New American Bible, Revised Edition

Genesis 41:34-51 New American Bible, Revised Edition (NABRE)

34. Let Pharaoh act and appoint overseers for the land to organize it during the seven years of abundance.

35. They should collect all the food of these coming good years, gathering the grain under Pharaoh’s authority, for food in the cities, and they should guard it.

36. This food will serve as a reserve for the country against the seven years of famine that will occur in the land of Egypt, so that the land may not perish in the famine.”

37. This advice pleased Pharaoh and all his servants.

38. “Could we find another like him,” Pharaoh asked his servants, “a man so endowed with the spirit of God?”

39. So Pharaoh said to Joseph: “Since God has made all this known to you, there is no one as discerning and wise as you are.

40. You shall be in charge of my household, and all my people will obey your command. Only in respect to the throne will I outrank you.”

41. Then Pharaoh said to Joseph, “Look, I put you in charge of the whole land of Egypt.”

42. With that, Pharaoh took off his signet ring and put it on Joseph’s finger. He dressed him in robes of fine linen and put a gold chain around his neck.

43. He then had him ride in his second chariot, and they shouted “Abrek!” before him.Thus was Joseph installed over the whole land of Egypt.

44. “I am Pharaoh,” he told Joseph, “but without your approval no one shall lift hand or foot in all the land of Egypt.”

45. Pharaoh also bestowed the name of Zaphenath-paneah on Joseph, and he gave him in marriage Asenath, the daughter of Potiphera, priest of Heliopolis. And Joseph went out over the land of Egypt.

46. Joseph was thirty years old when he entered the service of Pharaoh, king of Egypt.After Joseph left Pharaoh, he went throughout the land of Egypt.

47. During the seven years of plenty, when the land produced abundant crops,

48. he collected all the food of these years of plenty that the land of Egypt was enjoying and stored it in the cities, placing in each city the crops of the fields around it.

49. Joseph collected grain like the sands of the sea, so much that at last he stopped measuring it, for it was beyond measure.

50. Before the famine years set in, Joseph became the father of two sons, borne to him by Asenath, daughter of Potiphera, priest of Heliopolis.

51. Joseph named his firstborn Manasseh, meaning, “God has made me forget entirely my troubles and my father’s house”;