It is a funny thing how often problems run down through family lines, whether that is divorce, alcoholism, uncontrolled anger, unforgiveness or sibling rivalry. Joseph knew what his brothers were like having grown up in the home for 17 years before being sold into slavery by them. He knew they had a tendency to argue amongst themselves and they could be very hot headed and over react. Reuben had arrogantly slept with his father’s concubine (Genesis 35: 22) and Simeon and Levi had taken the law into their own hands and had tricked and destroyed all the inhabitants of a city because one man had violated their sister (Genesis 34).
So although Joseph was delighted with the reconciliation that had occurred between them, he was also nervous at what might happen on the journey back to Canaan to collect Jacob and the rest of the family. The brothers were laden down with gifts from Egypt and Benjamin had been given more than the rest so his warning to not quarrel was quite wise given the treatment he had received from their hands.
However we can see that Jacob’s sons were carrying on the family tradition of sibling rivalry. Jacob and Esau had been separated for years following Jacob’s theft of Esau’s birthright helped on by parental favouritism. Although there was reconciliation, their lives were lived quite separately. The same had happened in the previous generation when Isaac and Ishmael had not got on and Sarah insisted on Abraham sending Hagar and Ishmael away.
Favouritism and sibling rivalry had run down the generations but Joseph brought this to an end. He didn’t live like his brothers, he didn’t carry grudges, didn’t take anyone else’s wife and when given an opportunity to have his revenge on his brothers, he instead brought reconciliation to the whole family and rescued them from famine.
Joseph had a different spirit and changed his family fortunes for many years. You may have come from a family split apart by all sorts of difficulties and you too can either choose to follow in your family’s footsteps or cut a different path and change your family. We do not have to walk in the ways of our parents and grandparents especially when those ways lead to problems, separation and pain for all. We can cut a fresh path of reconciliation, love, hope, and restore trust to our families.
With Jesus’ help we can shake off the past and start a fresh course that will be a source of blessing to our families for years to come.
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