(Written
by Sheila Gail Landgraf)
So now
Jacob/Israel is very old and he has been living in Egypt almost seventeen years
under the favor of Pharaoh because of his son Joseph.
Israel had fallen very ill. Joseph heard of his father’s failing health
and he went to visit him. He took
Manasseh and Ephraim, his two young sons with him. These two boys had been born to Joseph before
their grandfather ever arrived in Egypt.
That would make both of them at least 17 years old or older. They had spent 17 years knowing and loving
their grandfather, Israel.
When
Joseph arrived Israel rallied. He gained
a little strength and sat up on his bed.
He spoke with Joseph of things that mattered very much to him. These were his words: “God
Almighty appeared to me at Luz in the Land of Canaan, and there He blessed me
and said to me, ‘I am going to make you fruitful and increase your
numbers. I will make you a community of
peoples, and I will give this land as an everlasting possession to your
descendants after you.’”
Remember
that “Luz” was another name for Bethel.
Bethel was where Jacob had wrestled with The Angel of The Lord, which
most people now consider to be Christ Himself in the form of a
Christophony. It is thought that Jacob
was now dying in peace because of this experience where he had met God at
Bethel. Jacob never forgot what happened
there. He knew that he was redeemed by the Angel of The Lord at Bethel. He had held on to the Angel until The Angel
had blessed him. Jacob had been begging
for pardon of his sins, both against his brother and against God. At Bethel he gave up his old self. There he had repented, confessed, pleaded and
wrestled and begged forgiveness from The Angel of The Lord all night long until
the sun began to come up. He had held on
all through the dark night until The Angel of The Lord finally agreed to his
request. The “blessing” that The Angel
of The Lord brought to him was Jacob’s pardon for his sins and guilt. There at Bethel Jacob had been redeemed and
changed. He was a new man, forgiven and had
the new name of Israel.
We all
have our Bethels. They are unforgettable. Do you remember yours? Has it happened yet? There comes a time in a person’s life when
they have to repent of their sins, turn from their old self and allow God to
bless them with a new name.
There
at Bethel, Jacob had received the greatest blessing that one can receive; the
blessing of being the first physically redeemed new man of Christ. Only Jesus has the power to forgive sins. He earned this right as he died on the cross
as a perfect sacrifice, once and for all, for the sins of mankind.
Try to
wrap your mind around what truly happened to Jacob at Bethel with Christ. Jesus had come back from outside of time with
God the Father as The Angel of The Lord and had forgiven Jacob, making him the
first after Abraham, who had believed in Messiah on faith alone, ahead of the
cross and the coming of Messiah.
Jacob was given so much more than Abraham to
hold on to; He had met Christ in person, seen him with his own eyes and wrestled
with Him and had been redeemed and promised a new life with a changed
name. At Bethel, Jacob had become
Israel, the first of a nation of people who would follow God The Father.
Now
Israel lay dying, ready to go meet with God again, just as soon as he passed on
his blessing to his son Joseph and his descendants as well as Joseph’s other
brothers.
Israel
continued to talk with Joseph.
“Now
then, your two sons born to you in Egypt before I came to you here will be
reckoned as mine; Ephraim and Manasseh will be mine, just as Ruben and Simeon
are mine. Any children born to you after
them will be yours; in the territory they inherit they will be reckoned under
the names of their brothers.
Israel
spoke to Joseph once again of his mother, Rachel and spoke of how she died in
The Land of Canaan on the way to where they were going, just a little distance
from Ephrath. (This was Bethlehem.) Israel spoke to Joseph of how he had buried
Rachel near Bethlehem. He felt it was
important for Joseph to remember this.
Then he
went on to explain to Joseph his plans for Ephraim and Mannesseh’s future. In so many words Israel was explaining to
Joseph that he was legally adopting Ephraim and Mannesseh as his own sons. This
adoption would make them the legal heirs to all that Israel possessed. They
would be considered first, above all the rest of Israel’s sons, as heirs to
Israel’s estate and blessings.
One
cannot help but think of the old saying “what goes around comes around.” Jacob’s sons were jealous of his love for
Joseph. They once would have inherited
equally, but because they cast him away from Jacob his love for Joseph had only
been multiplied. The inheritance of
Joseph and his sons was much greater than the inheritance of all of Joseph’s
brothers, though he was not the oldest at all.
He was the most favored. His sons
were the most loved. The brother’s of
Joseph had brought justice on their own heads by their plots against
Joseph. Even though Joseph and Israel
had forgiven them, Joseph had only gained favor, just the opposite of what they
had hoped to accomplish.
Once
again we see the proof of Joseph’s dream where his brothers would bow to
him. Once again we see that people
plotting with that ugly green monster called jealousy never win in the end. Joseph never had to say a word in his own
defense. God looks after those who
follow Him in righteousness through all kinds of circumstances. In the end, it is God who arranges their
outcome, not the plotters and the schemers.
Ruben
and Simeon were physically the oldest two sons, the first and second born, but
they had disqualified themselves as leaders of the family long ago and Israel
was placing Ephraim and Mannesseh in their place of leadership as head of the
family.
How
could he do such a thing?
There
is a good logical explanation, even more than all the love he held in his heart
for Joseph. It had to do with the type of people Ruben and Simeon had
become. It had to do with the type of people Ephraim
and Manesseh were already and would go on to be. Israel had been with them for seventeen years
and God had been speaking to him about them all along. God had given this knowledge to Israel by
Divine counsel, through the spirit of prophecy.
Manesseh
had been named by Joseph. Manesseh meant
“forgetting.” It was Joseph’s wish that
with the birth of his first son, Manesseh, he would become more content in his
circumstances and learn how to forget the disconnect he had to endure by living
in a land away from his family and all that he loved against his will. The “forgetting” that came with Manesseh had
made Joseph a stronger person, a person who could endure and cope with all
circumstances and situations. This is a
very good trait for a man to have.
Israel
perceived that Manesseh would inherit these same traits of his father. Even though Manesseh was born in a pagan land
and the odds of him being like his father in the culture he grew up in were
low, Israel sensed that he was going to rise above the mediocrity of his
culture and become very much a man like Joseph.
Manesseh has become for the world looking back, a perfect example of a
man who rises above the teachings of his culture and society and becomes
righteous and godly in spite of his surroundings.
Then
there was Ephraim who was born second to Joseph. Ephraim was born to a much stronger, more settled,
very stable Joseph. By the time of
Ephraim’s birth Joseph had become very prosperous and successful in a foreign
land. Joseph named him Ephraim because
it meant “God has made me fruitful in the land of my affliction.” Joseph had transformed beyond merely surviving
to thriving because of his faith that God would see him through anything. By the time of Ephraim’s birth Joseph had
moved on up to a higher spiritual plane. He had come to a place of experiencing the joy
of communion with God in any circumstances.
Ephraim’s birth was symbolic of Joseph’s joy.
In
spite of the fact that Ephraim too was born in a culture that was pagan, he
also had begun to aspire to be like his father Joseph, to possess integrity in
a land where integrity was not required or expected. Israel perceived from God that Ephraim would
be very great. Ephraim became the symbol
to mankind after him of one who could rise above mediocrity, one who could
obtain physical and spiritual enlightenment from God in any circumstances. He could swim against the current and keep
moving upstream with no problem.
So
Joseph brought his beloved sons to Israel.
When Israel saw them he asked, “Who are these?”
Joseph
said, “They are the sons God has given me here.”
Israel
and Joseph both knew who the boys were.
This was simply Israel giving Joseph the chance to state out loud and in
front of God and his two sons that they were a gift from God. Joseph acknowledged in this statement that
all that they were and all that they would become were simply a blessing from
God’s hand on their lives and nothing that Joseph had done on his own. It was a way of showing honor and
thankfulness to God for the gift of the two boys. Israel wanted to honor God first before
passing on the blessings he had received from God.
Then
Israel said, “Bring them to me so I may bless them.”
Israel’s
eyes were very bad in his old age and he could hardly see the boys. Joseph brought his sons close to him, and his
father kissed them and embraced them, then he said to Joseph, “I never expected
to see your face again, and now God has allowed me to see your children too!” I can imagine both men’s eyes being filled
with tears at this point. It was a very
sweet moment in both of their lives.
Joseph
bowed down toward his father showing him the great love and respect he held for
him. Then, Joseph took both sons, Ephraim on his right
toward Israel’s left hand and Manasseh on his left toward Israel’s right hand,
and brought them close to Israel.
An
interesting thing happened next. Israel
reached out his right hand and put it on Ephriam’s head, though he was the
younger, and crossing his arms, he put his left hand on Manasseh’s head, even
though Manasseh was the first born.
This
wasn’t a mistake. Israel crossed his
hands on purpose. It was what he had
discerned from God that should be done.
This has happened over and over again throughout the history of God and
his people and the passing down of blessings.
Remember how it happened with Jacob and Essau? It has happened with many more since
them.
Everything
does not always go as expected by humans when God is in control. God sometimes gives more to some than others.
This should never be questioned. It may not seem logical to humans at the
time. Often this happens to those who
expect to receive less. We are reminded
of that worn out verse that people like to ponder that says ‘the first shall be
last and the last shall be first.’ God’s
idea of fair isn’t always on a human level.
That is because His wisdom is so far beyond our ability of thinking that
we cannot begin to understand it.
The
right hand always holds the idea of showing the most favor. The right hand is said to be the hand of
strength and skill. We hear much later in history of Jesus being seated
at the right hand of The Father in heaven.
It is because He has the most favor from God that he sits on the right.
Joseph
was displeased that his father placed his right hand on the head of Ephraim, so
when he saw this he took hold of his father’s hand to move it from Ephraim’s
head to Manasseh’s head saying, “No, my father, this one is the firstborn; put your
right hand on his head.,” But Israel said “I know, my son, I know. He too will become a people, and he too will
become great. Nevertheless, his younger
brother will be greater than he, and his descendants will become a group of
nations.”
That
was exactly how it happened years and years later. Ephraim became the father of Joshua who led
the people of Israel into the promise land!
Israel had the discernment to bless them according to how God would use
them and lead them later. God gave this
discernment to Israel and there was no doubt in his mind that he was making the
right blessing.
These
were the words he used in the blessing:
“May
the God before whom my fathers, Abraham and Isaac walked faithfully, the God
who has been my shepherd all my life to this day, the Angel who has delivered
me from all harm – may he bless these boys.
May they be called by my name and the names of my fathers Abraham and
Isaac, and may they increase greatly on the earth.”
This
blessing from Israel was the first place in the scriptures where God was
related to as a Shepherd who would guide the nation of Israel. It was very appropriate for Israel, a
shepherd himself, to state.
And
then Israel said something amazing: “In your name will Israel pronounce this
blessing; ‘May God make you like Ephraim and Manasseh”.
It has
come to pass after this blessing that all of the nation of Israel, even up
until this present day, still pray for their sons to be like Ephraim and Manesseh.
Many Christian families have adopted
this tradition too. They are hoping that they have sons who will rise above the
commonplace people of their culture and society and conform to and worship God
in all circumstances at all times. This
was what Ephraim and Manesseh did in Egypt.
This is also a perfect blessing for the sons of the earth today from any
parents who wish for them to follow God’s will and ways all the days of their
lives.
Then
Israel blessed Joseph.
After
Israel had blessed Joseph’s sons, he looked up at Joseph and said “I am about
to die, but God will be with you and take you back to the land of your
fathers. And to you I give one more
ridge of land than to your brothers, the ridge I took from the Amorites with my
sword and my bow.”
Later
scriptures hints at where this ridge that Joseph inherited as an extra portion
was. John 4:5 seems to imply that with
this blessing Joseph was given the land of Sychar. Joshua 24:32 goes on to explain: “And Joseph’s bones, which the Israelites had
brought up from Egypt, were buried at Shechem in the tract of land that Jacob
bought for a hundred pieces of silver from the sons of Hamor, the father of
Shechem. This became the inheritance of
Joseph’s descendants.
A while
back we studied what happened in Shechem with Reuben and Simeon. It was a terrible tragedy and it was the
reason they were disinherited.
The
word for “portion” is “Shechem.” Shechem
was the name of the city where this land that Israel spoke of had existed. The tribe of Ephraim eventually possessed
this land. Israel was seeing this as he
blessed Ephraim under the spirit of prophecy.
When Israel refers to obtaining the land with his sword and bow, he
speaks of his money. His money at that time
was marked with an archer holding a sword and a bow. This was the way the land was obtained. He bought it from the children of Hamor the
Hivite. You would do well to review the
story again, I do not have time or space to re-teach it here.
The
Jewish people state in their writings that Jacob and his sons had a very
grievous war with the Amorites because of their capture of the
Shechemites.
By
giving to Joseph this portion above his brothers, it seems that Joseph was
given the birthright, the double portion, all that Jacob had obtained in the land
of Canaan.
This
land of the double portion, was the spot where Joseph later declared that his
bones should be buried when he died.