Genesis 50
Genesis 50 brings the book of Genesis to its close with grief, forgiveness, and faith. Jacob is embalmed and mourned for seventy days — an Egyptian honor for a foreign patriarch. The funeral procession to Canaan is enormous, and Jacob is buried in the cave of Machpelah as he requested. Then, with Jacob gone, the brothers fear that Joseph's forgiveness was conditional on their father's life. They send a message claiming Jacob left instructions for Joseph to forgive them — whether this is true or a desperate invention, we cannot know. Joseph weeps when he hears it. His response is the theological center of the entire Joseph story and one of the most important sentences in the Old Testament: you intended to harm me, but God intended it for good, to accomplish what is now being done, the saving of many lives. It is not minimization of the evil done to him — it is the larger vision of a God who works through and beyond human cruelty. Joseph lives to one hundred and ten, sees his grandchildren, and dies with a word of faith: God will surely visit you and bring you up out of this land to the land He swore to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob. He asks for his bones to be carried up. The book ends in Egypt, looking toward a promise not yet fulfilled — which is exactly where Exodus begins.
Genesis 50:1
Joseph threw himself on his father and wept over him and kissed him. The fifth and final recorded weeping of Joseph is the weeping at his father's death — the last of the five grief-points across the Joseph narrative. The application: the grief at the death of the parent who loved you most, after seventeen years of restored relationship following twenty-two years of separation, is a grief that requires the full presence of the body — falling on him, kissing him.
Genesis 50:2
Then Joseph directed the physicians in his service to embalm his father Israel. So the physicians embalmed him. The embalming is the Egyptian preparation for burial — Joseph uses the resources of his position to honor his father in the practice of the land where he died. The application: the honored dead are cared for with the best available means. Joseph uses Egyptian embalming to honor the covenant patriarch.
Genesis 50:3
Taking a full forty days, for that was the time required for embalming. And the Egyptians mourned for him seventy days. The seventy-day Egyptian mourning for Jacob is the full period reserved for the most honored dead in Egypt — the same period mourned for Pharaoh himself. The application: the man who arrived in Egypt as a foreign shepherd dies honored by the full mourning period of the greatest nation in the world.
Genesis 50:4
When the days of mourning had passed, Joseph said to Pharaoh's court: if I have found favor in your eyes, speak to Pharaoh for me. Tell him. The approach to Pharaoh through his court — not directly — is Joseph's continued deference to the protocols of Egyptian court life even in his personal grief. The application: the covenant person who holds high position continues to honor the protocols of that position even in the midst of personal grief.