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JOSEPH’S DREAMS
Genesis 37
"Surely the wrath of man shall praise thee."- Psa 76:10
THE migration of Israel from Canaan to Egypt was a step of prime
importance in the history. Great difficulties surrounded it, and
very extraordinary means were used to bring it about.
The preparatory steps occupied about twenty years, and nearly a
fourth of the Book of Genesis is devoted to this period. This
migration was a new idea. So little was it the result of an
accidental dearth, or of any of those unforeseen calamities which
cause families to emigrate from our own country, that God had
forewarned Abraham himself that it must be. But only when it was
becoming matter of actual experience and of history did God make
known the precise object to be accomplished by it. This He makes
known to Jacob as he passes from Canaan; and as, in abandoning the
land be had so painfully won, his heart sinks, he is sustained by
the assurance, "Fear not to go down into Egypt; I will there make
thee a great nation."
The meaning of the step, and the suitableness of the time and of the
place to which Israel migrated, are apparent. For more than two
hundred years now had Abraham and his descendants been wandering as
pilgrims, and as yet there were no signs of God’s promise being kept
to them. That promise had been of a land and of a seed. Great
fecundity had been promised to the race; but instead of that there
had been a remarkable and perplexing barrenness, so that after two
centuries one tent could contain the whole male population. In
Jacob’s time the population began to increase, but just in
proportion as this part of the promise showed signs of fulfilment
did the other part seem precarious. For, in proportion to their
increase, the family became hostile to the Canaanites, and how
should they ever get past that critical point in their history at
which they would be strong enough to excite the suspicion, jealousy,
and hatred of the indigenous tribes, and yet not strong enough to
defend themselves against this enmity? Their presence was tolerated,
just as our countrymen tolerated the presence of French refugees, on
the score of their impotence to do harm. They were placed in a quite
anomalous position; a single family who had continued for two
hundred years in a land which they could only seem in jest to call
theirs, dwelling as guests amid the natives, maintaining peculiar
forms of worship and customs. Collision with the inhabitants seemed
unavoidable as soon as their real character and pretensions oozed
out, and as soon as it seemed at all likely that they really
proposed to become owners and masters in the land. And, in case of
such collision, what could be the result, but that which has ever
followed where a few score men, brave enough to be cut down where
they stood, have been exposed to mass after mass of fierce and
bloodthirsty barbarians? A small number of men have often made good
their entrance into lands where the inhabitants greatly outnumbered
them, but these have commonly been highly disciplined troops, as in
the case of the handful of Spaniards who seized Mexico and Peru; or
they have been backed by a power which could aid with vast
resources, as when the Romans held this country, or when the English
lad in India left his pen on his desk and headed his few resolute
countrymen, and held his own against unnumbered millions. It may be
argued that if even Abraham with his own household swept Canaan
clear of invaders, it might now have been possible for his grandson
to do as much with increased means at his disposal. But, not to
mention that every man has not the native genius for command and
military enterprise which Abraham had, it must be taken into account
that a force which is quite sufficient for a marauding expedition or
a night attack, is inadequate for the exigencies of a campaign of
several years’ duration. The war which Jacob must have waged, had
hostilities been opened, must have been a war of extermination, and
such a war must have desolated the house of Israel if victorious,
and, more probably by far, would have quite annihilated it.
It is to obviate these dangers, and to secure that Israel grow
without let or hindrance, that Jacob’s household is removed to a
land where protection and seclusion would at once be secured to
them. In the land of Goshen, secured from molestation partly by the
influence of Joseph, but much more by the caste-prejudices’ of the
Egyptians, and their hatred of all foreigners, and shepherds in
particular, they enjoyed such prosperity and attained so rapidly the
magnitude of a nation that some, forgetful alike of the promise of
God and of the natural advantages of Israel’s position, have refused
to credit the accounts given us of the increase in their population.
In a land so roomy, so fertile, and so secluded as that in which
they were now settled, they had every advantage for making the
transition from a family to a nation. Here they were preserved from
all temptation to mingle with neighbours of a different race, and so
lose their special place as a people called out by God to stand
alone. The Egyptians would have scorned the marriages which the
Canaanites passionately solicited. Here the very contempt in which
they were held proved to be their most valuable bulwark. And if
Christians have any of the wisdom of the serpent, they will often
find in the contempt or exclusiveness of worldly men a convenient
barrier, preventing them, indeed, from enjoying some privileges, but
at the same time enabling them, without molestation, to pursue their
own way. I believe young people especially feel put about by the
deprivations which they have to suffer in order to save their
religious scruples; they are shut off from what their friends and
associates enjoy, and they perceive that they are not so well liked
as they would be had they less desire to live by conscience and by
God’s will. They feel ostracized, banished, frowned upon, laid under
disabilities; but all this has its compensations: it forms for them
a kind of Goshen where they may worship and increase, it runs a
fence around them which keeps them apart from much that tempts and
from much that enfeebles.
The residence of Israel in Egypt served another important purpose.
By contact with the most civilised people of antiquity they emerged
from the semi-barbarous condition in which they had previously been
living. Going into Egypt mere. shepherds, as Jacob somewhat
plaintively and deprecatingly says to Pharaoh; not even possessed,
so far as we know, of the fundamental arts on which civilisation
rests, unable to record inwriting the revelations God made, or to
read them if recorded; having the most rudimentary ideas of law and
justice, and having nothing to keep them together and give them form
anal strength, save the one idea that God meant to confer on them
great distinction; they were transferred into a land where
government had been so long established and law had come to be so
thoroughly administered that life and property were as safe as among
ourselves to-day, where science had made such advances that even the
weather-beaten and time-stained relics of it seem to point to
regions into which even the bold enterprise of modern investigation
has not penetrated, and where all the arts needful for life were in
familiar use, and even some practised which modern times have as yet
been unable to recover. To no better school could the barbarous sons
of Bilhah and Zitpah have been sent; to no more fitting discipline
could the lawless spirits of Reuben, Simeon, and Levi have been
subjected. In Egypt, where human life was sacred, where truth was
worshipped as a deity, and where law was invested with the sanctity
which belonged to what was supposed to have descended from heaven,
they were brought under influences similar to those which ancient
Rome exerted over conquered races.
The unwitting pioneer of this great movement was a man in all
respects fitted to initiate it happily. In Joseph we meet a type of
character rare in any race, and which, though occasionally
reproduced in Jewish history, we should certainly not have expected
to meet with at so early a period. For what chiefly strikes one in
Joseph is a combination of grace and power, which is commonly looked
upon as the peculiar result of civilising influences, knowledge of
history, familiarity with foreign races, and hereditary dignity. In
David we find a similar flexibility and grace of character, and a
similar personal superiority. We find the same bright and humorous
disposition helping him to play the man in adverse circumstances;
but we miss in David Joseph’s self-control and incorruptible purity,
as we also miss something of his capacity for difficult affairs of
state. In Daniel this latter capacity is abundantly present, and a
facility equal to Joseph’s in dealing with foreigners, and there is
also a certain grace or nobility in the Jewish Vizier; but Joseph
had a surplus of power which enabled him to be cheerful and alert in
doleful circumstances, which Daniel would certainly have borne
manfully, but probably in a sterner and more passive mood. Joseph,
indeed, seemed to inherit and happily combine the highest qualities
of his ancestors. He had Abraham’s dignity and capacity, Isaac’s
purity and power of self-devotion, Jacob’s cleverness and buoyancy
and tenacity. From his mother’s family he had personal beauty,
humour, and management.
A young man of such capabilities could not long remain insensible to
his own powers or indifferent to his own destiny. Indeed, the
conduct of his father and brothers towards him must have made him
self-conscious, even though he had been wholly innocent of
introspection. The force of the impression he produced on his family
may be measured by the circumstance that the princely dress given
him by his father did not excite his brothers’ ridicule but their
envy and hatred. In this dress there was a manifest suitableness to
his person, and this excited them to a keen resentment of the
distinction. So too they felt that his dreams were not the mere
whimsicalities of a lively fancy, but were possessed of a
verisimilitude which gave them importance. In short, the dress and
the dreams were insufferably exasperating to the brothers, because
they proclaimed and marked in a definite way the feeling of Joseph’s
superiority which had already been vaguely rankling in their
consciousness. And it is creditable to Joseph that this superiority
should first have emerged in connection with a point of conduct. It
was in moral stature that the sons of Bilhah and Zilpah felt that
they were outgrown by the stripling whom they carried with them as
their drudge. Neither are we obliged to suppose that Joseph was a
gratuitous tale-bearer, or that when he carried their evil report to
his father he was actuated by a prudish, censorious, or in any way
unworthy spirit. That he very well knew how to hold his tongue no
man ever gave more adequate proof; but he that understands that
there is a time to keep silence necessarily sees also that there is
a time to speak. And no one can tell what torture that pure young
soul may have endured in the remote pastures, when left alone to
withstand day after day the outrage of these coarse and unscrupulous
men. An elder brother, if he will, can more effectually guard the
innocence of a younger brother than any other relative can, but he
can also inflict a more exquisite torture.
Joseph, then, could not but come to think of his future and of his
destiny in this family. That his father should make a pet of him
rather than of Benjamin, he would refer to the circumstance that he
was the oldest son of the wife of his choice, of her whom first he
had loved, and who had no rival while he lived. To so charming a
companion as Joseph must always have been, Jacob would naturally
impart all the traditions and hopes of the family. In him he found a
sympathetic and appreciative listener, who wiled him on to endless
narrative, and whose imaginativeness quickened his own hopes and
made the future seem grander and the world more wide. And what Jacob
had to tell could fall into no kindlier soil than the opening mind
of Joseph. No hint was lost, every promise was interpreted by some
waiting aspiration. And thus, like every youth of capacity, he came
to have his clay-dreams. These day-dreams, though derided by those
who cannot see the Caesar in the careless trifler, and though often
awkward and even offensive in their expression, are not always the
mere discontented cravings of youthful vanity, but are frequently
instinctive gropings towards the position which the nature is fitted
to fill. "Our wishes," it has been said, "are the forefeeling of our
capabilities"; and certainly where there is any special gift or
genius in a man, the wish of his youth is predictive of the
attainment of manhood. Whims, no doubt, there are, passing phases
through which natural growth carries us, flutterings of the needle
when too near some powerful influence; yet amidst all variations the
true direction will be discernible and ultimately will be dominant.
And it is a great art to discover what we are fit for, so that we
may settle down to our own work, or patiently wait for our own
place, without enviously striving to rob every other man of his
crown and so losing our own. It is an art that saves us much
fretting and disappointment and waste of time, to understand early
in life what it is we can accomplish, and what precisely we mean to
be at; "to recognise in, our personal gifts or station, in the
circumstances and complications of our life, in our relations to
others, or to the world-the will of God teaching us what we are, and
for what we ought to live." How much of life often is gone before
its possessor sees the use he can put it to and ceases to beat the
air! How much of life is an ill-considered but passionate striving
after what can never be attained, or a vain imitation of persons who
have quite different talents and opportunities from ourselves, and
who are therefore set to quite another work than ours.
It was because Joseph’s dreams embodied his waking ambition that
they were of importance. Dreams become significant when they are the
concentrated essence of the main stream of the waking thoughts, and
picturesquely exhibit the tendency of the character. "In a dream,"
says Elihu, "in a vision of the night, when deep sleep falleth upon
men, in slumberings upon the bed; then He openeth the ears of men,
and sealeth their instruction, that He may withdraw man from his
purpose." This is precisely the use of dreams: our tendencies,
unbridled by reason and fact, run on to results; the purposes which
the business and other good influences of the day have kept down act
themselves out in our dreams, and we see the character unimpeded by
social checks, and as it would be were it unmodified by the
restraints and efforts and external considerations of our conscious
hours. Our vanity, our pride, our malice, our impurity, our deceit,
our every evil passion, has free play, and shows us its finished
result, and in so vivid and true though caricatured a form that we
are startled and withdrawn from our purpose. The evil thought we
have suffered to creep about our heart seems in our dreams to become
a deed, and we wake in horror and thank God we can yet refrain. Thus
the poor woman, who in utter destitution was beginning to find her
child a burden, dreamt she had drowned it, and woke in horror at the
fancied sound of the plunge-woke to clasp her little one to her
breast with the thrill of a grateful affection that never again gave
way. So that while no man is so foolish as to expect instruction
from every dream any more than from every thought that visits his
waking mind, yet every one who has been accumulating some knowledge
of himself is aware that he has drawn a large part of this from his
unconscious hours. As the naturalist would know but a small part of
the animal kingdom by studying the creatures that show themselves in
the daylight, so there are moles and bats of the spirit that exhibit
themselves most freely in the darkness; and there are jungles and
waste places in the character which, if you look on them only in the
sunshine, may seem safe and lovely, but which at night show
themselves to be fall of all loathsome and savage beasts.
With the simplicity of a guileless mind, and with the natural
proneness of members of one family to tell in the morning the dreams
they have had, Joseph tells to the rest what seems to himself
interesting, if not very suggestive. Possibly he thought very little
of his dream till he saw how much importance his brothers attached
to it. Possibly there might be discernible in his tone and look some
mixture of youthful arrogance. And in his relation of the second
dream, there was discernible at least a confidence that it would be
realised, which was peculiarly intolerable to his brothers, and to
his father seemed a dangerous symptom that called for rebuke. And
yet "his father observed the saying"; as a parent has sometimes
occasion to check his child, and yet, having done so, feels that
that does not end the matter; that his boy and he are in somewhat
different spheres, so that while he was certainly justified in
punishing such and such a manifestation of his character, there is
yet something behind that he does not quite understand, and for
which possibly punishment may not be exactly the suitable award.
We fall into Jacob’s mistake when we refuse to acknowledge as
genuine and God-inspired any religious experience which we ourselves
have not passed through, and which appears in a guise that is not
only unfamiliar, but that is in some particulars objectionable. Up
to the measure of our own religious experience, we recognise as
genuine, and sympathise with, the parallel experience of others; but
when they rise above us and get beyond us, we begin to speak of them
as visionaries, enthusiasts, dreamers. We content ourselves with
pointing again and again to the blots in their manner, and refuse to
read the future through the ideas they add to our knowledge. But the
future necessarily lies, not in the definite and finished
attainment, but in the indefinite and hazy and dream-like germs that
have yet growth in them. The future is not with Jacob, the rebuker,
but with the dreaming, and, possibly, somewhat offensive Joseph. It
was certainly a new element Joseph introduced into the experience of
God’s people. He saw, obscurely indeed, but with sufficient
clearness to make him thoughtful, that the man whom Goal chooses and
makes a blessing to others is so far advanced above his fellows that
they lean upon him and pay him homage as if he were in the place of
God to them. He saw that his higher powers were to be used for his
brethren, and that the high destiny he somehow felt to be his was to
be won by doing service so essential that his family would bow
before him and give themselves into his hand. He saw this, as every
man whose love keeps pace with his talent sees it, and he so far
anticipated the dignity of Him who, in the deepest self-sacrifice,
assumed a position and asserted claims which enraged His brethren
and made even His believing mother marvel. Joseph knew that the
welfare of his family rested not with the Esau-like good-nature of
Reuben, still less with the fanatical ferocity of Simeon and Levi,
not with the servile patience of Issachar, nor with the natural
force and dignity of Judah, but with some deeper qualities which, if
he himself did not yet possess, he at least valued and aspired to.
Whatever Joseph thought of the path by which he was to reach the
high dignity which his dreams foreshadowed, he was soon to learn
that the path was neither easy nor short. Each man thinks that, for
himself at least, an exceptional path will be broken out, and that
without difficulties and humiliations he will inherit the kingdom.
But it cannot be so. And as the first step a lad takes towards the
attainment of his position often involves him in trouble and covers
him with confusion, and does so even although he ultimately finds
that it was the only path by which he could have reached his goal;
so, that which was really the first step towards Joseph’s high
destiny, no doubt seemed to him most calamitous and fatal. It
certainly did so to his brothers, who thought that they were
effectually and for ever putting an end to Joseph’s pretensions.
"Behold, this dreamer cometh; come now therefore, and let us slay
him, and we shall see what will become of his dreams." They were,
however, so far turned from their purpose by Reuben as to put him in
a pit, meaning to leave him to die, and doubtless they thought
themselves lenient in doing so. The less violent the death
inflicted, the less of murder seems to be in it; so that he who
slowly kills the body by only wounding the affections often counts
himself no murderer at all, because he strikes no blood-shedding
blow, and can deceive himself into the idea that it is the working
of his victim’s own spirit that is doing the damage.
The tank into which Joseph’s brethren cast him was apparently one of
those huge reservoirs excavated by shepherds in the East, that they
may have a supply of water for their flocks in the end of the dry
season, when the running waters fail them. Being so narrow at the
mouth that they can be covered by a single stone, they gradually
widen and form a large subterranean room; and the facility they thus
afford for the confinement of prisoners was from the first too
obvious not to be commonly taken advantage of. In such a place was
Joseph left to die under the ground, sinking in mire, his flesh
creeping at the touch of unseen slimy creatures, in darkness, alone:
that is to say, in a species of confinement which tames the most
reckless and maddens the best balanced spirits, which shakes the
nerve of the calmest, and has sometimes left the blankness of idiocy
in masculine understandings. A few wild cries that ring painfully
round his prison show him he need expect no help from without; a few
wild and desperate beatings round the shelving walls of rock show
him there is no possibility of escape; he covers his face, or casts
himself on the floor of his dungeon to escape within himself, but
only to find this also in vain, and to rise and renew efforts he
knows to be fruitless. Here, then, is what has come of his fine
dreams. With shame he now remembers the beaming confidence with
which he had related them; with bitterness he thinks of the bright
life above him, from which these few feet cut him so absolutely off,
and of the quick termination that has been put to all his hopes.
Into such tanks do young persons especially get cast: finding
themselves suddenly dropped out of the lively scenery and bright
sunshine in which they have been living, down into roomy graves
where they seem left to die at leisure. They had conceived a way of
being useful in the world; they had found an aim or a hope; they
had, like Joseph, discerned their place and were making towards it.
when suddenly they seem to be thrown out and are left to learn that
the world can do very well without them, that the sun and moon and
the eleven stars do not drop from their courses or make wail because
of their sad condition. High aims and commendable purposes are not
so easily fulfilled as they fancied. The faculty and desire in them
to be of service are not recognised. Men do not make room for them,
and God seems to disregard the hopes He has excited in them. The
little attempt at living they have made seems only to have got
themselves and others into trouble. They begin to think it a mistake
their being in the world at all; they curse the day of their birth.
Others are enjoying this life, and seem to be making something of
it, having found work that suits and develops them; but, for their
own part, they cannot get fitted into life at any point, and are
excluded from the onward movement of the world. They are again and
again flung back, until they fear they are not to see the fulfilment
of any one bright dream that has ever visited them, and that they
are never, never at all, to live out the life it is in them to live,
or find light and scope for maturing those germs of the rich human
nature that they feel within them.
All this is in the way to attainment. This or that check, this long
burial for years, does not come upon you merely because stoppage and
hindrance have been useful to others, but because your advancement
lies through these experiences. Young persons naturally feel
strongly that life is all before them, that this life is, in the
first place, their concern, and that God must be proved sufficient
for this life, able to bring them to their ideal. And the first
lesson they have to learn is, that mere youthful confidence and
energy are not the qualities that overcome the world. They have to
learn that humility, and the ambition that seeks great things, but
not for ourselves, are the qualities really indispensable. But do
men become humble by being told to become so, or by knowing they
ought to be so? God must make us humble by the actual experience we
meet with in our ordinary life. Joseph, no doubt, knew very well,
what his aged grandfather must often have told him, that a man must
die before he begins to live. But what could an ambitious, happy
youth make of this, till he was thrown into the pit and left there?
as truly passing through the bitterness of death as Isaac had passed
through it, and as keenly feeling the pain of severance from the
light of life. Then, no doubt, he thought of Isaac, and of Isaac’s
God, till between himself and the impenetrable dungeon-walls the
everlasting arms seemed to interpose, and through the darkness of
his death-like solitude the face of Jacob’s God appeared to beam
upon him, and he came to feel what we must, by some extremity, all
be made to feel, that it was not in this world’s life but in God he
lived, that nothing could befall him which God did not will, and
that what God had for him to do, God would enable him to do.
The heartless barbarity with which the brethren of Joseph sat down
to eat and drink the very dainties he had brought them from his
father, while they left him, as they thought, to starve, has been
regarded by all later generations as the height of hard-hearted
indifference. Amos, at a loss to describe the recklessness of his
own generation, falls back upon this incident, and cries woe upon
those "that drink wine in bowls, and anoint themselves with the
chief ointment, but they are not grieved for the affliction of
Joseph." We reflect, if we do not substantially reproduce, their sin
when we are filled with animosity against those who usher in some
higher kind of life, effort, or worship, than we ourselves as yet
desire or are fit for, and which, therefore, reflects shame on our
incapacity; and when we would fain, without using violence, get rid
of such persons. There are often schemes set on foot by better men
than ourselves, against which somehow our spirit rises, yet which,
did we consider, we should at the most say with the cautious
Gamaliel, Let us beware of doing anything to hinder this; let us see
whether, perchance, It be not of God. Sometimes there are in
families individuals who do not get the encouragement in well-doing
they might expect in a Christian family, but are rather frowned upon
and hindered by the other members of it, because they seem to be
inaugurating a higher style of religion than the family is used to,
and to be reflecting from their own conduct a condemnation of what
has hitherto been current.
This treatment, who among us has not extended to Him who in His
whole experience so closely resembles Joseph? So long as Christ is
to us merely, as it were, the pet of the family, the innocent,
guileless, loving Being on whom we can heap pretty epithets, and in
whom we find play for our best affections, to whom it is easier to
show ourselves affectionate and well.-disposed than to the brothers
who mingle with us in all our pursuits; so long as He remains to us
as a child whose demands it is a relaxation to fulfil, we fancy that
we are giving Him our hearts, and that He, if any, has our love. But
when He declares to us His dreams, and claims to be our Lord, to
whom with most absolute homage we must bow, who has a right to rule
and means to rule over us, who will have His will done by us and not
our own, then the love we fancied seems to pass into something like
aversion. His purposes we would fain believe to be the idle fancies
of a dreamer which He Himself does not expect us to pay much heed
to. And if we do not resent the absolute surrender of ourselves to
Him which He demands, if the bowing down of our fullest sheaves and
brightest glory to Him is too little understood by us to be
resented; if we think such dreams are not to come true, and that He
does not mean much by demanding our homage, and therefore do not
resent the demand; yet possibly we can remember with shame how we
have "anointed ourselves with the chief ointment," lain listlesly
enjoying some of those luxuries which our Brother has brought us
from the Father’s house, and yet let Himself and His cause be buried
out of sight-enjoyed the good name of Christian, the pleasant social
refinements of a Christian land, even the peace of conscience which
the knowledge of the Christian’s God produces, and yet turned away
from the deeper emotions which His personal entreaties stir, and
from those self-sacrificing efforts which His cause requires if it
is to prosper.
There are, too, unstable Reubens still, whom something always draws
aside, and who are ever out of the way when most needed; who, like
him, are on the other side of the hill when Christ’s cause is being
betrayed; who still count their own private business that which must
be done, and God’s work that which may be done-work for themselves
necessary, and God’s work only voluntary and in the second place.
And there are also those who, though they would be honestly shocked
to be charged with murdering Christ’s cause, can yet leave it to
perish.
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