Ever feel like you arrived too late and with the wrong story? Ephraim and Manasseh knew something of that. They were born in Egypt to a foreign mother and outside the bloodline of promise. But in these next few verses, we see that this did not matter to Jacob, or to God.
“Now then, your two sons born to you in Egypt before I came to you here will be reckoned as mine; Ephraim and Manasseh will be mine, just as Reuben and Simeon are mine. Any children born to you after them will be yours; in the territory they inherit they will be reckoned under the names of their brothers. As I was returning from Paddan, to my sorrow Rachel died in the land of Canaan while we were still on the way, a little distance from Ephrath. So I buried her there beside the road to Ephrath” (that is, Bethlehem). (Genesis 48:5–7)
Ever feel overlooked?
Jacob is old, and his eyes are failing, but his words here are deliberate. He adopts Ephraim and Manasseh, Joseph’s Egyptian-born sons, not as grandsons kept at a comfortable distance, but as his own. Equal in standing to Reuben and Simeon, the firstborn line. It is a remarkable act of inclusion.
Then, right in the middle of this legal arrangement, he stops and speaks about Rachel.
She died in the land of Canaan. A little way from Ephrath. I buried her there, beside the road.
Why say this now? Because these boys are Rachel’s grandchildren. And Jacob wants them to know it. He wants them to feel the weight of the line they belong to. He wants Joseph to hear it again, that the grief and love haven’t faded.
Jacob is not rushing past the painful details on his way to the promise. He is holding them and naming them.
Ephraim and Manasseh were born in Egypt, to an Egyptian mother, in a foreign land. By every measure of the ancient world, birth order, bloodline, and geography, they had no claim to what was being offered. The promise belonged to others. The inheritance was spoken for. They were, in the most literal sense, outside.
But Jacob reached across every one of those boundaries and said, “These are mine.”
This is covenant language. It is the same word at the heart of every promise God makes to his people: you are mine, I am yours, nothing in your story disqualifies you from that.
You may feel like you arrived too late. But this is the God who counts the overlooked in. Not despite your history. With it. You are counted. You are named. You are his.

