Page images
PDF
EPUB

Gentiles, that thou mayest be my salvation to the ends of the earth. Ask of me, and I will give THEE the heathen for thine inheritance, and the uttermost parts of the earth for thy possession.He shall see of the travail of his soul, and shall be satisfied. In these as in the former instances, God's covenant stands fast with one, and many are blessed for his sake: their salvation is his reward.

DISCOURSE XII,

THE FLOOD.

Gen. vii.

We have seen the preparation of the ark, the warnings of God by it, and his long suffering for a hundred and twenty years. Now we see it finished: now the end of all flesh is come before him. Observe, (1.) God gave special notice to Noah, saying, Come thou and all thy house into the ark; for thee have I seen righteous. He who in well doing commits himself into the hands of a faithful Creator, needs not fear being overtaken by surprise. What have we to fear, when he whom we serve hath the keys of hell and of death? This is not the only instance in which, when impending ills have been ready to burst upon the world. God has, in effect said to his servants, Come my people, enter thou into thy chambers, and shut thy doors about thee: hide thyself as it were for a little moment, until the indignation be overpast. (2.) God gave him all his household with him. We are not informed whether any of Noah's family at present followed his example: it is certain that all did not; yet all entered with him into the ark for his sake. This indeed was but a specimen of the mercy which was to be exercised towards his distant posterity on behalf of him, as we have seen in the former chapter. But it is of importance to observe, that though temporal blessings may be given to the ungodly children of a godly parent, yet without walking in his steps they will not be partakers with him in those which are spiritual and eternal. (3.) It is an affecting thought, that there should be no more than Noah and his family to enter into the ark. Peter speaks of them as few; and few they were, considering the vast numbers that were left behind. Noah had long been a preacher of righteousness;

and what, is there not one sinner brought to repentance by his preaching? It should seem not one or if there were any, they were taken away from the evil to come. Not one that we know of was found at the time, who had received his warnings, and was desirous of casting in his lot with him. We are ready to think our ministry has but little success; but his, so far as appears, was without any yet, like Enoch, he pleased God. (4.) The righteousness of Noah is repeated, as the reason of the differences put between him and the world. This does not imply that the favour shown to him is to be ascribed to his own merit; for whatever he was, he was by grace; and all his righteousness was rewardable only out of respect to Him in whom he believed; but being accepted for his sake, his works also were accepted and honoured. And while the mercy of God was manifested towards him, the distinction between him and the world being made according to character, would render his justice apparent. Thus at the last day, though the righteous will have nothing to boast of, yet every man being judged according to his works, the world will be constrained to acknowledge the equity of the divine proceedings.

enter into the ark with which were fit for hu

Ver. 2, 3. Of the animals which were to Noah, those that were clean, that is, those man food and for sacrifice to God, were to go in by sevens; and those which were unclean, only by two of a kind. It would seem as if this direction differed from that in Chap. vi. 19, 20, which mentions only two of every sort: but the meaning there may be, that whatever number entered in they should be in pairs, that is, male and female, to preserve them alive; whereas here the direction is more particular, appointing the number of pairs that should be admitted, according as they were clean or unclean. This order is expressive of the goodness of God in providing food for man, and of his regard for his own worship.

Ver. 4-9. Just one week was allowed for Noah to embark. What a week was this! What feelings must it excite! His neighbours had seen him busily employed for the last hundred and twenty years in rearing the massy fabric; and doubtless had had many a laugh at the old man's folly and credulity; and now behold, he is going to remove all his family into it; with birds, and beasts,

and creeping things, and provisions for their accommodation! Well, let him go: a week longer, and we shall see what will be-) come of his dreams!' Meanwhile they eat and drink, and buy and sell, and marry and are given in marriage. As for Noah, he must have felt much, in contemplating the destruction of the whole of his species, to whom he had preached righteousness in vain. But it is not for him to linger; but to do according to all that the Lord commanded him. He had borne his testimony: he could do no more. He, his sons, his wife, and his sons' wives, therefore, with all the inferior creatures, which probably were caused to assemble before him by the same power which brought them to Adam to be named, enter into the ark. The same thing which is said of him in ver 7, is repeated in ver. 13. He doubtless would have to enter and re-enter many times, in the course of the week; but the last describes his final entrance, when he should return no

more.

Ver. 10-16. From the account taken together, it appears, that though God suffered long with the world during the ministry of Noah, yet the flood came upon them at last very suddenly.. the words, after seven days, in ver. 10, seem to mean on the seventh day ;* for that was the day when Noah made his final entrance into the ark; namely, the seventeenth day of the second month, answering to our October or November, in the six hundredth year of his life; and on that same day were all the fountains of the great deep broken up, and the windows of heaven opened What a scene of consternation and dismay must that day have exhibited, on the part of those who were left behind! The manner in which the rains set in would leave little or no hope of their being soon over. It was not a common rain: it came in torrents, or as we should say, in a manner as though heaven and earth were come together. The waters of the subterraneous cavities from beneath, and of the clouds from above, all met together at God's

* Such a mode of speaking is usual in the scriptures. Compare, ver. 6, with ver. 11, and Chap. xl. 18. 20.

[blocks in formation]

There is one

command, to execute his wrath on guilty men.* sentence concerning Noah which is worthy of special notice : when he and all pertaining to him had entered into the ark, it is said, And the Lord shut him in. The door of such a stupendous building may be supposed to be too large for human hands to fasten, especially so few as they were, and all withinside of it. It is possible too, there might be, by this time, numbers crowding round it for admittance; for those who trifle with death at a distance, are often the most terrified when it approaches. But lo, all is over! That act which shut Noah and his family in, shut them forever out! And let it be considered, that something very nearly resembling this will ere long be acted over again. As it was in the days of Noah, so shall it be at the coming of the Son of Man. Not only shall the world, as then, be full of dissipation, but the concluding scene is described in nearly the same words— And they that were ready went in, and the door was shut!

Ver. 17-24. We hear no more of the inhabitants of the world, except that all flesh died that moved upon the earth, both of fowl and of cattle, and of beast, and of every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth, AND EVERY MAN: all in whose nostrils was the breath of life, of all that was in the dry land, died. We are informed, however, of the progress of the flood. For six weeks, | within two days, it continued to rain incessantly; during which period it was of sufficient depth to bear up the ark from the earth, which after this, floated upon the surface of the waters, like aship on the sea. For some time however, there were mountains and high hills which were out of water. Hither therefore, we may naturally suppose, the inhabitants of the earth would repair, as to

*The great deep seems to mean that vast confluence of water, said to have been gathered together on the third day of the creation into one place, and called seas. (Chap. i. 9, 10.) These waters not only extend over a great part of the surface of the earth, but probably flow, as through a number of arteries and veins, to its most interior recesses, and occupy its centre. This body of waters, which was ordained, as I may say, unto life, was turned, in just displeasure against man's sin, into an engine of destruction. Bursting forth in tremendous floods, multitudes were hereby swept away: while from above, the clouds poured forth their torrents, as though heaven itself were a reservoir of waters, and God had opened its windows.

« ՆախորդըՇարունակել »