9-13. then spake the chief butler unto Pharaoh, saying, I do remember my faults--This public acknowledgment of the merits of the young Hebrew would, tardy though it was, have reflected credit on the butler had it not been obviously made to ingratiate himself with his royal master. It is right to confess our faults against God, and against our fellow men when that confession is made in the spirit of godly sorrow and penitence. But this man was not much impressed with a sense of the fault he had committed against Joseph; he never thought of God, to whose goodness he was indebted for the prophetic announcement of his release, and in acknowledging his former fault against the king, he was practising the courtly art of pleasing his master.
JFB.
Outline
1 Pharaoh's two dreams
25 Joseph interprets them
33 Josephe gives Pharaoh counsel
38 Joseph is promoted
50 The birth of Manasseh and Ephraim
53 The famine begins
Quick Reference Map
Map of the Nile River and Egypt
Ancient Customs
chief butler
Pharaoh
Dreams
shaved
changed his raiment
Egyptian magicians
famine
Pharaoh's ring
vestures of fine linen
gold chain about his neck
Egyptian priest of On
Ancient Topics
Hebrew
an answer of peace
Ancient People
Pharaoh, Joseph, butler, Asenath, Manasseh,
Ephraim
Zaphnathpaaneah
Potipherah
Geography
Egypt
On (Heliopolis)
The Old Testament
Genesis Resources
Creation
Adam and Eve
The
Flood
The Tower of Babel
Abraham the First Hebrew
Isaac, Son of Promise
Jacob
and the 12 Tribes
Joseph
and Egypt