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Wednesday, February 21, 2018

BEING JOSEPH


Blogging Genesis 39:20–41:46

Genesis 39: 20 Then Joseph’s master took him and put him into the prison, a place where the king’s prisoners were confined. And he was there in the prison.


Joseph was a foreign slave declared guilty of the attempted rape of Potiphar’s wife; and Potiphar didn’t immediately execute and/or castrate him?  Instead he used his position as captain of the guard to have incarcerated in the KING’s prison.    The rest of chapter 39 doesn’t depict the prison as particularly cruel.  The inmates seemed to have a great deal of freedom, like it was a minimum-security, country-club prison.  Which implies that  Potiphar retained some sympathy for his house-slave and possibly some doubt about his wife’s testimony.   Goes to show that “When a man’s ways please the Lord, He makes even his enemies to be at peace with him” (Proverbs 16:7).  Goes to show that when God’s on your side they can’t break you even when they want to.


Even while locked up, “the Lord was with Joseph and showed him mercy, and He gave him favor in the sight of the keeper of the prison” (Genesis 39: 21).  Joseph was transferred from general population to work detail as one of the warden’s  household slaves.  In that capacity, Joseph ran the prison, but something  inside him was changing.

When Israel-Jacob promoted Joseph above his brothers the teenage manager exalted himself, bragging about his dreams of the family bowing down before him.  When he got the promotion in Potiphar’s house, Joseph attributed his rise to master’s good judgment and trusted in his good evaluations and company loyalty to protect him from sexual harassment, false accusations, and racial profiling. But by the time he began running the king’s prison, Joseph didn’t want another promotion.  He didn’t want the praise of people who didn’t care about him but only what profits he could generate.   

By the turning point in Genesis 40,  Joseph was WOKE to the injustice of the system in which he operated.   “I was stolen away from the land of the Hebrews; and also I have done nothing here that they should put me into the dungeon” (Genesis 40:15). 

In other words, Joseph said, “Yeah, I’m in the big house, but they still see me as a slave and a prisoner,” so “Remember me,”  he begged the cupbearer (Genesis 40:23). 


Meanwhile, he worked.  He worked for the man who kept him in dual bondage, and he endured being un-remembered by those to whom he had ministered in their time of distress.  Joseph no longer wanted to be promoted.  Joseph wanted to be FREE.


Years passed and Joseph was called to demonstrate his prophetic skills for the most powerful man in Egypt.  But Joseph had changed.  He wasn’t about self-promotion anymore.  To the contrary, he told the king of Egypt,  “It is not in me.”  He directed all the praise to “God,” whom Joseph affirmed, “will give Pharaoh an answer of peace.”
The son of Israel’s old arrogance was displaced by irreverence for “great” masters like the king of the Nile.   Twice, Joseph said, “God has shown Pharaoh what He is about to do,” which is kinda like saying, “Duuh.  Isn’t it obvious?  I mean,” Joseph continued, “the dream was repeated to Pharaoh twice because the thing is established by God, and God will shortly bring it to pass.” (Genesis 41: 25, 28, 32)

Get ready.  A twist is coming.

Joseph then outlined an ingenious plan to prepare Egypt for the coming economic downturn, and again an Egyptian promoted him; but this promotion elevated Joseph above his former masters and all masters in Egypt.  Pharaoh gave Joseph an Egyptian name and an Egyptian wife, making him a full Egyptian citizen (Genesis 41:39-45).  That’s not the twist.

Here’s the twist: Joseph got free, but he didn’t even try to go home. 

He could have asked Pharaoh for a chariot to take him back to Canaan to rejoin his family and prepare them for the famine.  He could have sent for his father and baby brother to come stay with him in Egypt.   Joseph could have reconnected with his tribe any number of ways, but he didn’t. 

He was finally free but his old family was as dead to him and he had been made to them.
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Promotion doesn’t mean you’re free.  Sometimes, neither does freedom.   

Yes, ultimately God brought them all back together.  But their re-unification, still years away at this point, would not undo decades of estrangement.  Joseph was going to be prime minister of the most powerful empire on the planet and he was still so wounded by his brothers’ betrayal that he turned his back on everything in his Hebrew culture --- except God.

WE are Joseph.

Black in America.  Residents by enslavement.  Citizens by struggle.  They have exploited our skills.  They have claimed our bodies for their entertainment.  They have jailed us unjustly. 

WE are Joseph.

We have struggled for promotion and for freedom in times and contexts where one had to be sacrificed for the other.    

WE are Joseph.

Our ancestral names and nations are dead to us.  Still, we dream through music and movies of re-unification with our motherland.  But the years of estrangement have stretched so long, and there are problems in this land that require our attention.  Here where we are citizens, named and known, are crises we can solve. 

WE are Joseph.

So, we do what we do.  We do our jobs, and we throw shade, and we speak truth to power and despite ourselves we get promoted because we are that gifted. 

WE are Joseph.

We gave up everything of who we were, but we kept our faith.  Tattered and misattributed as Black Christianity is, we keep the faith of our unconquered fathers because WE are Joseph.

YOU are Joseph.

Remember yourself.

Remember how God kept you. 

Remember that before you started helping Pharaoh realize his dream, God gave you dreams of your own.

Remember that the God you have not forgotten has not forgotten you. 

YOU are Joseph. 

Go be great.
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--Anderson T. Graves II   is a writer, community organizer and consultant for education, ministry, and rural leadership development.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Miles Chapel CME Church in Fairfield, Alabama. He writes a blog called A Word to the Wise at www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com

Email atgravestwo2@aol.com
Follow me on twitter @AndersonTGraves 

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Fairfield, Al 35064


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