Remember
that he had been sold to Potiphar, the captain of the Egyptian Pharaoh’s guard.
And “the Lord was with Joseph,” so that he was successful at everything he did.
Potiphar “saw that the Lord was with him,” and that everything he did
succeeded, so he made Joseph the overseer of his entire household. But
Potiphar’s wife tried to seduce him, and when he refused her repeated advances
she claimed to her husband that he’d tried to seduce her (or rape her – the
language is kinda flowery and vague). So Potiphar put Joseph in prison.
The
prison overseer took a liking to Joseph (once more attributed to God’s
intervention. Whatever happened to free will? Though I suppose to this point
there has been no mention whatsoever made of the concept of free will, so there’s
no reason yet to suppose it exists). So Joseph gets put in charge of the
activities of all the other prisoners.
After
he’d been there awhile the Pharaoh’s cupbearer and baker were put in prison for
some unspecified offense. One night they both had troubling dreams, and in the
morning Joseph noticed that they were kind of down. So he asked them about it.
“Gen 40:8 They said to him ‘We
have had dreams, and there is no one to interpret them.’ And Joseph said to
them ‘Do not interpretations belong to God? Please tell them to me.’”
So
Joseph is making the claim to either have a power reserved for God, or to speak
for God. So the two men tell him their dreams, and he interprets them to mean
that the cupbearer will be returned to Pharaoh’s favor and get his job back,
while the baker is going to be hanged. And he asks the cupbearer to mention him
to Pharaoh once he’s restored to favor, so he can be set free.
Three
days later the baker is hanged, and the cupbearer is restored to favor but
forgets to mention Joseph to Pharaoh (I guess accurate predictions of
life-altering future events were so common and trivial back then that folks
could just forget about specific episodes). So Joseph languished in prison for
another two years.
Then
Pharaoh has a couple troubling and related dreams. In one he sees seven fat
cows eaten by seven skinny cows. In the other, he sees seven healthy ears of
grain consumed by seven withered ears of grain. So he starts asking around his
advisors if anyone can interpret his dreams, but none of them know of anyone.
But then his cupbearer finally remembers Joseph, and mentions him to Pharaoh.
Pharaoh
has Joseph brought to him to have his dreams interpreted. Joseph basically says
he can’t interpret dreams, but if Pharaoh tells him the dreams then God will
interpret them through him (does this sound to anyone else like standard
psychic/medium schlock?). So Pharaoh tells Joseph his dream, and Joseph
responds that God sent the dreams and they mean that there will be seven years
of great plenty, followed by seven years of famine. He then goes on to say that
Pharaoh should appoint someone wise to manage their food stores, and order that
a portion of the food from the good years should be set aside and stored so
there will be something to eat during the lean years.
Well
naturally, the Pharaoh decided that this stranger, fortune-teller, and prisoner
must surely be the wisest man in all the land, and therefore should get the
job. Not only that, he essentially made Joseph his second in command over the
entire kingdom (kinda funny that I’ve never really considered before whether
this was reasonable behavior – but then, I was a child when I was taught this
story). And gave him a wife (the daughter of the high priest of On). This wife,
in the seven years that followed, bore him two sons: Manasseh, and Ephraim.
So
Joseph had vast amounts of grain saved up during the seven years of plenty that
followed. At the end of those seven years the famine began, and when people
came to Pharaoh begging for food he told them to go see Joseph.
“Gen 41:56 So when the famine had
spread over all the land, Joseph opened all the storehouses and sold to the
Egyptians, for the famine was severe in the land of Egypt. 57 Moreover, all the
earth came to Egypt to Joseph to buy grain, because the famine was severe over
all the earth.”
Fairly
certain that “all the earth” is a gross exaggeration, though I suppose it might
seem like a reasonable claim to an author ignorant of the true size of the
earth and in how much of it people lived even back then. But to continue on…
eventually Jacob (or Israel – he’s referred to by both names interchangeably in
this story) hears that there’s grain for sale in Egypt. So he sends all of his
sons except the youngest one Benjamin (the only one to share a mother with
Joseph) to Egypt to buy some grain.
Joseph
recognizes them when they arrive at the storehouse, but they don’t recognize
him. So he decides to fuck with them a bit and accuses them of being spies.
When they deny it, he has them thrown in prison (isn’t the abuse of absolute
dictatorial power fun?). After a few days he comes to question them, and when
they admit that they have another brother still back home, he tells them that
the way they can prove themselves to be honest men is to return home and bring
back their youngest brother.
Oh, and
apparently most of this conversation takes place through an interpreter, as
Joseph is pretending not to know his brothers’ language. But you don’t find
this out until the end of the scene when it’s mentioned that Joseph is able to
eavesdrop on his brothers’ conversations amongst themselves because they didn’t
realize he could speak their language due to the presence of the interpreter. I
have no way of judging the poetic merit of the script in the original Hebrew,
but I can tell you this: failing to mention the interpreter and resultant
linguistic deception until after the whole scene is almost over is crap
storytelling.
Anyway,
Joseph makes them leave one of their number, Simeon, as hostage against their
return and sets the rest of them free. He sends them off with the grain they
had purchased, and has one of his servants sneak the money they had paid for it
back into their bags (embezzling from the Pharaoh’s coffers?).
They
return home and tell Israel/Jacob what happened. He refuses to let Benjamin go
back with them for fear that he might lose him (and seems to just write Simeon
off as dead). Reuben offers to let Israel kill his own children if he fails to
return with Benjamin, but for some odd reason the proposal to let Jacob kill
some of his own grandkids to make up for losing a son doesn’t seem to hold much
appeal (ya think?!). When they all discover their money is still in their bags,
they’re scared that they might be accused of stealing it. So they don’t go back
right away.
But
eventually the grain starts to run out, and they have to consider going back to
buy more. This time they manage to talk Israel into letting them take Benjamin
with them, and Judah takes the responsibility for seeing that he is returned.
Israel orders them to take presents to the man (Joseph), as well as the money that
had been replaced in their packs after the previous trip.
This
time when they meet Joseph and he sees that they have Benjamin with them, he
has his steward instruct them to join him at his house. They try to give the
steward the extra money that had been returned to them on the previous visit,
but he tells them that their God had put the money in their packs and he had
been paid. So even in a world where their God supposedly shows up and
physically manifests to do impressive shit all the time, apparently it’s still
OK to invent stuff that he did to give him credit for even when you know that an
actual person was responsible.
But
then, this part of the story is really about an elaborate prank Joseph is
pulling on his dick brothers, so I suppose it doesn’t really matter much.
Anyway,
there’s this big impressive meal with Joseph sitting at his table, the brothers
sitting at theirs, and the Egyptians in the household sitting at yet a third
(because eating with Hebrews is an abomination to Egyptians). Joseph shares the
food from his table with his brothers, and Benjamin gets five times as much as
the rest of them. Much merriment is had all around.
When the
feast is over, Joseph instructs his steward to give them the food they came to
buy, and to once again sneak the money they had paid back into their packs. But
since he’s not done fucking with them yet, he also has his silver chalice snuck
into Benjamin’s bags. Joseph waits a bit after they leave, then he sends the
steward out to chase them down, arrest them and accuse them of stealing the
chalice.
Of
course the brothers are shocked, and invite the steward’s men to search their
bags. And of course they find the chalice, and drag them all back to Joseph’s
house where he informs them that he will be keeping Benjamin as a slave now.
Now, since Judah had promised to take responsibility for Benjamin’s return, he
takes Joseph aside for a word. And then he retells the whole fucking story of
every goddamn thing that happened from the moment they first came to buy grain
(forcing the reader’s eyes to glaze over for several verses), before finally
getting to the point and offering to take Benjamin’s place in captivity.
Now,
finally, Joseph can’t take it anymore and reveals his true identity to his
brothers. And so there is a tearful reunion (slightly tinged by his brothers’
terror that the most powerful man in Egypt might have a grudge against them for
the whole selling him into slavery thing).
OK… long
story, and there’s still more to it, so I’m picking this as a good stopping
point. The stuff that happens after this deserves its own posting, especially
since I’ll be forced to partially retract my previous assertion that the Joseph
story was about someone who behaved decently. Find out why, when we return!
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