Genesis 40
Genesis 40 finds Joseph in prison alongside two of Pharaoh's officials — his cupbearer and his baker — each of whom has a dream they cannot interpret. Joseph, seeing their distress, asks to hear the dreams and declares: do not interpretations belong to God? He interprets the cupbearer's dream as restoration in three days, and the baker's as execution in three days. Both come true exactly. Joseph asks the cupbearer to remember him and speak to Pharaoh on his behalf. But the cupbearer, restored to his position, forgets Joseph for two full years. It is a moment of hope deferred, one of the most painful experiences a person can know. Psalm 105:18–19 says the word of the Lord tested Joseph until the time His word came to pass. Joseph's gifts are evident, his interpretation is accurate, and still he waits. The chapter trains the reader — and Joseph — in the patience that Hebrews 6:12 calls necessary for inheriting the promises. Sometimes the person who should help you simply forgets, and God is still not late.
Genesis 40:1
Some time later, the cupbearer and the baker of the king of Egypt offended their master the king of Egypt. The placement of these two officials in prison is the divine arrangement that brings the right people to Joseph at the right time. The application: the offenses of others — their failures and falls — become the occasions for God's providential positioning. The cupbearer and baker did not fall from the king's favor for Joseph's benefit, but their fall creates the encounter that changes Joseph's trajectory.
Genesis 40:2
Pharaoh was angry with his two officials, the chief cupbearer and the chief baker. The anger of Pharaoh at his officials is the trigger for their imprisonment. The application: the circumstances that deliver specific people into specific places are often the results of their own failures. The cupbearer and baker are in prison because they offended Pharaoh, not because God placed them there directly — yet God uses the placement.
Genesis 40:3
And put them in custody in the house of the captain of the guard, in the same prison where Joseph was confined. The same prison where Joseph was confined is the connection point — the captain of the guard's prison is Potiphar's domain, and Joseph is under Potiphar. The application: the places where we have been placed by injustice are sometimes the exact places where providential encounters await.
Genesis 40:4
The captain of the guard assigned them to Joseph, and he attended to them. After they had been in custody for some time. Joseph's assignment to attend to them is the human action that places him in relationship with the two officials. The application: the servant who attends faithfully to those in his care creates the relationship that allows for the significant encounter.
Genesis 40:5
Each of the two men — the cupbearer and the baker of the king of Egypt, who were being held in prison — had a dream the same night, and each dream had a meaning of its own. The simultaneous dreams of the two officials is the occasion for Joseph's gift of interpretation. The application: the gifts God gives are given for the specific moments that require them. Joseph's gift of dream interpretation has been developing since his own dreams in Genesis 37; it is about to be deployed.