
π August 1, 2025
πΎ Joseph β Faith That Endures
Devotions from the life of a dreamer with character
π§ 7.Faith Instead of Grudge
When youβve been hurt β and still choose to trust rather than repay
ββββββββββββββββπΎββββββββββββββββ
π£ Introduction
Joseph had every reason to become bitter.
His brothers had betrayed him.
He had lost everything β because of the jealousy of those who should have protected him.
And yet: he didnβt let bitterness take root in his heart.
Where others might have plotted revenge, Joseph chose a different path β a path of trust in God, not bitterness toward people.
This devotion highlights one of the hardest β and holiest β choices a person can make:
To respond to injustice with faith β not with retaliation.
ββββββββββββββββπΎββββββββββββββββ
π― Devotional
Genesis 50:19β20
βBut Joseph said to them, βDo not be afraid. Am I in the place of God? You intended to harm me, but God intended it for good to accomplish what is now being done, the saving of many lives.ββ
Joseph stands before his brothers β the very brothers who once hated him, robbed him, betrayed him, and sold him. They are helpless, afraid, expectant. Perhaps they now anticipate revenge. But Joseph responds with a sentence that opens the heavens:
βAm I in the place of God?β
This sentence is more than humility β itβs a spiritual decision, a rejection of revenge, a clear stance:
I will not presume to judge your fate. That belongs to God.
Joseph wasnβt naive. He knew pain. He had suffered for years because of othersβ sin β in the pit, in slavery, in prison. His forgiveness wasnβt a cheap βlet it go,β but a choice to let God be greater than the injustice.
Forgiveness is not a feeling β it is an act of faith.
It says:
βI release the right to take revenge β because I trust that Godβs justice is enough.β
Joseph didnβt live in the past β even though it had shaped him.
He lived in Godβs presence.
And that was his source of strength.
ββββββββββββββββπΎββββββββββββββββ
π What We Can Learn from Joseph
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You can live by grace β even if youβve gone through injustice.
Joseph didnβt become bitter because he focused on Godβs hand, not just peopleβs behavior. -
Your witness begins when you donβt react as expected.
Revenge would have made sense. But grace was divine. Thatβs what stood out. Joseph didnβt testify with words β but with his response. -
God writes stories bigger than our pain.
Josephβs suffering wasnβt the end β it was the instrument through which God saved many.
What others use against you, God can use for something greater. -
You donβt have to approve of injustice in order to forgive.
Joseph didnβt say, βWhat you did was okay.β
He said, βIt was evil β but God turned it around.β
Forgiveness doesnβt minimize the wrong β it places it in Godβs hands.
ββββββββββββββββπΎββββββββββββββββ
π§ Reflection β What Does This Mean for You?
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What would it mean for me to no longer want to be judge β but leave it to God?
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Where do I see Godβs hand when I look back on my own wounds?
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Is there someone I need to forgive today β not because they deserve it, but because I want to be free?
And most importantly:
Joseph could have become a bitter man.
He had every reason.
But he chose the path of trust β a path that isnβt easy, but is full of healing.
Maybe that means for you today:
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Not striking back when provoked.
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Not speaking badly of someone who disappointed you.
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Not demanding justice β but building on grace.
Because the truth is:
What hurt you doesnβt have to define you.
God can turn it into something that not only heals you β but also saves others.
ββββββββββββββββπΎββββββββββββββββ
π Story β βWhen My Heart Learned to Forgiveβ
A story about guilt, silence β and an unexpected phone call.
Chapter 1 β The Door Slammed Shut
Eva was 23 the last time she spoke to her sister.
She had said a sentence she could never take back:
βYouβre dead to me.β
It had been a fight over their parentsβ house. Inheritance issues, misunderstandings, wounded egos. Her sister Miriam had taken care of their ailing mother β but Eva felt left out.
Bitterness grew inside her like a silent vine.
After their motherβs funeral, they went their separate ways. No letters. No calls. No looking back.
But even after ten years, the silence still hurt.
β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦
Chapter 2 β The Sermon She Didnβt Want to Hear
By now, Eva was a teacher, married, mother of two.
She attended church every Sunday β but this Sunday was different.
The pastor preached about forgiveness.
Not vaguely, not abstractly β but directly.
βForgiveness doesnβt mean forgetting the wrong.
Forgiveness means letting God be the judge β and placing your right to revenge in His hands.β
Eva sat frozen.
Her heart pounded. Her stomach clenched.
Miriam.
The name she had avoided for years came rushing back β in thoughts, in emotions, in memories.
At the end of the sermon, the pastor read Josephβs famous words:
βYou intended to harm me, but God intended it for good.β (Genesis 50:20)
Eva couldnβt stay in her seat.
She walked out β but the sentence stayed with her.
β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦
Chapter 3 β The Call She Couldnβt Make
For a week, she wrestled inwardly.
Her husband noticed and gently asked.
βIf you want, Iβll go with you,β he said.
But Eva shook her head.
βI donβt even know if sheβd listen.β
βThen at least call her.β
βI donβt even have her number anymore.β
βThen Google it.β
A few days later, she had the number β and the phone in her hand.
She dialed β and hung up. Three times.
On the fourth try, it went to voicemail. She was about to hang up β but suddenly, she spoke:
βMiriam… itβs Eva.
I… I donβt know if youβre hearing this.
Or if you even want to hear what I have to say.
But I just wanted to say:
Iβm sorry. For the fight. For the years. For the words.
I was hurt β but I hurt you.
I hope youβre well.
I just wanted you to know that.β
β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦
Chapter 4 β The Message
Two days later, her phone buzzed.
A text message.
From Miriam.
βI heard your message.
I donβt know what to say.
Iβm crying right now.
Iβve thought about you so often.
Maybe we could… talk?β
Eva sat with the phone in her hand for a long time.
Then she replied:
βIβd really love to talk.β
β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦
Chapter 5 β The Visit
A few weeks later, they sat across from each other.
The first moment was awkward, distant.
Then they cried.
For a long time.
Without words.
They talked for hours. About misunderstandings. About pain.
About what they had lost β and what they still had.
At the end, Miriam quietly said:
βIβve prayed many times that you would reach out.
I couldβve never done it myself.
But God… God can soften even the hardest hearts.β
Eva nodded β and whispered:
βBitterness had me in chains.
But grace opened the door.β
β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦
Chapter 6 β What Remains
Today, they meet regularly.
Not everything is like before. But itβs real.
Theyβre moving slowly. Honestly. But together.
Eva sometimes says in her womenβs group:
βForgiveness doesnβt heal overnight.
But it begins with one step β one prayer, one phone call, one open heart.β
ββββββββββββββββπΎββββββββββββββββ
π What We Can Learn from This
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Bitterness feels like protection at first β but quickly becomes a burden.
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Forgiveness isnβt a guarantee of a perfect relationship β but it makes healing possible.
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Godβs grace doesnβt wait for ideal circumstances β it shows up in the middle of our mess, if we make room for it.
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You donβt need to be strong to forgive β you just need to be willing to be led.
ββββββββββββββββπΎββββββββββββββββ
π οΈ Application
Joseph shows us:
You can forgive without forgetting.
You can heal without denying the wound.
And you can choose faith β even when your heart is still hurting.
Ask yourself:
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Who has hurt me β and am I still holding on to it?
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Do I believe God can bring good even from betrayal?
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What would it look like to trust God more than my pain?
ββββββββββββββββπΎββββββββββββββββ
π‘ Practical Steps for Today
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Write down a name β someone who hurt you.
Pray for them β not to excuse, but to release. -
Read Genesis 50 and underline Josephβs response.
Ask yourself: Could I say the same? -
Ask God to show you your story from His perspective β not just your own.
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If possible: take one small step toward reconciliation β even if only in your heart.
ββββββββββββββββπΎββββββββββββββββ
π Prayer
Lord,
you see what I can hardly let go.
You know the people I struggle to forgive.
Youβre aware of the silent bitterness in my heart.But I donβt want to stay trapped.
I want to trust you more than my emotions.
Give me the courage to release.
The faith to believe you can heal, restore, and redeem even the hardest moments.
Amen.
ββββββββββββββββπΎββββββββββββββββ
π Key Thought of the Day
What others meant for evil β God can turn for good.
ββββββββββββββββπΎββββββββββββββββ
πΏ Blessing to Close
May the Lord free your heart from hidden bitterness.
May He exchange the weight of resentment for the lightness of grace.
May He give you strength to forgive β
and courage to trust again.
He sees your pain.
And He honors your faithfulness β even where youβve been wounded.
ββββββββββββββββπΎββββββββββββββββ
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