Chapter 7:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 Revelation Exodus
Genesis 7
Complete Concise
In this chapter we have the performance of what was foretold in
the foregoing chapter, both concerning the destruction of the old world and the
salvation of Noah; for we may be sure that no word of God shall fall to the
ground. There we left Noah busy about his ark, and full of care to get it
finished in time, while the rest of his neighbours were laughing at him for his
pains. Now here we see what was the end thereof, the end of his care and of
their carelessness. And this famous period of the old world gives us some idea
of the state of things when the world that now is shall be destroyed by fire, as
that was by water. (See 2 Pt. 3:6, 7.) We have, in this chapter, I. God's
gracious call to Noah to come into the ark (v. 1), and to bring the creatures
that were to be preserved alive along with him (v. 2, 3), in consideration of
the deluge at hand (v. 4). II. Noah's obedience to this heavenly vision (v.
5). When he was six hundred years old, he came with his family into the ark (v.
6, 7), and brought the creatures along with him (v. 8, 9), an account of which
is repeated (v. 13-16), to which is added God's tender care to shut him in.
III. The coming of the threatened deluge (v. 10); the causes of it (v. 11, 12);
the prevalency of it (v. 17-20). IV. The dreadful desolations that were made
by it in the death of every living creature upon earth, except those that were
in the ark (v. 21-23). V. The continuance of it in full sea, before it began
to ebb, one hundred and fifty days (v. 24).
Verses 1-4
Here is, I. A gracious invitation of Noah and his family into a
place of safety, now that the flood of waters was coming, v. 1.
1. The call itself is very kind, like that of a tender father to
his children, to come in doors, when he sees night or a storm coming:
Come
thou, and all thy house, that small family that thou hast,
into the ark.
Observe, (1.) Noah did not go into the ark till God bade him; though he knew it
was designed for his place of refuge, yet he waited for a renewed command, and
had it. It is very comfortable to follow the calls of Providence, and to see God
going before us in every step we take. (2.) God does not bid him
go into
the ark, but
come into it, implying that God would go with him, would
lead him into it, accompany him in it, and in due time bring him safely out of
it. Note, Wherever we are, it is very desirable to have the presence of God with
us, for this is all in all to the comfort of every condition. It was this that
made Noah's ark, which was a prison, to be to him not only a refuge, but a
palace. (3.) Noah had taken a great deal of pains to build the ark, and now he
was himself preserved alive in it. Note, What we do in obedience to the command
of God, and in faith, we ourselves shall certainly have the comfort of, first or
last. (4.) Not he only, but his house also, his wife and children, are called
with him into the ark. Note, It is good to belong to the family of a godly man;
it is safe and comfortable to dwell under such a shadow. One of Noah's sons
was Ham, who proved afterwards a bad man, yet he was saved in the ark, which
intimates, [1.] That wicked children often fare the better for the sake of their
godly parents. [2.] That there is a mixture of bad with good in the best
societies in earth, and we are not to think it strange. In Noah's family there
was a Ham, and in Christ's family there was a Judas. There is no perfect
purity on this side heaven. (5.) This call to Noah was a type of the call which
the gospel gives to poor sinners. Christ is an ark already prepared, in whom
alone we can be safe when death and judgment come. Now the burden of the song
is, "Come, come;" the word says, "Come;" ministers say,
"Come;" the Spirit says, "Come, come into the ark."
2. The reason for this invitation is a very honourable testimony
to Noah's integrity:
For thee have I seen righteous before me in this
generation. Observe, (1.) Those are righteous indeed that are righteous
before God, that have not only the form of godliness by which they appear
righteous before men, who may easily be imposed upon, but the power of it by
which they approve themselves to God, who searches the heart, and cannot be
deceived in men's characters. (2.) God takes notice of and is pleased with
those that are righteous before him:
Thee have I seen. In a world of
wicked people God could see one righteous Noah; that single grain of wheat could
not be lost, no, not in so great a heap of chaff.
The Lord knows those that
are his. (3.) God, that is a witness to, will shortly be a witness for, his
people's integrity; he that sees it will proclaim it before angels and men, to
their immortal honour. Those that obtain mercy to be righteous shall obtain
witness that they are righteous. (4.) God is, in a special manner, pleased with
those that are good in bad times and places. Noah was therefore illustriously
righteous, because he was so in that wicked and adulterous generation. (5.)
Those that keep themselves pure in times of common iniquity God will keep safe
in times of common calamity; those that partake not with others in their sins
shall not partake with them in their plagues; those that are better than others
are, even in this life, safer than others, and it is better with them.
II. Here are necessary orders given concerning the
brute-creatures that were to be preserved alive with Noah in the ark, v. 2, 3.
They were not capable of receiving the warning and directions themselves, as man
was, who herein is taught
more than the beasts of the earth, and made wiser
than the fowls of heaventhat he is endued with the power of foresight;
therefore man is charged with the care of them: being under his dominion, they
must be under his protection; and, though he could not secure every individual,
yet he must carefully preserve every species, that no tribe, no, not the least
considerable, might entirely perish out of the creation. Observe in this, 1. God's
care for man, for his comfort and benefit. We do not find that Noah was
solicitous of himself about this matter; but God consults our happiness more
than we do ourselves. Though God saw that the old world was very provoking, and
foresaw that the new one would be little better, yet he would preserve the brute
creatures for man's use.
Doth God take care for oxen? 1 Co. 9:9. Or was
it not rather for man's sake that this care was taken? 2. Even the unclean
beasts, which were least valuable and profitable, were preserved alive in the
ark; for God's tender mercies are over all his works, and not over those only
that are of most eminence and use. 3. Yet more of the clean were preserved than
of the unclean. (1.) Because the clean were most for the service of man; and
therefore, in favour to him, more of them were preserved and are still
propagated. Thanks be to God, there are not herds of lions as there are of oxen,
nor flocks of tigers as there are of sheep. (2.) Because the clean were for
sacrifice to God; and therefore, in honour to him, more of them were preserved,
three couple for breed, and the odd seventh for sacrifice, ch. 8:20. God gives
us six for one in earthly things, as in the distribution of the days of the
week, that in spiritual things we should be all for him. What is devoted to God's
honour, and used in his service, is particularly blessed and increased.
III. Here is notice given of the now imminent approach of the
flood:
Yet seven days, and I will cause it to rain, v. 4. 1. "It
shall be seven days
yet, before I do it." After the hundred and
twenty years had expired, God grants them a reprieve of seven days longer, both
to show how slow he is to anger and that punishing work is his strange work, and
also to give them some further space for repentance: but all in vain; these
seven days were trifled away, after all the rest; they continued secure and
sensual until the day that the flood came. 2. "It shall be
but seven
days." While Noah told them of the judgment at a distance, they were
tempted to put off their repentance, because the vision was for a great while to
come; but now he is ordered to tell them that it is at the door, that they have
but one week more to turn them in, but one sabbath more to improve, to see if
that will now, at last, awaken them to consider the things that belong to their
peace, which otherwise will soon be hidden from their eyes. But it is common for
those that have been careless of their souls during the years of their health,
when they have looked upon death at a distance, to be as careless during the
days, the seven days, of their sickness, when they see it approaching, their
hearts being hardened by the deceitfulness of sin.
Verses 5-10
Here is Noah's ready obedience to the commands that God gave
him. Observe, 1. He went into the ark, upon notice that the flood would come
after seven days, though probably as yet there appeared no visible sign of its
approach, no cloud arising that threatened it, nothing done towards it, but all
continued serene and clear; for, as he prepared the ark by faith in the warning
given that the flood would come, so he went into it by faith in this warning
that it would come quickly, though he did not see that the second causes had yet
begun to work. In every step he took, he walked by faith, and not by sense.
During these seven days, it is likely, he was settling himself and his family in
the ark, and distributing the creatures into their several apartments. This was
the conclusion of that visible sermon which he had long been preaching to his
careless neighbours, and which, one would think, might have awakened them; but,
not obtaining that desired end, it left their blood upon their own heads. 2. He
took all his family along with him, his wife, to be his companion and comfort
(though it should seem that, after this, he had no children by her), his sons,
and his sons' wives, that by them not only his family, but the world of
mankind, might be built up. Observe, Though men were to be reduced to so small a
number, and it would be very desirable to have the world speedily repeopled, yet
Noah's sons were each of them to have but one wife, which strengthens the
argument against having many wives; for from the beginning of this new world it
was not so: as, at first, God made, so now he kept alive, but one woman for one
man. See Mt. 19:4, 8. 3. The brute creatures readily went in with him. The same
hand that at first brought them to Adam to be named now brought them to Noah to
be preserved. The ox now knew his owner, and the ass his protector's crib,
nay, even the wildest creatures flocked to it; but man had become more brutish
than the brutes themselves, and did not know, did not consider, Isa. 1:3.
Verses 11-12
Here is, I. The date of this great event; this is carefully
recorded, for the greater certainty of the story.
1. It was in the 600th year of Noah's life, which, by
computation, appears to be 1656 years from the creation. The years of the old
world are reckoned, not by the reigns of the giants, but the lives of the
patriarchs; saints are of more account with God than princes.
The righteous
shall be had in everlasting remembrance. Noah was now a very old man, even
as men's years went then. Note, (1.) The longer we live in this world the more
we see of the miseries and calamities of it; it is therefore spoken of as the
privilege of those that die young that their
eyes shall not see the evil
which is coming, 2 Ki. 22:20. (2.) Sometimes God exercises his old servants with
extraordinary trials of obedience patience. The oldest of Christ's soldiers
must not promise themselves a discharge from their warfare till death discharge
them. Still they must gird on their harness, and not boast as though they had
put it off. As the year of the deluge is recorded, so,
2. We are told that it was in the
second month, the
seventeenth day of the month, which is reckoned to be about the beginning of
November; so that Noah had had a harvest just before, from which to victual his
ark.
II. The second causes that concurred to this deluge. Observe,
1. In the self-same day that Noah was fixed in the ark, the
inundation began. Note, (1.) Desolating judgments come not till God has provided
for the security of his own people; see ch. 19:22, I can
do nothing till thou
be come thither: and we find (Rev. 7:3) that the winds are held till the
servants of God are sealed. (2.) When good men are removed judgments are not far
off; for they are
taken away from the evil to come, Isa. 57:1. When they
are called into the chambers, hidden in the grave, hidden in heaven, then God is
coming out of his place to punish, Isa. 26:20, 21.
2. See what was done on that day, that fatal day to the world of
the ungodly. (1.)
The fountains of the great deep were broken up. Perhaps
there needed no new creation of waters; what were already made to be, in the
common course of providence, blessings to the earth, were now, by an
extraordinary act of divine power, made the ruin of it. God has laid up the deep
in storehouses (Ps. 33:7), and now he broke up those stores. As our bodies have
in themselves those humours which, when God pleases, become the seeds and
springs of mortal diseases, so the earth had in it bowels those waters which, at
God's command, sprang up and flooded it. God had, in the creation, set
bars
and doors to the waters of
the sea, that they
might not return to
cover the earth (Ps. 104:9; Job 38:9-11); and now he only removed those
ancient land-marks, mounds, and fences, and the waters of the sea returned to
cover the earth, as they had done at first, ch. 1:9. Note, All the creatures are
ready to fight against sinful man, and any of them is able to be the instrument
of his ruin, if God do but take off the restraints by which they are held in
during the day of God's patience. (2.)
The windows of heaven were opened,
and
the waters which were above the firmament were poured out upon the
world; those treasures which God has
reserved against the time of trouble,
the day of battle and war, Job 38:22, 33. The rain, which ordinarily
descends in drops, then came down in streams, or
spouts, as they call
them in the Indies, where clouds have been often known to
burst, as they
express it there, when the rain descends in a much more violent torrent than we
have ever seen in the greatest shower. We read (Job 26:8) that
God binds up
the waters in his thick clouds, and the
cloud is not rent under them;
but now the bond was loosed, the cloud was rent, and such rains descended as
were never known before nor since, in such abundance and of such continuance:
the thick cloud was not, as ordinarily it is, wearied with waterings (Job
37:11), that is, soon spent and exhausted; but still the clouds returned after
the rain, and the divine power brought in fresh recruits. It rained, without
intermission or abatement,
forty days and forty nights (v. 12), and that
upon the whole earth at once, not, as sometimes,
upon one city and not upon
another. God made the world in six days, but he was forty days in destroying
it; for he is slow to anger: but, though the destruction came slowly and
gradually, yet it came effectually.
3. Now learn from this, (1.) That all the creatures are at God's
disposal, and that he makes what use he pleases of them, whether
for
correction, or for his land, or for mercy, as Elihu speaks of the rain, Job
37:12, 12. (2.) That God often makes that which
should be for our welfare to
become a trap, Ps. 69:22. That which usually is a comfort and benefit to us
becomes, when God pleases, a scourge and a plague to us. Nothing is more needful
nor useful than water, both the springs of the earth and the showers of heaven;
and yet now nothing was more hurtful, nothing more destructive: every creature
is to us what God makes it. (3.) That it is impossible to escape the righteous
judgments of God when they come against sinners with commission; for God can arm
both heaven and earth against them; see Job 20:27. God can surround men with the
messengers of his wrath, so that, if they look upwards, it is with horror and
amazement, if they look to the earth,
behold, trouble and darkness, Isa.
8:21, 11. Who then is able to stand before God, when he is angry? (4.) In this
destruction of the old world by water God gave a specimen of the final
destruction of the world that now is by fire. We find the apostle setting the
one of these over against the other, 2 Pt. 3:6, 7. As there are waters under the
earth, so Aetna, Vesuvius, and other volcanoes, proclaim to the world that there
are subterraneous fires too; and fire often falls from heaven, many desolations
are made by lightning; so that, when the time predetermined comes, between these
two fires the earth and all the works therein shall be burnt up, as the flood
was brought upon the old world out of the fountains of the great deep and
through the windows of heaven.
Verses 13-16
Here is repeated what was related before of Noah's entrance
into the ark, with his family and creatures that were marked for preservation.
Now,
I. It is thus repeated for the honour of Noah, whose faith and
obedience herein shone so brightly, by which he obtained a good report, and who
herein appeared so great a favourite of Heaven and so great a blessing to this
earth.
II. Notice is here taken of the beasts going in
each after
his kind, according to the phrase used in the history of the creation (ch.
1:21-25), to intimate that just as many kinds as were created at first were
saved now, and no more; and that this preservation was as a new creation: a life
remarkably protected is, as it were, a new life.
III. Though all enmities and hostilities between the creatures
ceased for the present, and ravenous creatures were not only so mild and
manageable as that the
wolf and the lamb lay down together, but so
strangely altered as that the
lion did eat straw like an ox (Isa. 11:6,
7), yet, when this occasion was over, the restraint was taken off, and they were
still of the same kind as ever; for the ark did not alter their constitution.
Hypocrites in the church, that externally conform to the laws of that ark, may
yet be unchanged, and then it will appear, one time or other, what kind they are
after.
IV. It is added (and the circumstance deserves our notice),
The
Lord shut him in, v. 16. As Noah continued his obedience to God, so God
continued his care of Noah: and here it appeared to be a very distinguishing
care; for the shutting of this door set up a partition wall between him and all
the world besides. God shut the door, 1. To secure him, and keep him safe in the
ark. The door must be shut very
close, lest the waters should break in
and sink the ark, and very
fast, lest any without should break it down.
Thus God made up Noah, as he
makes up his jewels, Mal. 3:17. 2. To
exclude all others, and keep them for ever out. Hitherto the door of the ark
stood open, and if any, even during the last seven days, had repented and
believed, for aught I know they might have been welcomed into the ark; but now
the door was shut, and they were cut off from all hopes of admittance: for God
shutteth,
and none can open.
V. There is much of our gospel duty and privilege to be seen in
Noah's preservation in the ark. The apostle makes it a type of our baptism,
that is, our Christianity, 1 Pt. 3:20,21. Observe then, 1. It is our great duty,
in obedience to the gospel call, by a lively faith in Christ, to come into that
way of salvation which God has provided for poor sinners. When Noah came into
the ark, he quitted his own house and lands; so must we quit our own
righteousness and our worldly possessions, whenever they come into competition
with Christ. Noah must, for a while, submit to the confinements and
inconveniences of the ark, in order to his preservation for a new world; so
those that come into Christ to be saved by him must deny themselves, both in
sufferings and services. 2. Those that come into the ark themselves should bring
as many as they can in with them, by good instructions, by persuasions, and by a
good example.
What knowest thou, O man, but thou mayest thus save thy wife
(1 Co. 7:16), as Noah did his? There is room enough in Christ for all comers. 3.
Those that by faith come into Christ, the ark, shall by the power of God be shut
in, and kept as in a strong-hold
by the power of God, 1 Pt. 1:5. God put
Adam into paradise, but he did not shut him in, and so he threw himself out; but
when he put Noah into the ark he shut him in, and so when he brings a soul to
Christ he ensures its salvation: it is not in our own keeping, but in the
Mediator's hand. 4. The door of mercy will shortly be shut against those that
now make light of it. Now,
knock and it shall be opened; but the time
will come when it shall not, Lu. 13:25.
Verses 17-20
We are here told,
I. How long the flood was increasing
forty days, v. 17.
The profane world, who believed not that it would come, probably when it came
flattered themselves with hopes that it would soon abate and never come to
extremity; but still it increased, it prevailed. Note, 1. When God judges he
will overcome. If he begin, he will make an end; his way is perfect, both in
judgment and mercy. 2. The gradual approaches and advances of God's judgments,
which are designed to bring sinners to repentance, are often abused to the
hardening of them in their presumption.
II. To what degree they increased: they rose so high that not
only the low flat countries were deluged, but to make sure work, and that none
might escape, the tops of the highest mountains were overflowed
fifteen
cubits, that is, seven yards and a half; so that
in vain was salvation
hoped for from hills or mountains, Jer. 3:23. None of God's creatures are
so high but his power can overtop them; and he will make them know that wherein
they deal proudly he is above them. Perhaps the tops of the mountains were
washed down by the strength of the waters, which helped much towards the
prevailing of the waters above them; for it is said (Job 12:15),
He sends out
the waters, and they not only overflow, but overturn, the earth. Thus the
refuge of lies was swept away, and the waters overflowed the hiding-place of
those sinners (Isa. 28:17), and in vain they fly to them for safety, Rev. 6:16.
Now the mountains departed, and the hills were removed, and nothing stood a man
in stead but the
covenant of peace, Isa. 54:10. There is no place on
earth so high as to set men out of the reach of God's judgments, Jer. 49:16;
Obad. 3:4. God's hand will
find out all his enemies, Ps. 21:8. Observe
how exactly they are fathomed
(fifteen cubits), not by Noah's plummet,
but by his knowledge who
weighs the waters by measure, Job 28:25.
III. What became of Noah's ark when the waters thus increased:
It was lifted up above the earth (v. 17), and went upon the face of the
waters, v. 18. When all other buildings were demolished by the waters, and
buried under them, the ark alone subsisted. Observe, 1. The waters which broke
down every thing else bore up the ark. That which to unbelievers is a savour of
death unto death is to the faithful a savour of life unto life. 2. The more the
waters increased the higher the ark was lifted up towards heaven. Thus
sanctified afflictions are spiritual promotions; and as troubles abound
consolations much more abound.
Verses 21-24
Here is, I. The general destruction of all flesh by the waters
of the flood.
Come, and see the desolations which God makes in the earth
(Ps. 46:8), and how he lays heaps upon heaps. Never did death triumph, from its
first entrance unto this day, as it did then. Come, and see Death upon his pale
horse, and hell following with him, Rev. 6:7, 8.
1. All the cattle, fowl, and creeping things, died, except the
few that were in the ark. Observe how this is repeated:
All flesh died, v.
21. All in whose nostrils was the breath of life, of all that was on the dry
land, v. 22. Every living substance, v. 23. And why so? Man only had done
wickedly, and justly is God's hand against him; but
these sheep, what have
they done? I answer, (1.) We are sure God did them no wrong. He is the
sovereign Lord of all life, for he is the sole fountain and author of it. He
that made them as he pleased might unmake them when he pleased; and who shall
say unto him,
What doest thou? May he not do what he will with his own,
which were created for his pleasure? (2.) God did admirably serve the purposes
of his own glory by their destruction, as well as by their creation. Herein his
holiness and justice were greatly magnified; by this it appears that he hates
sin, and is highly displeased with sinners, when even the inferior creatures,
because they are the servants of man and part of his possession, and because
they have been abused to be the servants of sin, are destroyed with him. This
makes the judgment the more remarkable, the more dreadful, and, consequently,
the more expressive of God's wrath and vengeance. The destruction of the
creatures was their deliverance from the bondage of corruption, which
deliverance the whole creation now groans after, Rom. 8:21, 22. It was likewise
an instance of God's wisdom. As the creatures were made for man when he was
made, so they were multiplied for him when he was multiplied; and therefore, now
that mankind was reduced to so small a number, it was fit that the beasts should
proportionably be reduced, otherwise they would have had the dominion, and would
have replenished the earth, and the remnant of mankind that was left would have
been overpowered by them. See how God considered this in another case, Ex.
23:29,
Lest the beast of the field multiply against thee.
2. All the men, women, and children, that were in the world
(except that were in the ark) died.
Every man (v. 21 and v. 23), and
perhaps they were as many as are now upon the face of the earth, if not more.
Now, (1.) We may easily imagine what terror and consternation seized on them
when they saw themselves surrounded. Our Saviour tells us that till the very day
that the flood came they were
eating and drinking (Lu. 17:26, 27); they
were drowned in security and sensuality before they were drowned in those
waters, crying
Peace, peace, to themselves, deaf and blind to all divine
warnings. In this posture death surprised them, as 1 Sa. 30:16, 17. But O what
an amazement were they in then! Now they see and feel that which they would not
believe and fear, and are convinced of their folly when it is too late; now they
find no place for repentance, though they seek it carefully with tears. (2.) We
may suppose that they tried all ways and means possible for their preservation,
but all in vain. Some climb to the tops of trees or mountains, and spin out
their terrors there awhile. But the flood reaches them, at last, and they are
forced to die with the more deliberation. Some, it is likely, cling to the ark,
and now hope that this may be their safety which they had so long made their
sport. Perhaps some get to the top of the ark, and hope to shift for themselves
there; but either they perish there for want of food, or, by a speedier despatch,
a dash of rain washes them off that deck. Others, it may be, hoped to prevail
with Noah for admission into the ark, and pleaded old acquaintance,
Have we
not eaten and drunk in thy presence? Hast thou not taught in our streets?
"Yes," might Noah say, "that I have, many a time, to little
purpose.
I called but you refused; you set at nought all my counsel (Prov.
1:24, 25), and now it is not in my power to help you: God has shut the door, and
I cannot open it." Thus it will be at the great day. Neither climbing high
in an outward profession, nor claiming relation to good people, will bring men
to heaven, Mt. 7:22; 25:8, 9. Those that are not found in Christ, the ark, are
certainly undone, undone for ever; salvation itself cannot save them. See Isa.
10:3. (3.) We may suppose that some of those that perished in the deluge had
themselves assisted Noah, or were employed by him, in the building of the ark,
and yet were not so wise as by repentance to secure themselves a place in it.
Thus wicked ministers, though they may have been instrumental to help others to
heaven, will themselves be thrust down to hell.
Let us now pause awhile and consider this tremendous judgment!
Let our hearts meditate terror, the terror of this destruction. Let us see, and
say,
It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God; who can
stand before him when he is angry? Let us see and say,
It is an evil
thing, and a bitter, to depart from God. The sin of sinners will, without
repentance, be their ruin, first or last; if God be true, it will.
Though
hand join in hand, yet the wicked shall not go unpunished. The righteous God
knows how to bring a flood upon the world of the ungodly, 2 Pt. 2:5. Eliphaz
appeals to this story as a standing warning to a careless world (Job 22:15, 16),
Hast thou marked the old way, which wicked men have trodden, who were cut
down out of time, and sent into eternity,
whose foundation was overflown
with the flood?
II. The special preservation of Noah and his family:
Noah
only remained alive, and those that were with him in the ark, v. 23.
Observe, 1. Noah lives. When all about him were monuments of justice, thousands
falling on his right hand and ten thousands on his left, he was a monument of
mercy. Only with his eyes might he
behold and see the reward of the wicked,
Ps. 91:7,8.
In the floods of great waters, they did not come nigh him,
Ps. 32:6. We have reason to think that, while the long-suffering of God waited,
Noah not only preached to, but prayed for, that wicked world, and would have
turned away the wrath; but his prayers return into his own bosom, and are
answered only in his own escape, which is plainly referred to, Eze. 14:14,
Noah,
Daniel, and Job, shall but deliver their own souls. A mark of honour shall
be set on intercessors. 2. He but lives. Noah remains alive, and this is all; he
is, in effect, buried alivecooped up in a close place, alarmed with the
terrors of the descending rain, the increasing flood, and the shrieks and
outcries of his perishing neighbours, his heart overwhelmed with melancholy
thoughts of the desolations made. But he comforts himself with this, that he is
in the way of duty and in the way of deliverance. And we are taught (Jer. 45:4,
5) that when desolating judgments are abroad we must not seek great nor pleasant
things to ourselves, but reckon it an unspeakable favour if we have our lives
given us for a prey.
Chapter 7:
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| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
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