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Jacob And Joseph Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Mar 11, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: Nobody in the family but Joseph knew what was going on, and how God had made the salvation of Jacob's family possible by the position God had lead him to possess. Joseph did not need faith at this point, for he had knowledge, but Jacob needed faith, and that is where he was weak.
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If the strong-willed child is the greatest challenge for
parents, the strong-willed adult is the greatest challenge for
God. The greatest obstacle to God's will being done on earth
as it is in heaven is the strong stubborn self-will of man. All of
the judgments of God through the Bible and through history
are due to man's stubborn will. Over and over the story is
repeated of Jesus in sorrow saying, "I would but you would
not." Pharaoh stubbornly refused to let God's people go, and
the result was that Egypt suffered great judgement. Then the
people of God stubbornly refused to take the land God
provided for them, and they were condemned to wonder in
the wilderness until all the stubborn people died. One of the
Proverbs most often illustrated in the Bible and history is
Proverbs 29:1. "A man who remains stiff-necked after many
rebukes will suddenly be destroyed without remedy."
The stubbornness of men is the primary cause of the
judgment of war. Stubborn dictators have forced us into
many costly wars, but Christians have their share of guilt as
well. DeWitt Talmage, one of the great preachers in
American history during the Civil War, tells of how Christian
leaders came up with a plan to avoid that tragic war. The
plan was for the North to pay for the slaves and set them free.
This way the South would not suffer the economic loss and
slavery could be ended without great instability in the
economy. The leaders of the North laughed and said they
would not pay, and the leaders of the South said they would
not sell. The result of their stubborn refusal to except this
Christian compromise was the worst war in our history. The
North ended up paying not only all it would have taken to
buy the slaves, but it paid in the blood of half a million of its
men. The South paid even more in blood and money, and the
end result was far greater instability. Everybody lost because
of stubbornness, and many of these leaders were Christians.
There are wars that are necessary, but this worst one was
total folly due to the stubborn refusal of men to listen to
Christian advisers. Their plan could have prevented it all,
and made both sides winners without a war. In our text we
are focusing on one of the most stubborn men in the Bible,
but one whom God used greatly. He illustrates that godly
people can still be obstacles to the will of God. Good and
godly people are often part of the problem. It is good to see
this so we do not pretend that it could not be us who are
hindering the will of God. We have the biographical accounts
in the Bible to challenge us to look at ourselves in the light of
their lives, and learn to avoid their mistakes. Jacob's life is
loaded with lessons, for he made so many mistakes.
Jacob had lost his favorite son Joseph and thought he was
dead. This loss had an impact on his emotions, and it was still
affecting him 21 years later. It made him over protective of
his younger son Benjamin. He is not little Benji any more.
He is a grown man with a good size family of his own, but he
is the only son left which was born to him by his first love
Rachel. Jacob will not let Benjamin out of his sight. He sent
his other 10 sons off to Egypt to face the dangers of thieves,
war, and the unknown, but not his baby Benjamin.
The older boys have apparently adjusted to their father's
favoritism by now. They hated Joseph for being his favorite,
and they got rid of him by selling him into slavery. But there
is no hint that they had any hostility toward Benjamin. He is
still alive and well and being treated royally. Dad says that
the rest of you guys can go and risk being lost or killed, but
not my boy Benjamin. If you are a child of Rachel, you are
exempt from risk from this family. As the story unfolds the
brothers go to Egypt and encounter their long lost brother
Joseph, but they do not recognize him.
Joseph, however, knows them, but he does not
know what has happened over the last two decades. He does
not know if they have found a way to eliminate his brother
Benjamin as they did him, or if he really is safe at home.
Joseph has to find out if his brother is alive before he reveals
himself, and so he demands that they bring their youngest
brother to Egypt to prove they are not spies. Simeon is kept in
prison until they return with Benjamin.