While Joseph remains unjustly imprisoned, God reveals the future through dreams, fulfills His word exactly, and yet leaves Joseph waiting, showing that divine faithfulness often operates through delayed deliverance rather than immediate release.
Joseph Interprets the Prisoners’ Dreams, the Word Is Fulfilled, and the Cupbearer Forgets Him
While Joseph remains unjustly imprisoned, God reveals the future through dreams, fulfills His word exactly, and yet leaves Joseph waiting, showing that divine faithfulness often operates through delayed deliverance rather than immediate release.
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While Joseph remains unjustly imprisoned, God reveals the future through dreams, fulfills His word exactly, and yet leaves Joseph waiting, showing that divine faithfulness often operates through delayed deliverance rather than immediate release.
Genesis 40 teaches that God is sovereign over revelation, outcomes, and timing, and that His servants may speak His true word faithfully while still remaining in prolonged obscurity and suffering. The chapter begins with a providentially arranged convergence. Two royal officials are imprisoned in Joseph’s location, placing Joseph into contact with the court of Pharaoh long before Joseph realizes where this will lead.
Their troubled faces after their dreams provide the occasion for Joseph’s theological confession: interpretations belong to God. This is one of the chapter’s central truths. Joseph does not claim autonomous power. He understands Himself as dependent upon the God who reveals mysteries. His humility before revelation stands in contrast to many forms of human divination and self-exalting spirituality.
The interpretations themselves are starkly different, one restoring, one condemning, yet both are spoken with equal faithfulness. Joseph does not manipulate the message to secure favor. He tells the truth whether it is pleasant or severe. This shows prophetic integrity inside prison. At the same time, Joseph’s request to the cupbearer reveals that He still longs for justice and release.
He is not stoic or indifferent to His suffering. He knows He is there wrongly and asks to be remembered. The final note that the cupbearer forgets Him is therefore painful and theologically important. God’s interpretations are fulfilled perfectly within three days, but Joseph’s own hoped-for relief does not come. That means the issue is not whether God is active.
The issue is God’s timing. Thus Genesis 40 argues that divine revelation is certain, divine fulfillment is exact, and divine providence may still leave the righteous servant waiting longer than expected. Forgetfulness at the human level does not mean forgetfulness at the divine level.
Genesis 40 continues the Joseph narrative inside the Egyptian prison and develops the providential pattern established in Genesis 39. Joseph remains unjustly confined, yet the Lord is still with Him and has already granted Him favor with the keeper of the prison. This chapter narrows the setting further by introducing two royal prisoners, Pharaoh’s chief cupbearer and chief baker, whose imprisonment becomes the means by which Joseph’s gift of dream interpretation is brought into contact with Pharaoh’s court.
Within the broader flow of Genesis, this chapter is transitional and strategic. Joseph is still hidden, still suffering, and still waiting. There is no outward resolution yet. Instead, the chapter shows that God is positioning Joseph for future elevation through apparently small and unnoticed events inside confinement. Theologically, the chapter reinforces that revelation belongs to God, that Joseph functions as a faithful interpreter rather than a self-originating seer, and that divine words come to pass exactly.
It also intensifies the theme of delayed deliverance. Joseph’s interpretations are accurate, yet the very person who could have remembered Him does not. Thus Genesis 40 is a chapter of divine revelation in prison, accurate fulfillment, and prolonged waiting under providence.
After these things, Pharaoh’s chief cupbearer and chief baker offend their lord, the king of Egypt. Pharaoh becomes angry with them and places them in custody in the house of the captain of the guard, in the same prison where Joseph is confined. The captain of the guard assigns Joseph to attend them.
Each man dreams a dream on the same night, each with its own meaning. In the morning Joseph sees that they are troubled and asks why their faces are downcast. They explain that they have dreamed but have no interpreter. Joseph answers that interpretations belong to God and tells them to recount the dreams to Him.
The chief cupbearer recounts His dream of a vine with three branches that bud, blossom, and produce ripe grapes, which He squeezes into Pharaoh’s cup and places in Pharaoh’s hand. Joseph interprets the dream: the three branches are three days, within which Pharaoh will lift up the cupbearer’s head and restore Him to office. Joseph then asks the cupbearer to remember Him and mention Him to Pharaoh, explaining that He was stolen from the land of the Hebrews and has done nothing to deserve imprisonment.
Seeing that the interpretation was favorable, the chief baker recounts His dream of three baskets on His head, with baked goods for Pharaoh in the top basket, which birds were eating. Joseph interprets the dream: the three baskets are three days, within which Pharaoh will lift up the baker’s head from Him and hang Him on a tree, and the birds will eat His flesh.
On the third day, Pharaoh’s birthday, He makes a feast for His servants and lifts up the head of the chief cupbearer and chief baker among them. He restores the cupbearer but hangs the baker, just as Joseph had interpreted. Yet the chief cupbearer does not remember Joseph, but forgets Him.
- 40:1–4: After these things, Pharaoh’s chief cupbearer and chief baker offend their lord, the king of Egypt. Pharaoh becomes angry with them and places them in custody in the house of the captain of the guard, in the same prison where Joseph is confined. The captain of the guard assigns Joseph to attend them.
- 40:5–8: Each man dreams a dream on the same night, each with its own meaning. In the morning Joseph sees that they are troubled and asks why their faces are downcast. They explain that they have dreamed but have no interpreter. Joseph answers that interpretations belong to God and tells them to recount the dreams to Him.
- 40:9–15: The chief cupbearer recounts His dream of a vine with three branches that bud, blossom, and produce ripe grapes, which He squeezes into Pharaoh’s cup and places in Pharaoh’s hand. Joseph interprets the dream: the three branches are three days, within which Pharaoh will lift up the cupbearer’s head and restore Him to office. Joseph then asks the cupbearer to remember Him and mention Him to Pharaoh, explaining that He was stolen from the land of the Hebrews and has done nothing to deserve imprisonment.
- 40:16–19: Seeing that the interpretation was favorable, the chief baker recounts His dream of three baskets on His head, with baked goods for Pharaoh in the top basket, which birds were eating. Joseph interprets the dream: the three baskets are three days, within which Pharaoh will lift up the baker’s head from Him and hang Him on a tree, and the birds will eat His flesh.
- 40:20–23: On the third day, Pharaoh’s birthday, He makes a feast for His servants and lifts up the head of the chief cupbearer and chief baker among them. He restores the cupbearer but hangs the baker, just as Joseph had interpreted. Yet the chief cupbearer does not remember Joseph, but forgets Him.
Theological Focus
- Providence
- Divine Revelation
- Interpretation Belongs to God
- Faithful Witness
- Delayed Deliverance
- Righteous Waiting
- Judgment and Restoration
- Divine Timing
- Righteous Suffering
- Biblical Theology
- Christology Preparation
Covenant Significance
Genesis 40 is covenantally significant because it advances Joseph’s hidden preparation for future service in Pharaoh’s court, which will be essential for the preservation of Jacob’s household. Joseph is not yet exalted, but He is being providentially positioned. The chapter also preserves Joseph’s moral and theological integrity. He remains God-centered, truthful, and faithful in prison, which is vital for the role He will soon play in preserving the covenant family during famine.
The delayed remembrance at the chapter’s end underscores that covenant preservation unfolds according to God’s timing, not human urgency.
Canonical Connections
Genesis 40 is covenantally significant because it advances Joseph’s hidden preparation for future service in Pharaoh’s court, which will be essential for the preservation of Jacob’s household. Joseph is not yet exalted, but He is being providentially positioned. The chapter also preserves Joseph’s moral and theological integrity. He remains God-centered, truthful, and faithful in prison, which is vital for the role He will soon play in preserving the covenant family during famine.
The delayed remembrance at the chapter’s end underscores that covenant preservation unfolds according to God’s timing, not human urgency.
Genesis 39:1-23
Genesis 41:1-16
Psalm 105:17-19
Daniel 2:27-28
Genesis 50:20
Genesis 39:1-23
Genesis 41:1-16
Daniel 2:27-28
Psalm 105:17-19
Cross References
Daniel answered before the king, and said, “The secret which the king has demanded can’t be shown to the king by wise men, enchanters, magicians, or soothsayers; but there is a God in heaven who reveals secrets, and he has made known to...
For everything there is a season, and a time for every purpose under heaven:
I declare the end from the beginning, and from ancient times things that are not yet done. I say: My counsel will stand, and I will do all that I please.
The king’s heart is in Yahweh’s hand like the watercourses. He turns it wherever he desires.
Genesis 40 strengthens the gospel trajectory by showing a righteous servant in humiliation who speaks God’s truth accurately and serves others while still remaining confined and forgotten. Joseph does not control the timing of His own deliverance, yet God’s word through Him proves completely trustworthy. This prepares the reader to understand that God’s redemptive work may be moving forward powerfully even when His servant remains in suffering.
In the fullness of Scripture, this pattern reaches its deepest fulfillment in Jesus Christ, who speaks the true word of God, bears humiliation, and is vindicated in God’s appointed time.
Primary Emphasis
Genesis 40 contributes to Christology by strengthening the Joseph pattern of the righteous sufferer who serves others while still confined in humiliation. Joseph interprets truthfully, speaks life to one man and judgment to another, and yet remains forgotten. This anticipates broader biblical patterns fulfilled in Christ, who speaks the truth of salvation and judgment, ministers while rejected, and is not immediately vindicated in the eyes of men.
The chapter also intensifies the descent-before-exaltation pattern that is central to Joseph and finds its fullest realization in Christ.
Chapter Contribution
Genesis 40 teaches that God is sovereign over revelation, outcomes, and timing, and that His servants may speak His true word faithfully while still remaining in prolonged obscurity and suffering. The chapter begins with a providentially arranged convergence. Two royal officials are imprisoned in Joseph’s location, placing Joseph into contact with the court of Pharaoh long before Joseph realizes where this will lead.
Their troubled faces after their dreams provide the occasion for Joseph’s theological confession: interpretations belong to God. This is one of the chapter’s central truths. Joseph does not claim autonomous power. He understands Himself as dependent upon the God who reveals mysteries. His humility before revelation stands in contrast to many forms of human divination and self-exalting spirituality.
The interpretations themselves are starkly different, one restoring, one condemning, yet both are spoken with equal faithfulness. Joseph does not manipulate the message to secure favor. He tells the truth whether it is pleasant or severe. This shows prophetic integrity inside prison. At the same time, Joseph’s request to the cupbearer reveals that He still longs for justice and release.
He is not stoic or indifferent to His suffering. He knows He is there wrongly and asks to be remembered. The final note that the cupbearer forgets Him is therefore painful and theologically important. God’s interpretations are fulfilled perfectly within three days, but Joseph’s own hoped-for relief does not come. That means the issue is not whether God is active.
The issue is God’s timing. Thus Genesis 40 argues that divine revelation is certain, divine fulfillment is exact, and divine providence may still leave the righteous servant waiting longer than expected. Forgetfulness at the human level does not mean forgetfulness at the divine level.
God alone grants the true interpretation of dreams and reveals hidden things.
God calls His people to remain faithful even when they are forgotten by others.
God’s purposes unfold according to His timing, not human expectation.
God’s revealed purposes include both deliverance and judgment.
God directs events and outcomes with precision according to His plan.
4 Imperatives
- Tell them to me, please
- Remember me when it is well with You
- Show kindness to me
- Make mention of me to Pharaoh
Sense interpretations
Definition interpretations
Why it matters Joseph’s declaration that interpretations belong to God is the chapter’s central theological confession about revelation and understanding.
Sense Do not interpretations belong to God?
Definition Do not interpretations belong to God?
Why it matters This phrase makes clear that Joseph sees Himself not as source but servant of revelation, grounding all interpretation in God alone.
Sense dream
Definition dream
Why it matters The dreams of the cupbearer and baker continue the Joseph narrative’s emphasis on dream-revelation as a key vehicle of divine disclosure.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense troubled, dejected, sad
Definition troubled, dejected, sad
Why it matters The troubled faces of the prisoners become the occasion for Joseph’s compassionate attention and faithful ministry in prison.
Sense lift up the head
Definition lift up the head
Why it matters The phrase is used with opposite outcomes, restoration for the cupbearer and removal for the baker, showing the precision and dual force of divine decree.
Sense restore to your office, return to your position
Definition restore to your office, return to your position
Why it matters The restoration of the cupbearer illustrates that God’s revealed word governs court outcomes even from inside prison.
Sense hang
Definition hang
Why it matters The baker’s judgment is pronounced and fulfilled with sobering clarity, showing that God’s revelation carries both mercy and severity.
Sense remember
Definition remember
Why it matters Joseph’s plea to be remembered brings the chapter’s theme of delayed deliverance into view, especially when contrasted with the cupbearer’s failure.
Sense forget
Definition forget
Why it matters The cupbearer’s forgetfulness is the painful close of the chapter and highlights the difference between unreliable human memory and unfailing divine providence.
Sense I was surely stolen away
Definition I was surely stolen away
Why it matters Joseph’s description of His situation reinforces His innocence and frames His suffering as the result of grave injustice rather than personal wrongdoing.
Sense pit / prison house
Definition pit / prison house
Why it matters Joseph’s story continues the motif of descent into confinement, first the pit, now prison, as the pathway of hidden providence.
Lexicon data: MorphGNT Strong's Dictionary XML (CC0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Bible (CC BY 4.0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Lexicon (CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible Data (CC BY 4.0) · Full details
C.F. Keil & F. Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (1861–91) — public domain
- Genesis 40 warns that human forgetfulness and shifting favor are unreliable, and it reminds us that even truthful service and real usefulness do not guarantee immediate recognition or relief.
- Treating Joseph as though He possessed dream interpretation as an innate private talent, when He explicitly states that interpretations belong to God.
- Reading the chapter as if Joseph’s request to be remembered shows lack of faith, rather than seeing it as a natural and honest appeal for justice within God’s providence.
- Assuming the favorable interpretation for the cupbearer is the main point, while missing that both restoration and judgment are equally part of the truthful word Joseph gives.
- Ignoring the painful ending and treating the chapter as tidy progress, when the final note of forgetfulness is crucial to its theology of delayed deliverance.
- Reducing the chapter to a lesson on dreams alone instead of seeing its emphasis on divine ownership of revelation and exact fulfillment.
- Missing how the prison setting continues the righteous-sufferer pattern established in Genesis 39.
- How does Joseph’s statement that interpretations belong to God challenge Your tendency to control meaning, outcomes, or answers?
- Are You willing to speak truth faithfully even when it will not be equally welcome by everyone who hears it?
- Where are You currently serving faithfully while feeling forgotten, overlooked, or delayed?
- How do You usually respond when something You hoped would bring relief instead leaves You waiting longer?
- What would it look like for You to trust that God remembers You even when the people who should remember You do not?
- Preach Genesis 40 as a chapter about God’s timing, showing that exact fulfillment of His word can coexist with continued personal waiting.
- Use Joseph’s response to the prisoners to teach that all true interpretation, wisdom, and understanding belong first to God, not to human brilliance.
- Encourage believers who feel forgotten that God’s providence may be advancing most quietly in the very season where human help fails them.
- Help the church recover the courage to speak truth that includes both promise and warning, rather than only messages that flatter.
- Comfort those suffering injustice by showing that Joseph’s righteousness did not produce instant release, yet God was still ordering every detail.
- Teach that honest desire for deliverance is not the opposite of faith, but it must remain submitted to God’s timing.
- Point toward Christ as the greater righteous servant who brought God’s truth in humiliation and was not vindicated according to human timing.
Genesis 40 strengthens the gospel trajectory by showing a righteous servant in humiliation who speaks God’s truth accurately and serves others while still remaining confined and forgotten. Joseph does not control the timing of His own deliverance, yet God’s word through Him proves completely trustworthy. This prepares the reader to understand that God’s redemptive work may be moving forward powerfully even when His servant remains in suffering.
In the fullness of Scripture, this pattern reaches its deepest fulfillment in Jesus Christ, who speaks the true word of God, bears humiliation, and is vindicated in God’s appointed time.
Genesis 40 strengthens the gospel trajectory by showing a righteous servant in humiliation who speaks God’s truth accurately and serves others while still remaining confined and forgotten. Joseph does not control the timing of His own deliverance, yet God’s word through Him proves completely trustworthy. This prepares the reader to understand that God’s redemptive work may be moving forward powerfully even when His servant remains in suffering.
In the fullness of Scripture, this pattern reaches its deepest fulfillment in Jesus Christ, who speaks the true word of God, bears humiliation, and is vindicated in God’s appointed time.
Genesis 40 strengthens the gospel trajectory by showing a righteous servant in humiliation who speaks God’s truth accurately and serves others while still remaining confined and forgotten. Joseph does not control the timing of His own deliverance, yet God’s word through Him proves completely trustworthy. This prepares the reader to understand that God’s redemptive work may be moving forward powerfully even when His servant remains in suffering.
In the fullness of Scripture, this pattern reaches its deepest fulfillment in Jesus Christ, who speaks the true word of God, bears humiliation, and is vindicated in God’s appointed time.
Genesis 40 strengthens the gospel trajectory by showing a righteous servant in humiliation who speaks God’s truth accurately and serves others while still remaining confined and forgotten. Joseph does not control the timing of His own deliverance, yet God’s word through Him proves completely trustworthy. This prepares the reader to understand that God’s redemptive work may be moving forward powerfully even when His servant remains in suffering.
In the fullness of Scripture, this pattern reaches its deepest fulfillment in Jesus Christ, who speaks the true word of God, bears humiliation, and is vindicated in God’s appointed time.
Genesis 40 strengthens the gospel trajectory by showing a righteous servant in humiliation who speaks God’s truth accurately and serves others while still remaining confined and forgotten. Joseph does not control the timing of His own deliverance, yet God’s word through Him proves completely trustworthy. This prepares the reader to understand that God’s redemptive work may be moving forward powerfully even when His servant remains in suffering.
In the fullness of Scripture, this pattern reaches its deepest fulfillment in Jesus Christ, who speaks the true word of God, bears humiliation, and is vindicated in God’s appointed time.
4
Moderate
- Tell them to me, please
- Remember me when it is well with You
- Show kindness to me
- Make mention of me to Pharaoh
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
Genesis 40 is covenantally significant because it advances Joseph’s hidden preparation for future service in Pharaoh’s court, which will be essential for the preservation of Jacob’s household. Joseph is not yet exalted, but He is being providentially positioned. The chapter also preserves Joseph’s moral and theological integrity. He remains God-centered, truthful, and faithful in prison, which is vital for the role He will soon play in preserving the covenant family during famine.
The delayed remembrance at the chapter’s end underscores that covenant preservation unfolds according to God’s timing, not human urgency.
Genesis 40 strengthens the gospel trajectory by showing a righteous servant in humiliation who speaks God’s truth accurately and serves others while still remaining confined and forgotten. Joseph does not control the timing of His own deliverance, yet God’s word through Him proves completely trustworthy. This prepares the reader to understand that God’s redemptive work may be moving forward powerfully even when His servant remains in suffering.
In the fullness of Scripture, this pattern reaches its deepest fulfillment in Jesus Christ, who speaks the true word of God, bears humiliation, and is vindicated in God’s appointed time.
Focus Points
- Providence
- Divine Revelation
- Interpretation Belongs to God
- Faithful Witness
- Delayed Deliverance
- Righteous Waiting
- Judgment and Restoration
- Divine Timing
- Righteous Suffering
- Biblical Theology
- Christology Preparation
Cross References
Passages
Chapter opening: Genesis 40:1-23
Gen 40:1-4 The head cup-bearer and head baker had committed crimes against the king of Egypt, and were imprisoned in “ the prison of the house of the captain of the trabantes, the prison where Joseph himself was confined; ” the state-prison, according to Eastern custom, forming part of the same building as the dwelling-house of the chief of the executioners. From a regard to the exalted position of these two prisoners, Potiphar ordered Joseph to wait upon them, not to keep watch over them; for את פּקד does not mean to appoint as guard, but to place by the side of a person.
Gen 40:1-4 The head cup-bearer and head baker had committed crimes against the king of Egypt, and were imprisoned in “ the prison of the house of the captain of the trabantes, the prison where Joseph himself was confined; ” the state-prison, according to Eastern custom, forming part of the same building as the dwelling-house of the chief of the executioners. From a regard to the exalted position of these two prisoners, Potiphar ordered Joseph to wait upon them, not to keep watch over them; for את פּקד does not mean to appoint as guard, but to place by the side of a person.
Gen 40:1-4 The head cup-bearer and head baker had committed crimes against the king of Egypt, and were imprisoned in “ the prison of the house of the captain of the trabantes, the prison where Joseph himself was confined; ” the state-prison, according to Eastern custom, forming part of the same building as the dwelling-house of the chief of the executioners. From a regard to the exalted position of these two prisoners, Potiphar ordered Joseph to wait upon them, not to keep watch over them; for את פּקד does not mean to appoint as guard, but to place by the side of a person.
Gen 40:1-4 The head cup-bearer and head baker had committed crimes against the king of Egypt, and were imprisoned in “ the prison of the house of the captain of the trabantes, the prison where Joseph himself was confined; ” the state-prison, according to Eastern custom, forming part of the same building as the dwelling-house of the chief of the executioners. From a regard to the exalted position of these two prisoners, Potiphar ordered Joseph to wait upon them, not to keep watch over them; for את פּקד does not mean to appoint as guard, but to place by the side of a person.
Gen 40:5-7 After some time (“days,” Gen 40:4, as in Gen 4:3), and on the same night, these two prisoners had each a peculiar dream, “ each one according to the interpretation of his dream; ” i.e., each one had a dream corresponding to the interpretation which specially applied to him. On account of these dreams, which seemed to them to have some bearing upon their fate, and, as the issue proved, were really true omens of it, Joseph found them the next morning looking anxious, and asked them the reason of the trouble which was depicted upon their countenances.
Gen 40:5-7 After some time (“days,” Gen 40:4, as in Gen 4:3), and on the same night, these two prisoners had each a peculiar dream, “ each one according to the interpretation of his dream; ” i.e., each one had a dream corresponding to the interpretation which specially applied to him. On account of these dreams, which seemed to them to have some bearing upon their fate, and, as the issue proved, were really true omens of it, Joseph found them the next morning looking anxious, and asked them the reason of the trouble which was depicted upon their countenances.
Gen 40:5-7 After some time (“days,” Gen 40:4, as in Gen 4:3), and on the same night, these two prisoners had each a peculiar dream, “ each one according to the interpretation of his dream; ” i.e., each one had a dream corresponding to the interpretation which specially applied to him. On account of these dreams, which seemed to them to have some bearing upon their fate, and, as the issue proved, were really true omens of it, Joseph found them the next morning looking anxious, and asked them the reason of the trouble which was depicted upon their countenances.
Gen 40:8 On their replying that they had dreamed, and there was no one to interpret the dream, Joseph reminded them first of all that “interpretations are God's,” come from God, are His gift; at the same time he bade them tell him their dreams, from a consciousness, no doubt, that he was endowed with this divine gift.
Gen 40:9-11 The cup-bearer gave this account: “ In my dream, behold there was a vine before me, and on the vine three branches; and it was as though blossoming, it shot forth its blossom (נצּהּ either from the hapax l. נץ = נצּה, or from נצּה with the fem. termination resolved into the 3 pers. suff. : Ewald , §257 d ), its clusters ripened into grapes. And Pharaoh’s cup was in my hand; and I took the grapes and pressed them into Pharaoh’s cup, and gave the cup into Pharaoh’s hand .
” In this dream the office and duty of the royal cup-bearer were represented in an unmistakeable manner, though the particular details must not be so forced as to lead to the conclusion, that the kings of ancient Egypt drank only the fresh juice of the grape, and not fermented wine as well. The cultivation of the vine, and the making and drinking of wine, among the Egyptians, are established beyond question by ancient testimony and the earliest monuments, notwithstanding the statement of Herodotus (2, 77) to the contrary (see Hengstenberg, Egypt and the Books of Moses , pp.
13ff.)
Gen 40:9-11 The cup-bearer gave this account: “ In my dream, behold there was a vine before me, and on the vine three branches; and it was as though blossoming, it shot forth its blossom (נצּהּ either from the hapax l. נץ = נצּה, or from נצּה with the fem. termination resolved into the 3 pers. suff. : Ewald , §257 d ), its clusters ripened into grapes. And Pharaoh’s cup was in my hand; and I took the grapes and pressed them into Pharaoh’s cup, and gave the cup into Pharaoh’s hand .
” In this dream the office and duty of the royal cup-bearer were represented in an unmistakeable manner, though the particular details must not be so forced as to lead to the conclusion, that the kings of ancient Egypt drank only the fresh juice of the grape, and not fermented wine as well. The cultivation of the vine, and the making and drinking of wine, among the Egyptians, are established beyond question by ancient testimony and the earliest monuments, notwithstanding the statement of Herodotus (2, 77) to the contrary (see Hengstenberg, Egypt and the Books of Moses , pp.
13ff.)
Gen 40:9-11 The cup-bearer gave this account: “ In my dream, behold there was a vine before me, and on the vine three branches; and it was as though blossoming, it shot forth its blossom (נצּהּ either from the hapax l. נץ = נצּה, or from נצּה with the fem. termination resolved into the 3 pers. suff. : Ewald , §257 d ), its clusters ripened into grapes. And Pharaoh’s cup was in my hand; and I took the grapes and pressed them into Pharaoh’s cup, and gave the cup into Pharaoh’s hand .
” In this dream the office and duty of the royal cup-bearer were represented in an unmistakeable manner, though the particular details must not be so forced as to lead to the conclusion, that the kings of ancient Egypt drank only the fresh juice of the grape, and not fermented wine as well. The cultivation of the vine, and the making and drinking of wine, among the Egyptians, are established beyond question by ancient testimony and the earliest monuments, notwithstanding the statement of Herodotus (2, 77) to the contrary (see Hengstenberg, Egypt and the Books of Moses , pp.
13ff.)
Gen 40:12-15 Joseph then gave this interpretation: The three branches were three days, in which time Pharaoh would restore him to his post again (“lift up his head,” i. e. , raise him from his degradation, send and fetch him from prison, 2Ki 25:27). And he added this request (Gen 40:14): “ Only think of me, as it goes well with thee, and show favour to me...
for I was stolen (i. e. , carried away secretly and by force; I did not abscond because of any crime) out of the land of the Hebrews (the land where the Ibrim live); and here also I have done nothing (committed no crime) for which they should put me into the hole . ” בּור: the cell, applied to a prison as a miserable hole, because often dry cess-pools were used as prisons.
Gen 40:12-15 Joseph then gave this interpretation: The three branches were three days, in which time Pharaoh would restore him to his post again (“lift up his head,” i. e. , raise him from his degradation, send and fetch him from prison, 2Ki 25:27). And he added this request (Gen 40:14): “ Only think of me, as it goes well with thee, and show favour to me...
for I was stolen (i. e. , carried away secretly and by force; I did not abscond because of any crime) out of the land of the Hebrews (the land where the Ibrim live); and here also I have done nothing (committed no crime) for which they should put me into the hole . ” בּור: the cell, applied to a prison as a miserable hole, because often dry cess-pools were used as prisons.
Gen 40:12-15 Joseph then gave this interpretation: The three branches were three days, in which time Pharaoh would restore him to his post again (“lift up his head,” i. e. , raise him from his degradation, send and fetch him from prison, 2Ki 25:27). And he added this request (Gen 40:14): “ Only think of me, as it goes well with thee, and show favour to me...
for I was stolen (i. e. , carried away secretly and by force; I did not abscond because of any crime) out of the land of the Hebrews (the land where the Ibrim live); and here also I have done nothing (committed no crime) for which they should put me into the hole . ” בּור: the cell, applied to a prison as a miserable hole, because often dry cess-pools were used as prisons.
Gen 40:12-15 Joseph then gave this interpretation: The three branches were three days, in which time Pharaoh would restore him to his post again (“lift up his head,” i. e. , raise him from his degradation, send and fetch him from prison, 2Ki 25:27). And he added this request (Gen 40:14): “ Only think of me, as it goes well with thee, and show favour to me...
for I was stolen (i. e. , carried away secretly and by force; I did not abscond because of any crime) out of the land of the Hebrews (the land where the Ibrim live); and here also I have done nothing (committed no crime) for which they should put me into the hole . ” בּור: the cell, applied to a prison as a miserable hole, because often dry cess-pools were used as prisons.
Gen 40:16-19 Encouraged by this favourable interpretation, the chief baker also told his dream: “ I too,... in my dream: behold, baskets of white bread upon my head, and in the top basket all kinds of food for Pharaoh, pastry; and the birds ate it out of the basket from my head . ” In this dream, the carrying of the baskets upon the head is thoroughly Egyptian; for, according to Herod .
2, 35, the men in Egypt carry burdens upon the head, the women upon the shoulders. And, according to the monuments, the variety of confectionary was very extensive (cf. Hengst . p. 27). In the opening words, “ I too, ” the baker points to the resemblance between his dream and the cup-bearer's. The resemblance was not confined to the sameness of the numbers-three baskets of white bread, and three branches of the vine-but was also seen in the fact that his official duty at the court was represented in the dream.
But instead of Pharaoh taking the bread from his hand, the birds of heaven ate it out of the basket upon his head. And Joseph gave this interpretation: “ The three baskets signify three days: within that time Pharaoh will take away thy head from thee (“lift up thy head,” as in Gen 40:13, but with מעליך “away from thee,” i. e. , behead thee), and hang thee on the stake (thy body after execution; vid.
, Deu 21:22-23), and the birds will eat thy flesh from off thee . ” However simple and close this interpretation of the two dreams may appear, the exact accordance with the fulfilment was a miracle wrought by God, and showed that as the dreams originated in the instigation of God, the interpretation was His inspiration also.
Gen 40:16-19 Encouraged by this favourable interpretation, the chief baker also told his dream: “ I too,... in my dream: behold, baskets of white bread upon my head, and in the top basket all kinds of food for Pharaoh, pastry; and the birds ate it out of the basket from my head . ” In this dream, the carrying of the baskets upon the head is thoroughly Egyptian; for, according to Herod .
2, 35, the men in Egypt carry burdens upon the head, the women upon the shoulders. And, according to the monuments, the variety of confectionary was very extensive (cf. Hengst . p. 27). In the opening words, “ I too, ” the baker points to the resemblance between his dream and the cup-bearer's. The resemblance was not confined to the sameness of the numbers-three baskets of white bread, and three branches of the vine-but was also seen in the fact that his official duty at the court was represented in the dream.
But instead of Pharaoh taking the bread from his hand, the birds of heaven ate it out of the basket upon his head. And Joseph gave this interpretation: “ The three baskets signify three days: within that time Pharaoh will take away thy head from thee (“lift up thy head,” as in Gen 40:13, but with מעליך “away from thee,” i. e. , behead thee), and hang thee on the stake (thy body after execution; vid.
, Deu 21:22-23), and the birds will eat thy flesh from off thee . ” However simple and close this interpretation of the two dreams may appear, the exact accordance with the fulfilment was a miracle wrought by God, and showed that as the dreams originated in the instigation of God, the interpretation was His inspiration also.
Gen 40:16-19 Encouraged by this favourable interpretation, the chief baker also told his dream: “ I too,... in my dream: behold, baskets of white bread upon my head, and in the top basket all kinds of food for Pharaoh, pastry; and the birds ate it out of the basket from my head . ” In this dream, the carrying of the baskets upon the head is thoroughly Egyptian; for, according to Herod .
2, 35, the men in Egypt carry burdens upon the head, the women upon the shoulders. And, according to the monuments, the variety of confectionary was very extensive (cf. Hengst . p. 27). In the opening words, “ I too, ” the baker points to the resemblance between his dream and the cup-bearer's. The resemblance was not confined to the sameness of the numbers-three baskets of white bread, and three branches of the vine-but was also seen in the fact that his official duty at the court was represented in the dream.
But instead of Pharaoh taking the bread from his hand, the birds of heaven ate it out of the basket upon his head. And Joseph gave this interpretation: “ The three baskets signify three days: within that time Pharaoh will take away thy head from thee (“lift up thy head,” as in Gen 40:13, but with מעליך “away from thee,” i. e. , behead thee), and hang thee on the stake (thy body after execution; vid.
, Deu 21:22-23), and the birds will eat thy flesh from off thee . ” However simple and close this interpretation of the two dreams may appear, the exact accordance with the fulfilment was a miracle wrought by God, and showed that as the dreams originated in the instigation of God, the interpretation was His inspiration also.
Gen 40:16-19 Encouraged by this favourable interpretation, the chief baker also told his dream: “ I too,... in my dream: behold, baskets of white bread upon my head, and in the top basket all kinds of food for Pharaoh, pastry; and the birds ate it out of the basket from my head . ” In this dream, the carrying of the baskets upon the head is thoroughly Egyptian; for, according to Herod .
2, 35, the men in Egypt carry burdens upon the head, the women upon the shoulders. And, according to the monuments, the variety of confectionary was very extensive (cf. Hengst . p. 27). In the opening words, “ I too, ” the baker points to the resemblance between his dream and the cup-bearer's. The resemblance was not confined to the sameness of the numbers-three baskets of white bread, and three branches of the vine-but was also seen in the fact that his official duty at the court was represented in the dream.
But instead of Pharaoh taking the bread from his hand, the birds of heaven ate it out of the basket upon his head. And Joseph gave this interpretation: “ The three baskets signify three days: within that time Pharaoh will take away thy head from thee (“lift up thy head,” as in Gen 40:13, but with מעליך “away from thee,” i. e. , behead thee), and hang thee on the stake (thy body after execution; vid.
, Deu 21:22-23), and the birds will eat thy flesh from off thee . ” However simple and close this interpretation of the two dreams may appear, the exact accordance with the fulfilment was a miracle wrought by God, and showed that as the dreams originated in the instigation of God, the interpretation was His inspiration also.
Gen 40:20-22 Joseph’s interpretations were fulfilled three days afterwards, on the king’s birth-day. הלּדת יום: the day of being born; the inf. Hoph . is construed as a passive with the accus . obj ., as in Gen 4:18, etc. Pharaoh gave his servants a feast, and lifted up the heads of both the prisoners, but in very different ways. The cup-bearer was pardoned, and reinstated in his office; the baker, on the other hand, was executed.
Gen 40:20-22 Joseph’s interpretations were fulfilled three days afterwards, on the king’s birth-day. הלּדת יום: the day of being born; the inf. Hoph . is construed as a passive with the accus . obj ., as in Gen 4:18, etc. Pharaoh gave his servants a feast, and lifted up the heads of both the prisoners, but in very different ways. The cup-bearer was pardoned, and reinstated in his office; the baker, on the other hand, was executed.
Gen 40:20-22 Joseph’s interpretations were fulfilled three days afterwards, on the king’s birth-day. הלּדת יום: the day of being born; the inf. Hoph . is construed as a passive with the accus . obj ., as in Gen 4:18, etc. Pharaoh gave his servants a feast, and lifted up the heads of both the prisoners, but in very different ways. The cup-bearer was pardoned, and reinstated in his office; the baker, on the other hand, was executed.