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He told them further, that
their consciences would be their enemies, if they attempted to go through so
wicked an enterprise, which they can never avoid, whether it be a good
conscience; or whether it be such a one as they will have within them when once
they have killed their brother. He also added this besides to what he had
before said, that it was not a righteous thing to kill a brother, though he had
injured them; that it is a good thing to forget the actions of such near
friends, even in things wherein they might seem to have offended; but that they
were going to kill Joseph, who had been guilty of nothing that was ill towards
them, in whose case the infirmity of his small age should rather procure him
mercy, and move them to unite together in the care of his preservation.
That the cause of killing him
made the act itself much worse, while they determined to take him off out of
envy at his future prosperity, an equal share of which they would naturally
partake while he enjoyed it, since they were to him not strangers, but the
nearest relations, for they might reckon upon what God bestowed upon Joseph as
their own; and that it was fit for them to believe, that the anger of God would
for this cause be more severe upon them, if they slew him who was judged by God
to be worthy of that prosperity which was to be hoped for; and while, by
murdering him, they made it impossible for God to bestow it upon him.
2. Reubel said these
and many other things, and used entreaties to them, and thereby endeavored to
divert them from the murder of their brother. But when he saw that his
discourse had not mollified them at all, and that they made haste to do the
fact, he advised them to alleviate the wickedness they were going about, in the
manner of taking Joseph off; for as he had exhorted them first, when they were
going to revenge themselves, to be dissuaded from doing it; so, since the
sentence for killing their brother had prevailed, he said that they would not,
however, be so grossly guilty, if they would be persuaded to follow his present
advice, which would include what they were so eager about, but was not so very
bad, but, in the distress they were in, of a lighter nature.
He begged of them, therefore,
not to kill their brother with their own hands, but to cast him into the pit
that was hard by, and so to let him die; by which they would gain so much, that
they would not defile their own hands with his blood. To this the young men
readily agreed; so Reubel took the lad and tied him to a cord, and let him down
gently into the pit, for it had no water at all in it; who, when he had done
this, went his way to seek for such pasturage as was fit for feeding his
flocks.
3. But Judas, being one
of Jacob's sons also, seeing some Arabians, of the posterity of Ismael,
carrying spices and Syrian wares out of the land of Gilead to the Egyptians,
after Rubel was gone, advised his brethren to draw Joseph out of the pit, and
sell him to the Arabians; for if he should die among strangers a great way
off,they should be freed from this barbarous action.
This, therefore, was resolved
on; so they drew Joseph up out of the pit, and sold him to the merchants for
twenty pounds (2) He was now seventeen
years old. But Reubel, coming in the night-time to the pit, resolved to save
Joseph, without the privity of his brethren; and when, upon his calling to him,
he made no answer, he was afraid that they had destroyed him after he was gone;
of which he complained to his brethren; but when they had told him what they
had done, Reubel left off his mourning.
4. When Joseph's
brethren had done thus to him, they considered what they should do to escape
the suspicions of their father. Now they had taken away from Joseph the coat
which he had on when he came to them at the time they let him down into the
pit; so they thought proper to tear that coat to pieces, and to dip it into
goats' blood, and then to carry it and show it to their father, that he might
believe he was destroyed by wild beasts.
And when they had so done,
they came to the old man, but this not till what had happened to his son had
already come to his knowledge. Then they said that they had not seen Joseph,
nor knew what mishap had befallen him; but that they had found his coat bloody
and torn to pieces, whence they had a suspicion that he had fallen among wild
beasts, and so perished, if that was the coat he had on when he came from home.
Now Jacob had before some
better hopes that his son was only made a captive; but now he laid aside that
notion, and supposed that this coat was an evident argument that he was dead,
for he well remembered that this was the coat he had on when he sent him to his
brethren; so he hereafter lamented the lad as now dead, and as if he had been
the father of no more than one, without taking any comfort in the rest; and so
he was also affected with his misfortune before he met with Joseph's brethren,
when he also conjectured that Joseph was destroyed by wild beasts. He sat down
also clothed in sackcloth and in heavy affliction, insomuch that he found no
ease when his sons comforted him, neither did his pains remit by length of
time.
Footnotes
(1) We may here observe, that in correspondence to Joseph's
second dream, which implied that his mother, who was then alive, as well as his
father, should come and bow down to him, Josephus represents her here as still
alive after she was dead, for the decorum of the dream that foretold it, as the
interpretation of the dream does also in all our copies, Genesis
37:10.
(2) The Septuagint have twenty pieces of gold; the Testament
of Gad thirty; the Hebrew and Samaritan twenty of silver; and the vulgar Latin
thirty. What was the true number and true sum cannot therefore now be
known.
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