Sunday,
April 26, 2020
DEPTH OF MERCY!
Gen 50:15-17
15 And
when Joseph's brethren saw that their father was dead, they said, Joseph will
peradventure hate us, and will certainly requite us all the evil which we did
unto him.
16 And
they sent a messenger unto Joseph, saying, Thy father did command before he
died, saying,
17 So
shall ye say unto Joseph, Forgive,
I pray thee now, the trespass of thy brethren, and their sin; for they did unto
thee evil: and now, we pray thee, forgive
the trespass of the servants of the God of thy father. And Joseph wept when
they spake unto him.
Warren Wiersbe, in his Bible Exposition Commentary,
has such a wonderful comment on this portion of Scripture that I would like to
simply include it here without further comment.
Afraid to approach Joseph personally, they sent a message to him, hoping
to convince him. Did Jacob actually speak the words they quoted? Probably not.
If Jacob had wanted to intercede for the guilty sons, he could easily have done
it when he was alone with Joseph. And he had seventeen years in which to do it!
It's likely that the brothers concocted this story, hoping that Joseph's love
for his father would give him a greater love for his brothers.
How did Joseph respond to their message? "When their message came to
him, Joseph wept" (v. 17). He was deeply hurt that his own brothers didn't
believe his words or accept his kind deeds at face value as true expressions of
his love and forgiveness. What more could he have done to convince them?
Charles Wesley may have had Joseph and his brothers in mind when he
wrote his hymn "Depth of
Mercy" :
Depth of
mercy! Can there be
Mercy still
reserved for me?
Can my God
His wrath forbear —
Me, the chief
of sinners, spare?
Now incline
me to repent;
Let me now
my sins lament;
Now my foul
revolt deplore,
Weep,
believe and sin no more.
There for me
the Saviour stands,
Holding
forth His wounded hands;
God is love!
I know, I feel,
Jesus weeps
and loves me still.
Dear Lord,
your mercy is, in our thinking, so unbelievable that we need constant
reassuring. Help us to rest in the depth of your mercy today. AMEN
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