Genesis 37
Who can understand the mind of God? We bow before the
One who not only reveals but also conceals. He knows all things. It
is His glory to choose when to keep a matter to Himself and when to
show it to the sons of men. It was His choice to use the favorite son
of Jacob, Joseph, as the one who would receive His revelation and
communicate it among men.
That special gift was known to Joseph even as a young
man. When he was seventeen years old and living in Canaan, his
brothers began to hate him. The fact that Joseph spoke for the Lord
did not change that hatred. It added to it.
In his dream, Joseph saw his preeminence over his
brothers and even over his mother and father, and he spoke of this to
his family. Even Jacob rebuked Joseph for his report of his dreams,
but his father kept the words of his son in his mind.
The hatred of Joseph's brothers led to their horrible
attack against their brother and a ruthless deception against their
father Jacob. The older boys sold him into bondage in Egypt and gave
his special clothes to his father, stained with the blood of a goat.
They presented this false evidence to their father for him to draw
his own conclusions.
This story is a very powerful one which began years of
lowliness for Joseph that speak to us of the humiliation and
suffering of the Son of God. Through the story of Joseph, we are
prepared to feel the facts of the abuse of Jesus more forcefully.
A long period of intense grief began for Jacob, the
boy's devoted father. If Joseph's sufferings prepare us for the
coming of Jesus and for the cross, Jacob's grief reminds us that the
Father loved the Son, but gave Him up for us all. The illustration
must fall short, since Jesus was a willing victim, and His Father,
while truly feeling grief, did not allow Himself to be deceived by
us.
We find our place in the drama of the ages in the
position of the brothers. It is because of us that Jesus went to the
cross. In the flesh, we would be those who bring the blood-stained
garment back to Jacob, acting innocent. We would allow a man to
grieve for years if we could maintain the fiction that we were
guiltless.
The brothers did have some struggle and intrigue before
settling on the eventual plan that would lead to Joseph's slavery in
Egypt. Their first inclination was to kill him themselves. “Here
comes this dreamer. Come now, let us kill him and throw him into one
of the pits. Then we will say that a fierce animal has devoured him,
and we will see what will become of his dreams.”
It was Reuben, the oldest, that told them not to take
the boy's life, and who even had a private intention to get Joseph
out of the pit after a little brotherly discipline that would teach
the boy a lesson. But that was not to be.
They were all a part of the tearing down of the one who
truly had a Word from God, a Word of his royal authority that would
fit into the Lord's plans for the salvation of his people. They would
not hear that Word in their hearts. They tore off the boy's robe and
threw him into a pit.
Reuben stepped away for a moment, and the rest of the
brothers came up with the wicked idea to sell Joseph to some
slave-trading Ishmaelites who were on their way to Egypt. They even
made themselves sound good in their restraint. “Come, let us sell
him to the Ishmaelites, and let not our hand be upon him, for he is
our brother, our own flesh.” Think of the chief priests and the
elders of Israel. They wanted to be ceremonially clean so that they
could eat the Passover. … Let Judas do his part. Let the Romans be
the ones to strike the final blow. We can remain guiltless regarding
what happens to Jesus of Nazareth.
When Reuben returned, he saw that his own intention to
secretly rescue Joseph had now been thwarted. He despaired of the
consequences to himself, the oldest brother, because of what the
others had done to their father's favorite son. “The boy is gone,
and I, where shall I go?”
That is when they took Joseph's robe, dipped it in
blood, and brought it to their father. “This we have found; please
identify whether it is your son's robe or not.”
Something died in Jacob that day. Grief and unending
sorrow began. The only thing that could have taken away this loss
would be to overturn it with resurrection.
He thought he knew for certain what had taken place. “It
is my son's robe. A fierce animal has devoured him. Joseph is without
doubt torn to pieces.” The deception had worked. But God knew. And
Joseph knew. Would the brothers ever tell the truth? Will we ever
admit that our sin brought Jesus to the cross?
The Lord who not only reveals, but also conceals, knows
the truth, and He knows the right time to reveal it openly. Though
men do what they will by their own hands and by the hands of others,
God works all things for good.
Joseph's journey down to Egypt would fit in with the
Lord's good plan. The cross of Christ would also work tremendous good
centuries later. His resurrection would bring joy to the Father and
to all those who would be cleansed by the blood of the Lamb. Draw
near to God. Tell Him the truth about yourself that He already knows.
Be forgiven and restored through the blood of His Son.
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