Genesis 42:28

28 And he said to his brethren, My money has been restored to me, and behold this is in my sack. And their heart was wonder-struck, and they were troubled, saying one to another, What is this that God has done to us?

Genesis 42:28 Meaning and Commentary

Genesis 42:28

And he said unto his brethren, my money is restored
The money paid for the corn is returned: and, lo, [it is] even in my sack;
this put them all upon opening their sacks, where every man found his money, though not expressed, see ( Genesis 43:21 ) : and their heart failed [them];
through surprise and fear; or "went out"


FOOTNOTES:

F3 front them, as it were, they were ready to faint and swoon away: and they were afraid;
their consciences being awakened, and loaded with the guilt of their former sins, they were afraid that more evil was coming upon them for them; and that this was a scheme laid to entrap them, and that they should be pursued and seized, and fetched back, and charged with a fraud and trick, as going off with their corn without paying for it: saying one to another, what [is] this [that] God hath done unto us?
for whoever was the instrument, they concluded the overruling hand of divine Providence was in it, for the further chastisement and correction of them for their iniquity: instead of being thus frightened and distressed, it is very much it did not give them suspicion of Joseph, that he was the person they had been conversing with, and that he had done this in kindness to them; but their minds were so pressed with the guilt of their sin, that they were possessed of nothing but fears and dreadful apprehensions of things, and put the worst construction upon them they could, as men in such circumstances usually do, even fear where no fear is, or no occasion for it.
F3 (Mbl auyw) "et exiit cor eorum", Montanus, Drusius, Piscator, Schmidt.

Genesis 42:28 In-Context

26 And having put the corn on the asses, they departed thence.
27 And one having opened his sack to give his asses fodder, at the place where they rested, saw also his bundle of money, for it was on the mouth of his sack.
28 And he said to his brethren, My money has been restored to me, and behold this is in my sack. And their heart was wonder-struck, and they were troubled, saying one to another, What is this that God has done to us?
29 And they came to their father, Jacob, into the land of Chanaan, and reported to him all that had happened to them, saying,
30 The man, the lord of the land, spoke harsh words to us, and put us in prison as spies of the land.

The Brenton translation of the Septuagint is in the public domain.