The Joseph Strategy: Solving Global Crisis Through Management

Nov 6, 2020    Dubb Alexander    Kingdom Conference

Joseph didn't save the world by preaching; he saved it by building a supply chain. Discover how to turn your administrative gift into a tool for national transformation.

About This Economic Masterclass

Dubb Alexander challenges the traditional view of Joseph as merely a "dreamer." In this teaching, Joseph is revealed as a systemic reformer and an economist who leveraged divine insight to solve a global food crisis.

This session is for leaders who feel called to the marketplace, finance, or government. It validates the "secular" skills of administration and management as high spiritual callings. You will learn why the answer to the coming famine isn't just prayer—it's a 20% savings plan and a robust supply chain.




Core Insights: What You'll Discover 🎯


1. Crisis Management vs. Miracles


When Pharaoh had a terrifying dream about famine, Joseph didn't offer a prayer meeting to stop it. He offered a business plan. Dubb emphasizes: "The answer to crisis is management, not just miracles."

Joseph's solution was practical mathematics: take 20% of the yield during the seven good years and store it for the seven bad years. This teaches us that strategy is a form of deliverance. God often gives wisdom to *manage* a crisis rather than removing the crisis entirely.


2. The Training Ground of Betrayal


Before Joseph could manage the wealth of Egypt, he had to manage the betrayal of his brothers and the injustice of Potiphar's house. Dubb notes: "If you can manage a prison, you can manage a palace."

Your current season of restriction or unfair treatment is not a detour; it is the curriculum. Joseph learned logistics, personnel management, and integrity while enslaved. God was proving his character so He could trust him with the economy of nations.


3. The Coat of Favor (Multi-Sphere Influence)


The "coat of many colors" represents the ability to walk in diverse spheres. Joseph could navigate the spiritual (dreams), the domestic (Potiphar's house), the penal (prison), and the governmental (Pharaoh's court).

"Favor is the currency that buys you time and access." Leaders called to reform systems must be bilingual—fluent in both the language of the Kingdom [Purpose] and the language of the Marketplace [Profit/Systems].


4. Wealth Transfer for Preservation


Why did God give Joseph this plan? To preserve life. But the byproduct was that all the money in the known world ended up in Egypt's treasury.

Dubb teaches: "You are called to manage resources so that when the world is in crisis, they come to you for solutions." Wealth transfer isn't for luxury; it's for leverage. When the righteous hold the resources, they can dictate terms that preserve life and align with Heaven's values.


5. Forgiveness as a Leadership Requirement


Joseph could not have ruled effectively if he was bitter. When his brothers came to buy grain, he had the power to destroy them. Instead, he said, "You meant it for evil, but God meant it for good."

Takeaway: You cannot reform a system you are bitter against. To lead at a high level, you must process your pain so that your decisions are driven by vision, not vengeance.




The Bottom Line: Be the Solution 💡


The world is full of problems (famines). Most people panic; Josephs plan. Your ability to organize, strategize, and manage resources is not "unspiritual"—it is the very thing God uses to save lives.

Stop apologizing for your business acumen. Stop hiding your administrative gift. The world is looking for a Joseph. Will you be ready with a plan when the dream comes?




Who This Message is For:


Perfect for:

  • Entrepreneurs & CEOs — Validate your business strategy as a divine assignment to solve problems.
  • Administrators & Managers — See your "behind-the-scenes" work as the backbone of revival.
  • Anyone in a Season of "Prison" — Find hope that your current unseen faithfulness is training for future public authority.
  • Financial Planners — Understand the spiritual weight of stewardship and saving for the future.



Frequently Asked Questions ❓


Why is "management" considered spiritual?

Because God is a God of order, not chaos. Management is the stewardship of what God has entrusted to us. In the story of Joseph, management (storing grain) was the literal vehicle for salvation. Without good management, the prophetic warning would have been useless, and people would have starved.


How do I know if I have a "Joseph" calling?

You likely have a Joseph calling if you possess a mix of spiritual intuition (insight into problems) and practical administration (ability to execute solutions). You are drawn to fixing broken systems, you naturally organize chaos, and you find yourself thriving in secular environments where you bring order and prosperity.


What is the "Joseph Strategy" for today?

It involves three steps: (1) Revelation: Perceiving the coming shifts or problems. (2) Preparation: Creating a plan to store resources (knowledge, money, food) during seasons of plenty. (3) Distribution: Having a system ready to help others when the crisis hits.

Key Scripture Reference: Genesis 50:20

"As for you, you meant evil against me, but God meant it for good, to bring it about that many people should be kept alive, as they are today."