The Dream that Changed the World

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This is the first in a series of devotionals called "Expressions of Hope in Joseph" in anticipation of the 7th annual Kingdom Justice Summit on February 27 with the theme of Hope.


By Dietrich Gruen
Collaboration Project Story Team

In recurring dreams this season I am overseas, canvassing the destruction, witnessing death all around, and hearing people speak a strange language. In one dream, I experience back-to-back tsunamis—in the first wave I am tossed high and almost drown, but in the second I follow the locals, hunker down, and hold onto secure scaffolding. 

In another dream I experienced cheering fans, marching music, a crescendo of song, standing room only crowded shoulder to shoulder, from pillar to post, from plaza floor to stacked balcony, one atop another. Nothing but pure youthful energy. God’s Army standing in all kinds of stripes and colors. I was stunned into silence and awe. I was craning and swiveling my neck to take it all in, to find familiar bearings. But in awesome wonder, I could scarce take it in.

Joseph, too, experiences dreams that force him far afield, to suffer a world that tosses him upside down and locks him up. (You can find this part of his story in Chapter 37 of the Book of Genesis.) He’ll learn to interpret dreams and foreign languages. Two decades later, in real life, Joseph’s bold dreams come true: Good overcomes Evil and injustice. But not before Joseph makes a serious mistake.


First, he boasts to his older brothers when he should’ve kept the dreams to himself: 

“Listen to this dream I had: We were binding sheaves of grain out in the field when suddenly my sheaf rose and stood upright, while your sheaves gathered around mine and bowed down to it.” 

His brothers said to him, “Do you intend to reign over us? Will you actually rule us?” And they hated him all the more because of his dream and what he had said. 

Then he had another dream... “This time the sun and moon and eleven stars were bowing down to me.” When he told his father as well as his brothers, his father rebuked him (Genesis 37:7–10).

The angry brothers seize “the dreamer” in a field 60 miles outside the protective custody of their father Jacob.

To silence their baby brother for putting them down and puffing himself up, they take his multicolored dream coat and stuff him down a cistern. But rather than let him die there, they sell him to a caravan of slave traders bound for Egypt (Genesis 37:17–28). He’s down for the count—or so the schemers think.

Joseph’s world is turned upside down—like ours in the COVID era. To Egyptians, he’s low man on the totem pole; his privileged family connections mean squat. Joseph has only God and dreams to rely on. But that’s enough.


Those dreams at first seem absurd and unfold badly for him but are destined to be fulfilled. 

Joseph will be raised up and his brothers brought low (Genesis 42:6, 43:26, 44:14), as God undoes the injustice done to Joseph to solve a worldwide famine.

Joseph’s rise to the top would not be quick or painless. Rather, he suffers as a slave, a forgotten inmate, as an unreconciled brother—and as a dreamer. 


A God-given dream—no matter how far, no matter the foe, no matter how foreign—gives us hope: 

  • Where we see nothing but messy mistakes, God sees a second chance—and many more—to take us further, perfect our character, and build a life message.

  • Where we see only walls closing in—a cistern, slave camp, prison, or even home confinement—God sees a crucible for reshaping us.

  • Where we feel overwhelmed by worldwide famine, panic or plague, God sees an opportunity to relocate and rebrand his people.

  • Where we fear evil at work, God sees plot foiled and good rising to the top.

  • Where we see a hot mess, God sees a hit message.

In scary, uncertain times, God gets down-and-dirty that we might get up, turn-around, and get going. Just as those God-moments for Joseph equip him to be the future Prime Minister of Egypt, they can encourage us to believe and hope: “We will get through this!”

We all have a certain destiny from God. Joseph knew his by trusting God to speak through dreams—God’s language when Scriptures are not available. 

How do you suppose God might use your present circumstances, the Joseph story, and related dreams for long-term good?  


Dietrich Gruen is a free-lance writer and benevolence fund coordinator for High Point Church, serving those displaced and impoverished by COVID-19.

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