The Bible Recap - Day 026 (Genesis 41-42) - Year 4
Episode Date: January 26, 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: - T...he Bible Recap Store 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 ended with Joseph in prison in Egypt, forgotten by everyone but God, and probably
his dad Jacob.
Today we open with Pharaoh, the king of Egypt, having a pair of weird dreams.
They bothered him because as we talked about yesterday, the king of Egypt, having a pair of weird dreams. They bothered him because, as we talked about yesterday,
the ancient Near East cultures believed that dreams were messages from God.
So Pharaoh called for his magicians to interpret these dreams.
First of all, don't think David Blaine type magicians.
Think Hollywood medium type magicians.
They were more like spiritual mediums who would interpret signs and omens.
But second of all, and in general,
I should point out that consulting mediums
and spiritists is ill-advised.
We'll see that here, but also throughout scripture.
Pharaoh's magician mediums were useless.
It was all part of God's plan to help the cup bearer
remember that Joseph exists
and is really good at this dream interpretation thing.
After all,
Joseph had delivered God's interpretation of the Cutbearer's dream and the Chief Faker's dream
a couple of years earlier. So the Cutbearer filled Theroy in on this, and Theroy had Joseph
brought to him quickly, but not before a shave because those Egyptians loved a bald head.
Theroy asked Joseph for an interpretation, and Joseph makes it clear that this is not some skill
he possesses, but that it is, in fact, a gift from God.
Pharaoh shares the dreams of Joseph,
who then, without missing a beat, tells him what they mean.
There will be seven years of agricultural abundance
in Egypt, and then there will be seven years of famine
in that part of the world.
And it's about to happen real soon. Then after his dream interpretation, Joseph
Trump summed wisdom on Pharaoh. He basically says, because this is happening soon,
you should put someone in charge of preparation. That person should store up 20% of all the harvest
during the Abunda years. Pharaoh asked around about who should fill this role, and decides that
this Hebrew guy who was both discerning and wise, he should be the one in charge.
So he puts Joseph in charge of everything in his house.
Pharaoh gives him new clothes, which honestly just makes me nervous for Joseph at this point.
This doesn't usually go well for him.
Pharaoh gives him a new car, basically, and a gold chain, and puts a signet ring on him.
This is like the signet we talked about
with Judah, the one Tamar got from him, except it was a ring. These rings were like signatures that
you press into melted wax when you sign and seal a document, so it's a big deal that Joseph could
sign documents for the king. By this time, Joseph was 30 years old. When he was sold into slavery by
his brothers, he was 17, so he suffered
for 13 years. But God has brought him to a place of abundance and power. Pharaoh also arranged
a marriage between Joseph and a woman from a prominent local family. While Joseph is
busy storing up immeasurable amounts of food during the seven years of abundance, he also
fathers two children with his new wife, and names them Manasseh and Ephraim.
We'll be seeing those names a lot in our reading. Both of their names have meanings that
signify Joseph's gratitude. By the time seven years of abundance end, Joseph is 37. It's
now been 20 years since his brother sold him into slavery. Cut to Jacob, his father, back
in Canaan with 11 sons in need of food, the famine has begun
and they get word that there's grain for sale in Egypt.
So the 10 oldest brothers make the journey, about 450 miles, but dad keeps baby Benjamin,
who is probably in his 20s, at home to protect him.
Just a quick refresher, Jacob fathered children with two wives and two concubines.
Of those four women, his wife Rachel was the only one he loved.
They had two kids together, Joseph and Benjamin.
Obviously, Jacob is going to be extra protective of Benjamin because he thinks Joseph is dead,
so Benjamin is ostensibly his only child from his favorite wife.
So Benjamin did not make the trip to Egypt with his brothers.
Imagine being Joseph and Egypt, and one day your brothers who sold you into slavery appear
before you and bow to you, fulfilling the prophetic dream you had 20 years earlier.
Joseph recognizes them immediately, but he pretends not to.
He even speaks to them through an interpreter to keep them from knowing that he can speak
Hebrew.
He's pretty mean to them at first, even accusing them of being spies.
At first, it's hard to tell if he's being vindictive or if he has other motives at play here,
but all that eventually becomes clear.
They tell him they are 10 of 12 brothers from Canaan and that one is at home and one has
died, but Joseph acts like he doesn't believe them.
He says they have to prove that they aren't spies by bringing back the youngest brother.
This could have been a test of their sincerity,
but it was most likely a desire
to see his full brother Benjamin.
Then Joseph puts them all in custody for three days
and says he'll keep one brother as a hostage
while they make the round trip to get Benjamin
and prove they aren't spies.
The brothers panic.
Their struggle and confinement seem to really produce some introspection on their lives.
In conversation with each other, they confess their guilt and regret over what the Denda Joseph
discussing all of this in front of him in a language they don't know he understands.
Can you imagine?
Joseph steps away and weeps when he overhears all this.
The plan is for Simeon to stay behind an Egypt as a hostage while the others go back to
Canaan.
Joseph gives orders to give them free grain by sneaking their money back into their grain
sacks after they pay.
We don't know whether this is a test or an act of generosity or both, but the brothers
receive it as neither.
They think it's God's judgment.
Now, I've never gotten free money and thought God was judging me, so I can't relate, but
that's how they felt.
They panic again, and then we end today's reading with a cliffhanger.
The brothers break the news to Daddy Jacob that this guy in Egypt wants them to bring Benjamin
to him in order for Simian to be released.
And Jacob refuses.
Where did you see God today?
What did he do or what did he reveal to you about himself in the passage?
Honestly, it was pretty hard for me to nail down just one God shot today, but here we go.
I saw God's abundant generosity.
Not only does it show up in Joseph's life, that's an easy one, but it also shows up in
God's abundant generosity to his enemies.
Think about this, in Egypt, a land that did not worship him, a land that enslaved his people,
a land whose very name serves to represent his enemies throughout Scripture.
He sent one of his people to warn them about a famine and make a way to feed them.
And then, there's his generosity to Joseph's brothers
through Joseph himself.
They not only got grain, but they got their money back.
What appeared to be tragic and prompted fear in them
was actually a double portion that God generously provided.
But maybe you are in the famine right now,
and there's no end in sight.
You don't have the benefit of a seven-year timeline and it doesn't seem like God is being generous.
Let me encourage you with Joseph's story.
I'm sure being in power is great
and having your own chariot is awesome,
but even in the pit and the prison,
Joseph knew that some very real sense of joy could be found there
because God was with him,
and he's where the joy is.
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