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The Lost Books of the Bible: The Great Rejected Texts Page 48


  8 He filled their sacks with corn, and he put their gold back in their sacks, and they did not know it. Joseph then commanded them to bring their younger brother, because they had told him their father was living and also their younger brother.

  9 They went up from the land of Egypt and they came to the land of Canaan. There they told their father all that had happened to them, and how the ruler of the country had spoken rudely to them, and had seized Simeon until they should bring Benjamin.

  10 Jacob said, “You have taken my children from me! Joseph is gone and Simeon also is gone, and now you will take Benjamin away. I am the victim of your wickedness.”

  11 He said, “My son will not go down with you because fate may have it that he would fall sick. Their mother gave birth to two sons, and one has died, and this one also you will take from me. If, by fate, he took a fever on the road, you would turn my old age to sorrow and death.”

  12 He saw that every man’s money had been returned to him in his sack, and for this reason he feared to send him.

  13 The famine increased and became grievous in the land of Canaan, and in all lands except in the land of Egypt. Egypt had food because many of the children of the Egyptians had stored up their seed for food from the time when they saw Joseph gathering seed together and putting it in storehouses and preserving it for the years of famine.

  14 The people of Egypt fed themselves on it during the first year of their famine but when Israel saw that the famine was very serious in the land, and that there was no deliverance, he said to his sons, “Go again, and procure food for us so that we will not die.”

  15 They said, “We shall not go unless our youngest brother go with us!”

  16 Israel saw that if he did not send Benjamin with them, they would all perish because of the famine.

  17 Reuben said, “Give him to me, and if I do not bring him back to you, kill my two sons in payment for his soul.” Israel said to Reuben, “He shall not go with you.”

  18 Judah came near and said, “Send him with me, and if I do not bring him back to you, let me bear your blame all the days of my life.”

  19 He sent him with them in the second year of this week on the first day of the month.

  20 They all came to the land of Egypt, and they had presents in their hands of sweet spice, almonds, turpentine nuts, and pure honey.

  21 And they went and stood before Joseph, and he saw Benjamin his brother, and he knew him, and said to them, “Is this your youngest brother?” They said to him, “It is he.”

  22 He said, “The Lord be gracious to you, my son!” And he sent Benjamin into his house and he brought out Simeon to them. Joseph made a feast for them, and they presented to him the gifts that they had brought in their hands.

  23 They ate before Joseph and he gave them all a portion of food, but the portion of food given to Benjamin was seven times larger than any of theirs.

  24 And they ate and drank and got up and remained with their donkeys.

  25 Joseph devised a plan whereby he might learn their thoughts as to whether they desired peace or not. He said to the steward who was over his house, “Fill all their sacks with food. Place their money back in their vessels. Put my cup, the silver cup out of which I drink, in the sack of the youngest and send them away.”

  [Chapter 43]

  1 He did as Joseph had told him, and filled all their sacks with food for them and put their money back into their sacks, and put the cup in Benjamin’s sack.

  2 Early in the morning they departed, and it happened that when they had gone from that place, Joseph said to the steward of his house, “Pursue them, run and seize them, and say, ‘You have repaid my kindness with evil. You have stolen from me the silver cup out of which my lord drinks.’

  3 Bring me back their youngest brother. Go! Get him quickly before I go to my seat of judgment (judge you guilt of disobeying an order). “

  4 He ran after them and said the words as he was told. They said to him, “God forbid that your servants should do this thing, and steal any utensil or money from the house of your lord, like the things we found in our sacks the first time we, your servants, came back from the land of Canaan.

  5 We have not stolen any utensil. How could we? Look here in our sacks and search, and wherever you find the cup in the sack of any man among us, let him be killed, and we and our donkeys will serve your lord.”

  6 He said to them, “Not so. If I find it, the man whose sack I find it in I shall take as a servant, and the rest of you shall return in peace to your house.”

  7 He was searching in their vessels, beginning with the eldest and ending with the youngest, when it was found in Benjamin’s sack.

  8 They ripped their garments in frustration, and placed their belongings back on their donkeys, and returned to the city and came to the house of Joseph. They all bowed themselves with their faces to the ground in front of him.

  9 Joseph said to them, “You have done evil.” They said, “What shall we say and how shall we defend ourselves? Our lord has discovered the transgression of his servants; and now we and our donkeys are the servants of our lord.”

  10 Joseph said to them, “I too fear the Lord. As for you, go to your homes and let your brother be my servant, because you have done evil. I delight in this cup as no one else delights in his cup and yet you have stolen it from me.”

  11 Judah said, “O my lord, I pray you to let your servant speak a word in my lord’s ear. Your servant’s mother had two sons for our father. One went away and was lost, and has not been found since. This one alone is left of his mother, and your servant our father loves him. He would die if the lad were lost to him.

  12 When we go to your servant our father, and the lad is not with us, it will happen that he will die. We will have brought so much sorrow on our father it will bring his death.

  13 Now rather let me, your servant, stay here as a bondsman to my lord instead of the boy. Let the lad go with his brothers, because I will stand in for him at the hand of your servant our father. If I do not bring him back, your servant will bear the blame of our father forever.”

  14 Joseph saw that they were all in accord in doing good to one another. Then, he could not refrain himself, and he told them that he was Joseph.

  15 And he conversed with them in the Hebrew tongue and hugged their necks and wept.

  16 At first they did not recognize him and then they began to weep. He said to them, “Do not weep for me, but hurry and bring my father to me. See, it is my mouth that speaks and the eyes of my brother Benjamin see me.

  17 Pay attention. This is the second year of the famine, and there are still five years to come without harvest or fruit of trees or plowing.

  18 You and your households come down quickly, so that you won’t die because of the famine. Do not be grieved for your possessions, because the Lord sent me before you to set things in order that many people might live.

  19 Tell my father that I am still alive. You see that the Lord has made me as a father to Pharaoh, and ruler over his house and over all the land of Egypt.

  20 Tell my father of all my glory, and all the riches and glory that the Lord has given me.”

  21 By the command of Pharaoh’s mouth, he gave them chariots and provisions for the way, and he gave them all multi-colored raiment and silver.

  22 He sent corn, raiment, silver, and ten donkeys that carried all of this to his father, and he sent them away.

  23 They went up and told their father that Joseph was alive, and was measuring out corn to all the nations of the earth, and that he was ruler over all the land of Egypt.

  24 But their father did not believe it, because he was not in his right mind. But when he saw the wagons, which Joseph had sent, the life of his spirit revived, and he said, “It is enough for me if Joseph lives. I will go down and see him before I die.”

  [Chapter 44]

  1 Israel took his journey from Haran’s house on the new moon of the third month, and he stopped at the Well of the Oath on the wa
y and he offered a sacrifice to the God of his father Isaac on the seventh of this month.

  2 Jacob remembered the dream that he had at Bethel, and he feared to go down into Egypt.

  3 He was thinking of sending word to Joseph to come to him because he did not want to go down. He remained there seven days, hoping fate would permit him to see a vision as to whether he should remain or go down.

  4 He celebrated the harvest festival of the first-fruits with old grain, because in all the land of Canaan there was not a handful of seed in the ground because the famine was affecting all the beasts, and cattle, and birds, and all men.

  5 On the sixteenth the Lord appeared to him, and said to him, “Jacob, Jacob,” and he said, “Here I am.”

  6 And He said to him, “I am the God of your fathers, the God of Abraham and Isaac. Do not be afraid to go down into Egypt, because I will be there to make you a great nation. I will go down with you, and I will bring you up again. You will be buried in this land and Joseph will put his hands on your eyes (to close them in death). Do not be afraid. Go down into Egypt.”

  7 And his sons got up and placed their father and their possessions on wagons.

  8 Israel got up from the Well of the Oath on the sixteenth of this third month, and he went to the land of Egypt.

  9 Israel sent Judah before him to his son Joseph to examine the Land of Goshen, because Joseph had told his brothers that they should come and live there so they could be near him.

  10 This was the best land in Egypt. It was near to him and suitable for all of the cattle they had.

  11 These are the names of the sons of Jacob who went into Egypt with Jacob their father; Reuben, the First-born of Israel and his sons Enoch, and Pallu, and Hezron and Carmi, making five.

  12 Simeon and his sons Jemuel, and Jamin, and Ohad, and Jachin, and Zohar, and Shaul, the son of the Zephathite woman, making seven.

  13 Levi and his sons Gershon, and Kohath, and Merari, making four.

  14 Judah and his sons Shela, and Perez, and Zerah, making four.

  15 Issachar and his sons Tola, and Phua, and Jasub, and Shimron, making five.

  16 Zebulon and his sons Sered, and Elon, and Jahleel, making four.

  17 These are the sons of Jacob and their sons whom Leah bore to Jacob in Mesopotamia, six, and their one sister, Dinah and all the souls of the sons of Leah, and their sons, who went with Jacob their father into Egypt. Twenty-nine souls, and Jacob, making thirty, were the number of people that went into Egypt.

  18 And the sons of Zilpah, Leah’s handmaid, the wife of Jacob, who bore to Jacob Gad and Ashur and their sons who went with him into Egypt.

  19 The sons of Gad are Ziphion, and Haggi, and Shuni, and Ezbon, and Eri, and Areli, and Arodi, which make eight souls in total. The sons of Asher are Imnah, and Ishvah, and Ishvi, and Beriah, and Serah, and their one sister, which makes six in total.

  20 All the souls were fourteen, and all those of Leah were forty-four.

  21 The sons of Rachel, the wife of Jacob are Joseph and Benjamin.

  22 There were born to Joseph in Egypt before his father came into Egypt, those whom Asenath, daughter of Potiphar, priest of Heliopolis gave birth to him, Manasseh, and Ephraim. The wife and children of Joseph totaled three.

  23 The sons of Benjamin, Bela and Becher and Ashbel, Gera, and Naaman, and Ehi, and Rosh, and Muppim, and Huppim, and Ard with Benjamin totaled eleven.

  24 And all the souls of Rachel were fourteen.

  25 And the sons of Bilhah, the handmaid of Rachel, the wife of Jacob, whom she gave birth to Jacob, were Dan and Naphtali. These are the names of their sons who went with them into Egypt.

  26 The sons of Dan were Hushim, and Samon, and Asudi. and “Ijaka, and Salomon, all totaling six.

  27 All but one died the year in which they entered into Egypt, and there was left to Dan only Hushim.

  28 These are the names of the sons of Naphtali: Jahziel, and Guni and Jezer, and Shallum, and ‘Iv.

  29 And ‘Iv, who was born after the years of famine, died in Egypt.

  30 All the souls (offspring) of Rachel were twenty-six.

  31 All the souls (offspring) of Jacob, which went into Egypt, were seventy souls.

  32 These are his children and his children’s children, in all seventy, but five died in Egypt in the time of Joseph’s rule and they had no children.

  33 In the land of Canaan two sons of Judah died, Er and Onan, and they had no children, and the children of Israel buried those who died, and they were counted among the seventy Gentile nations.

  [Chapter 45]

  1 On the new moon of the fourth month, in the second year of the third week of the forty-fifth jubilee, Israel went into the country of Egypt, to the land of Goshen.

  2 Joseph went to meet his father, Jacob, in the land of Goshen, and he hugged his father’s neck and wept.

  3 Israel said to Joseph, “Now that I have seen you let me die and may the Lord God of Israel, the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, who has not withheld His mercy and His grace from His servant Jacob, be blessed.

  4 It is enough for me to have seen your face while I am yet alive. Yes, this is the true vision which I saw at Bethel.

  5 Blessed be the Lord my God forever and ever, and blessed be His name.”

  6 Joseph and his brothers ate bread in the presence of their father and drank wine, and Jacob rejoiced with very great joy because he saw Joseph eating with his brothers and drinking in the presence of him, and he blessed the Creator of all things who had preserved him, and had preserved for him his twelve sons.

  7 Joseph had given his father and his brothers as a gift the right of dwelling in the land of Goshen and in Rameses and all of the region around it, which he ruled over in the presence of Pharaoh.

  8 Israel and his sons dwelt in the land of Goshen, the best part of the land of Egypt, and Israel was one hundred and thirty years old when he came into Egypt. Joseph nourished his father and his brothers and also their possessions (servants) with bread as much as they needed for the seven years of the famine.

  9 The land of Egypt became available for purchase because of the famine, and Joseph acquired all the land of Egypt for Pharaoh in return for food, and he got possession of the people and their cattle and everything for Pharaoh.

  10 The years of the famine were completed, and Joseph gave the people in the land seed and food that they might sow the land in the eighth year, because the river had overflowed all the land of Egypt.

  11 For in the seven years of the famine it had not overflowed and had irrigated only a few places on the banks of the river, but now it overflowed and the Egyptians sowed the land, and it produced much corn that year.

  12 This was the first year of the fourth week of the forty-fifth jubilee. Joseph took one-fifth of the corn of the harvest for the king and left four parts for them for food and for seed, and Joseph made it a law for Egypt until this day.

  13 Israel lived in the land of Egypt seventeen years, and all the days which he lived were three jubilees, one hundred and forty-seven years, and he died in the fourth year of the fifth week of the forty-fifth jubilee.

  14 Israel blessed his sons before he died and told them everything that they would go through in the land of Egypt. He revealed to them what they would live through in the last days, and he blessed them and gave Joseph two portions of the land.

  15 He slept with his fathers, and he was buried in the double cave in the land of Canaan, near Abraham his father, in the grave which he dug for himself in the land of Hebron.

  16 And he gave all his books and the books of his fathers to Levi, his son so that he might preserve them and replicate them for his children until this day.

  [Chapter 46]

  1 It happened that after the death of Jacob the children of Israel continued to multiply in the land of Egypt, and they became a great nation, and they were in one accord of heart, so that brother loved brother and every man helped his brother. They increased abundantly and multiplied greatly, ten weeks of year
s, all the days of the life of Joseph.

  2 There was neither Satan nor any evil in all the days of the life of Joseph after his father, Jacob (had died), because all the Egyptians respected the children of Israel all the days of the life of Joseph.

  3 Joseph died, being a hundred and ten years old. He lived seventeen years in the land of Canaan, and ten years he was a servant, and three years in prison, and eighty years he was under the king, ruling all the land of Egypt.

  4 He died and so did all his brothers and all of that generation. But, he commanded the children of Israel before he died that they should carry his bones with them when they went out from the land of Egypt.

  5 And he made them swear regarding his bones, because he knew that the Egyptians would not bring his bones out of Egypt or bury him in the land of Canaan, because while dwelling in the land of Assyria, king Makamaron, the king of Canaan, fought against Egypt in the valley and killed the king of Egypt there, and pursued the Egyptians to the gates of “Ermon.

  6 But he was not able to enter, because another king, a new king, had become king of Egypt, and he was stronger than he (Makamaron), and he returned to the land of Canaan, and the gates of Egypt were closed so that none came or went from Egypt.

  7 Joseph died in the forty-sixth jubilee, in the sixth week, in the second year, and they buried him in the land of Egypt, and all his brothers died after him.

  8 The king of Egypt went to war against the king of Canaan in the forty-seventh jubilee, in the second week in the second year, and the children of Israel brought out all the bones of the children of Jacob except the bones of Joseph, and they buried them in the field in the double cave in the mountain.

  9 Then, most of them returned to Egypt, but a few of them remained in the mountains of Hebron, and Amram your father remained with them.

  10 The king of Canaan was victorious over the king of Egypt, and he closed the gates of Egypt.