GOODNESS IN A DUNGEON
by Alexander Maclaren
'And Joseph's master took him, and put him into the
prison, a place where the king's prisoners were bound: and he was there in
the prison. But the Lord was with Joseph, and showed him mercy, and gave him
favour in the sight of the keeper of the prison. And the keeper of the
prison committed to Joseph's hand all the prisoners that were in the prison;
and whatsoever they did there, he was the doer of it. The keeper of the
prison looked not to any thing that was under his hand; because the Lord was
with him, and that which he did, the Lord made it to prosper.' -- GENESIS
xxxix. 20-23.
'And it came to pass after these things, that the
butler of the
king of Egypt and his baker had offended their lord
the king of
Egypt. And Pharaoh was wroth against two of his
officers, against
the chief of the butlers, and against the chief of
the bakers.
And he put them in ward in the house of the captain
of the guard,
into the prison, the place where Joseph was bound.
And the
captain of the guard charged Joseph with them, and
he served
them: and they continued a season in ward. And they
dreamed a
dream both of them, each man his dream in one night,
each man
according to the interpretation of his dream, the
butler and the
baker of the king of Egypt, which were bound in the
prison. And
Joseph came in unto them in the morning, and looked
upon them,
and, behold, they were sad. And he asked Pharaoh's
officers that
were with him in the ward of his lord's house,
saying, Wherefore
look ye so sadly to day? And they said unto him, We
have dreamed
a dream, and there is no interpreter of it. And
Joseph said unto
them, Do not interpretations belong to God? tell me
them, I pray
you. And the chief butler told his dream to Joseph,
and said to
him, In my dream, behold, a vine was before me; And
in the vine
were three branches: and it was as though it budded,
and her
blossoms shot forth; and the clusters thereof
brought forth ripe
grapes: And Pharaoh's cup was in my hand: and I took
the grapes,
and pressed them into Pharaoh's cup, and I gave the
cup into
Pharaoh's hand. And Joseph said unto him, This is
the interpretation
of it: The three branches are three days: Yet within
three days shall
Pharaoh lift up thine head, and restore thee unto
thy place: and thou
shalt deliver Pharaoh's cup into his hand, after the
former manner
when thou wast his butler. But think on me when it
shall be well with
thee, and shew kindness, I pray thee, unto me, and
make mention of
me unto Pharaoh, and bring me out of this house: For
indeed I was
stolen away out of the land of the Hebrews: and here
also have I done
nothing that they should put me into the
dungeon.'--GENESIS xl. 1-15.
Potiphar was 'captain of the guard,' or, as the
title literally
runs, chief of the executioners. In that capacity he
had charge of
the prison, which was connected with his house (Gen.
xl. 3). It is,
therefore, quite intelligible that he should have
put Joseph in
confinement on his own authority, and the
distinction drawn between
such a prisoner and the 'king's prisoners,' who were
there by royal
warrant or due process of law, is natural. Such
high-handed
treatment of a slave was a small matter, and it was
merciful as well
as arrogant, for death would have been the
punishment of the crime
of which Joseph was accused. Either Potiphar was
singularly lenient,
or, as is perhaps more probable, he did not quite
believe his wife's
story, and thought it best to hush up a scandal. The
transfer of
Joseph from the house to the adjoining prison would
be quietly
managed, and then no more need be said about an ugly
business.
So now we see him at the lowest ebb of his fortunes,
flung down in a
moment by a lie from the height to which he had
slowly been
climbing, having lost the confidence of his master,
and earned the
unslumbering hatred of a wicked woman. He had
wrecked his career by
his goodness. 'What a fool!' says the world. 'How
badly managed
things are in this life,' say doubters, 'that virtue
should not be
paid by prosperity!' But the end, even the nearer
end in this life,
will show whether he was a fool, and whether things
are so badly
arranged; and the lesson enforced by the picture of
Joseph in his
dungeon, and which young beginners in life have
special need to
learn, is that, come what will of it, right is
right, and sin is
sin, that consequences are never to deter from duty,
and that it is
better to have a clean conscience and be in prison
than do
wickedness and sit at a king's table. A very
threadbare lesson, but
needing to be often repeated.
'But the Lord was with Joseph.' That is one of the
eloquent 'buts'
of Scripture. The prison is light when God is there,
and chains do
not chafe if He wraps His love round them. Many a
prisoner for God
since Joseph's time has had his experience repeated,
and received
tenderer tokens from Him in a dungeon than ever
before. Paul the
prisoner, John in Patmos, Bunyan in Bedford jail,
George Fox in
Lancaster Castle, Rutherford in Aberdeen, and many
more, have found
the Lord with them, and showing them His kindness.
We may all be
sure that, if ever faithfulness to conscience
involves us in
difficulties, the faithfulness and the difficulties
will combine to
bring to us sweet and strong tokens of God's
approval and presence,
the winning of which will make a prison a palace and
a gate of
heaven.
Joseph's relations to jailer and fellow-prisoners
are beautiful and
instructive. The former is called 'the keeper of the
prison,' and is
evidently Potiphar's deputy, in more immediate
charge of the prison.
Of course, the great man had an underling to do the
work, and
probably that underling was not chosen for sweetness
of temper or
facile leniency to his charges. But he fell under
the charm of
Joseph's character--all the more readily, perhaps,
because his
occupation had not brought many good men to his
knowledge. This
jewel would flash all the more brightly for the dark
background of
criminals, and the jailer would wonder at a type of
character so
unlike what he was accustomed to. Eastern prisons
to-day present a
curious mixture of cruelty and companionship. The
jailers are on
intimate terms with prisoners, and yet are ready to
torture them.
There is no discipline, nor any rules, nor
inspection. The jailer
does as he likes. So it seems to have been in Egypt,
and there would
be nothing unnatural in making a prisoner jailer of
the rest, and
leaving everything in his hands. The 'keeper of the
prison' was
lazy, like most of us, and very glad to shift duties
on to any
capable shoulders. Such a thing would, of course, be
impossible with
us, but it is a bit of true local colouring here.
Joseph won hearts because God was with him, as the
story is careful
to point out. Our religion should recommend us, and
therefore
itself, to those who have to do with us. It is not
enough that we
should be severely righteous, as Joseph had been, or
ready to meet
trouble with stoical resignation, but we are to be
gentle and
lovable, gracious towards men, because we receive
grace from God. We
owe it to our Lord and to our fellows, and to
ourselves, to be
magnets to attract to Jesus, by showing how fair He
can make a life.
Joseph in prison found work to do, and he did not
shirk it. He might
have said to himself: 'This is poor work for me, who
had all
Potiphar's house to rule. Shall such a man as I come
down to such
small tasks as this?' He might have sulked or
desponded in idleness,
but he took the kind of work that offered, and did
his best by it.
Many young people nowadays do nothing, because they
think themselves
above the small humdrum duties that lie near them.
It would do some
of us good to remember Joseph in the jail, and his
cheerful
discharge of what his hands found to do there.
Of course, work done 'because the Lord was with
him,' in the
consciousness of His presence, and in obedience to
Him, went well.
'The Lord made it to prosper,' as He always will
make such work.
'When thou dost favour any action,
It runs, it flies.'
And even if, sometimes, work done in the fear of the
Lord does not
outwardly prosper, it does so in deepest truth, if
it work in us the
peaceable fruit of righteousness. We need to have a
more Christian
idea of what constitutes prosperity, and then we
shall understand
that there are no exceptions to the law that, if a
man does his work
by God and with God and for God, 'that which he
does, the Lord makes
it to prosper.'
The help that Joseph gave by interpreting the two
high officials'
dreams cannot be considered here in detail, but we
note that the
names of similar officers, evidently higher in rank
than we should
suppose, with our notions of bakers and butlers, are
found in
Egyptian documents, and that these two were 'king's
prisoners,' and
put in charge of Potiphar, who alleviated their
imprisonment by
detailing Joseph as their attendant, thus showing
that his feeling
to the young Hebrew was friendly still. Dreams are
the usual method
of divine communication in Genesis, and belong to a
certain stage in
the process of revelation. The friend of God, who is
in touch with
Him, can interpret these. 'The secret of the Lord is
with them that
fear Him,' and it is still true that they who live
close by God have
insight into His purposes. Joseph showed sympathy
with the two
dreamers, and his question, 'Why look ye so sadly?'
unlocked their
hearts. He was not so swallowed up in his own
trouble as to be blind
to the signs of another's sorrow, or slow to try to
comfort. Grief
is apt to make us selfish, but it is meant to make
us tender of
heart and quick of hand to help our fellows in
calamity. We win
comfort for our own sorrows by trying to soothe
those of others.
Jesus stooped to suffer that He might succour them
that suffer, and
we are to tread in His steps.
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