Sunday, 27 October 2013

Joseph – A tale for our day

A reflection shared by Ray Anglesea with the congregation at St Andrew's Dawson Street, Crook - October 27th 2013
 
 
Joseph is one of my favourite characters from the Old Testament.  His story is so graphic and attractive that Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber set the tale of Joseph to music in their now famous musical Joseph and the Amazing Technicolour Dreamcoat, first performed in 1968, West End, London in 1973 and later on Broadway in 1982.

The family-friendly storyline, universal themes and catchy music have resulted in numerous productions of Joseph ever since. By 2008 it was estimated that more than 20,000 schools and amateur theatre groups had successfully put on productions. And still the musical is entertaining thousands as it today tours the UK. But amongst the well- known tunes and the famous celebrities who have played Joseph, the biblical story of Joseph has an important message for our times.

Joseph was lucky not to have been killed. Envied and hated by his brothers, a favourite son of Jacob, lost to his helpless father through betrayal, the self important young dreamer, stripped of his legendary coat with its long sleeves (or many colours), was sold after a meal into slavery to the Ishmaelites.  Despite his brothers’ treachery and duplicity, Joseph rose to power in Egypt, growing in wisdom, humility and humaneness, later becoming viceroy of Egypt, second only to Pharaoh. The brothers, arriving in Egypt to buy food during a famine, do not realise that the man in royal robes is their brother. After putting them through a series of trials to show that they had repented of what they did, Joseph revealed his identity and forgave them – the first act of forgiveness in literature? At the end of the book of Genesis, a set of sibling rivalry, ends on this sublime note of reconciliation.

How was Joseph able to forgive? The bible tells us. He says to his bothers: “Do not be distressed and do not be angry with yourselves for selling me here, because it was to save lives that God sent me ahead of you.......So then, it was not you who sent me here, but God.” This proves to be the story's vital hinge.  Without it the Hebrews would not have been delivered from famine and kept safe in Egypt.  In conspiracy and catastrophe, everything has worked together for good. 

This is one of the most transformative and changing passages in the Bible. It explains how Joseph was able to free himself from the hurt he surely felt at being betrayed by his own family. Nowadays this is called cognitive behavioural therapy. Joseph changed the way he felt by changing the way he thought.

Evidently he had asked himself: “Why has God put me through this suffering?” But there are two ways of asking it, and it makes all the difference which way we do. One is orientated in the past: “What did I do to deserve this?” For what sin am I being punished?” The other is directed to the future: “What is it that God wants me to do, that I can only do here, now and in these circumstances?”

Joseph must have asked this second question often during the long years he spent, first as a slave, then as a prisoner. The answer eventually came. The moment he was taken to interpret Pharaoh’s dreams – seven years of plenty followed by seven years of famine – he realised that all the seeming random events of his life were a preparation for this moment  when he was able to devise a plan that would save a whole region from starvation. As soon as he had these thoughts, he was able to forgive his brothers. His fate, he now knew, was not about them at all. “It was not you who sent me here but God.” That one thought has the power to cure resentment and banish pain.

Whenever we come close to despair, the strongest lifeline is to think like Joseph.  People who have suffered tragedy have often found meaning by alleviating the suffering of others. The grief may not disappear but it is redeemed.

Seen through the eyes of faith life is not what Joseph Heller called it; “a trash bag of random coincidences blown open in a wind.” Each of us is here for a reason, to do something only we can do. Pain and heartbreak are bearable if we can discern God’s purpose or hear, however muffled, His call.

In crisis, the wrong question to ask is “What have I done to deserve this?” The right one is, “What am I now being summoned to do?” Each of us has a task. Every life has a purpose.  We can bear the pain of the past when we discover the future we are called to make.

 
 

Ray Anglesea is a self-supporting minister working in Durham Cathedral bookshop, Crook Local Ecumenical Partnership and in the West Durham Methodist Circuit

 

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