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The story of Joseph in the Bible is one of my favorite stories of all time. It is a true story about a man and his family and how God worked through them all, but it is a story so full of emotion that even now, after I am fully familiar with the story, it still sometimes leaves me in tears. It’s got it all – scenic backdrops, pride, suspense, hate, love, favoritism, forgiveness, intrigue, and a plot twist to beat all plot twists.

You can see the story yourself in Genesis 37-50 to get all the details – if you do not know the story already, you will not regret reading it. It’s one of the longest and most picturesque narratives of the Bible, so I do not really even have the space here to summarize it. But I do want to tell you about a particular part of Joseph’s life. Joseph was a favorite of his dad, hated by his brothers, sold into slavery, accused of rape, a prisoner, an interpreter of dreams, a savior of his people, and leader of the known world, but when Joseph is mentioned in Hebrews 11, the chapter that records many people known and commended for their faith, this is what it says: By faith Joseph, at the end of his life, made mention of the exodus of the Israelites and gave directions concerning his bones (Hebrews 11:22).

What?? Of all the things Joseph endured and accomplished, this is what the writer of Hebrews praises Joseph for? Mentioning the Israelites leaving Egypt and telling them what to do with his bones? Why does that rate being in the same category with those who conquered kingdoms or left all they knew or were beaten or killed? Joseph was abused, mistreated, forgotten, and used mightily by God, but here in Hebrews, none of that is recognized. What was it about Joseph’s words that revealed such faith?

When Joseph was about to die, he told his family that God will bring them out of Egypt and into the land that He promised Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and because he knew God would one day do this, Joseph wanted to be part of it and made his family swear that they would carry his bones with them to the Promised Land.

The Promised Land looked further away now than before – none of the Israelites were in the land now, and it would be over 300 more years until God sent Moses. I don’t know if by the time of Joseph’s death, the Israelites were already coming under oppression or if they were just so entrenched in Egypt that they could not get out, but it seems they couldn’t. But Joseph knew one day they would. God had promised, and Joseph believed. The last verse of Genesis says that Joseph was embalmed and placed in a coffin in Egypt.

His faith was so strong that it was passed down from generation to generation. Moses records in the book of Exodus that he brought the bones of Joseph with him out of Egypt because Joseph had made the Israelites swear that they would. So Joseph, most likely in a King Tut-like coffin, was carried across the Red Sea, all around the wilderness for forty years, and then, finally, into the Promised Land, where, according to the very end of the book of Joshua, he was buried in the burial plot of his father, Jacob.

Roland Unger | Wikipedia
(King Tut’s Funerary Mask by Roland Unger | Wikipedia)

Joseph died before God completely fulfilled His promise – and so did Abraham, Moses, Samson, the prophets, and all the others in the chapter of faith, but Joseph had seen God’s goodness in his life and knew God will one day soon come bring all His people into the place He has promised for him and for us.

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