Joseph, the
son of Jacob, would have to be the greatest example of the importance of
preparation. Joseph started off as somewhat of an insufferable teenager. Not that
he was unrighteous but because his advantages in early life were leading him to
a possible path of pride. Here’s what I mean by that:
1. He
was favoured and most loved of all of his father’s children. He was the only
one who was honoured with a coat of many colours which symbolized not only favouritism
but high status in the ancient world (Genesis 37:3). This alone had the potential
of going to his head;
2. He
policed his brothers and reported their evil doings to his father (v 2);
3. He
bragged about his dreams of the prosperous future and leadership that they
promised (v 5-10). This earned him the derision of his brothers who named him ‘the
dreamer’ (v 19).
The
favouritism, the self-righteousness, the revelations, all point to a teenage lack
of humility and a slippery slide in the opposite direction. Joseph was 17 when
his brothers cut him off from his home and sold him into servitude in Egypt but
by the time he was 30 he was Egypt’s ruler (Genesis 37:2; 41:46). When his brothers
arrived in Egypt to buy food, we see a different Joseph, a Joseph with a tender
heart willing to forgive and yearning to embrace his brothers and re-unite with
his family (Genesis 42:24; 43:24-31). This story alone is worth the weeping.
There was
something wonderful about Joseph….besides his integrity and righteousness, he
had an uncanny ability to make lemonade out of lemons. He possessed a positive
attitude and God used this attribute to refine and teach him. Through his
optimism Joseph could see and understand that his servitude in Egypt had a
higher purpose, that of saving the entire House of Israel (Genesis 45:5-8).
There was no pride in this admission, only credit and honour to God.
This was
the preparation of Joseph, a prolific figure in the patriarchal line and a
prototype of the promised Messiah. His life heralds the exciting and
complicated history of the House of Israel that we belong to. Knowing the patriarchs
and the people who shaped this history is a privilege we should consider to be of
immense worth.
Sometimes
God is preparing us for something great when it least seems like it…. “He has
the ability to turn everything into something good. This is a godly
characteristic. Everything, no matter how dire, becomes a victory to the Lord”
(Hartman Rector Jr., “Live Above the Law To Be Free”, Ensign Jan 1973, p 130).
It reminds me of this poem by Benjamin Malachi Franklin:
My life is but a weaving between my God and me,
I cannot choose the colours, He weaveth skillfully.
Oft times He weaveth sorrow; And I in foolish pride
Forget He sees the upper and I the underside.
Not till the loom is silent and the shuttles cease to
fly
Will God unroll the canvas and reveal the reason why
The dark threads are as needful in the weaver’s
skillful hand
As the threads of gold and silver
In the pattern He has planned.
- CATHRYNE ALLEN
(Art: Joseph of Egypt by Michael T. Malm)

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