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Genesis 42:2 - Exposition

And he said, Behold, I have heard (this does not imply that the rumor had not also reached Jacob's sons, but only that the proposal to visit Egypt did not originate with them) that there is corn שֶׁבֶר ut supra , σῖτος ( LXX .) , triticum (Vulgate)— in Egypt: get you down thither. That Jacob did not, like Abraham ( Genesis 12:10 )and Isaac ( Genesis 26:2 ), propose to remove his family to Egypt, may be explained either by the length of the journey, which was too great for so large a household, or by the circumstance that the famine prevailed in Egypt as well as Canaan (Gerlach). That he entrusted his sons, and not his servants, with the mission, though perhaps dictated by a sense of its importance (Lawson), was clearly of Divine arrangement for the further accomplishment of the Divine plan concerning Joseph and his brethren. And buy ( i.e. buy corn, the verb being a denominative from שֶׁבֶר , corn) for us from thence . From this it is apparent that the hitherto abundant flocks and herds of the patriarchal family had been greatly reduced by the long-continued and severe drought, thus requiring them to obtain food from Egypt, if either any portion of their flocks were to be saved, or themselves to escape starvation, as the patriarch explained to his sons. That we may (literally, and we shall ) live, and not die.

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