I just read one of the saddest lines in the Bible again tonight. “But the cup bearer forgot about Joseph.” This is the Joseph who was thrown into a well, sold by his brothers, entrapped by a seductress, and abandoned in an Egyptian prison. Things started looking up a little, though, when he told a fellow prisoner the good news about his dream. (The baker in the other cell didn’t get such a great report.) Joseph told the cupbearer, “Your dream means Pharaoh is going to spring you out of jail and promote you back to your old job in three days.” Wahoooo! Great things ahead for the cup bearer. While he was dancing a little jig (or whatever) Joseph said, “By the way, when you get the promotion, please drop my name to the CEO.” (Wall Street translation.)

Of course, said cup bearer forgot all about Joseph when the time actually came. The point of that story for me right now is this: People are great. We love ’em. We need ’em. We couldn’t get along without them. But, only Jesus is our Savior. 
I’ve been guilty many times of wanting to lean on the cup bearer for my security. Sometimes he was my husband, or my mom, or my boss, or my pastor, or even one of my kids. Sometimes he was an editor or agent I met at a conference. Even though all those people are tremendously valuable to my life, they are just people. And chances are pretty good they won’t be able to live up to my lofty expectations.
But Joseph’s fate wasn’t really in the hands of the forgetful cupbearer. Eventually God nudged Pharaoh, and he remembered Joseph. He promoted the former prisoner to the second highest post in the land.
That is good news for us, too. Despite the lousy economy, the shrinking job market, and the daily threat of annihilation by pandemic and/or terrorist attack, our true fate lies in the hands of God. We don’t have to trust in the cup bearer, because the One who bore the cup of suffering will never forget us.