Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Genesis 41:41
And Pharaoh said unto Joseph, See, I have set thee over all the land of Egypt.
41. Pharaoh said, . . . See, I haveset thee over all the landThese words were preliminary toinvestiture with the insignia of office, which were these: thesignet-ring, used for signing public documents, and its impressionwas more valid than the sign-manual of the king; the khelaator dress of honor, a coat of finely wrought linen, or rather cotton,worn only by the highest personages; the gold necklace, a badge ofrank, the plain or ornamental form of it indicating the degreeof rank and dignity; the privilege of riding in a state carriage, thesecond chariot; and lastly
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
And Pharaoh said unto Joseph,…. He continued speaking to him for the greater confirmation of what he had said, and for further explanation of it:
see, I have set thee over all the land of Egypt; not merely as the corn master general, to take care of a provision of corn in time of plenty, against a time of scarcity, but as a viceroy or deputy governor over the whole land, as appears by the ensigns of honour and dignity bestowed on him; of which in the following verses.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
DISCOURSE: 53
JOSEPHS ADVANCEMENT
Gen 41:41. And Pharaoh said unto Joseph, See, I have set thee over all the land of Egypt.
IN the eventful life of Joseph we are particularly struck with the suddenness and greatness of the changes he experienced. One day he was his fathers favourite; the next he was menaced with death and sold as a slave: one day at the head of Potiphars household; the next immured in a prison and laden with fetters of iron. From that state also he was called in a moment by the singular providence of God, and exalted to the government of the first nation upon earth. Of this we are informed in the text; from whence we take occasion to observe,
I.
That we can be in no state, however desperate, from whence God cannot speedily deliver us
[The state of Joseph, though considerably ameliorated by the indulgence of the keeper of his prison, was very hopeless. He had been many years in prison; and had no means of redress afforded him. His cause being never fairly tried, his innocence could not be cleared: and there was every reason to apprehend that his confinement would terminate only with his life. The hopes he had entertained from the kind offices of Pharaohs butler had completely failed: and God had suffered him to be thus disappointed, in order that, having the sentence of death in himself, he might not trust in himself, but in God that raiseth the dead. But when Gods time was come, every difficulty vanished, and his elevation was as great as it was sudden and unexpected.
It would be well if we bore in mind the ability of God to help us. People when brought into great trials by loss of dear friends, by embarrassed circumstances, or by some other calamitous event, are apt to think, that, because they see no way for their escape, their state is hopeless; and, from indulging despair, they are ready to say with Job, I am weary of life, and my soul chooseth strangling, and death rather than my life [Note: Job 7:15.]. But we should remember that there is a God with whom nothing is impossible: though human help may fail us, his arm is not shortened, that it cannot save, nor is his ear heavy, that it cannot hear: yea rather he would glorify himself, as he did in rescuing Israel at the Red Sea, if we would call upon him; and our extremity should be the opportunity he would seize for his effectual interpositions: In the mount, the Lord would be seen.
We may apply the same observations to those who seem to have cast off all fear of God, and to have sinned beyond a hope of recovery. But while the conversion of Saul, and the deliverance of Peter from prison, stand on record, we shall see that there is nothing too great for God to effect, and nothing too good for him to give, in answer to the prayer of faith.]
II.
That God is never at a loss for means whereby to effect his gracious purposes
[He had decreed the elevation of Joseph to the highest dignity in the land of Egypt. To accomplish this, he causes Pharaoh to be disturbed by two significant dreams, which none of his magicians could interpret. The solicitude of Pharaoh to understand the purport of his dreams leads his butler to confess his fault in having so long neglected the youth who had, two years before, interpreted his dreams; and to recommend him as the only person capable of satisfying the mind of Pharaoh. Instantly Joseph is sent for (not from a sense of justice to an injured person, but from a desire for the information which he alone could give); and, upon his interpreting the dreams of Pharaoh, and giving suitable advice respecting the steps that should be taken to meet the future distress, he is invested with supreme authority, that he may carry his own plans into execution. Thus God, by suggesting dreams to Pharaoh, and to Joseph the interpretation of them, effects in an hour what, humanly speaking, all the power of Pharaoh could not otherwise have accomplished.
If we were duly observant of the works of Providence, we should see, in many instances relating to ourselves, how wonderfully God has brought to pass the most unlooked-for events. Things the most strange have been made to subserve his gracious purposes, and to accomplish what no human foresight could have effected for us. In relation to the concerns of our souls this may perhaps be more visible than in any temporal matters. The history of Gods people, if it were fully known, would furnish thousands of instances, not less wonderful than that before us, of persons raised by the most unexpected and apparently trivial means from the dust or a dunghill, to be set among princes, and to inherit a throne of glory. We are far from recommending any one to trust in dreams, or to pay any attention to them whatever: for in the multitude of dreams are divers vanities. But we dare not say that God never makes use of dreams to forward his own inscrutable designs: on the contrary, we believe that he has often made a dream about death or judgment the occasion of stirring up a person to seek after salvation; and that he has afterwards answered the prayers, which originated in that apparently trifling and accidental occurrence. At all events, there are a multitude of little circumstances which tend to fix the bounds of our habitation, or to bring us into conversation with this or that person, by whom we are ultimately led to the knowledge of the truth. So that we should commit our every way to God, and look to him to order every thing for us according to the counsel of his own gracious will.]
III.
We are never in a fairer way for exaltation to happiness than when we are waiting Gods time, and suffering his will
[We hear nothing respecting Joseph but what strongly impresses us with a belief that he was perfectly resigned to the will of God. It is most probable indeed that he had formed some expectation from an arm of flesh: but two years experience of human ingratitude had taught him that his help must be in God alone. At last, his recompence is bestowed, and ample compensation is given him for all that he endured. With his prison garments, he puts off his sorrows; and, from a state of oppression and ignominy, he is made the Benefactor and the Saviour of a whole nation.
Happy would it be for us if we could leave ourselves in Gods hands, and submit ourselves in all things to his wise disposed! We are persuaded, that our want of submission to Divine Providence is that which so often necessitates God to afflict us; and that if we could more cordially say, Thy will be done, we should much sooner and much oftener be favoured with the desire of our own hearts. Have we an husband, a wife, a child in sick and dying circumstances? our rebellious murmurings may provoke God to inflict the threatened stroke, and to take away the idol which we are so averse to part with: whereas, if we were once brought to make a cordial surrender of our will to His, he would in many instances arrest the uplifted arm, and restore our Isaac to our bosom. At all events, he would compensate by spiritual communications whatever we might lose or suffer by a temporal bereavement.]
We may yet further learn from this subject,
1.
To submit with cheerfulness to all the dispensations of Providence
[We may, like Joseph, have accumulated and long-continued trials; the end of which we may not be able to foresee. But, as in his instance, and in that of Job, we have seen the end of the Lord, that the Lord is very pitiful and of tender mercy, so we may be sure that our trials shall terminate well; and that however great or long-continued they may be, our future recompence, either in this world or the next, will leave us no reason to complain.]
2.
To be thankful to God for the Governors whom he has been pleased to set over us
[It is by God that kings reign, and princes decree justice. Sometimes, for the punishment of a land, children (that is, persons weak and incompetent) are placed over it, that their infatuated counsels or projects may bring upon it his heavy judgments. We, blessed be God! have been highly favoured in this respect. By his gracious providence, we have for a long series of years had persons exalted to posts of honour, who, like Joseph, have sought the welfare of the nation, and have promoted it by their wise counsels and indefatigable exertions. Let us thankfully acknowledge God in them, and endeavour to shew ourselves worthy of this mercy, by the peaceableness of our demeanour, and the cheerfulness of our submission to them.]
3.
To be thankful, above all, for our adorable Emmanuel
[Him hath God exalted with his right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour. To Him hath he given a name that is above every name; that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow [Note: Compare 3 with Php 2:9-11.]. To Him doth our almighty King direct us, saying to every famished soul, Go to Jesus [Note: 5.]. In Him there is all fulness treasured up: to Him all the nations of the earth may go for the bread of life: nor shall any of them be sent empty away. They shall receive it too without money and without price. O what do we owe to God for raising us up such a Saviour! and what do we owe to Jesus, who has voluntarily undertaken this office, and who submitted to imprisonment in the grave as the appointed step to this glorious elevation! Let us thankfully bow the knee to him; and go to him continually for our daily supplies of grace and peace.]
Fuente: Charles Simeon’s Horae Homileticae (Old and New Testaments)
When the Church is adorned in the robes of the Redeemer’s righteousness, then, like Joseph, how differently clad from the former wretchedness! Psa 45:9-11 .
Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Gen 41:41 And Pharaoh said unto Joseph, See, I have set thee over all the land of Egypt.
Ver. 41. See, I have set thee over all, &c. ] So Antoninus, the emperor, made Pertinax, a a lowly man, but well qualified, consul, which many murmured at. But he was afterwards became emperor; and finding the public treasure woefully wasted by his predecessor Commodus, he restored it by his good husbandry, which many prominent men laughed at; caeteri, quibus virtus luxuria potior erat, laudabamus, saith the historian.
a Pertinax ob res praeclare gestas consul est factus: caius causa multi indignati sunt, &c. – Dio, in Vita Pertinacis.
all. Apepi only recently ruled over all. Before this he had reigned with his father and grandfather. So the Monuments.
Gen 41:44, Gen 39:5, Gen 39:22, Est 10:3, Pro 17:2, Pro 22:29, Dan 2:7, Dan 2:8, Dan 4:2, Dan 4:3, Dan 6:3, Mat 28:18, Phi 2:9-11
Reciprocal: Gen 39:4 – overseer Gen 41:55 – Go unto Gen 42:6 – governor Psa 113:8 – General
PRISON TO PALACE
Pharaoh said unto Joseph, See I have set thee over all the land of Egypt.
Gen 41:41
Pharaoh was a wise king. When he found a man of capacity and honesty like Joseph, he made use of him. And he did it in a royal style. He gave him a place in which he could use his qualities for the kingdom, and he invested the place with dignity and honour. The story is illustrative of the free and sweeping way an Eastern monarch ruled. But it is true of the life of Eastern lands to-day. A late Prime Minister in Persia rose from a humble place and lowly lineage to the first place in the kingdom, just as Joseph did in Egypt.
I. It does credit to Pharaoh that he admired and sought the qualities which Joseph possessed.The Spirit of God was in him, and he had discretion and wisdom. There will always be work in the world ready for the man of whom this can be said. Discretion and wisdom are terms applicable not so much to the intellectual life as to character; to the man as a whole. The wise man is the man who knows how to do and when to do, and who does. And no man can have the Spirit of God in him doing his full work who will not become such a wise man, calm and prudent in judgment, strong and patient in plan and purpose, and steadfast and reliable in the discharge of duty.
II. Joseph accepted the position Pharaoh offered him.It might have been dangerous for him to decline. It was surely dangerous for him to accept. There were the certain jealousies of those who would be supplanted by him, and the natural opposition of old officials and established families to an upstart, just out from prison, and with a dark history behind him. Moreover, the work before Joseph was appalling. But young as he was, he took it up. A man need never be afraid to take up any work which God gives him. He is pursuing the perilous course who runs away from Gods call, however solemn and astounding it may be. It is an easier and a happier thing to be a prime minister at Gods call and with Gods help than a hod-carrier without God. All work is easy which God gives man, and all work hard when He does not give. In prison Joseph at once acted upon all the knowledge he had of Gods will and purpose.
III. Joseph had not sought this office, nor interpreted dreams in order to get it.He believed that he was in it for the sake of the conditions, the knowledge of which had been the means of putting him in it. And he went to work to gather the grain which the land brought forth in handfuls. What he predicted in Gods name to others, he acted upon in Gods strength himself. Joseph lived his own gospel, and at once laid out his might in accordance with it. Thou that preachest that another man must not lie, dost thou lie? Thou that tellest men to prepare for judgment, art thou prepared? Thou that preachest of a holy God, art thou clean in thine inward parts? The consistency of Joseph calls all who preach to others or who think that they believe for themselves, to act upon their beliefs and not use them merely as the means of livelihood, as stock in trade in conversation, or as mental notions untranslated into act and moral nature.
Illustration
(1) How casual seem the results of Gods providence! In after years, the butler might say, By merest chance I was in the same prison with him, and happened to dream a dream, which he interpreted, and so he became ruler of Egypt. The history of the world all hinges on seeming chances of this sort. Oliver Cromwell was on board of ship ready to start for America, when Charles I. stopped him. How nearly his services were lost to England!
The great struggle of the Dutch against Spain for religious liberty might have been fruitless, but for the storm which raised the sea, and broke through the dykes and permitted the Dutch galleys to sail over the fields right to the besieged town of Leyden with provisions and men. Our accidents are Gods designs, and the little things as well as the great are all of His appointment.
(2) There were good reasons for the time of waiting that Joseph had in the prison-house. What did it do for Josephs character? Perhaps it cured a tendency to undue self-esteem; certainly it helped to nourish self-control. Nothing does that so well as being compelled to wait, when we want to work. Compare the influence of Davids time of persecution on his fitness for his kingship. Joseph also had to learn this very valuable lesson, that if a man takes care to keep his character good, God will have both him and it in His safe keeping, and by-and-by make the goodness plain to everybody.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Fuente: Church Pulpit Commentary