Reward for Doing Right: Joseph told Israel of his brother’s evil doings. He was faithful to reveal rather than conceal the matter. Certainly it took a great deal of courage to do what he did. The exercising of that courage showed forth faithfulness. He also was faithful to his job requirements. There is no indication that he was just a tale-bearer, but instead he is seen to have a sensitive spirit to that which is wrong and most likely told the evil report with the hopes that his father could deal with it to the son’s good. Yet, we will find that this was to be added to those things that would cost Joseph for doing right. Time will prove that God will honor him for doing right.
PRACTICAL APPLICATION: As it did with Joseph, it may cost you to do right. Yet, it may also be said, “That it pays to do right.†When doing right and facing criticism for having done so, you may be tempted to “back off†from doing right. Like the Book of Hebrews, we should heed what Hebrews 10:35 says: “Cast not away therefore your confidence, which hath great recompense of rewardâ€. The Lord will reward us when we do right.
When I was in the sixth grade, I reported a theft of fifty cents from the “snack boxâ€. Ann and I had been given the responsibility of taking care of the store. I turned my back and then quickly turned back around and saw that the fifty cent piece had been stolen. I went home after I saw that she had taken the money and told my mother. My mother then told me that I needed to tell my sixth grade school teacher. I went the next day and told my teacher that I had something private to tell her. We stepped out into the hall and then I told her. She went and told the principle. Instead of the principle removing or disciplining the one who had taken the money, he removed us both. That nearly crushed me, because it made me look guilty, also. It bothered me for many years when I thought about it. Over twenty-five years later, I walked into a funeral home to preach a funeral and saw my sixth grade school teacher. The first thing that she said was, “Max, I won’t ever get over what that principle did to you. You were doing right in reporting the theft of that money and he treated you just as though you had taken it.†I had never mentioned this incident to my sixth grade teacher and had wondered if she thought that I had taken some money, but when she told me that, I felt a sense of relief in knowing that she knew that I had done right… That made my day. I think of how when we do right and feel that it is not being rewarded, that just as it was with my teacher, one day the truth will come forth.
Some of you hearing this may have faced trial or persecution for just doing right. Just wait. One day the truth will come out…
From W. Alderman’s Sermon “The Dreamerâ€