The saga of the bones of
Joseph
1. The bones of Joseph left Egypt in
that great exodus. When Moses assembled the people and they were ready to move
out at the beginning of their great trek to Canaan — Exodus 13:19 — “Moses took
the bones of Joseph with him; for he [Joseph] had made sons of Israel solemnly sware,
saying, God will surely provide for you, and you will carry my bones from here
with you.” Moses was the man of doctrine who kept the promise. That unburied
coffin moved out with the people and at the front of the column for forty years
was a reminder of the dynamics of Bible doctrine in the soul of one person. In
fact, their only responsibility was to follow the colours. They followed the
coffin. Why was it a coffin to them? Because they were reversionists. But in
effect that coffin was their guidon, the national colours. To follow the coffin
means to take in doctrine, day in and day out.
2. The bones of Joseph were forty
years in the desert with Israel, carried by reversionists. They followed the
coffin overtly but they did not follow the coffin spiritually. They didn’t
follow it in the sense of taking in doctrine today, tomorrow, the next day.
They had the greatest Bible teacher but they didn’t listen to his teaching and
they revolted against his wonderful leadership, for Moses was a humble man
under God with the most dynamic system of leadership the world has ever seen.
3. The bones of Joseph crossed the
Jordan with the next generation under Joshua. The coffin was carried dry shod
across the Jordan river, held up by the grace of God.
4. The bones of Joseph were finally
buried 470 years after he made his speech — Joshua 24:32. Again, we have the
principle of resurrection. Joseph in resurrection wanted to stand by his
grandfather and his father. And in the resurrection which will occur at the
second advent there will be a resurrection of regenerate Jews. There will be
four generations of believers on the earth — Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Joseph
— who claimed paragraph SG2, who made the transition from time to
eternity by dying grace, and who claimed paragraph SG3.
Summary
1. There are two areas of doctrine
which are emphasised by Joseph in his dying moments. The first is national
eschatology, the future of Israel under the Abrahamic and Palestinian
covenants. Secondly, the personal eschatology: the future of Joseph in
resurrection body claiming paragraph SG3.
2. Joseph, therefore, is a classic
example of a believer who seized and held the high ground, enjoyed paragraph SG2,
had something better in the PCS of dying grace, and had
something better than the best in his surpassing grace paragraph of eternity.
3. Joseph’s supergrace blessings
included promotion to Prime Minister of Egypt, social and sexual prosperity
with his right woman, great leadership dynamics, one of the finest and smartest
policy-makers to ever control a nation. Economic and materialistic prosperity
came to Egypt through his policies. The inheritance of the double portion of
Israel is a part of SG3, sharing the happiness of God, His
occupation with Christ, his lack of bitterness and reaction toward his brothers
and others who maligned him.
4. Joseph made the transfer from
time to eternity by means of dying grace. He not only had a great death but he
had one of the most dynamic deaths in history. Very few deaths influence
history for four hundred years after that death. His did.
5. Not only did Joseph anticipate
his own resurrection but he is included in the salute and embrace principle of
the aorist middle participle of a)sfazomai which we studied in verse
13.
6. In other words, Joseph
has in the future a glorious SG3 paragraph — surpassing grace,
blessings and rewards forever and ever. These blessings will glorify God for
all eternity. What more can you say about anyone in that he glorified God in
time, he glorified God even more in dying, and he glorifies God to the maximum
forever and ever.