Theological Commentary: Click Here
Once more we
see a picture of grace in the book of Genesis.
Joseph hears that his father may not have too much longer to live. When he hears this, he takes his sons to
Jacob and asks for him to bless the sons.
Jacob willingly does this.
Naturally,
this makes a bunch of sense. Jacob spent
a good portion of his life without Joseph.
Joseph’s children have not known Jacob like Jacob’s other grandchildren
know him. Joseph was Jacob’s favorite
son from his favorite wife. There seem
to be every reason for Jacob to bless Joseph’s boys.
On the other
hand, there are some hidden reasons why Jacob could not have wanted to bless
them. Jacob didn’t know them all that
well. They were children from a marriage
that Joseph had with an Egyptian priest’s daughter.
What I like
about this chapter is that Jacob does not dwell on these reasons. Instead, Jacob blesses the children. Jacob looks to the positives and dwells on
what the relationship means instead of looking at the negatives in life. This is truly a show of grace. Jacob desires to bestow his blessing upon
them.
As we look
at this blessing, we very much see an additional place of grace. Jacob blesses the younger son as if he were
the eldest. In fact, we know that Jacob
does this intentionally. At first, we
might simply say that Jacob was the younger and got his brother’s blessing, so
he is just continuing the tradition. But
I truly think that there is more to it than that.
Let’s look
back through Genesis. Seth (and Abel) were
both chosen ahead of Cain. Isaac was
chosen ahead of Ishmael. Jacob was
chosen ahead of Esau. Joseph was chosen
ahead of the vast majority of his brothers.
The pattern we see in Genesis is that the former is looked over in favor
of the latter.
There is a
profound spiritual message being passed along here. We hear in the book of Hebrews that in Christ
God is doing a new thing. Hebrews
10:8-10 states that God has been working throughout history to “do away with
the first” in order to “establish the second.”
God does away with the old system of
forgiveness/repentance/sanctification in favor of a new system of
forgiveness/repentance/sanctification through Jesus’ death on the cross.
This is a sign of grace in its own right. God gives us grace when we do not deserve
it. He passes over our guilt with His
forgiveness and even pays the cost Himself!
This is indeed a pattern that God is creating through His servants in
the Old Testament. When Jacob blesses
the younger son over the elder, Jacob is laying down the foundation of a long
line – and an even longer line in the future – of preparing His people to
accept that the second is preferred to the first. God’s grace through Christ on the cross is
far more preferred than the sacrificial system for forgiveness.
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