After judging the world by the flood, God remembers Noah, restores habitable creation, receives Noah’s worship, and commits Himself to the preservation of earth’s ordered rhythms despite persistent human sinfulness.
God Remembers Noah, Causes the Waters to Recede, and Reestablishes Life After Judgment
After judging the world by the flood, God remembers Noah, restores habitable creation, receives Noah’s worship, and commits Himself to the preservation of earth’s ordered rhythms despite persistent human sinfulness.
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After judging the world by the flood, God remembers Noah, restores habitable creation, receives Noah’s worship, and commits Himself to the preservation of earth’s ordered rhythms despite persistent human sinfulness.
Genesis 8 reveals that God’s judgment is purposeful rather than arbitrary, and that His preserving mercy actively governs what happens after judgment. The chapter opens with one of its most important theological statements: God remembered Noah. This does not imply prior forgetfulness, but covenantal attention and action. God turns toward the remnant He has preserved and begins to reverse the flood conditions.
The sending of the wind over the earth deliberately echoes creation language, suggesting a re-ordering of the world after de-creation waters had overwhelmed it. The recession of the waters and the reappearance of dry land mark a kind of new beginning for humanity and the animal world. Yet this renewed beginning does not arise from a changed human nature. The chapter closes by explicitly acknowledging that the inclination of man’s heart remains evil from youth.
Thus the stability that follows the flood is grounded not in human reform but in divine mercy. Noah’s altar and burnt offerings underscore that restored life must be answered with worship, gratitude, and recognition of God’s sovereign grace. The pleasing aroma and God’s resolve not again to strike every living thing in the same manner demonstrate that post-flood history will now unfold under a divine commitment to preserve the regularity of creation.
Genesis 8 therefore advances a theology of remembered grace, renewed creation order, worship after deliverance, and divine patience toward sinners.
Genesis 8 stands at the turning point of the flood narrative. Genesis 7 emphasized the overwhelming force of divine judgment as the waters prevailed over the earth. Genesis 8 shifts the movement from destruction to restoration, from prevailing waters to receding waters, and from enclosed preservation to renewed emergence onto dry ground. Within the primeval history of Genesis 1–11, this chapter is essential because it shows that God’s judgment is not His final word over creation.
He preserves a remnant, remembers His covenant purpose, and begins the process of restoration after judgment. The chapter also prepares for the formal covenant language and divine commitments that follow in Genesis 9. In canonical perspective, Genesis 8 contributes to the recurring biblical pattern of judgment followed by renewal, exile followed by reentry, and death-shadowed circumstances giving way to divine preservation and future hope.
God remembers Noah and all with Him in the ark, sends a wind over the earth, and causes the waters to subside until the ark comes to rest on the mountains of Ararat.
Noah sends out a raven and then a dove in stages to test whether the earth is habitable, and the dove eventually returns with an olive leaf, then later does not return.
The covering of the ark is removed, the earth dries further, and God commands Noah, His family, and the animals to come out of the ark to repopulate the earth.
Noah builds an altar and offers burnt offerings from the clean animals; the Lord receives the pleasing aroma and declares in His heart that He will not again curse the ground in the same way, even though the inclination of man’s heart remains evil from youth, and He promises the ongoing regularity of the created order.
- 8:1–5: God remembers Noah and all with Him in the ark, sends a wind over the earth, and causes the waters to subside until the ark comes to rest on the mountains of Ararat.
- 8:6–12: Noah sends out a raven and then a dove in stages to test whether the earth is habitable, and the dove eventually returns with an olive leaf, then later does not return.
- 8:13–19: The covering of the ark is removed, the earth dries further, and God commands Noah, His family, and the animals to come out of the ark to repopulate the earth.
- 8:20–22: Noah builds an altar and offers burnt offerings from the clean animals · the Lord receives the pleasing aroma and declares in His heart that He will not again curse the ground in the same way, even though the inclination of man’s heart remains evil from youth, and He promises the ongoing regularity of the created order.
Theological Focus
- Divine Remembrance
- Preservation
- Creation Renewal
- Worship
- Common Grace
- Patience of God
- Human Sinfulness
- Post-Judgment Restoration
- Theology Proper
- Providence
- Covenant Theology
- Hamartiology
- Soteriology Preparation
- Biblical Theology
Covenant Significance
Genesis 8 is covenantally significant because it forms the transition from preservation through judgment to the establishment of the post-flood order under God’s sustaining commitment. The statement that God remembered Noah signals covenant faithfulness in action, and the conclusion of the chapter prepares directly for the formal covenant commitments of Genesis 9.
The promise of ongoing seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night establishes the stability of the world as the stage on which covenant history will continue. The chapter therefore grounds later redemptive history in God’s gracious resolve to preserve the ordered world despite ongoing human sin.
Canonical Connections
Genesis 8 is covenantally significant because it forms the transition from preservation through judgment to the establishment of the post-flood order under God’s sustaining commitment. The statement that God remembered Noah signals covenant faithfulness in action, and the conclusion of the chapter prepares directly for the formal covenant commitments of Genesis 9.
The promise of ongoing seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night establishes the stability of the world as the stage on which covenant history will continue. The chapter therefore grounds later redemptive history in God’s gracious resolve to preserve the ordered world despite ongoing human sin.
Genesis 1:2-10
Genesis 6:17-22
Psalm 104:5-9
Isaiah 54:9-10
Jeremiah 33:20-25
Genesis 7:17-24
Genesis 9:1-17
Exodus 14:21-31
Acts 14:15-17
Cross References
Genesis 8 shows that after judgment God preserves a people and brings them into a renewed order of life. Yet it also makes clear that the deeper human problem remains, because the inclination of man’s heart is still evil from youth. The flood did not regenerate humanity. Therefore a greater work of salvation is needed than survival through outward catastrophe.
In the fullness of Scripture, that greater work is accomplished in Jesus Christ, whose sacrifice is fully pleasing to God, who brings not only preservation but true reconciliation, and who secures the hope of final new creation for all who belong to Him.
Primary Emphasis
Genesis 8 contributes to Christology by reinforcing the biblical pattern of life emerging after judgment and worship following deliverance. Noah’s preservation and emergence into a renewed world anticipate the broader redemptive pattern fulfilled in Christ, where judgment is not the final word for those kept by God. Noah’s burnt offerings, received as a pleasing aroma, also contribute to the sacrificial trajectory that ultimately culminates in Christ, whose offering is fully acceptable before God.
The renewed earth after flood judgment further anticipates the new creation realities that come through Christ’s redemptive work.
Chapter Contribution
Genesis 8 reveals that God’s judgment is purposeful rather than arbitrary, and that His preserving mercy actively governs what happens after judgment. The chapter opens with one of its most important theological statements: God remembered Noah. This does not imply prior forgetfulness, but covenantal attention and action. God turns toward the remnant He has preserved and begins to reverse the flood conditions.
The sending of the wind over the earth deliberately echoes creation language, suggesting a re-ordering of the world after de-creation waters had overwhelmed it. The recession of the waters and the reappearance of dry land mark a kind of new beginning for humanity and the animal world. Yet this renewed beginning does not arise from a changed human nature. The chapter closes by explicitly acknowledging that the inclination of man’s heart remains evil from youth.
Thus the stability that follows the flood is grounded not in human reform but in divine mercy. Noah’s altar and burnt offerings underscore that restored life must be answered with worship, gratitude, and recognition of God’s sovereign grace. The pleasing aroma and God’s resolve not again to strike every living thing in the same manner demonstrate that post-flood history will now unfold under a divine commitment to preserve the regularity of creation.
Genesis 8 therefore advances a theology of remembered grace, renewed creation order, worship after deliverance, and divine patience toward sinners.
Sacrifice points forward to the need for substitutionary atonement.
God sustains the world despite ongoing human sin.
God’s original mandate for multiplication continues after the flood.
Believers are called to observe and discern while awaiting God’s direction.
God remains faithful to His covenant and acts on behalf of His people.
God restrains judgment and extends mercy beyond what is deserved.
God’s work unfolds according to His appointed timing and process.
Human sinfulness persists even after judgment and renewal.
God brings restoration and renewal after judgment.
Faith responds to God’s commands both in waiting and in action.
Faithful waiting is part of obedience to God.
God restores creation in stages rather than instantaneously.
God governs creation and directs events according to His purposes.
God saves His people for a continued purpose within His creation.
God brings renewal and restoration after judgment.
God exercises authority over natural forces to accomplish His will.
Human discernment must remain under God’s command.
True response to God’s deliverance is expressed through worship and sacrifice.
5 Imperatives
- Come out of the ark
- Bring out Your household
- Bring out the animals
- Be fruitful and multiply again in the renewed world
Sense remember
Definition remember
Why it matters When God remembers Noah, the term signals covenant faithfulness and active intervention rather than mere mental recollection.
Sense wind, spirit, breath
Definition wind, spirit, breath
Why it matters The wind God sends over the earth echoes creation language and signals the beginning of post-flood reordering.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense abate, subside
Definition abate, subside
Why it matters The abating waters show judgment being restrained under God’s sovereign will.
Sense dry, dried up
Definition dry, dried up
Why it matters The drying of the earth recalls the reappearance of ordered habitable space after the de-creation flood.
Sense resting place
Definition resting place
Why it matters The ark coming to rest signifies the transition from preserved suspension to settled post-judgment stability.
Sense altar
Definition altar
Why it matters Noah’s altar marks worship as the first formal act after emergence, showing that life after deliverance begins with devotion to God.
Sense burnt offering
Definition burnt offering
Why it matters The burnt offering contributes to the sacrificial pattern of atonement, dedication, and acceptable worship later developed through the canon.
Sense pleasing aroma, soothing aroma
Definition pleasing aroma, soothing aroma
Why it matters The pleasing aroma language shows divine acceptance of Noah’s worship and later becomes important in sacrificial theology fulfilled in Christ.
Sense inclination, formation
Definition inclination, formation
Why it matters The term exposes the continued inward bent of the human heart toward evil, proving that outward preservation does not equal moral renewal.
Sense heart
Definition heart
Why it matters The heart remains the source of human evil, reinforcing the depth of the human problem after the flood.
Sense curse, treat lightly, bring under curse
Definition curse, treat lightly, bring under curse
Why it matters God’s resolve not again to curse the ground in this same way marks a decisive commitment concerning the stability of the post-flood world.
Sense seedtime and harvest
Definition seedtime and harvest
Why it matters This pair summarizes the stable rhythms of creation that God pledges to preserve as an expression of common grace.
Lexicon data: MorphGNT Strong's Dictionary XML (CC0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Bible (CC BY 4.0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Lexicon (CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible Data (CC BY 4.0) · Full details
C.F. Keil & F. Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (1861–91) — public domain
- Genesis 8 warns that even after severe judgment humanity’s heart remains sinful, so survival through judgment does not equal inward renewal apart from God’s grace.
- Treating 'God remembered Noah' as though God had literally forgotten Him, rather than recognizing covenant remembrance as active divine faithfulness.
- Reading the chapter as a simple survival story and missing its new-creation structure and theological depth.
- Assuming the flood solved the human problem morally, when the chapter explicitly states that the inclination of man’s heart remains evil from youth.
- Overlooking Noah’s altar and sacrifice, as though emergence from the ark required no worshipful response to divine deliverance.
- Reading the promise of creation’s ongoing cycles as a denial of future judgment of every kind, rather than as a specific commitment concerning the stability of the earth’s order.
- Missing the strong common-grace dimension in God’s promise to sustain the world despite persistent sin.
- How does the statement that God remembered Noah strengthen Your confidence in God’s covenant faithfulness during long and uncertain trials?
- Do You respond to God’s preserving mercy with worship, or do You move on from deliverance without gratitude?
- How does Genesis 8 correct any shallow belief that changed circumstances automatically change the human heart?
- What does the regularity of seedtime and harvest, day and night, teach You about depending on God’s sustaining providence?
- Where do You need to remember that God’s patience with sinners is mercy, not approval of sin?
- Preach Genesis 8 as a chapter of divine faithfulness, where God remembers His people and acts on their behalf at the appointed time.
- Use the chapter to help believers endure seasons where they feel enclosed, forgotten, or suspended between promise and visible resolution.
- Show that true deliverance ought to lead to worship, sacrifice, and grateful acknowledgment of God’s preserving grace.
- Teach clearly that judgment alone does not change the sinful heart · people need more than external reset, they need inner renewal.
- Encourage the church with the doctrine of common grace, showing that the regularity of creation itself is a mercy from God to a sinful world.
- Help believers interpret ordinary rhythms of life, seasons, harvests, days, and nights, as testimonies to God’s patience and sustaining care.
Genesis 8 shows that after judgment God preserves a people and brings them into a renewed order of life. Yet it also makes clear that the deeper human problem remains, because the inclination of man’s heart is still evil from youth. The flood did not regenerate humanity. Therefore a greater work of salvation is needed than survival through outward catastrophe.
In the fullness of Scripture, that greater work is accomplished in Jesus Christ, whose sacrifice is fully pleasing to God, who brings not only preservation but true reconciliation, and who secures the hope of final new creation for all who belong to Him.
Genesis 8 shows that after judgment God preserves a people and brings them into a renewed order of life. Yet it also makes clear that the deeper human problem remains, because the inclination of man’s heart is still evil from youth. The flood did not regenerate humanity. Therefore a greater work of salvation is needed than survival through outward catastrophe.
In the fullness of Scripture, that greater work is accomplished in Jesus Christ, whose sacrifice is fully pleasing to God, who brings not only preservation but true reconciliation, and who secures the hope of final new creation for all who belong to Him.
Genesis 8 shows that after judgment God preserves a people and brings them into a renewed order of life. Yet it also makes clear that the deeper human problem remains, because the inclination of man’s heart is still evil from youth. The flood did not regenerate humanity. Therefore a greater work of salvation is needed than survival through outward catastrophe.
In the fullness of Scripture, that greater work is accomplished in Jesus Christ, whose sacrifice is fully pleasing to God, who brings not only preservation but true reconciliation, and who secures the hope of final new creation for all who belong to Him.
Genesis 8 shows that after judgment God preserves a people and brings them into a renewed order of life. Yet it also makes clear that the deeper human problem remains, because the inclination of man’s heart is still evil from youth. The flood did not regenerate humanity. Therefore a greater work of salvation is needed than survival through outward catastrophe.
In the fullness of Scripture, that greater work is accomplished in Jesus Christ, whose sacrifice is fully pleasing to God, who brings not only preservation but true reconciliation, and who secures the hope of final new creation for all who belong to Him.
Genesis 8 shows that after judgment God preserves a people and brings them into a renewed order of life. Yet it also makes clear that the deeper human problem remains, because the inclination of man’s heart is still evil from youth. The flood did not regenerate humanity. Therefore a greater work of salvation is needed than survival through outward catastrophe.
In the fullness of Scripture, that greater work is accomplished in Jesus Christ, whose sacrifice is fully pleasing to God, who brings not only preservation but true reconciliation, and who secures the hope of final new creation for all who belong to Him.
5
High
- Come out of the ark
- Bring out Your household
- Bring out the animals
- Be fruitful and multiply again in the renewed world
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
Genesis 8 is covenantally significant because it forms the transition from preservation through judgment to the establishment of the post-flood order under God’s sustaining commitment. The statement that God remembered Noah signals covenant faithfulness in action, and the conclusion of the chapter prepares directly for the formal covenant commitments of Genesis 9.
The promise of ongoing seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night establishes the stability of the world as the stage on which covenant history will continue. The chapter therefore grounds later redemptive history in God’s gracious resolve to preserve the ordered world despite ongoing human sin.
Genesis 8 shows that after judgment God preserves a people and brings them into a renewed order of life. Yet it also makes clear that the deeper human problem remains, because the inclination of man’s heart is still evil from youth. The flood did not regenerate humanity. Therefore a greater work of salvation is needed than survival through outward catastrophe.
In the fullness of Scripture, that greater work is accomplished in Jesus Christ, whose sacrifice is fully pleasing to God, who brings not only preservation but true reconciliation, and who secures the hope of final new creation for all who belong to Him.
Focus Points
- Divine Remembrance
- Preservation
- Creation Renewal
- Worship
- Common Grace
- Patience of God
- Human Sinfulness
- Post-Judgment Restoration
- Theology Proper
- Providence
- Covenant Theology
- Hamartiology
- Soteriology Preparation
- Biblical Theology
Cross References
Passages
Chapter opening: Genesis 8:1-5
Gen 8:1-5 With the words, “ then God remembered Noah and all the animals... in the ark, ” the narrative turns to the description of the gradual decrease of the water until the ground was perfectly dry. The fall of the water is described in the same pictorial style as its rapid rise. God’s “remembering” was a manifestation of Himself, an effective restraint of the force of the raging element.
He caused a wind to blow over the earth, so that the waters sank, and shut up the fountains of the deep, and the sluices of heaven, so that the rain from heaven was restrained. “ Then the waters turned (ישׁבוּ i. e. , flowed off) from the earth, flowing continuously (the inf. absol. ושׁוב הלוך expresses continuation), and decreased at the end of 150 days . ” The decrease first became perceptible when the ark rested upon the mountains of Ararat on the 17th day of the seventh month; i.
e. ,, reckoning 30 days to a month, exactly 150 days after the flood commenced. From that time forth it continued without intermission, so that on the first day of the tenth month, probably 73 days after the resting of the ark, the tops of the mountains were seen, viz. , the tops of the Armenian highlands, by which the ark was surrounded. Ararat was the name of a province (2Ki 19:37), which is mentioned along with Minni (Armenia) as a kingdom in Jer 51:27, probably the central province of the country of Armenia, which Moses v.
Chorene calls Arairad , Araratia . The mountains of Ararat are, no doubt, the group of mountains which rise from the plain of the Araxes in two lofty peaks, the greater and lesser Ararat, the former 16,254 feet above the level of the sea, the latter about 12,000. This landing-place of the ark is extremely interesting in connection with the development of the human race as renewed after the flood.
Armenia, the source of the rivers of paradise, has been called “a cool, airy, well-watered mountain-island in the midst of the old continent;” but Mount Ararat especially is situated almost in the middle, not only of the great desert route of Africa and Asia, but also of the range of inland waters from Gibraltar to the Baikal Sea-in the centre, too, of the longest line that can be drawn through the settlements of the Caucasian race and the Indo-Germanic tribes; and, as the central point of the longest land-line of the ancient world, from the Cape of Good Hope to the Behring Straits, it was the most suitable spot in the world, for the tribes and nations that sprang from the sons of Noah to descend from its heights and spread into every land (vid. , K.
v. Raumer , Paläst. pp. 456ff.)
Gen 8:1-5 With the words, “ then God remembered Noah and all the animals... in the ark, ” the narrative turns to the description of the gradual decrease of the water until the ground was perfectly dry. The fall of the water is described in the same pictorial style as its rapid rise. God’s “remembering” was a manifestation of Himself, an effective restraint of the force of the raging element.
He caused a wind to blow over the earth, so that the waters sank, and shut up the fountains of the deep, and the sluices of heaven, so that the rain from heaven was restrained. “ Then the waters turned (ישׁבוּ i. e. , flowed off) from the earth, flowing continuously (the inf. absol. ושׁוב הלוך expresses continuation), and decreased at the end of 150 days . ” The decrease first became perceptible when the ark rested upon the mountains of Ararat on the 17th day of the seventh month; i.
e. ,, reckoning 30 days to a month, exactly 150 days after the flood commenced. From that time forth it continued without intermission, so that on the first day of the tenth month, probably 73 days after the resting of the ark, the tops of the mountains were seen, viz. , the tops of the Armenian highlands, by which the ark was surrounded. Ararat was the name of a province (2Ki 19:37), which is mentioned along with Minni (Armenia) as a kingdom in Jer 51:27, probably the central province of the country of Armenia, which Moses v.
Chorene calls Arairad , Araratia . The mountains of Ararat are, no doubt, the group of mountains which rise from the plain of the Araxes in two lofty peaks, the greater and lesser Ararat, the former 16,254 feet above the level of the sea, the latter about 12,000. This landing-place of the ark is extremely interesting in connection with the development of the human race as renewed after the flood.
Armenia, the source of the rivers of paradise, has been called “a cool, airy, well-watered mountain-island in the midst of the old continent;” but Mount Ararat especially is situated almost in the middle, not only of the great desert route of Africa and Asia, but also of the range of inland waters from Gibraltar to the Baikal Sea-in the centre, too, of the longest line that can be drawn through the settlements of the Caucasian race and the Indo-Germanic tribes; and, as the central point of the longest land-line of the ancient world, from the Cape of Good Hope to the Behring Straits, it was the most suitable spot in the world, for the tribes and nations that sprang from the sons of Noah to descend from its heights and spread into every land (vid. , K.
v. Raumer , Paläst. pp. 456ff.)
Gen 8:1-5 With the words, “ then God remembered Noah and all the animals... in the ark, ” the narrative turns to the description of the gradual decrease of the water until the ground was perfectly dry. The fall of the water is described in the same pictorial style as its rapid rise. God’s “remembering” was a manifestation of Himself, an effective restraint of the force of the raging element.
He caused a wind to blow over the earth, so that the waters sank, and shut up the fountains of the deep, and the sluices of heaven, so that the rain from heaven was restrained. “ Then the waters turned (ישׁבוּ i. e. , flowed off) from the earth, flowing continuously (the inf. absol. ושׁוב הלוך expresses continuation), and decreased at the end of 150 days . ” The decrease first became perceptible when the ark rested upon the mountains of Ararat on the 17th day of the seventh month; i.
e. ,, reckoning 30 days to a month, exactly 150 days after the flood commenced. From that time forth it continued without intermission, so that on the first day of the tenth month, probably 73 days after the resting of the ark, the tops of the mountains were seen, viz. , the tops of the Armenian highlands, by which the ark was surrounded. Ararat was the name of a province (2Ki 19:37), which is mentioned along with Minni (Armenia) as a kingdom in Jer 51:27, probably the central province of the country of Armenia, which Moses v.
Chorene calls Arairad , Araratia . The mountains of Ararat are, no doubt, the group of mountains which rise from the plain of the Araxes in two lofty peaks, the greater and lesser Ararat, the former 16,254 feet above the level of the sea, the latter about 12,000. This landing-place of the ark is extremely interesting in connection with the development of the human race as renewed after the flood.
Armenia, the source of the rivers of paradise, has been called “a cool, airy, well-watered mountain-island in the midst of the old continent;” but Mount Ararat especially is situated almost in the middle, not only of the great desert route of Africa and Asia, but also of the range of inland waters from Gibraltar to the Baikal Sea-in the centre, too, of the longest line that can be drawn through the settlements of the Caucasian race and the Indo-Germanic tribes; and, as the central point of the longest land-line of the ancient world, from the Cape of Good Hope to the Behring Straits, it was the most suitable spot in the world, for the tribes and nations that sprang from the sons of Noah to descend from its heights and spread into every land (vid. , K.
v. Raumer , Paläst. pp. 456ff.)
Gen 8:1-5 With the words, “ then God remembered Noah and all the animals... in the ark, ” the narrative turns to the description of the gradual decrease of the water until the ground was perfectly dry. The fall of the water is described in the same pictorial style as its rapid rise. God’s “remembering” was a manifestation of Himself, an effective restraint of the force of the raging element.
He caused a wind to blow over the earth, so that the waters sank, and shut up the fountains of the deep, and the sluices of heaven, so that the rain from heaven was restrained. “ Then the waters turned (ישׁבוּ i. e. , flowed off) from the earth, flowing continuously (the inf. absol. ושׁוב הלוך expresses continuation), and decreased at the end of 150 days . ” The decrease first became perceptible when the ark rested upon the mountains of Ararat on the 17th day of the seventh month; i.
e. ,, reckoning 30 days to a month, exactly 150 days after the flood commenced. From that time forth it continued without intermission, so that on the first day of the tenth month, probably 73 days after the resting of the ark, the tops of the mountains were seen, viz. , the tops of the Armenian highlands, by which the ark was surrounded. Ararat was the name of a province (2Ki 19:37), which is mentioned along with Minni (Armenia) as a kingdom in Jer 51:27, probably the central province of the country of Armenia, which Moses v.
Chorene calls Arairad , Araratia . The mountains of Ararat are, no doubt, the group of mountains which rise from the plain of the Araxes in two lofty peaks, the greater and lesser Ararat, the former 16,254 feet above the level of the sea, the latter about 12,000. This landing-place of the ark is extremely interesting in connection with the development of the human race as renewed after the flood.
Armenia, the source of the rivers of paradise, has been called “a cool, airy, well-watered mountain-island in the midst of the old continent;” but Mount Ararat especially is situated almost in the middle, not only of the great desert route of Africa and Asia, but also of the range of inland waters from Gibraltar to the Baikal Sea-in the centre, too, of the longest line that can be drawn through the settlements of the Caucasian race and the Indo-Germanic tribes; and, as the central point of the longest land-line of the ancient world, from the Cape of Good Hope to the Behring Straits, it was the most suitable spot in the world, for the tribes and nations that sprang from the sons of Noah to descend from its heights and spread into every land (vid. , K.
v. Raumer , Paläst. pp. 456ff.)
Gen 8:1-5 With the words, “ then God remembered Noah and all the animals... in the ark, ” the narrative turns to the description of the gradual decrease of the water until the ground was perfectly dry. The fall of the water is described in the same pictorial style as its rapid rise. God’s “remembering” was a manifestation of Himself, an effective restraint of the force of the raging element.
He caused a wind to blow over the earth, so that the waters sank, and shut up the fountains of the deep, and the sluices of heaven, so that the rain from heaven was restrained. “ Then the waters turned (ישׁבוּ i. e. , flowed off) from the earth, flowing continuously (the inf. absol. ושׁוב הלוך expresses continuation), and decreased at the end of 150 days . ” The decrease first became perceptible when the ark rested upon the mountains of Ararat on the 17th day of the seventh month; i.
e. ,, reckoning 30 days to a month, exactly 150 days after the flood commenced. From that time forth it continued without intermission, so that on the first day of the tenth month, probably 73 days after the resting of the ark, the tops of the mountains were seen, viz. , the tops of the Armenian highlands, by which the ark was surrounded. Ararat was the name of a province (2Ki 19:37), which is mentioned along with Minni (Armenia) as a kingdom in Jer 51:27, probably the central province of the country of Armenia, which Moses v.
Chorene calls Arairad , Araratia . The mountains of Ararat are, no doubt, the group of mountains which rise from the plain of the Araxes in two lofty peaks, the greater and lesser Ararat, the former 16,254 feet above the level of the sea, the latter about 12,000. This landing-place of the ark is extremely interesting in connection with the development of the human race as renewed after the flood.
Armenia, the source of the rivers of paradise, has been called “a cool, airy, well-watered mountain-island in the midst of the old continent;” but Mount Ararat especially is situated almost in the middle, not only of the great desert route of Africa and Asia, but also of the range of inland waters from Gibraltar to the Baikal Sea-in the centre, too, of the longest line that can be drawn through the settlements of the Caucasian race and the Indo-Germanic tribes; and, as the central point of the longest land-line of the ancient world, from the Cape of Good Hope to the Behring Straits, it was the most suitable spot in the world, for the tribes and nations that sprang from the sons of Noah to descend from its heights and spread into every land (vid. , K.
v. Raumer , Paläst. pp. 456ff.)
Gen 8:6-12 Forty days after the appearance of the mountain tops, Noah opened the window of the ark and let a raven fly out (lit. , the raven, i. e. , the particular raven known from that circumstance), for the purpose of ascertaining the drying up of the waters. The raven went out and returned until the earth was dry, but without being taken back into the ark, as the mountain tops and the carcases floating upon the water afforded both resting-places and food.
After that, Noah let a dove fly out three times, at intervals of seven days. It is not distinctly stated that he sent it out the first time seven days after the raven, but this is implied in the statement that he stayed yet other seven days before sending it out the second time, and the same again before sending it the third time (Gen 8:10 and Gen 8:12). The dove, when first sent out, “ found no rest for the sole of its foot; ” for a dove will only settle upon such places and objects as are dry and clean.
It returned to the ark and let Noah take it in again (Gen 8:8, Gen 8:9). The second time it returned in the evening, having remained out longer than before, and brought a fresh (טרף freshly plucked) olive-leaf in its mouth. Noah perceived from this that the water must be almost gone, had “abated from off the earth,” though the ground might not be perfectly dry, as the olive-tree will put out leaves even under water.
The fresh olive-leaf was the first sign of the resurrection of the earth to new life after the flood, and the dove with the olive-leaf a herald of salvation. The third time it did not return; a sign that the waters had completely receded from the earth. The fact that Noah waited 40 days before sending the raven, and after that always left an interval of seven days, is not to be accounted for on the supposition that these numbers were already regarded as significant.
The 40 days correspond to the 40 days during which the rain fell and the waters rose; and Noah might assume that they would require the same time to recede as to rise. The seven days constituted the week established at the creation, and God had already conformed to it in arranging their entrance into the ark (Gen 7:4, Gen 7:10). The selection which Noah made of the birds may also be explained quite simply from the difference in their nature, with which Noah must have been acquainted; that is to say, from the fact that the raven in seeking its food settles upon every carcase that it sees, whereas the dove will only settle upon what is dry and clean.
Gen 8:6-12 Forty days after the appearance of the mountain tops, Noah opened the window of the ark and let a raven fly out (lit. , the raven, i. e. , the particular raven known from that circumstance), for the purpose of ascertaining the drying up of the waters. The raven went out and returned until the earth was dry, but without being taken back into the ark, as the mountain tops and the carcases floating upon the water afforded both resting-places and food.
After that, Noah let a dove fly out three times, at intervals of seven days. It is not distinctly stated that he sent it out the first time seven days after the raven, but this is implied in the statement that he stayed yet other seven days before sending it out the second time, and the same again before sending it the third time (Gen 8:10 and Gen 8:12). The dove, when first sent out, “ found no rest for the sole of its foot; ” for a dove will only settle upon such places and objects as are dry and clean.
It returned to the ark and let Noah take it in again (Gen 8:8, Gen 8:9). The second time it returned in the evening, having remained out longer than before, and brought a fresh (טרף freshly plucked) olive-leaf in its mouth. Noah perceived from this that the water must be almost gone, had “abated from off the earth,” though the ground might not be perfectly dry, as the olive-tree will put out leaves even under water.
The fresh olive-leaf was the first sign of the resurrection of the earth to new life after the flood, and the dove with the olive-leaf a herald of salvation. The third time it did not return; a sign that the waters had completely receded from the earth. The fact that Noah waited 40 days before sending the raven, and after that always left an interval of seven days, is not to be accounted for on the supposition that these numbers were already regarded as significant.
The 40 days correspond to the 40 days during which the rain fell and the waters rose; and Noah might assume that they would require the same time to recede as to rise. The seven days constituted the week established at the creation, and God had already conformed to it in arranging their entrance into the ark (Gen 7:4, Gen 7:10). The selection which Noah made of the birds may also be explained quite simply from the difference in their nature, with which Noah must have been acquainted; that is to say, from the fact that the raven in seeking its food settles upon every carcase that it sees, whereas the dove will only settle upon what is dry and clean.
Gen 8:6-12 Forty days after the appearance of the mountain tops, Noah opened the window of the ark and let a raven fly out (lit. , the raven, i. e. , the particular raven known from that circumstance), for the purpose of ascertaining the drying up of the waters. The raven went out and returned until the earth was dry, but without being taken back into the ark, as the mountain tops and the carcases floating upon the water afforded both resting-places and food.
After that, Noah let a dove fly out three times, at intervals of seven days. It is not distinctly stated that he sent it out the first time seven days after the raven, but this is implied in the statement that he stayed yet other seven days before sending it out the second time, and the same again before sending it the third time (Gen 8:10 and Gen 8:12). The dove, when first sent out, “ found no rest for the sole of its foot; ” for a dove will only settle upon such places and objects as are dry and clean.
It returned to the ark and let Noah take it in again (Gen 8:8, Gen 8:9). The second time it returned in the evening, having remained out longer than before, and brought a fresh (טרף freshly plucked) olive-leaf in its mouth. Noah perceived from this that the water must be almost gone, had “abated from off the earth,” though the ground might not be perfectly dry, as the olive-tree will put out leaves even under water.
The fresh olive-leaf was the first sign of the resurrection of the earth to new life after the flood, and the dove with the olive-leaf a herald of salvation. The third time it did not return; a sign that the waters had completely receded from the earth. The fact that Noah waited 40 days before sending the raven, and after that always left an interval of seven days, is not to be accounted for on the supposition that these numbers were already regarded as significant.
The 40 days correspond to the 40 days during which the rain fell and the waters rose; and Noah might assume that they would require the same time to recede as to rise. The seven days constituted the week established at the creation, and God had already conformed to it in arranging their entrance into the ark (Gen 7:4, Gen 7:10). The selection which Noah made of the birds may also be explained quite simply from the difference in their nature, with which Noah must have been acquainted; that is to say, from the fact that the raven in seeking its food settles upon every carcase that it sees, whereas the dove will only settle upon what is dry and clean.
Gen 8:6-12 Forty days after the appearance of the mountain tops, Noah opened the window of the ark and let a raven fly out (lit. , the raven, i. e. , the particular raven known from that circumstance), for the purpose of ascertaining the drying up of the waters. The raven went out and returned until the earth was dry, but without being taken back into the ark, as the mountain tops and the carcases floating upon the water afforded both resting-places and food.
After that, Noah let a dove fly out three times, at intervals of seven days. It is not distinctly stated that he sent it out the first time seven days after the raven, but this is implied in the statement that he stayed yet other seven days before sending it out the second time, and the same again before sending it the third time (Gen 8:10 and Gen 8:12). The dove, when first sent out, “ found no rest for the sole of its foot; ” for a dove will only settle upon such places and objects as are dry and clean.
It returned to the ark and let Noah take it in again (Gen 8:8, Gen 8:9). The second time it returned in the evening, having remained out longer than before, and brought a fresh (טרף freshly plucked) olive-leaf in its mouth. Noah perceived from this that the water must be almost gone, had “abated from off the earth,” though the ground might not be perfectly dry, as the olive-tree will put out leaves even under water.
The fresh olive-leaf was the first sign of the resurrection of the earth to new life after the flood, and the dove with the olive-leaf a herald of salvation. The third time it did not return; a sign that the waters had completely receded from the earth. The fact that Noah waited 40 days before sending the raven, and after that always left an interval of seven days, is not to be accounted for on the supposition that these numbers were already regarded as significant.
The 40 days correspond to the 40 days during which the rain fell and the waters rose; and Noah might assume that they would require the same time to recede as to rise. The seven days constituted the week established at the creation, and God had already conformed to it in arranging their entrance into the ark (Gen 7:4, Gen 7:10). The selection which Noah made of the birds may also be explained quite simply from the difference in their nature, with which Noah must have been acquainted; that is to say, from the fact that the raven in seeking its food settles upon every carcase that it sees, whereas the dove will only settle upon what is dry and clean.
Gen 8:6-12 Forty days after the appearance of the mountain tops, Noah opened the window of the ark and let a raven fly out (lit. , the raven, i. e. , the particular raven known from that circumstance), for the purpose of ascertaining the drying up of the waters. The raven went out and returned until the earth was dry, but without being taken back into the ark, as the mountain tops and the carcases floating upon the water afforded both resting-places and food.
After that, Noah let a dove fly out three times, at intervals of seven days. It is not distinctly stated that he sent it out the first time seven days after the raven, but this is implied in the statement that he stayed yet other seven days before sending it out the second time, and the same again before sending it the third time (Gen 8:10 and Gen 8:12). The dove, when first sent out, “ found no rest for the sole of its foot; ” for a dove will only settle upon such places and objects as are dry and clean.
It returned to the ark and let Noah take it in again (Gen 8:8, Gen 8:9). The second time it returned in the evening, having remained out longer than before, and brought a fresh (טרף freshly plucked) olive-leaf in its mouth. Noah perceived from this that the water must be almost gone, had “abated from off the earth,” though the ground might not be perfectly dry, as the olive-tree will put out leaves even under water.
The fresh olive-leaf was the first sign of the resurrection of the earth to new life after the flood, and the dove with the olive-leaf a herald of salvation. The third time it did not return; a sign that the waters had completely receded from the earth. The fact that Noah waited 40 days before sending the raven, and after that always left an interval of seven days, is not to be accounted for on the supposition that these numbers were already regarded as significant.
The 40 days correspond to the 40 days during which the rain fell and the waters rose; and Noah might assume that they would require the same time to recede as to rise. The seven days constituted the week established at the creation, and God had already conformed to it in arranging their entrance into the ark (Gen 7:4, Gen 7:10). The selection which Noah made of the birds may also be explained quite simply from the difference in their nature, with which Noah must have been acquainted; that is to say, from the fact that the raven in seeking its food settles upon every carcase that it sees, whereas the dove will only settle upon what is dry and clean.
Gen 8:6-12 Forty days after the appearance of the mountain tops, Noah opened the window of the ark and let a raven fly out (lit. , the raven, i. e. , the particular raven known from that circumstance), for the purpose of ascertaining the drying up of the waters. The raven went out and returned until the earth was dry, but without being taken back into the ark, as the mountain tops and the carcases floating upon the water afforded both resting-places and food.
After that, Noah let a dove fly out three times, at intervals of seven days. It is not distinctly stated that he sent it out the first time seven days after the raven, but this is implied in the statement that he stayed yet other seven days before sending it out the second time, and the same again before sending it the third time (Gen 8:10 and Gen 8:12). The dove, when first sent out, “ found no rest for the sole of its foot; ” for a dove will only settle upon such places and objects as are dry and clean.
It returned to the ark and let Noah take it in again (Gen 8:8, Gen 8:9). The second time it returned in the evening, having remained out longer than before, and brought a fresh (טרף freshly plucked) olive-leaf in its mouth. Noah perceived from this that the water must be almost gone, had “abated from off the earth,” though the ground might not be perfectly dry, as the olive-tree will put out leaves even under water.
The fresh olive-leaf was the first sign of the resurrection of the earth to new life after the flood, and the dove with the olive-leaf a herald of salvation. The third time it did not return; a sign that the waters had completely receded from the earth. The fact that Noah waited 40 days before sending the raven, and after that always left an interval of seven days, is not to be accounted for on the supposition that these numbers were already regarded as significant.
The 40 days correspond to the 40 days during which the rain fell and the waters rose; and Noah might assume that they would require the same time to recede as to rise. The seven days constituted the week established at the creation, and God had already conformed to it in arranging their entrance into the ark (Gen 7:4, Gen 7:10). The selection which Noah made of the birds may also be explained quite simply from the difference in their nature, with which Noah must have been acquainted; that is to say, from the fact that the raven in seeking its food settles upon every carcase that it sees, whereas the dove will only settle upon what is dry and clean.
Gen 8:6-12 Forty days after the appearance of the mountain tops, Noah opened the window of the ark and let a raven fly out (lit. , the raven, i. e. , the particular raven known from that circumstance), for the purpose of ascertaining the drying up of the waters. The raven went out and returned until the earth was dry, but without being taken back into the ark, as the mountain tops and the carcases floating upon the water afforded both resting-places and food.
After that, Noah let a dove fly out three times, at intervals of seven days. It is not distinctly stated that he sent it out the first time seven days after the raven, but this is implied in the statement that he stayed yet other seven days before sending it out the second time, and the same again before sending it the third time (Gen 8:10 and Gen 8:12). The dove, when first sent out, “ found no rest for the sole of its foot; ” for a dove will only settle upon such places and objects as are dry and clean.
It returned to the ark and let Noah take it in again (Gen 8:8, Gen 8:9). The second time it returned in the evening, having remained out longer than before, and brought a fresh (טרף freshly plucked) olive-leaf in its mouth. Noah perceived from this that the water must be almost gone, had “abated from off the earth,” though the ground might not be perfectly dry, as the olive-tree will put out leaves even under water.
The fresh olive-leaf was the first sign of the resurrection of the earth to new life after the flood, and the dove with the olive-leaf a herald of salvation. The third time it did not return; a sign that the waters had completely receded from the earth. The fact that Noah waited 40 days before sending the raven, and after that always left an interval of seven days, is not to be accounted for on the supposition that these numbers were already regarded as significant.
The 40 days correspond to the 40 days during which the rain fell and the waters rose; and Noah might assume that they would require the same time to recede as to rise. The seven days constituted the week established at the creation, and God had already conformed to it in arranging their entrance into the ark (Gen 7:4, Gen 7:10). The selection which Noah made of the birds may also be explained quite simply from the difference in their nature, with which Noah must have been acquainted; that is to say, from the fact that the raven in seeking its food settles upon every carcase that it sees, whereas the dove will only settle upon what is dry and clean.
Gen 8:13-19 Noah waited some time, and then, on the first day of the first month, in the 601st year of his life, removed the covering from the ark, that he might obtain a freer prospect over the earth. He could see that the surface of the earth was dry; but it was not till the 27th day of the second month, 57 days, therefore, after the removal of the roof, that the earth was completely dried up.
Then God commanded him to leave the ark with his family and all the animals; and so far as the latter were concerned, He renewed the blessing of the creation (Gen 8:17 cf. Gen 1:22). As the flood commenced on the 17th of the second month of the 600th year of Noah’s life, and ended on the 27th of the second month of the 601st year, it lasted a year and ten days; but whether a solar year of 360 of 365 days, or a lunar year of 352, is doubtful.
The former is the more probable, as the first five months are said to have consisted of 150 days, which suits the solar year better than the lunar. The question cannot be decided with certainty, because we neither know the number of days between the 17th of the seventh month and the 1st of the tenth month, nor the interval between the sending out of the dove and the 1st day of the first month of the 601st year.
Gen 8:13-19 Noah waited some time, and then, on the first day of the first month, in the 601st year of his life, removed the covering from the ark, that he might obtain a freer prospect over the earth. He could see that the surface of the earth was dry; but it was not till the 27th day of the second month, 57 days, therefore, after the removal of the roof, that the earth was completely dried up.
Then God commanded him to leave the ark with his family and all the animals; and so far as the latter were concerned, He renewed the blessing of the creation (Gen 8:17 cf. Gen 1:22). As the flood commenced on the 17th of the second month of the 600th year of Noah’s life, and ended on the 27th of the second month of the 601st year, it lasted a year and ten days; but whether a solar year of 360 of 365 days, or a lunar year of 352, is doubtful.
The former is the more probable, as the first five months are said to have consisted of 150 days, which suits the solar year better than the lunar. The question cannot be decided with certainty, because we neither know the number of days between the 17th of the seventh month and the 1st of the tenth month, nor the interval between the sending out of the dove and the 1st day of the first month of the 601st year.
Gen 8:13-19 Noah waited some time, and then, on the first day of the first month, in the 601st year of his life, removed the covering from the ark, that he might obtain a freer prospect over the earth. He could see that the surface of the earth was dry; but it was not till the 27th day of the second month, 57 days, therefore, after the removal of the roof, that the earth was completely dried up.
Then God commanded him to leave the ark with his family and all the animals; and so far as the latter were concerned, He renewed the blessing of the creation (Gen 8:17 cf. Gen 1:22). As the flood commenced on the 17th of the second month of the 600th year of Noah’s life, and ended on the 27th of the second month of the 601st year, it lasted a year and ten days; but whether a solar year of 360 of 365 days, or a lunar year of 352, is doubtful.
The former is the more probable, as the first five months are said to have consisted of 150 days, which suits the solar year better than the lunar. The question cannot be decided with certainty, because we neither know the number of days between the 17th of the seventh month and the 1st of the tenth month, nor the interval between the sending out of the dove and the 1st day of the first month of the 601st year.
Gen 8:13-19 Noah waited some time, and then, on the first day of the first month, in the 601st year of his life, removed the covering from the ark, that he might obtain a freer prospect over the earth. He could see that the surface of the earth was dry; but it was not till the 27th day of the second month, 57 days, therefore, after the removal of the roof, that the earth was completely dried up.
Then God commanded him to leave the ark with his family and all the animals; and so far as the latter were concerned, He renewed the blessing of the creation (Gen 8:17 cf. Gen 1:22). As the flood commenced on the 17th of the second month of the 600th year of Noah’s life, and ended on the 27th of the second month of the 601st year, it lasted a year and ten days; but whether a solar year of 360 of 365 days, or a lunar year of 352, is doubtful.
The former is the more probable, as the first five months are said to have consisted of 150 days, which suits the solar year better than the lunar. The question cannot be decided with certainty, because we neither know the number of days between the 17th of the seventh month and the 1st of the tenth month, nor the interval between the sending out of the dove and the 1st day of the first month of the 601st year.
Gen 8:13-19 Noah waited some time, and then, on the first day of the first month, in the 601st year of his life, removed the covering from the ark, that he might obtain a freer prospect over the earth. He could see that the surface of the earth was dry; but it was not till the 27th day of the second month, 57 days, therefore, after the removal of the roof, that the earth was completely dried up.
Then God commanded him to leave the ark with his family and all the animals; and so far as the latter were concerned, He renewed the blessing of the creation (Gen 8:17 cf. Gen 1:22). As the flood commenced on the 17th of the second month of the 600th year of Noah’s life, and ended on the 27th of the second month of the 601st year, it lasted a year and ten days; but whether a solar year of 360 of 365 days, or a lunar year of 352, is doubtful.
The former is the more probable, as the first five months are said to have consisted of 150 days, which suits the solar year better than the lunar. The question cannot be decided with certainty, because we neither know the number of days between the 17th of the seventh month and the 1st of the tenth month, nor the interval between the sending out of the dove and the 1st day of the first month of the 601st year.
Gen 8:13-19 Noah waited some time, and then, on the first day of the first month, in the 601st year of his life, removed the covering from the ark, that he might obtain a freer prospect over the earth. He could see that the surface of the earth was dry; but it was not till the 27th day of the second month, 57 days, therefore, after the removal of the roof, that the earth was completely dried up.
Then God commanded him to leave the ark with his family and all the animals; and so far as the latter were concerned, He renewed the blessing of the creation (Gen 8:17 cf. Gen 1:22). As the flood commenced on the 17th of the second month of the 600th year of Noah’s life, and ended on the 27th of the second month of the 601st year, it lasted a year and ten days; but whether a solar year of 360 of 365 days, or a lunar year of 352, is doubtful.
The former is the more probable, as the first five months are said to have consisted of 150 days, which suits the solar year better than the lunar. The question cannot be decided with certainty, because we neither know the number of days between the 17th of the seventh month and the 1st of the tenth month, nor the interval between the sending out of the dove and the 1st day of the first month of the 601st year.
Gen 8:13-19 Noah waited some time, and then, on the first day of the first month, in the 601st year of his life, removed the covering from the ark, that he might obtain a freer prospect over the earth. He could see that the surface of the earth was dry; but it was not till the 27th day of the second month, 57 days, therefore, after the removal of the roof, that the earth was completely dried up.
Then God commanded him to leave the ark with his family and all the animals; and so far as the latter were concerned, He renewed the blessing of the creation (Gen 8:17 cf. Gen 1:22). As the flood commenced on the 17th of the second month of the 600th year of Noah’s life, and ended on the 27th of the second month of the 601st year, it lasted a year and ten days; but whether a solar year of 360 of 365 days, or a lunar year of 352, is doubtful.
The former is the more probable, as the first five months are said to have consisted of 150 days, which suits the solar year better than the lunar. The question cannot be decided with certainty, because we neither know the number of days between the 17th of the seventh month and the 1st of the tenth month, nor the interval between the sending out of the dove and the 1st day of the first month of the 601st year.
Gen 8:20-22 The first thing which Noah did, was to build an altar for burnt sacrifice, to thank the Lord for gracious protection, and pray for His mercy in time to come. This altar - מזבּח, lit. , a place for the offering of slain animals, from זבח, like θυσιαστήριον from θύειν - is the first altar mentioned in history. The sons of Adam had built no altar for their offerings, because God was still present on the earth in paradise, so that they could turn their offerings and hearts towards that abode.
But with the flood God had swept paradise away, withdrawn the place of His presence, and set up His throne in heaven, from which He would henceforth reveal Himself to man (cf. Gen 9:5, Gen 9:7). In future, therefore, the hearts of the pious had to be turned towards heaven, and their offerings and prayers needed to ascend on high if they were to reach the throne of God.
To give this direction to their offerings, heights or elevated places were erected, from which they ascended towards heaven in fire. From this the offerings received the name of עלת from עולה, the ascending, not so much because the sacrificial animals ascended or were raised upon the altar, as because they rose from the altar to haven (cf. Jdg 20:40; Jer 48:15; Amo 4:10).
Noah took his offerings from every clean beast and every clean fowl - from those animals, therefore, which were destined for man’s food; probably the seventh of every kind, which he had taken into the ark. “ And Jehovah smelled the smell of satisfaction, ” i. e. , He graciously accepted the feelings of the offerer which rose to Him in the odour of the sacrificial flame.
In the sacrificial flame the essence of the animal was resolved into vapour; so that when man presented a sacrifice in his own stead, his inmost being, his spirit, and his heart ascended to God in the vapour, and the sacrifice brought the feeling of his heart before God. This feeling of gratitude for gracious protection, and of desire for further communications of grace, was well-pleasing to God.
He “ said to His heart ' (to, or in Himself; i. e. , He resolved), “ I will not again curse the ground any more for man’s sake, because the image (i. e. , the thought and desire) of man’s heart is evil from his youth up (i. e. , from the very time when he begins to act with consciousness). ” This hardly seems an appropriate reason. As Luther says: “ Hic inconstantiae videtur Deus accusari posse.
Supra puniturus hominem causam consilii dicit, quia figmentum cordis humani malum est. Hic promissurus homini gratiam, quod posthac tali ira uti nolit, eandem causam allegat . ” Both Luther and Calvin express the same thought, though without really solving the apparent discrepancy. It was not because the thoughts and desires of the human heart are evil that God would not smite any more every living thing, that is to say, would not exterminate it judicially; but because they are evil from his youth up , because evil is innate in man, and for that reason he needs the forbearance of God; and also (and here lies the principal motive for the divine resolution) because in the offering of the righteous Noah, not only were thanks presented for past protection, and entreaty for further care, but the desire of man was expressed, to remain in fellowship with God, and to procure the divine favour.
“ All the days of the earth; ” i. e. , so long as the earth shall continue, the regular alternation of day and night and of the seasons of the year, so indispensable to the continuance of the human race, would never be interrupted again.
Gen 8:20-22 The first thing which Noah did, was to build an altar for burnt sacrifice, to thank the Lord for gracious protection, and pray for His mercy in time to come. This altar - מזבּח, lit. , a place for the offering of slain animals, from זבח, like θυσιαστήριον from θύειν - is the first altar mentioned in history. The sons of Adam had built no altar for their offerings, because God was still present on the earth in paradise, so that they could turn their offerings and hearts towards that abode.
But with the flood God had swept paradise away, withdrawn the place of His presence, and set up His throne in heaven, from which He would henceforth reveal Himself to man (cf. Gen 9:5, Gen 9:7). In future, therefore, the hearts of the pious had to be turned towards heaven, and their offerings and prayers needed to ascend on high if they were to reach the throne of God.
To give this direction to their offerings, heights or elevated places were erected, from which they ascended towards heaven in fire. From this the offerings received the name of עלת from עולה, the ascending, not so much because the sacrificial animals ascended or were raised upon the altar, as because they rose from the altar to haven (cf. Jdg 20:40; Jer 48:15; Amo 4:10).
Noah took his offerings from every clean beast and every clean fowl - from those animals, therefore, which were destined for man’s food; probably the seventh of every kind, which he had taken into the ark. “ And Jehovah smelled the smell of satisfaction, ” i. e. , He graciously accepted the feelings of the offerer which rose to Him in the odour of the sacrificial flame.
In the sacrificial flame the essence of the animal was resolved into vapour; so that when man presented a sacrifice in his own stead, his inmost being, his spirit, and his heart ascended to God in the vapour, and the sacrifice brought the feeling of his heart before God. This feeling of gratitude for gracious protection, and of desire for further communications of grace, was well-pleasing to God.
He “ said to His heart ' (to, or in Himself; i. e. , He resolved), “ I will not again curse the ground any more for man’s sake, because the image (i. e. , the thought and desire) of man’s heart is evil from his youth up (i. e. , from the very time when he begins to act with consciousness). ” This hardly seems an appropriate reason. As Luther says: “ Hic inconstantiae videtur Deus accusari posse.
Supra puniturus hominem causam consilii dicit, quia figmentum cordis humani malum est. Hic promissurus homini gratiam, quod posthac tali ira uti nolit, eandem causam allegat . ” Both Luther and Calvin express the same thought, though without really solving the apparent discrepancy. It was not because the thoughts and desires of the human heart are evil that God would not smite any more every living thing, that is to say, would not exterminate it judicially; but because they are evil from his youth up , because evil is innate in man, and for that reason he needs the forbearance of God; and also (and here lies the principal motive for the divine resolution) because in the offering of the righteous Noah, not only were thanks presented for past protection, and entreaty for further care, but the desire of man was expressed, to remain in fellowship with God, and to procure the divine favour.
“ All the days of the earth; ” i. e. , so long as the earth shall continue, the regular alternation of day and night and of the seasons of the year, so indispensable to the continuance of the human race, would never be interrupted again.