Zodiac Sign Joseph
Israel's Blessings For His Son, Joseph
"Joseph is a
fruitful bough,
A fruitful bough by a
well;
His branches run over
the wall.
The archers have bitterly grieved him,
Shot at him and hated
him.
But his bow remained in strength,
And the arms of his
hands were made strong
By the hands of the
Mighty God of Israel
(From there is the
Shepherd, the Stone of Israel),
By the God of your father who will help you,
And by the Almighty
who will bless you
With blessings of
heaven above,
Blessings of the deep
that lies beneath,
Blessings of the
breasts and of the womb.
The blessings of your father
Have excelled the
blessings of my ancestors,
Up to the utmost bound
of the everlasting hills.
They shall be on the
head of Joseph,
And on the crown of
the head of him who was separate from his brothers.
Genesis 49:22-26
Holy Moses Blesses Joseph
And of Joseph he said:
"Blessed of the
Lord is his land,
With the precious
things of heaven, with the dew,
And the deep lying
beneath,
With the precious
fruits of the sun,
With the precious
produce of the months,
With the best things
of the ancient mountains,
With the precious
things of the everlasting hills,
With the precious
things of the earth and its fullness,
And the favor of Him
who dwelt in the bush.
Let the blessing
come'on the head of Joseph,
And on the crown of
the head of him who was separate from his brothers.'
His glory is like a
firstborn bull,
And his horns like the
horns of the wild ox;
Together with them
He shall push the
peoples
To the ends of the
earth;
They are the ten
thousands of Ephraim,
And they are the
thousands of Manasseh."
Deuteronomy 33:13-17
The Eleventh Son of Jacob
and Rachel.
Joseph, the eleventh son of
Jacob and Rachel, the beautiful and beloved.
His struggle against the
Egyptian temptress.
THE copy of the Testament of Joseph. When he was
about to die he called his sons and his brethren together, and said to them:
“My brethren and my children, hearken to Joseph the
beloved of Israel; give ear, my sons, unto your father. I have seen in my life
envy and death, yet I went not astray, but persevered in the truth of the Lord.
“These my
brethren hated me, but the Lord loved me: They wished to slay me, but the God
of my fathers guarded me:
They let me
down into a pit, and the Most High brought me up again.
I was sold
into slavery, and the Lord of all made me free:
I was taken
into captivity, and His strong hand succored (assisted, comforted) me.
I was beset
with hunger, and the Lord Himself nourished me.
I was alone,
and God comforted me:
I was sick,
and the Lord visited me.
I was in
prison, and my God showed favour unto me.
In bonds, and
He released me.
Slandered,
and He pleaded my cause.
Bitterly
spoken against by the Egyptians, and He delivered me.
Envied by my
fellow slaves, and He exalted me.
“And this chief captain of Pharaoh entrusted to me
his house. And I struggled against a shameless woman, urging me to transgress
with her; but the God of Israel my father delivered me from the burning flame.
I was cast into prison, I was beaten, I was mocked; but the Lord granted me to
find mercy, in the sight of the keeper of the prison. For the Lord doth not
forsake them that fear Him, neither in darkness, nor in bonds, nor in tribulations,
nor in necessities.
“For God is not put to shame as a man, nor as the
son of man is he afraid, nor as one that is earth-born is He weak or
affrighted. But in all those things doth He give protection, and in diverse
ways doth He comfort, though for a little space (time) He departs to try the
inclination of the soul.
“In ten temptations He showed me approved, and in
all of them I endured; for endurance is a mighty charm, and patience gives many
good things.
How often did
the Egyptian woman threaten me with death!
How often did
she give me over to punishment, and then call me back and threaten me, and when
I was unwilling to company with her, she said to me: Thou shalt be lord of me,
and all that is in my house, if thou wilt give thyself unto me, and thou shalt
be as our master. But I remembered the words of my father, and going into my
chamber, I wept and prayed unto the Lord. And I fasted in those seven years,
and I appeared to the Egyptians as one living delicately, for they that fast
for God's sake receive beauty of face.
“And if my lord were away from home, I drank no
wine; nor for three days did I take my food, but I gave it to the poor and
sick. And I sought the Lord early, and I wept for the Egyptian woman of
Memphis, for very unceasingly did she trouble me, for also at night she came to
me under pretence of visiting me. And because she had no male child she
pretended to regard me as a son.
And for a
time she embraced me as a son, and I knew it not; but later, she sought to draw
me into fornication. And when I perceived it I sorrowed unto death; and when
she had gone out, I came to myself, and lamented for her many days, because I
recognized her guile and her deceit.
“And I declared unto her the words of the Most High,
if haply she would turn from her evil lust. Often, therefore, did she flatter
me with words as a holy man, and guilefully in her talk praise my chastity
before her husband, while desiring to ensnare me when we were alone. For she
lauded me openly as chaste, and in secret she said unto me: Fear not my
husband; for he is persuaded concerning thy chastity: for even should one tell
him concerning us, he would not believe.
“Owing to all
these things I lay upon the ground, and besought God that the Lord would
deliver me from her deceit. And when she had prevailed nothing thereby, she
came again to me under the plea of instruction, that she might learn the word
of God. And she said unto me: ‘If your will is that I should leave my idols,
lie with me, and I will persuade my husband to depart from his idols, and we
will walk in the law by thy Lord.’
“And I said unto her: ‘The Lord wills not that those
who reverence Him should be in uncleanness, nor doth He take pleasure in them
that commit adultery, but in those that approach Him with a pure heart and
undefiled lips.’ But she heed her peace, longing to accomplish her evil desire.
“And I gave myself yet more to fasting and prayer, that the Lord might deliver me from her. And again,
at another time she said unto me: If thou wilt not commit adultery, I will kill
my husband by poison; and take thee to be my husband. I therefore, when I heard
this, rent my garments, and said unto her:
‘Woman, reverence God, and do not this evil deed,
lest thou be destroyed; for know indeed that I will declare this thy device
unto all men. She therefore, being afraid, besought that I would not declare
this device.’ And she departed soothing me with gifts, and sending to me every
delight of the sons of men.
“And afterwards she sent me food mingled with
enchantments. And when the eunuch who brought it came, I looked up and beheld a
terrible man giving me with the dish a sword, and I perceived that her scheme
was to beguile me. And when he had gone out I wept, nor did I taste that or any
other of her food.
“So then after one day she came to me and observed
the food, and said unto me: ‘Why is it that thou hast not eaten of the food?’
And I said unto her: ‘It is because you have filled it
with deadly enchantments; and how says you: ‘I come not near to idols but to
the Lord alone. Now therefore know that the God of my father hath revealed unto
me by His angel thy wickedness, and I have kept it to convict thee, if perhaps
you may see and repent. But that you may learn that the wickedness of the
ungodly hath no power over them that worship God with chastity behold I will
take of it and eat before thee.’ And having so said, I prayed thus: ‘The God of
my fathers and the angel of Abraham, be with me; and ate.’, And
when she saw this she fell upon her face at my feet, weeping; and I raised her
up and admonished her. And she promised to do this iniquity no more.
“But her heart was still set upon evil, and she
looked around how to ensnare me, and sighing deeply she became downcast, though
she was not sick. And when her husband saw her, he said unto her: ‘Why is thy
countenance fallen?’ And she said unto him: ‘I have a pain at my heart, and the
groanings of my spirit oppress me,’ and so he comforted her who was not sick.
“Then, accordingly seizing an opportunity, she
rushed unto me while her husband was yet without (away), and said unto me: ‘I
will hang myself, or cast myself over a cliff, if thou wilt not lie with me.’
“And when I saw the spirit of Beliar was troubling
her, I prayed unto the Lord, and said unto her: ‘Why, wretched woman, art thou
troubled and disturbed, blinded through sins? Remember that if thou kill
thyself, Asteho, the concubine of thy husband, thy rival, will beat thy
children, and thou wilt destroy thy memorial from off the earth.’ And she said
unto me: ‘Lo, then as you loves me; let this suffice me: only strive for my
life and my children, and I expect that I shall enjoy my desire also.’ But she
knew not that because of my lord I spoke thus, and not because of her.
For if a man
hath fallen before the passion of a wicked desire and become enslaved by it,
even as she, whatever good thing he may hear with regard to that passion, he
receives it with a view to his wicked desire.
“I declare, therefore, unto you, my children, that
it was about the sixth hour when she departed from me; and I knelt before the
Lord all day, and all the night; and about dawn I rose up, weeping the while
and praying for a release from her. At last, then, she laid hold of my
garments, forcibly dragging me to have connexion (sexual immorality) with her.
When, therefore, I saw that in her madness she was holding fast to my garment,
I left it behind, and fled away naked. And holding fast to the garment she
falsely accused me, and when her husband came he cast me into prison in his
house; and on the morrow he scourged me and sent me into Pharaoh's prison.
“And when I was in bonds, the Egyptian woman was
oppressed with grief, and she came and heard how I gave thanks unto the Lord
and sang praises in the abode of darkness, and with glad voice rejoiced,
glorifying my God that I was delivered from the lustful desire of the Egyptian
woman. And often hath she sent unto me saying: ‘Consent to fulfil my desire,
and I will release thee from thy bonds, and I will free thee from the darkness.’
And not even in thought did I incline unto her.
“For God loves him who in a den of wickedness
combines fasting with chastity, rather than the man who in kings' chambers
combines luxury with license (many people forget all about God’s laws and live
worldly lifestyle, in disobedience to God when they are in city that is not
covenant-keeping. Such unfaithful people do say that their environment does not
allow the keeping of God’s laws, which laws God said you shall keep wherever
your dwelling is). And if a man lives in chastity, and desires also glory, and
the Most High knows that it is expedient (convenient, beneficial) for him, He
bestows this also upon me.
How often,
though she were sick, did she come down to me at unlooked for times, and
listened to my voice as I prayed! And when I heard her groanings I held my
peace. For when I was in her house she was wont to bare her arms, and breasts,
and legs, that I might lie with her; for she was very
beautiful, splendidly adorned in order to beguile me. And the Lord guarded me
from her devices.
Joseph is the victim of many
plots by the wicked ingenuity of the Memphian woman.
For an interesting prophetic
parable, see Verses 73-74.
“Ye see, therefore, my children, how great things
patience works, and prayer with fasting. So ye too, if ye follow after chastity
and purity with patience and prayer, with fasting in humility of heart, the
Lord will dwell among you because He loves chastity. And wheresoever the Most High
dwells, even though envy or slavery, or slander befalls a man, the Lord who
dwells in him, for the sake of his chastity not only delivers him from evil,
but also exalts him even as me. For in every way the man is lifted up, whether
in deed, or in word, or in thought.
“My brethren knew how my father loved me, and yet I
did not exalt myself in my mind: although I was a child, I had the fear of God
in my heart; for I knew that all things would pass away. And I did not raise
myself against them with evil intent, but I honoured my brethren; and out of
respect for them, even when I was being sold, I refrained from telling the
Ishmaelites that I was a son of Jacob, a great man and a mighty. Do ye also, my
children, have the fear of God in all your works before your eyes, and honour
your brethren. For every one who does the law of the Lord shall be loved by Him.
“And when I came to the Indocolpitae with the
Ishmaelites, they asked me, saying: ‘Art thou a slave? And I said that I was a
home-born slave, that I might not put my brethren to shame.’ And the eldest of
them said unto me: ‘Thou art not a slave, for even thy appearance doth make it
manifest.’ But I said that I was their slave.
“Now when we came into Egypt they strove concerning
me, which of them should buy me and take me.
Therefore it
seemed good to all that I should remain in Egypt with the merchant of their
trade, until they should return bringing merchandise. And the Lord gave me
favour in the eyes of the merchant, and he entrusted unto me his house. And God
blessed him by my means, and increased him in gold and silver and in household
servants. And I was with him three months and five days.
“And about that time the Memphian woman, the wife of
Pentephris (Potiphar) came down in a chariot, with great pomp, because she had
heard from her eunuchs concerning me. And she told her husband that the
merchant had become rich by means of a young Hebrew, and they say that he had
assuredly been stolen out of the land of Canaan. Now, therefore, render justice
unto him, and take away the youth to thy house; so shall the God of the Hebrews
bless thee, for grace from heaven is upon him. And Pentephris was persuaded by
her words, and commanded the merchant to be brought, and said unto him:
“‘What is this that I hear concerning thee, that
thou do steals persons out of the land of Canaan, and sells them for slaves?’
But the merchant fell at his feet, and besought him, saying: ‘I beseech thee,
my lord, I do not know what you are saying.’
And
Pentephris said unto him: ‘Whence, then, is the Hebrew
slave?’
And he said: ‘The
Ishmaelites entrusted him unto me until they should return.’ But he believed
him not, but commanded him to be stripped and beaten.
And when he
persisted in this statement, Pentephris said: ‘Let the youth be brought.’
And when I
was brought in, I did obeisance to Pentephris for he was third in rank of the
officers of Pharaoh. And he took me apart from him, and said unto me: ‘Art thou
a slave or free?’
And I said: ‘A
slave.’
And he said: ‘Whose?’
And I said: ‘The
Ishmaelites'.
And he said: ‘How
didst thou become their slave?’
And I said: ‘They
bought me out of the land of Canaan.’
And he said
unto me: ‘Truly thou liest,’ and straightway he commanded me to be stripped and
beaten.
“Now, the Memphian woman was looking through a
window at me, while I was being beaten, for her house was near, and she sent
unto him saying: ‘Thy judgement is unjust; for thou dost punish a free man who
hath been stolen, as though he were a transgressor.’ And when I made no change
in my statement, though I was beaten, he ordered me to be imprisoned, until, he
said, the owners of the boy should come.
“And the woman said unto her husband: ‘Wherefore
dost thou detain the captive and wellborn lad in bonds, who ought rather to be
set at liberty, and be waited upon?’ For she wished to see me out of a desire
of sin, but I was ignorant concerning all these things. And he said to her: ‘It
is not the custom of the Egyptians to take that which belongs to others before
proof is given.’ This, therefore, he said concerning the merchant; but as for
the lad, he must be imprisoned.
“Now after four and twenty days came the
Ishmaelites; for they had heard that Jacob my father was mourning much
concerning me. And they came and said unto me: ‘How is it that you are saying
that you are a slave? And lo, we have learnt that thou art the son of a mighty
man in the land of Canaan, and thy father still mourns for thee in sackcloth
and ashes.’ When I heard this my bowels were dissolved and my heart melted, and
I desired greatly to weep, but I restrained myself that I should not put my
brethren to shame. And I said unto them, ‘I know not, I am a slave.’
“Then, therefore, they took counsel to sell me, that I should not be found in their hands. For they
feared my father, lest he should come and execute upon them a grievous
vengeance. For they had heard that he was mighty with God and with men. Then
said the merchant unto them: ‘Release me from the judgement of Pentiphri.’ And
they came and requested me, saying: ‘Say that thou was bought by us with money,
and he will set us free.’
“Now the Memphian woman said to her husband: ‘Buy
the youth; for I hear,’ said she, ‘that they are
selling him.’ And straightway she sent a eunuch to the Ishmaelites, and asked
them to sell me. But since the eunuch would not agree to buy me at their price
he returned, having made trial of them, and he made known to his mistress that
they asked a large price for their slave. And she sent another eunuch, saying: ‘Even
though they demand two minas, give them, do not spare the gold; only buy the
boy, and bring him to me.’ The eunuch therefore went and gave them eighty
pieces of gold, and he received me; but to the Egyptian woman he said, ‘I have
given (paid) a hundred.’ And though I knew this I held my peace, lest the
eunuch should be put to shame.
“Ye see, therefore, my children, what great things I
endured that I should not put my brethren to shame. Do ye also, therefore, love
one another, and with long-suffering hide ye one another's faults. For God
delights in the unity of brethren, and in the purpose of a heart that takes
pleasure in love. And when my brethren came into Egypt, they learnt that I had
returned their money unto them, and upbraided them not, and comforted them. And
after the death of Jacob my father, I loved them more abundantly, and all
things whatsoever he commanded I did very abundantly for them. And I suffered
them not to be afflicted in the smallest matter; and all that was in my hand I
gave unto them. And their children were my children, and my children as their
servants; and their life was my life, and all their suffering was my suffering,
and all their sickness was my infirmity. My land was their land, and their
counsel my counsel. And I exalted not myself among them in arrogance because of
my worldly glory, but I was among them as one of the least.
“If ye also, therefore, walk in the commandments of
the Lord, my children, He will exalt you there, and will bless you with good
things for ever and ever. And if any one seeks to do evil unto you, do well
unto him, and pray for him, and ye shall be redeemed of the Lord from all evil.
For, behold, ye see that out of my humility and longsuffering I took unto wife
the daughter of the priest of Heliopolis. And a hundred talents of gold were
given me with her, and the Lord made them to serve me. And He gave me also
beauty as a flower beyond the beautiful ones of Israel; and He preserved me
unto old age in strength and in beauty, because I was like in all things to
Jacob.
“And hear ye, my children, also the vision which I
saw. There were twelve harts () feeding: and the nine were first dispersed over
all the earth, and likewise also the three. And I saw that from Judah was born
a virgin wearing a linen garment, and from her, was born a lamb, without spot;
and on his left hand there was as it were a lion; and all the beasts rushed
against him, and the lamb overcame them, and destroyed them and trod them under
foot. And because of him the angels and men rejoiced, and all the land. And
these things shall come to pass in their season, in the last days. (That was a
vision of Jesus Christ. A lamb means the lamb, who was crucified on the
Calvary. The lion in His left hand means God Almighty, the Lion of the Tribe of
Judah - Yahweh, the Lord of the Hosts, who comes conquering and to conquer. And
all the beasts means the forces of darkness and powers of darkness – the evil
spirits, demons, mermaids, ghosts, witches, idols, charms and black energies.)
“Do ye therefore, my children, observe the
commandments of the Lord, and honour Levi and Judah; for from them shall arise
unto you the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world, one who saves
all the Gentiles and Israel. For His kingdom is an everlasting kingdom, which
shall not pass away; but my kingdom among you shall come to an end as a
watcher's hammock (…), which after the summer disappears.
“For I know that after my death, the Egyptians will
afflict you, but God will avenge you, and will bring you into that which He
promised to your fathers. But ye shall carry up my bones with you; for when my
bones are being taken up thither, the Lord shall be with you in light, and
Beliar shall be in darkness with the Egyptians. And carry ye
up Asenath, your mother, to the Hippodrome, and near Rachel your mother bury
her.”
And when he
had said these things he stretched out his feet, and died at a good old age.
And all Israel mourned for him, and all Egypt, with a great mourning. And when
the children of Israel went out of Egypt, they took with them the bones of
Joseph, and they buried him in Hebron with his fathers, and the years of his
life were one hundred and ten years.