| BOYS and girls, and almost
everybody else, have dreams. Most dreams are not important. Whether
our dreams are good or bad, it is usually best to forget about them
as soon as we can. But in the long, long ago some of the people who
were especially loved by God were given dreams from him which had
important meanings.
A young man by the name of
Joseph was given such a dream from the Lord. In fact, he had two
dreams. In both of these dreams God showed to Joseph some of the
things that were to come into his life when he grew older. This
young man, Joseph, was a son of Jacob. Jacob was, you will remember,
the one who bought the birthright from Esau. After Jacob obtained
the birthright from his father, Isaac, his twin brother Esau was
very angry with him, and he had to flee for his life. He went into
the land of his grandfather's and his mother's people. In fact, he
found his uncle's home.
This uncle was named
Laban.
Jacob stayed at Laban's home
for many years. He had twelve boys who are spoken of in the Bible as
the twelve sons of Jacob. Joseph was next to the youngest one of
these boys. When they grew up they were herdsmen, or keepers of
cattle and sheep. Jacob loved his son Joseph very much. Joseph loved
God and the promises of God. In order to show how much he loved
Joseph, his father made him a beautiful coat of many colors.
This made the other boys
jealous of Joseph.
I have told you in other
stories how terrible it is to be jealous. It was jealousy that
caused Cain to kill his brother Abel. And now these older brothers
of Joseph became jealous of him, and the Bible says that they hated
him.
Just about this time Joseph
had his first dream. He dreamed that he and his brothers were all
out in a field gathering grain. Each of them had gathered up a
bundle of grain called "shocks." Joseph's bundle stood straight up
in the field, and all the other bundles bowed down toward it.
It might have been better for
Joseph if he had kept this dream to himself. But he was so excited
about it that he told his brothers, and when he told them of this
dream they understood it to mean that Joseph expected that some day
they would all bow down to him, and that made them more jealous than
ever, and they hated him even more.
A little later Joseph had
another dream. In this dream, which was even more wonderful than the
first one, Joseph saw the sun and the moon and eleven stars bow down
to him. Joseph told this dream to his brothers, and also to his
father.
His father was just a little
angry about it because it seemed to mean that some time in the
future he, as the father of Joseph, would, have to bow down to his
son. Of course Joseph's brothers were made more angry than
ever.
Not long after this Joseph's
brothers went to a part of the country called Shechem to find better
fields for their flocks. They were too far away from home to come
back each night, so after they had been gone for a while, Jacob
wondered how his sons were getting along, and how their flocks were
faring.
Joseph was too young to work
in the fields with his brothers, so he had stayed at home. His
father asked him if he would go to Shechem, find his brothers, learn
how they were getting along, and bring back word to him. Well,
Joseph had the Boy Scout spirit, and he was willing to do this
errand for his father. So he started on his way to Shechem.
When he arrived there he
couldn't find his brothers, and he was wandering around in the
fields when a man came up to him and asked:
"What seekest thou?"
Joseph told the man he was
looking for his brothers, and the man replied:
"I heard them say, Let us go
to Dothan."
So Joseph traveled still
farther until he came to Dothan, and here he found his brothers
taking care of their flocks.
His brothers saw him coming.
He was probably walking, and it took him some tim to reach them. So
this gave his brothers a chance to make some plans. They decided
that they would kill their brother, just as Cain, because of
jealousy, decided that he would kill Abel. Jealousy, you see, always
leads people into trouble.
They called their brother a
dreamer. So instead of letting him go back to his father, they
seized him, and were ready to take his life. The name of the oldest
son was Reuben. Evidently Reuben was not quite so wicked as the
others, and he pleaded with his brothers not to kill Joseph. He
suggested that they put Joseph in a pit. Reuben's plan was that when
the others were not watching, he would rescue Joseph so he could go
back to his father again.
Reuben's brothers agreed to
this, not knowing, of course, what Reuben was hoping to do. But
after they had put Joseph into the pit the brothers noticed that
traveling nearby was a group of what the Bible calls Midianites.
They were merchants, or storekeepers, rom the country called Midian.
Joseph's brethren decided to sell Joseph to them. These Midianites
were on their way to Egypt, and Joseph's brethren knew that in
Egypt, Pharaoh the king, and probably other rich people there,
bought slaves.
So they sold Joseph to the
Midianites, who took him to Egypt, where he was sold to an officer
of the king as a slave. Then the brothers took Joseph's coat of many
colors which his father had made for him and dipped it in the blood
of a goat, and returned it to their father. When their father saw
this coat covered with blood he was sure that his beloved boy Joseph
had been killed by a wild beast. So years and years went by, and
Jacob thought that Joseph was dead, while all the time his brothers
knew that he was a slave in Egypt.
Yes, Joseph's brothers called
him a dreamer. Those two wonderful dreams that God gave to Joseph
had caused him a lot of trouble. No doubt his brothers thought that
those dreams would never come true. How could Joseph ever rule over
them now that he was away down in Egypt, working for some rich man
as a slave?
But there was one thing
Joseph's brothers did not know. They did not know that those
wonderful dreams were given to Joseph by God, and that God would be
sure to make them come true.
As year after year went by, no
doubt Josephs brethren would remember what they had done, and
perhaps they said to themselves with a little chuckle:
"We fixed him, all right. He
thought that we would have to bow down to him, but he was
mistaken."
But was he?
A BOY WH0 DREAMED
QUESTIONS
Who was Joseph, and why did
his father, Jacob, love him more than he did his other sons?
What were the two dreams of
Joseph, and why did the telling of these dreams make his brothers
angry?
Why did Joseph's brothers
sell him to the Midianites, and how did they make their father
believe that Joseph had been
killed? |