Verse 1-2
Genesis 11:1-2. The whole earth
was of one language — This even
heathen writers acknowledge; and
that language was, probably, the
Hebrew. They journeyed from the
east of Shinar, where Noah had
settled when he left the ark.
They were, therefore, now
travelling westward.
Verse 3-4
Genesis 11:3-4. Let us make
brick, let us build a city — The
country, being a plain, yielded
neither stone nor mortar; yet
this did not discourage them;
but they made brick to serve
instead of stone, and slime
instead of mortar; a kind of
clay or pitch called bitumen,
which, as Pliny testifies, is
liquid and glutinous, and fit to
be used in brick buildings, as
Strabo, Dion, and others
observe. And that Babylon was
built with this and with brick,
as is here said, we have the
joint testimony of Berosus,
Etesius, Dion, Curtius, and many
others. It has been thought that
they intended hereby to secure
themselves against the waters of
another flood; but if they had,
they would have chosen to build
upon a mountain rather than upon
a plain. But two things, it
seems, they aimed at in
building. 1st, To make them a
name — A great name; out of
pride and vain glory to erect a
monument that should remain to
all posterity: and, 2d, To
prevent their dispersion; lest
we be scattered abroad upon the
face of the earth — It was done
(saith Josephus) in disobedience
to that command, Genesis 9:1,
Replenish the earth — That they
might be united in one glorious
empire, they resolve to build
this city and tower, to be the
metropolis of their kingdom, and
the centre of their unity.
Verse 5
Genesis 11:5. And the Lord came
down to see the city — This is
an expression after the manner
of men; he knew it as clearly as
men know that which they come
upon the place to view.
Genesis 11:6-9. And the Lord
said, Behold, the people is one,
&c. — And if they continue one,
much of the earth will be left
uninhabited. Let us confound
their language — This was not
spoken to the angels, as if God
needed either their advice or
their assistance; but God speaks
it to himself, or the Father to
the Son. That they may not
understand one another’s speech
— Nor could they well continue
to be united in any undertaking
when their tongues were divided;
so that this was a proper means,
both to take them off from their
building, and to dispose them to
separate; for if they could not
understand one another, they
could neither help nor enjoy one
another. Accordingly, 1st, Their
language was confounded. God,
who, when he made man, taught
him to speak, now made those
builders to forget their former
language; and to speak a new
one, which yet was the same to
those of the same tribe or
family, but not to others. We
all suffer hereby to this day,
in all the inconveniences we
sustain by the diversity of
languages, and all the trouble
we are at to learn the languages
we have occasion for; nay, and
those unhappy controversies,
which are strifes of words, and
arise from our misunderstanding
of one another’s language, are
partly owing to this confusion
of tongues. The project of some
to frame a universal character,
in order to a universal
language, how desirable soever
it may seem, yet is but a vain
thing; for it is to strive
against a divine sentence, by
which the languages of the
nations will be divided while
the world stands. As the
confounding of tongues divided
the children of men, and
scattered them abroad, so the
gift of tongues bestowed upon
the apostles, Acts 2.,
contributed greatly to the
gathering together of the
children of God which were
scattered abroad, and the
uniting of them in Christ, that
with one mind and mouth they
might glorify God, Romans 15:6.
2d, Their building was stopped.
The confusion of their tongues
not only disabled them from
helping one another, but
probably struck a damp upon
their spirits, since they saw
the hand of the Lord was gone
out against them. 3d, The
builders were scattered abroad
from thence upon the face of the
whole earth — They departed in
companies, after their families
and after their tongues,
(Genesis 10:5; Genesis 10:20;
Genesis 10:31,) to the several
countries and places allotted to
them in the division that had
been made, which, it seems, they
knew before, but would not go to
take possession of, till now
they were forced to it. So that
the very thing which they feared
came upon them; that dispersion
which they thought to avoid. And
they left behind them a
perpetual memorandum of their
reproach in the name given to
the place; it was called Babel,
confusion. The children of men
were now finally scattered, and
never will come all together
again till the great day when
the Son of man shall sit upon
the throne of his glory, and all
nations shall be gathered before
him, Matthew 25:31-32. Reader,
how wilt thou then appear?
Verse 10
Genesis 11:10. Observe here,
1st, That nothing is left upon
record concerning those of this
line, but their names and ages;
the Holy Ghost seeming to hasten
through them to the story of
Abraham. How little do we know
of those who are gone before us
in this world, even those that
lived in the same places where
we live! Or, indeed, of those
who are our contemporaries, but
in distant places. 2d, That
there was an observable gradual
decrease in the years of their
lives. Shem reached to six
hundred years, which yet fell
short of the age of the
patriarchs before the flood; the
three next came short of five
hundred, the three next did not
reach to three hundred, and
after them we read not of any
that attained to two hundred but
Terah; and not many ages after
this Moses reckoned seventy or
eighty to be the utmost men
ordinarily arrive at. When the
earth began to be replenished,
men’s lives began to be
shortened; so that the decrease
is to be imputed to the wise
disposal of Providence, rather
than to any decay of nature. 3d,
That Eber, from whom the Hebrews
were denominated, was the
longest lived of any that were
born after the flood; which
perhaps was the reward of his
strict adherence to the ways of
God.
Verse 27
Genesis 11:27. Here begins the
story of Abram. We have here,
1st, His country: Ur of the
Chaldees — An idolatrous
country, where even the children
of Eber themselves degenerated.
2d, His relations, mentioned for
his sake, and because of their
interest in the following story.
His father was Terah, of whom it
is said, Joshua 24:2, that he
served other gods on the other
side the flood; so early did
idolatry gain footing in the
world. His brethren were, Nahor,
out of whose family both Isaac
and Jacob had their wives; and
Haran, the father of Lot, of
whom it is here said, Genesis
11:28, that he died before his
father Terah. It is likewise
said that he died in Ur of the
Chaldees, before that happy
removal of the family out of
that idolatrous country. His
wife was Sarai, who, some think,
was the same with Iscah, the
daughter of Haran. Abram himself
saith, she was the daughter of
his father, but not the daughter
of his mother, Genesis 20:12.
She was ten years younger than
Abram. 3d, His departure out of
Ur of the Chaldees, with his
father Terah, and his nephew
Lot, and the rest of his family,
in obedience to the call of God.
This chapter leaves them in
Haran or Charran, a place about
the midway between Ur and
Canaan, where they dwelt till
Terah’s head was laid; probably
because the old man was unable,
through the infirmities of age,
to proceed in his journey. |