SNAPSHOTS OF THE KINGDOM: JOSEPH
By
Dr. Stephen Jones: Date: 10/01/2019
Blog Post Date: 10-15-2019
Abraham
gave us the example of Passover faith, Isaac gave us the example of Pentecostal
obedience, and Jacob gave us the example of Tabernacles agreement.
The
sequence culminates with Joseph, whose rule over Egypt prophesies of Christ’s
Kingdom in the earth.
The
feast of Passover was fulfilled when Jesus died on the cross at Passover.
Pentecost was fulfilled in Acts 2 when the Holy Spirit came upon the disciples
at the start of the Pentecostal Age. That age has now ended, and we are in the
transition of ages from Pentecost to Tabernacles.
The
Tabernacles Age begins fully with the manifestation of the sons of God at the
time of Christ’s second appearance. Christ came the first time to fulfill His
“Judah” calling as the dead lion (Genesis 49:11, 12), coinciding with His call as the Passover
lamb and the red heifer. But His second coming is a Joseph calling and is
distinctly different.
Scepter
and Birthright
When
Jacob blessed his sons, he gave the scepter to Judah (Gen. 49:10) and the birthright to Joseph (Gen. 49:22-26). This is explained clearly again
in 1 Chron. 5:1, 2. At the time, the priesthood of Levi was not
specified, but Moses clarified this in setting up the priesthood at the
tabernacle in the wilderness (Num. 1:50-53; 3:3).
Jacob
distributed portions of the birthright to his sons, which resulted in the
necessity for Christ to come twice. He had to come the first time to fulfill
the call of Judah, and He must come a second time to fulfill the call of
Joseph. That is why, when He is pictured coming the second time in Rev. 19:13, it says, “He is clothed with a
robe dipped in blood.” Joseph’s robe was dipped in blood (Gen. 37:31).
By
the time we get to the New Testament revelation, we find that Jesus Christ came
first to die on the cross as the Lion of the tribe of Judah. His second coming
is first to manifest the sons of God and then rule the earth through His sons.
So Jacob’s blessing said, “Joseph is a fruitful bough” (Heb., ben,
“son”). Joseph received the sonship portion of the birthright.
The
birthright itself had begun with the two mandates in the first chapter of
Genesis. The scepter was created in Gen. 1:26, saying, “Let Us make man in Our
image, according to Our likeness; and let them rule.” The sonship mandate
was given in Gen. 1:28, “Be fruitful
and multiply.”
Both
mandates were packaged together originally, but they were divided by Jacob.
Ultimately, they must return to their original unity under one Head, Jesus
Christ. This is accomplished through two comings of Christ.
Joseph’s
Dreams
When
Joseph was just 17, he had two dreams in which he saw himself ruling over his
brethren and even his own parents. The first dream is given in Gen. 37:6-8,
6 And he said to them, “Please listen to this dream which I have had; 7
for behold, we were binding sheaves in the field, and lo, my sheaf rose up and
also stood erect; and behold, your sheaves gathered around and bowed down to my
sheaf. 8 Then his brothers said to him, “Are you actually going to
reign over us? Or are you really going to rule over us?” So they hated him even
more for his dreams and for his words.
The
brothers understood the meaning of the dream, but instead of rejoicing at the
good fortune of their younger brother, they hated him for his insolence. It was
probably not wise to tell them this dream.
The
second dream is given in Gen. 37:9-11,
9 Now he had still another dream, and related it to his brothers, and
said, “Lo, I have had still another dream; and behold, the sun and the moon and
eleven stars were bowing down to me.” 10 And he related it to his
father and to his brothers; and his father rebuked him and said to him, “What
is this dream that you have had? Shall I and your mother and your brothers
actually come to bow ourselves down before you to the ground?” 11 And
his brothers were jealous of him, but his father kept the saying in mind.
Joseph
was too young and inexperienced to know that such a calling would require
spiritual growth and maturity through pain and suffering. As with all of us, we
delight in our callings but frown upon the processing required to qualify us
for such callings.
Years
later, Pharaoh also had two dreams, and Joseph understood that “as for the
repeating of the dream to Pharaoh twice, it means that the matter is determined
by God [by the double witness], and God will quickly bring it about”
(Gen. 41:32). This suggests that Joseph also knew
that his own two dreams established the truth, giving him hope during his years
in the prison.
Joseph
was not immediately given the throne, of course, but shortly thereafter, God
began to move him in that direction. Joseph’s brothers sold him as a slave, and
he was taken to Egypt. The book of Jasher tells us that he arrived at the
border of Egypt on his 18th birthday.
At
first, he was treated well by his new master. But soon he was falsely accused
by Potiphar’s wife for attempted rape and was sent to prison, probably under a
life sentence.
Finally,
when he was 30 years of age, God had afflicted him enough to mature him
sufficiently to carry out his call to rule. Only then did God give Pharaoh two
dreams, which Joseph interpreted, and this event put Joseph into his calling as
ruler of Egypt, second only to Pharaoh.
Joseph
the World Ruler
Joseph
was a type of Christ in regard to His calling to rule the Kingdom as the
birthright holder. The fact that Joseph ruled over Egypt (a type of the world)
shows first that the Kingdom is not in heaven but on the earth. Though it
originates in heaven, the Kingdom, properly, is on earth.
Years
later, Daniel interpreted King Nebuchadnezzar’s dream, which spoke of four
metallic empires, ending with a Stone Kingdom, which “became a great
mountain and filled the whole earth.” The Stone is both Christ and His
domain. In other words, Christ rules the whole earth.
This
agrees with Rev. 5:10, which speaks of
the sons of God, saying, “they will reign upon the earth.”
This
fulfills the original promise and mandate that God gave to man in Gen. 1:26, where God delegated authority to man
and told him to rule the earth, including the fish, birds, cattle, and creeping
things. These are included to ensure that we do not spiritualize this and
transfer this dominion to the heavenly realm, leaving the earth neglected and
chaotic, if not destroyed altogether.
Judah
Submits to Joseph
When
Jacob blessed Judah, he gave him temporary dominion “until Shiloh comes”
(Gen. 49:10). The root word from which Shiloh is
derived is shalah, “to be at rest, at ease, tranquil.”
The
implication is that Judah was to rule during the time of conflict or war, but
that once his job was complete, the Kingdom would be turned over to “Shiloh,”
which is a prophetic name for the Messiah who has received the birthright.
King
David was perhaps the most prominent type of Christ in a Judah capacity. David
was not allowed to build the temple, because he was “a man of war”
(1 Chron. 28:3). In other words, “Shiloh” had not
yet come with its rest and tranquility. David’s calling was to prepare for that
future time. Likewise, Christ’s first appearance was as the Son of David, and
so we see again how He suffered during the time of conflict and rejection.
Even
as David prepared the way for Solomon (“peaceable”), so also did Christ, the
Son of David, prepare the way for His second appearance as Shiloh, when He
comes as “Joseph.”
Jacob’s
blessing on Judah stated also, “and to him [Shiloh] shall be the
obedience of the peoples” (Gen. 49:10). In other words, the people would
rally around the one called “Shiloh” and give their allegiance to Him, instead
of to Judah.
Those
who fulfill their Judah calling are those who transfer their loyalty to Shiloh,
even as David himself called Him “Lord” (Psalm 110:1; Matt. 22:43-45). In saying this, we see that
David understood that the One coming was greater than he.
So
Joseph’s dream showed that Judah, along with his brothers, would all bow to
Joseph in the end. This was literally fulfilled (Gen. 42:6), and “Joseph remembered the dreams
which he had about them” (Gen. 42:9).
The
first time they bowed to Joseph ignorantly without knowing who he was. They
later bowed before him with full knowledge of his identity. Gen. 50:18 says,
18 Then his brothers also came and fell down before him and said,
“Behold, we are your servants.”
The
fulfillment of Joseph’s dreams tells us that the second coming of Christ
supersedes His first appearance. Christ comes twice, each time representing a
different person prophetically. In that way, He is both Judah (or specifically,
“David”) and Joseph, but His ministry as David is temporary, while His ministry
as Joseph is permanent. He died but once, but He lives forever.
Nonetheless,
Christ is both Messiah ben Judah and Messiah ben Joseph. So Ezekiel could say
truthfully that “David will be prince among them” (Ezekiel 34:24), even though Christ is more Joseph
than David at the coming of peace, rest, and tranquility (“Shiloh”).
The
Two Birds to Cleanse Lepers
The
law prophesies two comings of Christ in terms of Judah and Joseph and the
purpose of each. In Lev. 14:1-7 we read that
cleansing lepers requires two birds. The first was to be killed in an earthen
vessel over running water (Lev. 14:5); and the second
was to be dipped or smeared with the blood of the first bird and then released
alive into the open field (Lev. 14:7).
Leprosy
is a biblical type of mortality, because leprosy is a slow death. Overcoming
death/mortality is set forth in the laws of cleansing lepers. So Christ came
the first time to be killed in an earthen vessel (physical body) over running
water (baptism, then the cross).
Christ
then comes a second time as the second bird, and his robe is dipped in blood (Rev. 19:13). Just as Joseph’s robe was dipped in
the blood of a goat, so the second bird was dipped in the blood of the first.
Hence, we see that Christ will return with the calling of Joseph and also to
fulfill the prophetic type of the second bird to heal us from our mortality
(leprosy).
Two
Goats to Cover and Remove Sin
Another
related law is found two chapters later in Leviticus 16, which gives us the
instructions for the Day of Atonement. There we find that the priest was to
take two goats, kill one and release the other into the wilderness.
The
main difference between the birds and the goats is that the birds were used to
deal with death/mortality, whereas the goats were used to deal with sin. These
two problems are closely related, yet different.
Christ
died on the cross to cover sin, that is, to atone for sin. The Day of
Atonement is Yom Kippur. The verb is kaphar, which is where we
get our English word “cover.” The word is used in Gen. 6:14,
14 Make for yourself an ark of gopher wood; you shall make the ark with
rooms and shall cover [kaphar] it inside and out with pitch.
Hence,
the first goat was killed to cover sin and thereby impute righteousness to us.
The blood of Jesus covers us, but it does not yet remove the sin.
It requires a second goat to remove sin.
The
priest was to take the second goat and impute all sins, iniquities, and
transgressions upon its head and send it alive into the wilderness (Lev. 16:21). This goat pictured the removal of
sin.
We
learn from this that Christ’s death on the cross did not actually make us
perfect, as so many have expected. Instead, our faith in Him and in His blood
has imputed righteousness to us (Rom. 4:6-8). We are called righteous, because our
sin is covered, and so we are blessed:
8 Blessed is the man whose sin the Lord will not take into account.
The
biblical definition of imputation is seen in Paul’s example of Abraham, of whom
it was said that God had imputed many sons to him even though he had none.
Paul’s explanation is that God calls “those things which be not as though
they were” (Rom. 4:17). The lesson,
then, is that by faith in God’s promise, we are imputed righteous, even though
we are yet imperfect. We have a legal righteousness, until the coming of the
second “goat” which actually removes sin.
From
Christ’s Baptism to the Cross
Jesus
was born on the evening of the feast of Trumpets in 2 B.C. He turned 30 in 29
A.D. (Note: there is no year Zero; the calendar went from 1 B.C. directly to 1
A.D.)
Ten
days after Jesus’ 30th birthday, He went to John to be baptized on
the Day of Atonement in order to fulfill the timing that had been established
in the law. When John the Baptist saw Him, He proclaimed that He was “the
Lamb of God which takes away the sin of the world’ (John 1:29).
Thus,
there is a strong link between Passover and the Day of Atonement. Each had its
place in the timing of Christ’s first ministry. He was baptized on Atonement to
prophesy His future death on the cross at Passover.
I
believe that He was baptized at the same time that day when the high priest was
killing the first goat in the temple in Jerusalem. When the designated man led
the second goat into the wilderness, they had to cross the Jordan at the place
where Jesus was baptized—where also the Israelites had crossed under Joshua.
I
believe that Jesus accompanied the man leading the goat into the wilderness.
There He was tempted by the devil forty days (Matt. 4:1, 2; Luke 4:1, 2). Thus, He was identified with both goats in
different ways.
A
literal rendering of Lev. 16:8 says,
8 And Aaron shall cast lots for the two goats; one lot for Yahweh
and the other lot for Azazel.
Azazel
is often translated “scapegoat,” but in fact, it was a “devil” figure, pictured
as a satyr, or fawn—half goat and half man. The book of Enoch says that Azazel
was one of the leaders in the false sonship movement in Gen. 6:2-4, who taught “every species of iniquity
upon earth” (Enoch 9:5).
The
second goat was “for Azazel,” which had an obscure prophetic meaning
until Christ actually fulfilled the law. Jesus was baptized to identify with
the first goat that was being killed in the temple and which was thus given “for
Yahweh.” But Jesus went into the wilderness as the second goat “for
Azazel.” What actually happened? Jesus was given into the hands of the
devil to be tempted 40 days.
At
the same time, we see that while the first goat died at a moment in time, the
second goat remained alive, and 40 days were ascribed to it. This was a
parallel to Israel’s own 40 years in the wilderness where they were tempted or
“tested” (Deut. 8:2).
The
same 40 days/years prophesied of the 40 Jubilees (40 x 49 years) in which the
Church has been tested in the wilderness of its own. Just as it took 40 days
for Jesus to be tested, and 40 years for Israel, so also has it taken 40
Jubilee cycles for the Church to be tested.
At
the end of the testing time, Jesus began His ministry, Israel entered the
Promised Land, and the Church also began the transition into the time of the
manifestation of the sons of God. (See The Laws of the
Second Coming.)
The
Kingdom of Joseph
There
are many layers in the study of Joseph which give us a snapshot of the Kingdom.
The main feature is that the coming of Christ as Joseph is the start of His new
ministry to bring the whole earth under His feet.
The
timing of this appears to coincide with the end of the 40 Jubilees of testing.
During this season, we have all been tested, “to know what was in your heart,
whether you would keep his commandments or not” (Deut. 8:2).
God
has also humbled us and allowed us to be hungry and has fed us with manna
(revelation of the word), “that He might make you understand that man does
not live by bread alone, but man lives by everything that proceeds out of the
mouth of the Lord” (Deut. 8:3). In other words,
the test is to see if we will live by every word or just those portions
that suit us or that we can understand. The goal is to live by every word.
To
do this, we must have a revelation of the word, not just head knowledge. It
must be revelation that comes from one’s spirit through which the Holy Spirit
speaks. If it is just soulish knowledge by the mind of carnal man, it is not
acceptable, nor will it transform one’s nature.
To
eat Christ’s flesh is to assimilate the Truth of who He is and the teachings
that He has presented (John 6:53). This is the
manna given in our own wilderness, which prepares us for the ministry of
Joseph, ruling in the coming Kingdom.
Knowing
the snapshot of Joseph is to know the divine plan of ruling the world. This is
the truth that gives us direction to live by every word of God. No one can
reject any portion of the word without becoming blind in that area of
revelation. We need the full revelation of God to judge the world righteously
according to the mind of God.
A
Sovereign Perspective
When
Joseph was mature, he was able to forgive his brothers for their betrayal and
hatred. So we see, when their father died, how his brothers were fearful that
Joseph might turn against them and punish them for their wickedness. Gen. 50:15 says,
15 When Joseph’s brothers saw that their father was dead, they said,
“What if Joseph should bear a grudge against us and pay us back in full for all
the wrong which we did to him!”
The
brothers then appealed to Joseph and bowed down before him. What was Joseph’s
response? Gen. 50:19, 20 tells us,
19 But Joseph said to them, “Do not be afraid, for am I in God’s place? 20
And as for you, you meant evil against me, but God meant it for good in order
to bring about this present result, to preserve many people alive.”
Joseph
recognized that God works all things together for good (Rom. 8:28). Even the bad things that people do to
us work for our benefit, if we recognize God’s hand in it and “in everything
give thanks” (1 Thess. 5:18). We are all
tested by the devil, regardless of what form he takes, but in the end, the
devil can only bless us. This is the “rest” of Shiloh and the basis of Christ’s
Joseph calling.
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