Another less noticed Bible verse echoes my new love of organic farming and permaculture. As a young man I was quite dismissive of organic food and farming – is sounded like a lot of blouse-wearing to me – but about five years ago my wife encouraged us to get some backyard chickens. This was the start of a surprising journey for me towards a better understanding of where our food comes from; about the unnatural processes behind many mass-produced foods, about how poorly many animals are treated; and by contrast the joy of natural food production processes that enhance the land, rather than degrade it. I particularly like the work of Joel Salatin at Polyface farm – Joel says that the health of his soil and his earthworms is the best measure of his farm’s success.
So you can imagine my surprise and delight when in the middle of 2 Chronicles, not one of the most frequently read books of the bible, I discovered King Uzziah, who we are told in 2 Ch 26:10 “loved the soil”. Not just managed the soil, not just looked after it, but loved the soil. One day I hope to have a small farm, and I’ll be tempted to call it “King Uzziah’s farm”, although I wouldn’t want the neighbours to think I was a crazy person. Well, not the wrong sort of crazy person. And sometimes I imagine that great day when God makes all things new, and I think of how wonderful it will be to sit and listen to King Uzziah and Joel Salatin wax lyrical about the soil.
Now to one of my favourite less noticed verses – it comes from the story of Joseph in Genesis – do you remember the part where he is prison? There he meets Pharaoh’s cupbearer and baker, and each has a dream, which Joseph can interpret because God is with him. The cupbearer is soon lifted up and restored to his previous position, while the baker’s head is grimly “lifted up”. The cupbearer was meant to mention Joseph to Pharaoh, but he forgot. Then Pharaoh has his dreams, the cupbearer remembers Joseph, and Joseph is brought before Pharaoh to interpret. So… how long was Joseph waiting in prison after the cupbearer was restored? Three days? A week or so? A month?
Here is the verse – in fact, half a verse – that caught my eye. Genesis 41:1a “
When two full years had passed, Pharaoh had a dream”. Two full years. 730 days. That’s a lot longer than I had assumed when I missed this verse on previous readings.
And it’s not just that Joseph was in prison for a long time, it was that God had acted decisively in Joseph’s by helping him interpret the dreams, and then nothing seems to happen after this. For a long time.
I try to imagine Joseph’s prayers to God on day 600 – what did he say to God? If it had been me, I think would have been asking God what was going on – “why give me the interpretation and what seemed a golden chance to leave prison, and then nothing? Why did my earlier dreams seem to indicate my life had some significant purpose, and now day after day I’m stuck in prison without meaning?”
We don’t know what Joseph prayed, although we do know he worked so diligently to help the warden of the prison that he was given management of the prison – so he wasn’t just moping about.
There seem to me to be two possibilities for how Joseph responded during these two years – both involved trusting God, in believing that God has a plan, that God is Sovereign.
The first is that Joseph simply waited patiently on God, trusting that in whatever way God would use him he would serve faithfully. On day 600, he may have wondered whether God had some big event planned for him in the future, but whether God did or didn’t, he would seek to serve each day humbly and faithfully wherever he found himself.
We can apply this to our own lives and struggles. Sometimes God’s plans are different from what we think, and His timing is not our timing. In these cases, I think we can draw great strength and solace from the book of Job, one of the more extraordinary books of the Old Testament, where Job cries out to God in his suffering wanting to understand his dire circumstances. Following much misguided advice from his friends, when God speaks to Job at the end of the book, he doesn’t answer Job’s questions about his suffering. Rather, he gives Job a glimpse of the astonishing beauty and complexity of the world that God sees – the “big picture”. After this, Job humbly repents saying, “Surely I spoke of things I did not understand, things too wonderful for me to know.”
God’s plans are often different from what we think, and His timing is not our timing. Sometimes events well beyond our understanding are progressing according to a divine plan we do not see, and this may involve hard times and extended periods of waiting. At the end of the story of Joseph in Gen 50:20, after his father has died and his brothers fear Joseph might finally seek retribution, he says this: “
You intended to harm me, but God intended it for good to accomplish what is now being done, the saving of many lives.”
Two years in prison after the cupbearer was restored was a long time to wait on God, but others in the Bible waited longer – it was 25 years before God’s promise to Sarah was fulfilled when she bore her son Isaac, Joseph’s grandfather. Later, the nation of Israel spent a lifetime, 70 years, in exile; and it was 400 years between the end of the Old Testament writings and the coming of Jesus. And many today have seen far greater trials and suffering than I have. But whatever our circumstances, I think the challenge is the same – are we willing to patiently trust God in His plans and His timing? Will we trust that He loves us and that He is Sovereign?
There is a second possibility for Joseph, which ends in the same place of trust in God, but gets there by a different path. We know that part of God’s love for us is that he disciplines us and refines us to be like pure gold. For example, in Proverbs 3:11-12, and then again in Hebrews 12:5-6, we read:
“My son, do not make light of the Lord’s discipline,and do not lose heart when he rebukes you,because the Lord disciplines the one he loves, and he chastens everyone he accepts as his son.”
Was God testing Joseph to refine him while he was in prison? We don’t know for sure, but another less noticed verse may give us a clue. Right back at the very start of the story of Joseph in Gen 37:2 we read:
“Joseph, a young man of seventeen was tending the flocks with his brothers, the sons of Bilhah and the sons of Zilpah, his father’s wives, and he brought their father a bad report about them.”
Now given the bad behaviour of his brothers a little later, Joseph may have been simply speaking the truth when he gave this bad report to his father. But maybe he was not blameless in this bad report. And later when he told his brothers his dreams, perhaps he took a little too much pride in them.
We don’t know about Joseph, but in our own lives, there will be many times where God’s apparent delays or unexpected events can be God’s loving discipline to call us to repent and to know Him more deeply, and to change to become more like His Son Jesus. To refine us with fire to become more like pure gold.
God has been gracious to act like this in my own life, and perhaps that is why I am drawn to the verse about Joseph and his two years in prison after the restoration of the cupbearer. My hardest struggles have been opportunities to seek God more fully and turn away from that which is broken in me, relying on the transformative power of the Holy Spirit working within me.
In some of my other struggles, it has simply been about patient endurance while God’s plans unfolded in ways I could not foresee. In these cases, I tried to learn God’s lesson at the end of Job.
Either way, it comes down to trusting that God is in control, that God is Sovereign. Tolkien, the author of the Lord of the Rings, and a man who knew significant suffering in his early life, put it this way, “a divine ‘punishment’ is also a divine ‘gift’”. Steven Colbert (of the Colbert Report) recently paraphrased Tolkien when speaking of his own early suffering when he said, “What punishments of God are not gifts?”
What should we do when we lack understanding during our challenges? In the intellectual realm, I have found great comfort in the idea found in St Augustine and St Anselm of “faith before understanding”. This does not mean blind or irrational faith – rather, it means that there are some things about God that are only rightly understood from within a humble attitude of faith and trust; as St Anselm puts it, “faith seeking understanding”.
But in our hearts and the daily practice of our lives, what should we do? It is here that a related phrase hit home for me – “obedience before understanding”. When I was in my own very difficult period, and was not really sure what to do, it was simple obedience that God used to change me. Obedience like praying, even when I wasn’t quite sure how prayer worked; like turning away from things in my life that I knew were not what God wanted me to do; like making sacrifices for the benefit of others; and like reading God’s Word carefully, even when I had a great many questions about it. It is not the obedience that brought me to God – the faith had to come first – but the faith found flesh in obedience.
During years of close reading of the Bible, I found many treasures. The greatest is God’s persistence in reaching out to mankind, which culminates in the death and resurrection of God’s Son, and the call to all people to repent and put their faith in Jesus. And one day He will make all things new.
But I also found a great many little treasures, like the splendour of grey hair, King Uzziah who loved the soil, and Joseph spending 730 days in prison wondering why God gave him an interpretation of the cupbearer’s dream.
James Dalziel
show less