Dysfunction or Function?
All these facts combine to make the account of this unusual family not a story of godly heritage so much as a story of mercy!
The account of the dreams, coming at the outset, makes God, not Joseph, the ‘hero’ of the story: it is not a tale of human success but of divine sovereignty.
Joseph took gifts from God—his dreams—and turned them into tools of self-promotion!
And aren’t we also prone to take the good gifts of God—our positions, our possessions, our intelligence, our education, our sexuality, our ability to pray—and use them, not for the benefit of others and the glory of God, but only to make ourselves feel better? Think it out. What good gifts has God given you which you are tempted to use solely for yourself? As you think it out, notice the obvious: Joseph’s sins came back and bit him! He ended up in a pit, in a slave caravan, and in slavery because he abused the good gifts of God. If he was to be God’s leader, he would have to learn humility somehow. So God let him stumble; “whom the Lord loves, He disciplines.”