Verse 1
Genesis 7:1. Come thou, and all
thy house, into the ark — His
family consisted only of eight
persons, 1 Peter 3:20, namely,
Noah and his three sons, and
their four wives, Genesis 6:18.
By this it appears that each man
had but one wife, and
consequently it is probable,
that, as polygamy began in the
posterity of Cain, so it was
confined to them, and had not,
as yet, got footing among the
sons of God. For if ever
polygamy had been allowable, it
must have been now for
repeopling of the perishing
world. For thee have I seen
righteous before me — With the
righteousness of faith, as it is
explained Hebrews 11:7,
evidenced by the fruits of
righteousness and true holiness.
Those are righteous indeed, that
are righteous before God; that
have not only the form of
godliness, by which they appear
righteous before men, who may
easily be imposed upon; but the
power of it, by which they
approve themselves to God, who
searcheth the heart.
Verse 2
Genesis 7:2. Here are necessary
orders given concerning the
brute creatures that were to be
preserved alive with Noah in the
ark. He must carefully preserve
every species, that no tribe,
no, not the least considerable,
might entirely perish out of the
creation. Even the unclean
beasts, that were least
valuable, were preserved alive
in the ark. For God’s tender
mercies are over all his works,
and not only over those that are
of most use; yet more of the
clean were preserved than of the
unclean. 1st, Because the clean
were most for the service of
man; and therefore, in favour to
him, more of them were
preserved, and are still
propagated. Thanks be to God,
there are not herds of lions as
there are of oxen; nor flocks of
tigers, as there are of sheep.
2d, Because the clean were for
sacrifice to God; and therefore,
in honour to him, more of them
were preserved, three couple for
breed, and the odd seventh for
sacrifice, Genesis 8:20.
Verse 4
Genesis 7:4. Yet seven days — Or
after seven days, which time the
long- suffering of God (1 Peter
3:20) granted to the world, as a
further space for repentance, of
which, therefore, it is
probable, Noah gave them notice.
And it is not unlikely that many
of them, who slighted the
threatening when it was at the
distance of one hundred and
twenty years, now hearing
another threatening, and
considering the nearness of
their danger, might be more
affected, and brought to
repentance. And although
destroyed, as to their bodies,
by the flood, for their former
and long-continued impenitence,
yet might be saved in their
spirits, 1 Peter 4:6. And as it
is likely that some, who were
preserved from the waters by the
ark, nevertheless, at last,
perished in hell; so some that
were drowned in the deluge might
be eternally saved into heaven.
With respect, however, to the
generality, this reprieve was
certainly in vain: see Luke
17:26, and 2 Peter 2:5. These
seven days were trifled away
after all the rest, and they
continued secure until the day
that the flood came. While Noah
told them of the judgment at a
distance, they were tempted to
put off their repentance: but
now he is ordered to tell them
that it is at the door; that
they have but one week more to
turn them in, to see if that
will now at last awaken them to
consider the things that belong
to their peace. But it is common
for those that have been
careless for their souls during
the years of their health, when
they have looked upon death at a
distance, to be as careless
during the days, the seven days
of their sickness, when they see
it approaching, their hearts
being hardened by the
deceitfulness of sin. Reader,
art thou the man?
Verse 11
Genesis 7:11. In the six
hundredth year of Noah’s life,
second month, the seventeenth
day — It must be observed here,
that the year among the Hebrews
was two-fold: the one sacred,
for the celebration of feasts,
beginning in March, Exodus
12:12; the other civil, for
men’s political or civil
affairs, beginning in September.
Accordingly this second month
has been thought by some to have
been part of April and part of
May, the most pleasant time of
the year, when a flood was least
expected or feared; by others,
part of October and part of
November, a little after Noah
had gathered in the fruits of
the earth and laid them up in
the ark: so that the flood came
in with the winter, and was, by
degrees, dried up by the heat of
the following summer. And this
latter opinion seems more
probable, because the most
ancient and first beginning of
the year was in September; and
the other beginning of it in
March, a later institution,
which took place among the Jews,
with respect to their feasts and
religious affairs only, which
are not concerned here. The
fountains of the great deep were
broken up — There needed no new
creation of waters; God has laid
up the deep in storehouses,
Psalms 33:7; and now he broke up
those stores. God had, in the
creation, set bars and doors to
the waters of the sea, that they
might not return to cover the
earth, Psalms 104:9; Job
38:9-11; and now he only removed
these ancient mounds and fences,
and the waters returned to cover
the earth, as they had done at
first, chap. Genesis 1:9. And
the windows of heaven were
opened — And the waters which
were above the firmament were
poured out upon the world; those
treasures which God, has
reserved against the time of
trouble, the day of battle and
war, Job 38:22-23. The rain,
which ordinarily descends in
drops, then came down in
streams. We read, Job 26:8, that
God binds up the waters in his
thick clouds, and the cloud is
not rent under them; but now the
bond was loosed, the cloud was
rent, and such rains descended
as were never known before or
since.
Verse 12
Genesis 7:12. Forty days and
forty nights — By proceeding in
this gradual way, God, it is
hoped, both awakened many to
repentance, and gave them space
for it.
Verse 14
Genesis 7:14. Every beast after
his kind — According to the
phrase used in the history of
the creation, Genesis 1:21, to
intimate, that as many species
as were created were now saved.
Every fowl and every bird — The
former word in the original
signifies the larger, the
latter, the less sort of birds;
of every sort — The Hebrew is,
of every kind of wing, whether
feathered, as the wing is in
most birds, or skinny, as in
bats.
Verse 19-20
Genesis 7:19-20. All the high
hills, and the mountains were
covered — Therefore, there were
hills and mountains before the
flood. Deists, and other
infidels, would persuade us that
this was impossible, because of
the vast height of divers hills
and mountains. But, not to
mention here that this fact has
been established by the
universal consent of all
nations, that there was a
general deluge which over-flowed
the whole world, and that it has
been demonstrated by different
writers that there is in nature
a sufficient quantity of water
to deluge it, concerning both
which see the Encyclopędia
Britannica; it will be
sufficient to observe here, that
this cannot be thought
impossible by any one who
believes in the existence of
such a being as Jehovah, a God
of infinite power, to whom it
surely was as easy to bring
forth a sufficiency of water for
this purpose, as it was to
create all things by the word of
his power, or to say, Let there
be light, and there was light.
It is evident Moses, the
historian, makes no difficulty
on this subject. So far from
questioning whether the quantity
of water in the earth and
atmosphere was sufficient, he
thought the sources from whence
it came were not exhausted,
since both of them required to
be stopped by the same almighty
hand that opened them, lest the
flood should increase more than
it actually did.
Verse 21
Genesis 7:21. All flesh died;
all that was on the dry land —
And why so? Man only had done
wickedly, and justly is God’s
hand against him, but these
sheep, what have they done? I
answer, 1st, We are sure God did
them no wrong. He is the
sovereign Lord of all life; for
he is the sole fountain and
author of it. He that made them
as he pleased, might unmake them
when he pleased, and who shall
say unto God, What dost thou?
2d, God did admirably serve the
purposes of his own glory by
their destruction, as well as by
their creation. Herein his
holiness and justice were
greatly magnified: by this it
appears that he hates sin, and
is highly displeased with
sinners, since even the inferior
creatures, because they are the
servants of man, and part of his
possession, and because they had
been abused to be the servants
of sin, are destroyed with him.
It was likewise an instance of
God’s wisdom. As the creatures
were made for man when he was
made, so they were multiplied
for him when he was multiplied;
and, therefore, now mankind was
reduced to so small a number, it
was fit that the beasts should
proportionably be reduced,
otherwise they would have had
the dominion, and would have
replenished the earth, and the
remnant of mankind that was left
would have been overpowered by
them. |