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Text -- Genesis 44:19-34 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
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TSK: Gen 44:20 - -- we said : Every word in this verse is simplicity and pathos itself. No man of the least sensibility can read it without great emotion. Indeed the wh...
we said : Every word in this verse is simplicity and pathos itself. No man of the least sensibility can read it without great emotion. Indeed the whole speech is exquisitely beautiful, and perhaps the most complete pattern of genuine natural eloquence extant in any language. When we read this generous speech, we forgive Judah all the past, and cannot refuse to say, ""Thou art he whom thy brethren shall praise.""Gen 49:8
a child : Gen 35:18, Gen 37:3, Gen 37:19, Gen 43:7, Gen 43:8, Gen 46:21
and his brother : Gen 37:33-35, Gen 42:36, Gen 42:38
he alone : Gen 44:27-29; Luk 7:12
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TSK: Gen 44:21 - -- Bring : Gen 42:15, Gen 42:20, Gen 43:29
that I may : Jer 24:6, Jer 40:4; Amo 9:4
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TSK: Gen 44:29 - -- And if : Gen 42:36, Gen 42:38, Gen 43:14; Psa 88:3, Psa 88:4
sorrow : Gen 44:31, Gen 42:38; Deu 31:17; Psa 88:4
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TSK: Gen 44:30 - -- When I : Gen 44:17, Gen 44:31, Gen 44:34
his life : 1Sa 18:1, 1Sa 25:29; 2Sa 18:33
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TSK: Gen 44:31 - -- when he : 1Sa 4:17, 1Sa 4:18; 2Co 7:10; 1Th 4:13
servants shall : Gen 44:29, Gen 37:26, Gen 37:27, Gen 37:35; 1Sa 22:22
grave : Gen 44:29, Gen 37:35
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TSK: Gen 44:33 - -- therefore : What must Benjamin have felt when he heard his brother conclude his speech by a proposal which could never have been thought of if it had ...
therefore : What must Benjamin have felt when he heard his brother conclude his speech by a proposal which could never have been thought of if it had not been actually made! Perhaps the annals of the whole world do not produce an instance of so heroic and disinterested affection in any mere man.
I pray thee : Exo 32:32; Rom 5:7-10, Rom 9:3
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Gen 44:1-34
Barnes: Gen 44:1-34 - -- - The Ten Brothers Were Tested Joseph has had the satisfaction of seeing his brother Benjamin safe and well. He has heard his brothers acknowledgin...
- 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.
And my cup. - Besides returning each man’ s money as before, a silver cup of Joseph’ s is put in Benjamin’ s bag, after which, when daylight comes, they are dismissed. They are scarcely out of the town when Joseph’ s steward is ordered to overtake them, and charge them with stealing the cup. "And whereby indeed he divineth."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.
The cup is found in Benjamin’ s bag. "Spake unto them these words."The words of Joseph, supplying of course the mention of the cup which is expressed in the text only by the pronoun this. "We brought back to thee."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? "Now also according to your words let it be."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.
"They rent their garments;"the natural token of a sorrow that knows no remedy. "And Judah went."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. "They fell before him on the earth."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! "Wot ye not that such a man as I doth certainly divine?"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. "The God,"the great and only God, "hath found out the iniquity of thy servants;"in our dark and treacherous dealing with our brother. "Behold, we are servants to my lord."He resigns himself and all to perpetual bondage, as the doom of a just God upon their still-remembered crime. "He shall be my servant; and ye, go up in peace to your father."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
"And Judah came near unto him."He is going to surrender himself as a slave for life, that Benjamin may go home with his brothers, who are permitted to depart. "Let thy servant now speak a word in the ears of my lord."There is nothing here but respectful calmness of demeanor. "And let not thine anger burn against thy servant."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. "For so art thou as Pharaoh."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. "Let me set mine eyes upon him"- regard him with favor and kindness. "He shall leave his father and he shall die."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. "And now let thy servant now abide instead of the lad a servant to my lord."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.
Poole: Gen 44:20 - -- A little one so they call him comparatively to themselves, who were much elder; and withal, to signify the reason why he came, not with them, because...
A little one so they call him comparatively to themselves, who were much elder; and withal, to signify the reason why he came, not with them, because he was young and tender, and unfit for such a journey.
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Poole: Gen 44:21 - -- i.e. See him with my own eyes, and thereby be satisfied of the truth of what you say. Compare Gen 42:15,16 . Elsewhere this phrase signifies to sho...
i.e. See him with my own eyes, and thereby be satisfied of the truth of what you say. Compare Gen 42:15,16 . Elsewhere this phrase signifies to show favour to a person, as Jer 39:12 40:4 . But though that was Joseph’ s intention, as yet he was minded to conceal it from them.
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Poole: Gen 44:23 - -- Quest
Why would Joseph expose his father to the hazard of his life, in parting with his dear child?
Answ Joseph supposed that to be but a pretence...
Quest
Why would Joseph expose his father to the hazard of his life, in parting with his dear child?
Answ Joseph supposed that to be but a pretence, and might fear lest his brethren had disposed of Benjamin as they did of him, and therefore could not bring him forth. And as for his father, the experience which he had of his continuance in life and health after the supposed untimely death of Joseph, gave him good assurance that his parting with Benjamin for a season, and that under the care and charge of his brethren, was not likely to make any dangerous impression upon him.
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Poole: Gen 44:27 - -- He calleth her
my wife by way of eminency, as Gen 46:19 , because she only was his wife by design and choice, whereas Leah was put upon him by fra...
He calleth her
my wife by way of eminency, as Gen 46:19 , because she only was his wife by design and choice, whereas Leah was put upon him by fraud, and might have been refused by him, if he had so pleased; and the other two were given to him by Rachel and Leah.
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Poole: Gen 44:30 - -- The death of the child, which upon this occasion he will firmly believe, will unavoidably procure his death also.
The death of the child, which upon this occasion he will firmly believe, will unavoidably procure his death also.
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Poole: Gen 44:33 - -- Partly in compassion to our aged father, and partly for thy own advantage; because I can be more serviceable to thee than he, because of my greater ...
Partly in compassion to our aged father, and partly for thy own advantage; because I can be more serviceable to thee than he, because of my greater strength and experience.
Haydock: Gen 44:20 - -- Is left of, (habet mater.) Rachel had been dead about twenty-four years. (Haydock)
Is left of, (habet mater.) Rachel had been dead about twenty-four years. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Gen 44:31 - -- With us, is not now found in Hebrew. But it is in the Samaritan, Septuagint, Syriac, and Chaldean. (Calmet) ---
His grey hairs. That is, his per...
With us, is not now found in Hebrew. But it is in the Samaritan, Septuagint, Syriac, and Chaldean. (Calmet) ---
His grey hairs. That is, his person, now far advanced in years. ---
With sorrow unto hell. The Hebrew word for hell is here Sheola , the Greek hades: it is not taken for the hell of the damned; but for that place of souls below, where the servants of God were kept before the coming of Christ. Which place, both in the Scripture and in the creed, is named hell. (Challoner) ---
In this speech, we find many particulars not mentioned before; whence it appears, that the sacred historian does not always specify every circumstance. But, in relating the same speech, uses various expressions to the same purport. (Calmet)
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The boy. I am older, and more fit for service. (Menochius)
Gill: Gen 44:19 - -- My lord asked his servants,.... The first time they came down to Egypt to buy corn; he puts him in mind of what passed between them at that time:
s...
My lord asked his servants,.... The first time they came down to Egypt to buy corn; he puts him in mind of what passed between them at that time:
saying, have ye a father or a brother? which question followed upon their saying that they were the sons of one man, Gen 42:11.
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Gill: Gen 44:20 - -- And we said unto my lord, we have a father,.... Yet living in the land of Canaan:
an old man; being one hundred and thirty years of age, Gen 47:9,
...
And we said unto my lord, we have a father,.... Yet living in the land of Canaan:
an old man; being one hundred and thirty years of age, Gen 47:9,
and a child of his old age; who was born when he was near an hundred years of age: and
a little one; not in stature, but in age, being the youngest son, and much younger than they: so they represented him, on that account, and because he was tenderly brought up with his father, and not inured to business and hardship, and so unfit to travel:
and his brother is dead; meaning Joseph: so they thought him to be, having not heard of him for twenty two years or more, and they had so often said he was dead, or suggested as much, that they at length believed he was:
and he alone is left of his mother; the only child left of his mother Rachel:
and his father loveth him; being his youngest son, and the only child of his beloved Rachel, and therefore most dear unto him.
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Gill: Gen 44:21 - -- And thou saidst unto thy servants, bring him down unto me,.... Judah does not relate the reason of his order, which was to give proof that they were n...
And thou saidst unto thy servants, bring him down unto me,.... Judah does not relate the reason of his order, which was to give proof that they were no spies, but as if Joseph designed to show favour to Benjamin, as undoubtedly he did:
that I may set mine eyes upon him; not barely see him, as Aben Ezra interprets it, though that would be, and was, very desirable by him, and agreeable to him; but he desired to set his eyes upon him, not only for his own pleasure, but for the good of Benjamin, as the Targum of Jonathan adds; he intimated that he should receive him kindly, show favour unto him, and use him well: the Septuagint version is, "and I will take care of him": Joseph's brethren had told him, that Benjamin was at home with their father, who they suggested was afraid to let him go with them, lest evil should befall him; wherefore to encourage him to let him go with them, Joseph promised to take care of him, that no hurt should be done to him, but he should be provided with everything that was proper and necessary; and this Judah improves into an argument with the governor in favour of Benjamin, that since he desired his coming, in order to show him a kindness, he hoped he would not detain him, and make a slave of him.
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Gill: Gen 44:22 - -- And we said unto my lord, the lad cannot leave his father,.... That is, his father will not be willing to part with him:
for if he should leave hi...
And we said unto my lord, the lad cannot leave his father,.... That is, his father will not be willing to part with him:
for if he should leave his father, his father would die; with grief and trouble, fearing some evil was befallen him, and he should see him no more.
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Gill: Gen 44:23 - -- And thou saidst unto thy servants,.... In answer to the representation of things made by them, and notwithstanding that:
except your youngest broth...
And thou saidst unto thy servants,.... In answer to the representation of things made by them, and notwithstanding that:
except your youngest brother come down with you, you shall see my face no more; which though not before related in the discourse, which passed between Joseph and his brethren, in express terms, yet might be justly inferred from what he said; nay, might be expressed in so many words, though not recorded, and as it seems plainly it was, as appears from Gen 43:3.
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Gill: Gen 44:24 - -- And it came to pass, when we came unto thy servant my father,.... In the land of Canaan:
we told him the words of my lord; what he had said to them...
And it came to pass, when we came unto thy servant my father,.... In the land of Canaan:
we told him the words of my lord; what he had said to them, particularly respecting Benjamin.
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Gill: Gen 44:25 - -- 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...
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 Gen 43:1.
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Gill: Gen 44:26 - -- And we said, we cannot go down,.... With any safety to their persons, which would be in danger, or with any profit to their families, since their end ...
And we said, we cannot go down,.... With any safety to their persons, which would be in danger, or with any profit to their families, since their end in going down to buy corn would not be answered:
if our youngest brother be with us, then will we go down; let it be agreed to, that Benjamin go along with us, to Egypt, and then no difficulty will be made of it:
for we may not see the man's face, except our youngest brother be with us; the face of the great man, the governor of Egypt; for that this phrase, "the man", is not used diminutively, but as expressive of grandeur, is clear, or otherwise it would never have been made use of in his presence, and in such a submissive and polite speech as this of Judah's.
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Gill: Gen 44:27 - -- And thy servant my father said unto us,.... When thus pressed to let Benjamin go with them:
ye know that my wife bare me two sons; Rachel, by whom...
And thy servant my father said unto us,.... When thus pressed to let Benjamin go with them:
ye know that my wife bare me two sons; Rachel, by whom he had Joseph and Benjamin, and whom he calls his wife, she being his only lawful wife; Leah was imposed upon him, Gen 29:20; and the other two were concubines, Gen 30:4.
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Gill: Gen 44:28 - -- And the one went out from, me,.... Being sent by him to see how his brethren did, who were feeding his flocks at Shechem, and he had never returned to...
And the one went out from, me,.... Being sent by him to see how his brethren did, who were feeding his flocks at Shechem, and he had never returned to him to that day:
and I said, surely he is torn in pieces; by some wild beast; this he said on sight of his coat, being shown him all bloody:
and I saw him not since; now twenty two years ago; for though Joseph was not such a great way off his father, especially if he was at Memphis, as some think; yet what through his confinement as a servant in Potiphar's house, and then for some years in prison, and through the multiplicity of business when advanced in Pharaoh's court, he had no leisure and opportunity of visiting his father; and especially so it was ordered by the providence of God that he should not, that he might be made known at the most proper time for the glory of God, and the good of his family.
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Gill: Gen 44:29 - -- And if ye take this also from me,.... His son Benjamin, as he perhaps suspected they had taken Joseph, and made away with him:
and mischief befall ...
And if ye take this also from me,.... His son Benjamin, as he perhaps suspected they had taken Joseph, and made away with him:
and mischief befall him; either in Egypt, or on the road, going or returning, any ill accident, especially death, as the Targums of Onkelos and Jonathan, or what may issue in it:
ye shall bring my gray hairs with sorrow to the grave; it would be the means of his death, and while he lived he should be full of sorrow and grief; see Gen 42:38.
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Gill: Gen 44:30 - -- Now therefore, when I come to thy servant my father,.... That is, should he return to him in the land of Canaan with the rest of his brethren:
and ...
Now therefore, when I come to thy servant my father,.... That is, should he return to him in the land of Canaan with the rest of his brethren:
and the lad be not with us; his brother Benjamin, so called here, and in the following verses, though thirty years of age and upwards, see Gen 43:8,
seeing that his life is bound up in the lad's life; he is as closely united to him in affection, and is as dear to him as his own soul; quite wrapped up in him, and cannot live without him; should he die, he must die too; see 1Sa 18:1; so it follows:
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Gill: Gen 44:31 - -- It shall come to pass, when he seeth that the lad is not with us, that he will die,.... As soon as ever he sees us, without asking any question and ...
It shall come to pass, when he seeth that the lad is not with us, that he will die,.... As soon as ever he sees us, without asking any question and observes that Benjamin is missing he will conclude at once that he is dead, which will so seize his spirits, that he will expire immediately:
and thy servants shall bring down the gray hairs of thy servant, our father, with sorrow to the grave; as he said would be the case, Gen 44:29; and which would be very afflicting to his sons to be the cause of it, and could not be thought of without the utmost uneasiness and distress.
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Gill: Gen 44:32 - -- For thy servant became surety for the lad unto my father,.... Which is another argument used for the release of Benjamin, though he should be detained...
For thy servant became surety for the lad unto my father,.... Which is another argument used for the release of Benjamin, though he should be detained for him, which he offers to be:
saying, if I bring him not unto thee, then I shall bear the blame unto my father for ever; See Gill on Gen 43:9.
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Gill: Gen 44:33 - -- Now therefore, I pray thee, let thy servant abide instead of the lad a bondman to my lord,.... Being, as Jarchi observes preferable to Benjamin for st...
Now therefore, I pray thee, let thy servant abide instead of the lad a bondman to my lord,.... Being, as Jarchi observes preferable to Benjamin for strength, for war, and for service: in this Judah was a type of Christ, from whose tribe he sprung, who became the surety of God's Benjamins, his children who are beloved by him, and as dear to him as his right hand, and put himself in their legal place and stead, and became sin and a curse for them, that they might go free, as Judah desired his brother Benjamin might, as follows:
and let the lad go up with his brethren; from Egypt to Canaan's land, to their father there.
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Gill: Gen 44:34 - -- For how shall I go up to my father, and the lad be not with me?.... Signifying that he must abide in Egypt, and chose to do it, and could not go up t...
For how shall I go up to my father, and the lad be not with me?.... Signifying that he must abide in Egypt, and chose to do it, and could not go up to the land of Canaan any more or see his father's face without Benjamin along with him, to whom he was a surety for him:
lest peradventure I see the evil that shall come on my father; see him die, or live a life of sorrow worse than death: this he could not bear, and chose rather to be a slave in Egypt, than to be the spectator of such an affecting scene. By this speech of Judah, Joseph plainly saw the great affection which his brethren, especially Judah, had for his father and his brother Benjamin, as well as the sense they had of their evil in selling him, which lay uppermost on their minds, and for which they thought themselves brought into all this trouble; wherefore he could no longer conceal himself from them, but makes himself known unto them, which is the principal subject of the following chapter.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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NET Notes: Gen 44:22 The last two verbs are perfect tenses with vav consecutive. The first is subordinated to the second as a conditional clause.
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Geneva Bible: Gen 44:27 And thy servant my father said unto us, Ye know that my ( f ) wife bare me two [sons]:
( f ) Rachel bore to Jacob, Joseph and Benjamin.
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Geneva Bible: Gen 44:29 And if ye take this also from me, and mischief befall him, ( g ) ye shall bring down my gray hairs with sorrow to the grave.
( g ) You will cause me ...
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Geneva Bible: Gen 44:34 For ( h ) how shall I go up to my father, and the lad [be] not with me? lest peradventure I see the evil that shall come on my father.
( h ) Meaning,...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Gen 44:1-34
TSK Synopsis: Gen 44:1-34 - --1 Joseph's policy to stay his brethren.6 The cup is found in Benjamin's sack.14 They are brought before Joseph.18 Judah's humble supplication to Josep...
MHCC -> Gen 44:18-34
MHCC: Gen 44:18-34 - --Had Joseph been, as Judah supposed him, an utter stranger to the family, he could not but be wrought upon by his powerful reasonings. But neither Jaco...
Matthew Henry -> Gen 44:18-34
Matthew Henry: Gen 44:18-34 - -- We have here a most ingenious and pathetic speech which Judah made to Joseph on Benjamin's behalf, to obtain his discharge from the sentence passed ...
Keil-Delitzsch: Gen 44:18-20 - --
But that the brothers could not do. Judah, who had pledged himself to his father for Benjamin, ventured in the anguish of his heart to approach Jose...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Gen 44:21-26 - --
To " set eyes upon him "signifies, with a gracious intention, to show him good-will (as in Jer 39:12; Jer 40:4).
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Keil-Delitzsch: Gen 44:27 - --
" That my wife bore to me two (sons):"Jacob regards Rachel alone as his actual wife (cf. Gen 46:19).
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Keil-Delitzsch: Gen 44:28-29 - --
ואמר , preceded by a preterite, is to be rendered " and I was obliged to say, Only (nothing but) torn in pieces has he become ."
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Keil-Delitzsch: Gen 44:30-32 - --
" His soul is bound to his soul: "equivalent to, "he clings to him with all his soul."
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Keil-Delitzsch: Gen 44:33-34 - --
Judah closed his appeal with the entreaty, " Now let thy servant (me) remain instead of the lad as slave to my lord, but let the lad go up with his...
Constable: Gen 11:27--Exo 1:1 - --II. PATRIARCHAL NARRATIVES 11:27--50:26
One of the significant changes in the emphasis that occurs at this point...
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Constable: Gen 37:2--Exo 1:1 - --E. What Became of Jacob 37:2-50:26
Here begins the tenth and last toledot in Genesis. Jacob remains a ma...
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