V olume II covers what really was the gift that Jacob gave Joseph, why Joseph’s brothers sold him into slavery, who purchased Joseph as a servant and plaything, and what was Joseph's role in Egypt.
Furthermore, this book reveals why the Egyptian Sanmut was chosen and the reasons for that choice. What did Joseph do with the gold that he received for the grain sale, and what did he do with it? Who were the Ephraimites and why some of them morphed into another tribal identity. Who were Aaron and Moses really related to, and finally, why did eleven of the original twelve tribes become slaves?
About 23 percent of Genesis is directly or indirectly about Joseph and the things he did in Egypt. There is a very good reason for this: it is because of who Joseph was in Egypt and what he did as prime minister. This book also answers why only eleven of the twelve tribes went into slavery and why there were only ten of the original twelve tribes left by the time of the Exodus.
This book discusses who the Pharaoh was who made Joseph the prime minister of Egypt, and who was the Pharaoh who enslaved eleven of the Hebrew tribes and what was the reasons for it.
You will also find an explanation in this volume why Joseph told his brothers, “God has made me father to Pharaoh.” (Genesis 45:8)
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