<h2 class="label">CHAPTER II.</h2>
<h2 class="main">JOSEPH SOLD TO THE ISHMAELITES.</h2>
<p class="xd31e254"><span class="xd31e254init">W</span>e have just seen that Joseph’s brethren, moved by envy, sold him to some Ishmaelite
merchants, by whom he was carried into Egypt, and there sold as a slave. Regardless
of their brother’s cries, and deaf to all that affection might whisper, the future
patriarchs <i>would</i> make him the victim of their hatred; and it is deeply instructive to notice how many
sins are contained in this one transaction.</p>
<p>1. There was a sin committed by brothers against a brother. The ties of nature were outraged. Affection was trampled in the dust,—it was in truth cast into
the pit beside Joseph,—it had no power in the hearts of those hating and hateful men.
Surely such a case occurring in the Bible so soon after the murder of Abel by his
brother Cain, was designed by God to show us the terrible ravages wrought by sin in
the soul. Just as war, with its bloody work, has often deflowered the fairest regions
of the earth, does fierce passion waste the soul of man.</p>
<p>2. There was sin committed against their father. What although the patriarch should
suffer uttermost woe when bereft of his favourite son! or what although his heart
should break when the tidings reached him that Joseph had been cruelly devoured by
a wild beast! It was not to such things that those men would listen: it was to their
own malicious hearts; and, cost what it might to their father, their brother must either die or become a slave. You may
assure the sinner that the wages of sin is death,—you may tell him that agony for
ever is attached to guilt by God’s decree; but all that will not turn the wicked from
his way. God must turn us, or we rush unchecked upon ruin.</p>
<p>3. In the sin of Joseph’s brethren there was falsehood, and that to a parent. Those
men deliberately plotted to deceive Jacob, by showing him the coat of Joseph dipped
in the blood of a kid. They utterly forgot that God saw them; they listened only to
their own hearts; and sin was added to sin, that their passion might be indulged.
To the crime of murder—the murder of a brother—which some of them were willing to
perpetrate, they added that of deception, deep in itself and sad in all its results.
Now in all this they were just showing us more and more clearly what iniquity lurks or reigns in the heart of man, till the
Almighty Spirit make all things new.</p>
<p>4. In that sin there was spite, and that against a brother. We have seen that there
is reason to believe that Joseph had formerly blamed some of the practices in which his brethren indulged
while they were from under their parent’s eye, and that had provoked their antipathy:
“They hated him” when they saw that his father loved him. And here again we see one
reason why men have always ranked envy among the vilest and the meanest of the sins.</p>
<p>5. It need scarcely be added that there was cruelty in that crime. Those brothers
were deaf to the cries of the stripling; the majority of them were not unwilling to
put him to death amid lingering agonies,—that is, to leave him to die of hunger in
a pit, unheeded and unrelieved. When we see fools making a mock at sin, and multitudes
seeking in it the only pleasure or the only gratification which they know, surely
that is because they do not know the dark depths into which it sinks them!</p>
<p>6. And, to name no more, there was in that sin the love of money, which is the root
of all evil. Those unnatural brothers, blinded by hatred, and eager to get the offender
out of the way, actually sold him for a slave. They valued gold or silver more than
their brother’s life, his happiness, or his affection. He might have to wear chains,
or carry burdens heavier than he could bear; but what of all that, if their hatred
was indulged, and Joseph put out of their sight! Till then they could not be at ease.
His deportment was a rebuke to them. He seemed holier than they, and because of that
he must suffer; they must contract guilt upon guilt. Now, is not this, in spirit, the very same kind of
sin as that which led Satan to tempt and ruin man?</p>
<p>Such are some of the views suggested by this sad transaction—the selling of Joseph.
But little did his brothers know that these sins would find them out. Little did they
expect that even upon earth they would see in Joseph all that his dreams had predicted,—themselves
at his feet, and doing him obeisance with all their heart. And little did they know
that God was to be with their brother of a truth, to bless him and make him a blessing.
But so it was; and Joseph became a type of Jesus, persecuted by his brothers, but
exalted by his God; buried out of sight, yet raised to a throne; the victim of malignity
at man’s hand, but beloved of God, and therefore set on high.</p>
<div class="figure"><ANTIMG src="images/o021.png" alt="CHAPTER III." width-obs="434" height-obs="89"></div>
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