GOD WAS WITH JOSEPH
Genesis 37-39 Lesson 15a
Key Verse 39:2
"The Lord was with Joseph and he prospered, and he lived in the house
of his Egyptian master."
*JOSEPH'S YOUTH (37:1-36; Chapter 38)
1.Why did Joseph's brothers hate him? (2,3,4,5,8,11) What was his home atmosphere
probably like?
2.Describe Joseph's dreams. What did they reveal about God's larger purpose for
Joseph? In the absence of a written Bible, how might God use dreams in Joseph's life?
Why didn't his brothers have dreams?
3.What was the errand Jacob gave Joseph? How did Joseph carry out the mission
his father gave him? What does this show about him?
4.How did Joseph's brothers come to sell him to Midianite traders going to Egypt?
What were the roles of Judah and Reuben in this crime? (42:21) How did they explain
to their father, and how did this affect his life?
5.What happened to Joseph? (36, Ps 105:17,18) What did Judah do after this?
(38:1-30) Describe his family life among the Canaanites.
6.Who was Tamar? Why did Judah say, "She is more righteous than I..." (38:26)
How does God use her to bring Judah back into the covenant history?
(See also Mt: 1:2,3)
*JOSEPH IN POTIPHAR'S HOUSE (38,39)
7.How does the writer describe Joseph's rise to power in Potiphar's house? (39:1-6a)
What are some of the things he had to overcome in that situation?
Why was he successful? (2,3,5)
8.Why was Potiphar's wife attracted to Joseph? How did she try to seduce him?
What was involved in the temptation other than physical desire? What reasons
did Joseph give for refusing her? What does this show about him?
9.What happened that caused Potiphar's wife's desire for Joseph to turn into hatred?
What happened to Joseph because of her lies?
10.In what kind of prison was Joseph put? What happened to him there?
How could he avoid becoming bitter and fatalistic? What does it mean
that "God was with Joseph"? What can you learn from Joseph's faith and life?
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GOD WAS WITH JOSEPH
Genesis 37:1-39:23 Lesson 15a
Key Verse 39:2
"The Lord was with Joseph and he prospered, and he
lived in the house of his Egyptian master."
In many ways, Joseph is the fruit of Genesis. He lived in a cursed
world and felt the full force of the curse of sin overwhelming him like
the rushing torrent of a river at flood stage. But he believed in the
God of Genesis, the Almighty God who created the heavens and the earth.
He believed that God is the Lord of history and the Sovereign Ruler of
men and nations. He believed that God had a purpose for his life, for
he believed the promises of God. He knew that God was with him--even
when circumstances seemed to say that God had forgotten him. He never
doubted the love of God. So God trained him and blessed him and used
him to save many lives, especially, to save a remnant of God's people,
keeping them alive on the earth both physically and spiritually.
Although Joseph was not the covenant son, his life of redemptive love
points to Jesus and reflects his image.
The covenant son was Judah. His life is a stark contrast to that of
Joseph. In his early years he was as evil as Joseph was good. But God
worked a miracle of grace in Judah's heart and he was changed. Joseph's
redemptive love for his brothers was the catalyst that brought about
that change. But that is the subject of a later lesson. In this lesson
we want to meet the God who was with Joseph.
1. Joseph's youth (37:1-36)
This is the account of Joseph and his brothers. Joseph was the
eleventh son of Jacob. He grew up in a home that was full of jealousy
and human conflict. His father was a successful businessman and was
very wealthy. He had 2 wives, 2 concubines 12 sons and a daughter. The
Bible does not make any comment about Jacob's having 4 wives--he was a
man of his times; but the suffering and tragedy that this brought to
him and to his family is very evident. And this is clearly a lowering
of God's standard for marriage in Genesis 2. Joseph's father, Jacob,
was very partial to his second wife, Rachel, and Joseph was her first
son. After Rachel died while giving birth to her second son, Jacob
lavished all of his love and affection on Joseph. Somehow, Joseph was
not spoiled; he received his father's love well, and grew up until he
was a teenager of 17 without lacking anything. He loved his father and
was obedient to him. He was oblivious to his brothers' jealousy and had
no idea of the intensity of their hatred for him. Once, when he was
tending the flocks with some of his brothers--the concubines' sons, he
brought his father a bad report about them. This didn't improve their
relations. Later on, his father made him a very special coat. It was
richly ornamented--it looked like a prince's robe. Every time he
innocently wore it, his brothers burned with jealousy.
From his youth Joseph was different. He dreamed dreams. His dreams
were not ordinary dreams. They were God's revelation to him. They were
like his Bible, for there was no written Bible at that time. So Joseph
became a "Bible student" who meditated on God's word. Because Joseph
lived his life on a spiritual level, he could see things from a
different perspective. He deeply accepted God's sovereignty, not only
for his own personal life, but also over the created world and over
history. His brothers could not comprehend his inner spiritual life.
Joseph was a pure-hearted man, so everything seemed pure to him. He
seemed unaware of the raging storm of jealousy that whirled around him.
His brothers hated him for being a tattle-tale; they hated his
beautiful coat; but most of all, they hated his dreams. He seemed
totally unaware of their hatred when he innocently told them about his
dreams, especially his dream about the sheaves of grain in the field,
then later, about his dream of the sun, moon and eleven stars bowing
down to him. No one understood his dreams, but Joseph hid them in his
heart. They were God's word of promise to him.
One day, Joseph's easy-going, prince-like life came to an abrupt
end. He was 17 years old, and his father sent him on an errand to find
his brothers who were taking care of their father's flocks near
Shechem. When he came to the place where they were supposed to be, they
were gone. He didn't give up and go back home, but asked around and
found that they had gone further north to a place called Dothan. So he
went there.
When they saw him coming, wearing his beautiful coat, their anger
and hatred boiled over. They remembered his audacious dreams and
decided to kill him. The oldest son, Reuben, was too weak to exercise
any leadership among his brothers, but he secretly planned to rescue
Joseph. They followed Reuben's suggestion and stripped him of his
beautiful robe and threw him in an empty cistern. Reuben intended to
come back and pull him out. But before he could do so, something
happened.
Judah was the 4th son, but he was the real leader. He saw a caravan
of Midianite traders on their way to Egypt, and had a brilliant idea.
"Let's not kill him. What would we gain by that? Let's sell him to the
Midianites." The brothers agreed. Reuben was not around, so they
pulled Joseph up out of the cistern and sold him for twenty shekels of
silver to the Ishmaelites (Midianites) who took him to Egypt, and sold
him to a man named Potiphar, the captain of Pharaoh's guard.
2. Judah's unfaithfulness (38)
Before picking up Joseph's story in Egypt, the writer tells us about
Judah, the brother who proposed and carried out the terrible plot to
sell his younger brother into slavery. After the deed was done, Judah
and his brothers dipped Joseph's beautiful coat in the blood of a goat
and took it to their father. He saw the bloody coat and concluded that
a wild animal had killed Joseph. From that day on, he could not be
comforted. A gloomy pall settled over the family. Judah couldn't stand
it. He couldn't deal with his father's inconsolable grief or with his
own guilt. So, he left home.
Chapter 38 begins with the words, "At that time, Judah left his
brothers and went down to stay with a man of Adullam named Hirah." He
met and married a Canaanite woman, and had three sons by her. He raised
his sons there among the Canaanites. When his elder son was old enough,
he got a wife for him. Her name was Tamar, and she was a faithful
woman. Judah's son Er was wicked and the Lord put him to death. The
second son, Onan, was told to take his brother's widow as his wife,
according to the levirate law. He, too, was wicked and the Lord put him
to death also. Judah didn't want to give Tamar to his third son, so he
sent her to her father's house with a promise which he did not intend
to keep. In the meantime, Judah's wife died.
Tamar realized that Judah was not going to keep his promise, so she
took matters into her own hands. She disguised herself as a prostitute
and slept with Judah, her father-in-law, and conceived. She was
determined not to die a sorrowful, fruitless widow in her father's
house. She was called to bear an heir for the covenant family, and she
was determined to do so. She was faithful to her husband's family.
When Judah found out what she had done he said, "She is more righteous
than I..." (26) After she gave birth to twin boys, Judah took his
family and returned to his father's house. One woman's faithfulness
touched his heart, and he came home to become a faithful son, and again
become a leader among his brothers.
3. JOSEPH IN POTIPHAR'S HOUSE (39:1-23)
Joseph was suddenly thrust into the cruel reality of slave life in a
strange land. Psalm 105:18 says, "They bruised his feet with shackles,
his neck was put in irons." Genesis 42:21b says, "We saw how distressed
he was when he pleaded with us for his life, but we would not
listen..." The Bible does not tell us about his early years as a slave
boy in Egypt, but we can imagine how many blows he must have received
and how many tears he must have shed in the night as he thought about
his father. We can imagine how lonely and frightened he must have been.
We are not told how he mastered the language of Egypt, but he did, for
later he spoke like a native. He was a hard worker, and he overcame
himself and his environment. The writer of Genesis only tells us, "The
Lord was with Joseph and he prospered..." (39:2) He grew from a
slender, dreamy boy of 17 into a handsome, well-built man of 25 or 26.
He was an able man and his life in Potiphar's house demonstrates the
real meaning of the word, "stewardship." The words of Ephesians 6:5-8
might have been written about Joseph. "Slaves, obey your earthly
masters with respect and fear and with sincerity of heart, just as you
would obey Christ. Obey them not only to win their favor when their eye
is on you, but like slaves of Christ, doing the will of God from your
heart. Serve wholeheartedly, as if you were serving the Lord, not
men..." Because Joseph accepted God's sovereignty and trusted God's
love in both good times and bad, his heart did not become crooked. He
believed that the sovereign God loved him even more than his father had
loved him, and that God had sent him to Egypt for a purpose.
The life of faith must be undergirded by a deep and humble
acceptance of God's sovereignty. This means that one can't become
fatalistic. One's life is not determined by an impersonal fate or by
accidents or by chance. The loving Sovereign God is the Ruler and Lord
of life. He created each of us for a purpose and he is working out that
good purpose in each person's life--if we trust him.
Because God was in his heart, hardship and mistreatment did not
make him bitter; and success did not make him proud. These
experiences--the good and the bad--made him grow in character in his
inner man. All people have ups and downs in life. Some people become
bitter and angry toward God when they encounter hard things; and they
become proud or self-indulgent when things go well. But God was with
Joseph, and Joseph trusted God, so the experiences of his life, both
good and bad, pleasant and unpleasant, could be used by God to build
his character.
Joseph's time of testing came at the height of his power and success
as a steward and practical master of Potiphar's household. Potiphar's
wife was very much attracted to the young, handsome and very able
Joseph. She tried to seduce him, not just once, but day after day.
Joseph was clear and unwavering. He reminded her of her husband's
complete trust in him. But more than this, he told her that what she
was asking him to do was wicked in the sight of God. It was a sin. So
he refused to sleep with her, and he did his best to avoid her. If
Joseph had allowed passion, pride or ambition to get even a small
foothold in his heart, he would have surely fallen. But God was in his
heart. Potiphar's wife was proud and full of desire. She waited for an
opportunity and one day, found it. She was at home alone, and Joseph
came into the house to attend to some duty. She said, "Come to bed with
me." And she took hold of his cloak. Joseph fled, leaving his cloak
behind. She was furious. She turned the story around and lied to her
husband, and Joseph was thrown in jail.
Joseph had tried to do what was right; he was faithful to God, and
look where it got him--in jail. One might think that a slave is on the
very bottom of society and can go down no further, but that's not so. A
slave in prison is worse off. Joseph's imprisonment was a great
injustice. He could have been filled with bitterness; he could have
despaired. But he overcame himself and depended on God who was with him
in prison. Before long, he was the practical steward of the prison. God
was preparing him for a great task, and this was one necessary step
toward that task. Joseph believed that all things work together for
good to those who love God and are called according to his purpose (Ro
8:28). God was with Joseph because Joseph had faith in God.