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Genesis 39 to Genesis 41

Pharaoh's Dream
Genesis 39 to Genesis 41
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Pharoah asks for the meaning of his dream.
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HE MERCHANTS WHO
bought Joseph sold him to Potiphar, an officer of Pharaoh, king of
Egypt, who treated him very favorably, and put all his affairs under
Joseph's care. But after he had served his master faithfully for some
time, Joseph was falsely accused of some wrong doing; and his master,
without inquiring into the matter, shut him up in prison.
But God was with him in the prison, as He had been while Joseph was
ruling over Potiphar's household; and He caused the keeper of the
prison to put trust in him, so that he had the whole care of the other
prisoners, and of all that was done there.
Two of these prisoners, chief servants of Pharaoh, dreamed strange
dreams, and God gave Joseph wisdom to interpret them. He told one of
them that his dream signified that in three days he should be taken out
of prison and hanged; the other prisoner's dream signified that in
three days he should be released and restored to favor. And he begged
this one, after he should be set at liberty, to try to get him also out
of prison. But when the man got out of prison, he thought no more about
Joseph for two whole years.
At the
end of that time, Pharaoh, to whose service he was restored, had two
dreams that made him unhappy, and whose meaning none of his wise men
could tell him.
He dreamed that
seven fat cattle were feeding in a meadow, and that seven lean ones
came and ate them up. Again he dreamed of seven ears of good corn on
one stalk, and that seven blighted ones sprang up and devoured them.
And when no one could tell him what these dreams meant, the chief
butler remembered how Joseph had explained to him his dream in the
prison.
So he told the king, who
immediately sent for Joseph out of prison, related his dreams to him,
and asked him what they signified. Joseph answered the king that in
these dreams God had showed him what He was about to do: that He was
going to give Egypt seven years of plenty, and after them seven years
of famine. And he advised Pharaoh to seek out some discreet person whom
he might set over the land of Egypt, with officers under him, to store
up, during the years of plenty, corn enough to supply them in the years
of famine.
Pharaoh thought the
advice was good, and that no one was so fit as Joseph to do all this;
so he made him ruler. And Joseph stored up the corn, so that, when the
famine came, other countries sent to Egypt to buy food.
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