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Joseph plants his silver cup in Benjamin's sack. The steward overtakes the brothers, accuses them of theft, searches from oldest to youngest. The cup is found with Benjamin. The brothers tear their clothes and return to face Joseph. He offers them exactly what they wanted twenty years ago—a way to abandon the favored son. Benjamin stays as a slave; the rest go free. Will they take it? Judah steps forward with the longest speech in Genesis. He tells Joseph about their father, about the son already lost, about what losing Benjamin would do. Then: "Let me remain instead of the boy as a slave to my lord." In his place. The man who once sold a brother for silver now offers his freedom to save one. This is what Joseph has been waiting for. The test is over. They've changed.
By Michael WhitworthJoseph plants his silver cup in Benjamin's sack. The steward overtakes the brothers, accuses them of theft, searches from oldest to youngest. The cup is found with Benjamin. The brothers tear their clothes and return to face Joseph. He offers them exactly what they wanted twenty years ago—a way to abandon the favored son. Benjamin stays as a slave; the rest go free. Will they take it? Judah steps forward with the longest speech in Genesis. He tells Joseph about their father, about the son already lost, about what losing Benjamin would do. Then: "Let me remain instead of the boy as a slave to my lord." In his place. The man who once sold a brother for silver now offers his freedom to save one. This is what Joseph has been waiting for. The test is over. They've changed.