The Dreams Come True
It happens, as Joseph interpreted. Pharaoh lifts up the head of the chief cupbearer and the head of the chief baker. On Pharaoh’s birthday, when he has made a feast for all his servants, he restores the chief cupbearer to his office and hangs the chief baker.
Then the question arises: why is the cupbearer received in grace and why is the baker judged? They both have sinned (Genesis 40:1). We have already seen that only those who take the basis of grace are saved and those who want to be saved by their own works are judged and lost.
However, that is not yet the answer to the question why one person realizes that he can only be saved by grace, while the other continues to build up his own justice. There is no logical answer to this question, an answer that we can understand with our human and therefore limited understanding. Here we come across God’s sovereign dealing, which we cannot understand. Why does one of the two crucified criminals believe in the Lord Jesus and the other does not?
This question runs through the whole Bible from the beginning. Why did God place two trees in paradise, one of life and the other of the knowledge of good and evil? Why Abel offered a better sacrifice than Cain? Why did God choose Jacob and reject Esau? And so on and so forth. Why, as someone I know, repeatedly asks himself in amazement, me and my brother not? This amazement can also be supplemented today with countless examples.
The only way we can see this mystery is to remember that it is about two sides of the truth. One side is the election of God, the other side is the responsibility of man. These two sides cannot be brought together by us. Only God can do that. We must leave both sides side by side and not try to connect them. If we try to do that, we will end up with heresy. We should not be so arrogant as to want to understand God in everything. If we really trust God, we will know that He is not doing injustice.
There is also an additional thought. The cupbearer and the baker both have sinned. Likewise, all people have sinned. All deserve the judgment. If God in His mercy chooses some to be saved forever and we may know to belong to them, that is something to thank Him for now and forever. Then, as far as we are concerned, the amazement remains, because in ourselves we are nothing better than others.
That does not mean that God has predestined those others to perish. He who perishes is to blame for this because he or she did not want to repent (cf. Matthew 23:37) in obedience to God’s call to do so (Acts 17:30).