Verse 1
Genesis 9:1. God blessed Noah
and his sons — He assured them
of his good- will to them, and
his gracious intentions
concerning them. The first
blessing is here renewed, Be
fruitful, and multiply, and
replenish the earth, and
repeated, Genesis 9:7; for the
race of mankind was, as it were,
to begin again. By virtue of
this blessing mankind were to be
both multiplied and perpetuated
upon earth; so that in a little
time all the habitable parts of
the earth should be more or less
inhabited; and though one
generation should pass away, yet
another generation should come,
so that the stream of the human
race should be supplied with a
constant succession, and run
parallel with the current of
time, till both should be
swallowed up in the ocean of
eternity.
Verse 3
Genesis 9:3. Every moving thing
— Which is wholesome and fit for
food, shall be meat for you:
That liveth — This may be added
to exclude the use of those
creatures which died of
themselves, or were killed by
wild beasts. These, which were
afterward expressly forbidden to
be eaten, (see Exodus 22:31,
Leviticus 22:8,) may here be
forbidden implicitly. Hitherto
man had been confined to feed
only upon the products of the
earth, fruits, herbs, and roots,
and all sorts of corn and milk;
such was the first grant,
Genesis 1:29. But the flood
having perhaps washed away much
of the virtue of the earth, and
so rendered its fruits less
pleasing, and less nourishing,
God now enlarged the grant, and
allowed man to eat flesh, which
perhaps man himself never
thought of till now. The Jewish
doctors speak so often of the
seven precepts of Noah, which
they say were to be observed by
all nations, that it may not be
amiss to set them down here.
The first was against the
worship of idols: the second
against blasphemy; and requires
to bless the name of God: the
third against murder: the fourth
against incest and all
uncleanness: the fifth against
theft and rapine: the sixth
required the administration of
justice: the seventh was against
eating flesh with life. The Jews
required the observation of
these from the proselytes of the
gate. But the precepts here
given, all concern the life of
man. Man must not prejudice his
own life by eating that food
which is unwholesome and
prejudicial to his health.
Verse 4
Genesis 9:4. But flesh with the
blood thereof shall ye not eat —
One meaning of this may be, Ye
shall not cut off, tear away, or
take any member or part of any
creature for your food, while it
is yet alive; but ye shall first
spill its blood, and thereby put
it to death in the way most easy
to it. This is the sense which
the Jews give the words, and,
thus understood, they contain a
prohibition of all cruelty
toward those animals which are
killed for food. And the
prohibition, in this point of
view, was not unnecessary, the
practice here condemned being
not unusual in ancient nor even
in modern times, in many parts
of the East. The principal
meaning, however, of the
passage, is to prohibit the
eating of blood in any way, the
eating of which seems to have
been forbidden especially for
two reasons: 1st, To be a token
to mankind in all ages, that
they would have had no right to
take the life of any animal for
food, if God had not given them
that right, and who, therefore,
to remind them of it, and
impress it on their minds in all
generations, denied them the use
of blood, and required it to be
spilled upon the ground: 2d: In
honour of the blood of
atonement, Leviticus 17:11-12.
The life of the sacrifice was
accepted for the life of the
sinner, and blood made atonement
for the soul, and therefore must
not be looked upon as a common
thing, but must be poured out
before the Lord, 2 Samuel 23:16.
And it ought to be observed,
that this prohibition of eating
blood, given to Noah and all his
posterity, and repeated to the
Israelites, in a most solemn
manner, under the Mosaic
dispensation, has never been
revoked, but, on the contrary,
has been confirmed under the New
Testament, Acts 15.; and thereby
made of perpetual obligation.
Verse 5
Genesis 9:5. And surely your
blood of your lives will I
require — The sense is, If I am
thus careful of the blood of
beasts, be assured I will be
much more solicitous for the
blood of men, when it shall be
shed by unjust and violent
hands. Our own lives are not so
our own that we may quit them at
our own pleasure; but they are
God’s, and we must resign them
at his pleasure. If we any way
hasten our own deaths, we are
accountable to God for it. Yea,
At the hand of every beast will
I require it — To show how
tender God was of the life of
man, he will have the beast put
to death that kills a man. This
was confirmed by the law of
Moses, Exodus 21:28, and it
would not be improper to observe
it still. And at the hand of
every man’s brother will I
require the life of man — I will
avenge the blood of the murdered
upon the murderer. When God
requires the life of a man at
the hand of him that took it
away unjustly, as he cannot
render that, therefore he must
render his own in lieu of it,
which is the only way he hath of
making restitution.
Verse 6
Genesis 9:6. Whoso sheddeth
man’s blood — Whether upon a
sudden provocation, or
premeditated, (for rash anger is
heart-murder, as well as malice
prepense, Matthew 5:21-22,) by
man shall his blood be shed —
That is, by the magistrate, or
whoever is appointed to be the
avenger of blood. Before the
flood, as it should seem by the
story of Cain, God took the
punishment of murder into his
own hands; but now he committed
this judgment to men, to masters
of families at first, and
afterward to the heads of
countries. For in the image of
God made he man — Man is a
creature dear to his Creator,
and, therefore, ought to be so
to us: God put honour upon him,
let us not then put contempt
upon him. Such remains of God’s
image are still even upon fallen
man, that he who unjustly kills
a man, defaceth the image of
God, and doth dishonour to him.
And what then shall we say of
those who commit wilful and
deliberate murder in duels? And
what shall we say of the
magistracy in any country that
does not suppress this
diabolical practice?
Verse 9
Genesis 9:9. Behold, I establish
my covenant, &c. — We have here
the general establishment of
God’s covenant with this new
world, and the extent of that
covenant.
Verse 11
Genesis 9:11. There shall not
any more be a flood — God had
drowned the world once, and
still it is as provoking as
ever; yet he will never drown it
any more, for he deals not with
us according to our sins. This
promise of God keeps the sea and
clouds in their decreed places,
and “sets them gates and bars:
Hitherto they shall come,” Job
38:10-11. If the sea should flow
but for a few days, as it doth
twice every day for a few hours,
what desolations would it make!
So would the clouds, if such
showers as we have sometimes
seen, were continued long. But
God, by flowing seas and
sweeping rains, shows what he
could do in wrath; and yet by
preserving the earth from being
deluged between both, shows what
he can do in mercy, and will do
in truth.
Verse 13
Genesis 9:13. I set my bow in
the clouds — The rainbow, it is
likely, was seen in the clouds
before, but was never a seal of
the covenant till now. Now,
observe, 1st, This seal is
affixed with repeated assurances
of the truth of that promise,
which it was designed to be the
ratification of; I do set my bow
in the cloud, Genesis 9:13. It
shall be seen in the cloud,
Genesis 9:14, and it shall be a
token of the covenant, Genesis
9:12-13. And I will remember my
covenant, that the waters shall
no more become a flood, Genesis
9:15. Nay, as if the Eternal
Mind needed a memorandum, I will
look upon it that I may remember
the everlasting covenant,
Genesis 9:16. 2d, The rainbow
appears when the clouds are most
disposed to wet; when we have
most reason to fear the rain
prevailing, God shows this seal
of the promise that it shall not
prevail. 3d, The rainbow appears
when one part of the sky is
clear, which intimates mercy
remembered in the midst of
wrath, and the clouds are
hemmed, as it were, with the
rainbow, that they may not
overspread the heavens; for the
bow is coloured rain, or the
edges of a cloud gilded. As God
looks upon the bow that he may
remember the covenant, so should
we, that we also may be ever
mindful of the covenant with
faith and thankfulness.
Verse 20
Genesis 9:20. And Noah began to
be a husbandman — (Hebrews a man
of the earth,) a man dealing in
the earth, that kept ground in
his hand and occupied it. Some
time after his departure out of
the ark he returned to his old
employment, from which he had
been diverted by the building of
the ark first, and probably
after by the building a house
for himself and family. And he
planted a vineyard — And when he
had gathered his vintage,
probably he appointed a day of
mirth and feasting in his
family, and had his sons and
their children with him, to
rejoice with him in the increase
of his house, as well as in the
increase of his vineyard; and we
may suppose he prefaced his
feast with a sacrifice to the
honour of God. If that were
omitted, it was just with God to
leave him to himself, to end
with the beasts that which did
not begin with God: but we
charitably hope he did. And
perhaps he appointed this feast
with design, in the close of it,
to bless his sons, as Isaac,
Genesis 27:3-4, “That I may eat,
and that my soul may bless
thee.”
Verse 21
Genesis 9:21. And he drank of
the wine, and was drunk — It is
highly probable he did not know
the effect of it before. And he
was uncovered in his tent — Made
naked to his shame.
Verse 22
Genesis 9:22. And Ham saw the
nakedness of his father, and
told his two brethren — To have
seen it accidentally and
involuntarily would not have
been a crime. But he pleased
himself with the sight. And he
told his brethren without — In
the street, as the word is, in a
scornful, deriding manner.
Verse 23
Genesis 9:23. And Shem and
Japheth took a garment, &c. —
They not only would not see it
themselves, but provided that no
one else might see it; herein
setting an example of charity
with reference to other men’s
sin and shame.
Verse 24
Genesis 9:24. Noah knew — Either
by the information of his sons,
or by divine inspiration, what
his younger son, (Hebrews his
son, הקשׂן, the younger, or
little one,) had done unto him.
Canaan is thought by many to be
chiefly intended. 1st, Because
the following curse is
appropriated to him; and, 2d,
Because the title of younger,
little son, does not seem so
properly added if Ham be meant,
it not being probable that he
was the youngest of Noah’s sons;
for when they are mentioned
together, he is never named
last, but always second. Be this
as it may, it is very likely he
partook of his father’s sin, and
probably first saw the situation
which his grandfather was in,
and told it to his father, who
then told it to his brethren.
Verse 25
Genesis 9:25. Cursed be Canaan —
Canaan may be here put, by a
well-known figure termed
ellipsis, often used in
Scripture, for the father of
Canaan, the title given to Ham
in Genesis 9:22. And although
Ham had more sons, he may here
be described by his relation to
Canaan, because in him the curse
was more fixed and dreadful,
reaching to the utter
extirpation of his seed, while
many of the other nations
descended from Ham were, in
after ages, blessed with the
knowledge of the true God and
the gospel of his Son. A servant
of servants shall he (namely,
the father of Canaan, Ham) be to
his brethren — That is, in his
posterity; whose condition in
every age has remarkably
coincided with the prediction.
“The whole continent of Africa
was peopled principally by the
descendants of Ham, and for how
many ages did the better parts
of that country lie under the
dominion of the Romans, and then
of the Saracens, as they do now
under that of the Turks! In what
wickedness, ignorance,
barbarity, slavery, misery, live
most of the inhabitants! And of
the poor negroes how many
hundreds, nay thousands, have
been annually sold and bought,
like beasts in the market, and
conveyed from one quarter of the
world to do the work of beasts
in another!” — Newton on the
Prophecies. “There never has
been a son of Ham who hath
shaken a sceptre over the head
of Japheth. Shem hath subdued
Japheth, and Japheth subdued
Shem, but Ham never subdued
either.” — Mede. The curse,
however, principally respects
the posterity of Canaan, the
devoted nations whom God
destroyed before Israel, and is
here recorded for the
encouragement of the Israelites,
who, it is probable, when Moses
wrote these words, were about to
march against them and to take
possession of their country,
about eight hundred years after
the words were uttered by Noah.
The Phœnicians and Carthaginians
are also included in the curse
denounced on Canaan; for they
were descended from him, and
were, at length, subdued with
dreadful destruction by the
Greeks and Romans, and made
tributary to them both.
Verse 26
Genesis 9:26. Blessed be the
Lord God of Shem — Abraham and
all his posterity were included
in the descendants of Shem, as
appears from the next chapter.
Our Lord Jesus Christ,
therefore, in whom all the
nations of the earth are to be
blessed, sprang from him. Well,
therefore, might Jehovah be
called the Lord God of Shem.
Most of the worshippers of the
true God, before the coming of
the Messiah, were of his seed,
and afterward the descendants of
Shem were the chief instruments
of bringing other nations to
join in God’s worship, and to
partake of the blessings of his
salvation. Thus Shem is well
recompensed for his respect to
his father, and the being thus
informed of the blessings that
awaited his posterity, must have
been a great consolation to him,
as it, no doubt, was afterward
to the truly pious of his seed.
Verse 27
Genesis 9:27. God shall enlarge
Japheth — Most of the
inhabitants of Europe, termed in
the next chapter, the isles of
the Gentiles, and those of the
northern parts of Asia, were
descended from Japheth; and if,
as is generally supposed,
America was peopled from the
north-east of Asia, the original
inhabitants of that country also
were his offspring. And he shall
dwell in the tents of Shem — His
seed shall be so numerous, and
so victorious, that they shall
be masters of the tents of Shem.
This was fulfilled when the
people of the Jews, the most
eminent of Shem’s race, were
subjected and made tributaries,
first to the Grecians, and
afterward to the Romans, both of
Japheth’s seed. This also
signifies the conversion of the
Gentiles, and the bringing of
them into the Church of God; and
with a reference to this, the
words should be rendered, as
they properly may, God shall
persuade Japheth; and being so
persuaded, he shall dwell in the
tents of Shem: that is, the Jews
and Gentiles shall be united
together in the church of God.
And after many of the Gentiles
shall be proselyted to the
Jewish religion, both Jews and
Gentiles shall be one in Christ.
And Canaan shall be his servant
— Servant to Shem, and servant
to Japheth; for it is affirmed
with respect to both. And a very
slight acquaintance with ancient
or modern history will be
sufficient to convince any
serious inquirer of the exact
accomplishment of the
prediction. For the descendants
of Canaan have been under
subjection to those of Shem and
Japheth through many
generations. In this wonderful
prophecy, therefore, which
includes an outline of the
history of all nations and ages,
we have a demonstration of the
divine inspiration of him who
uttered it, as well as of him
who recorded it, as Bishop
Newton has shown in his most
admirable Exposition of the
Prophecies: a decisive proof
this, of the certainty and
importance of these records of
eternal truth!
Verse 28
Genesis 9:28. Noah lived after
the flood three hundred and
fifty years — Which period, as
the Jews observe, reaches to the
fifty-eighth year of Abraham’s
age. So that we need be under no
difficulty in accounting for the
transmission of the original
revelation made to Adam, and of
other branches of divine truth,
from the beginning of the world
to the time of Abraham. Noah
received these from his parents,
who had the account from Adam’s
own mouth, and transmitted it to
Abraham. And its communication
and descent from him to the
Jews, and from the Jews to us,
is sufficiently known. Within
this time also Noah saw the
building of the tower of Babel,
the horrid wickedness and
idolatry of his children, and
the bloody wars which even then
began to arise between some of
them.
Verse 29
Genesis 9:29. All the days of
Noah were nine hundred and fifty
years — Here the clause, and he
begat sons and daughters, is
omitted, whence we may infer
that he had no more than the
three sons already mentioned. |