Joseph was  handsome and good-looking. 
 And after a time his  master's wife cast 
 her eyes on Joseph and said,  "Lie with me."
 Genesis  39:6-7
 I learned a new word this morning from an old devotional.  "Perfidious" means "guilty, treacherous, faithless, or deceitful."  
 With that in mind, I'm very intrigued by  the phrase "Lie with me." In English (and in this  context), "lie" has two perfidious (treachous) meanings.  In the more literal sense, a perfidious  wife wants to lie down with someone other than her husband. But I'm more  interested in the less literal sense ...
 Potipher's wife wants Joseph to "lie with [her]." Yes, she wants  to physically entangle him in her adultery (perfidity), but she also wants  to entangle him in her lies and deceitfulness and treachery.  
 Adultery, obviously, entangles not just one person in a web  of lies. But the question is: Who are you entangling in other kinds of lies and  perfidity? And whose treachery are you tangled up in?
 In Christ's Love,
 a guy who used to use conditioner on his  hair
 (I didn't even want my hair to be  tangled
 ... but God made sure I didn't have to  worry
 anymore about tangled hair.
No comments:
Post a Comment