Reflection: The Silver Cup
Further Reading: Genesis 34:1-34
I imagine, if you’re like me, you may think that Joseph’s actions here are pretty over the top. At first glance it may seem that way. As Joyce Baldwin puts in her commentary, ‘The brusque treatment they received in the morning was out of keeping with the entertainment of the night before, but Joseph could not let them leave now in case he did not see them again.’ (The Message of Genesis 12-50, IVP). His actions in placing the silver in their bags and his own silver cup in Benjamin’s bag were designed to enforce their return. It put them in the wrong when they were innocent. Does that sound familiar? In exposing Benjamin, someone would be put on the spot, and it would reveal what lay beneath the polite exterior. We need to put ourselves in Joseph’s shoes. He loved his brothers deeply, but they had caused him great harm and had been deceitful toward him.
The brothers return and for the third time they bow down before Joseph! The brothers’ guilt is exposed, and their only option will be slavery in Egypt under Joseph. Judah draws Joseph aside and pleads with Joseph to allow him to be the substitute for Benjamin, lest his father die if Benjamin doesn’t return.
Reconciliation and forgiveness are complex matters. Joseph is desperate to be reconciled, but only if his brothers fully acknowledge their own actions. May we be people who seek after full and genuine reconciliation.
Prayer: Gracious God, thank you for the death of your Son so we could be reconciled to you. Help us to seek for reconciliation with others and to do whatever we can to bring this about. Amen.