Genesis 41:43-53

43 He gave him the second royal chariot to ride in, and his guard of honor went ahead of him and cried out, "Make way! Make way!" And so Joseph was appointed governor over all Egypt.
44 The king said to him, "I am the king - and no one in all Egypt shall so much as lift a hand or a foot without your permission."
45 He gave Joseph the Egyptian name Zaphenath Paneah, and he gave him a wife, Asenath, the daughter of Potiphera, a priest in the city of Heliopolis. Joseph was thirty years old when he began to serve the king of Egypt. He left the king's court and traveled all over the land.
47 During the seven years of plenty the land produced abundant crops,
48 all of which Joseph collected and stored in the cities. In each city he stored the food from the fields around it.
49 There was so much grain that Joseph stopped measuring it - it was like the sand of the sea.
50 Before the years of famine came, Joseph had two sons by Asenath.
51 He said, "God has made me forget all my sufferings and all my father's family"; so he named his first son Manasseh.
52 He also said, "God has given me children in the land of my trouble"; so he named his second son Ephraim.
53 The seven years of plenty that the land of Egypt had enjoyed came to an end,

Genesis 41:43-53 Meaning and Commentary

INTRODUCTION TO GENESIS 41

In this chapter are related Pharaoh's dreams, which his magicians could not interpret, Ge 41:1-9, upon which the chief butler now remembering Joseph, recommended him to Pharaoh as an interpreter, having had an happy experience of him as such himself, Ge 41:10-13, when Joseph was sent for out of prison; and Pharaoh having related his dreams, he interpreted them of seven years of plenty, and seven years of famine, that should be in the land of Egypt, Ge 41:14-32; and having done, he gave his advice to provide in the years of plenty against the years of famine, and proposed a scheme for doing it, which was approved of by Pharaoh and his ministers, Ge 41:33-37; and Joseph himself was pitched upon as the most proper person to execute it, and was appointed chief over the kingdom next to Pharaoh, who gave him a new name and a wife upon this occasion, Ge 41:38-45; accordingly, in the years of plenty he took a tour throughout the whole land, and gathered and laid up food in vast quantities in every city, Ge 41:46-49; an account is given of two sons born to Joseph, and of their names, Ge 41:50-52; and of the seven years of famine, beginning to come on at the end of the seven years of plenty, which brought great distress on the land of Egypt, and the countries round about, who all came to Joseph to buy corn, Ge 41:53-57.

Footnotes 2

  • [a]. manasseh: [This name sounds like the Hebrew for "cause to forget."]
  • [b]. ephraim: [This name sounds like the Hebrew for "give children."]
Scripture taken from the Good News Translation - Second Edition, Copyright 1992 by American Bible Society. Used by Permission.