Note: Devotional based on last Sunday's sermon on Genesis 47.
“And Joseph nourished his father,
and his brethren, and all his father’s household…” (Genesis 47:12).
We are right to suggest that there
are whispers (types) of the experience of Christ in the life of Joseph, though
we would also admit that this connection is not explicitly drawn within the NT
itself, unlike the connections that are made with other OT types (cf. Jonah as
a type of Christ in Matt 12:40).
The historical Joseph of Genesis is
not mentioned directly in the NT Gospels, although our Lord’s legal father,
Joseph of Nazareth, the husband of Mary, was named after him, as was Joseph of
Arimathea, the man who took Christ’s lifeless body down from the cross.
The historical Joseph of Genesis is
mentioned in only two places in the NT: First, in Stephen’s speech before his
martyrdom (cf. Acts 7:12-15), and second, in the “faith chapter” of Hebrews 11
(cf. Heb 11:21-22). In both of these, the main emphasis is on Joseph’s
providential role in preserving his family and bringing them into Egypt. But
there is also a focus in the sacred account in Genesis upon the piety and
righteousness of Joseph.
We saw it when Joseph had to bring an “evil report” to Jacob about
the sinful behavior of his brothers (37:2).
We saw it when with innocence and sincerity (with no guile or
grandiosity) he reported his dreams of his family bowing before him (37:5-11).
We saw it when Moses said Joseph was a “prosperous man,” even when
he was a slave in the house of Potiphar (39:2).
We saw it when he fled from the salacious advances of Potiphar’s
wife (39:12) and when he refused to sin against man (Potiphar) in committing adultery,
but most especially to sin against God (39:9b: “how then can I do this great
wickedness and sin against God”).
We saw it in his willingness to extend mercy and forgiveness to
his brethren who had treated him so maliciously (45:5; 8a).
And we see it also in Genesis 47 as Joseph is presented to us as a
man of virtue and diligence. We see this in at least three ways in Genesis 47.
First, he nourishes his father and brethren (47:1-12); second, he faithfully serves
Pharaoh the king, so that the people say, “Thou hast saved our lives” (47:25);
and third, he honors his father, even as Jacob neared death (47:30).
The Bible is not a mere moralistic handbook. Its focus is on the
glory of God, not the virtue of men, though it does provide us with virtuous
models to follow. Joseph is one such model.
The apostle Paul said,
“Be ye followers of me, even as I also am of Christ” (1 Cor. 11:1). And here in
Genesis, Joseph is saying to us: Follow me, as I also followed Christ.
As we have
opportunity: Let us nourish our brethren. Let us faithfully serve those who are
over us in the Lord. And let us honor father and mother, that our days may be
long upon the land which the Lord our God giveth us.
Grace and peace, Pastor Jeff
Riddle

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