Value for Value ⚡️

Genesis 49
Episode Summary
Today’s episode of Lifespring! One Year Bible Rewind brings us to the closing chapters of Genesis. In Genesis 48–50 we walk through Jacob’s final blessings, his death and burial, and Joseph’s stunning response to his brothers: “You planned to harm me, but God planned it for good.” From up close, life can look like loose threads and hard moments, but Scripture keeps pulling us back to a bigger view: God is weaving with purpose, even when we cannot yet see the finished design.
Episode Title
Woven, Not Wasted
Today’s Reading
Today’s reading is Genesis 48–50.
Verse of the Day
Genesis 50:20 — “You planned to harm me, but God planned it for good. He planned to do what is now being done. He wanted to save many lives.”
What This Episode Is About
Genesis ends with both grief and grace. Jacob’s story closes with blessings that look forward, and Joseph’s story closes with a perspective only God can give: what others meant for harm, the Lord had already accounted for in His plan. The same events can be seen as betrayal and loss, or as the raw material God uses to preserve life and keep His promises moving forward.
In today’s reflection, we consider the Hebrew idea behind “planned” in Genesis 50:20 and the picture it gives us: God weaving. We often judge our days from inches away, staring at a knot or a dark strand and assuming that is the whole story. But Romans 8:28 reminds us that God is not improvising with our lives. He is working all things together for good for those who love Him and are called according to His purpose.
If you are in a season that feels confusing or costly, Joseph’s story invites you to hold steady. God may not explain every thread today, but He never wastes one. Your pain is not the author of your story. The Lord is, and He is faithful to finish what He has begun.
Listen and Read Along
Read Genesis 48–50 on BibleGateway
On This Date in Church History
Today we look back at a key moment in the Reformation era: the First Zurich Disputation (1523), when Huldrych Zwingli defended reform by appealing directly to Scripture and Zurich’s leaders ruled that preaching should be guided by the Bible rather than church tradition alone.
First Zurich Disputation (1523) — reference
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