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Isn`t this that from which my lord drinks, and whereby he indeed divines? You have done evil in so doing.`"
Verse Takeaways
1
What "Divining" Means Here
Scholars debate the meaning of the steward's claim that Joseph "divineth" with the cup. Some, like John Calvin, see it as a sinful deception by Joseph. Others suggest the Hebrew word can also mean "to test" or "to search diligently." In this view, the steward is saying Joseph used the cup to test their honesty or would search relentlessly for it, avoiding the issue of pagan divination.
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4
18th Century
Presbyterian
Joseph has had the satisfaction of seeing his brother Benjamin safe and well. He has heard his brothers acknowledging their guilt concerning himsel…
16th Century
Protestant
Whereby indeed, he divineth. This clause is variously interpreted. For some take it as if Joseph pretended that he consulted diviners to f…
17th Century
Reformed Baptist
[Is] not this [it], in which my lord drinketh Which was for his own particular use, and so the more ungrateful in them to take…
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Joseph tested how his brothers felt towards Benjamin. If they had envied and hated the other son of Rachel as they had hated him, and if they had t…