Verse 2
Genesis 37:2. These are the
generations of Jacob — The
events or occurrences which
happened to Jacob in his family
and issue; as the word is used,
chap. Genesis 6:9, and Numbers
3:1. The genealogy of Esau,
which was brought in by way of
parenthesis, being finished,
Moses returns to the family of
Jacob, and proceeds in his
narration of their concerns. And
it is not a barren genealogy
like that of Esau, but a
memorable, useful history.
Joseph brought to his father
their evil report — Jacob’s sons
did that when they were from
under his eye, which they durst
not have done if they had been
at home with him; but Joseph
gave his father an account of
their ill carriage, that he
might reprove and restrain them.
Verse 3
Genesis 37:3. The son of his old
age — Born when Jacob was
ninety-one years old. Such
children are commonly best
beloved of their parents.
Several of the ancient
translations, Chaldee, Persian,
Arabic, and Samaritan, render
the words a wise or prudent son,
old age being an emblem of
prudence; one born old, wise
above his years. Jacob’s other
sons had in many things grieved
and disgraced him; but Joseph,
it seems, gave, while young,
indications of that wisdom and
piety which adorned his riper
years. A coat of divers colours
— Interwoven with threads, or
made of pieces of divers colours.
This probably was meant to
signify that further honours
were intended him; but it seems
to have been an injudicious
distinction, and excited the
envy of Jacob’s other sons.
Verse 5
Genesis 37:5. Joseph dreamed a
dream — Which it is probable he
did not understand at first, and
therefore, in great simplicity,
told it to his brethren; for,
had he understood it, he
certainly would not have
mentioned it to them, for he
could not but know they were
likely to make an evil
construction and use of it. But
God’s special providence was
seen both in giving him these
dreams, and in causing him to
reveal them, because hereby it
was made manifest, when the
things which they signified came
to pass, that these events had
not happened by chance, but were
of God’s ordering. It must be
observed, that though Joseph was
so young, as is here stated, yet
his piety and devotion were
such, that he was fitted thereby
for God’s gracious discoveries
to him: and as he had a great
deal of trouble before him, God,
in his great goodness, was
pleased betimes to give him this
prospect of his advancement, to
support and comfort him.
Verse 7
Genesis 37:7. Behold, we were
binding sheaves in the field —
This was a secret intimation of
the occasion of Joseph’s
advancement, which was from his
counsel and care about the corn
in Egypt. Your sheaves stood
round about — A posture this of
ministry and service; and made
obeisance to my sheaf — How
wonderfully was this fulfilled
when his brethren, making
application to him for corn,
came and bowed down themselves
before him with their faces to
the earth!
Verse 8
Genesis 37:8. Shalt thou indeed
reign over us? — See here, 1st,
How truly they interpreted his
dream! The event exactly
answered this interpretation,
Genesis 42:6, &c. 2d, How
scornfully they resented it,
Shalt thou, that art but one,
reign over us, that are many?
Thou that art the youngest, over
us that are elder? The reign of
Jesus Christ, our Joseph, is
despised and opposed by an
unbelieving world, who cannot
endure to think that this man
should reign over them. The
dominion also of the upright in
the morning of the resurrection
is thought of with the utmost
disdain. They hated him yet the
more for his words — For this
relation of his dream, which
they imputed to his arrogancy.
Verse 9
Genesis 37:9. Yet another dream
— The repetition of the same
thing in another shape, might
have taught them that it was
both certain and very
observable. Behold the sun and
the moon — His father and
mother, here signified by the
sun and moon, were not
represented in the first dream,
because, in the event, his
brethren only went at first to
Egypt, and there did him
obeisance, and it was not till
afterward that his father went
with them.
Verse 10
Genesis 37:10. He told it to his
father — The dream was so
strongly impressed upon his
mind, and that, no doubt, by the
Spirit of God, that he could not
rest till he had acquainted his
father with it. His father
rebuked him — Not through anger
or contempt of his dream, for it
follows, he observed it; but
partly lest Joseph should be
elated with the idea of
superiority over his brethren,
and give place to pride on
account of his dreams, and
principally to allay the envy
and hatred of his brethren. In
his thus rebuking him, although
in regard to Joseph without
cause, Jacob is an example
worthy of the imitation of all
parents, who, when they observe
any appearance of arrogance,
self-exaltation, or aspiring
after high things in any of
their children, ought always to
check it, as being a sinful
disposition, and often
productive of very evil
consequences. Shall I and thy
mother — Leah, his step-mother,
one that filled his mother’s
place, and was now Jacob’s only
wife, and the mother of the
family. Or he means, “Shall thy
mother Rachel rise from the dead
to come and join with me in
worshipping thee?” In which
sense of the words he seems to
infer the idleness of the dream,
the fulfilling of it being
impossible.
Verse 11
Genesis 37:11. But his father
observed the saying — The words
of Joseph, or the dream which he
told, well knowing that God did
frequently reveal his will, or
foretel future events by dreams,
and perceiving something
singular and extraordinary in
this dream, and especially in
its being doubled.
Verse 12
Genesis 37:12. To feed in
Shechem — In the parts adjoining
to Shechem, probably in the
lands Jacob had purchased there.
After the cruel and barbarous
massacre which Jacob’s sons had
been guilty of toward the
Shechemites, it is a wonder they
should venture to seek pasture
for their flocks in that
neighbourhood; but it is no
wonder that their father should
be anxious for their safety. It
must be observed, however, as
the LXX. make a difference in
the spelling of the name of that
place where they had so lately
robbed and murdered the people,
and this where they were now
feeding their flocks, some
suppose that this was not the
same Shechem, but another at
some considerable distance from
it. Be this as it will, as
either place was at least forty,
if not sixty miles from Hebron,
if Jacob had any idea of the
envy and malice which actuated
his other sons against Joseph,
it is not to be supposed that he
would have sent him among them,
and have thus put his life in
their hands. The providence of
God, however, was in the whole
affair, for his own glory, and
the preservation of the lives of
many.
Verse 18-19
Genesis 37:18-19. When they saw
him they conspired against him —
It was not in a heat, or upon a
sudden provocation, that they
thought to slay him, but from
malice prepense, and in cold
blood. Behold this dreamer
cometh — Hebrew, this master of
dreams; that covers his own
ambitious desires and designs,
with pretences and fictions of
dreams. See the progress of
vice! From envy and malice they
proceeded to conspire against
the life of their brother, and
then contrived a lie to impose
upon their own father!
Verse 21
Genesis 37:21. Reuben heard it —
God can raise up friends for his
people, even among their
enemies. Reuben, of all the
brothers, had most reason to be
jealous of Joseph; for he was
the firstborn, and so entitled
to those distinguishing favours
which Jacob was conferring on
Joseph; yet he proves his best
friend. Reuben’s temper seems to
have been soft and effeminate,
which had betrayed him into the
sin of uncleanness; while the
temper of the two next brothers,
Simeon and Levi, was fierce,
which betrayed them into the sin
of murder, a sin which Reuben
startled at the thought of. He
made a proposal which they
thought would effectually
destroy Joseph, and yet which he
designed should answer his
intention of rescuing him out of
their hands, probably hoping
thereby to recover his father’s
favour, which he had lately
lost; but God overruled all to
serve his own purpose of making
Joseph an instrument to save
much people alive. Joseph was
here a type of Christ. Though he
was the beloved Son of his
Father, and hated by a wicked
world, yet the Father sent him
out of his bosom to visit us; he
came from heaven to earth to
seek and save us; yet then
malicious plots were laid
against him; he came to his own,
and his own not only received
him not, but consulted, This is
the heir, come, let us kill him.
This he submitted to, in
pursuance of his design to save
us.
Verse 24-25
Genesis 37:24-25. They cast him
into a pit — To perish there
with hunger and cold; so cruel
were their tender mercies. They
sat down to eat bread — They
felt no remorse of conscience,
which, if they had, would have
spoiled their stomachs to their
meat. A great force put upon
conscience commonly stupifies
it, and for the time deprives it
both of sense and speech. A
company of Ishmaelites — In
Genesis 37:28; Genesis 37:36,
they are termed also Midianites,
or, as it is in the Hebrew of
Genesis 37:36, Medanites. It
seems these different tribes,
which were descended from the
sons of Abraham, Medan, and
Midian, by Keturah, and of
Ishmael, by Hagar, were joined
in one caravan, or company of
merchants, bringing spicery,
balm, and myrrh upon their
camels from Gilead, a place
noted for these articles, and
carrying them into Egypt.
Verse 26
Genesis 37:26. What profit is it
if we slay our brother? — It
will be less guilt and more gain
to sell him. They all agreed to
this. And as Joseph was sold by
the contrivance of Judah for
twenty pieces of silver, so was
our Lord Jesus for thirty, and
by one of the same name too,
Judas. Reuben, it seems, was
gone away from his brethren when
they sold Joseph, intending to
come round some other way to the
pit, and to help Joseph out of
it. But had this taken effect,
what had become of God’s purpose
concerning his preferment in
Egypt? There are many devices of
the enemies of God’s people to
destroy them, and of their
friends to help them, which
perhaps are both disappointed,
as these here; but the counsel
of the Lord, that shall stand.
Reuben thought himself undone
because the child was sold; I,
whither shall I go? — He being
the eldest, his father would
expect from him an account of
him; but it proved they had all
been undone, if he had not been
sold.
Verse 31
Genesis 37:31. They took
Joseph’s coat, and killed a kid
— It is difficult to say here
whether their falsehood or their
cruelly to their father be the
more to be execrated!
Verse 35
Genesis 37:35. All his sons and
all his daughters — Namely,
Dinah and his daughters-in-law,
for several of his sons were
married; rose up to comfort him
— In this his excess of sorrow
to which he had imprudently and
sinfully abandoned himself. He
refused to be comforted —
Resolving to go down to, the
grave mourning, And yet there
was no foundation for all this
sorrow. Joseph, whose supposed
premature and violent death he
thus deeply and inconsolably
lamented, was still alive and in
health; and God was preparing
him for, and conducting him to,
a state of felicity and glory
much beyond what Jacob could
reasonably have expected or
desired for him. Nay, and God by
these very means, which had
deprived Jacob of him for a
time, was pursuing the measures
which his infinite wisdom had
devised to make Joseph the
instrument of preserving Jacob
and all his family from
perishing by famine! Thus do we
often mourn, with the bitterest
anguish, those very ways and
acts of Providence, which are
designed to be productive of the
greatest good to us; and
consider as the greatest evils
those things which God intends
to be real and lasting
blessings! Let us then learn to
resign ourselves and all our
affairs to the disposal of that
infinitely wise and gracious
Being, who is engaged, by
promise, to make all things work
for good to them that love and
trust in him. And let us be
aware that great affection to
any creature doth but prepare
for so much the greater
affliction, when it is either
removed from us, or imbittered
to us: inordinate love commonly
ends in immoderate grief. |