"Now then, please let your servant remain here as my lord's slave in place of the boy, and let the boy return with his brothers." (Genesis 44:33)
Joseph devises a final test. His silver cup is placed in Benjamin's sack. The brothers set out for home and are overtaken by Joseph's steward, who accuses them of theft. They deny it confidently: search us all; whoever has the cup shall die and the rest of us will become your slaves. The cup is found in Benjamin's sack. They return in anguish to the city. Joseph tells them: the man in whose possession the cup was found shall become my slave; the rest of you are free to go. It is the mirror of what they did to Joseph twenty years ago: a younger brother in bondage, the rest free to go home. The question is what they will do.
Judah comes forward with a speech that is one of the most extraordinary moments in Genesis, a man fully changed by years of consequence and guilt. He tells Joseph everything: our father, his grief over losing Joseph, his reluctance to let Benjamin go, his pledge to guarantee Benjamin's safety. Then the climactic offer: Now then, please let your servant remain here as my lord's slave in place of the boy, and let the boy return with his brothers. Judah, who once suggested selling Joseph for profit, now offers himself as a slave for Benjamin's freedom. The transformation is complete. The test is passed. Joseph can no longer control himself.
Brothers and sisters, Judah offered himself in place of his brother. This is the shadow of the ultimate substitution: Christ in place of us, the innocent for the guilty. The transformation that produces this kind of self-offering in a human being is the work of grace, usually accomplished through years of guilt, consequence, and the slow undoing of the self-protective mechanisms that prevent genuine love. Let God do that work in you.
Lord God, you transformed Judah from the man who sold his brother into the man who offered himself in his brother's place. Do the same work in us. Make us capable of the substitutionary love that reflects the one who gave himself for us. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.