Genesis 41:30

30 After that, there will be seven years of famine, and all the good years will be forgotten, because the famine will ruin the country.

Genesis 41:30 Meaning and Commentary

Genesis 41:30

And there shall arise after them seven years of famine
Which might be occasioned by the river Nile not rising so high as to overflow its banks, as, when it did not rise to more than twelve cubits, a famine ensued, as the above writer says F14; and it must be owing to the overruling providence of God that this should be the case for seven years running: and all the plenty shall be forgotten in the land of Egypt;
the seven years of plenty being all spent, it should be as if it never was; the minds of men would be so intent upon their present distressed case and circumstances, that they should wholly forget how it had been with them in time past; or it would be as if they had never enjoyed it, or were never the better for it: this answers to and explains how it was with the ill favoured kine, when they had eaten up the fat kine; they seemed never the better, nor could it be known by their appearance that they had so done: and the famine shall consume the land:
the inhabitants of it, and all the fruits and increase of it the former years produced.


FOOTNOTES:

F14 Nat Hist. l. 5. c. 9.

Genesis 41:30 In-Context

28 It is just as I told you - God has shown you what he is going to do.
29 There will be seven years of great plenty in all the land of Egypt.
30 After that, there will be seven years of famine, and all the good years will be forgotten, because the famine will ruin the country.
31 The time of plenty will be entirely forgotten, because the famine which follows will be so terrible.
32 The repetition of your dream means that the matter is fixed by God and that he will make it happen in the near future.
Scripture taken from the Good News Translation - Second Edition, Copyright 1992 by American Bible Society. Used by Permission.