EXCURSUS B: ON THE NAMES ELOHIM AND JEHOVAH-ELOHIM.
Throughout the first account of creation (Genesis 1:1 to Genesis 2:3)
the Deity is simply called _Elohim._ This word is strictly a plural of
_Eloah,_ which is used as the name of God only in poetry, or in late
books like those of Nehemiah and Danie... [ Continue Reading ]
II.
THE SABBATH.
(1) WERE FINISHED. — The first three verses of this chapter form
part of the previous narrative, and contain its Divine purpose. For
the great object of this hymn of creation is to give the sanction of
the Creator to the Sabbath. Hence the ascribing of rest to Him who
wearies not, a... [ Continue Reading ]
GOD ENDED HIS WORK. — Not all work (see John 5:17, and Note _in
loc._)_,_ but the special work of creation. The laws given in these
six days still continue their activity; they are still maintained, and
there may even be with them progress and development. There is also
something special on this sev... [ Continue Reading ]
SANCTIFIED IT. — That is, separated it from ordinary uses, and
hallowed it. Legal observance of the Sabbath did not begin till the
days of Moses (Exodus 31:13; Exodus 35:2); but this blessing and
sanctification were given prior to any covenant with man, and by
Elohim, the God of nature, and not Jeho... [ Continue Reading ]
WHEN THEY WERE CREATED. — Heb., _in,_ or upon, _their creation._
IN THE DAY. — Viewed in its several stages, and with reference to
the weekly rest, there were six days of creation, which are here
described as one day, because they were but divisions in one
continuous act.
THE LORD GOD. — Jehovah-E... [ Continue Reading ]
EXCURSUS C: ON THE DURATION OF THE PARADISIACAL STATE OF INNOCENCE.
The _Bereshit Rabba_ argues that Adam and Eve remained in their
original state of innocence for six hours only. Others have supposed
that the events recorded in Genesis 2:4 to Genesis 3:24 took place in
the course of twenty-four hou... [ Continue Reading ]
(5)AND EVERY PLANT... — The Authorised Version follows the LXX. in
so translating this as to make it simply mean that God created
vegetation. The more correct rendering is, “There was no shrub of
the field (no wild shrub) as yet on the earth, and no herb of the
field had as yet sprung up.” The purpo... [ Continue Reading ]
A MIST. — This mist, as we learn from Job 36:27, where the same word
is translated _vapour,_ is the measure and material of the rain, and
thus there was already preparation for the Divine method of watering
the earth, and making it capable of producing food for man. But, as we
gather from Genesis 1,... [ Continue Reading ]
AND THE LORD GOD FORMED MAN OF THE DUST OF THE GROUND. — Literally,
_formed the man_ (adam) _dust from the ground._ In this section the
prominent idea is not that of producing out of nothing, but of
_forming,_ that is, shaping and moulding. So in Genesis 2:19 Jehovah
forms the animals, and in Genesi... [ Continue Reading ]
THE LORD GOD PLANTED A GARDEN. — The order followed in the text,
namely, man first and the garden afterwards, is not that of
chronology, but of precedence. In Genesis 2:15 we find that the garden
was ready as soon as man needed a home. It was a separate plot of
ground, fenced off from the rest of Ed... [ Continue Reading ]
EVERY TREE THAT IS PLEASANT TO THE SIGHT, AND GOOD FOR FOOD. — It
has often been noticed that while the ancients do not seem to have had
much taste for the beauty of the landscape, they greatly admired large
and umbrageous trees. This feeling seems like a reminiscence of the
joy of our first parents... [ Continue Reading ]
A RIVER WENT OUT OF EDEN. — Out of the large region of which the
garden formed a part. The tenses, too, are present, as if the main
features of the country remained unchanged: “a river goeth forth
from Eden, and thence outside of it is parted, and becometh four main
streams.” The idea is that of a s... [ Continue Reading ]
THE NAME OF THE FIRST IS PISON. — “The full-flowing” (Gesenius),
or “free-streaming” (Fürst). Neither derivation has much
authority for it in the Hebrew language, and we must wait for the true
explanation till the cuneiform inscriptions have been more thoroughly
examined. As two of the four rivers o... [ Continue Reading ]
GIHON, “the river that bursts forth,” has been supposed to be the
Nile, because it is said to wind about Ethiopia (Cush). According to
this view, there was originally no break between Asia and Africa, and
the Nile, entering Abyssinia from Arabia, took thence a northerly
course, and traversed Egypt.... [ Continue Reading ]
Of the “Hiddekel” and “Euphrates” there is no doubt: the
former is the Tigris, or Tigres, which is a mere Graecising of its
Oriental name, Daglath in Arabic, and Deklath in Syriac, and in the
Targum of Onkelos. The word Hiddekel is startling as being a
quadriliteral, but the Samaritan Codex reads _t... [ Continue Reading ]
AND THE LORD GOD TOOK THE MAN (THE ADAM), AND PUT HIM INTO THE GARDEN
OF EDEN. — The narrative now reverts to Genesis 2:8, but the word
translated _put_ is not the same in both places. Here it literally
means _He made him rest,_ that is, He gave it to him as his permanent
and settled dwelling.
TO DR... [ Continue Reading ]
THE LORD GOD COMMANDED. — Probation is the law of man’s moral
condition now, and it began in Paradise, only the conditions there
were different. (See _Excursus_ at end of this book.)
IN THE DAY.... — Used, as in Genesis 2:4, for an indefinitely long
period. But just as on the third day God gave the... [ Continue Reading ]
IT IS NOT GOOD... — In these words we have the Divine appointment of
marriage, and also the declaration that the female is subsequent in
order of production to the male, and formed from him. In Genesis 1:27;
Genesis 5:2, the creation of male and female is represented as having
been simultaneous. She... [ Continue Reading ]
OUT OF THE GROUND. — The adâmâh; thus the physical constituents of
the animals are the same as those of the body of man. Much curious
speculation has arisen from the mistaken idea that the order here is
chronological, and that the animals were created subsequently to man,
and that it was only upon t... [ Continue Reading ]
AND ADAM GAVE NAMES. — Throughout this chapter Adam is but once
mentioned as a proper name; and the regular phrase in the Hebrew is
_the adam,_ that is, the man, except in the last clause of this verse.
In Genesis 2:23 there is a different word for man, namely, _ish._ We
must not confine this giving... [ Continue Reading ]
AND THE LORD GOD CAUSED A DEEP SLEEP (comp. Job 4:13, where it is the
same word) to fall upon Adam. — Heb., the man.
ONE OF HIS RIBS. — The word is never translated _rib_ except in this
place, but always _side, flank._ This is the true meaning also of the
Latin word by which it is rendered in the V... [ Continue Reading ]
MADE HE A WOMAN. — Heb., _he built up into a woman._ Her formation
is described as requiring both time and care on the heavenly
artificer’s part. Thus woman is no casual or hasty production of
nature, but is the finished result of labour and skill. Finally, she
is brought with special honour to the... [ Continue Reading ]
THIS IS NOW. — Literally, _this stroke,_ or _beat of the foot_ in
keeping time. It means, therefore, _this time,_ or colloquially, _at
last._ Adam had long studied the natural world, and while, with their
confidence as yet unmarred by human cruelty, they came to his call,
grew tame, and joined his c... [ Continue Reading ]
THEREFORE SHALL A MAN LEAVE... — These are evidently the words of
the narrator. Adam names this new product of creative power, as he had
named others, but he knew nothing about young men leaving their
father’s house for the wife’s sake. Moreover, in Matthew 19:5, our
Lord quotes these words as spoke... [ Continue Reading ]
THE TEMPTATION AND FALL.
(25) THEY WERE BOTH NAKED. — This is the description of perfect
childlike innocence, and belongs naturally to beings who as yet knew
neither good nor evil. It is not, however, the conclusion of the
marriage section, where it would be indelicate, but the introduction
to the... [ Continue Reading ]