|


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
|
|
What We Believe
-
Sola Scriptura: The
Scripture Alone is the Standard
-
Soli Deo Gloria: For the
Glory of God Alone
-
Solo Christo: By Christ's
Work Alone are We Saved
-
Sola Gratia: Salvation by
Grace Alone
-
Sola Fide: Justification by
Faith Alone
|
World Without End Ministry
P.O. Box 177
Cagayan de Oro
Central Post Office
Cagayan de Oro 9000
Mindanao, Philippines |
 |
|
"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 7)
Gen 7:1-16 -
Gen_7:1-12
When the ark was built, and the period of grace ( Gen_6:3)
had passed, Noah received instructions from Jehovah to enter the
ark with his family, and with the animals, viz., seven of every kind of
clean animals, and two of the unclean; and was informed that within seven
days God would cause it to rain upon the earth forty days and forty
nights. The date of the flood is then given (Gen_7:6):
“Noah was six hundred years old, and the flood was (namely)
water upon the earth;” and the execution of the divine command is
recorded in Gen_7:7-9.
There follows next the account of the bursting forth of the flood, the
date being given with still greater minuteness; and the entrance of the
men and animals into the ark is again described as being fully
accomplished (Gen_7:10-16).
- The fact that in the command to enter the ark a distinction is now made
between clean and unclean animals, seven of the former being ordered to be
taken, - i.e., three pair and a single one, probably a male for
sacrifice-is no more a proof of different authorship, or of the fusion of
two accounts, than the interchange of the names Jehovah and
Elohim. For the distinction between clean and unclean animals did not
originate with Moses, but was confirmed by him as a long established
custom, in harmony with the law. It reached back to the very earliest
times, and arose from a certain innate feeling of the human mind, when
undisturbed by unnatural and ungodly influences, which detects types of
sin and corruption in many animals, and instinctively recoils from them
(see my biblische Archäeologie ii. p. 20). That the variations in
the names of God furnish no criterion by which to detect different
documents, is evident enough from the fact, that in
Gen_7:1 it is
Jehovah who commands Noah to enter the ark, and in
Gen_7:4 Noah
does as Elohim had commanded, whilst in
Gen_7:16, in
two successive clauses, Elohim alternates with Jehovah-the
animals entering the ark at the command of Elohim, and Jehovah
shutting Noah in. With regard to the entrance of the animals into the ark,
it is worthy of notice, that in
Gen_7:9 and
Gen_7:15 it is
stated that “they came two and two,” and in
Gen_7:16 that
“the coming ones came male and female of all flesh.” In this
expression “they came” it is clearly intimated, that the animals collected
about Noah and were taken into the ark, without his having to exert
himself to collect them, and that they did so in consequence of an
instinct produced by God, like that which frequently leads animals to
scent and try to flee from dangers, of which man has no presentiment. The
time when the flood commenced is said to have been the 600th year of
Noah's life, on the 17th day of the second month (Gen_7:11).
The months must be reckoned, not according to the Mosaic ecclesiastical
year, which commenced in the spring, but according to the natural of civil
year, which commenced in the autumn at the beginning of sowing time, or
the autumnal equinox; so that the flood would be pouring upon the earth in
October and November. “The same day were all the fountains of the great
deep (תְּהֹום
the unfathomable ocean) broken up, and the sluices (windows,
lattices) of heaven opened, and there was (happened, came)
pouring rain (גֶּשֶׁם
in distinction from
טָטָר)
upon the earth 40 days and 40 nights.” Thus the flood was produced
by the bursting forth of fountains hidden within the earth, which drove
seas and rivers above their banks, and by rain which continued incessantly
for 40 days and 40 nights.
Gen_7:13-16
“In the self-same day had Noah...entered into the
ark:”
בָּא,
pluperfect “had come,” not came, which would require
יָבֹא.
The idea is not that Noah, with his family and all the animals, entered
the ark on the very day on which the rain began, but that on that day he
had entered, had completed the entering, which occupied the seven days
between the giving of the command (Gen_7:4)
and the commencement of the flood (Gen_7:10).
Gen 7:17-24 -
Gen_7:17-24 contain a
description of the flood: how the water increased more and more, till it
was 15 cubits above all the lofty mountains of the earth, and how, on the
one hand, it raised the ark above the earth and above the mountains, and,
on the other, destroyed every living being upon the dry land, from man to
cattle, creeping things, and birds. “The description is simple and
majestic; the almighty judgment of God, and the love manifest in the midst
of the wrath, hold the historian fast. The tautologies depict the fearful
monotony of the immeasurable expanse of water: omnia pontus erant et
deerant litera ponto.” The words of
Gen_7:17, “and
the flood was (came) upon the earth for forty days,” relate to
the 40 days' rain combined with the bursting forth of the foundations
beneath the earth. By these the water was eventually raised to the height
given, at which it remained 150 days (Gen_7:24).
But if the water covered “all the high hills under the whole heaven,”
this clearly indicates the universality of the flood. The statement,
indeed, that it rose 15 cubits above the mountains, is probably founded
upon the fact, that the ark drew 15 feet of water, and that when the
waters subsided, it rested upon the top of Ararat, from which the
conclusion would very naturally be drawn as to the greatest height
attained. Now as Ararat, according to the measurement of Perrot, is
only 16,254 feet high, whereas the loftiest peaks of the Himalaya and
Cordilleras are as much as 26,843, the submersion of these mountains has
been thought impossible, and the statement in
Gen_7:19 has
been regarded as a rhetorical expression, like
Deu_2:25 and
Deu_4:19,
which is not of universal application. But even if those peaks, which are
higher than Ararat, were not covered by water, we cannot therefore
pronounce the flood merely partial in its extent, but must regard it as
universal, as extending over every part of the world, since the few peaks
uncovered would not only sink into vanishing points in comparison with the
surface covered, but would form an exception not worth mentioning, for the
simple reason that no living beings could exist upon these mountains,
covered with perpetual snow and ice; so that everything that lived upon
the dry land, in whose nostrils there was a breath of life, would
inevitably die, and, with the exception of those shut up in the ark,
neither man nor beast would be able to rescue itself, and escape
destruction. A flood which rose 15 cubits above the top of Ararat could
not remain partial, if it only continued a few days, to say nothing of the
fact that the water was rising for 40 days, and remained at the highest
elevation for 150 days. To speak of such a flood as partial is absurd,
even if it broke out at only one spot, it would spread over the earth from
one end to the other, and reach everywhere to the same elevation. However
impossible, therefore, scientific men may declare it to be for them to
conceive of a universal flood of such a height and duration in accordance
with the known laws of nature, this inability on their part does not
justify any one in questioning the possibility of such an event being
produced by the omnipotence of God. It has been justly remarked, too, that
the proportion of such a quantity of water to the entire mass of the
earth, in relation to which the mountains are but like the scratches of a
needle on a globe, is no greater than that of a profuse perspiration to
the body of a man. And to this must be added, that, apart from the legend
of a flood, which is found in nearly every nation, the earth presents
unquestionable traces of submersion in the fossil remains of animals and
plants, which are found upon the Cordilleras and Himalaya even beyond the
limit of perpetual snow.
(Note: The geological facts which testify to the
submersion of the entire globe are collected in Buckland's reliquiae
diluv., Schubert's Gesch. der Natur, and C. v. Raumer's
Geography, and are of such importance that even Cuvier
acknowledged “Je pense donc, avec MM. Deluc et Dolomieu, que s'il y a
quelque chose de constaté en géologie; c'est que la surface de notre
globe a été victime d'une grande et subite révolution, dont la date ne
peut remonter beaucoup au delà de cinq ou six mille ans ”
(Discours sur les rιvol. de la surface du globe, p. 190, ed. 6).
The latest phase of geology, however, denies that these facts furnish
any testimony to the historical character of the flood, and substitutes
the hypothesis of a submersion of the entire globe before the creation
of man: 1. because the animals found are very different from those at
present in existence; and 2. because no certain traces have hitherto
been found of fossil human bones. We have already shown that there is no
force in these arguments. Vid., Keerl, pp. 489ff.)
In Gen_7:23,
instead of
וַיִּמַּח
(imperf. Niphal) read
וַיּמַח
(imperf. Kal): “and He (Jehovah) destroyed every
existing thing,” as He had said in
Gen_7:4.
[Home]
[Keil & Delitzsch]
|
Bethel Missionary Baptist:
The name Bethel comes from the Hebrew beth,
meaning house,
and el, meaning God. Bethel means "The House of
God."
Church in the Philippines |
|