CRITICAL NOTES.—

Genesis 44:21. That I may set mine eyes upon him.] An expression meaning the exercising of a tender care towards him. Thus (Jeremiah 29:12.) “Take him, and look well to him, and do him no harm.” Heb. “Set thine eyes upon him.”

MAIN HOMILETICS OF THE PARAGRAPH.— Genesis 44:16

JUDAH’S INTERCESSION

There are some remarkable features in this intercession—

I. It was able. Judah was the man of eloquence among his brethren. His eloquence proposed and carried out the measure of Joseph’s sale, prevailed on Jacob to send Benjamin with the rest to Egypt; and now it persuades and overcomes this unknown Joseph who cannot endure any longer the restraint which he put upon himself. Judah confines himself to facts, but arranges them in the best order for effect. They are all speaking facts, each one has a tender memory or sorrow of its own. They suggest so much to the hearer that the whole speech is fired with the passion of true eloquence. Kalisch justly calls this pleading speech of Judah’s, “one of the masterpieces of Hebrew composition.” The facts narrated are simple, but they are told with the true touches of nature. What fiction can surpass the pathos of Genesis 44:20? “And we said unto my lord, we have a father, an old man, and a child of his old age; a little one; and his brother is dead, and he alone is left of his mother, and his father loveth him.”

II. It was noble. He does not insist upon the innocence of Benjamin, nor does he confess the theft; but acknowledges the general iniquity of his life. He generously offers himself as a surety for Benjamin. This heroic and self-sacrificing deed speaks louder than any words. He accepts slavery in his brother’s stead. Here was an appeal to Joseph’s sense of a self-forgetting devotion. In Judah there were many faults, and yet we find in him fond love for his father, and compassion for a brother stronger than even the desire of life.

III. It gave promise of future greatness. In sacred history, Judah’s name becomes great, is associated with all that is strong and noble. He is the pleader, “Hear, Lord, the voice of Judah.” (Deuteronomy 33:7.) “The sceptre shall not depart from Judah.” (Genesis 49:10.) David was chosen to be king of the tribe of Judah. (Psalms 78:67.)

IV. It suggests some features of our Lord’s intercession for us. Judah was a type of Christ. “Our Lord sprang out of Judah.” (Hebrews 7:14.) He was “the Lion of the tribe of Judah.” (Revelation 5:5.) His human ancestor was a remarkable type of Him, of His power, His wisdom, His triumphs, His preeminence. A type also, as here, of His intercession. Christ appears in the presence of God for us. He “maketh intercession for us.” (Romans 8:34.) He bears the curse that would otherwise fall upon us. Though Himself the birthright son, He bears the cross that we, the humblest and the least, might be free.

V. It suggests the qualities of true prayer. In true prayer the soul is stirred to its depths. “I would give very much,” says Luther, “if I could pray to our Lord God as well as Judah prays to Joseph here; for it is a perfect specimen of prayer—the true feeling that there ought to be in prayer.”

SUGGESTIVE COMMENTS ON THE VERSES

Genesis 44:16. They well knew that they had sold Joseph for a slave, and filled up many of the years of their father’s life with bitter anguish; and they admit that it were a righteous thing with God to make them all slaves for crimes which their consciences charged upon them, but of which they supposed Joseph to be profoundly ignorant.—(Bush.)

An ingenuous and penitent confession, joined with self-loathing and self-judging; teaching us how to confess to God.—(Trapp.)

Genesis 44:17. This was to try the truth of their love to Benjamin, and whether they would stick to him in his utmost peril. God hath like ends in afflicting His children. “The King of Babylon stood at the parting-way, at the head of the two ways, to use divination” (Ezekiel 21:21.) So doth God. He knows that the best divining of men is at the parting-way; there every dog will show to what master he belongs.—(Trapp.)

Genesis 44:18. He asks the privilege of speaking a word.

“Say, what is prayer, when it is prayer indeed?
The mighty utterance of a mighty need.”

He begs that the lord’s anger may not burn against him. He is in his power; the evidence is against him. But he will press his suit, if possible to get a hearing. He owns the royal authority which he addresses; but he must tell the facts in some faint hope of prevalence.—(Jacobus.)

The surety here becomes the advocate, and presents one of the most powerful pleas ever uttered. Though he knew nothing of the schools or the rules of the rhetoricians, yet no orator ever pronounced a more moving oration. His good sense, and his affection for his venerable father, taught him the highest strains of eloquence.—(Bush.)

This brief introduction was admirably calculated to soften resentment, and obtain a patient hearing. The respectful title given him, “my lord;” the entreaty for permission to “speak;” the intimation that it should be but as it were “a word;” the deprecation of his anger, as being in a manner equal to that of “Pharaoh;” and all this prefaced with an interjection of sorrow, as though nothing but the deepest distress should have induced him to presume to speak on such a subject, showed him to be well qualified for his undertaking.—(Fuller.)

Genesis 44:19. It is observable that Judah said nothing but what was true, although he did not tell all the truth. It was not to be expected that he would tell how Benjamin’s brother was lost. He only told his father’s opinion concerning it, and that was enough to melt any man’s heart into compassion for a father bereaved in such a cruel manner of one son, and trembling in apprehension of the loss of another.—(Bush.)

Genesis 44:30. The whole of this intercession, taken together, is not one twentieth part of the length which our best advocates would have made of it in a court of justice; yet the speaker finds room to expatiate upon those parts which are the most tender, and on which a minute description will heighten the general effect. We are surprised, delighted, and melted with his charming parenthesis: “Seeing his life is bound up with the lad’s life” It is also remarkable how he repeats things which are the most tender; as, “when I come, and the lad be not with us … it shall come to pass, when he seeth that the lad is not with us”.… So also in describing the effect which this would produce: “When he seeth that the lad is not with us, he will die; and we shall bring down the grey hairs of thy servant, my father, with sorrow to the grave. And now, having stated his situation, he presumes to express his petition. His withholding that to the last was holding the mind of his judge in a state of affecting suspense, and preventing the objections which an abrupt introduction of it at the beginning might have created. Thus Esther, when presenting her petition to Ahasuerus, kept it back till she had, by holding him in suspense, raised his desire to the utmost height to know what it was, and induced in him a predisposition to grant it. And when we consider his petition, and the filial regard from which it proceeds, we may say, that if we except the grace of another and greater Substitute, never surely was there a more generous proposal!—(Fuller.)

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