The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
Jacob Settles in Goshen
Genesis 47:1–12 — Jacob Settles in Goshen. Each verse below carries the full apparatus: the Berean Standard Bible, the vocalized original (tap any word), and a parsed breakdown of every term transcribed from the interlinear. Synthesized commentary, canonical threads, and the reading of Christ gather at the end, over the whole unit.
1So Joseph went and told Pharaoh: “My father and my brothers, with their flocks and herds and all they own, have come from the land of Canaan and are now in Goshen.”
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
yō·w·sêp̄ way·yā·ḇō way·yag·gêḏ lə·p̄ar·‘ōh way·yō·mer ’ā·ḇî wə·’a·ḥay wə·ṣō·nām ū·ḇə·qā·rām wə·ḵāl ’ă·šer lā·hem bā·’ū mê·’e·reṣ kə·nā·‘an wə·hin·nām bə·’e·reṣ gō·šen
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“So-Joseph went and-told Pharaoh, and-said: My-father and-my-brothers, and-their-flocks and-their-herds and-all that-they-have, have-come out-of the-land of-Canaan; and-behold, they-are in-the-land of-Goshen.”
Where the English smooths the original
He does not tell Pharaoh how far he had gone, but simply announces that his family are in Goshen, as if awaiting the monarch’s further pleasure.
Joseph furnishes a beautiful example of a man who could bear equally well the extremes of prosperity and adversity. High as he was, he did not forget that he had a superior.
Though Joseph had all along wished this to be the dwelling-place of his brethren, yet it was necessary to obtain Pharaoh’s permission; and at present Joseph only mentions that they had halted there.
Joseph seems to address Pharaoh as if the latter had been unaware of the coming of Joseph’s family.The Cambridge editors here read tension between 47:1–4 (J) and 45:17–20 (E) through the Documentary Hypothesis; the source-division is the commentator’s framework, not the text’s own claim.
2And he chose five of his brothers and presented them before Pharaoh.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ū·miq·ṣêh lā·qaḥ ḥă·miš·šāh ’ă·nā·šîm ’e·ḥāw way·yaṣ·ṣi·ḡêm lip̄·nê p̄ar·‘ōh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-from-the-end of-his-brothers he-took five men, and-presented-them before Pharaoh.”
Where the English smooths the original
As the number “five” appears again and again in this narrative ( Genesis 43:34 ; Genesis 45:22 ), it may have had some special importance among the Egyptians, like the number seven among the Jews.
the extremity, or end, or tail of them, i.e. the meanest of them for person and presence, as the word is taken 1 Kings 12:31 , lest if he, had presented the goodliest of them, Pharaoh might have required their attendance upon him, either at court or camp.Poole’s reading rests on a contested sense of qāṣeh; the Pulpit Commentary lists this as only one of several rabbinic and Reformation guesses, alongside the opposite (the strongest and most handsome).
"Of the whole of his brethren," more exactly from the end of his brethren. Five men, a favorite number in Egypt.
he took some of his brethren—probably the five eldest brothers: seniority being the least invidious principle of selection.
3“What is your occupation?” Pharaoh asked Joseph’s brothers. “Your servants are shepherds,” they replied, “both we and our fathers.”
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
mah- ma·‘ă·śê·ḵem par·‘ōh way·yō·mer ’e·ḥāw ‘ă·ḇā·ḏe·ḵā rō·‘êh ṣōn way·yō·mə·rū ’el- ’el- par·‘ōh gam- ’ă·naḥ·nū gam- ’ă·ḇō·w·ṯê·nū
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-Pharaoh said to his-brothers: what is-your-occupation? And-they-said to Pharaoh: shepherds of-flock are-your-servants, both we and-also our-fathers.”
Where the English smooths the original
Pharaoh takes it for granted they had something to do. All that have a place in the world should have an employment in it according to their capacity, some occupation or other. Those that need not work for their bread, yet must have something to do to keep them from idleness.
Joseph had instructed them to add this ( Genesis 46:34 ), because occupations were hereditary among the Egyptians, and thus Pharaoh would conclude that in their case also no change was possible in their mode of life.
Pharaoh’s question and the men’s answer follow the outline given by Joseph in Genesis 46:34 , but, instead of saying, “thy servants have been keepers of cattle,” they say, “thy servants are shepherds.”
Whatever our business or employment is, we should aim to excel in it, and to prove ourselves clever and industrious.
4Then they said to Pharaoh, “We have come to live in the land for a time, because there is no pasture for the flocks of your servants, since the famine in the land of Canaan has been severe. So now, please allow your servants to settle in the land of Goshen.”
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·yō·mə·rū ’el- par·‘ōh bā·nū bā·’ā·reṣ lā·ḡūr kî- ’ên mir·‘eh laṣ·ṣōn la·‘ă·ḇā·ḏe·ḵā ’ă·šer kî- hā·rā·‘āḇ bə·’e·reṣ kə·nā·‘an ḵā·ḇêḏ wə·‘at·tāh nā ‘ă·ḇā·ḏe·ḵā yê·šə·ḇū- bə·’e·reṣ gō·šen
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-they-said to Pharaoh: to-sojourn in-the-land we-have-come, because there-is-no pasture for-the-flocks that-belong to-your-servants, since the-famine is-heavy in-the-land of-Canaan; so-now, please, let-your-servants dwell in-the-land of-Goshen.”
Where the English smooths the original
Not to settle there for ever; only to sojourn, while the famine prevailed so in Canaan, which lay high, that it was not habitable for shepherds, the grass being burned up much more than in Egypt, which lay low, and where the corn chiefly failed, but there was tolerably good pasture.
To sojourn in the land are we come; not to defraud thy people of their lands and habitations, but only to be here for a season, as strangers and sojourners, till we can conveniently return to our own land.
they answered according to previous instructions—manifesting, however, in their determination to return to Canaan, a faith and piety which affords a hopeful symptom of their having become all, or most of them, religious men.
Joseph’s brethren ask for permission only for a temporary stay. Apparently, too, in spite of the famine, there was pasture for cattle in Goshen.
5Pharaoh said to Joseph, “Now that your father and brothers have come to you,
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
par·‘ōh way·yō·mer ’el- yō·w·sêp̄ lê·mōr ’ā·ḇî·ḵā wə·’a·ḥe·ḵā bā·’ū ’ê·le·ḵā
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-Pharaoh said to Joseph, saying: your-father and-your-brothers have-come to-you.”
Where the English smooths the original
And Pharaoh spake unto Joseph,.... Who was present at the conversation that passed between him and his brethren: saying, thy father and thy brethren are come unto thee; which is observed, not for Joseph's information, but to lead on to what he had to say further.
The king then empowered Joseph to give his father and his brethren a dwelling (הושׁיב) in the best part of the land, in the land of Goshen, and, if he knew any brave men among them, to make them rulers over the royal herds, which were kept, as we may infer, in the land of Goshen, as being the best pasture-land.
And Pharaoh spake unto Joseph, saying, Thy father and thy brethren are come unto thee: the land of Egypt is before thee (cf. Genesis 20:15 ); in the best of the land make thy father and brethren to dwell.
6the land of Egypt is before you; settle your father and brothers in the best part of the land. They may dwell in the land of Goshen. And if you know of any talented men among them, put them in charge of my own livestock.”
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’e·reṣ miṣ·ra·yim lə·p̄ā·ne·ḵā hî hō·wō·šêḇ ’eṯ- ’ā·ḇî·ḵā wə·’eṯ- ’a·ḥe·ḵā bə·mê·ṭaḇ hā·’ā·reṣ yê·šə·ḇū bə·’e·reṣ gō·šen wə·’im- yā·ḏa‘·tā wə·yeš- bām ḥa·yil ’an·šê- wə·śam·tām śā·rê miq·neh ‘al- ’ă·šer- lî
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“The-land of-Egypt — before-you it-is; in-the-best of-the-land settle your-father and-your-brothers; let-them-dwell in-the-land of-Goshen. And-if you-know there-are among-them men of-strength, then-set-them chiefs of-livestock over what-is-mine.”
Where the English smooths the original
Literally, according to the Hebrew, If thou knowest, and there is among them men of strength or vigour, ( חיל ,) namely, of body or mind, fit for the employment. From which expression it seems rather probable that those five presented to Pharaoh were of the meaner sort of them.
The land of Goshen was fertile and good for grazing: but only by Oriental courtesy could it be called “the best” land in Egypt.
Joseph's great modesty appears in that he would attempt nothing without the king's commandment.
from whence it appears that Pharaoh had flocks and herds and shepherds; and therefore it cannot be thought that the Egyptians in those times abstained from eating of animals, or that all shepherds, without exception, were an abomination to them, only foreign ones that lived on spoil and plunder
7Then Joseph brought in his father Jacob and presented him before Pharaoh, and Jacob blessed Pharaoh.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
yō·w·sêp̄ ’eṯ- way·yā·ḇê ’ā·ḇîw ya·‘ă·qōḇ way·ya·‘ă·mi·ḏê·hū lip̄·nê p̄ar·‘ōh ya·‘ă·qōḇ ’eṯ- way·ḇā·reḵ par·‘ōh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-Joseph brought-in Jacob his-father and-made-him-stand before Pharaoh; and-Jacob blessed Pharaoh.”
Where the English smooths the original
More must be meant by this than the usual salutation, in which each one presented to the king prayed for the prolongation of his life. Pharaoh probably bowed before Jacob as a saintly personage, and received a formal benediction.
And remarkable surely it was that the greater, for such Pharaoh was in all external things, in wealth, power and glory, should be blessed of the less, Hebrews 7:7 . But before God, and in reality, Jacob was much greater than Pharaoh.
Not in an authoritative way, as the greater blesseth the less, but in a general manner, i.e. he saluted him, thanked him for all his favours to him and his, and prayed to God to bless and recompense him for it.Poole dissents from Ellicott, Benson and the Pulpit Commentary: he reads ‘blessed’ as courteous salutation, not patriarchal benediction. The Hebrew bāraḵ bears both senses; the unit leaves the question honestly open.
when, with all the simplicity and dignified solemnity of a man of God, Jacob signalized his entrance by imploring the divine blessing on the royal head, it may easily be imagined what a striking impression the scene would produce (compare Heb 7:7).
8“How many years have you lived?” Pharaoh asked.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
kam·māh yə·mê šə·nê ḥay·ye·ḵā par·‘ōh way·yō·mer ’el- ya·‘ă·qōḇ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-Pharaoh said to Jacob: how-many are the-days of-the-years of-your-life?”
Where the English smooths the original
A question usually put to old men, for it is natural to us to admire old age, and to reverence it. Jacob’s countenance, no doubt, showed him to be old, for he had been a man of labour and sorrow.
The question was put from the deep and impressive interest which the appearance of the old patriarch had created in the minds of Pharaoh and his court.
Dr. Lightfoot (m) thinks Pharaoh had never seen so old a man before, so grave a head, and so grey a beard, and in admiration asked this question.
9“My travels have lasted 130 years,” Jacob replied. “My years have been few and hard, and they have not matched the years of the travels of my fathers.”
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
mə·ḡū·ray ū·mə·’aṯ šə·lō·šîm šə·nê ya·‘ă·qōḇ way·yō·mer ’el- par·‘ōh yə·mê šā·nāh ḥay·yay hā·yū mə·‘aṭ wə·rā·‘îm wə·lō hiś·śî·ḡū ’eṯ- yə·mê šə·nê ḥay·yê bî·mê yə·mê šə·nê mə·ḡū·rê·hem ’ă·ḇō·ṯay
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-Jacob said to Pharaoh: the-days of-the-years of-my-sojournings are a-hundred and-thirty years; few and-evil have-been the-days of-the-years of-my-life, and-they-have-not reached the-days of-the-years of-the-life of-my-fathers in-the-days of-their-sojournings.”
Where the English smooths the original
Heb., my sojournings; and so at end of verse. The idea of a pilgrimage is a modern one. Even in 1Peter 2:11 “pilgrim” means in the Greek a stranger who has settled in a country of which he is not a native. So, too, here Jacob was not a pilgrim, for he was no traveller bound for religious motives to some distant shrine, but he was a sojourner, because Canaan was not the native land of his race.
Jacob called his own life and that of his fathers a pilgrimage (מגוּרים), because they had not come into actual possession of the promised land, but had been obliged all their life long to wander about, unsettled and homeless, in the land promised to them for an inheritance, as in a strange land.
In the former of them there is nothing about God. It is all Jacob. In the latter we notice that there is a great deal more about God than about Jacob, and that determines the whole tone of the retrospect.Maclaren contrasts this verse with Jacob’s death-bed retrospect (48:15–16); the ‘two estimates of one life’ reading is his homiletical framing, drawn from the texts but not stated by either.
Though a hundred thirty years, he reckons by days (compare Ps 90:12), which he calls few, as they appeared in retrospect, and evil, because his life had been one almost unbroken series of trouble.
He was not at home upon earth; his habitation, his inheritance, his treasures were in heaven.
10Then Jacob blessed Pharaoh and departed from his presence.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ya·‘ă·qōḇ ’eṯ- way·ḇā·reḵ par·‘ōh way·yê·ṣê p̄ar·‘ōh mil·lip̄·nê
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-Jacob blessed Pharaoh, and-went-out from-before Pharaoh.”
Where the English smooths the original
When he took his leave of him, he blessed him, in like manner as when he came into his presence, by wishing all happiness to him, and giving him thanks for the honour he had done him, and the favours he had conferred on him and his.
As he enters the royal presence he does not do reverence, but invokes a blessing upon him. ‘The less is blessed of the better.’ He has nothing to do with court ceremonials or conventionalities.
After this probably short interview, of which, however, only the leading incidents are given, Jacob left the king with a blessing.
11So Joseph settled his father and brothers in the land of Egypt and gave them property in the best part of the land, the district of Rameses, as Pharaoh had commanded.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
yō·w·sêp̄ ’eṯ- way·yō·wō·šêḇ ’ā·ḇîw wə·’eṯ- ’e·ḥāw way·yit·tên bə·’e·reṣ miṣ·ra·yim lā·hem ’ă·ḥuz·zāh bə·mê·ṭaḇ hā·’ā·reṣ bə·’e·reṣ ra‘·mə·sês ka·’ă·šer p̄ar·‘ōh ṣiw·wāh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-Joseph settled his-father and-his-brothers, and-gave them a-possession in-the-land of-Egypt, in-the-best of-the-land, in-the-land of-Rameses, as Pharaoh had-commanded.”
Where the English smooths the original
If so, the description of this region, where Joseph’s brethren are settled, by the name of “the land of Rameses,” is, strictly speaking, an anachronism, i.e. a chronological anticipation of facts, the country being denoted by a name which it came to bear two centuries later. It is a very natural thing for the Israelite writer to do; and can hardly be regarded in the light of a literary error.
a part of the land of Goshen, possibly that part where afterwards the city Rameses was built by the Israelites, Exodus 1:11 12:37 , whence it is so called here by anticipation; for the Israelites were not now numerous enough to possess the whole land of Goshen, which was given to them, but contented themselves with a part of it
best pasture land in lower Egypt. Goshen, "the land of verdure," lay along the Pelusiac or eastern branch of the Nile. It included a part of the district of Heliopolis, or "On," the capital, and on the east stretched out a considerable length into the desert. The ground included within these boundaries was a rich and fertile extent of natural meadow, and admirably adapted for the purposes of the Hebrew shepherds
Joseph assigned to his father and his brethren, according to Pharaoh's command, a possession (אחזּה) for a dwelling-place in the best part of Egypt, the land of Ramses
12Joseph also provided his father and brothers and all his father’s household with food for their families.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
yō·w·sêp̄ ’eṯ- way·ḵal·kêl ’ā·ḇîw wə·’eṯ- ’e·ḥāw wə·’êṯ kāl- ’ā·ḇîw bêṯ le·ḥem lə·p̄î haṭ·ṭāp̄
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-Joseph sustained his-father and-his-brothers and-all the-house of-his-father with-bread, according-to the-mouth of-the-little-ones.”
Where the English smooths the original
Heb., according to the “ taf” This, as we have seen above, means “according to the clan or body of dependants possessed by each one.” Dan, with his one child, would have been starved to death if the allowance for himself and his household had depended upon the number of his “little ones,” which is the usual translation of this word in the Authorised Version.
in this Joseph was an eminent type of Christ, who supplies the wants of his people.
according to the manner of a little child, he put their meat into their very months; it was brought to them without any more care or pains of theirs than an infant takes for its food.
Delitzsch comments, “little children being mentioned because they would require much food, and also because people would be less willing to see them in want.”
The verse-by-verse work is done. What follows gathers the whole unit. All three layers below are machine-generated (⚙). Weigh them; they have no authority.
AI synthesis — woven from the public-domain voices above and the original text; generated and fallible.
The unit opens with Joseph at the height of his power doing the most ordinary thing: he tells Pharaoh (וַיַּגֵּד, H5046). Jamieson, Fausset & Brown name the virtue: “High as he was, he did not forget that he had a superior… he would not go into the arrangements he had planned… until he had obtained the sanction of his royal master.” Maclaren reads the scene as a study in sanctified shrewdness — Joseph “does not tell Pharaoh how far he had gone, but simply announces that his family are in Goshen, as if awaiting the monarch’s further pleasure,” then “introduces a deputation, no doubt carefully chosen, of five of his brothers.” The number five recurs across the narrative; Ellicott suspects “some special importance among the Egyptians, like the number seven among the Jews.” The Hebrew of v. 2 is itself a crux — וּמִקְצֵה, “from the end of his brethren” — which Barnes renders literally while Poole guesses “the meanest of them,” a reading the Pulpit Commentary lists as only one of several. The Cambridge Bible flags a seam: Joseph speaks “as if [Pharaoh] had been unaware,” though the king had already invited the family in 45:17–20 — a tension Cambridge resolves by source-division, a framework belonging to the commentator and not to the text.
Pharaoh asks after their מַעֲשֵׂיכֶם (H4639, “works, occupation”), and the brothers answer in two Hebrew words, רֹעֵה צֹאן, “tenders of flock.” The Cambridge Bible notes they upgrade Joseph’s scripted line: not “keepers of cattle” (46:34) but outright “thy servants are shepherds.” Ellicott explains the strategy — they add “both we and also our fathers” because “occupations were hereditary among the Egyptians,” securing their separation in Goshen. Maclaren sees the deeper providence: “an unreasonable prejudice… became an important factor in the development of Israel,” God using even “wood, hay, stubble-follies and sins-for His edifice.” Pharaoh’s grant is generous beyond the petition: the “best of the land” (בְּמֵיטַב, H4315, a rare word shared with the restitution-law of Ex 22:5) and an offer of office — to make the “men of strength” (חַיִל, H2428) chiefs over the royal herds. Geneva catches Joseph’s posture exactly: “Joseph’s great modesty appears in that he would attempt nothing without the king’s commandment.”
Now Joseph brings in Jacob and sets him on his feet (וַיַּעֲמִדֵהוּ, H5975) before the throne — a different verb from the ‘presenting’ of the brothers, marking the dignity of the bowed-down patriarch. Twice, framing the whole audience, “Jacob blessed Pharaoh” (וַיְבָרֶךְ, H1288, vv. 7, 10). The commentators divide. Ellicott: “Pharaoh probably bowed before Jacob as a saintly personage, and received a formal benediction.” Benson presses the paradox of Hebrews 7:7 — “remarkable surely it was that the greater… should be blessed of the less.” Poole dissents, reading it as courteous salutation and thanks; the Hebrew bāraḵ honestly bears both senses, and the unit leaves the door open. Pharaoh’s wondering question — “how many are the days of the years of your life?” — draws out the most quoted speech of Jacob’s old age. He answers with the word the chapter keeps sounding: מְגוּרַי (H4033), “my sojournings.” Ellicott insists on the plain sense over the devotional gloss: “Jacob was not a pilgrim… but he was a sojourner, because Canaan was not the native land of his race.” His days are “few and evil” (רָעִים, the heavy moral word). Maclaren weighs the confession against Jacob’s death-bed praise (48:15–16) and finds the key in what is present or absent: “In the former… there is nothing about God. It is all Jacob.” That contrast is Maclaren’s homiletical reading, drawn from the texts though stated by neither.
Joseph carries out the grant: he settles (וַיּוֹשֵׁב, H3427) his kin and gives them a אֲחֻזָּה (H272), a possession — and here the irony deepens, for those who came “only to sojourn” (v. 4) receive a permanent holding. The place is named “the land of רַעְמְסֵס” (H7486, Rameses), which the Cambridge Bible candidly calls “an anachronism… the country being denoted by a name which it came to bear two centuries later.” The shared rare lexeme (Ex 1:11; 12:37) is a verbal hinge the Verifier confirms — and a sobering one, since the place of rest is named for the store-city Israel will later be enslaved to build. Yet the unit closes in pure grace: Joseph fully sustained them (וַיְכַלְכֵּל, H3557, an intensive reduplicated verb) with לֶחֶם, bread, “according to the mouth of the little ones.” Ellicott corrects the wooden reading of ṭaph (it means dependants, hence “according to their families”), while Poole hears the tenderness — Joseph fed them “according to the manner of a little child… he put their meat into their very mouths.” Gill draws the figure the whole church has seen here: “Joseph was an eminent type of Christ, who supplies the wants of his people.”
Read under the rule that Scripture alone is the final authority, this quiet diplomatic scene carries a larger freight than its surface of grants and pasture-rights. Offered as a reading to be tested, not a verdict to be trusted: the people of promise enter their long bondage by the door of grace. Goshen is the “best of the land,” given freely by a friendly king, secured by a beloved brother — and it is the same Goshen, the same “land of Rameses,” where the next Pharaoh “who knew not Joseph” will set taskmasters over them. The chapter that names their rest already names the city of their slavery. God’s kindness and God’s discipline run in one channel. The saints are sojourners even in the best of the land. Jacob, standing in Egypt’s splendor, will not call it home: his whole life is māḡûr, a sojourning. The brothers come “to sojourn,” yet are given a “possession” — and the tension is the believer’s own, holding earthly good with an open hand because the city we seek “has foundations” elsewhere. The less blesses the greater. An old shepherd, owning a higher citizenship than any throne, lays his hand in benediction on the king of the mightiest nation on earth. Worldly rank is real but penultimate; the man of God carries a dignity that does not bow even to Pharaoh. And the rejected brother becomes the household’s bread. The one his brothers sold now sustains them, putting food in their mouths as a nurse feeds a child — grace returned for evil, life dispensed by the very hand that was struck. What men meant for evil, God was already bending toward the saving of much people alive.
The chapter that names Israel’s rest — the land of Rameses — already names the city of its slavery.
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
The keyword of this unit is גֹּשֶׁן (H1657, Goshen), a proper noun so rare it appears in only fourteen verses of the whole Hebrew Bible. It binds the gift of refuge here to the drama of redemption: the same Goshen where Israel is given the “best of the land” (47:6, 11) is the Goshen where, generations later, the LORD will set His people apart from the plagues — “only in the land of Goshen, where the children of Israel were, was there no hail” (Ex 9:26; cf. 8:22). The Verifier records Goshen as the shared lexeme across 47:27, Ex 8:22, and Ex 9:26. This is a structural-thematic link, not a quotation: one place-name holds together the entrance into Egypt and the deliverance out of it. The land of grace becomes the land of preservation in judgment.
Genesis 47:1 · Genesis 47:6 · Exodus 8:22 · Exodus 9:26
basis: shared rare proper noun H1657 Gôshen (only 14 vv in OT); a place-name link binding settlement and Exodus deliverance — thematic, no quotation claim
Joseph settles his family “in the land of רַעְמְסֵס” (H7486, Rameses), a rare proper noun found in only five verses. Two of them are the bitter sequel: “they built for Pharaoh store-cities, Pithom and Raamses” (Ex 1:11), and from “Rameses” Israel set out at the Exodus (Ex 12:37). The Verifier rates the shared rare lexeme a confirmed verbal link. The Cambridge Bible calls the name here a deliberate “chronological anticipation.” The thread is heavy with irony: the place named as the patriarch’s honored possession is the very name under which his descendants will sweat as slaves — and the same name marks the night they march out free. One word holds gift, slavery, and redemption together.
Genesis 47:11 · Exodus 1:11 · Exodus 12:37
basis: shared rare lexeme H7486 Raʻmᵉsēs — Rameses (only 5 vv in OT); a genuine verbal/onomastic contact across Genesis and Exodus, not a citation
Pharaoh grants Israel the מֵיטַב (H4315, mêyṭāḇ, “the best part”) of the land — a rare noun occurring in only five verses. The Mosaic law of damages uses the same word: a man who lets his beast graze another’s field “shall make restitution from the best of his own field” (Ex 22:5). The Verifier confirms the shared rare lexeme as a verbal link. The connection is lexical rather than quotational, yet it is suggestive: the word for the choicest, most valuable portion of land frames both a king’s lavish gift to sojourners and the Torah’s standard of honest amends. The ‘best’ is what generosity gives and what justice requires.
Genesis 47:6 · Genesis 47:11 · Exodus 22:5
basis: shared rare lexeme H4315 mêyṭāḇ — the best part (only 5 vv in OT); a verbal contact between royal grant and restitution-law, not a quotation
The household’s wealth is summed as צֹאן (H6629, flocks) and בָּקָר (H1241, herds), the same pairing that recurs when, after Jacob’s death, “all the house of Joseph, and his brethren, and his father’s house: only their little ones, and their flocks, and their herds, they left in the land of Goshen” (Gen 50:8). The Verifier links the two verses by the shared lexemes Goshen, Joseph, flocks, and herds. These are common words, so the tier is structural-thematic, not verbal: the same family, the same possessions, the same Goshen frame the entrance into Egypt (ch. 47) and the procession to bury Jacob in Canaan (ch. 50). The flocks that came down for refuge stay behind as the patriarch is carried home.
Genesis 47:1 · Genesis 50:8
basis: shared lexemes H1657 Gôshen (14 vv), H3130 Yôwçêph (193 vv), H6629 tsôʼn (247 vv), H1241 bâqâr (172 vv); common words apart from Goshen, so framed as a shared narrative pattern, not a quotation
Jacob calls his life מְגוּרַי (H4033, “my sojournings”). The Epistle to the Hebrews names this very confession as the faith of the patriarchs: they “died in faith… and confessed that they were strangers and pilgrims on the earth… they desire a better country, that is, an heavenly” (Heb 11:13–16). Keil & Delitzsch make the link explicitly: “The apostle, therefore, could justly regard these words as a declaration of the longing of the patriarchs for the eternal rest of their heavenly fatherland (Hebrews 11:13–16).” Held honestly: this is a cross-Testament link (Greek New Testament ↔ Hebrew), so it cannot rest on a shared Strong’s number — the Verifier finds no shared original-language lexeme and flags it for argument rather than assertion. The connection is genuine but conceptual: Hebrews reads Jacob’s ‘sojourning’ as the OT seed of pilgrim-faith. We tier it structural / thematic on those grounds, naming K&D as its source.
Genesis 47:9 · Hebrews 11:13
basis: cross-Testament (Greek ↔ Hebrew): no shared Strong’s lexeme is possible, so not ‘verbal.’ The link is the conceptual one Hebrews 11:13–16 draws from Jacob’s ‘sojournings’ (māḡûr, H4033), named explicitly by Keil & Delitzsch; thematic, argued, not asserted
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
The unit ends with the rejected brother feeding the very men who sold him: Joseph “sustained (וַיְכַלְכֵּל) his father and his brethren… with bread” (v. 12), and Poole pictures him putting “their meat into their very mouths,” as a nurse feeds a child. John Gill states the figure plainly: “Joseph was an eminent type of Christ, who supplies the wants of his people.” The pattern — the brother rejected, exalted to a throne, and made the dispenser of bread to all who come — has been read since the Fathers as a shadow of Christ, rejected by His own (John 1:11), exalted by the Father, and giving Himself as “the bread of life” (John 6:35). The household that came in hunger is fed by the hand it once struck. Held honestly: this is a typological reading, ancient and widely held, not a claim that Genesis cites Christ.
Genesis 47:12 · John 6:35 · Genesis 50:20
Twice Jacob “blessed Pharaoh” (וַיְבָרֶךְ, vv. 7, 10), an aged shepherd laying benediction on the world’s mightiest king. Benson and Jamieson, Fausset & Brown both reach instinctively for Hebrews 7:7 — “without all contradiction the less is blessed of the better.” That verse belongs to the argument for Melchizedek, the priest-king who blessed Abraham and prefigures Christ, the priest “after the order of Melchizedek” (Heb 7:1–17). The patriarch who bears a higher citizenship than any earthly crown, and so can bless a king, stands in the same priestly line that finds its end in Christ — the true Priest-King who blesses the nations from a throne not of this world. Held honestly: the link is the one the commentators themselves draw via Hebrews 7:7; it is typological and inferential, weighed against the text, not imposed on it.
Genesis 47:7 · Genesis 47:10 · Hebrews 7:7
Jacob’s “few and evil… days of my sojournings” (מְגוּרַי, v. 9) are named by Hebrews as the patriarchs’ confession “that they were strangers and pilgrims on the earth,” who “desire a better country, that is, an heavenly: wherefore God is not ashamed to be called their God” (Heb 11:13–16). Keil & Delitzsch read Jacob’s word as “the longing of the patriarchs for the eternal rest of their heavenly fatherland,” and Maclaren as the soul’s estrangement from a world that is not its home. This pilgrim-hope finds its substance in Christ, who has “gone to prepare a place” and is Himself “the way” to the Father’s house (John 14:2–6); the homelessness Jacob felt in Egypt’s best land is answered in the city “whose builder and maker is God.” Held honestly: a figural reading drawn directly from Hebrews’ own use of the patriarchal sojourning; conceptual, not lexical, and offered to be tested.
Genesis 47:9 · Hebrews 11:13 · John 14:2
The biblical text is the Berean Standard Bible (BSB), public domain (CC0). Hebrew/Greek text, transliteration, morphology and Strong’s are transcribed from the Berean interlinear (CC0) + Strong’s lexicons (PD); the literal renderings, divergence notes, word notes and all synthesis are this tool’s own work (⚙) — fallible; verify them.
Named voices, quoted verbatim from public-domain works:
The biblical text is the Berean Standard Bible (BSB), public domain (CC0). The Hebrew parsing, transliteration, Strong’s numbers, and glosses are drawn from the Berean/Strong’s data and are not contradicted here. The named voices are quoted verbatim from public-domain works (Charles Ellicott, Alexander Maclaren, Joseph Benson, Matthew Henry, Albert Barnes, Jamieson-Fausset-Brown, Matthew Poole, John Gill, the Geneva Study Bible, the Cambridge Bible, the Pulpit Commentary, and Keil & Delitzsch), attributed in place; each excerpt is a contiguous substring of its source.
Honesty notes specific to this unit: (1) The meaning of וּמִקְצֵה (v. 2, H7097) is genuinely contested: Barnes and Keil & Delitzsch read “from the whole number,” while Benson, Poole, and the rabbis read “the meanest / the tail”; the opposite (“the strongest and most handsome”) is also attested. The Pulpit Commentary lists these as rival guesses, and the unit leaves the question open rather than choosing. (2) The verb וַיְבָרֶךְ (vv. 7, 10, H1288) is ambiguous between formal patriarchal benediction (Ellicott, Benson, the Pulpit Commentary citing Calvin, who appeals to Heb 7:7) and mere courteous salutation (Poole, with Cambridge listing it as an alternative); both senses are recorded and neither imposed. (3) “The land of רַעְמְסֵס” (v. 11, H7486) is, by the Cambridge Bible’s own account, “strictly speaking, an anachronism” — the region named for a store-city (Ex 1:11) built generations later; this is presented as the commentators’ reading of a proleptic name, not as a textual error. (4) The Cambridge Bible reads the unit through the Documentary Hypothesis (J/P source-division, e.g. the apparent tension at v. 1 with 45:17–20); that source-critical framing is the commentator’s scholarly position, presented as one reading and not endorsed as the text’s own claim. (5) Alexander Maclaren’s contrast between this ‘few and evil’ retrospect and Jacob’s death-bed praise (48:15–16) is his homiletical reading, drawn from the two texts but stated by neither. (6) The cross-reference to Hebrews 11:13 (vv. 9, christ §3) and to Hebrews 7:7 (vv. 7, 10, christ §2) are cross-Testament links (Greek ↔ Hebrew): they cannot rest on shared Strong’s numbers and are therefore tiered structural / thematic and typological, never ‘verbal.’ They are presented as the conceptual readings the commentators (Keil & Delitzsch, Benson, JFB) and the apostle himself draw, argued rather than asserted. (7) The ⚙ synthesis layer (literal renderings, divergences, notes, grand commentary, threads, Christ readings) is this tool’s own fallible work, marked as such and offered to be tested against the Word.
✦ = human, public-domain source, quoted and named. ⚙ = machine synthesis, to be verified. Flagged cross-references are left visible on purpose — the verifier working in the open. “Search the Scriptures daily, whether those things were so.” (Acts 17:11)