Joseph – dreamer and interpreter of dreams
Whenever possible Joseph promoted the idea that God, through His aspect of Elohim, involves Himself in the affairs of nations. His family retained their belief in Elohim despite living in a heavily pagan environment. He was a role model for how Jews in a position of power should use this to safeguard their people. He was alsoan example as to how those in public service should use their position not to benefit themselves but to promote the welfare of everyone.
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Joseph's concept of God
The only aspect of God spoken about by Joseph is Elohim — and he does this often. He never speaks about YHWH. Even when speaking to a pagan such as Pharaoh, he takes pains to inform him that it is Elohim who rules nature:
“And for the repetition of the dream to Pharaoh twice, it is because the matter stands ready before Elohim, and Elohim is hastening to bring it to pass” (Genesis 41:32).
This is not to say that YHWH is not involved in Joseph’s life. He is, but He is behind the scenes:
And YKVK was with Joseph, and he became a successful man; and he remained in the house of his master. His master perceived that YKVK was with him and that whatever he did YKVK made prosper in his hand (Genesis 39:2-3).
and
And it was after these things, that his master’s wife cast her eyes upon Joseph and she said: “Lie with me.” But he refused: He said to his master’s wife “ . . . How then can I perpetrate this great evil; I will have sinned against Elohim?”. . . . Then Joseph’s master took him and placed him in the prison. . . . The prison warden did not scrutinize anything that was in his custody, because YHWH was with him [Joseph]; and whatever he would do YHWH would make successful (ibid 39:7-23).
However, it was not only Joseph who had lost the perception of YHWH, but also his father Jacob and Jacob’s entire family.
Following his vision of the ladder at Beth El, Jacob makes a vow to Elohim that if He will care for him and bring him back to his father’s home, then YHWH will be His God, that the stone that had been his headrest will become the site of a house to Elohim, and that he would repeatedly tithe to Him.3 Following Jacob’s marriage to Leah and Rachel, it was YHWH Who saw that Leah was unloved and allowed her to conceive, and she bore Reuben, Simeon, Levi and Judah (Genesis 29:31). Following these births, Leah acknowledges the role of YHWH in her fertility (Genesis 29:33). However, from this time on there is no further mention of YHWH by Jacob’s family.
Jacob’s anger flares up at Rachel when she asks him for a child and he says “Am I instead of Elohim Who has withheld from you fruit of the womb?” (Genesis 30:2). It is now Elohim who allows the two sisters to conceive: “Elohim remembered Rachel, Elohim hearkened to her and He opened her womb.” (Genesis 30:22). And it is angels of Elohim who met Jacob when he returned to Israel:
Jacob went on his way, and angels of Elohim encountered him. Jacob said when he saw them: this is an Elohim camp! So, he named that place Machana’im (Genesis 32:2-3).
Similarly, when Jacob prays to God to seek reassurance before going to Egypt to meet his long-lost son Joseph, he slaughters sacrifices to the “God (lelokei) of his father Isaac” (Genesis 46:1), and it is Elohim Who responds to him in night visions and reassures him (Genesis 46:2).
The distinction between Elohim and YHWH was already shown to Jacob in his vision of angels of Elohim ascending and descending on a ladder based on the ground that reached up to the heavens. Yet right above him (and probably not on top of the ladder) was YHWH who promised him that He would be with him, would guard him wherever he went, and would bring him back to the very place he was now lying (Genesis 28:13-15).1
Through this vision, Jacob (as well as the Bible reader) is shown that God’s general providence oversees the world through His aspect of Elohim and that His agents carry out His will on earth. Right above him, however, on earth, the YHWH aspect of God will focus specifically on his individual needs (see the previous essay “Jacob’s blessings and visions).”
It needs to be asked at this stage — what is the difference between the individual providence of Elohim and that provided by YHWH, and why did Jacob and his family’s conception of YHWH become remote them?
It is suggested that it is related to how close they feel to God, in which case it is YHWH, and how much they feel that Elohim is running the affairs of the world and they are part of these plans. In particular, Joseph sees and expresses this more than any of the other biblical figure. In his commentary to the Torah, Rabbi Munk summarizes the approach that the Bible and Joseph are promoting:
The people involved in this episode appear as agents of Providence. The universal plans for the realization of the Messianic goals of history are carried out amidst the comings and goings, the dreams and grudges, the ambitions and vindictiveness of the children of the family of Abraham. And here the Torah gives us an example of the story of a family in which each person remains totally responsible for his acts although in a historical perspective they were acting as agents of the Divine. 8
It is noteworthy that the involvement of Elohim in human affairs as enunciated by Joseph is far more extensive than that previously expressed in the Bible.
When the brothers return to Egypt, they are dumbfounded to find their long-lost brother in front of them. Judah has just volunteered to stay in jail instead of Benjamin. Joseph now reveals himself to them and comforts them with the following words:
“And now be not distressed, nor angry with yourselves, nor reproach yourselves for having sold me here; for it was to be a provider that Elohim sent me ahead of you …….. And Elohim sent me ahead of you to ensure your survival in the land, and to sustain you for a momentous delivery. And now it was not you that sent me here, but Elohim; and He has made me a father to Pharaoh, master of his entire household, and ruler over all the land of Egypt” (Genesis 45:5-8).
What is Joseph saying here? You threw me into a pit while deciding what to do with me. You then sold me to caravan men. All this was part of the Divine plan. Elohim was working within your scheming to bring me to Egypt and ultimately to also bring you here, as there are years of famine yet to come.
Joseph expresses similar sentiments in the final chapter of Genesis. Jacob is dead and the brothers are worried that Joseph will now seek revenge for their attempting to kill him many years ago. They fabricate a message from their now dead father that he insisted that Joseph refrain from punishing them. Joseph replies:
“…. ‘Fear not, for am I instead of Elohim? Although you intended me harm, Elohim intended it for good, in order to bring about — it is clear as this day — that a vast people be kept alive.” (Genesis 50:19-20)
Joseph saw it all lucidly. His descent to Egypt was part of something much bigger than his relationships between himself and his family. Their coming to Egypt was part of the prophecy given to Abraham that his descendants that they would be delivered from oppression in Egypt and in due time make their way back to Canaan. Hence, prior to his death, Joseph makes the Children of Israel swear that they will bring his bones from Egypt to Canaan:
‘Elohim will indeed remember you (pokod yifkod Elohim etchem) and you will bring my bones up out of here.” (Genesis 50:25)7
How can all these activities of God be explained? Is it really possible for a person to have free will and yet at the same time that his actions fit into God’s designs?
The Joseph story hints to us how this could be so. It seems likely that to an extent the brothers were functioning within a “set-up” and God was manipulating events by feeding Joseph dreams guaranteed to antagonize his brothers.
Joseph had two dreams — one involving he and his brothers binding sheaves of corn in the field. His sheaf stood upright, whereas the brother’s sheaves bowed down to his. Understandably, the brothers find this dream extremely annoying:
“Would you then reign over us? Would you then dominate us? And they hated him even more — because of his dreams and because of his talk (Genesis 37:7-8).
It needs be recalled that Jacob’s family were not farmers but shepherds. This dream must have seemed ominous to the brothers in that Joseph was conjuring up powers for himself far removed from their daily lives.
If that was not sufficient, immediately after this the Bible tells us about another of Joseph’s dreams — this time the sun, the moon and eleven stars were bowing down to him:
And he related it to his father and to his brothers. His father scolded him and said to him, ‘What is this dream that you have dreamt? Are we to come — I and your mother and your brothers — to bow down to you to the ground? So, his brothers were jealous of him, but his father kept the matter in mind (Genesis 37:9-11).
Jacob tried to defuse the tension by criticizing Joseph. But the damage was done – “So his brothers were jealous of him. . . . ” (Genesis 37:11).
Joseph’s dreams would have had a number of consequences. They instilled in him the sense that he was born for great things. This could have led to feelings of superiority that exacerbated the brothers’ feelings of jealousy. Plus, when his dreams started to become actualized, this confirmed to Joseph that he was part of an act much greater than the jealousies of his family. Elohim was controlling events. The brothers could not be exonerated for what they had done, but they could claim “extenuating circumstances”.
Joseph’s interpretation of Pharaoh’s dreams
All of Joseph’s dreams had a prophetic aspect to them, or at least the ones the Torah informs us about. His brothers did bow down to him to obtain sheaves of corn and his family did come down to Egypt when he was grand vizier of Egypt.
One of the pillars of Jewish belief is that God communicates with man via prophecy.3 Moses was unique in that he communicated directly with God face to face, while others received their communication from God in visions and dreams (Exodus 33:11). Joseph received two communications from God via dreams. Was he not then a prophet?
It is suggested that the answer is no. Joseph never received a communication from God instructing him to pass on the content of his dreams to others. His dreams were so vivid in his mind that he felt compelled to tell his family, and in retrospect they turned out to have implications for the future. However, there is no suggestion in the Bible that this was prophecy. If having meaningful dreams is a sign of prophecy, then Pharaoh himself and even his butler and baker could be considered prophets. Any person can receive a communication from God. It can also take different forms. It may be a dream and it may be a series of events in one’s life.
There are Jewish commentators who feel that Joseph received prophetic communications from God when he interpreted Pharaoh’s dreams, but most commentators do not take this approach.4 This means that the interpretations of the dreams of the butler, the baker and Pharaoh were contained within their dreams.
Clearly, such messages are open to misinterpretation. How then does one know if a communication is truly from God? The reality is that there is no answer to this question. Divine inspiration does not come with a tag on it designating its source. This is precisely the situation Joseph found himself in and it was only by putting the dreams into context that he realized they had meaning. Similarly, it is only the context, often with the passage of time, that we can see that God is helping us along in many of life’s important decisions.
How did Joseph figure out the meaning of Pharaoh’s dream? One answer is that God directly conveyed to him the meaning of the dreams and what needed to be done. This answer is rejected. There was no direct communication between God and Joseph. Joseph was not a prophet.
Elohim provided a warning to Pharaoh wrapped up in pictorial representations. He also provided Joseph with clues as to what the dreams meant and what actions needed to be taken.
Pharaoh had two dreams. The first one was about seven cows emerging from the River Nile. They were beautiful in appearance and they grazed in the marshland by the river. After them came seven cows of inferior appearance and lean in flesh that stood next to the beautiful cows and proceeded to eat them up. Pharaoh awoke startled.
He then dreamed again. This time there was no involvement of the Nile. Seven ears of grain sprouted from a single stalk. After them came seven ears of grain scorched by the east wind. The seven thin ears of grain then proceeded to swallow up the seven full ears of grain.
Pharaoh was baffled and upset by his dreams. He summoned all the necromancers and wise men of Egypt, but none was able to explain them satisfactorily to Pharaoh.
Why not?
Each of Pharaoh’s dreams contained the number 7. In the ancient world, number 7 was associated with divinity. Hence, Pharaoh could have suspected that the gods were sending him a message. But which god? There was a god of the Nile inundation and its silt deposition called Hapi, who was also a symbol of fertility and prosperity. The first dream did involve the Nile, but it also involved cows. Inundation of the Nile could influence the second dream, but it would have been indirect. The two dreams were clearly similar, but they did not fit neatly together within a polytheistic framework, otherwise Pharaih’s necromancers would have figured it out.
Joseph provided the answer. The two dreams were one dream (ibid 41:25). Pharaoh was correct in assuming he was receiving a Divine message, but only one God could accomplish everything that happened in these dreams and this was Elohim, the one God governing all the powers of nature.
Based on his experience with the dreams of the butler and baker, Joseph realized that physical objects could represent time. The three tendrils of the grapevine in the butler’s dream and the three wicker baskets on his head in the baker’s dream represented three days. God helped Joseph with this revelation regarding time since Pharaoh’s birthday was in 3 days and this was a time in the ancient world for bestowing favors (although the baker was an exception, presumably because of the gravity of his offence) (ibid 40:20). Similarly, the seven cows and seven ears of grain represented seven periods of time. Since the Nile has a yearly cycle the number of cows and stalks of grain represented numbers of years.
There are two descriptions of Pharaoh’s dreams in the Bible. In the first one, the Torah describes what Pharaoh dreamed, and following this, after Joseph has been summoned from jail, Pharaoh explained to Joseph how he perceived his dreams. In addition, Pharaoh provides commentary on what he had seen. It is this second description and the comments of Pharaoh that enabled Joseph to accurately interpret these two dreams.
The first dream describes the second set of cows as being of “inferior appearance and of lean flesh (וְדַקּוֹתבָּשָׂר) (vedakot basar)” (Genesis 41:3). The second time round, Pharaoh describes them as being of “inferior form and emaciated flesh (וְרַקּוֹתבָּשָׂר) (verakot basar).” “Dakos” in Hebrew means thin or lean. “Rakos” has the meaning of limited in flesh or emaciated, coming from the same word as rak (רק) which means only and the root rkk (רקק), which means limited. Pharaoh then adds a commentary of his own: “I have never seen inferiority like theirs in all the land of Egypt” (Genesis 41:19). He also says:
“Thus, they came inside them. But it was not apparent that they had come inside them for their appearance remained as inferior as at first. . . .” (Genesis 41:21).
In the second dream, the Torah describes the ears of grain as “healthy and good” (Genesis 40:5), whereas Pharaoh describes them as “full and good” (Genesis 41:22). The bad ears are described at first by the Torah as “thin (dakot) and scorched by the east wind” (Genesis 41:6), whereas Pharaoh describes them as “shriveled (znumot) (צְנֻמוֹת), thin (rakot) and scorched by the east wind” (Genesis 41:23). The additional word znumos means empty.5 Joseph, when he summarized Pharaoh’s dreams, also understood that the seven ears of grain scorched by the east wind would be (rekus) (הָרֵקוֹת), coming from the word rek meaning empty (Genesis 41:27)
Clearly, these were not just seven relatively good years and seven relatively bad years, but seven exceptionally good years and seven devastatingly bad years. the likes of which had never been seen in Egypt. Elohim was bringing surplus and famine to Egypt, and during the seven years of famine, the previous abundance in Egypt would all but be forgotten.
If Joseph were a prophet, he would have received a communication from God what should be done. But he was not a prophet. The answer to Pharaoh’s dream had to be contained within the dreams themselves. This is what Joseph meant when he said “It is Elohim Who will respond with Pharaoh’s welfare” (Genesis 41:16) and “What Elohim is about to do He has shown to Pharaoh” (Genesis 41:28).6
It may well have been Joseph’s solution to Egypt’s impending problem that impressed Pharaoh more than all else. Decrees from a divinity are just that. There is nothing one can do about them. If there really was to be a 7-year famine in the country, then Pharaoh was finished as a ruler. Chaos and insurrection were on the horizon. However, a new idea was suggested to Pharaoh and his attendants by Joseph. If Elohim was sending Pharaoh a warning, it could be for one purpose only — to take action.
But what action?
It was not conceit and opportunism that brought Joseph to offer an interpretation of Pharaoh’s dreams, but the panic Pharaoh conveyed to Joseph. Pharaoh had described to Joseph (and this was the only description he heard) that the hunger would be like nothing seen before in the land of Egypt. The cows in the famine would be not only thin but emaciated. Similarly, the grains of wheat would be scorched by the east wind and “empty.” Fortunately, the good ears of corn were not only “healthy” but “full.” The solution was clear. The plenty from the years of “fullness” needed to be used for the years of “emptiness.”
The matter appeared good to Pharaoh and to all his servants. Pharaoh said to his servants:
“Could we find another like him — a man in whom is the spirit of Elohim? Pharaoh said to Joseph: “Since Elohim has informed you of all this, there can be no one so discerning and wise as you. . .“ (Genesis 41:37-39).
The dreams contained the solution. It just needed a genius such as Joseph to put it all together.
A new spin on Joseph’s social policies
Joseph’s social policies are often looked upon unfavorably by modern commentators. The classic Jewish commentators, on the other hand, give the relevant sentences a miss. This is good reason to examine them!
These are the problematic sentences:
Thus, Joseph acquired all the land of Egypt for Pharaoh, for every Egyptian sold his field because the famine had overwhelmed them. And the land became Pharaoh’s. As for the nation, he resettled it by cities (heevir oto leorim) from one end of Egypt’s borders to the others (Genesis 47:20-22).
In effect, Joseph creates a nation of serfs for the benefit of his boss Pharaoh. Recalling European history, we have definite sentiments about serfdom and have little good to say about it.
To add injury to insult, not only did Joseph create serfs from the populace, but he forcibly moved them from the properties their families had worked on for centuries in order to drive home to them that they were no longer working for themselves and they were now employees of Pharaoh.
None of this seems much to Joseph’s credit.
Admittedly, there are commentators who stress that Joseph did not forcibly disperse the farmers from their hamlets, as might be apparent from the Bible, but he moved them from one place to another in such a way that their social framework was not disrupted.7 This explanation hinges on the translation of “he moved it (i.e. the nation) to/by cities” and the suggestion that le’orim (לֶעָרִים) means “by cities” and not “to cities.” Nevertheless, this explanation is by no means obvious.
The reality is that from the text it is impossible to know the social consequences of Joseph’s moves and what the people felt about them. However, knowing Joseph and his modus operandi I would like to suggest that we examine Joseph’s moves with a more positive spin, since they can be viewed just as easily through positive lenses as through negative ones.
Joseph was given absolute authority to manage the forthcoming crisis:
Pharaoh said to Joseph:
“I am Pharaoh. And without you no man may lift up his hand or foot in all the land of Egypt.”. . . Thus, Joseph went out over the land of Egypt (Genesis 41:44-45).
During the years of plenty, Joseph gathered all the food in the land and placed the excess food from each geographical area into a central location. There turned out to be so much food that it was impossible to keep count:
And Joseph amassed corn like the sand of the sea in great abundance until he ceased taking stock, for it was without number (Genesis 41:49).
What the text does not say is whether Joseph paid for the excess grain or just appropriated it. In actuality, it makes not that much difference since the farmers would have benefited in both instances. If Joseph had not siphoned off the surplus grain its price would have plummeted. Moreover, as he will soon find out, or more likely anticipated since he was always one step ahead of the situation, one business endeavor inevitably leads to another, since matters can always be made more efficient.
At this stage, Joseph was totally dependent on the goodwill of the people so that he could take the excess grain —which means that he was always working in their interest. A win-win situation was being created for the country, and it is likely that Joseph made sure this continued for the people, for the farmers, for the country and for Pharaoh. Joseph was teaching the country how a devoted civil servant should act.
He will need all his administrative skills as the famine strikes. A major issue he has to deal with is what to do with the surplus grain he has accumulated when the famine arrives. Does he sell it or give it away? If he gives it away there is no change to the system, whereas if he sells it he can keep on improving Egyptian agriculture. In fact, as the famine progresses, the Egyptian farmers will help him carry out what he intended doing anyway — and the result will be a new social contract for Egypt.
When the famine arrives, Joseph begins selling corn to the people. We may find it strange that the people have to go hungry before the granaries are opened, but Pharaoh seems to have been responsible for this decision. This may be the last significant administrative decision he makes with respect to the famine. Everything is now in Joseph’s hands. Pharaoh trusts him implicitly:
When all the land of Egypt hungered, the people cried out to Pharaoh for bread. So, Pharaoh said to all of Egypt: “Go to Joseph. Whatever he tells you, do” (Genesis 41:55).
By now (and the exact sequence in terms of the years of famine is difficult to determine from the biblical text), Joseph has extracted all the money in Egypt and Canaan and has brought it to Pharaoh. As the famine continues, Joseph says to the people:
“Bring your livestock and I will provide for you in return for your livestock if the money is gone.” So, they brought their livestock to Joseph, and Joseph gave them bread in return for the horses, for the flocks of sheep, for the herds of cattle, and for the donkeys; thus, he provided them with bread for all their livestock during that year (Genesis 47:16-17).
This man is brilliant! The gathered livestock have to be fed otherwise they will die. Joseph has two alternatives. He can either provide food to the people and to their livestock for free or he can take the livestock and feed it himself. Unstated is that much of this livestock is useless to the government. Admittedly, some of these animals can be sold for meat. But what use does the government have for lots of donkeys? They only have value if he lets the farmers use them. Whether the country will charge the farmers in the future for the use of the donkeys (i.e., they will be rented), will give them back for free, or sell them back when they have money is not stated. In any case, he has saved the livestock of Egypt to everyone’s advantage.
Moreover, the country is edging more and more towards a socialist-type economy. As a result of this, the civil service will need to be considerably expanded.
Could it be that this accounts for Pharaoh’s offer to Joseph’s family once they arrive in Egypt?
And Pharaoh said to Joseph: “. . . . and if you know of any capable men among them, appoint them as managers of the livestock over that which is mine” (Genesis 46:6).
One can only guess that Joseph knew already what was going to happen next — he was going to take the farmers’ lands. In actuality, it was the farmers themselves who suggested this. Did they do this out of desperation or because they knew that Joseph was a fair person who was working on their behalf? The text does not say, but we are in a position to surmise.
This is what the people say:
And when that year ended, they came to him in the second year and said to him: “We will not hide from my lord how that our money is all spent and the herds of cattle are my lord’s, nothing is left before my lord except for our bodies and our land. Why should we die before your eyes, both we and our land? Acquire us and our land for bread, and we and our land will become bondmen to Pharaoh; and provide us seed so that we may live and not die, and the land will not become desolate” (Genesis 47:18-19).
In effect, Joseph is creating a partially “communist” or “kibbutz” type of system, but without the downside inherent in these systems. He is gathering the people in “communes,” but not to a system that drives away competitiveness and the desire for improvement. This is because the workers still keep the majority of their earnings.
Joseph said to the people: “Look — I have acquired you this day and your land for Pharaoh; here is seed for you — sow the land. At the ingatherings you shall give a fifth to Pharaoh; and four parts shall remain yours — as seed for the field, the [other] four parts shall remain yours — as seed for the field, food for yourselves, and for those in your household, and to feed your little ones” (Genesis 47:23-24).
In the system that Joseph is creating there are continual convergences of interest. Pharaoh wants his share of the crop to be as big as possible. He can get this if the farmers work harder‚ and this is exactly what they will do since they can keep 80% of the grain. The farmers would like as high a price as possible for their grain. But the people also want a fair price when they buy the grain. Pharaoh has the ability with his 20% of the grain to influence the market price. He can administer price controls with his share of the market.
Pharaoh’s 20% of the grain constitutes a tax on the people. It is a fair tax for both them and for Pharaoh. One cannot be certain about this, but this may well have been the maximum tax that the monarch could extract from the people, since they are no longer working their own land. From now on he will have to keep within budget!
Finally, and of upmost importance, he has taught the country how to care for the welfare of everyone.
This was the legacy of Joseph. Unfortunately, although his system was “imposed as a statue till this day regarding the land of Egypt” (Genesis 47:26), his own reputation does not last.
The Book of Exodus relates that “A new king arose over Egypt who did not know of Joseph.” (Exodus 1:8)
A new monarch should have known about Joseph because of all he had accomplished for the country, but for reasons to be explored in a subsequent chapter he did not. This also was part of the Divine plan.
Bringing reconciliation between the children of Rachel and Leah
Joseph makes his brothers go through considerable anguish by imprisoning Simeon and then making them bring back Joseph’s younger brother Benjamin to secure Simeon’s release. Why did he do this? Why not just reveal himself as their long-last brother Joseph and dispense with four chapters of the Bible?
One answer is that he wanted them to show remorse for what they had done to him. If they were put in the same situation as previously and this time they did the right thing their repentance would be complete.
This is exactly how the story unfolds. All the brothers are in front of Joseph, including Benjamin, and Joseph now threatens to imprison him for stealing his silver goblet. The goblet in question had been planted in Benjamin’s sack. In a moving speech, Judah rises to the occasion and offers to be incarcerated instead of Benjamin. Benjamin is the son of the deceased Rachel while Judah is the son of Leah. Joseph is appropriately touched.
However, another level to this story recognizes that Joseph had more weighty things on his mind than the state of his brothers’ souls or his own feelings. Joseph was aware that there would come a time when the children of Israel would be enslaved and they would eventually leave Egypt to go to Canaan. It was essential that all this be in a state of unity. The children of Rachel had to be reconciled with the children of Leah. This realization was not the consequence of years of thinking. What had happened to him in his father’s home was a thing of the past and had been out of mind. But now, as he saw his brothers in front of him, he suddenly recalled his dreams:
Joseph remembered the dreams that he had dreamed about them and he said to them: “You are spies! You have come to see the land’s nakedness!” (Genesis 42:9).
What was the connection between the recalling of his dreams and concocting a story about them being spies?8
In the first of his dreams all his brothers bowed down to him as sheaves of corn. This had now happened and had demonstrated his authority. It was now up to him to use this authority to unite the family. The children of Leah had to recompense the children of Rachel. Judah had done this by offering to stay in prison instead of Benjamin. All that remained now was for Joseph to impress upon them that he had completely forgiven them.
If one dream had been fulfilled, it was likely that the second would now also come to pass. Joseph needed to facilitate this. All his brothers and his father now had to come to Egypt. There, they would acknowledge his authority and he would use this to save them from the remainder of the famine. Admittedly, his mother was no longer alive, but her maid Bilhah had brought up Rachel’s two children following her death and would take her place.
Did Joseph feel he had accomplished this task? Perhaps. If he did, he may well have felt considerable pain when his brothers came to him after Jacob’s death on the assumption that he had not forgiven them and had been waiting until the death of their father to take revenge. He had gone through this great game for their benefit – and they had still not gotten the message! They still felt they needed to make up a story about their father asking Joseph to forgive them. Could this be why he wept again? They spoke:
“… so now, please forgive the transgression of the servants of the God of your father.” And Joseph wept when they spoke to him. . . . Thus, he comforted them and spoke to their hearts (Genesis 50:15-21).
He stressed again that they were forgiven and that “Although you intended me harm, Elohim intended it for good” (Genesis 50:20).
Joseph had engineered reconciliation between the children of Rachel and the children of Leah. The Children of Israel were now prepared for the difficult future they would face together in Egypt.
But when was the time?
Joseph — the right person in the right place at the right time
Kings I states that Solomon’s Temple was constructed 480 years after the Exodus:
In the 480th year after the Children of Israel’s exodus from the land of Egypt — in the fourth year of Solomon’s reign over Israel, in the month of Ziv which is the second month — he built the Temple for YHWH (Kings I 6:1).
We know from other sources that the First Temple was destroyed in 587 BCE. From information given in the Bible it can be determined that Solomon succeeded to his throne in 970 BCE and began construction of his Temple in 966 BCE. The date of the Exodus would have been 480 years earlier in 1446 BCE (see also the chapter on the Exodus for a fuller discussion of these points).
With this date in hand, it is possible to retrace the events before the Exodus. A short period for the ten plagues can be assumed from the fact that Moses first spoke to Pharaoh when he was 80 years old, that he led the Israelites for 40 years in the wilderness, and he died when he was 120 (Exodus 7:6 and Deuteronomy 34:7). Thus, the 10 plagues would have lasted only a relatively short time and Moses would have been born in about 1527 BCE. This would be during the reign of either Amenhotep I or Thutmose I, both of whom were part of the 18th Egyptian Dynasty.
The Pharaoh who began persecuting the Israelites was likely Ahmose 1, previously the ruler of southern Egypt and the founder of the 18th Dynasty, and who became Pharaoh over all Egypt 23 years before the birth of Moses in about 1550 BCE.
Prior to this, the Hyksos had been in control of the Nile Delta and Middle Egypt. Ahmose I completed the struggle began by his predecessors and drove out the Hyksos, thereby uniting northern and southern Egypt. The dynasty that he formed became the most successful and powerful dynasty in Egyptian history.
Who the Hyksos were and how they came to Egypt is unclear. They are often considered to be of either Semitic or multi-ethnic origin and they took advantage of a general weakening of the Egyptian state to establish themselves in the Nile Delta. The beginning of their 15th dynasty is usually dated to between 1663 to 1648 BCE and they ruled during what is called the Second Intermediate Period of the Middle Kingdom. They introduced advanced military technology into Egypt, such as the horse and chariot, advanced battle axe and composite bow, which gave them a definite advantage in battle.
Their entry into the Nile Delta was probably forceful. Josephus, quoting from the works of the Egyptian historian Manetho, wrote:
By main force they easily seized it without striking a blow; and having overpowered the rulers of the land, they then burned our cities ruthlessly, razed to the ground the temples of gods… Finally, they appointed as king one of their number whose name was Salitis.9
However, some have suggested that this may be historically inaccurate and that the Hyksos gradually infiltrated into the Nile Delta area and subsequently seized power.
The name Hyksos means in Egyptian “rulers of foreign countries” and the populace always regarded them as foreign invaders. They established their capital and seat of government in the Eastern Delta at Avaris. For a brief period, they also occupied southern Egypt. This may have occurred during the reign of the Pharaoh Khyan, who ruled from about 1620 BCE, although it may have lasted only a few years. Nevertheless, the southern kingdom may have been under tribute to the Hyksos for a longer period of time.
The political changes occurring in Egypt at the time of Ahmose I’s expulsion of the Hyksos may well be hinted at in the following biblical verse:
A new king arose over Egypt who did not know of Joseph. He said to his people, “Behold! The people, the Children of Israel are more numerous and stronger than we” (Exodus 1:8).
This verse intimates that this particular succession was different from previous ones. This king not only did not know of Joseph but he was a “new king.” But do not all successions bring a “new king”? Egyptian history provides the answer. The ascension of Ahmose I begins an entirely new dynasty and there is no reason that he would have known, or even wanted to know, about Joseph.
Is it possible that Joseph served the Hyksos? The answer to this question hinges on the date on which Joseph and Jacob arrived in Egypt and how long the Israelites were in Egypt before Ahmose I expelled the Hyksos.
The Book of Exodus informs us:
The habitation of the Children of Israel during which they dwelled in Egypt (Septuagint: and in other lands) was four hundred and thirty years. It was at the end of four hundred and thirty years, and it was on this very day that all the legions of God left the land of Egypt (Exodus 12:40).10
The Exodus marks the fulfillment of a prophecy. At the Covenant between the Pieces Abraham had received a promise from YHWH:
And He [God] said to Abram: “Know with certainty that your offspring shall be sojourners in a land not their own, they will enslave them, and they will oppress them four hundred years. . . . And the fourth generation will return here, for the iniquity of the Amorite will not yet be full until then” (Genesis 15:13).
This verse is puzzling since four generations are not usually equivalent to 400 years. A midrashic tradition explains that the prophecy that Abraham’s offspring would live for 400 years “in a land not their own” commences with the birth of Isaac, and not with the entrance of Jacob to Egypt.11 The 430 years mentioned in the verse above from Exodus is from the time the prophecy was made at the Covenant between the Pieces and took place 30 years before Isaac was born.12
If this explanation is correct, then the Israelite exile in Egypt actually lasted only 210 years (i.e., 400 years minus 190). This can be deduced from verses in the Bible that state that Jacob was born when his father Isaac was 60 and Jacob was 130 when he arrived in Egypt (Genesis 25:26 and 47:9). Hence, 190 years of the 400 year prophesy had already passed before Jacob and his family arrived in Egypt.
If the Israelites left Egypt in 1446 BCE and Jacob arrived with his sons 210 years earlier then Jacob’s arrival in Egypt occurred in 1656 BCE or thereabout. From the Bible, it can deduced that Joseph arrived in Egypt 22 years before his father Jacob and he began his political career 9 years prior to Jacob’s arrival.12 The date for Joseph leaving jail and becoming viceroy was therefore approximately1666 BCE. Hence, Joseph’s political career began at about the same time as the Hyksos invasion of Egypt.
This could explain a number of statements in the Bible:
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Jewish settlement was in the Nile Delta in the “Land of Goshen.” This was the best of the land, in the land of Ramses. This would have been well within the Hyksos kingdom
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The foreign status of the Hyksos could explain why there was such readiness on the part of Pharaoh and his entourage to accept another foreigner, such as Joseph, into their administration.
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It would also explain why there was such readiness on their part to accept Joseph’s brothers into senior administrative positions (“If you know of capable men among them, appoint them as managers of the livestock over that which is mine” (Genesis 47:6)).
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It would be compatible with Pharaoh providing Joseph with a chariot, since it is generally considered that it was the Hyksos that brought chariots into Egypt.
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It would explain why Ahmose I was so concerned about his Israelite population. Until this time, the Israelites would have been a favored population in the Hyksos kingdom. However, once the Hyksos were expelled, the Israelites would find themselves in a very vulnerable position. Ahmose I may not have been totally irrational when he considered the Israelites a security threat (“it may be if a war occur it too may join our enemies” (Exodus 1:10). If the Hyksos had attempted to regain their kingdom, the Israelites may have considered aiding them. Ahmose’s solution was to put the Israelites in labor camps so he could keep a close watch on them.
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The Torah tells us “that a new king arose over Egypt who did not know of Joseph” (Exodus 1:8). Joseph’s actions could have provided considerable benefit to Egypt, . Nevertheless, they may have had little to no impact on the rulers of southern Egypt.
Is there any other supporting evidence that the Egyptian exile lasted 210 years and not 400 or 430?
The reality is that the evidence is sparse – and this entire issue is a difficult one. The prophecy at the Covenant between the Pieces mentions that “the fourth generation will return” (Genesis 15:16), and this is borne out by the Torah. Kohath, Moses’ grandfather and the son of Levi, arrived in Egypt with Jacob and lived a total of 133 years (Exodus 6:18). His son Amram, who was Moses’ father, lived 137 years (Exodus 6:20). Moses left Egypt when he was 80. This comes to a total of 350 years. However, the sojourn in Egypt of these three generations would have been much shorter than this since their lives would have overlapped. It is also difficult to see how these four generations could have produced 600,00 adult males leaving Egypt (Exodus 12:37).
One solution to this is to say that the Hebrew “dor” means not a generation in the conventional sense but more in the way of a period of time in which a generation is still alive. Also, perhaps, the Hebrew word “elef” means not a thousand adult males, but an armed group arranged by family.
In sum, an argument can be made that Joseph worked for the Hyksos, and that his interpretation of Pharaoh’s dreams occurred during the early years of the Hyksos regime. It may even have been for the first Hyksos king. In fact, this argument is made by the first CE Jewish historian Josephus.14 It all fits nicely into the Bible – but the evidence is still very circumstantial.
Joseph and his family
Joseph’s father-in-law was probably an influential pagan priest. This marriage could well have been arranged by Pharaoh to solidify the palace’s connection to the Egyptian priesthood.
The relevant verse is as follows:
Pharaoh called Joseph’s name Tzafnas Pane’ach, and he gave him Asnat the daughter of Poti Phera, priest of On, for a wife (Genesis 41:45).
The Egyptian name for the city of “On” was Annu (literally "[place of] pillars"), and it was on the outskirts of the present city of Cairo. It was known in Greek times as Heliopolis, or “the city of the sun,” and it received this name because of its temples of sun worship to the sun god Ra (or Re) and the more local sun god Atum.
“Poti Phera” means “He who Ra has given,” and it is likely that he was a priest to the son god Ra. The name of his daughter “Asenat” means “she belongs to the sky goddess Nut.” Joseph was given the more monotheistic title “Tzafnas Pane’ach” which means “The God has spoken and he (the bearer of the name) shall live”.
Despite these strong pagan influences around him, Joseph’s household retained their links to the Israelite nation and their beliefs.
Before he died, Jacob summoned Joseph and his two sons so they could receive the patriarch’s blessing:
“And now, your two sons who were born to you in Egypt before my coming to you, to Egypt, they are mine; Ephraim and Manasseh shall be mine like Reuben and Simeon” (Genesis 48:5).15
Joseph’s two sons are now effectively tribes, and because of this double portion, Joseph has symbolically displaced Reuben from the position of firstborn.
Jacob then blesses Joseph by bestowing blessing on his two children:16
He blessed Joseph and he said: . . . “May the angel who redeems me from all evil bless the lads, and may my name be declared upon them, and the names of my forefathers Abraham and Isaac, and may they reproduce abundantly like fish within the land” (Genesis 48:15-16).
He then blesses the two children themselves:
So he blessed them that day saying: “By you shall Israel bless saying: ‘May Elohim make you like Ephraim and like Manasseh.‘” — and he put Ephraim before Manasseh (Genesis 48:20).
To this day, it is a custom among the Jewish people that parents bless their children with these words on Friday night.
But what was so special about Ephraim and Manasseh that they warranted being a source of blessing to all male Jewish children?
The text does not say, but high on the list must certainly be the family’s retaining its belief in the existence of one God and its trust in Him despite the multitude of pagan influences around them. Also, maintaining a moral family life despite the immorality of the surrounding culture.
For Joseph, there could be no greater compliment than this.
References
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In this chapter I adopt the explanation that God was standing above Jacob (Rashi and Bereishis Rabba 69:3), rather than above the ladder (Ramban). Both explanations fit the Hebrew, but “above him” is more commensurate with the YHWH aspect of God.
2. Quoted in Bereshis: A New Translation with a Commentary Anthologized from Talmudic, Midrashic and Rabbinic Sources, Vol 1(b). Mesorah Publications.
3. Maimonides writes in his Mishneh Torah: “It is [one] of the foundations of [our] faith that God communicates by prophecy with man” (Hilchot Yesodei Hatorah 7:1). Without belief in the validity of Moses’ prophecy there can be no Judaism.
4. Rashi opines that God did communicate with Joseph directly. He writes: “He will put a response in my month for Pharaoh’s welfare” (Rashi to 41:16). However, other exegetes including the Ralbag, Ibn Ezra and Radak provide other explanations for Joseph’s comment when he says: “That is beyond me. God will respond to Pharaoh’s welfare” (ibid 41:16).
5. This is the interpretation of Onkelos, also quoted by Rashi to Genesis 41:23.
6 . Another explanation is that God had given him the wisdom to interpret Pharaoh’s dreams.
7. See the explanation of R’ Samson Raphael Hirsch and Targum Onkelos to these verses.
8. Rashi writes that he knew his dreams were fulfilled when he saw his brothers (even though Benjamin was not present). Ramban disagrees and explains that Joseph engineered the fulfillment of his dreams so that all the brothers would bow down to him — including Benjamin. In other words, Joseph arranged for the fulfillment of his dreams for the sake of them being fulfilled. Only then could he reveal his true identity. This would explain why he never contacted his father during his stay in Egypt. The explanation presented here is different and follows to a degree that of R' Hirsch in his commentary to the Torah to Genesis 42:9. Nevertheless, R’ Hirsch sees matters in more personal terms and not with a tribal connotation.
9. Josephus, Flavius, Against Apion, 1:86–90.
10. Rashi to Exodus 40:6 explains the phrase “which they dwelled in Egypt” as meaning — which culminated in their dwelling in Egypt. The Septuagint adds “and in other lands.”
11. Mechilta, Parshas Bo 14:3. This Midrash attempts to reconcile two statements — that the fourth generation would enter Israel and that the exile would last for 400 years. The answer provided in the text is the most widely accepted interpretation. TB Megilla 9a discusses that to avoid reader confusion, the Septuagint inserted the words “and in other lands” to its Greek translation of Exodus 12:41. Although the most accepted explanation, it is not the only one. Another Midrash views the verse in Genesis as being conditional. The Egyptian exile would last three generations if the Jews were worthy, but otherwise would last 400 years (Yalkut Shimoni, Parshat Bo 210).
12. Yalkut Shimoni, Parshas Bo 210. According to Seder Olam I, Abraham was 70 years old at the Covenant between the Pieces and 100 years old at the birth of Isaac (Genesis 21:5).
13. Joseph met his brothers 9 years after becoming viceroy. There would now be 2 years of bounty and 7 years of famine. Joseph left Canaan when he was 17 (Genesis 37:2) and was presented to Pharaoh at age 30 (Genesis 41:46). He therefore arrived in Egypt 22 years prior to Jacob — 9+(30-17).
14. Josephus, Ant 2:15.2 and Ag Apion 1.14. However, he dates the Exodus to the time of the Hyksos expulsion — Ant 2.9.1
15. There is a disagreement among the exegetes Rashi and Nachmanides as to whether this had any territorial consequences. Rashi felt it had none, as each person from each tribe was given equal territory. It had significance only in terms of tribal princes and banners and the location of their inheritance. However, Nachmanides feels that each member of the tribe of Ephraim and Manasseh received twice as much land as the members of other tribes. See also TB Horayos 6b and TB Bava Basra 122a to 123b.
16. Commentators note that no direct blessing of Joseph is mentioned. Perhaps Joseph’s blessing is not mentioned in the text (Sforno). More likely is that by blessing Joseph’s children he was in effect blessing Joseph (Nachmanides, Rashbam and Radak)