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Genesis 41

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May 14, 2026
11:28

Joseph's life is full of drama. He was his father's favorite son (Genesis 37:3). He was hated by his brothers and ultimately sold as a slave (Genesis 37:4, 28). In Egypt, he was falsely accused of misconduct (Genesis 39:12-20) and imprisoned without any signs of a hopeful future (Genesis 39:20-23). Now Genesis 41 records the Pharaoh having a strange dream. "After two whole years, Pharaoh dreamed that he was standing by the Nile" (v. 1) The Bible mentions two whole years as "a matter of fact," but the psalmist remembers how physically and emotionally Joseph suffered in prison. Joseph, sold as a slave. They bruised his feet with shackles, his neck was put in irons, till what he foretold came to pass, till the word of the Lord proved him true (Psalm 105:17-19). For Joseph, who had high hopes of being proven innocent and being released from prison, the two years must have felt like twenty years. Time is a strange thing, isn't it? When we suffer, it feels like time stands still.  We often view delays as divine absence, but this chapter reveals that God is not absent in our suffering. It seems God is never in a hurry, though. But he is always on time, I am told. In fact, the "delay" is even necessary for us. Theologian A.W. Pink said,  "Waiting is not just a period of time that elapses before we get what we want. It is the process by which God prepares us for what He has for us." God often takes us to a place we don't want to be—a "prison" of suffering—where we receive blessings we could not fathom on our own. Personally, I wish it weren't so, but that's how it is. One of the most profound examples of this is Joni Eareckson Tada. In 1967, a diving accident left her a quadriplegic at just 17 years old. She went from being an active athlete to being confined to a wheelchair for the rest of her life. Joni's testimony captures this "Joseph-like" perspective. After over 50 years in a wheelchair as a quadriplegic, she has often remarked that she would rather be in her chair knowing God than on her feet without Him. She describes her paralysis not as a tragedy that sidelined her life, but as a "severe mercy." Like Joseph, her place of greatest confinement became the very platform God used to provide spiritual bread to a hungry world. It echoes a hard but beautiful truth: the place where we feel most restricted is often where God is doing His most expansive work. Joseph's story is a blessing because it ultimately points to Jesus Christ. Joseph foreshadows Jesus Christ:  • The beloved son is rejected by his brothers. • He is stripped, sold for silver, and cast into a pit. • He is raised from a "tomb" (the prison) to the right hand of power. • He becomes the source of bread for a dying world. However, there is a vital distinction. Joseph’s suffering was necessary to form his character. Christ, already perfect, suffered not to be improved, but to atone. Joseph’s suffering produced a leader; Christ’s suffering produced redemption. The God who remembered Joseph in a forgotten cell is the same God who raised Christ from a sealed grave. If you find yourself in a season where delays feel like denials and silence feels like absence, remember that your waiting is not wasted. The same God who remembered Joseph in a forgotten cell is the God who raised Jesus Christ from the sealed tomb. He is not absent in the silence. He is not late in the delay. What feels like confinement may become the place where faith deepens, pride is humbled, and grace bears unexpected fruit. No delay is long enough to derail what God has decreed. You are not forgotten. Support the show (https://www.buzzsprout.com/2601934/support)

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