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How does the book of beginnings end with death, exile, and waiting?
In today’s episode of Five Minute Bible, we read Genesis 48–50, the deliberate and unsettling conclusion to the book of Genesis.
Jacob blesses future generations he will never see. Joseph interprets suffering through the sovereignty of God. And the family of promise ends the book not in the land, not in rest, but in a coffin in Egypt.
Genesis refuses to give us tidy closure.
Jacob blesses Ephraim and Manasseh by reversing expectations once again, reminding us that God’s purposes never move forward by natural strength or human instinct. He then gathers his sons and speaks prophetic words that expose sin, announce consequence, and unveil destiny. Violence is not forgotten. Failure is not erased. And yet hope rises unmistakably through Judah—the repentant brother whose line will one day bring forth the King.
Joseph’s final words interpret the entire book: What you meant for evil, God meant for good. That sentence has carried us through betrayal, famine, exile, and loss. It will carry us forward into Exodus.
As you read today, consider this guiding question:
Why would God choose to end the story of beginnings with death, displacement, and four hundred years of waiting?
Because Genesis is not a book about arrival—it is a book about promise. Faith is formed not by resolution, speed, or sight, but by trusting God when fulfillment remains out of reach.
The final image of Genesis is not a throne. It is a coffin.
Joseph’s bones rest in Egypt, declaring that the promises of God cannot be completed without resurrection. Those bones cry out for Exodus. They cry out for Christ.
Genesis ends with expectation, not completion—pressing us forward into the next act of redemption God Himself will accomplish.
Read your Bible carefully, devotionally, and joyfully—and join us tomorrow as we open the book of Exodus, where waiting turns into crying out, and God begins to act again.
CHECK IT OUT ON:
Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/show/6jKPORV75RzsBVOqC8IsvE?si=e1d0801259e14135
Apple Podcasts:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/five-minute-bible/id1865075283
YouTube:
https://www.youtube.com/@KendallLankford
By Kendall LankfordHow does the book of beginnings end with death, exile, and waiting?
In today’s episode of Five Minute Bible, we read Genesis 48–50, the deliberate and unsettling conclusion to the book of Genesis.
Jacob blesses future generations he will never see. Joseph interprets suffering through the sovereignty of God. And the family of promise ends the book not in the land, not in rest, but in a coffin in Egypt.
Genesis refuses to give us tidy closure.
Jacob blesses Ephraim and Manasseh by reversing expectations once again, reminding us that God’s purposes never move forward by natural strength or human instinct. He then gathers his sons and speaks prophetic words that expose sin, announce consequence, and unveil destiny. Violence is not forgotten. Failure is not erased. And yet hope rises unmistakably through Judah—the repentant brother whose line will one day bring forth the King.
Joseph’s final words interpret the entire book: What you meant for evil, God meant for good. That sentence has carried us through betrayal, famine, exile, and loss. It will carry us forward into Exodus.
As you read today, consider this guiding question:
Why would God choose to end the story of beginnings with death, displacement, and four hundred years of waiting?
Because Genesis is not a book about arrival—it is a book about promise. Faith is formed not by resolution, speed, or sight, but by trusting God when fulfillment remains out of reach.
The final image of Genesis is not a throne. It is a coffin.
Joseph’s bones rest in Egypt, declaring that the promises of God cannot be completed without resurrection. Those bones cry out for Exodus. They cry out for Christ.
Genesis ends with expectation, not completion—pressing us forward into the next act of redemption God Himself will accomplish.
Read your Bible carefully, devotionally, and joyfully—and join us tomorrow as we open the book of Exodus, where waiting turns into crying out, and God begins to act again.
CHECK IT OUT ON:
Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/show/6jKPORV75RzsBVOqC8IsvE?si=e1d0801259e14135
Apple Podcasts:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/five-minute-bible/id1865075283
YouTube:
https://www.youtube.com/@KendallLankford