29, 30. Joseph made ready his chariot--The difference between
chariot and wagon was not only in the lighter and more elegant
construction of the former, but in the one being drawn by horses and
the other by oxen. Being a public man in Egypt, Joseph was required to
appear everywhere in an equipage suitable to his dignity; and,
therefore, it was not owing either to pride or ostentatious parade that
he drove his carriage, while his father's family were accommodated only
in rude and humble wagons.
presented himself unto him--in an attitude of filial reverence
(compare
Ex 22:17).
The interview was a most affecting one--the happiness of the delighted
father was now at its height; and life having no higher charms, he
could, in the very spirit of the aged Simeon, have departed in peace
[Lu 2:25, 29].
JFB.
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