I preached on the Joseph story and came across something that should be a great encouragement to Christians facing difficult circumstances.
If youâre familiar with the story, you know that Joseph goes through a whole lot of ups-and-downs. Heâs sold into slavery by his brothers (Boo!), but soon rises to #2 position in his masterâs house (Yay!). Heâs thrown into jail for something (actually, someone) he didnât do (Boo!), but then he gets put in charge of his fellow-inmates (Yay! Sort of). Then, itâs all good, as Joseph becomes Pharaohâs right-hand man and saves his people from the potentially devastating effects of a seven-year famine.
The point of the story, of course, is that NOTHINGâincluding a dysfunctional family where a husband and father plays favorites with his wives (Oh, Rachel!) and his children (Oh, Joey & Benny!)âcan derail Godâs plan to use Abrahamâs offspring to fix the mess Adam made. God, it turns out, has been in control throughout the whole scenario, as Joseph himself recognizes at the end of the story: âYou intended to harm me, but God intended it for good to accomplish what is now being done, the saving of many livesâ (Gen 50:20).
So, God was with Joseph all along the way. But, interestingly enough, the narrator only explicitly says so two times in the whole accountâright at those two places in the story where circumstances appear most hopeless for Joseph.
In Genesis 39:1b, we read, âPotiphar, an Egyptian who was one of Pharaohâs officials, the captain of the guard, bought him from the Ishmaelites who had taken him there.â The very next verse begins with the statement, âThe LORD was with Joseph.â
Then, once again, after Potipharâs wife had falsely accused Joseph of attempting to âmake sportâ of her (gotta love those biblical euphemisms), the Holy Spirit wants us to know that even hereâin what is arguably the darkest moment in Josephâs lifeâGod was close at hand: âBut while Joseph was there in the prison, the LORD was with himâŚthe LORD was with Josephâ (39:21-23).
Now we know that God was with Joseph throughout the story. Godâs sovereign intervention on behalf of His people is the point of the whole saga. But only when (a) Joseph is sold into slavery and (b) thrown into prison do we encounter the phrase âThe LORD was with Joseph.â It is as if the Holy Spirit is saying to us, When things are the darkest, and God seems farthest away, the LORD is with us!
But there is more. Notice the capital letters in the word âLORDâ in the above passages. As many of you are aware, those caps tell us that the name in view is Godâs covenant name, âYahweh,â the special relational name God gave to his chosen people.
Well, I did a little word search and (youâve probably guessed it by now), except for a single appearance among the blessings of Jacob (49:18), âYahwehâ also occurs in the Joseph narrative only in Genesis 39, where Joseph is sold into slavery and thrown into prison.
Now the obvious explanation for the selective use of âYahwehâ is, of course, the various sources (JEDP) that now constitute the Pentateuch. Genesis 39 was written by the âJâ source. The rest of the story came from the âEâ source.
NOT! If you buy that explanation, youâve been eating too much alphabet soup, and Iâll be happy to sell you a house on a great surfing beach in Nebraska.
No. The only possible reason for the selective use of âYahwehâ in the storyâand for Genesis 39 being the only place that Moses writes, âThe LORD was with Josephââis that God wants his kids to know for certain that âThe LORD is with us,â particularly when circumstances are at their worst, when it feels (to some of us, at any rate) that God is a million miles away.
It was the last thing JesusâYahweh in the fleshâsaid in the Gospel of Matthew: âAnd surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.â