This is the happy ending to a story that began with a
sibling rivalry that led to violence and treachery and a father’s broken heart.
It is as much our story as it is theirs. Like Jacob favoring Joseph because he
grieves the death of Joseph’s mother Rachael we often do not anticipate the
chain of events that follow in the wake of our grief. While Joseph can’t be
blamed for being thrown down the well it was his boasting that pushed his
brothers over the edge. We often speak in ways unbecoming without considering
others. The violence and deceit that broke Jacob’s heart is the tragic
consequence of jealously unchecked. This too is our story as from Cain and Abel
to the present human beings would seem to be predisposed to violence. But the
happy ending is our story as well. Jacob blesses Joseph’s sons before he dies
and maybe repents of that colored coat and the misery it brought. Joseph humbled by his journey from favored
son to slave to master of Egypt’s grain surprises his fearful brothers and the
family torn apart by deceit is restored in shared tears. It might read like a
fairy tale but the truly happy ending to this story flows from a Father’s
broken heart over his children’s warring madness who showing no favorites takes
on the form of a servant to suffer the harm of the cross in order to preserve
more than just “a numerous people.” It is God’s hope that knowing what we know
we would be more inclined to live the end of the story than the part that comes
more naturally to us.
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