“And He called
for a famine upon the land; He broke the whole staff of bead. He sent a man
before them, Joseph, who was sold as a slave. They afflicted his feet with
fetters, he himself [his soul] was laid in irons; until the time that his word
came to pass, the word of the LORD tested him” (Psalm 105:16 – 19).
There is a sense
in which we can speak of three Josephs when we read Genesis and Psalm 105. This
may seem strange to us, it may even seem outrageous to some, but it is the
truth. It would not have always been viewed strangely, certainly not, I think,
in the early days of the Church, the Church which was seeing Christ throughout
all Scripture, and in seeing Christ was seeing His Body, and in seeing His Body
was seeing themselves.
In Joseph we see
Jesus Christ. We see Jesus rejected by His brothers, sold into death, released
from prison, exalted to the right hand of God. In Jospeh we see Jesus in that
what men meant for evil, God meant for good. In Joseph we see Jesus in forgiveness.
In Joseph we see the salvation of many through suffering, and thus we see
Jesus. Joseph becomes a source of salvation, a refuge for many, a picture of
Jesus the Christ. Just as Joseph’s brothers rejected the message of Joseph’s
dreams, so Jesus’ brothers, Israel, along with mankind rejected the Word of
Jesus. Just as the Word of the LORD was tried in Joseph, so the Word was tried
within Jesus Christ. “Though He were a Son, yet He learned obedience by the
things which He suffered” (Hebrews 5:8 – 9).
There are, of
course, contrasts in the story of Joseph and Jesus. Jacob did not knowingly
send Joseph down into Egypt; the Father knowingly, willingly, and lovingly gave
His Only Begotten Son. Joseph did not understand that betrayal, slavery, and
prison lay between his dreams and their fulfillment, Jesus knew that the Cross
beckoned Him.
If then we see
Jesus Christ in and through Joseph, we also see the Body of Christ in and
through Joseph, for as Augustine says, “As with the Head, so with the Body.” That
is, if we are the Body of Christ, then we participate with Christ in His story,
in His calling, in His mission. This is a theme of the Bible and an explicit
teaching of the New Testament. We love as He loves, we are in the Trinity in
Him, we are sent as the Father sent Him, we are to live in the koinonia of His
sufferings, we are even to “fill up what is lacking in Christ’s afflictions” (Col.
1:24, whatever that may mean). We are, let us recall, to be conformed to His
image (Romans 8:29).
This means that we
suffer on behalf of others, that what others mean for evil, our God means for
good. It means that we, as His Body, are tried in the fires of testing and
obedience and persecution just as Joseph and Jesus were tried. It means that
God’s Word is tested within us, as His Word was tested in Joseph and Jesus (1
Peter 1:3 – 9). It means that the calling of God the Father is within us, just
as it is in Jesus Christ. It means that the Incarnation continues within us
because Christ lives within us His Body.
This further
means that when we read “they afflicted his feet with fetters” that we can
read, “They afflicted His feet with fetters.” The feet of the Body of Christ
were afflicted with fetters, they are being afflicted with fetters, they are
bound, their movement is restricted, they are in prison.
Can we see “they
afflicted His feet with fetters” in Romans 8:18 – 25? Can we see that “the
sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory
that is to be revealed in us” (Rom. 8:18)? Just as the sufferings of Joseph were
not worthy to be compared with his exaltation to Pharoah’s right hand and his feeding
of the people and his family, just as the sufferings Jesus were not to be
compared with the “joy set before Him” (Heb. 12:2), so our present sufferings pale
in comparison to the coming glory of Christ in us and us in Christ. Indeed,
Christ in us fully and completely is our “hope of glory” (Col. 1:27; see also 2
Thess. 1:10 – 12).
The culmination
of the suffering of the saints in Revelation is the glory of God in His People
and His People in God (Revelation chapters 21 – 22).
O dear friends,
our hope is in Jesus and His Word, our hope is in the promises of our Father,
through which we partake of His Nature (2 Peter 1:4). The temptation while we
are in prison is to scheme our own way out rather than wait for God. We have
pressure to build the House of God when only God can build His House (Psalm
127:1 – 2). Our Christianity is driven by a “make it happen” mentality which
abandons abiding in the Vine (John 15:1ff).
We have left our
first love, and we pride ourselves on our sparkling and entertaining and
man-centered Christianity – we have no grain with which to feed the people,
there is a famine for the Word of God (Amos 8:11 – 12). Let there be no mistake,
we can know the Bible in the sense of knowing its informational content and not
know the Word of God. The Word of God transforms us into the image of Jesus
Christ. The Word of God results in radical obedience to Jesus. The Word of God emanates
from the Cross of Christ. The Word of God bears the fruit of Matthew 25:34 – 40,
a fruit which transcends political, economic, social, national, and cultural
considerations – in fact, it puts the earthly to death.
I take great
hope in Psalm105:16 – 22 and the story of Joseph. I believe that while our feet
may be in fetters, that while the Word of God tries us, that Romans 8:18 – 25 awaits
us. I believe that the manifestation of the sons of God not only awaits us, but
that blessing awaits the peoples of the earth, for whatever we are experiencing
is for the glory of God and the blessing of others.
Just as Joseph
was able to say, just as Jesus has told us again and again, we also can say
both now and in the consummation of the ages, “What you meant for evil. God
meant for good.”
As the Father
sent Joseph, as the Father sent Jesus, so Jesus sends us (John 17:18; 20:21).