Genesis 41
So many years ago, God had given a word to Joseph
indicating that his brothers would bow before him. As Joseph lived in
an Egyptian prison, forgotten by the man who might have remembered
him to Pharaoh, rejected and abandoned by his brothers, and mourned
by his father, he seemed a most unlikely human being to fulfill that
prophetic word. But now, though all hope seemed to be lost, the
long-awaited deliverance and exaltation of this favorite son of Jacob
was about to begin.
Pharaoh had two very troubling dreams, dreams of life
and death, dreams where the darkness of death more than swallowed up
the fruitful bounty of life. In the morning, Pharaoh was troubled in
his heart over these dreams, and there was no man who could be found
to give Pharaoh a true interpretation.
It was then that the strange providence of God so
perplexing to our minds fell perfectly into place. If Joseph's
brothers had not sold him into slavery, he never would have been in
Egypt now. If Potiphar's wife had not lied about Joseph, he never
would have met the cupbearer of Pharaoh and interpreted his dream. If
the cupbearer had not ignored Joseph's plea and forgotten him for two
years, then Joseph might have been long gone, back again in Canaan,
when this all-important moment finally arrived. God held Joseph in
just the right place of humiliation until the night that Pharaoh had
two unsettling dreams and needed an interpreter. It was then that the
cupbearer remembered Joseph.
From that moment of remembrance onward, nothing would
ever be the same. Pharaoh sent and called for Joseph, and this Hebrew
slave and presumed criminal was brought up out of the pit of prison
to stand at the place of power.
At that critical juncture in Joseph's life he could have
so easily glorified himself in his sudden appearance before one of
the big men of the world. He instead testified to the greatness of
God. He said, “It is not in me; God will give Pharaoh a favorable
answer.”
The first insight that the Lord gave to Joseph is that
the two dreams of Pharaoh had one interpretation. They were both
describing the same events that would soon take place. These dreams
were about the next fourteen years, seven of which would be very
fruitful, followed by another seven that would be years of drought
and famine. The doubling of the dream was like a divine oath showing
certainty. These events would surely take place.
Joseph not only understood what the dreams were all
about, he also knew what should be done to prepare for the famine
that would eventually come to the entire region. Saving for seven
years was the most practical solution to the problem of the years of
trouble that would soon be upon them. The solution that Joseph
proposed involved the selection of an able administrator who would
save thousands of lives. A discerning and wise man needed to be set
over the land of Egypt during this time of future crisis and present
opportunity.
Pharaoh was pleased with the idea and recognized Joseph
as the best man for the job. “Can we find a man like this, in whom
is the Spirit of God?” What a change had taken place in just a few
short hours! This forgotten young man had been lifted up to the
highest station in the Egyptian Empire in a matter of hours.
When we think that our lives are over, we make a
conjecture about matters that are clearly beyond us. God is able to
take a man from the ash heap and to make him sit with princes. He
does not need a lot of time to accomplish such an amazing
transformation.
Imagine what it was like for Joseph to hear these words:
“See, I have set you over all the land of Egypt.” God also
provided him with a wife and two children that would be a part of the
twelve tribes of Israel. His brothers would still have to be brought
by God to Egypt in order to see the one who had risen to such a lofty
height, but it was already possible that their arrival would mean the
fulfillment of Joseph's great dream so long ago. His brothers would
bow before him.
For now he would begin to implement the plan that would
save so many lives that he had spoken of in the hearing of Pharaoh.
Seven years of saving followed by seven years of controlled spending–
this would be the way that so many people would escape starvation.
If we accept this story as one of the great turn-around
moments in the Bible, we need to see it as a preparation for a far
greater event in the life of Jesus, and through Him, in our lives as
well. Jesus was lying as a dead man in a borrowed tomb. Then He was
risen from the grave. One day, in the twinkling of an eye, the dead
will be raised imperishable, and those who are alive at the coming of
the Lord will put on immortality without having to go through the
ugly gate of death.
The exaltation of Joseph is only a hint. Even the
resurrection of Jesus Christ is a very small beginning for a kingdom
movement that would take over the world. It is the full coming of the
new resurrection world that will surely take our breath away.
Be strong and of good courage. A man has been found who
knows the full story of the coming new heavens and earth. This Jesus
has begun, in His own resurrection, a life for you that will never
end. He knows the full meaning of the current moment, and when we
least expect it, He will gather us with the power of a world of
resurrection glory.
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