Chapter 13 THE
BLESSING OF THE FACULTIES
GENESIS 47, 48, 49 and 50
Charles Fillmore
Mysteries of Genesis
JOSEPH IS A SUBLIME IDEA
of Truth that goes down into the
darkened sense consciousness, and under
the law finally raises it up and out of
sense and into Spirit. He was seemingly
forced there by his brothers, yet he
was sent by the Lord to prepare for the
maintenance of Jacob's family through
the period of dearth that later came to
Canaan. The Truth he represents, when
taken down into the sense
consciousness, establishes there a new
realization of life that will result in
the regeneration of the entire man. We
must often go consciously into every
part of our body and build it up in
Truth with new ideas of life and
substance.
Gen. 47:1-12. Then
Joseph went in and told Pharaoh,
and said, My father and my
brethren, and their flocks, and
their herds, and all that they
have, are come out of the land of
Canaan; and, behold, they are in
the land of Goshen. And from among
his brethren he took five men, and
presented them unto Pharaoh. And
Pharaoh said unto his brethren,
What is your occupation? And they
said unto Pharaoh, Thy servants are
shepherds, both we, and our
fathers. And they said unto
Pharaoh, To sojourn in the land are
we come; for there is no pasture
for thy servants' flocks; for the
famine is sore in the land of
Canaan: now therefore, we pray
thee, let thy servants dwell in the
land of Goshen. And Pharaoh spake
unto Joseph, saying, Thy father and
thy brethren are come unto thee:
the land of Egypt is before thee;
in the best of the land make thy
father and thy brethren to dwell;
in the land of Goshen let them
dwell: and if thou knowest any able
men among them, then make them
rulers over my cattle. And Joseph
brought in Jacob his father, and
set him before Pharaoh: and Jacob
blessed Pharaoh. And Pharaoh said
unto Jacob, How many are the days
of the years of thy life? And Jacob
said unto Pharaoh, The days of the
years of my pilgrimage are a
hundred and thirty years: few and
evil have been the days of the
years of my life, and they have not
attained unto the days of the years
of the life of my fathers in the
days of their pilgrimage. And Jacob
blessed Pharaoh, and went out from
the presence of Pharaoh. And Joseph
placed his father and his brethren,
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. And Joseph
nourished his father, and his
brethren, and all his father's
household, with bread, according to
their families.
Joseph's brothers had
been shepherds in Canaan. It is the
business of our mind faculties (Jacob's
sons) to tend those thought
aggregations (flocks, herds) that
pertain to our vitality. There were no
sheep in Egypt, but Pharaoh made them
"rulers" over his cattle. Cattle
represent physical strength, which like
all the powers of man on the natural
plane, must be spiritualized. The
faculties, having come down into a more
material state of consciousness
(Egypt), take dominion over and lift up
the animal thoughts and tendencies in
the body and unify them with Spirit.
This is done by a transmutation of
quality and is attained by right
thinking, by putting the "cattle" under
the control of the thoughts of reality
or Spirit, represented by the
Israelites.
Joseph brought his
father to the ruler, and Jacob blessed
Pharaoh. This shows that the power that
rules the body, under the material
regime, rules in obscurity or is
without spiritual understanding. When
imagination (Joseph) brings the higher
understanding (Jacob) to the body
consciousness (Pharaoh), the higher
blesses the lower.
Thus, the father and the
brothers of Joseph took up their abode
in the land of Egypt, and Joseph
nourished them there. The imagination,
which is our faculty of increase, when
established in Truth, prepares the way
for us. It inspires, encourages, and
sustains the other faculties in us when
they fall into a seemingly material
phase of being, and ultimately brings
about the spiritualization of the whole
organism, mind, soul, and
body.
It is thought that
Rameses is the same name as Raamses,
which means "son of Ra," "son of the
sun," "sun's emanation." Rameses
represents a consciousness of substance
in the domain of the physical ego
(Pharaoh). This "sun" or "light"
consciousness, which in Pharaoh and
Egypt is obscured or veiled by the life
on the lower sense plane, works in
conjunction with the higher religious
thoughts (Hebrews) that are in
servitude to the darkened sense
consciousness symbolized by Egypt, and
so this reserve substance (Rameses) is
built up in Egypt.
Gen. 47:13-26. And
there was no bread in all the land;
for the famine was very sore, so
that the land of Egypt and the land
of Canaan fainted by reason of the
famine. And Joseph gathered up all
the money that was found in the
land of Egypt, and in the land of
Canaan, for the grain which they
bought: and Joseph brought the
money into Pharaoh's house. And
when the money was all spent in the
land of Egypt, and in the land of
Canaan, all the Egyptians came unto
Joseph, and said, Give us bread:
for why should we die in thy
presence? for our money faileth.
And Joseph said, Give your cattle;
and I will give you for your
cattle, if money fail. And they
brought their cattle unto Joseph;
and Joseph gave them bread in
exchange for the horses, and for
the flocks, and for the herds, and
for the asses: and he fed them with
bread in exchange for all their
cattle for that year. And when that
year was ended, they came unto him
the second year, and said unto him,
We will not hide from my lord, how
that our money is all spent; and
the herds of cattle are my lord's;
there is nought left in the sight
of my lord, but our bodies, and our
lands: wherefore should we die
before thine eyes, both we and our
land? buy us and our land for
bread, and we and our land will be
servants unto Pharaoh: and give us
seed, that we may live, and not
die, and that the land be not
desolate.
So Joseph bought
all the land of Egypt for Pharaoh;
for the Egyptians sold every man
his field, because the famine was
sore upon them: and the land became
Pharaoh's. And as for the people,
he removed them to the cities from
one end of the border of Egypt even
to the other end thereof. Only the
land of the priests bought he not:
for the priests had a portion from
Pharaoh, and did eat their portion
which Pharaoh gave them; wherefore
they sold not their land. Then
Joseph said unto the people,
Behold, I have bought you this day
and your land for Pharaoh: lo, here
is seed for you, and ye shall sow
the land. And it shall come to pass
at the ingatherings, that ye shall
give a fifth unto Pharaoh, and four
parts shall be your own, for seed
of the field, and for your food,
and for them of your households,
and for food for your little ones.
And they said, Thou hast saved our
lives: let us find favor in the
sight of my lord, and we will be
Pharaoh's servants. And Joseph made
it a statute concerning the land of
Egypt unto this day, that Pharaoh
should have the fifth; only the
land of the priests alone became
not Pharaoh's.
In the early stages of
regeneration there are times when the
developing soul has exhausted its
resources and the outer world no longer
satisfies. When it reaches this point
man has to turn within and appropriate
from the higher principles that which
they have to give. The center of the
great solar plexus (Pharaoh) is also
the conservator of substance and life
in the organism. When man is
spiritually famished and feels the lack
he is eager regardless of cost to go to
the inner reservoirs of stored-up
substance for sustenance. First he
gives up to the higher principles the
power and strength of the natural man
(symbolized by money and cattle), then
he draws on the fixed forces, the land
(representing the body), until it is
finally realized that the higher
principles really are in authority. In
the last analysis the "sun" (solar
plexus) consciousness is actually the
great distributor. The men (thought
forces) were given seed to sow the
land, and Pharaoh (the great
distributing ego) permitted them to
have four fifths of the harvest for
sustenance, while retaining one fifth
(in the subconscious) to meet any usual
demands. The man now becomes aware of
the presence of this subconscious ego
that, when spiritually instructed by
the imagination (Joseph), will handle
all the processes of rebuilding the
body. Finally this becomes an
established law. The priests,
representing the higher spiritual life,
are not subject to this law.
Gen. 47:27-31. And
Israel dwelt in the land of Egypt,
in the land of Goshen; and they gat
them possessions therein, and were
fruitful, and multiplied
exceedingly. And Jacob lived in the
land of Egypt seventeen years: so
the days of Jacob, the years of his
life, were a hundred forty and
seven years. And the time drew near
that Israel must die: and he called
his son Joseph, and said unto him,
If now I have found favor in thy
sight, put, I pray thee, thy hand
under my thigh, and deal kindly and
truly with me: bury me not, I pray
thee, in Egypt; but when I sleep
with my fathers, thou shalt carry
me out of Egypt, and bury me in
their burying-place. And he said, I
will do as thou hast said. And he
said, Swear unto me: and he sware
unto him. And Israel bowed himself
upon the bed's head.
The central thought in
this Scripture is that Jacob is giving
up old ideas and taking on new. The
life of Jacob in a certain unfoldment
was drawing to a close, and his desire
was that his body be buried with his
fathers in the cave of Machpelah. This
indicates that a certain phase of the
illumined intellect is sinking back
into the subconsciousness (Macpelah).
All experiences in life that have
spiritual qualities and all realities
gained in the land of unity (Goshen)
are preserved in the subconsciousness.
Joseph's placing his hand under the
thigh of Jacob symbolizes the truth
that the illumined intellect needs the
encouragement and support and power of
the imagination in order to effect
spiritually the change that is about to
take place. When this is granted, Jacob
bows down in gratitude and thanksgiving
to the Holy One and rests in the
realization that all is well. "And
Israel bowed himself upon the bed's
head."
Jacob's age is
significant. The number seven
symbolizes fullness in the world of
phenomena. It is so universally used as
a mystical number that its basis must
be in some fundamental arrangement of
the natural world.
(For significance of the
oath see interpretation of Gen.
24:9.)
Gen. 48:1-4. And it
came to pass after these things,
that one said to Joseph, Behold,
thy father is sick: and he took
with him his two sons, Manasseh and
Ephraim. And one told Jacob, and
said, Behold, thy son Joseph cometh
unto thee: and Israel strengthened
himself, and sat upon the bed. And
Jacob said unto Joseph, God
Almighty appeared unto me at Luz in
the land of Canaan, and blessed me,
and said unto me, Behold, I will
make thee fruitful, and multiply
thee, and I will make of thee a
company of peoples, and will give
this land to thy seed after thee
for an everlasting
possession.
In this Scripture the I
AM functioning in the illumined
intellect (Jacob) is taking cognizance
of its abilities and possessions before
it sinks back into the subconsciousness
for a season of rest. The I AM faculty
of imagination (Joseph) is quick to
discern what is taking place and brings
the will and the understanding, the yes
and the no of the mind (Ephraim and
Manasseh), to the I AM for a final
blessing. (The will and the
understanding are the powers that say
yes and no to your
thoughts.)
The Lord had blessed
Jacob (the I AM) at Luz. One
interpretation of Luz is "separation,"
but under the light of Spirit we find
that that which we conceive to be apart
from God (Luz) is in truth His abode
(Bethel, house of God). Therefore this
Luz state of consciousness belongs
eternally to the I AM and its faculties
will (Ephraim) and understanding
(Manasseh), which faculties are to
multiply and bring forth fruit
exceedingly.
Gen. 48:5, 6. And
now thy two sons, who were born
unto thee in the land of Egypt
before I came unto thee into Egypt,
are mine; Ephraim and Manasseh,
even as Reuben and Simeon, shall be
mine. And thy issue, that thou
begettest after them, shall be
thine; they shall be called after
the name of their brethren in their
inheritance.
The I AM (Jacob) here
claims Joseph's two sons Ephraim and
Manasseh (fruit of the imagination) as
his own. The primal faculties of will
(Ephraim) and understanding (Manasseh)
or of affirmation and denial now come
under the dominion of the I AM,
symbolized by Jacob. The secondary
issues come under the imagination
(Joseph).
Gen. 48:7. And as
for me, when I came from Paddan,
Rachel died by me in the land of
Canaan in the way, when there was
still some distance to come unto
Ephrath: and I buried her there in
the way to Ephrath (the same is
Bethlehem).
When an important ego is
about to change its plane of
expression, a memory of past
experiences, especially of those which
are dear to the heart, flashes into the
mind. Spiritually that which is good in
the experiences is retained and that
which is not good is cast aside. In
soul consciousness the soul intuitively
rejects the error and claims the good.
It is an occasion where denial and
affirmation play an important
part.
Jacob had been on his
way from Paddan (a place of substance
in the consciousness and body organism
of the individual) and was yet some
distance from Ephrath (realization of
abundance); that is, the illumined I AM
(Jacob) had been passing from a lower
plane of substance to a higher plane.
During this period of transition the
consciousness of love for material
substance (Rachel) died, or sank back
into the subconscious, there to become
the foundation of a more spiritual
love. Now through introspection Jacob
was eliminating the error and affirming
the good.
Gen. 48:8-22. And
Israel beheld Joseph's sons, and
said, Who are these? And Joseph
said unto his father, They are my
sons, whom God hath given me here.
And he said, Bring them, I pray
thee, unto me, and I will bless
them. Now the eyes of Israel were
dim for age, so that he could not
see. And he brought them near unto
him; and he kissed them, and
embraced them. And Israel said unto
Joseph, I had not thought to see
thy face: and, lo, God hath let me
see thy seed also. And Joseph
brought them out from between his
knees; and he bowed himself with
his face to the earth. And Joseph
took them both, Ephraim in his
right hand toward Israel's left
hand, and Manasseh in his left hand
toward Israel's right hand, and
brought them near unto him. And
Israel stretched out his right
hand, and laid it upon Ephraim's
head, who was the younger, and his
left hand upon Manasseh's head,
guiding his hands wittingly; for
Manasseh was the first-born. And he
blessed Joseph, and said, The God
before whom my fathers Abraham and
Isaac did walk, the God who hath
fed me all my life long unto this
day, the angel who hath redeemed me
from all evil, bless the lads; and
let my name be named on them, and
the name of my fathers Abraham and
Isaac; and let them grow into a
multitude in the midst of the
earth. And when Joseph saw that his
father laid his right hand upon the
head of Ephraim, it displeased him:
and he held up his father's hand,
to remove it from Ephraim's head
unto Manasseh's head. And Joseph
said unto his father, Not so, my
father; for this is the first-born;
put thy right hand upon his head.
And his father refused, and said, I
know it, my son, I know it; he also
shall become a people, and he also
shall be great; howbeit his younger
brother shall be greater than he,
and his seed shall become a
multitude of nations. And he
blessed them that day, saying, In
thee will Israel bless, saying, God
make thee as Ephraim and as
Manasseh: and he set Ephraim before
Manasseh. And Israel said unto
Joseph, Behold, I die: but God will
be with you, and bring you again
unto the land of your fathers.
Moreover I have given to thee one
portion above thy brethren, which I
took out of the hand of the Amorite
with my sword and with my
bow.
When Joseph came to
visit his father in the land of Goshen,
he brought his two sons with him.
Hearing that they were coming, "Israel
strengthened himself, and sat upon the
bed." Thus understanding (Manasseh) and
will (Ephraim) bring strength when
weakness appears. Job says, "When they
cast thee down, thou shalt say, There
is lifting up."
Jacob blessed his
grandsons, and his blessing is
significant. Manasseh, being the
first-born (under divine law
understanding precedes will), would be
entitled to the chief blessing, but
Jacob laid his right hand upon the head
of Ephraim and his left hand upon the
head of Manasseh instead of the
reverse, which was the customary way of
blessing. Joseph, thinking his aged
father's dim eyesight responsible for
this seeming error, called his
attention to it. Jacob replied that he
knew what he was doing and that
although the older son was to become
great and important, Ephraim (will)
would take precedence under the natural
law to which they were both to be
subjected.
That certain laws in
race evolution are involved in the
blessing by Jacob of Joseph's two sons,
also that a special spiritual
dispensation to the Hebrews, to
Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Joseph, was
instituted must be admitted by those
who believe that this Scripture is
inspired. But this dependence on the
Lord for guidance could not go on
forever; the highest test of character
is the self-made man. Man must develop
from within, and the time comes to
every soul when it must glow with its
own inner light, regardless of the
mistakes it may make.
Jacob saw that the time
had come for Ephraim and Manasseh to
act on their own initiative, and he
knew what he was doing when he gave
Ephraim (the will) first place. In the
free, full development of man the will
and ambition to achieve leap ahead of
the understanding. This has been and
still is the experience of the human
race, and it will continue to be until
man in his freedom willingly accepts
divine guidance. Then Manasseh (the
understanding) will come into his own
and assume first place in
consciousness. The blunders of man will
then be corrected and a mutual
understanding be restored to the whole
world.
Up to this time the
faculties symbolized by Ephraim and
Manasseh had been under the inspiration
of the imagination (Joseph). Joseph's
taking his sons from between his knees
and handing them over to Jacob for the
final blessing symbolizes the
restoration of the faculties to their
natural estate. The dying of Jacob
represents the withdrawal of the
activity of this special spiritual
inspiration imparted through the I
AM.
The final blessing of
the I AM on the imagination (Joseph)
promised that it would be taken back or
"reincarnated" in the land of the
fathers. The one extra portion that
Jacob gave to Joseph, which he "took
out of the hand of the Amorite" (a race
inheritance) with his sword (power of
the word) and bow (directive power), is
an amorous force that finds expression
on the generative plane but which
eventually must be elevated to
spiritual consciousness. The exercise
of any faculty to the best of one's
ability is appreciated by the Lord
(law), and we get an extra portion, a
"free gift of God." We receive a
certain return for our mental effort
although we may not always directly
recognize God as the source.
Gen. 49:1, 2. And
Jacob called unto his sons, and
said: Gather yourselves together,
that I may tell you that which
shall befall you in the latter
days.
Assemble
yourselves, and hear, ye sons of
Jacob;
And hearken unto
Israel your father.
A blessing signifies the
imparting of spiritual good, which the
recipient may receive or reject
according to his mental attitude. The
blessing by Jacob of his twelve sons
symbolizes the sowing of seed in
consciousness for a future harvest.
Through the power of his word Jacob was
raising the consciousness of his primal
ideas. In effect he was proclaiming:
"You represent the A B C of man's life,
and I am revealing to you in symbols
the foundation you have laid, what you
will have to contend with in the
future, and what you can attain. You
stand for the foundation faculties that
constitute the coming ideal man. The
true seed idea of this ideal man is
implanted within each of you and will
eventually become manifest. This
process of manifestation covers your
history up to the time of the
appearance of the man that God imaged
in the beginning, even Jesus
Christ."
Gen. 49:3, 4.
Reuben, thou art
my first-born, my might, and
the
beginning of my
strength;
The pre-eminence
of dignity, and the
pre-eminence
of
power.
Boiling over as
water, thou shalt not have the
pre-eminence;
Because thou
wentest up to thy father's
bed;
Then defilest
thou it; he went up to my
couch.
Reuben, the first-born,
symbolizes the faith of man in his
ability as expressed through his animal
nature. Here we see the vigor and
vitality of the functioning of man's
elemental life, which boils over "as
water," loses command. Reuben is
represented as the natural man giving
way to his passions and appetites
before he has developed spiritual
mastery.
Gen. 49:5, 7.
Simeon and Levi
are brethren;
Weapons of
violence are their
swords.
O my soul, come
not thou into their
council;
Unto their
assembly, my glory, be not thou
united;
For in their
anger they slew a man,
And in their
self-will they hocked an
ox.
Cursed be their
anger, for it was
fierce;
And their wrath,
for it was cruel:
I will divide
them in Jacob,
And scatter them
in Israel.
Simeon represents
receptivity (feeling) and Levi love
(sensation). The faculties of feeling
and sensation in human consciousness
have been debased on the mortal plane.
Simeon, the obedient one, one who is
easily influenced, falls under the sway
of physical sensation.
In Simeon and Levi we
also have an exhibition of animal love
and of its vengefulness as exemplified
in their treacherous attempt to right
the wrong committed against their
sister Dinah.
Gen. 49:8-12.
Judah, thee shall
thy brethren praise:
Thy hand shall be
on the neck of thine
enemies;
Thy father's sons
shall bow down before
thee.
Judah is a lion's
whelp;
From the prey, my
son, thou art gone up:
He stooped down,
he couched as a lion,
And as a lioness;
who shall rouse him up?
The sceptre shall
not depart from Judah,
Until Shiloh
come;
And unto him
shall the obedience of the peoples
be.
Binding his foal
unto the vine,
And his ass's
colt unto the choice
vine;
He hath washed
his garments in wine,
And his vesture
in the blood of the
grapes:
His eyes shall be
red with wine,
And his teeth
white with milk.
Jacob's blessing on
Judah was the most significant. Judah
was to conquer all his
enemies:
The sceptre shall
not depart from Judah,
Nor the ruler's
staff from between his
feet,
Until Shiloh
come;
And unto him
shall the obedience of the peoples
be.
Shiloh signifies peace
of mind, wholeness, completion or
fullness, and represents the Prince of
Peace, the Messiah or Savior. Jesus was
a direct descendant of Judah, as is
shown in the 1st chapter of Matthew.
The name Judah applies to only one of
the twelve tribes, but is often used to
designate the Jewish nation as a whole.
This would indicate that praise is such
an active principle in spiritual
thought that it is deserving of first
place. The power of the word of praise
shall be felt until the coming of the
Prince of Peace.
Gen. 49:13.
Zebulun shall
dwell at the haven of the
sea;
And he shall be
for a haven of ships;
And his border
shall be upon Sidon.
Zebulun represents the
law that relates man to the universal
cosmos. He dwells under the law of
protection and safety (refuge), yet has
a realization of the universal Mind
(sea). Zebulun is that in us which is
concerned with the maintenance of our
individual importance regardless of the
immensity of the universal. Those who
are in personality will find refuge in
this state of consciousness. We lose
consciousness of our spiritual
importance by looking out into the
universe but can retain our identity as
children of God through realizing that
Spirit is individualized in
us.
Gen. 49:14,
15.
Issachar is a
strong ass,
Couching down
between the sheepfolds:
And he saw a
resting-place that it was
good,
And the land that
it was pleasant;
And he bowed his
shoulder to bear,
And became a
servant under taskwork.
Issachar symbolizes the
inner latent powers in man. He
represents that side of the natural man
which accepts conditions as they appear
to be and bears the burdens of life
without question, as exemplified by the
patient ass.
Gen.
49:16-18.
Dan shall judge
his people,
As one of the
tribes of Israel.
Dan shall be a
serpent in the way,
An adder in the
path,
That biteth the
horse's heels,
So that his rider
falleth backward.
I have waited for
thy salvation, O
Jehovah.
Dan represents
discrimination or judgment, a choosing
between good and evil. The serpent is
used as a symbol of subtlety. "Now the
serpent was more subtle than any beast
of the field." Jesus advised His
followers to be "wise as serpents, and
harmless as doves." Sensation rushes
through the organism like a race horse,
but judgment "bites at the heels" to
restrain the headlong
flight.
Gen. 49:19.
Gad, a troop
shall press upon him;
But he shall
press upon their heel.
Gad represents latent
spiritual power, which like an army is
always ready to do a mighty work.
Science tells of an omnipresent ether
that presses upon us in the invisible
from every direction. One scientist
says that the atomic energy in a pea
would propel a large seagoing vessel
from America to England and return.
This ether has its analogy in Spirit,
which continually inspires us when we
give it our attention. Our mind is in
direct contact with this spiritual
power, and our word puts it into
action.
Gen. 49:20.
Out of Asher his
bread shall be fat,
And he shall
yield royal dainties.
Asher represents the
understanding mind and its ability to
manipulate universal substance (bread)
and make it manifest richly. The bread
or divine substance is susceptible of
infinite adaptation. Those who think
about it as limited in its expression
manifest limited supply, while those
who follow Jesus and realize the
richness of this substance manifest it
abundantly, being able even to
transform it into loaves and fishes to
feed the multitude.
Gen. 49:21.
Naphtali is a
hind let loose:
He giveth goodly
words.
The Hebrew meaning of
the name Naphtali is "my wrestling,"
"wrestling of Jehovah." Naphtali
represents the activity of strength in
man's consciousness. Jacob's blessing
on Naphtali was that he might have the
strength and speed of the deer and the
power of the word to increase
strength.
Gen.
49:22-26.
Joseph is a
fruitful bough,
A fruitful bough
by a fountain;
His branches run
over the wall.
The archers have
sorely grieved him,
And shot at him,
and persecuted him:
But his bow abode
in strength,
And the arms of
his hands were made
strong,
By the hands of
the Mighty One of Jacob
(From thence is
the shepherd, the stone of
Israel),
Even by the God
of thy father, who shall help
thee,
And by the
Almighty, who shall bless
thee,
With blessings of
heaven above,
Blessings of the
deep that coucheth
beneath,
Blessings of the
breasts, and of the
womb.
The blessings of
thy father
Have prevailed
above the blessings of my
progenitors
Unto the utmost
bound of the everlasting
hills:
They shall be on
the head of Joseph,
And on the crown
of the head of him that was
separated from his
brethren.
Joseph, representing the
imagination, is at all times very close
to divine inspiration. If man would
curb his will and keep it in abeyance
he would not "imagine vain things."
Notwithstanding the destructive power
of the personal will ("archers") with
which he is associated his directive
power is victorious. Joseph's
persecution and sale into Egypt by his
willful brothers and his demonstration
of superiority to his fate illustrate
the victory of an inspired imagination.
The whole story of Joseph is an example
of the successful functioning of man's
imaging faculty when he keeps contact
with Jehovah.
Gen. 49:27,
28.
Benjamin is a
wolf that raveneth:
In the morning he
shall devour the prey,
And at even he
shall divide the spoil.
All these are the
twelve tribes of Israel: and this
is it that their father spake unto
them and blessed them; every one
according to his blessing he
blessed them.
Benjamin (faith) in his
hunger after righteousness is compared
to a famished wolf. In the morning or
beginning he appropriates understanding
to the full, which he divides or
imparts freely at the evening or end of
the period.
Gen. 49:29-33. And
he charged them, and said unto
them, I am to be gathered unto my
people: bury me with my fathers in
the cave that is in the field of
Ephron the Hittite, in the cave
that is in the field of Machpelah,
which is before Mamre, in the land
of Canaan, which Abraham bought
with the field from Ephron the
Hittite for a possession of a
burying-place. There they buried
Abraham and Sarah his wife; there
they buried Isaac and Rebekah his
wife; and there I buried Leah--the
field and the cave that is therein,
which was purchased from the
children of Heth. And when Jacob
made an end of charging his sons,
he gathered up his feet into the
bed, and yielded up the ghost, and
was gathered unto his
people.
In the Scripture
allegories the various individuals
represent the different phases of
character through which one man passes
in his spiritual unfoldment. As these
follow in a series, gradually reaching
greater heights, the old phases of
character are left behind to be
replaced by new ones. Thus the Biblical
characters are said to "die" and to be
"gathered unto their fathers." Tennyson
was inspired to express a great truth,
as poets often are, when he
wrote,
"Men may rise on
steppingstones
Of their dead
selves to higher
things."
So each of the great
Bible personalities is gradually
replaced in the mind of him who is in
the narrow way. When a great change
takes place, some old phase of
consciousness has lost its hold, and we
read that Jacob or Joseph or another
character "dies." This does not mean
that there has been any loss or that
anything has "gone away" but that
certain states of mind have fulfilled
their regenerative work and have been
succeeded by others.
(For Ephron, Machpelah,
and Mamre see interpretation of Gen.
23:3-20.)
Gen. 50:1-13. And
Joseph fell upon his father's face,
and wept upon him, and kissed him.
And Joseph commanded his servants
the physicians to embalm his
father: and the physicians embalmed
Israel. And forty days were
fulfilled for him, for so are
fulfilled the days of embalming:
and the Egyptians wept for him
threescore and ten days.
And when the days
of weeping for him were past,
Joseph spake unto the house of
Pharaoh, saying, If now I have
found favor in your eyes, speak, I
pray you, in the ears of Pharaoh,
saying, My father made me swear,
saying, Lo, I die: in my grave
which I have digged for me in the
land of Canaan, there shalt thou
bury me. Now therefore let me go
up, I pray thee, and bury my
father, and I will come again. And
Pharaoh said, Go up, and bury thy
father, according as he made thee
swear. And Joseph went up to bury
his father; and with him went up
all the servants of Pharaoh, the
elders of his house, and all the
elders of the land of Egypt, and
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. And there
went up with him both chariots and
horsemen: and it was a very great
company. And they came to the
threshing-floor of Atad, which is
beyond the Jordan, and there they
lamented with a very great and sore
lamentation: and he made a mourning
for his father seven days. And when
the inhabitants of the land, the
Canaanites, saw the mourning in the
floor of Atad, they said, This is a
grievous mourning to the Egyptians:
wherefore the name of it was called
Abel-mizraim, which is beyond the
Jordan. And his sons did unto him
according as he commanded them: for
his sons carried him into the land
of Canaan, and buried him in the
cave of the field of Machpelah,
which Abraham bought with the
field, for a possession of a
burying place, of Ephron the
Hittite, before Mamre.
Whenever the I AM
withdraws, no matter in what state of
consciousness it has been functioning,
there is a great shock to the soul, and
all the forces of the natural man are
filled with grief and consternation.
"And he made a mourning for his father
seven days." The imagination (Joseph),
favorite faculty (son) of the illumined
intellect (Jacob), mourned greatly, not
fully understanding that the withdrawal
of the I AM eventually would culminate
in good.
The name Atad means
"bramble," "thornbush," "a thorn." It
was on the threshing floor of Atad that
Joseph and his brethren mourned seven
days for their father Jacob. A
threshing floor may be thought of as a
place of judgment or separation, of
letting go of that which is no longer
needful to be expressed in
consciousness. Atad represents the
belief that vexations, trials, and
sorrows are real. It is this unredeemed
thought or belief in man that causes
him to experience deep grief and
tribulation at giving up his personal
hold on old ideas and objects which are
due to be released from his mind and
affairs. This unredeemed belief is
concerned with and dwells on the trial
side of the process rather than on the
blessing side of it.
The Canaanites symbolize
the semispiritual in man. They changed
the name (or character) of Atad. "And
when the inhabitants of the land, the
Canaanites, saw the mourning on the
floor of Atad, they said, This is a
grievous mourning to the Egyptians:
wherefore the name of it was called
Abel-mizraim." The Egyptians symbolize
materiality.
Abel-mizraim ("mourning
of Egypt or Egyptians," "mourning or
meadow of distress") represents the
feeling of sorrow and loss in the sense
man that often accompanies the letting
go of some good idea in consciousness
after it has finished its work. Man's
tendency is to cling to the old ideas
that have been helpful to him. But when
their work is done in the individual
for the time being, these old ideas, no
matter how well they have served, must
be released from consciousness so that
other and higher ideas may take their
place. This is a process of judgment, a
sifting of ideas and thoughts, a
letting go of the chaff and a laying
hold of the wheat (on the threshing
floor).
The Jordan represents a
stream of thought, good, bad, and
indifferent, flowing through the
subconscious.
Machpelah refers to the
subconscious body substance.
Ephron the Hittite
symbolizes a phase of thought that is
quick to change its thinking base. The
word Hittite denotes thoughts belonging
to the carnal consciousness of
man.
Mamre suggests strength,
vigor; it also represents the seat of
the conscious mind.
(For further discussion
of these names see interpretation of
Gen. 23:3-20.)
This closing chapter of
Genesis is an allegorical account of
the end of the work of Jacob and his
family in Egypt. The descent of Joseph
(the illumined imagination) into Egypt
paved the way for Jacob (the
spiritually illumined ego) and his kin
to make contact with subconscious
substance. These pioneers of Jehovah
accomplished their work, and their
leader Jacob "died" or withdrew from
consciousness. That the whole man,
including the physical, was helped by
Jacob is evidenced by the interest the
Egyptians took in the funeral of Jacob
and the great company that went up to
Canaan with the Children of
Israel.
Gen. 50:14-21. And
Joseph returned into Egypt, he, and
his brethren, and all that went up
with him to bury his father, after
he had buried his father.
And when Joseph's
brethren saw that their father was
dead, they said, It may be that
Joseph will hate us, and will fully
requite us all the evil which we
did unto him. And they sent a
message unto Joseph, saying, Thy
father did command before he died,
saying, So shall ye say unto
Joseph, Forgive, I pray thee now,
the transgression of thy brethren,
and their sin, for that they did
unto thee evil. And now, we pray
thee, forgive the transgression of
the servants of the God of thy
father. And Joseph wept when they
spake unto him. And his brethren
also went and fell down before his
face; and they said, Behold, we are
thy servants. And Joseph said unto
them, Fear not: for am I in the
place of God? And as for you, ye
meant evil against me; but God
meant it for good, to bring to
pass, as it is this day, to save
much people alive. Now therefore
fear ye not: I will nourish you,
and your little ones. And he
comforted them, and spake kindly
unto them.
The imagination
returning to the body consciousness
(Egypt) again takes up the work of
redeeming it.
The confession of the
brothers of Joseph to their crime
against him and his loving forgiveness
both point to the spiritual uplift that
has taken place in soul
evolution.
"Now therefore fear ye
not: I will nourish you, and your
little ones" signifies that the
imagination in its divine purity and
holiness is one of the sources of good
to the whole man. What you mold in your
mind under the spiritual law is formed
in your affairs and thus is the source
of prosperity.
Gen. 50:22-26. And
Joseph dwelt in Egypt, he, and his
father's house: and Joseph lived a
hundred and ten years. And Joseph
saw Ephraim's children of the third
generation: the children also of
Machir the son of Manasseh were
born upon Joseph's knees. And
Joseph said unto his brethren, I
die; but God will surely visit you,
and bring you up out of this land
unto the land which he sware to
Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob.
And Joseph took an oath of the
children of Israel, saying, God
will surely visit you, and ye shall
carry up my bones from hence. And
Joseph died, being a hundred and
ten years old: and they embalmed
him, and he was put in a coffin in
Egypt.
Joseph also died in
Egypt but not until he had lived among
the children of Ephraim unto "the third
generation." This means that the Joseph
qualities of mind are developing a
deeper understanding of spiritual
things. Machir, the name of a son of
Manasseh (understanding), means
"acquired," "purchased." The children
of Machir that were "born upon Joseph's
knees" represent the balance and poise
that must actively exist in us if we
are abidingly to possess true
understanding. The Joseph
characteristics gradually become a part
of the whole body
consciousness.
The insistence by all
these patriarchs that their bones be
taken to Canaan for burial is
emblematic of the truth that the
substance of them and what they
represent is to be restored to its
source, Spirit. Although Joseph died
and was embalmed and put in a coffin in
Egypt, his bones were finally brought
to Canaan, as stated in the last
chapter of the Book of
Joshua.
The End
* * * * *
Mysteries of
Genesis
Table of
Contents
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