Jesus is not like Joseph. God is not like Pharaoh
OK,Im about to need to say some frankly critical things about the Rev. John Hagee, so let me start by saying something nice first. The pastorplays a mean saxophone :
Hagees son, Matt, also has a fine voice. (I think he might be happier, and the world might be a better place, if he stepped away from the family business of anti-gay vitriol and Bible prophecy nuttery and headed off to Nashville or Branson to follow his musical dreams.)
Anyway, Hemant Mehta directs our attention to John Hagees recent appearance on the Trinity Broadcasting Network where, alas, hes not playing the saxophone. Hagee is, rather, offering what he sees as the evidence that proves his belief in Bible prophecy.
Hagee, you see, is a Bible prophecy scholar, just like Tim LaHaye a premillennial dispensationalist who regards the whole Bible as a series of predictions about the future and the End of Days.
On TBN, Hagee addresses All the Prophecy Skeptics :
This is for those of you who are riddled with skepticism about the accuracy of the inerrant Word of God. Only God could orchestrate this. This is a prophetic overlay that Im about to give you. A prophetic overlay is something that is revealed in the Old Testament and becomes very obviously clear in the New Testament by an exact set of circumstances, but it involved another life centuries later.
Hagee believes the Bible is inerrant (excepting, of course, all that stuff in the Bible that says Jesus is the Word of God) and that it should be read literally. This prophetic overlay business is a way of getting around that. Its his way of telling himself that hes reading the Bible literally while he veers off into allegory.
He goes on to present a series of supposed parallels between the character of Joseph in Genesis (he of the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat) and the character of Jesus in the Gospels. These parallels are strained, to say the least. As Hemant says, Hagee sounds like hes reading the (debunked) chain letter about the coincidences between Abraham Lincoln and John F. Kennedy.
But most of these alleged parallels dont even rise to the level of coincidences. Hagees not wrong when he points out that both Joseph and Jesus had Jewish names, that both hadfathers, and that both wore garments. But he is wrong to imagine that these things are worth pointing out.
To be fair, most of the writers of the New Testament also stretched and strained to find echos and allusions for Jesus in the Hebrew scriptures. They found or invented some rather creative and imaginative ways to make connections between Jesus and those scriptures. Sometimes that meant tweaking Jesus story a bit to better fit the scriptural allusion. Sometimes it meant imposingwholly new meanings onthose passages of scripture.
Those New Testament writers Matthew, Luke, Paul, the author of Hebrews had a different agenda than Hagee. They werent trying to demonstrate the accuracy of biblical prophecy. They were making comparisons to teach their readers about Jesus. So unlike Hagees prophetic overlay, they didnt just look for parallels, but for points of contrast. They tried to show how Jesus was like David, but also how Jesus was not like David.
John Hagee wants us to see Joseph as a type of Jesus a prophetic precursor revealed in the Old Testament, the full meaning of which becomes very obviously clear in the prophetic fulfillment of Jesus Christ.
And that is horrifying .
The story of Joseph has been defanged and deformed by Sunday school storybooks and Broadway musicals, but it is not a happy story. Joseph is a predator, not a savior. He is, in this story, an evil, evil bastard.
You probably remember the bit with Josephs dreams foretelling seven years of plenty to be followed by seven years of famine, and how that allowed Joseph to store up food during the years of plenty to save the world from starvation during the years of famine. Yay, Joseph! Well done!
Except Joseph saved the world for a price a very high price. He made the world an offer it could not refuse. Joseph took everything from everyone. He extorted all their money, all their property, and all their land. And when they had nothing left to extort from them, he enslaved them. He didnt so much save the world, in other words, as he took it over.
Like most of Genesis, this is an origin story. It is the story of where tyrants come from. It is the story of Joseph inventing totalitarian rule :
So Joseph bought all the land of Egypt for Pharaoh. All the Egyptians sold their fields, because the famine was severe upon them; and the land became Pharaohs. As for the people, he made slaves of them from one end of Egypt to the other.
Its frightening, and probably blasphemous, for John Hagee to claimthat Josephs tyrannical extortion matches the exact set of circumstances that the New Testament presents about Jesus Christ. When Jesus said Today this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing, he was not talking about making slaves from one end of the world to the other. He was talking about this:
The Spirit of the Lord is upon me,
because he has anointed me
to bring good news to the poor.
He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives
and recovery of sight to the blind,
to let the oppressed go free,
to proclaim the year of the Lords favor.Jesus called himselfthe embodiment of Jubilee. Joseph was the anti- Jubilee.
Even more appalling is the climactic final point in Hagees prophetic overlay. Joseph, he says, was released from prison to stand bythe side of the most powerful man on the Earth, which was Pharaoh. Thats just like Jesus, Hagee continues, who was released from the prison of death and came to stand at the right hand of the most powerful person in the universe, God Almighty.
Hagees prophetic overlay of Joseph and Jesus thus ends by identifyingGod with Pharaoh . By presenting Joseph as a type of Jesus, he thereby winds up presenting Pharaoh as a type of God.
Oy . Not good.
This is particularly weird coming from a guy like John Hagee a man who is obsessed with Bible prophecy and the book of Revelation.The ghost of Pharaoh haunts that book, from the beastly machine that Joseph first invented, to the liberating plagues of divine wrath sent to destroy the thrones of power.
Hagees weird little prophetic overlay about Joseph and Jesus thus highlights the way his Bible prophecy scheme turns the book of Revelation on its head. It portrays God as Pharaoh. It portrays Jesus as Joseph saving the world by enslaving it withlethal coercion.
Jesus is not like Joseph. God is not like Pharaoh , Fred Clark, slacktivist
One of the Ten Commandments. You'd think that preachers would be the first to heed the stricture -- to be very careful not to deform the Holy text. But in fact, there are a lot of them who pretty much create their own religion, and then twist the Bible to fit...
The bible itself was nothing more than a fabrication of man design to twist the minds of other men.
I'm an incurable optimist, Dean. I refuse to give up hope that -- someday -- you will post a relevant Reply...
As a person of faith, I shutter to think of the distortions and lies that have been told in the name of God. The best advice ever received from a pastor was "don't take my word for it, read the bible for yourself and apply it to your life".
Congregants continue to relegate and elevate their clergy to Godlike status. I contend -for every pastor, theologian, priest, etc. there is an interpretation of the "Word of God".Hagee'sprophetic overlay isbut one example. Personally, I don't require his inspired, enlightened, schooled version ofGod to have my relationship with the same God...He and I are doing just finewith Mr. Hagee
And they're covered with cheesist.
Exactly