Suffering Servant

Re: Verse reading–Genesis 41:25-57; 45:4-8 (day seven)  “It was not you who sent me here, but God.” (v 45:8)  He lived 1200 years before Isaiah.  2000 years before Jesus.  Nevertheless, Joseph saw the same truth that they would eventually teach.  Suffering and service are synonymous.  No one can save others and himself too.  Please notice the uncomplaining summary that Joseph gives for his heart-breaking years.  God sent me.  It was not the hatred of men that put me on this road.  It was God’s love.  “He was pierced for our transgressions, he was crushed for our iniquities”, says Isaiah 53:5.  There is a cost!  It is not a surprise to us (or shouldn’t be).  Jesus said the same.  “Unless a kernel of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains only a single seed.  But if it dies, it produces many seeds.”  (John 12:24)  The man who loves his life will lose it.  Serving God means bearing up under the suffering that comes.  You willing?

Decisive God

Re: Verse reading–Genesis 41:25-57; 45:4-8 (day six)  “God has shown Pharaoh what he is about to do. . .the matter has been firmly decided by God, and God will do it soon.”  (v 28, 32)  Joseph has a different picture of God.  Dynamic!  Decisive!  Unconsciously, most of us imagine God to be distant, passive, uninvolved.  Our cultural bias has given us this perception.  We tend to view life with the focus on human activity/decision.  Our plans.  Our decisions.  Not Joseph!  He believed God makes decisions without consultation from us and forcefully carries them forward.  This vision changed Joseph’s life.  “You intended it for evil, God intended it for good in order to bring about this present result.” (Genesis 50: 20)  Jesus said, “Will not God bring about justice for His elect. . . He will bring about justice for them quickly.” (Luke 18:7-8) Do you see the God Joseph saw?  Do you see God as decisive?  Actively, powerfully, clearly revealing Himself, inviting us to join Him?  Joseph did.

The gospel according to Joseph

Re: Verse reading–Genesis 41:25-57; 45:4-8 (day five)  It is a very long story by Biblical standards.  13 chapters in the book of Genesis.  Very rare for the scripture to dedicate so much space to one life.  Moses, who years later would follow Joseph into the highest hallways of Egyptian power and, who wrote the book of Genesis, must have been fascinated with every detail.  Well-deserved attention because Joseph’s story is a gospel–a declaration of the character and nature of God, His wisdom, mercy and faithfulness.  When they write the story of my life, will the connection be as clear?  Yours?  Will anyone say, “Can we find anyone like this man, one in whom is the spirit of God?”  (41:38)  Will they hear me saying, “You meant if for evil, but God meant it for good.”  (50:20)  I hope so.  “They were glorifying God because of me”, said the Apostle Paul. (Galatians 1:24) God intends it for every Christian.  My life, a gospel of God’s character.

God’s Plan

Re: Verse reading–Genesis 41:25-57; 45:4-8 (Day four)
God was about to do something in Egypt.  Twice He told Pharaoh what his plan was, but Pharaoh could not hear God’s voice.  Without a relationship with Him, Pharaoh’s hearing was ineffective.  God often makes His message plain for all to see, but only those in relationship with Him have the ability to understand.  Joseph had trusted in the Lord through many hardships.  His relationship with the Lord had stood the test of time.  The message was certain…when God speaks, He always is true to His word.  Twice He had given Pharaoh the same message.  It was for this purpose that God had sent Joseph to Egypt many years before.  Joseph would not only organize the preservation of Egypt, but he would also provide for his own people.  It was the fulfillment of the prophetic dream given to Joseph as a young boy.  It was God’s call in his life.  God has a plan for your life…can you hear it?

God Sent

Re: Verse reading–Genesis 41:25-57, 45:4-8 (day three)
When a stranger holds the door open so you can exit the store with arms full of groceries, you might say, “You’re a God-send!” When your tax return is just enough to cover the unexpected car repairs you might tell your friend, “it was a God-send!” What is this instinct in us that attributes unexpectedly good happenings as sent from God? Some will call it good fortune. Others will refer to providence. It takes no real act of faith to recognize and celebrate these fortuitous moments. The real act of faith is to look on the darkest and most painful moments of life and declare, “that was a God-send.” The eyes trained by faith will see God’s sovereign hand “preserving life” not just in the moments of “good fortune” but also in the moments of “sheer, bad luck.” Joseph said, “God sent me” through the trouble “to preserve life” (45:5). Joseph’s heart of faith was revealed by what his eyes perceived through his trouble. What do your eyes perceive through your trouble? Does what you perceive reveal a heart of faith?

Real

Re: Verse reading–Genesis 41:25-57, 45:4-8 (day two)
“It was to save lives that God sent me ahead of you.” Was everything that unfolded between Joseph and his brothers merely a divine drama, a providential play? If “all the men and women [are] merely players”, where’s the realness of life? Lest we think that Joseph’s life with his brothers functioned as a cosmic end justifying cosmic means, we would do well to consider this: The Joseph story isn’t a nation rescue protocol with a plotline attached to give it pizzazz. No. It’s all real, not a front for a hidden agenda. The cruelty of the brothers wasn’t some strange way of doing God’s will. Cruelty is cruelty, and evil is evil. But God is stronger. Even in impossible circumstances. The story doesn’t get told in order to make the point. The story is the point.

Wisdom from God

Re: Verse reading–Genesis 41:25-57, 45:4-8 (day one)
“Since God has made all this known to you, there is no one so discerning and wise as you.”  (v 39)  “So heavenly-minded that they are of no earthly good” is an accusation frequently hurled at believers.  It isn’t true.  Not always.  Joseph is an example of a man who has both spiritual insight and practical wisdom.  Able to interpret Pharaoh’s dream.  Able also to recommend positive steps to prepare for the coming famine.  Practical.  Bottom-line-wise.  Notice Pharaoh’s words.  “No one is as discerning (able to see the truth) or wise (knows what to do with the truth that is seen)”.  As followers of Christ, we are to see invisible things with spiritual eyes.  We are also to be very practical as we deal with material realities.  Budgets, health care, leadership strategies, timely communication. . .none of these are contrary to a spiritual life.  “Select from among you, brethren, seven men. . .full of the Spirit AND wisdom.”  (Acts 6:3)

Go back?

Re: Verse reading–Ruth 1:1-19 (day seven)
“Go back each of you. . .Turn back, my daughters, go your way, for I am too old to have a husband. . .and bear sons.” (v 8, 12)  At one level it seems unselfish of Naomi.  She doesn’t want to be a burden to her daughters-in-law.  At another level, it is very unwise of her to speak to them this way.  “Go back”?  What was she thinking?  She was thinking of herself and her own limited capacities!  Note her focus.  I am too old to have a husband.  I cannot give you sons to marry.  Maybe you recognize the trap of the enemy.  Whenever we focus on ourselves and our own resources the path of faith appears impossible.  Only as the God of glory and mercy and infinite creativity comes into view are we led to follow forward with our eyes on Him.  “With God all things are possible.”  (Matthew 19:26)  Shall we go back?  No!  Forward!

Blaming God

Re: Verse reading-Ruth 1:1-19 (day six)
“The hand of the Lord has turned against me.” (v 14)  We are all  prone to it.  I don’t know why.  Rather than look at our own choices and attitudes, we tend to blame God for the outcomes of our lives.  Naomi is a believer.  Her early faith influenced  Ruth.  But the death of her husband and then her sons has changed her, caused her to believe that God has turned against her,  become her adversary.  Strange logic.  It was not God who sent the Elimelech family to Moab.  It is not God who sponsored death into the world.  Thankfully, Naomi will soon return to her original faith.  At the end of the story, a grandson is born to Naomi and hope is reborn.  It will be a Job-like moment for Naomi.  “I have declared that which I did not understand. . .I retract, and repent.” (Job 42:3,6)  May it be so for all who blame God.

Finding security

Re: Verse reading–Ruth 1:1-19 (day five)
“The Lord grant that you may find SECURITY, each of you in the house of your husband.” (v 8)  Naomi is not thinking clearly.  She frames her ideas in religious language (“The Lord grant you. . .”) but her advice is not wise when she counsels Orpah and Ruth to seek security in Moab.  The Hebrew word  means “resting place, a place unruled by anxiety”.  Naomi makes a common mistake.  We all are tempted to think that security can be found in circumstances.  In marriage.  In a better job.  Perhaps Naomi is worried by the discrimination these women will likely face in Israel.  Perhaps she is so disappointed by her own faith-journey that she no longer remembers the true truth.  THERE IS NO SECURITY EXCEPT IN GOD.   I am grateful today for the gospel. “We have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ.”  (Romans 5:1)  “Come unto Me,  I will give you rest” says the Lord.  (Matthew 11:28)