|
JOSEPH’S ADMINISTRATION
Gen 41:37-57, Gen 47:13-26
"He made him lord of his house, and ruler of all his substance:
To bind his princes at his pleasure; and teach his senators wisdom."
Psa 105:21-22.
"MANY a monument consecrated to the memory of some nobleman gone to
his long home, who during life had held high rank at the court of
Pharaoh, is decorated with the simple but laudatory inscription,
‘His ancestors were unknown people.'" -so we are told by our most
accurate informant regarding Egyptian affairs. Indeed, the tales we
read of adventurers in the East, and the histories which recount how
some dynasties have been founded, are sufficient evidence that, in
other countries besides Egypt, sudden elevation from the lowest to
the highest rank is not so unusual as amongst ourselves. Historians
have recently made out that in one period of the history of Egypt
there are traces of a kind of Semitic mania, a strong leaning
towards Syrian and Arabian customs, phrases, and persons. Such
manias have occurred in most countries. There was a period in the
history of Rome when everything that had a Greek flavour was
admired; an Anglomania once affected a portion of the French
population, and reciprocally, French manners and ideas have at times
found a welcome among ourselves. It is also clear that for a time
Lower Egypt was under the dominion of foreign rulers who were in
race more nearly allied to Joseph than to the native population. But
there is no need that so complicated a question as the exact date of
this foreign domination be debated here, for there was that in
Joseph’s bearing which would have commended him to any sagacious
monarch. Not only did the court accept him as a messenger from God,
but they could not fail to recognise substantial and serviceable
human qualities alongside of what was mysterious in him. The ready
apprehension with which he appreciated the magnitude of the danger,
the clear-sighted promptitude with which he met it, the resource and
quiet capacity with which he handled a matter involving the entire
condition of Egypt, showed them that they were in the presence of a
true statesman, No doubt the confidence with which he described the
best method of dealing with the emergency was the confidence of one
who was convinced he was speaking for God. This was the great
distinction they perceived between Joseph and ordinary
dream-interpreters. It was not guesswork with him. The same
distinction is always apparent between revelation and speculation.
Revelation speaks with authority; speculation gropes its way, and
when wisest is most diffident. At the same time Pharaoh was
perfectly right in his inference: "Forasmuch as God hath shewed thee
all this, there is none so discreet and wise as thou art." He
believed that God had chosen him to deal with this matter because he
was wise in heart, and he believed his wisdom would remain because
God had chosen him.
At length, then, Joseph saw the fulfilment of his dreams within his
reach. The coat of many colours with which his father had paid a
tribute to the princely person and ways of the boy, was now replaced
by the robe of state and the heavy gold necklace which marked him
out as second to Pharaoh. Whatever nerve and self-command and humble
dependence on God his varied experience had wrought in him were all
needed when Pharaoh took his hand and placed his own ring on it,
thus transferring all his authority to him, and when turning from
the king he received the acclamations of the court and the people,
bowed to by his old masters, and acknowledged the superior of all
the dignitaries and potentates of Egypt. Only once besides, so far
as the Egyptian inscriptions have yet been deciphered, does it
appear that any subject was raised to be Regent or Viceroy with
similar powers. Joseph is, as far as possible, naturalised as an
Egyptian. He receives a name easier of pronunciation than his own,
at least to Egyptian tongues-Zaphnath-Paaneah, which, however, was
perhaps only an official title meaning "Governor of the district of
the place of life," the name by which one of the Egyptian counties
or states was known. The king crowned his liberality and completed
the process of naturalisation by providing him with a wife, Asenath,
the daughter of Potipherah, priest of On. This city was not far from
Avaris or Haouar, where Joseph’s Pharaoh, Raapepi II, at this time
resided. The worship of the sun-god, Ra, had its centre at On (or
Heliopolis, as it was called by the Greeks), and the priests of On
took precedence of all Egyptian priests, Joseph was thus connected
with one of the most influential families in the land, and if he had
any scruples about marrying into an idolatrous family, they were too
insignificant to influence his conduct, or leave any trace in the
narrative.
His attitude towards God and his own family was disclosed in the
names which he gave to his children. In giving names which had a
meaning at all, and not merely a taking sound, he showed that he
understood, as well he might, that every human life has a
significance and expresses some principle or fact. And in giving
names which recorded his acknowledgment of God’s goodness, he showed
that prosperity had as little influence as adversity to move him
from his allegiance to the God of his fathers. His first son he
called Manasseh, Making to forget, " for God," said he, "hath made
me forget all my toil and all my father’s house"-not as if he were
now so abundantly satisfied in Egypt that the thought of his
father’s house was blotted from his mind, but only that in this
child the keen longings he had felt for kindred and home were
somewhat alleviated. He again found an object for his strong family
affection. The void in his heart he had so long felt was filled by
the little babe. A new home was begun around him. But this new
affection would not weaken, though it would alter the character of,
his love for his father and brethren. The birth of this child would
really be a new tie to the land from which he had been stolen. For,
however ready men are to spend their own life in foreign service,
you see them wishing that their children should spend their days
among the scenes with which their own childhood was familiar.
In the naming of his second son Ephraim he recognises that God had
made him fruitful in the most unlikely way. He does not leave it to
us to interpret his life, but records what he himself saw in it. It
has been said: "To get at the truth of any history is good; but a
man’s own history-when he reads that truly, and knows what he is
about and has been about, it is a Bible to him." And now that
Joseph, from the height he had reached, could look back on the way
by which he had been led to it, he cordially approved of all that
God had done. There was no resentment, no murmuring. He would often
find himself looking back and thinking, Had I found my brothers
where I thought they were, had the pit not been on the caravan-road,
had the merchants not come up so opportunely, had I not been sold at
all or to some other master, had I not been imprisoned, or had I
been put in another ward-had any one of the many slender links in
the chain of my career been absent, bow different might my present
state have been. How plainly I now see that all those sad mishaps
that crushed my hopes and tortured my spirit were steps in the only
conceivable path to my present position.
Many a man has added his signature to this acknowledgment of
Joseph’s, and confessed a providence guiding his life and working
out good for him through injuries and sorrows, as well as through
honours, marriages, births. As in the heat of summer it is difficult
to recall the sensation of winter’s bitter cold, so the fruitless
and barren periods of a man’s life are sometimes quite obliterated
from his memory. God has it in His power to raise a man higher above
the level of ordinary happiness than ever he has sunk below it: and
as winter and spring-time, when the seed is sown, are stormy and
bleak and gusty, so in human life seed-time is not bright as summer
nor cheerful as autumn; and yet it is then, when all the earth lies
bare and will yield us nothing, that the precious seed is sown: and
when we confidently commit our labour or patience of today to God,
the land of our affliction, now bare and desolate, will certainly
wave for us, as it has waved for others, with rich produce whitened
to the harvest.
There is no doubt then that Joseph had learned to recognise the
providence of God as a most important factor in his life. And the
man who does so gains for his character all the strength and
resolution that come with a capacity for waiting. He saw, most
legibly written on his own life, that God is never in a hurry. And
for the resolute adherence to his seven-years’ policy such a belief
was most necessary. Nothing, indeed, is said of opposition or
incredulity on the part of the Egyptians. But was there ever a
policy of such magnitude carried out in any country without
opposition or without evilly-disposed persons using it as a weapon
against its promoter? No doubt during these years he had need of all
the personal determination as well as of all the official authority
he possessed. And if, on the whole, remarkable success attended his
efforts, we must ascribe this partly to the unchallengeable justice
of his arrangements, and partly to the impression of commanding
genius Joseph seems everywhere to have made. As with his father and
brethren he was felt to be superior, as in Potiphar’s house he was
quickly recognised, as in the prison no prison-garb or slave-brand
could disguise him, as in the court his superiority was
instinctively felt, so in his administration the people seem to have
believed in him.
And if, on the whole and in general, Joseph was reckoned a wise and
equitable ruler, and even adored as a kind of saviour of the world,
it would be idle in us to canvass the wisdom of his administration.
When we have not sufficient historical material to apprehend the
full significance of any policy, it is safe to accept the judgment
of men who not only knew the facts, but were themselves so deeply
involved in them that they would certainly have felt and expressed
discontent had there been ground for doing so. The policy of Joseph
was simply to economise during the seven years of abundance to such
an extent that provision might be made against the seven years of
famine. He calculated that one-fifth of the produce of years so
extraordinarily plenteous would serve for the seven scarce years.
This fifth he seems to have bought in the king’s name from the
people, buying it, no doubt, at the cheap rates of abundant years.
When the years of famine came, the people were referred to Joseph;
and, till their money was gone, he sold corn to them, probably not
at famine prices. Next he acquired their cattle, and finally, in
exchange for food, they yielded to him both their lands and their
persons. So that the result of the whole was, that the people who
would otherwise have perished were preserved, and in return for this
preservation they paid a tax or rent on their farm-lands to the
amount of one-fifth of their produce. The people ceased to be
proprietors of their own farms, but they were not slaves with no
interest in the soil, but tenants sitting at easy rents-a fair
enough exchange for being preserved in life. This kind of taxation
is eminently fair in principle, securing, as it does, that the
wealth of the king and government shall vary with the prosperity of
the whole land. The chief difficulty that has always been
experienced in working it, has arisen from the necessity of leaving
a good deal of discretionary power in the hands of the collectors,
who have generally been found not slow to abuse this power.
The only semblance of despotism in Joseph’s policy is found in the
curious circumstance that he interfered with the people’s choice of
residence, and shifted them from one end of the land to another.
This may have been necessary not only as a kind of seal on the deed
by which the lands were conveyed to the king, and as a significant
sign to them that they were mere tenants, but also Joseph probably
saw that for the interests of the country, if not of agricultural
prosperity, this shifting had become necessary for the breaking up
of illegal associations, nests of sedition, and sectional prejudices
and enmities which were endangering the community. Modern experience
supplies us with instances in which, by such a policy, a country
might be regenerated and a seven years’ famine hailed as a blessing
if, without famishing the people, it put them unconditionally into
the hands of an able, bold, and beneficent ruler. And this was a
policy which could be much better devised and executed by a
foreigner than by a native.
Egypt’s indebtedness to Joseph was, in fact, two-fold. In the first
place he succeeded in doing what many strong governments have failed
to do: he enabled a large population to survive a long and severe
famine. Even with all modern facilities for transport and for making
the abundance of remote countries available for times of scarcity,
it has not always been found possible to save our own
fellow-subjects from starvation. In a prolonged famine which
occurred in Egypt during the Middle Ages, the inhabitants, reduced
to the unnatural habits which are the most painful feature of such
times, not only ate their own dead, but kidnapped the living on the
streets of Cairo and consumed them in secret. One of the most
touching memorials of the famine with which Joseph had to deal is
found in a sepulchral inscription in Arabia. A flood of rain laid
bare a tomb in which lay a woman having on her person a profusion of
jewels which represented a very large value. At her head stood a
coffer filled with treasure, and a tablet with this inscription: "In
Thy name, O God, the God of Himyar, I, Tayar, the daughter of Dzu
Shefar, sent my steward to Joseph, and he delaying to return to me,
I sent my handmaid with a measure of silver to bring me back a
measure of flour; and not being able to procure it, I sent her with
a measure of gold; and not being able to procure it, I sent her with
a measure of pearls; and not being able to procure it, I commanded
them to be ground; and finding no profit in them, I am shut up
here." If this inscription is genuine-and there seems no reason to
call it in question-it shows that there is no exaggeration in the
statement of our narrator that the famine was very grievous in other
lands as well as in Egypt. And, whether genuine or not, one cannot
but admire the grim humour of the starving woman getting herself
buried in the jewels which had suddenly dropped to less than the
value of a loaf of bread.
But besides being indebted to Joseph for their preservation, the
Egyptians owed to him an extension of their influence; for, as all
the lands round about became dependent on Egypt for provision, they
must have contracted a respect for the Egyptian administration. They
must also have added greatly to Egypt’s wealth and during those
years of constant traffic many commercial connections must have been
formed which in future years would be of untold value to Egypt. But
above all, the permanent alterations made by Joseph on their tenure
of land, and on their places of abode, may have convinced the most
sagacious of the Egyptians that it was well for them that their
money had failed, and that they had been compelled to yield
themselves unconditionally into the hands of this remarkable ruler.
It is the mark of a competent statesman that he makes temporary
distress the occasion for permanent benefit; and from the confidence
Joseph won with the people, there seems every reason to believe that
the permanent alterations he introduced were considered as
beneficial as certainly they were bold.
And for our own spiritual uses it is this point which seems chiefly
important. In Joseph is illustrated the principle that, in order to
the attainment of certain blessings, unconditional submission to
God’s delegate is required. If we miss this, we miss a large part of
what his history exhibits, and it becomes a mere pretty story. The
prominent idea in his dreams was that he was to be worshipped by his
brethren. In his exaltation by Pharaoh, the absolute authority given
to him is again conspicuous: "Without thee shall no man lift up hand
or foot in all the land of Egypt."
And still the same autocracy appears in the fact that not one
Egyptian who was helpful to him in this matter is mentioned; and no
one has received such exclusive possession of a considerable part of
Scripture, so personal and outstanding a place. All this leaves upon
the mind the impression that Joseph becomes a benefactor, and in his
degree a saviour, to men by becoming their absolute master. When
this was hinted in his dreams at first his brothers fiercely
resented it. But when they were put to the push by famine, both they
and the Egyptians recognised that he was appointed by God to be
their saviour, while at the same time they markedly and consciously
submitted themselves to him. Men may always be expected to recognise
that he who can save them alive in famine has a right to order the
bounds of their habitation; and also that in the hands of one who,
from disinterested motives, has saved them, they are likely to be
quite as safe as in their own. And it we are all quite sure of this,
that men of great political sagacity can regulate our affairs with
tenfold the judgment and success that we ourselves could achieve, we
cannot wonder that in matters still higher, and for which we are
notoriously incompetent, there should be One into whose hands it is
well to commit ourselves-One whose judgment is not warped by the
prejudices which blind all mere natives of this world, but who,
separate from sinners yet naturalised among us, can both detect and
rectify everything in our condition which is less than perfect. If
there are certainly many cases in which explanations are out of the
question, and in which the governed, if they are wise, will yield
themselves to a trusted authority, and leave it to time and results
to justify his measures, any one, I think, who anxiously considers
our spiritual condition must see that here too obedience is for us
the greater part of wisdom, and that, after all speculation and
efforts at sufficing investigation, we can still do no better than
yield ourselves absolutely to Jesus Christ. He alone understands our
whole position; He alone speaks with the authority that commands
confidence, because it is felt to be the authority of the truth. We
feel the present pressure of famine; we have discernment enough,
some of us, to know we are in danger, but we cannot penetrate deeply
either into the cause or the possible consequences of our present
state. But Christ-if we may continue the figure-legislates with a
breadth of administrative capacity which includes not only our
present distress but our future condition, and, with the boldness of
one who is master of the whole case, requires that we put ourselves
wholly into His hand. He takes the responsibility of all the changes
we make in obedience to Him, and proposes so to relieve us that the
relief shall be permanent, and that the very emergency which has
thrown us upon His help shall be the occasion of our transference
not merely out of the present evil, but into the best possible form
of human life.
From this chapter, then, in the history of Joseph, we may reasonably
take occasion to remind ourselves, first, that in all things
pertaining to God unconditional submission to Christ is necessarily
required of us. Apart from Christ we cannot tell what are the
necessary elements of a permanently happy state; nor, indeed, even
whether there is any such state awaiting us. There is a great deal
of truth in what is urged by unbelievers to the effect that
spiritual matters are in great measure beyond our cognizance, and
that many of our religious phrases are but, as it were, thrown out
in the direction of a truth but do not perfectly represent it. No
doubt we are in a provisional state, in which we are not in direct
contact with the absolute truth, nor in a final attitude of mind
towards it; and certain representations of things given in the Word
of God may seem to us not to cover the whole truth. But this only
compels the conclusion that for us Christ is the way, the truth, and
the life. To probe existence to the bottom is plainly not in our
power. To say precisely what God is, and how we are to carry
ourselves towards Him, is possible only to him who has been with God
and is God. To submit to the Spirit of Christ, and to live under
those influences and views which formed His life, is the only method
that promises deliverance from that moral condition which makes
spiritual vision impossible.
We may remind ourselves, secondly, that this submission to Christ
should be consistently adhered to in connection with those outward
occurrences in our life which give us opportunity of enlarging our
spiritual capacity. There can be little doubt that there would be
presented to Joseph many a plan for the better administration of
this whole matter, and many a petition from individuals craving
exemption from the seemingly arbitrary and certainly painful and
troublesome edict regulating change of residence. Many a man would
think himself much wiser than the minister of Pharaoh in whom was
the Spirit of God. When we act in a similar manner, and take upon us
to specify with precision the changes we should like to see in our
condition, and the methods by which these changes might best be
accomplished, we commonly manifest our own incompetence. The changes
which the strong hand of Providence enforces, the dislocation which
our life suffers from some irresistible blow, the necessity laid
upon us to begin life again and on apparently disadvantageous terms,
are naturally resented; but these things being certainly the result
of some unguardedness, improvidence, or weakness in our past state,
are necessarily the means most appropriate for disclosing to us
these elements of calamity and for securing our permanent welfare.
We rebel against such perilous and sweeping revolutions as the
basing of our life on a new foundation demands; we would disregard
the appointments of Providence if we could; but both our voluntary
consent to the authority of Christ and the impossibility of
resisting His providential arrangements, prevent us from refusing to
fall in with them, however needless and tyrannical they seem, and
however little we perceive that they are intended to accomplish our
permanent well-being. And it is in after years, when the pain of
severance from old friends and habits is healed, and when the
discomfort of adapting ourselves to a new kind of life is replaced
by peaceful and docile resignation to new conditions, that we reach
the clear perception that the changes we resented have in point of
fact rendered harmless the seeds of fresh disaster, and rescued us
from the results of long bad government. He who has most keenly felt
the hardship of being diverted from his original course in life will
in after life tell you that had he been allowed to hold his own
land, and remain his own master in his old loved abode, he would
have lapsed into a condition from which no worthy harvest could be
expected. If a man only wishes that his own conceptions of
prosperity be realised, then let him keep his land in his own hand
and work his material irrespective of God’s demands; for certainly,
if he yields himself to God, his own ideas of prosperity will not be
realised. But if he suspects that God may have a more liberal
conception of prosperity and may understand better than he what is
eternally beneficial, let him commit himself and all his material of
prosperity without doubting into God’s hand, and let him greedily
obey all God’s precepts; for in neglecting one of these, he so far
neglects and misses what God would have him enter into.
|