Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
CHAPTER 7
Ge 7:1-24.
ENTRANCE INTO THE
ARK.
1. And the Lord said unto Noah, Come thou and all thy house into the
ark--The ark was finished; and Noah now, in the spirit of implicit
faith, which had influenced his whole conduct, waited for directions
from God.
2, 3. Of every clean beast . . . fowls--Pairs of every
species of animals, except the tenants of the deep, were to be taken
for the preservation of their respective kinds. This was the general
rule of admission, only with regard to those animals which are styled
"clean," three pairs were to be taken, whether of beasts or birds; and
the reason was that their rapid multiplication was a matter of the
highest importance, when the earth should be renovated, for their
utility either as articles of food or as employed in the service of
man. But what was the use of the seventh? It was manifestly reserved
for sacrifice; and so that both during Noah's residence in the ark, and
after his return to dry land, provision was made for celebrating the
rites of worship according to the religion of fallen man. He did not,
like many, leave religion behind. He provided for it during his
protracted voyage.
4. For yet seven days--A week for a world to repent! What a
solemn pause! Did they laugh and ridicule his folly still? He whose
eyes saw and whose heart felt the full amount of human iniquity and
perverseness has told us of their reckless disregard
(Lu 17:27).
9. There went in two and two--Doubtless they were led by a
divine impulse. The number would not be so large as at first sight one
is apt to imagine. It has been calculated that there are not more than
three hundred distinct species of beasts and birds, the immense
varieties in regard to form, size, and color being traceable to the
influence of climate and other circumstances.
16. and the Lord shut him in--literally, "covered him round
about." The "shutting him in" intimated that Noah had become the
special object of divine care and protection, and that to those without
the season of grace was over
(Mt 25:10).
17. the waters increased, and bare up the ark--It seems to have
been raised so gradually as to be scarcely perceptible to its
occupants.
20. Fifteen cubits upward . . . and the mountains were
covered--twenty-two and a half feet above the summits of the
highest hills. The language is not consistent with the theory of a
partial deluge.
21. all flesh died . . . fowl . . . cattle, and
. . . creeping thing--It has been a uniform principle in
the divine procedure, when judgments were abroad on the earth, to
include every thing connected with the sinful objects of His wrath
(Ge 19:25;
Ex 9:6).
Besides, now that the human race was reduced to one single family, it
was necessary that the beasts should be proportionally diminished,
otherwise by their numbers they would have acquired the ascendancy and
overmastered the few that were to repeople the world. Thus goodness was
mingled with severity; the Lord exercises judgment in wisdom and in
wrath remembers mercy.
24. an hundred and fifty days--a period of five months. Though
long before that every living creature must have been drowned, such a
lengthened continuance of the flood was designed to manifest God's
stern displeasure at sin and sinners. Think of Noah during such a
crisis. We learn
(Eze 14:14)
that he was a man who lived and breathed habitually in an atmosphere of
devotion; and having in the exercise of this high-toned faith made God
his refuge, he did not fear "though the waters roared and were
troubled; though the mountains shook with the swelling thereof"
[Ps 46:3].
|