
The Life of Joseph
To learn about Joseph, you have to go to the Old
Testament part of the Bible. The first book is called Genesis. This is
where we find out about Joseph. You can read all about Joseph in Genesis
chapters 37 to 50.
Remember that God made promises to a man called
Abraham. Abraham had a son called Isaac. Isaac had a son called Jacob.
Jacob had four wives and 12 sons. Joseph was one of those 12 sons, and
Jacob loved Joseph more than his brothers.
The coloured coat of Joseph
To show how much Jacob loved his son, Jacob gave
Joseph a coloured coat to wear. Now in those times, only very rich
people had coloured clothes. So Joseph would have stood out as someone
important in the family, especially in front of his 11 brothers. What
did his brothers think of this? Genesis 37:4 tells us:
But when his brothers saw that their father
Jacob loved Joseph more than all his brothers, they hated him and could
not speak peaceably to him.
There was something else that made the brothers
hate Joseph. Joseph had unusual dreams that he told them about: that
Joseph would be a ruler over them. That his brothers, and even his
father, would bow down before Joseph as if he was a king. Genesis 37:5-8
The plot to kill Joseph
One day, Joseph was alone with his brothers.
Some of them wanted to kill Joseph, but two of them, Reuben and Judah,
took pity on their brother. Judah told the brothers to sell Joseph as a
slave. That way, they would not have to kill him, and as a slave they
would never see Joseph again.
The other brothers liked the plan. They tore off
Joseph's coat and sold the young lad as a slave to some traders that
were nearby. The brothers then took Joseph's coloured coat and poured
goat blood over it. They took the coat back to Jacob and asked him if it
was Joseph's. Jacob knew that it was Joseph’s, but his sons never told
him the truth. Jacob thought that his favourite son was dead. Jacob was
sorrowful from that day on. Genesis 37:18-36.
Joseph in Egypt
What happened to Joseph? He was taken as a slave
to Egypt. Now some of you may have come from another country. You have
come to a strange place where people speak a different language and have
different customs. You know how Joseph would have felt! He was alone in
a strange place, chained like an animal, and then having to be sold in
the market as a slave. Joseph knew about the God of his father, and so
he must have prayed to God to take care of him. But even so, Joseph must
have had many rough years in Egypt.
A man called Potiphar bought Joseph at the slave
market. Potiphar was an official of the King of Egypt (Egyptian kings
are known as Pharaohs). Joseph realised that he had to work to be a free
man, and so he worked hard. In fact, Joseph was so good that Potiphar
put him in charge of his whole house. The Bible tells us that Joseph was
so good at looking after Potiphar’s house, that all Potiphar had to
think about was eating! Genesis 39:1-6
Later, Joseph was accused of sleeping with
Potiphar's wife. Joseph did not do it; but Potiphar believed his wife.
So Joseph was placed in the king's prison.
This was a hopeless situation. He was imprisoned
without a trial - after all he was just a slave. No one cared about a
slave. There were no lawyers to help him.
But God did not forget Joseph. Soon, Joseph was
in charge of the prison! Joseph was such a good manager, that a prisoner
was running the prison! During this time, Joseph gave some good advice
to Pharaoh's butler after he had a dream. Joseph asked the butler to ask
Pharaoh if he (Joseph) could be freed. Genesis 39:21-23, chapter 40.
The dream of Pharaoh
Some time later, Pharaoh has two strange dreams,
and Joseph was asked, with God's help, to tell Pharaoh what the dreams
meant. Joseph said that there would be seven years when all the crops
will grow. After that seven years of famine would come: nothing would
grow and there would not be any food.
 |
|
Ancient Egyptian
drawing of Granaries in Egypt |
Pharaoh decided to put Joseph in charge of
collecting grain during the seven good years, so that when the famine
came, there would be enough for the people. At that moment, Joseph was
made the king's deputy. He was the ruler of Egypt, second in command to
Pharaoh! Genesis 41:37-44
God was with Joseph! Instead of being a slave,
he was now in control of Egypt for the next 14 years. The seven years
of
good crops came and went, and now there was famine. This famine was very
severe: it even reached to Canaan where Joseph's family lived.
Joseph meets his brothers
Jacob heard that food was for sale in Egypt. So
he sent 10 of his sons to Egypt to buy food for the family. When the 10
brothers arrived in Egypt, they bowed down to Joseph, just as his dream
many years before had said. But the brothers did not recognise Joseph.
They thought their brother was dead.
Joseph tested his brothers to see if they had
changed over the years. He found that they had. While before they were
willing to kill their brother, they now had a dark secret that made
their lives sad. They were sorry for what they had done to Joseph as a
young man, but there was no way they could have told their father what
really happened to his favourite son.
 |
|
Joseph is
revealed to his brothers |
Finally, Joseph told his brothers who he was;
they were amazed, and could not believe it! Their brother Joseph was not
a slave: he was in control of the entire country of Egypt! Joseph knew
that the famine would go on for a few years, and so he told his family
to move to Egypt, which they did.
And so, as an old man, Jacob finally saw his
favourite son again. Genesis 46:29-30.
After Jacob died, and later Joseph died, the
family grew in numbers, and stayed in Egypt for about 400 years.
Conclusion
What do we learn from Joseph? He was a man who
had a very hard life. All the time he was a slave, Joseph never knew why
God had done it this way. But in the end, God made Joseph's life happy
again. Our lives can be hard too. But if we serve God, if we trust that
He will do the right thing for us, then He will care for us.
 |