Genesis 48
Genesis 48 records Jacob's final acts of blessing and the crossing of hands that has become a pattern in Genesis. When Joseph brings his two sons Manasseh and Ephraim to receive Jacob's blessing, Jacob crosses his hands, placing his right hand on Ephraim the younger and his left on Manasseh the firstborn. Joseph tries to correct him, but Jacob insists: I know, my son, I know. The younger will be greater. Again the covenant moves through the unexpected channel — not primogeniture but divine choice. Jacob adopts Ephraim and Manasseh as his own sons, elevating them to the status of the original twelve, meaning Joseph receives a double portion in the land. Jacob recalls the appearances of God at Luz, the God who has been his shepherd all his life, the angel who has redeemed him from all evil. These are the words of a man who has lived long enough to see God's faithfulness across decades of loss and restoration. Hebrews 11:21 notes that Jacob, dying, blessed each of the sons of Joseph, worshipping as he leaned on his staff — faith's final posture.
Genesis 48:16
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. The Angel who has delivered — the same presence who wrestled with Jacob at Peniel and protected him through twenty years in Harran — is the deliverer invoked over the grandsons. The application: the blessing that calls on the Angel of the LORD to deliver the next generation is the blessing that connects the children to the covenant guardian who protected the patriarch.
Genesis 48:17
When Joseph saw his father placing his right hand on Ephraim's head he was displeased; so he took hold of his father's hand to move it from Ephraim's head to Manasseh's head. The displacement of Joseph's management is the final scene of Joseph's effort to control outcomes. He is displeased; he tries to correct the hand placement. The application: the covenant person who has managed so many outcomes across so many years still tries to manage this one. The patriarch's deliberateness will not be redirected.
Genesis 48:18
Joseph said to him: no, my father, this one is the firstborn; put your right hand on his head. The appeal to birth order — this one is the firstborn — is the appeal to natural expectation. The application: the natural expectation is the expectation the covenant consistently crosses.
Genesis 48:19
But his father refused and 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. The declaration of the patriarch — I know, I know — is the deliberate and informed choice. The application: the covenant blessing that crosses the expected order is never an accident or an oversight. Jacob knows exactly what he is doing, and he does it intentionally.