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My First Bible Stories
Abraham and his Family
After the Flood, Noah's family grew and grew, peopling the Earth. One of these people became very
special to God. The man's name was Abraham. His wife was Sarah. One day, God sent for Abraham
and told him that if he went where God led him, he would become the father of a great new nation.
Abraham was puzzled because he and Sarah had no children, but he did as God told him. Abraham
gathered all his people together and, with Sarah and his nephew Lot, set out for Canaan. When they
were nearly there, Lot and his people decided to turn to the East and Abraham and Sarah went to the
West. God spoke to Abraham again, telling him that all the land around him would belong to him and
his family. He also said that Sarah would have a son. "Your family will be as many as there are stars in
the sky," He said. Abraham was amazed. Surely Sarah was too old to have a child?
Sarah was very surprised to have a baby at last. Abraham and Sarah named their son Isaac. When Isaac
was still a little boy, God decided to give Abraham a terrible test. He wanted to see how much Abraham
loved Him. God told him to take Isaac up a high mountain and kill him. Abraham was horrified, and he
could not tell Sarah what God had said.Abraham loaded a donkey and took Isaac with him as if they
were just going out for a picnic. Isaac carried wood, and they set off to climb the mountain.When
Abraham and Isaac had reached the top, Abraham built an altar and piled the wood on top. Isaac
thought his father was going to kill a lamb."Father, where is the lamb?" asked Isaac. "God will provide
a lamb," said Abraham, but he could hardly speak for tears. He set Isaac on the altar and took out his
knife. The boy was terrified. Suddenly an angel called out, "Stop! Now God knows how much you love
Him. You were ready to give Him your only son." Looking up, Abraham saw a ram in the bushes,
which he killed instead of Isaac. Abraham had passed the test. He hugged Isaac tightly, then took him
back home.
God Makes the World
In the very beginning, there was nothing but emptiness, darkness, and deep, deep water. Then God said
the word, and the world was filled with light. He had made the first day. But He saw that darkness was
good, too, so He kept it and called it night.On the second day, God divided up the water. Some He
made the sea. The rest He put up in the sky. He made Heaven to keep them apart. On the third day, God
put the seas in their proper places, with dry land between them. He told the earth to start growing trees
and grass and plants. On the fourth day, God made two big lights to hang in the sky - the Sun by day
and the Moon by night. Then He made all the stars that keep them company. On the fifth day, God
made all the creatures that live in the water - fish, whales, dolphins, and octopuses. Then He made all
the birds that fly in the air, from the great eagle to the tiny wren. But the sixth day was the busiest of all.
God made all the animals that live on the land. Not just the big ones, like buffaloes and elephants and
tigers, but everything, right down to the smallest beetle that creeps through the grass. Finally, God
decided to make some people, too, who would be like Him. He made a man and a woman to take care
of all the animals. God saw that the world He had made was good. On the seventh day, He rested.
The first man and woman were Adam and Eve. God gave them a wonderful garden called Eden. He told
them to eat fruit and plants and take care of every single living thing in the world. He told them that
every person in the world would come from them and their children. The first job God gave Adam and
Eve was to name all the animals. Imagine trying to choose the right name for the camel, the giraffe, or
the ostrich if you didn't know it already! God visited Adam and Eve in the garden and talked to them.
He gave them only one rule. "See that tree over there in the middle of the garden?" He asked. "It is the
Tree of Knowledge. You must never eat its fruit. If you do, you will die."
Now there was a snake in the garden. It slithered up to Eve and hissed, "Why don't you pick that ripe
fruit from the tree in the middle of the garden?" Eve said, "God told us not to. If we do, we will die."
"Nonsense," said the snake. "God just wants to keep the best fruit for Himself." The fruit looked tasty,
so Eve picked one and took a big, juicy bite. It was so good, she shared some with Adam. Right away,
they felt shy and ashamed and realized they had no clothes on. As soon as God realized they had eaten
the forbidden fruit, a sadness as big as the whole world came over Him. God gave Adam and Eve
clothes and sent them out of the garden to raise their children and live without ever seeing Eden again.
To make sure they couldn't return, He set an angel with a fiery sword at the gate. And all because they
had done the one thing He had asked them not to do.
Daniel in the Lions' Den
The Israelites had been slaves in Egypt, but they finally escaped. Then many years later, the Babylonian
kings made them slaves again. One of the Israelites who still trusted God was Daniel. Daniel was so
honest and clever that the king, Darius, made him Prime Minister. All the other politicians were jealous.
They made Darius pass a law saying no one should pray to anyone but the king. Anyone who did would
be thrown into a pit with hungry lions. But Daniel went on praying to God the way he always had.
Everyone could see him. "Daniel prays to God," said the jealous politicians to Darius. "He has broken
your law. You must throw him to the lions." Darius was sad. He liked Daniel, but the law was the law.
He ordered Daniel to be thrown into the lions' den. Next morning, the king went sadly to the lions' den,
not daring to hope that Daniel had been saved. "Daniel! Has your god kept you safe from the lions?"
"Here I am. God's angel stood between me and the lions". The king ordered Daniel to be taken out of
the pit. He had the politicians thrown in instead and the lions made short work of them, munching on
their bones. Then Darius ordered all his people to respect Daniel's God.
Jonah and the Big Fish
God watched over His Earth and saw that there were still bad things happening on it. He saw that the
people of Nineveh were very wicked and violent. He asked an Israelite teacher named Jonah to talk to
them. But Jonah didn't like that idea at all. He didn't want to go to Nineveh. He ran away from God and
boarded a ship that was going to Tarshish, in the other direction. God knew that Jonah was on the ship
and He sent a great storm. All the sailors were terrified. When Jonah realized what was happening, he
told the sailors that the storm was his fault. "I tried to disobey God," he said. "You had better throw me
over the side." The sailors didn't want to do it, but Jonah made them throw him into the water.
Immediately the wind dropped and the sea became calm.
Jonah fell through the waves, sure that he was going to drown. All of a sudden, a huge fish came up and
opened its jaws. Down and down and down, and around and around went Jonah, swirling and tumbling
through the water into the darkness until he ended up inside the fish's belly. Jonah fell on his knees and
prayed to God, thanking Him for saving him from the sea.
After three days and nights, God thought Jonah had learned his lesson. God made the fish swim to the
shore and there it threw Jonah up onto the land. "Well?" asked God. "Now will you go to Nineveh?" So
Jonah walked all the way to Nineveh. Jonah warned all the people that God would destroy the city if
they didn't stop doing bad things. Everyone, even the king, was sorry. They all promised to lead better
lives in the future. So God did not have to destroy the people after all. He was glad He could forgive
them.
Joseph and his Rainbow Coat
Isaac was Abraham's son. He married Rebecca and had twin sons, Esau and Jacob. Jacob, who was also
called Israel, settled in Canaan and had a large family. Jacob's 12 sons were named Reuben, Simeon,
then Levi and Judah, Issachar, and Zebulun, Gad and Asher, Dan and Naphtali, then Joseph and
Benjamin. Joseph and Benjamin were Jacob's favorite children, but he loved Joseph best of all.
One day Joseph told his brothers about a dream he had had. They were tying up corn in the fields when
the other brothers' bundles bowed down to Joseph's. Joseph's dream made his brothers very angry.
"Who does he think he is?" they grumbled. Jacob had given Joseph a beautiful coat, colored like a
rainbow, and that made the brothers even more jealous. They hated Joseph so much that some of them
wanted to harm him. One day while the brothers were working in the fields, they grabbed Joseph and
tore his splendid coat off him. They decided to kill Joseph and throw his body into a well. Reuben
disagreed and said, "Let's just leave Joseph at the bottom of the well." Reuben secretly meant to come
back later and rescue him. Later, while Reuben was busy, the other brothers sold Joseph to some
merchants who were traveling to Egypt. Then the brothers smeared the rainbow coat with goat's blood
and told Jacob his favorite son had been killed by a wild beast.
When the merchants reached Egypt, they sold Joseph to the captain of Pharaoh's guard. Joseph worked
hard, and after some years he was made head of the household. One day, Pharaoh had a nightmare that
no one could explain. Joseph had strange dreams himself and was good at figuring out what they meant.
So Pharaoh sent for him. In Pharaoh's dream, seven fat cows came out of the river to graze. Then seven
thin cows followed the fat cows out of the water and gobbled them up. But the thin cows didn't get any
fatter. Joseph told Pharaoh that the dream meant Egypt was going to have seven years of good harvests
followed by seven years of famine. Pharaoh was so impressed by Joseph's explanation, he put him in
charge of building barns to store extra food for the bad years. And Pharaoh's dream came true, just as
Joseph said.
Years later, during the famine, 11 visitors came from Canaan to ask for food. They were Joseph's
brothers. He knew who they were immediately, but they had no idea who this powerful Egyptian was.
Joseph decided to test his brothers to see if they had changed. Joseph gave them all the food they could
carry, but in Benjamin's sack he hid his special silver cup. The brothers set off for home, but they had
not gone far when Joseph's guards rode after them and found the cup in Benjamin's sack. The brothers
were arrested and brought to Joseph. He pretended to be angry. "The rest of you can go free," he said,
"but the one who stole my cup shall stay and be my slave." The other brothers were horrified. Their
father had already lost one of his favorite sons - it would break his heart if they went back without
Benjamin. "Take one of us instead," they begged. Then Joseph knew they had really changed. He told
them who he was and asked them to fetch Jacob so they could all live together in Egypt.
Moses in the Bulrushes
Joseph came from Canaan to Egypt. Long after Joseph died, there were many Israelites living in Egypt.
The new pharaoh did not like so many Israelites being in his country. First he made them work as
slaves. Then he ordered that all Israelite boy babies should be killed. So Israelite women gave birth in
secret.
One family decided to save their newborn son in an unusual way. Even the baby's big sister, Miriam,
was in on the plot. The family kept the baby hidden till he was three months old. By then he was
sleeping less and it was hard to keep him a secret. So his mother wove a basket out of reeds. Miriam
helped. They coated the basket with mud and tar and let it dry. It was like a tiny boat. The baby's
mother put him in his little basket-boat and carried him to the river. She put the basket gently in the
water, where it was half-hidden by bulrushes and reeds.
Pharaoh's daughter came down to the river to bathe, as she did at the same time every day. "What is that
in the reeds?" she asked. "It looks like a basket." One of the servants brought the basket to the princess.
"It's a baby!" she exclaimed. "It must be one of the Israelite children. I shall save him and he shall be
my son." All this time, Miriam had been hiding in the reeds, watching out for her baby brother. "Your
Highness," she said. "I know an Israelite woman who will nurse the baby for you." "Good," said the
princess. "The baby must have milk." So the baby was taken care of by his own mother until he was old
enough to go to the palace and live with Pharaoh's family. The princess called the baby Moses, which
means "taken from the water."
Noah's Ark
Hundreds of years after Adam and Eve, the world had filled up with wicked people. This made God
sad. He saw that there was only one good family left on Earth: Noah, his wife, and their three sons,
Shem, Ham, and Japheth. God said to Noah, "I am going to send a great flood to wash the Earth clean.
Everyone will be drowned except you and your family. You must build a big boat. You'll need space for
a lot of food because there will be many animals to feed." "Animals?" asked Noah. "Yes," said God.
"Two of each kind, a male and female, including birds and creepy crawlies - even snakes."
God told Noah exactly how to build the boat, which was called an ark. Noah's whole family had to help
- all his sons and their wives - because they would all be on the ark. They painted the wooden ark with
sticky tar to keep the water out. Noah's neighbors thought he was crazy. "A boat!" they laughed.
"Haven't you noticed there's no sea around here?" But Noah kept on building.
As soon as the ark was ready, Noah took out his list of animals. His family had been rounding them up
for weeks. How the neighbors stared! Two by two, the animals entered the ark. The bears lumbered, the
reindeer pranced, the giraffes swayed, and the snakes slithered. The elephants were terribly slow, the
lions padded along, the parrots squawked, and the wolves howled. The swift cheetahs passed right by
the crawling crocodiles and leaping kangaroos. Soon the ark was alive with animals. It was full of hay
and oats, and food for the family, too. But the sky was getting very dark. "Hurry up!" cried Noah to the
waddling penguins. As the tortoises crept up the gangplank, the first drops of rain began to fall. It was
as if God had opened a window in Heaven and poured water out. Rain cascaded from the sky, filling all
the valleys. Thunder rumbled and lightning flashes cracked the sky in two. The people who had laughed
at Noah were now desperate to escape the rising water, but only the ark was lifted safely to the top of
the swirling water, higher than the mountaintops. For 40 days and 40 nights, rain drummed on the roof
of the ark.
Then one morning everything was quiet. The rain had stopped and the Sun was shining again. The ark
drifted for months. At last it bumped into some rocks. Slowly, the floodwaters sank down. Noah saw
that the ark had settled on the high mountaintops of Ararat. The animals couldn't wait to get off! But
Noah wanted to be sure it was safe. Three times he sent a dove out from the ark. The first time the dove
flew straight back. The second time it had an olive leaf in its beak. The third time the dove didn't come
back at all. It had found somewhere green and fresh to live. So Noah let down the gangplank and the
animals bounded out of the ark. As the birds flew away, Noah saw a beautiful arch of colors glowing in
the sky. It was the first rainbow. God promised that He would never again destroy life on Earth - the
rainbow would remind Him of His promise.