The following is drawn from the
Family Camp studies on the life of Joseph based on Max Lucado’s
book You’ll Get Through This.
Max says:
You’ll get through this. It won’t be painless. It won’t be
quick. But God will use this mess for good. In the meantime, don’t
be foolish or naïve. But don’t despair either. With God’s help,
you will get through this.”
The difficulty
is that we don’t know how long “through” is going to last—days,
months, years, or a lifetime. It is that uncertainty that is the
hardest to bear. As someone said, if I know this will be over next
month, then I know I can endure it. If I don’t know when (or if)
this will end, I imagine the worst and feel unable to keep pressing
on.
In the life of
Joseph, he had no idea how long he would spend in the pit, in
Potiphar’s house, in prison, or in the palace. The pit didn’t
last long, but being sold into slavery was a different kind of pit.
And prison could have been a much shorter stay if Potiphar had gotten
the truth out of his wife, or if the cupbearer had remembered his
promise. But through it all, Joseph remained faithful to God.
We don’t know
if Joseph had access to any kind of Scripture, and his family
wouldn’t be praying for him if they thought he was dead. So most of
his life it seems he was alone with his memories of the stories his
father had likely told him about Noah, Abraham, and others, and he
had his own prayers and the dreams God had given him. So he endured
by faith until God brought him through the other side.
Unlike Joseph,
we do have a couple avenues to find strength to endure and to trust
in God: Scripture and community. We have to decide to believe that
the promises of the Word are true, even if they don’t seem true at
this moment: God is in control; God is good; God is working all
things for my good and His glory; God knows and understands exactly
how we feel. By faith we take Him at His word and cling to what we
know. And in order to do that, we need the loving support and the
graceful reminders provided by the Body of Christ. We need to be
reminded of the truth in preaching and teaching. We need the
encouragement and love of true fellowship. We need to know that
others have been through the same difficulties and have survived with
their faith intact. Community can provide more specifically in the
forms of prayer, comfort, and material needs as well.
I don’t know
that I would have the endurance of Joseph. Thankfully I haven’t had
the same kinds of trials, though that doesn’t really matter. God
has His own way of turning evil into good for His own purposes. And
He’s given us His Word and His people to carry us through.
“Therefore since we are
surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside
every weight, and sin which clings so closely, and let us run with
endurance the race that is set before us” (Hebrews 12:1).