Verse 1
Genesis 19:1. There came two
angels — Probably two of the
three that had just before been
with Abraham, the two created
angels, who were now sent to
execute God’s purpose concerning
Sodom. Lot sat in the gate of
Sodom — Waiting for an
opportunity of entertaining
strangers, in which he imitated
Abraham, and set an example of
hospitality in the midst of the
reigning and abominable vices of
the place. For though he was
influenced to go thither by
improper motives, and continued
there with unjustifiable
obstinacy, when every dictate of
religion and morality cried
aloud, — “Come out from among
them;” yet, on the whole, as St.
Peter observes, (2 Peter 2:8,)
he was a righteous man, and his
righteous soul was vexed from
day to day with the filthy
conversation of that most
abandoned place, in seeing and
hearing of their unlawful deeds.
Verse 2
Genesis 19:2. They said, Nay,
but we will abide in the street
all night — So they said, not
only to give Lot an opportunity
of evincing the sincerity and
cordiality of his invitation,
but because it was their real
intention to abide in the
street, where they, no doubt,
would have abode, if he had not
so much urged them to lodge in
his house.
Verse 3
Genesis 19:3. He pressed upon
them greatly — Partly because he
would by no means have them to
expose themselves to the perils
and insults which he was aware
awaited their lodging in the
street of Sodom, and partly
because he was desirous of their
converse.
Verse 4-5
Genesis 19:4-5. No description
which could be given of their
vile and abominable conduct,
however laboured, could possibly
have conveyed so striking an
idea of their unparalleled
wickedness, as this simple
narrative of facts. Here were
old and young, all from every
quarter — Collected for
practices too shameful to be
mentioned! Either they had no
magistrates to protect the
peaceable, or their magistrates
themselves were aiding and
abetting.
Verse 8
Genesis 19:8. I have two
daughters — This was unadvisedly
and unjustifiably offered,
probably through the great
discomposure and perturbation
which his mind was in. It is
true, of two evils we must
choose the less, but of two sins
we must choose neither, nor ever
do evil that good may come of
it.
Verse 11
Genesis 19:11. And they smote
the men with blindness — This
was designed to put an end to
their attempt, and to be an
earnest of their utter ruin the
next day.
Verse 13
Genesis 19:13. We will destroy
this place — The holy angels are
ministers of God’s wrath for the
destruction of sinners, as well
as of his mercy for the
preservation and deliverance of
his people.
Verse 14
Genesis 19:14. Lot spake to his
sons-in-law, &c. — It is likely
these sons-in- law had married
other daughters of Lot, who were
now dead, or who afterward
perished in the destruction of
the city. Up, get you out of
this place — The manner of
expression is startling. It was
not a time to trifle, when the
destruction was just at the
door. But he seemed to them as
one that mocked — They thought
perhaps that the assault which
the Sodomites had just now made
upon his house had disturbed his
head, and put him into such a
fright that he knew not what he
said. They that made a jest of
every thing made a jest of that,
and so perished in the
overthrow. Thus many, who are
warned of the danger they are in
by sin, make a light matter of
it; such will perish with their
blood upon their heads.
Verse 16
Genesis 19:16. While he lingered
— He did not make so much haste
as the case required, and this
would have been fatal to him, if
the angels had not laid hold on
his hand, and brought him forth.
Herein the Lord was merciful to
him; and if God had not been
merciful to us, our lingering
had been our ruin.
Verse 17
Genesis 19:17. Look not behind
thee — He must not loiter by the
way; stay not in all the plain —
For it would all be made one
dead sea; he must not take up
short of the place of refuge
appointed him; escape to the
mountain — Such are the commands
given to those who, through
grace, are delivered out of a
sinful state. 1st, Return not to
sin and Satan, for that is
looking back to Sodom. 2d, Rest
not in the world, for that is
staying in the plain.
3d, Reach toward Christ and
heaven, for that is escaping to
the mountain, short of which we
must not take up.
Verse 22
Genesis 19:22. I cannot do any
thing till thou be come thither
— The very presence of good men
in a place helps to keep off
judgments. See what care God
takes for the preservation of
his people!
Verse 24
Genesis 19:24. Then the Lord
rained, from the Lord — The Son,
who had conversed with Abraham,
from the Father, for the Father
has committed all judgment to
the Son. He that is they Saviour
will be the destroyer of those
that reject the salvation.
Verse 25
Genesis 19:25. And he overthrew
those cities, and all the
inhabitants of them, the plain,
and all that grew upon the
ground — It was an utter ruin,
and irreparable; that fruitful
valley remains to this day a
great lake, or dead sea.
Travellers say it is about
thirty miles long, and ten miles
broad. It has no living creature
in it: it is not moved by the
wind: the smell of it is
offensive: things do not easily
sink in it. The Greeks call it
Asphaltis, from a sort of pitch
which it casts up. Jordan falls
into it, and is lost there. It
was a punishment that answered
their sin. Burning lusts against
nature were justly punished with
this preternatural burning.
Verse 26
Genesis 19:26. But his wife
looked back from behind him —
Herein she disobeyed an express
command. Probably she hankered
after her house and goods in
Sodom, and was loath to leave
them. Christ intimates this to
be her sin, Luke 17:31-32; she
too much regarded her stuff. And
her looking back spoke an
inclination to go back; and
therefore our Saviour uses it as
a warning against apostacy from
our Christian profession. And
she became a pillar of salt —
She was struck dead in the
place, yet her body did not fall
down, but stood fixed and erect,
like a pillar or monument, not
liable to waste or decay, as
human bodies exposed to the air
are, but metamorphosed into a
metallic substance, which would
last perpetually.
Verses 27-29
Genesis 19:27-29. And Abraham
gat up early — To see what was
become of his prayers, he went
to the very place where he had
stood before the Lord. And he
looked toward Sodom — Not as
Lot’s wife did, tacitly
reflecting upon the divine
severity, but humbly adoring it,
and acquiescing in it. Here is
God’s favourable regard to
Abraham. As before, when Abraham
prayed for Ishmael, God heard
him for Isaac; so now, when he
prayed for Sodom, he heard him
for Lot. God remembered Abraham,
and for his sake sent Lot out of
the overthrow — God will
certainly give an answer of
peace to the prayer of faith in
his own way and time.
Verse 30
Genesis 19:30. He feared to
dwell in Zoar — Probably he
found it as wicked as Sodom; and
therefore concluded it could not
long survive it; or perhaps he
observed the rise and increase
of those waters, which, after
the conflagration, began to
overflow the plain, and which,
mixing with the ruins, by
degrees, made the Dead sea. In
those waters he concluded Zoar
must needs perish, (though it
had escaped the fire,) because
it stood upon the same flat. He
was now glad to go to the
mountain, the place which God
had appointed for his shelter.
See in Lot what those bring
themselves to at last that
forsake the communion of saints
for secular advantages! He has
lost all his substance, and the
greater part of his family. His
wife is made a monument of the
divine wrath against those that
prefer the world to God, and the
principles of his remaining
daughters are so corrupted, and
their moral feelings so
stupified, through their
intercourse with the depraved
inhabitants of Sodom, that they
are prepared for the greatest
crimes; they even lay snares to
entangle their own father in the
dreadful one of committing
incest with themselves. He dwelt
in a cave, he and his two
daughters — It seems strange
when he was thus reduced, that
he did not think of returning to
Abraham, from whom he was at no
great distance, and who, no
doubt, would have kindly
received him. But probably he
was ashamed to return, being
conscious that he had not
treated that venerable servant
of God with due respect; or,
being now stripped of all, and a
wretched outcast, he could not
brook appearing so degraded
among those that had known him
in his more prosperous days.
Verse 32
Genesis 19:32. Come, let us make
our father drink wine —
Although, upon the whole, Lot
was a righteous man, and
possessed of many amiable
qualities, yet it evidently
appears that his principles
also, as well as those of his
daughters, had suffered some
degree of contamination by the
society of evil-doers, otherwise
surely he would have withstood
every temptation to excess of
drinking. Here the history of
Lot ends; after this we hear no
more of him or of his daughters.
We cannot but be sorry to leave
them under so dark a cloud. He,
indeed, we have reason to
believe, lived to repent of his
sin, otherwise St. Peter would
not have spoken so honourably of
him; but we have no proof that
his daughters repented of
theirs. And certainly the
children thus desired, and in
this unlawful way obtained, were
monuments of their own and their
father’s reproach, and the names
they thought fit to give them,
which descended to their
posterity, perpetuated the
memory of their sin and shame to
all generations: Moab
signifying, of my father, and
Ben-Ammi, the son of my people. |