the Second Week after Easter
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Myles Coverdale Bible
Genesis 44:25
Bible Study Resources
Concordances:
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- CondensedParallel Translations
Our father said, 'Go again, buy us a little food.'
And our father said, Go again, and buy us a little food.
And when our father said, ‘Buy a little food for us,'
"Later, our father said, ‘Go again and buy us a little more food.'
"Then our father said, ‘Go back and buy us a little food.'
"Our father said, 'Go back [to Egypt], and buy us a little food.'
"And our father said, 'Go back, buy us a little food.'
And our father sayde vnto vs, Goe againe, bye vs a litle foode,
And our father said, ‘Go back, buy us a little food.'
Later our father told us to come back here and buy more grain.
but when our father said, ‘Go again, and buy us some food,'
And our father said, Go again, buy us a little food.
"Later, our father said, ‘Go back and buy us some more food.'
And when our father said, ‘Go again, buy us a little food,'
And your servant our father said to us, Go back again and buy us a little grain.
Then he told us to return and buy a little food.
But our father said, ‘Go again, and buy us a little food.’
And our father said, Go back, buy a little food for us.
And our father said, Go again, buy us a little food.
And our father said, Go again and get us a little food.
And our father sayde vnto vs: go agayne, and bye vs a litle foode.
And our father said: Go again, buy us a little food.
And our father said, Goe againe, and buy vs a little food.
And our father said, Go again, and buy us a little food.
And our father said, Go again, buy us a little food.
Then our father said, 'Go back and buy us some food.'
Turne ye ayen, and bie ye to you a litil of wheete;
and our father saith, Turn back, buy for us a little food,
And our father said, Go again, buy us a little food.
And our father said, Go again; buy us a little food.
Our father said, 'Go again, buy us a little food.'
And our father said, "Go back and buy us a little food.'
Later, when he said, ‘Go back again and buy us more food,'
Our father said, ‘Go again and buy us a little food.'
And when our father said, ‘Go again, buy us a little food,'
Then said our father, - Go again buy us a little food,
And our father said: Go again, and buy us a little wheat.
And when our father said, 'Go again, buy us a little food,'
"Our father said, 'Go back, buy us a little food.'
Contextual Overview
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
Genesis 43:2, Genesis 43:5
Cross-References
And whan all the vytales that they had brought out of Egipte were spent, Iacob their father sayde vnto them: Go agayne, and bye vs a litle foode.
But yf thou wilt not sende him, we wyl not go downe. For the man sayde vnto vs: Ye shal not se my face, excepte youre brother be with you.
Gill's Notes on the Bible
And our father said,.... After some time, when the corn was almost consumed they had bought in Egypt:
go again, [and] buy us a little food; that may suffice fill the famine is over; see Genesis 43:1.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
- The Ten Brothers Were Tested
Joseph has had the satisfaction of seeing his brother Benjamin safe and well. He has heard his brothers acknowledging their guilt concerning himself. He resolves to put their attachment to Benjamin, and the genuineness of their change of disposition, to a test that will at the same time expose Benjamin to no hazard.
Genesis 44:1-5
And my cup. - Besides returning each manâs money as before, a silver cup of Josephâs is put in Benjaminâs bag, after which, when daylight comes, they are dismissed. They are scarcely out of the town when Josephâs steward is ordered to overtake them, and charge them with stealing the cup. âAnd whereby indeed he divineth.â Divining by cups, we learn from this, was a common custom in Egypt (Herodotus ii. 83). It is here mentioned to enhance the value of the cup. Whether Joseph really practised any sort of divination cannot be determined from this passage.
Genesis 44:6-12
The cup is found in Benjaminâs bag. âSpake unto them these words.â The words of Joseph, supplying of course the mention of the cup which is expressed in the text only by the pronoun this. âWe brought back to thee.â Silver that we might have retained, and to which you made no claim when we tendered it, we brought back. How or why should we therefore, steal silver? âNow also according to your words let it be.â He adopts their terms with a mitigation. He with whom the cup is found shall become a slave for life, and the rest be acquitted. The steward searches from the oldest to the youngest. The cup is found where it was put.
Genesis 44:13-17
âThey rent their garments;â the natural token of a sorrow that knows no remedy. âAnd Judah went.â He had pledged himself for the safety of Benjamin to his father. And he was yet there; awaiting no doubt the result which he anticipated. âThey fell before him on the earth.â It is no longer a bending of the head or bowing of the body, but the posture of deepest humiliation. How deeply that early dream penetrated into the stern reality! âWot ye not that such a man as I doth certainly divine?â Joseph keeps up the show of resentment for a little longer, and brings out from Judah the most pathetic plea of its kind that ever was uttered. âThe God,â the great and only God, âhath found out the iniquity of thy servants;â in our dark and treacherous dealing with our brother. âBehold, we are servants to my lord.â He resigns himself and all to perpetual bondage, as the doom of a just God upon their still-remembered crime. âHe shall be my servant; and ye, go up in peace to your father.â Now is the test applied with the nicest adjustment. Now is the moment of agony and suspense to Joseph. Will my brothers prove true? says he within himself. Will Judah prove adequate to the occasion? say we. His pleading with his father augured well.
Verse 18-34
âAnd Judah came near unto him.â He is going to surrender himself as a slave for life, that Benjamin may go home with his brothers, who are permitted to depart. âLet thy servant now speak a word in the ears of my lord.â There is nothing here but respectful calmness of demeanor. âAnd let not thine anger burn against thy servant.â He intuitively feels that the grand vizier is a man of like feelings with himself. He will surmount the distinction of rank, and stand with him on the ground of a common humanity. âFor so art thou as Pharaoh.â Thou hast power to grant or withhold my request. This forms, the exordium of the speech. Then follows the plea. This consists in a simple statement of the facts, which Judah expects to have its native effect upon a rightly-constituted heart. We will not touch this statement, except to explain two or three expressions. A young lad - a comparative youth. âLet me set mine eyes upon himâ - regard him with favor and kindness. âHe shall leave his father and he shall die.â If he were to leave his father, his father would die. Such is the natural interpretation of these words, as the paternal affection is generally stronger than the filial. âAnd now let thy servant now abide instead of the lad a servant to my lord.â Such is the humble and earnest petition of Judah. He calmly and firmly sacrifices home, family, and birthright, rather than see an aged father die of a broken heart.