The Bible Recap - Day 025 (Genesis 38-40) - Year 4
Episode Date: January 25, 2022SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! Seriously, go there. - Join our PATREON community for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - M...atthew 1 - D-Group Promo Video - D-Group Map - D-Group Online SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today!
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Yesterday, we ended with Joseph's brother selling him into slavery, and he was subsequently
sold to a man named Potterfair who worked for the King of Egypt.
Joseph's brothers led his father Jacob to believe he was dead, and Jacob was crushed.
Today, we have a brief intermission from Joseph's story where we follow what's happening at that time in the life of his half-brother Judah, Leah's fourth son.
Judah finds a wife from among the Canaanites.
We've seen them a lot already, we'll continue seeing them. They're the cursed descendants of Noah's son, Ham. they're not worshippers of God, and they currently
inhabit the land God promised to give to this family.
Judah and his new wife have three sons, and he eventually arranges a marriage between
his oldest son, Er, and a woman named Tamar, but Er was wicked, so God kills him, because
he's God, and he knows hearts.
God is both just and merciful.
In this instance, he leans into his justice.
So if you're feeling any kind of impulse
to set yourself up as a judge over God because of this,
I would just encourage you to remember
that he's the one who gets to make those kinds of decisions.
We've all committed treason against God in his kingdom
and we all deserve death.
So no matter what Er did or didn't do,
he got what he deserved.
The rest of us are just living on mercy.
After Er's death, Judah gave Tamar his second son in marriage, because if she had neither
a husband nor children, it was essentially a death sentence for her in that day.
There'd be no one to care for her or provide for her.
It seems like Judah was really trying to take care of Tamar.
But son number two wasn't having it, so he got sneaky about it to make sure he didn't get
her pregnant.
God's protection of Tamar kicks in when this happens, and God kills Sun No. 2.
Sun No. 3 was still a child at that point, so Chuta told Tamar to stick around until
he was old enough to marry.
But Chuta didn't seem keen on keeping his promises, and Tamar
was fearful that she should never have kids, so she took matters into her own hands.
We've seen this kind of thing a few times before, and we're not even a month in yet.
For the descendants of Abraham, children were the sign of God's blessing, because that's
what he promised Abraham, so to not have children was shameful for one of Abraham's descendants.
One day, after Judah's wife died, Tamar heard he was going on a trip.
She veiled herself and positioned herself on the road to be taking.
Some theologians think she intentionally dressed like a prostitute and planned this scenario
all along, but others believe she veiled herself as a reminder to Judah that he was supposed to be
helping her marry his son. Either way, when he mistook her for a prostitute, she went along with
the ruse. He slept with her and she cleverly asked for collateral until his payment, which was a
goat, could arrive. So he gave her his signate, which was like a form of ID. He also gave her the
cord it was on and his walking staff, which was probably also personalized and unique to him. He sent the
goat to her later, but surprised she was nowhere to be found. A few months later, word gets out
that Tamar is pregnant, and Judah orders her to be burned. She pulls the big reveal of all
Judah's personal items that he gave her, and he's busted.
Through this process, Judah is deeply humbled, and Tamar's life is spared.
Then she gives birth to twins.
Chapter 39 zooms back in on Joseph, who is still in captivity in Egypt.
One of the first things we learn about him was that he wasn't alone.
This chapter tells us four times that the Lord was with Joseph.
God's nearness to him and blessing on his life
made his master, Potapher, take notice.
God was causing him to succeed,
so Potapher put him in charge of more things
in hopes that more things would be successful.
It doesn't seem like this was some kind of
religious move on Potapher's part.
It wasn't like he saw the blessing on Joseph's life and said,
I want to worship this God who blesses you.
It just sounds like this was more of a business decision.
Still, for Joseph's sake, God bless this, and Potiphar trusted Joseph all the more.
This falls right in line with the promised God made to the patriarchs.
By the way, that's what we call the fathers of our faith who are from this particular family, patriarchs. The word refers specifically to Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob. God has promised to bless those who blessed them and curse those who curse them,
and now He's continuing this with Jacob's son Joseph. Joseph was easy on the eyes, and
part of his wife tried to seduce him. She launched a repeated campaign
of temptation against him, but he remained honorable. He knew it would be a sin not just against
his master and her and himself, but primarily against God. Since her efforts at seduction weren't
working, she forced herself on him, but he ran away. Rejection hits anyone hard, but this woman
took revenge to the next level, using the
clothes she had torn off him to accuse him of trying to attack her.
This is the second time Joseph has been wrong by someone who then uses his clothes to lie
about him.
If I were Joseph, I might start to get a little paranoid about my clothes.
You may have noticed that she calls Joseph the Hebrew, so I want to explain that
term briefly and why it's here in the text. First of all, Abraham, Joseph's great-grandfather,
was from Hebron, and there seems to be a close association with people of that region generally
being referred to as Hebrews. The term Hebrew is often used interchangeably with the term Israelites,
which refers to the descendants of Abraham, via Jacob Israel.
So Hebrew is usually more of a geographic identifier of a person, and Israelite is often more
of a reference to lineage.
To further complicate this, Hebrews also the name of the language they speak.
So when Potiphar's wife points out that Joseph is a Hebrew, she's trying to slander him.
She's leaning on the racial tension that exists
between her people, the Egyptians, and Joseph's people, the Hebrews. Despite Joseph's loyalty
to Potiphar for more than a decade of service, he puts Joseph in prison. There's not even a trial
where he can defend himself because he's a Hebrew slave in Egypt, so he has no rights. But guess what?
This is where we see two of the places that this chapter tells us.
The Lord, capital L-O-R-D, intimate, personal Yahweh, was with him. We don't have any record of
Joseph having personal conversations with God like his ancestors did, but God makes it clear
that he was there with him. And because God was with him, Joseph gained favor with the guards and continued to succeed, even in prison.
After Joseph becomes the highest ranking prisoner to new prisoner show up, the King's Cup Bearer and Chief Baker.
Both of these guys had really important positions. They had to be trustworthy because they had the responsibility of making sure the King wasn't poisoned. They were in charge of his food and beverages.
One night they both have dreams that bum them out, and they want someone to interpret them for them.
In ancient Near East culture, dreams were viewed as messages from God, and there were lots of
magicians who could interpret your dreams for you. But there apparently weren't any magicians
in prison, so these two guys were stuck. At Joseph knows that only God can provide an accurate interpretation for any messages he
sends via dreams, and Joseph also knows that God is with him, so he steps up in confidence.
He interprets the cupbearer's dreams first, and it has a favorable outcome.
He'll be restored to his position in three days.
He's overjoyed.
And Joseph knows that the cupbearer's reinstatement could be the key to his own freedom as well,
so he asked the cutbearer to put in a good word for him.
Then the chief baker shares his dream, but the interpretation is not so awesome.
He's going to be killed in three days.
It's pretty clear from Joseph's interpretations that he isn't just trying to win friends
by saying nice things.
The King's birthday is three days away,
and everything happens just as God had said
and Joseph had interpreted, both good and bad.
But the real let down for Joseph
is that the cut bearer forgets about him.
Where did you see God's character
and attribute show up in today's reading?
My God shot was in the story of Tamar and Judah
and his sons.
The whole story is filled with sin from top to bottom, wickedness, fear, deception, manipulation,
hypocrisy, prostitution, and-or adultery, but here's what I saw about God in this.
I saw his faithfulness.
Despite all the ways these people were unfaithful to him, he remained faithful to his promise
to their family.
How do we know this? Matthew 1, List, Judah, Tamar, and their son Paris in the lineage of Jesus. While scripture never endorses most of what
happens in Genesis 28, God was working in all that mess to bring about the birth of the very one
who would redeem us from sins like these.
That means Jesus comes from the line of Judah, which is why one of his names is the Lion
of Judah.
Judah was a broken man, Tamar was a broken woman, and we don't know a lot about their
son Paras, but I'm sure he was no walk in the park either.
It all goes to show us that even though we will be unfaithful, he will continue to be faithful to every promise he made.
He's a promise keeper, and he's where the joy is.
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