And all the days of Methuselah were nine hundred sixty and nine years: and he died.
Gen 5:27
And all the days of Methuselah
The longest life and its lessons
In dwelling upon this text I shall–
I.
Take a simple survey of the age and manners of the antediluvian world. The youth of the world was the season of mans greatest age; perhaps, also, of mans greatest wickedness.
II. Draw some important lessons from this survey–
1. The agglomerative tendencies of human depravity.
2. The vanity of earthly things.
3. The power of an endless life.
4. The great natural wickedness of the heart.
5. That mere duration of years does not constitute a long life, but the fulfilment of lifes ends.
6. The danger of religious procrastination. (Dr. Cheever.)
The close of life
I. THE CLOSE OF LIFE IS ABSOLUTELY CERTAIN.
II. LIFE HAS COME TO A CLOSE WITH MEN THROUGH ALL GENERATIONS FROM THE EARLIEST TIMES.
III. LIFE COMES TO A CLOSE IN ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD. Some places are more salubrious than others.
IV. LIFE COMES TO A CLOSE AT ALL SEASONS OF THE YEAR.
V. LIFE CLOSES AT ALL PERIODS. Death is not peculiar to any age.
VI. LIFE CLOSES IN A VARIETY OF WAYS. How many perish in the battlefield, amid all the dreadful realities of war! Many are lost by shipwreck at sea. Many lose their lives by accident on land. Far from the land of his birth and friends, pursuing his philanthropic career, John Howard finished his labours and his life. Sublimely grand must have been the exit of Thomas Chalmers; but, like that of John Foster, no human eye was permitted to see it. It was a Sabbath evening when he retired to rest, in his most happy mood. In the morning he was found on his bedside in an attitude of repose. A peaceful smile, like a beam from the Sun of Righteousness, lingered about his face. His immortal part had soared upwards, escorted by a convoy of angels, to the better land. Thus widely diversified are the circumstances and modes of our departure. VII. THE CLOSE OF LIFE NEVER HAPPENS BY CHANCE. It is an event of Divine appointment.
VIII. THE CLOSE OF LIFE MAKES ALL THE ARTIFICIAL DISTINCTIONS OF LIFE VOID. Death, says Dr. Donne, comes equally to us all, and makes us all equal when it comes. The ashes of an oak in a chimney are no epitaph of that to tell me how high, or how large it was; it tells me not what flocks it sheltered whilst it stood, nor what men it hurt when it fell. The dust of great mens graves is speechless too; it says nothing, it distinguishes nothing. As soon the dust of a wretch whom thou wouldst not, as of a prince whom thou couldst not look upon, will trouble thine eyes if the wind blow it thither; and when a whirlwind hath blown the dust of the churchyard into the church, and the man sweeps out the dust of the church into the churchyard, who will undertake to sift those dusts again, and to pronounce: This is the patrician–this is the noble flour; and this the yeoman–this the plebeian bran!
IX. THE CLOSE OF LIFE IS OF INCONCEIVABLE IMPORTANCE. Our chances of preparation last while life lasts. Iris said that when Alexander encamped before a city, he used to set up a light, to give notice to those within that if they came forth to him while that light lasted, they should have quarter; but if they came not out within the given time they were to expect no mercy. Our light is burning now. It goes out when life departs. Death fixes all forever. It is this solemn fact–that death in shutting the gates of life upon us here, ushers us into the unchangeable hereafter–that accounts for the opposite experiences of men when they come to die. Voltaire said to his doctor–I am abandoned by God and man. I will give you half of what I am worth, if you will give me six months life. Sir, replied the doctor, you cannot live six weeks. Then, said the dying man, I shall go to hell; and soon after expired. I shall be glad to find a hole, said Hobbes, to creep out of the world at. How different the anticipations of good men! O Father of Thy beloved Son Jesus Christ! exclaimed the martyr Polycarp; I bless Thee that Thou hast counted me worthy to receive my portion in the number of martyrs. I have pain, said Richard Baxter, (there is no arguing against sense); but I have peace. Is this dying? said Dr. Goodwin. How have I dreaded as an enemy this smiling friend. The best of all is, God is with us, was John Wesleys shout of victory in the last hour. The victorys won forever, exclaimed Dr. Payson; I am going to bathe in an ocean of purity and benevolence and happiness to all eternity.
X. I HAVE NOW TO OBSERVE, THAT THE CLOSE OF LIFE MAY BE NEAR AT HAND. We know not the day nor the hour of the messengers arrival.
XI. MY LAST REMARK IS THAT THE CLOSE OF LIFE DEMANDS INSTANT PREPARATION. Mark what that preparation is. What you require to fit you for death is all the same as that which you require to fit you for life. (W. Walters.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 27. The days of Methuselah were nine hundred sixty and nine years] This is the longest life mentioned in Scripture, and probably the longest ever lived; but we have not authority to say positively that it was the longest. Before the flood, and before artificial refinements were much known and cultivated, the life of man was greatly protracted, and yet of him who lived within thirty-one years of a thousand it is said he died; and the longest life is but as a moment when it is past. Though life is uncertain, precarious, and full of natural evils, yet it is a blessing in all its periods if devoted to the glory of God and the interest of the soul; for while it lasts we may more and more acquaint ourselves with God and be at peace, and thereby good shall come unto us; Job 22:21.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
This was the longest time that any man lived. But it is observable that neither his nor any of the patriarchs lives reached to a thousand years, which number hath some shadow of perfection.
He died but a little before the flood came, being taken away from the evil to come.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
And all the days of Methuselah were nine hundred and sixty nine years, and he died,…. This was the oldest man that ever lived, no man ever lived to a thousand years: the Jews give this as a reason for it, because a thousand years is God’s day, according to
Ps 90:4 and no man is suffered to arrive to that. His name carried in it a prediction of the time of the flood, which was to be quickly after his death, as has been observed, [See comments on Ge 5:21]. Some say he died in the year of the flood; others, fourteen years after, and was in the garden of Eden with his father, in the days of the flood, and then returned to the world a; but the eastern writers are unanimous that he died before the flood: the Arabic writers b are very particular as to the time in which he died; they say he died in the six hundredth year of Noah, on a Friday, about noon, on the twenty first day of Elul, which is Thout; and Noah and Shem buried him, embalmed in spices, in the double cave, and mourned for him forty days: and some of the Jewish writers say he died but seven days before the flood came, which they gather from Ge 7:10 “after seven days”; that is, as they interpret it, after seven days of mourning for Methuselah c: he died A. M. 1656, the same year the flood came, according to Bishop Usher.
a Shalshalet Hakabala, fol. 74. 2. b Apud Hottinger, p. 244. c Bereshit Rabba, sect. 32. fol. 27. 3. Juchasin, fol. 6. 1. Baal Habturim in Gen. vii. 10.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
27. Methuselah The etymology of this word is uncertain . Gesenius gives it man of the dart; it may also mean, he dieth, and sendeth forth, (that is, the deluge,) a prophetic name, given by his father, Enoch, when prophesying of God’s judgments, indicating that the deluge would take place at his death . He died in the year of the flood, having reached the greatest age recorded, nine hundred and sixty-nine years .
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Gen 5:27 And all the days of Methuselah were nine hundred sixty and nine years: and he died.
Ver. 27. And all the days of Methuselah. ] He lived longest of any, yet wanted thirty-one years of a thousand. Oecolampadius thinks there was a mystery in this, that they all died short of a thousand, which is a type of perfection; a to teach us, says he, that live we never so long here, and grow we never so fast in grace, we cannot possibly be perfect, till we get to heaven. Enoch lived long in a little time; and foreseeing the flood, named his son Methuselah; that is to say, he dies, and the dart (or flood) comes . And so it happened; for no sooner was his head laid, but in came the flood. “The righteous are taken away from the evil to come.” Isa 57:1 And their death is a sad presage of an imminent calamity. Hippo could not be taken while Augustine lived, nor Heidelberg while Paraeus. Semen sanctum statumen terrae b Isa 6:13 The holy seed upholdeth the state. Absque stationibus non staret mundus c “The innocent shall deliver the island, and it is delivered by the pureness of thy hands,” Job 22:30 whereas, “one sinner destroyeth much good.” Ecc 9:18 Ambrose is said to have been “the walls of Italy.” d Stilico the earl said, that his death did threaten destruction to that country.
“ Hic patria est, murique urbis stant pectore in uno .” e
a Nemo patriarcharum mille annos complevit, quia numerus iste typum habeat perfectionis. Hic nulla perfectio pietatu . – Oecolampad.
b Junius.
c Tertul.
d Paulin. Nolan., in Vita Ambros .
e De Fablo Cunctatore , Sil.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
am 1656, bc 2348
he died: Gen 5:5
Reciprocal: Gen 9:29 – nine Gen 47:9 – have not 2Sa 19:32 – fourscore Isa 65:22 – for as