Monday, April 21, 2025

The Wail

 

“And he [Joseph] wept so loudly
that the Egyptians heard him, and
Pharaoh’s household heard about it.”
—Genesis 45:2

“With a loud cry, Jesus breathed his last.”
—Mark 15:37

Other-earthly; prolonged and deathly; loud and terror-ridden—this sound came from Joseph’s body, up from the depths of his soul, when he revealed himself to his brothers. This unnatural act of forgiveness came with a terrible cost: months and years of heratbreaking turmoil.

Philip Yancey perfectly expresses this occasion: 1

The brothers Joseph struggled to forgive were the very ones who had bullied him, had cooked up schemes to murder him, had sold him into slavery. Because of them he had spent the best years of his youth moldering in an Egyptian dungeon. Though he went on to triumph over adversity and though with all his heart he now wanted to forgive these brothers, he could not bring himself to that point, not yet. The wound still hurt too much.

I view Genesis 42 - 45 as Joseph’s way of saying, “I think it’s pretty amazing that I forgive you for the dastardly things you’ve done!” When grace finally broke through to Joseph, the sound of his grief and loved echoed throughout the palace. What is that wail? Is the king’s minister sick? No, Joseph’s health is fine. It was the sound of a man forgiving.

Now, change the scene. In your mind, see Jesus during the last twenty-four hours of His life. During Jesus’ time in the Garden of Gethsemane, He fought in prayer with His Father:

“Would You possibly take this dreadful task away from me? If not, I will bow to Your will.”

Jesus prayed until He could agree with the Father’s will. This pain had to run its course. This death had to take place. There was no other way. In order to fully love us, Jesus willingly agreed to the Father’s plan. On the cross, in tortuous agony, Jesus gave Himself for the sins of all the people who had ever lived, all the people who were currently alive, and all the people who would ever live on the earth.

What is that wail? Listen! Hear that horrible sound! The terror of Jesus’ outcry graphically illustrates that He was born, would live, and willingly died for us all. The wail revealed the sound of the only Son of God, this perfect Man, forgiving—forgiving us!

Jesus asks us to forgive others as He forgave. We bow in prayer during this day after the celebration of Christ’s resurrection to ask for His grace that will allow us the healing that comes from His wail and from our own.

______________________
Yancey, Philip. What’s So Amazing About Grace? Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan Publishing House, 1997. Pp. 84-85. Citation of Copyrighted material is made on this blog post strictly for Educational Fair Use illustration purposes only. All Rights Reserved by the original Copyright Holder.