God's kids to walk in the shame and regret of those
sins is to carry a weight He died
to take from you.
If you're carrying regret for past sins, be honest with yourself.
Doesn't that weight more often serve to distance you from God instead of drawing you
nearer to Him?
Doesn't it leave you filled with shame instead of humility?
Doesn't it sound more like the lies of the enemy and your flesh than the words of your
loving Father who sent His Son so that you could be in relationship with Him?
If we trust that God is at work in all things, it not only helps us forgive those who repent
for sinning against us, but it also lays the framework to forgive ourselves as well, because
we know that no one's sins can ruin God's plan.
Joseph wants that freedom for his brothers.
He doesn't want them to carry guilt over their sins against him, because he knows it
was all serving to work out God's plan for good.
Joseph believes this so deeply that he reiterates it three times in this chapter alone.
God brought Joseph out of literal bondage into freedom, and he brought Joseph's brothers out of emotional bondage into freedom.
And because he has brought all of his adopted children out of spiritual bondage into freedom,
I hope that you can testify alongside me that he's where the joy is.
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