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Youngs
Literal Translation
King
James Version
The 1599
Geneva
Study Bible
American Standard ASV-1901
Historical Book
Flavius Josephus
Philip Schaff
History
of the
Christian Church
8 Vol.
Keil & Delitzsch
OT Commentary
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What We Believe
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Sola Scriptura: The
Scripture Alone is the Standard
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Glory of God Alone
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Solo Christo: By Christ's
Work Alone are We Saved
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Grace Alone
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Sola Fide: Justification by
Faith Alone
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"It is enough for good
people to do nothing, for evil people to succeed."
12 Little Things Every Filipino Can Do To Help Our Country
by Alexander L. Lacson
Keil & Delitzsch
Commentary on the Old Testament
(Genesis 5)
Genesis 5 -
II. History of Adam - Genesis 5-6:8
Generations from Adam to Noah - Genesis 5
The origin of the human race and the general character
of its development having been thus described, all that remained of
importance to universal or sacred history, in connection with the progress
of our race in the primeval age, was to record the order of the families
(Gen 5) and the ultimate result of the course which they pursued ( Gen_6:1-8).
- First of all, we have the genealogical table of Adam with the names of
the first ten patriarchs, who were at the head of that seed of the woman
by which the promise was preserved, viz., the posterity of the first pair
through Seth, from Adam to the flood. We have also an account of the ages
of these patriarchs before and after the birth of those sons in whom the
line was continued; so that the genealogy, which indicates the line of
development, furnishes at the same time a chronology of the primeval age.
In the genealogy of the Cainites no ages are given, since this family, as
being accursed by God, had no future history. On the other hand, the
family of Sethites, which acknowledged God, began from the time of Enos to
call upon the name of the Lord, and was therefore preserved and sustained
by God, in order that under the training of mercy and judgment the human
race might eventually attain to the great purpose of its creation. The
genealogies of the primeval age, to quote the apt words of M.
Baumgarten, are “memorials, which bear testimony quite as much to the
faithfulness of God in fulfilling His promise, as to the faith and
patience of the fathers themselves.” This testimony is first placed in its
true light by the numbers of the years. The historian gives not merely the
age of each patriarch at the time of the birth of the first-born, by whom
the line of succession was continued, but the number of years that he
lived after that, and then the entire length of his life. Now if we add
together the ages at the birth of the several first-born sons, and the
hundred years between the birth of Shem and the flood, we find that the
duration of the first period in the world's history was 1656 years. We
obtain a different result, however, from the numbers given by the lxx and
the Samaritan version, which differ in almost every instance from the
Hebrew text, both in Gen 5 and Gen 11 (from Shem to Terah), as will appear
from the table on the following page.
The principal deviations from the Hebrew in the case of
the other two texts are these: in Gen 5 the Samaritan places the birth of
the first-born of Jared, Methuselah, and Lamech 100 years earlier, whilst
the Septuagint places the birth of the first-born of all the other fathers
(except Noah) 100 years later than the Hebrew; in Gen 11 the latter course
is adopted in both texts in the case of all the fathers except Shem and
Terah. In consequence of this, the interval from Adam to the flood is
shortened in the Samaritan text by 349 years as compared with the Hebrew,
and in the Septuagint is lengthened by 586 (Cod. Alex. 606). The
interval from the flood to Abram is lengthened in both texts; in the
Sam. by 650 years, in the Sept. by 880 (Cod. Alex. 780).
In the latter, Cainan is interpolated between Arphaxad and Salah, which
adds 130 years, and the age of the first-born of Nahor is placed 150 years
later than in the Hebrew, whereas in the former the difference is only 50
years. With regard to the other differences, the reason for reducing the
lives of Jared, Methuselah, and Lamech in the Samaritan text after the
birth of their sons, was evidently to bring their deaths within the time
before the flood. The age of Methuselah, as given in the Cod. Alex.
of the lxx, is evidently to be accounted for on the same ground, since,
according to the numbers of the Vatican text, Methuselah must have lived
14 years after the flood. In the other divergences of these two texts from
the Hebrew, no definite purpose can be detected; at the same time they are
sufficient to show a twofold tendency, viz., to lengthen the interval from
the flood to Abram, and to reduce the ages of the fathers at the birth of
their first-born to greater uniformity, and to take care that the age of
Adam at the birth of Seth should not be exceeded by that of any other of
the patriarchs, especially in the time before the flood. To effect this,
the Sept. adds 100 years to the ages of all the fathers, before and
after the flood, whose sons were born before their 100th years; the
Sam., on the other hand, simply does this in the case of the fathers
who lived after the flood, whilst it deducts 100 years from the ages of
all the fathers before the flood who begot their first-born at a later
period of their life than Adam and Seth. The age of Noah alone is left
unaltered, because there were other data connected with the flood which
prevented any arbitrary alteration of the text. That the principal
divergences of both texts from the Hebrew are intentional changes, based
upon chronological theories or cycles, is sufficiently evident from their
internal character, viz., from the improbability of the statement, that
whereas the average duration of life after the flood was about half the
length that it was before, the time of life at which the fathers begot
their first-born after the flood was as late, and, according to the
Samaritan text, generally later than it had been before. No such intention
is discernible in the numbers of the Hebrew text; consequently every
attack upon the historical character of its numerical statements has
entirely failed, and no tenable argument can be adduced against their
correctness. The objection, that such longevity as that recorded in our
chapter is inconceivable according to the existing condition of human
nature, loses all its force if we consider “that all the memorials of the
old world contain evidence of gigantic power; that the climate, the
weather, and other natural conditions, were different from those after the
flood; that life was much more simple and uniform; and that the
after-effects of the condition of man in paradise would not be immediately
exhausted” (Delitzsch). This longevity, moreover,
necessarily contributed greatly to the increase of the human race; and the
circumstance that the children were not born till a comparatively advanced
period of life, - that is, until the corporeal and mental development of
the parent was perfectly complete, - necessarily favoured the generation
of a powerful race. From both these circumstances, however, the
development of the race was sure to be characterized by peculiar energy in
evil as well as in good; so that whilst in the godly portion of the race,
not only were the traditions of the fathers transmitted faithfully and
without adulteration from father to son, but family characteristics,
piety, discipline, and morals took deep root, whilst in the ungodly
portion time was given for sin to develop itself with mighty power in its
innumerable forms.
(Note: The numbers in brackets are the reading of the
Cod. Alexandrinus of the lxx. In the genealogical table,
Gen_11:10
ff., the Samaritan text is the only one which gives the whole duration
of life.)
Gen 5:1-2 -
The heading in
Gen_5:1 runs thus: “This is the book (sepher)
of the generations (tholedoth)
of Adam.” On
tholedoth, see
Gen_2:4.
Sepher is a writing complete in itself, whether it consist of one sheet or
several, as for instance the “bill of divorcement” in
Deu_24:1,
Deu_24:3.
The addition of the clause, “in the day that God created man,”
etc., is analogous to Gen_2:4;
the creation being mentioned again as the starting point, because all the
development and history of humanity was rooted there.
Gen 5:3-32 -
As Adam was created in the image of God, so did he
beget “in his own likeness, after his image;” that is to say, he
transmitted the image of God in which he was created, not in the purity in
which it came direct from God, but in the form given to it by his own
self-determination, modified and corrupted by sin. The begetting of the
son by whom the line was perpetuated (no doubt in every case the
first-born), is followed by an account of the number of years that Adam
and the other fathers lived after that, by the statement that each one
begat (other) sons and daughters, by the number of years that he lived
altogether, and lastly, by the assertion
וַיָּמֹת
“and he died.” This apparently superfluous announcement is
“intended to indicate by its constant recurrence that death reigned from
Adam downwards as an unchangeable law (vid.,
Rom_5:14). But
against this background of universal death, the power of life was still
more conspicuous. For the man did not die till he had propagated life, so
that in the midst of the death of individuals the life of the race was
preserved, and the hope of the seed sustained, by which the author of
death should be overcome.” In the case of one of the fathers indeed, viz.,
Enoch (Gen_5:21.),
life had not only a different issue, but also a different form. Instead of
the expression “and he lived,” which introduces in every other instance
the length of life after the birth of the first-born, we find in the case
of Enoch this statement, “he walked with God (Elohim);”
and instead of the expression “and he died,” the announcement, “and
he was not, for God (Elohim) took him.” The phrase
“walked with God,” which is only applied to Enoch and Noah (Gen_6:9),
denotes the most confidential intercourse, the closest communion with the
personal God, a walking as it were by the side of God, who still continued
His visible intercourse with men (vid.,
Gen_3:8). It
must be distinguished from “walking before God” (Gen_17:1;
Gen_24:40,
etc.), and “walking after God” (Deu_13:4),
both which phrases are used to indicate a pious, moral, blameless life
under the law according to the directions of the divine commands. The only
other passage in which this expression “walk with God” occurs is
Mal_2:6, where
it denotes not the piety of the godly Israelites generally, but the
conduct of the priests, who stood in a closer relation to Jehovah
under the Old Testament than the rest of the faithful, being permitted to
enter the Holy Place, and hold direct intercourse with Him there, which
the rest of the people could not do. The article in
האלהים
gives prominence to the personality of Elohim, and shows that the
expression cannot refer to intercourse with the spiritual world.
In Enoch, the seventh from Adam through Seth, godliness
attained its highest point; whilst ungodliness culminated in Lamech, the
seventh from Adam through Cain, who made his sword his god. Enoch,
therefore, like Elijah, was taken away by God, and carried into the
heavenly paradise, so that he did not see (experience) death ( Heb_11:5);
i.e., he was taken up from this temporal life and transfigured into life
eternal, being exempted by God from the law of death and of return to the
dust, as those of the faithful will be, who shall be alive at the coming
of Christ to judgment, and who in like manner shall not taste of death and
corruption, but be changed in a moment. There is no foundation for the
opinion, that Enoch did not participate at his translation in the
glorification which awaits the righteous at the resurrection. For,
according to 1Co_15:20,
1Co_15:23,
it is not in glorification, but in the resurrection, that Christ is the
first-fruits. Now the latter presupposes death. Whoever, therefore,
through the grace of God is exempted from death, cannot rise from the
dead, but reaches
ἀφθαρσία,
or the glorified state of perfection, through being “changed” or “clothed
upon” (2Co_5:4).
This does not at all affect the truth of the statement in
Rom_5:12,
Rom_5:14.
For the same God who has appointed death as the wages of sin, and given
us, through Christ, the victory over death, possesses the power to glorify
into eternal life an Enoch and an Elijah, and all who shall be alive at
the coming of the Lord without chaining their glorification to death and
resurrection. Enoch and Elijah were translated into eternal life with God
without passing through disease, death, and corruption, for the
consolation of believers, and to awaken the hope of a life after death.
Enoch's translation stands about half way between Adam and the flood, in
the 987th year after the creation of Adam. Seth, Enos, Cainan, Mahalaleel,
and Jared were still alive. His son Methuselah and his grandson Lamech
were also living, the latter being 113 years old. Noah was not yet born,
and Adam was dead. His translation, in consequence of his walking with
God, was “an example of repentance to all generations,” as the son of
Sirach says (Ecclus. 44:16); and the apocryphal legend in the book of
Enoch Gen_1:9
represents him as prophesying of the coming of the Lord, to execute
judgment upon the ungodly (Jud_1:14-15).
In comparison with the longevity of the other fathers, Enoch was taken
away young, before he had reached half the ordinary age, as a sign that
whilst long life, viewed as a time for repentance and grace, is indeed a
blessing from God, when the ills which have entered the world through sin
are considered, it is also a burden and trouble which God shortens for His
chosen. That the patriarchs of the old world felt the ills of this earthly
life in all their severity, was attested by Lamech (Gen_5:28,
Gen_5:29),
when he gave his son, who was born 69 years after Enoch's translation, the
name of Noah, saying, “This same shall comfort us concerning our
work and the toil of our hands, because of the ground which the Lord hath
cursed.” Noah,
נֹוחַ
from
נוּחַ to rest and
הֵנִיחַ
to bring rest, is explained by
נִחַם
to comfort, in the sense of helpful and remedial consolation. Lamech not
only felt the burden of his work upon the ground which God had cursed, but
looked forward with a prophetic presentiment to the time when the existing
misery and corruption would terminate, and a change for the better, a
redemption from the curse, would come. This presentiment assumed the form
of hope when his son was born; he therefore gave expression to it in his
name. But his hope was not realized, at least not in the way that he
desired. A change did indeed take place in the lifetime of Noah. By the
judgment of the flood the corrupt race was exterminated, and in Noah, who
was preserved because of his blameless walk with God, the restoration of
the human race was secured; but the effects of the curse, though
mitigated, were not removed; whilst a covenant sign guaranteed the
preservation of the human race, and therewith, by implication, his hope of
the eventual removal of the curse (Gen_9:8-17).
The genealogical table breaks off with Noah; all that
is mentioned with reference to him being the birth of his three sons, when
he was 500 years old ( Gen_5:32;
see Gen_11:10),
without any allusion to the remaining years of his life-an indication of a
later hand. “The mention of three sons leads to the expectation, that
whereas hitherto the line has been perpetuated through one member alone,
in the future each of the three sons will form a new beginning (vid.,
Gen_9:18-19;
Gen_10:1).”
- M. Baumgarten.
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