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Joseph's Dreams and the
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The story of the Joseph's dreams and the coat of many colors in royalty free Images in high resolution from our huge image library, free to use. Beautifully visual Bible lessons.What Came Before:
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And his brothers said to him, “Shall you indeed reign over us? Or shall you indeed have dominion over us?” So they hated him even more for his dreams and for his words.
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OF ALL THIS CHILDREN, Jacob loved Joseph the best, because he was Rachel's child, because he was so much younger than most of his brothers, and because he was good, and faithful, and thoughtful. Jacob gave to Joseph a robe or coat of bright color made somewhat like a long cloak with wide sleeves. This was a special mark of Jacob's favor to Joseph, and it made his older brothers very envious of him.
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Then, too, Joseph did what was right, while his older brothers often did very
wrong acts, of which Joseph sometimes told their father, and this made them very
angry at Joseph. But they hated him still more because of two strange dreams
that he had, and of which he told them. He said one day:
"Listen to this dream that I have dreamed. I dreamed that we were out in the
field binding sheaves, when suddenly my sheaf stood up, and all your sheaves
came around it, and bowed down to my sheaf." And they said, scornfully, "Do you
suppose that the dream means that you will some time rule over us, and that we
shall bow down to you?" Then a few days after Joseph said, "I have dreamed
again. This time I saw in my dream the sun and the moon and eleven stars all
come and bow down to me."
And his father said to him, "I do not like you to dream such dreams. Shall I,
and your mother, and your brothers, come and bow down before you, as if you are
a king?"
His brothers hated Joseph, and would not speak kindly to him; but his father
thought much of what Joseph had said.
At one time, Joseph's ten older brothers were taking care of the flock in the
fields near Shechem, which was nearly fifty miles from Hebron, where Jacob's
tents were spread. And Jacob wished to send a message to his sons, and he called
Joseph, and told him, "Your brothers are near Shechem with the flock. I wish
that you would go to them, and take a message, and find if they are well, and if
the flocks are doing well; and bring me word from them."
That was quite an errand for a boy to go alone over the country, and find his
way, for fifty miles, and then walk home again. But Joseph was a boy that could
take care of himself, and could be trusted; so he went forth on his journey,
walking northward over the mountains, past Bethlehem, and Jerusalem, and
Bethel,— though we are not sure that any of those cities were then built, except
Jerusalem, which we know was already a strong city.
When Joseph reached Shechem he could not find his brothers, for they had taken
their flocks to another place. A man met Joseph wandering in the field, and
asked him, "Whom are you seeking?" Joseph said, "I am looking for my brothers,
the sons of Jacob. Can you tell me where I will find them?" And the man said,
"They are at Dothan; for I heard them say that they were going there." Then
Joseph walked over the hills to Dothan, which was fifteen miles further. And
his brothers saw him afar off coming towards them. They knew him by his bright
garment; and one said to another:
"Look, that dreamer is coming! Come, let us
kill him, and throw his body into a pit, and tell his father that some wild
beast has eaten him; and then we will see what becomes of his dreams."
One of his brothers, whose name was Reuben, felt more kindly toward Joseph than
the others; but he did not dare to oppose the others openly. Reuben said:
"Let us not kill him; but let us throw him into this pit, here in the
wilderness, and leave him there to die." But Reuben intended, after they had
gone away, to lift Joseph out of the pit, and take him home to his father. The
brothers did as Reuben told them; they threw Joseph into the pit, which was
empty. He cried, and begged them to save him, but they would not. They calmly
sat down to eat their dinner on the grass, while their brother was calling to
them from the pit.
After the dinner, Reuben chanced to go to another part of the field, so that he
was not at hand when a company of men passed by with their camels, going from
Gilead, on the east of the river Jordan, to Egypt, to sell spices and fragrant
gum from trees to the Egyptians. Then Judah, another of Joseph's brothers said,
"What good will it do us to kill our brother? Would it not be better for us to
sell him to these men, and let them carry him away? After all, he is our
brother, and we would better not kill him."
His brothers agreed with him; so they stopped the men who were passing, and drew
up Joseph from the pit; and for twenty pieces of silver, they sold Joseph to
these men; and they took him away with them down to Egypt.
After a while, Reuben came to the pit, where he had left Joseph, and looked into
it; but Joseph was not there. Then Reuben was in great trouble, and he came back
to his brothers saying, "The boy is not there! What shall I do?"
Then his brothers told Reuben what they had done, and they all agreed together
to deceive their father. They killed one of the goats, and dipped Joseph's coat
in its blood, and they brought it to their father, and they said to him, "We
found this coat out in the wilderness. Look at it, and see if you think it was
your son's." And Jacob knew it at once. He said, "It is my son's coat. Some wild
beast has eaten him. There is no doubt that Joseph has been torn in pieces!"
And Jacob's heart was broken over the loss of Joseph, all the more because he
had sent Joseph alone on the journey through the wilderness. They tried to
comfort him, but he would not be comforted. He said:
"I will go down to the grave mourning for my poor lost son."
So the old man sorrowed for his son Joseph; and all the time his wicked brothers
knew that Joseph was not dead; but they would not tell their father the dreadful
deed that they had done to their brother, in selling him as a slave.
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