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Watch the story of Joseph—betrayed by his brothers, tested through hardship, and raised from the pit to the palace. This animated Bible movie brings Joseph’s journey to life with powerful lessons about faith, patience, and forgiveness. Watch till the end, and share with someone who needs hope today
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00:06Have you ever been betrayed by the people who were supposed to love you the
00:10most?
00:15This is the story of a boy with dreams. Dreams that made his own brothers want
00:21him dead. Sold for 20 pieces of silver, dragged to a foreign land in chains,
00:28falsely accused by a woman who couldn't have him, thrown into a dungeon and
00:32forgotten for years. But the pit was not the end. The prison was not the end, because
00:40the God who gave him the dreams never abandoned him. Not in the darkness, not
00:46in the waiting, not in the silence. And when the moment came, everything changed.
00:53Stay with us until the end, because you will witness one of the most powerful
00:57reversals in history and a scene of forgiveness that will move you to
01:02tears. If stories like this speak to your heart, like this video, share it with
01:09someone who needs hope today, and subscribe to ARK Films so we can keep
01:13bringing these stories to life. Your support means everything. Now, from the pit to the
01:19palace, from betrayal to redemption, let's begin.
01:26In the land of Canaan lived Jacob, a man blessed with twelve sons. But among them, one held his
01:33heart above all others. Joseph, the firstborn of Rachel, the wife he had loved most. Joseph
01:41was seventeen years old, and his father made no effort to hide his favor. While his brothers
01:47toiled under the sun, Joseph walked in privilege. And then came the gift that shattered whatever
01:53peace remained in that household. A robe of many colors, rich and beautiful, fit for a prince.
02:02My son, this robe is yours. Wear it and know that you are set apart. You carry your mother's face.
02:14And my heart.
02:18The brothers saw the robe. They saw what it meant. And from that day, they could not speak a kind
02:25word to Joseph. But the robe was only the beginning. One night, Joseph dreamed a dream,
02:32vivid and strange. He saw sheaves of wheat in an open field, and his sheaf rose high while his
02:39brother's sheaves gathered around and bowed before it. When morning came, Joseph told them what he had
02:45seen. Their faces darkened. Was he saying they would bow to him? The boy who had never worked as hard
02:52as
02:52they had? Then came a second dream, even bolder than the first. This time, the sun, the moon, and eleven
03:02stars
03:03all bowed down to Joseph. He told this dream not only to his brothers, but to his father as well.
03:13What is this dream?
03:16Shall I and your mother and your brothers indeed come to bow ourselves to the ground before you?
03:24Jacob rebuked him openly. But in the silence of his heart, he wondered. He kept the matter in his
03:30mind. The brothers did not wonder. They seethed. The robe. The dreams. The arrogance of this boy who
03:38dared to see himself above them. And so hatred took root, quiet, patient, and waiting for its moment.
03:47Some time later, Joseph's brothers took their father's flocks to graze near Shechem. Days passed
03:53without word, and Jacob grew uneasy. Go to your brothers and see if all is well with them and with
04:02the flocks. Then bring word back to me. Joseph obeyed. He set out alone, wearing the robe his
04:12father had given him. The robe his brothers despised. The journey was long. When Joseph arrived
04:18at Shechem, his brothers were not there. A man found him wandering the fields and told him they had moved
04:24on to Dothan. So Joseph walked further, not knowing what waited for him. The brothers saw him from a
04:30distance. That robe, unmistakable against the dust and sun. They watched him approach, and something
04:38dark rose up among them. Here comes the dreamer, one muttered. The word spread like fire. Years of
04:46resentment, years of watching their father pour his affection onto this one son. It all surged to the
04:53surface. They began to speak of murder. Let us kill him and throw him into one of the pits. We
05:01will say
05:02a wild beast devoured him. Then we shall see what becomes of his dreams. But Reuben, the eldest, would not
05:10have blood on his hands. He convinced them to throw Joseph into an empty cistern instead, hoping to
05:16return later and pull the boy out in secret. When Joseph reached them, they seized him. They tore
05:24the robe from his body, that symbol of everything they hated, and threw him into the pit. It was dry
05:31and deep. Joseph cried out from the darkness, but his brothers sat down to eat their bread as though
05:37nothing had happened. Then a caravan appeared on the horizon, Ishmaelite traders, their camels heavy
05:44with spices and balm, heading toward Egypt. Judah spoke up. What profit is it if we kill our brother
05:53and conceal his blood? Let us sell him to the Ishmaelites. After all, he is our brother, our own
06:02flesh. The others agreed. They pulled Joseph from the pit, trembling, desperate, pleading, and sold him
06:10for twenty pieces of silver. The traders took him and continued south. Joseph vanished into the dust of
06:17the road, bound for a land he had never seen. Now came the lie. The brothers slaughtered a young goat
06:24and dipped Joseph's robe in its blood. They carried it back to their father and laid it before him.
06:30We found this. Examine it. Is it your son's robe or not? Jacob knew it at once. The color drained
06:40from his face.
06:41He tore his garments and wept. It is my son's robe. A fierce animal has devoured him. Joseph is without
06:50doubt
06:50torn to pieces. He mourned for many days. His sons and daughters tried to comfort him, but he refused to
06:57be
06:58comforted. I will go down to the grave mourning my son, he said. And in Egypt, Joseph was sold once
07:05more, this time to a man named Potiphar, captain of Pharaoh's guard. Egypt was a world unlike anything
07:14Joseph had known. Towering monuments rose against the sky. The air smelled of incense and the Nile.
07:21The language was foreign. The gods were foreign. And Joseph was now property. A Hebrew slave with no
07:29name, no family, no future. He was taken to the house of Potiphar, a powerful man who served as
07:37captain of Pharaoh's guard. There, Joseph was put to work among the servants.
07:45But something set Joseph apart. Whatever task he was given, it prospered. Whatever he touched
07:51seemed to flourish. Potiphar noticed. The fields yielded more. The household ran smoothly.
07:59There was an unseen hand on this young Hebrew, and Potiphar was wise enough to recognize it.
08:06I do not know what god you serve, but his favor rests on you. From this day you will oversee
08:16my entire
08:16household. All that I have is in your hand. Joseph rose from slave to steward. He managed the servants,
08:26the livestock, the grain, the accounts. Potiphar entrusted everything to him and concerned himself
08:33with nothing except the food he ate. The Lord was with Joseph. Even in exile, even in chains,
08:41the blessing followed him. Joseph worked faithfully. He did not grow bitter. He did not curse the god of
08:48his fathers. In the silence of his heart, he remembered the dreams, the sheaves bowing, the stars bowing,
08:55and he held on. He did not know how those dreams would come to pass. He only knew that the
09:02god who gave
09:02them had not abandoned him. But favor in a foreign land is a dangerous thing, and not everyone in
09:11Potiphar's house looked upon Joseph with pure intentions. Joseph had grown into a man, strong,
09:19capable, and handsome in form and appearance. He carried himself with quiet dignity, and his presence
09:26did not go unnoticed. Potiphar's wife watched him. Day after day, her eyes followed him through the
09:34house. What began as glances became something more dangerous. Desire took hold of her, and she was not
09:40a woman accustomed to being denied. One day, when the house was quiet, she approached him.
09:52My master has withheld nothing from me except you, because you are his wife. How then can I do this
10:02great
10:03wickedness and sin against God? She did not relent. Day after day, she pursued him with words, with looks,
10:13with opportunities. And day after day, Joseph refused. He avoided being alone with her whenever he could,
10:21but she was patient. One afternoon, Joseph entered the house to attend to his duties. No other servants
10:28were inside. She had made sure of it. She came to him and grabbed his garment. Lie with me, she
10:34demanded.
10:36Joseph pulled away. He fled from her grip and ran out of the house. But his garment remained in her
10:43hand. She stood
10:44there, holding the cloth, her face twisting with humiliation and rage. If she could not have him, she would
10:52destroy him. She screamed. Servants came running. When they arrived, she held up Joseph's garment and let her voice
11:00tremble with false distress. Look, this Hebrew servant my husband brought into our house came to mock me.
11:10He tried to lie with me, but I screamed. When he heard me cry out, he fled and left his
11:16garment beside me.
11:18She kept the garment and waited for her husband to return. When Potiphar came home, she told him the same
11:25lie,
11:25her voice wounded, her eyes full of tears. Potiphar's anger burned. The man he had trusted,
11:33the man to whom he had given everything. He did not question his wife. He did not summon Joseph to
11:40speak.
11:40He simply acted. Joseph was seized and thrown into prison, the place where Pharaoh's prisoners were kept.
11:49The heavy door closed behind him, and once again, Joseph found himself in darkness.
11:57He had fled from sin and been punished for it. He had done what was right and lost everything for
12:04it.
12:04Yet even here, in the cold silence of a prison cell, the Lord did not abandon him. The same favor
12:12that had rested on him in Potiphar's house followed him into chains, and God's purposes were far from
12:19finished. The prison was dark, but Joseph did not sink into despair. He worked. He served. And before
12:28long, the keeper of the prison saw what Potiphar had once seen, that the Lord's hand was upon this man.
12:36Joseph was placed in charge of the other prisoners. Whatever happened in that place passed through his
12:43hands. Then, one night, two new prisoners arrived, Pharaoh's cupbearer and Pharaoh's baker. Both men had
12:52offended the king and now awaited their fate in the same dungeon where Joseph dwelt. One morning, Joseph
12:59noticed their faces were troubled. They had each dreamed a dream, and the dreams disturbed them deeply.
13:07Do not interpretations belong to God? Tell me your dreams. The cupbearer spoke first. He had seen a vine
13:17with three branches that budded, blossomed, and bore ripe grapes. He pressed the grapes into Pharaoh's cup and
13:24placed the cup in Pharaoh's hand. Joseph answered without hesitation, The three branches are three days. Within three
13:33days, Pharaoh will restore you to your position. Then Joseph leaned closer, his voice quiet but urgent.
13:43But when all goes well with you, remember me.
13:52Mention me to Pharaoh and get me out of this prison. I have done nothing to deserve being here.
14:02The baker, encouraged by the good interpretation, shared his dream. Three baskets of bread on his head and
14:09birds eating from the top basket. Joseph's face changed. The three baskets are three days. Within
14:17three days, Pharaoh will lift off your head and hang your body on a tree. Three days later, both
14:24interpretations came to pass. The cupbearer was restored. The baker was executed. But the cupbearer
14:30did not remember Joseph. He forgot him completely. Two full years Joseph remained in that prison. No word from
14:40the cupbearer. No summons. No deliverance. Just the slow passing of days in the silence of forgotten walls.
14:49Then one night, Pharaoh dreamed. He stood by the Nile and watched seven cows come up from the river, healthy,
14:56fat, and sleek. They grazed among the reeds. But then seven other cows emerged behind them, ugly, gaunt, and wasted.
15:05The thin cows devoured the fat ones, yet remained as thin as before.
15:11Pharaoh woke, troubled. He fell asleep again and dreamed a second time.
15:17Seven heads of grain grew on a single stalk, plump and full. Then seven thin heads scorched by the east
15:25wind
15:26sprouted and swallowed the healthy grain. Morning came, and Pharaoh's spirit was deeply disturbed.
15:32He summoned every magician and wise man in Egypt. None could tell him the meaning. Then the cupbearer remembered.
15:42He stepped forward and confessed how he had forgotten the Hebrew prisoner who had interpreted his dream in the dungeon,
15:49and how every word had come true. Pharaoh sent for Joseph immediately. They brought him out of the pit.
15:56He shaved, changed his garments, and was rushed into the throne room. There stood Pharaoh, ruler of the most powerful
16:04kingdom on earth,
16:06waiting for a prisoner to speak.
16:11I have heard that you can understand a dream and interpret it.
16:17Joseph did not hesitate, but he would not take credit.
16:22It is not in me.
16:25God will give Pharaoh an answer of peace.
16:30Pharaoh told him both dreams, the cows, the grain, the devouring.
16:36Joseph listened carefully, then spoke with certainty.
16:40The two dreams are one.
16:42God has revealed to Pharaoh what he is about to do.
16:46The seven fat cows and the seven good heads of grain are seven years of great abundance throughout the land
16:53of Egypt.
16:54The seven thin cows and the seven scorched heads are seven years of famine that will follow.
17:00The famine will be so severe that the years of plenty will be forgotten.
17:06Joseph continued.
17:08The dream had come twice because the matter was fixed.
17:12God would bring it to pass soon.
17:14Then, without being asked, Joseph offered counsel.
17:18Let Pharaoh appoint a wise and discerning man to oversee the land.
17:23Let him collect one fifth of all the harvest during the seven good years and store it.
17:28This reserve will keep Egypt alive when the famine comes.
17:34The words hung in the air.
17:36Pharaoh looked at this man, a foreigner, a slave, a prisoner, and saw something no one else had shown him.
17:42He saw an answer.
17:46Pharaoh looked at his servants, then back at Joseph.
17:49The decision came swiftly.
17:52Can we find anyone like this man, one in whom is the Spirit of God?
17:59Since God has made all this known to you, there is no one so discerning and wise as you.
18:07You shall be in charge of my palace, and all my people are to submit to your orders.
18:12Only with respect to the throne will I be greater than you.
18:16Pharaoh removed his signet ring and placed it on Joseph's finger.
18:19They clothed him in garments of fine linen and hung a gold chain around his neck.
18:24He rode in a chariot as the second in command, and men cried out before him, Bow the knee!
18:32Joseph, once thrown into a pit by his brothers, once sold for twenty pieces of silver,
18:38once falsely accused and forgotten in prison, now ruled over all the land of Egypt.
18:44He was thirty years old.
18:47Pharaoh gave him a new name, Zaphonath-Paneah.
18:51He gave him a wife, Asenath, daughter of a priest of On.
18:56In time she bore him two sons.
18:59Joseph named the first Manasseh, saying, God has made me forget all my hardship.
19:04He named the second Ephraim, saying, God has made me fruitful in the land of my affliction.
19:11The seven years of abundance came, just as Joseph had said.
19:15The land produced plentifully, and Joseph gathered grain like the sand of the sea,
19:21so much that they stopped measuring it.
19:24Then the good years ended.
19:26Famine spread across the earth.
19:28Crops failed.
19:30Rivers dried.
19:31Nations began to starve.
19:32But in Egypt, there was bread.
19:35And from every corner of the world, people came to Joseph to buy grain.
19:40Among them, ten brothers from Canaan.
19:45Back in Canaan, Jacob and his household felt the grip of famine.
19:49The fields yielded nothing.
19:51Their stores ran low.
19:54When Jacob heard that there was grain in Egypt, he called his sons together.
19:58Why do you stand looking at one another?
20:01Go down to Egypt and buy grain so that we may live and not die.
20:07Ten of the brothers set out on the long journey south.
20:10But Benjamin, the youngest, Rachel's only other son, stayed behind.
20:15Jacob would not risk him.
20:17He had already lost Joseph.
20:19He could not bear to lose Benjamin too.
20:23The brothers arrived in Egypt and were brought before the governor of the land.
20:27The man in charge of selling grain to all who came.
20:30They did not recognize him.
20:33How could they?
20:34The boy they had thrown into a pit was now dressed in Egyptian linen,
20:38speaking through an interpreter, wearing the authority of Pharaoh himself.
20:43But Joseph recognized them instantly.
20:46He saw their faces, older now, weathered by years, and his heart stirred.
20:52Yet he did not reveal himself.
20:55Instead, he spoke harshly.
20:58You are spies.
21:01You have come to see the weakness of our land.
21:06The brothers fell to the ground before him.
21:09They protested, desperate to explain.
21:13No, my lord.
21:14Your servants have come only to buy food.
21:20We are honest men.
21:22Twelve brothers from Canaan, Gestion.
21:25Sons of one father.
21:27The youngest is with our father today.
21:30And one is no more.
21:36Joseph listened.
21:37He tested them further, demanding they prove their story by bringing the youngest brother to Egypt.
21:42Until then, one of them would remain behind as prisoner.
21:47He chose Simeon.
21:49The guards bound him and took him away while the others watched in silence.
21:54The remaining brothers loaded their donkeys with grain and departed.
21:58But Joseph had secretly ordered his servants to return each man's silver, hiding it in their sacks.
22:04They did not yet understand.
22:06The past they had buried was rising to meet them.
22:11The brothers returned to Canaan and told Jacob everything.
22:15The harsh governor, the accusation, Simeon held captive, and the demand to bring Benjamin.
22:21Jacob refused.
22:23My son will not go down with you.
22:26His brother is dead, and he alone is left.
22:30If harm should come to him, you would bring my gray head down to the grave in sorrow.
22:36But the famine pressed harder.
22:38The grain ran out.
22:40There was no choice.
22:42Judah stepped forward and made a solemn vow.
22:46Send the boy with me.
22:49I myself will be surety for him.
22:52If I do not bring him back to you, let me bear the blame forever.
22:59Jacob relented.
23:00He sent them off with gifts, balm, honey, spices, myrrh, and double the silver to repay what had been returned.
23:09And he sent Benjamin.
23:11When Joseph saw his younger brother among them, his composure nearly broke.
23:16He turned away and went into a private room to weep.
23:20Then he washed his face and returned.
23:23He released Simeon.
23:25He invited them all to dine in his house.
23:28The brothers were seated in the order of their birth, oldest to youngest.
23:32And they looked at one another in astonishment.
23:35How could this Egyptian know?
23:38Benjamin received five times as much food as the others.
23:42Joseph watched him from across the room, saying nothing.
23:45The next morning, the brothers departed with their donkeys loaded with grain.
23:50But Joseph had given his steward one final instruction.
23:54Place his personal silver cup in Benjamin's sack.
23:58They had not gone far when the steward overtook them.
24:02Why have you repaid good with evil?
24:04You have stolen my master's cup.
24:07The brothers were stunned.
24:09They denied it fiercely.
24:11If the cup is found with any of us, let that man die, and the rest of us will become
24:16slaves.
24:18The search began.
24:20Oldest to youngest.
24:21Sack after sack was opened.
24:24Nothing.
24:25Then the steward reached Benjamin.
24:27He opened the sack, and there, gleaming in the morning sun, was the silver cup.
24:33The brothers tore their clothes in anguish.
24:36They returned to the city, dreading what awaited them.
24:39Joseph was waiting.
24:41His voice was cold.
24:43What have you done?
24:44Did you not know that a man like me can discern such things?
24:49The brothers fell before him.
24:51Judah spoke for them all, his voice broken.
24:55What can we say?
24:56God has uncovered the guilt of your servants.
24:59We are all your slaves.
25:01But Joseph shook his head.
25:03Only the one in whose hand the cup was found shall be my slave.
25:07The rest of you may return in peace to your father.
25:12This was the test.
25:14Would they abandon Benjamin as they had once abandoned Joseph?
25:18Judah stepped forward.
25:20He told the whole story.
25:21Their father's grief.
25:23The lost son.
25:24The vow he had made.
25:26Then he offered himself.
25:29Please, let me remain as your slave in place of the boy.
25:34Let him return to his father.
25:36For how can I go back if the boy is not with me?
25:44I cannot bear to see the suffering that would come upon my father.
25:50Silence filled the room.
25:54Joseph could bear it no longer.
25:57Judah's words broke through every wall he had built.
26:00The brother, who had once suggested selling him into slavery,
26:03was now offering his own life to save Benjamin.
26:07Something had changed in them.
26:09The test was complete.
26:12Joseph turned to his Egyptian servants, his voice trembling.
26:16Everyone leave me.
26:18Now.
26:19They obeyed.
26:21When the room was empty and only his brothers remained,
26:25Joseph let go.
26:26He wept.
26:27Not quietly, but with loud heaving sobs that echoed through the hall.
26:33The sound carried beyond the walls.
26:36Pharaoh's household heard it.
26:38The brothers stood frozen, terrified, unsure what was happening.
26:42Then Joseph spoke.
26:44Not in Egyptian, but in their own tongue.
26:47The voice of their youth.
26:50The voice they had tried to forget.
26:54I am Joseph.
26:57Is my father still alive?
27:01The brothers could not answer.
27:03They stared at him, paralyzed with fear.
27:06The boy from the pit.
27:07The dreamer they had sold.
27:10He stood before them now as the most powerful man in Egypt.
27:14Joseph saw their terror.
27:16He called them closer.
27:18They did not move.
27:19He called again, gently.
27:22Come near to me.
27:23They stepped forward, trembling.
27:26I am Joseph, your brother, whom you sold into Egypt.
27:31But do not be distressed or angry with yourselves.
27:34It was not you who sent me here, Pod.
27:37It was God.
27:39He sent me ahead of you to preserve life.
27:42The famine has lasted two years and five more will come.
27:46God made me ruler of all Egypt so that I could save our family.
27:50So it was not you who sent me here, but God.
27:57He fell upon Benjamin's neck and wept.
28:00Benjamin wept with him.
28:02Then Joseph kissed each of his brothers and wept over them.
28:07Only then could they bring themselves to speak.
28:09News of the reunion reached Pharaoh's palace.
28:13Pharaoh was pleased and told Joseph to send for his father and his entire household.
28:18He promised them the best of the land of Egypt.
28:22Joseph gave his brothers carts, provisions, and new garments.
28:27To Benjamin he gave three hundred pieces of silver and five sets of clothes.
28:32He sent donkeys loaded with grain, bread, and goods for the journey.
28:37As they departed, Joseph looked at them one last time.
28:41Do not quarrel on the way, he said.
28:44They returned to Canaan and found their father.
28:47The words tumbled out of them.
28:50Joseph is alive.
28:52He is ruler over all the land of Egypt.
28:56Jacob's heart went numb.
28:58He could not believe it.
28:59But when he saw the carts Joseph had sent, his spirit revived.
29:05It is enough, he said.
29:07My son Joseph is still alive.
29:09I will go and see him before I die.
29:12And so Jacob journeyed to Egypt with his sons, their wives, and their children.
29:17Seventy souls in all.
29:20Joseph rode out to meet his father in Goshen.
29:23When he saw him, he fell on his neck and wept for a long time.
29:27The dreamers' dreams had come to pass.
29:30The family was whole again.
29:34And so ends the story of Joseph.
29:39A story of betrayal and blessing.
29:42Of suffering and sovereignty.
29:44Of a boy who lost everything.
29:46And a man who forgave those who took it from him.
29:49But this story is not just about Joseph.
29:52It is about us.
29:54Perhaps you have been thrown into a pit by people you trusted.
29:58Perhaps you have done everything right and still found yourself in chains.
30:02Perhaps you are waiting.
30:04Forgotten.
30:05Unseen.
30:07Wondering if your dreams will ever come to pass.
30:10Joseph's life reminds us of this.
30:12God does not waste your pain.
30:15Every pit.
30:16Every prison.
30:17Every delay.
30:19He is working through it all.
30:21What others meant for evil, God can turn for good.
30:25Not sometimes.
30:25Always.
30:27The same God who watched over Joseph watches over you.
30:30He has not forgotten you.
30:32Your story is not over.
30:35Hold on.
30:36Stay faithful.
30:37Your moment before Pharaoh may be closer than you think.
30:41If this story touched your heart, we invite you to like this video and share it with someone who needs
30:47to hear it today.
30:48And if you haven't already, please subscribe to ARK Films and turn on notifications so you never miss a story.

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