And GOD saw that the wickedness of man [was] great in the earth, and [that] every imagination of the thoughts of his heart [was] only evil continually.
5. of man ] Literally, “the man,” ha-adam, used generically, as in Gen 6:1.
“The unity of the race is a consistent doctrine of the O.T. It was , man, when created as a single individual. It spread over the earth, and was still , man. It was , ‘alt flesh,’ that had corrupted its way before the Flood. Mankind is, as a whole, corrupt; and, corresponding to this, each individual is unclean. Probably the O.T. does not go the length of offering any rationale of the fact that each individual is sinful, beyond connecting him with a sinful whole.” (Davidson, Theology of the O.T. pp. 218, 219.)
every imagination of the thoughts of his heart ] An elaborate description. The word rendered “imagination” means “form,” “formation,” or “shape,” and, as applied to the region of thought, denotes “an idea,” or “the concept of thought,” cogitatio, cf. Gen 8:21.
continually ] Literally, “all the day.” Man’s sinfulness is thus described as universal and unintermittent. The beginnings of “sin” are seen in the picture of the Fall, chap. 3, its propagation in the murderous act of Cain, chap. 4; we have reached in this passage its complete and unrestrained expansion.
The LXX translating the word for “imagination” as a verb, gives , Lat. quod cuncta cogitatio cordis intenta esset ad malum omni tempore.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
5 8. Introduction to the story of the Flood from J: Jehovah sees the sinfulness of man and resolves to annihilate the race.
Gen 6:5 to Gen 9:17. The Flood. (J and P.)
Here follows the Hebrew narrative of the Flood. The Flood is the one great event in the history of the world, which in the Hebrew narrative emerges out of the obscurity between the creation of man and the period of the patriarchs. It marks the close of the first era of the human race. According to the story in Genesis, it was a judgement for the depravity of mankind.
It marks also the beginning of a new era in the history of mankind. This has its origin in the mercy of God, who, in recognition of the righteousness of Noah, preserves him and his family in the general overthrow. This is a symbol of salvation. The new age opens with the renewal of promises to man, and with a covenant entailing new obligations on man’s part, in return for the assurance of Divine protection.
On the relation of the Genesis narrative to the Babylonian and other accounts of the Flood, see Special Note on the chapter comments for Genesis 8.
The present narrative is woven together out of the two distinct Israelite traditions, J and P: see Introduction. This compositeness of structure in the Flood narrative is quite unmistakable 1 [12] . It accounts for the ( a) repetitions, ( b) discrepancies, ( c) intermittent use of special words and phrases, inexplicable on the assumption of a continuous homogeneous narrative. Under the head of ( a) “repetitions,” notice the duplicated account of the growing corruption of mankind in Gen 6:5-8 (J), and in Gen 6:9-12 (P); of the entrance of Noah and his family into the ark Gen 7:7 (J) and Gen 7:13 (P); of the rising of the waters of the Flood Gen 7:17 (J) and Gen 7:18-19 (P); of the end of all living creatures Gen 7:21 (P) and Gen 7:22-23 (J); and of God’s promise to Noah in Gen 8:15-19 (P) and Gen 8:20-22 (J).
[12] See Appendix C (book comments).
Under the head of ( b) “discrepancies,” notice that, in P, Noah takes one pair of every kind of animal into the ark (Gen 6:19-20, and Gen 7:15-16), while, in J, Noah is commanded to take seven pairs of every clean animal and one pair of every unclean animal into the ark (Gen 7:2-3); again, in P, the Flood is brought about through the outburst of the waters from the great deep both from beneath the earth and from above the firmament (Gen 7:11, Gen 8:2); while, in J, it is produced by the rain (Gen 7:12, Gen 8:2). According to P, the Flood was in progress for 150 days (Gen 7:24, Gen 8:3), while according to J the rain lasted for 40 days (Gen 7:12); in J the waters were subsiding for 14 or 21 days (Gen 8:10; Gen 8:12), and in P the earth was dry after a year and 10 days (Gen 8:14).
Under the head of ( c), the following are examples of distinctive phraseology:
P J “God” ( Elohim), Gen 6:9; Gen 6:11-13; Gen 6:22, Gen 7:16 a, Gen 8:1; Gen 8:15. “the Lord” (Jehovah), Gen 7:1; Gen 7:5; Gen 7:16 b, Gen 8:20-21. “male and female” ( zkr un’bh), Gen 6:19, Gen 7:16. “the male and his female” ( ish v’ishto), Gen 7:2. “destroy” ( shath), Gen 6:13; Gen 6:17. “destroy” ( mh), Gen 6:7, Gen 7:4; Gen 7:23. “all flesh,” Gen 6:12-13; Gen 6:17, Gen 7:21. “every living thing,” Gen 7:4; Gen 7:23. “breath ( rua) of life,” Gen 7:15. “breath of ( nishmath) the spirit of ( rua) life,” Gen 7:22. “die” ( gv‘), Gen 7:21. “die” ( mth), Gen 7:22. “waters prevailed” ( gbr), Gen 7:18-19; Gen 7:24. “waters increased” ( rbh), Gen 7:17 b. “waters abated” ( sr), Gen 8:3 b, 5. “waters abated” ( qlal), Gen 8:8. Also characteristic of P is the minute description of the ark and its dimensions (Gen 6:14-16), the varieties of animals (Gen 6:20), the Flood’s depth (Gen 7:20), and the members of Noah’s family (Gen 7:13, Gen 8:15; Gen 8:18); while, in J, Divine action is described in anthropomorphic terms (e.g. Gen 6:6, Gen 7:16, Gen 8:21), and vivid details of narrative are introduced (Gen 8:6-12).
Roughly speaking the portions derived from P consist of Gen 6:9-22, Gen 7:6; Gen 7:11; Gen 7:13-16 a, 18 21, 24, Gen 8:1-2 a, 3b 5, 13 a, 14 19, Gen 9:1-17: the remainder of the narrative is derived from the J tradition, with here and there a few alterations for the purpose of harmonizing the two sources of narrative. The process of harmonizing was not difficult: for both narratives agreed in their main outlines, and differed only in the treatment of details.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Gen 6:5-7
God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth.
A degenerate world
1. The organic unity of society is favourable to the spread of moral evil.
2. The native willingness of the human soul to do evil is favourable to the contagion of moral wrong.
I. IT IS A WORLD IN WHICH MARRIAGE IS ABUSED.
1. We find that marriage was commenced on a wrong principle. It is altogether wrong for the sons of God to marry the daughters of men.
2. We find that physical beauty was made the basis of the matrimonial selection. We find that the marriage bond was violated by impurity.
II. IT IS WORLD IN WHICH VIOLENCE PREVAILS.
1. Men of physical strength became the rulers of the people.
2. Men of physical strength were the popular favourites of the day.
3. Men of physical strength were the terror of the day.
III. IT IS A WORLD IN WHICH SPIRITUAL INFLUENCES ARE REJECTED.
1. This degenerate world had not been entirely left to its own inclination.
2. The degenerate world rejected the holy influences of heaven.
3. The degenerate world was in danger of losing the holy and correcting influences of heaven.
IV. IT IS A WORLD UNDER THE IMMEDIATE INSPECTION OF GOD.
V. IT IS A WORLD THREATENED WITH DESTRUCTION BY GOD.
1. This threat was retributive.
2. This threat was comprehensive.
3. This threat was mingled with mercy.
LESSONS:
1. To sanctify a long life by true piety, lest it become a means of impurity.
2. To avoid unhallowed alliances.
3. To coincide with the convictions of the Spirit or God. (J. S.Exell, M. A.)
The extent of mans wickedness
1. The testimony of God respecting man. In general, the wickedness of man was great in the earth. Every species of wickedness was committed in the most shameless manner. But more particularly, the hearts of men were evil; the thoughts of their hearts were evil; the imaginations of the thoughts were evil, and this too without exception, without mixture, without intermission; for every imagination was evil, and only evil, and that continually. What an awful statement. But how could this be ascertained? Only by God (Pro 16:2). This is His testimony, after a thorough inspection of every human being. The same must be spoken of man at this day. Proved by observation. What has been the state of your hearts? Pride, anger, impure thoughts have sprung up in them. If occasionally a transient thought of good has arisen, how coldly has it been entertained, how feebly has it operated, how soon has it been lost. Compared with what the law requires, and what God and His Christ deserve at your hands, do we not fall short of our duty?
II. WHAT EFFECT IT SHOULD PRODUCE UPON YOU.
1. Humiliation. On review of our words and actions we have all reason to be ashamed. Who amongst us could bear to have all his thoughts disclosed? Yet God beholds all; and has a perfect recollection of all that has passed through our minds from infancy. We ought to be humble.
2. Gratitude. God sent His Son that through Him all our iniquities might be forgiven. Is not gratitude due to Him in return?
3. Fear. Though your hearts are renewed by Divine grace, it is only in part; you have still the flesh within you, as well as the spirit. (C. Simeon, M. A.)
A degenerate world
1. In the first place, we may remark the occasion of this general corruption, which was the increase of population. When men began to multiply they became more and more depraved: yet an increase of population is considered as a blessing to a country, and such it is in itself; but through mans depravity it often proves a curse. When men are collected in great numbers they whet one another up to evil, which is the reason why sin commonly grows rankest in populous places. We were made to be helpers; but by sin we are become tempters of one another, drawing and being drawn into innumerable evils.
2. Secondly: Observe the first step towards degeneracy, which was the uniting of the world and the church by mixed marriages. The great end of marriage in a good man should not be to gratify his fancy, or indulge his natural inclinations, but to obtain a helper; and the same in a woman. We need to be helped on in our way to heaven, instead of being hindered and corrupted.
3. Observe the great offence that God took at this conduct, and the consequences which grew out of it: The Lord said, My Spirit shall not always strive with man, etc. It is for that he also (or these also) were flesh; that is, those who had been considered as the sons of God were become corrupt.
4. Observe the long suffering of God amidst His displeasure–His day shall be a hundred and twenty years (1Pe 3:20). All this time God did strive, or contend with them; but, it seems, without effect. (A. Fuller.)
Moral declension
As there is a law of continuity, whereby in ascending we can only mount step by step; so they who descend must sink with an ever increasing velocity. No propagation is more rapid than that of evil; no growth more certain. He who is in for a penny, if he does not resolutely fly, will find that he is in for a pound. The longer the avalanche rolls down the glacier slopes, the swifter becomes its speed. A little group of Alpine travellers saw a flower blooming on the slope of the cliff on which they stood surveying the prospect below. Each started to secure the prize; but as they hastened down, the force of their momentum increased with each step of the descent–they were borne on the smooth icy surface swiftly past the object of pursuit–and were precipitated into a yawning crevasse. Such is the declension of the soul.
A fair scene spoiled
I know beautiful valley in Wales, guarded by well-wooded hills. Spring came there first, and summer lingered longest, and the clear river loitered through the rich pastures and the laughing orchards, as if loth to leave the enchanting scene. But the manufacturer came there; he built his chimneys and he lighted his furnaces, out of which belched forth poisonous fumes night and day. Every tree is dead, no flower blooms there now, the very grass has been eaten off the face of the earth, the beautiful river, in which the pebbles once lay as the pure thoughts in a maidens mind, is now foul, and the valley scarred and bare, looks like the entrance into Tophet itself. And this human nature of ours, in which faith and virtue, and godliness, and all sweet humanities might flourish, in miles of this London of ours, is what bad air, and the gin palace, and the careless indifference of a Christianity bent only upon saving itself, have made it. (Morlais Jones.)
Mans corruption
I. THAT THE WICKEDNESS OF MAN IS, AND EVER HAS BEEN, GREAT.
1. Among the Jews.
2. In heathen nations. But, to bring the matter home to ourselves, for with ourselves the great concern lies, are not men still full of envy, murder, debate, deceit? Is not the state of society lamentably corrupted and depraved?
II. THAT THIS WICKEDNESS PROCEEDS FROM HIS CORRUPT NATURE. Prove this from–
1. Experience.
2. Scripture. (Gen 8:20-21; Job 15:14-16; Psa 51:5-10; Mat 15:19; Mat 12:33; Rom 7:14-15; Rom 7:18.)
II. THE ONLY REMEDY FOR THIS CORRUPTION. (Joh 3:16.) (H. J. Hastings, M. A.)
The sinfulness of mans natural state
Two things are here laid to their charge:
1. Corruption of life, wickedness, great wickedness. I understand this of the wickedness of their lives; for it is plainly distinguished from the wickedness of their hearts.
2. Corruption of nature. Every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. All their wicked practices are here traced to the fountain and springhead: a corrupt heart was the source of all. The soul, which was made upright in all its faculties, is now wholly disordered. There is a sad alteration, a wonderful overturning in the nature of man: where, at first, there was nothing evil, now there is nothing good.
I. I SHALL CONFIRM THE DOCTRINE OF THE CORRUPTION OF NATURE. Here we shall consult the word of God, and mens experience and observation. For Scripture-proof, let us consider,
1. How the Scripture takes particular notice of fallen Adams communicating his image to his posterity (Gen 5:3).
2. It appears, from Job 14:4, our first parents were unclean; how then can we be clean?
3. Consider the confession of David (Psa 51:5). Here he ascends from his actual sin to the fountain of it, namely, corrupt nature.
4. Hear our Lords determination of the point, That which is born of the flesh is flesh (Joh 3:6). Behold the universal corruption of mankind–all are flesh!
5. Man certainly is sunk very low now, in comparison of what he once was. God made him but a little lower than the angels; but now we find him likened to the beasts that perish. He hearkened to a brute, and is now become like one of them,
6. We are by nature the children of wrath (Eph 2:3). We are worthy of, and liable to, the wrath of God; and this by nature: therefore, doubtless, we are by nature sinful creatures. I shall propose a few things that may serve to convince us in this point–
(1) Who sees not a flood of miseries overflowing the world?
(2) Observe how early this corruption of nature begins to appear in young ones.
(3) Take a view of the manifold gross outbreakings of sin in the world: the wickedness of man is yet great in the earth.
(4) Cast your eye upon those terrible convulsions which the world is thrown into by the lusts of men! Lions make not a prey of lions, nor wolves of wolves: but men are turned lions and wolves to one another, biting and devouring one another.
(5) Consider the necessity of human laws, guarded by terrors and severities; to which we may apply what the apostle says (1Ti 1:9).
(6) Consider the remains of that natural corruption in the saints. Though grace has entered yet corruption is not expelled: though they have got the new creature, yet much of the old corrupt nature remains.
(7) I shall add but one observation more, and that is, that in every man naturally the image of fallen Adam appears. Some children by the features and lineaments of their face do, as it were, father themselves: and thus we resemble our first parents. Every one of us bears the image and impression of the Fall upon him: and to evince the truth of this, I appeal to the consciences of all in these following particulars–
(a) Is not sinful curiosity natural to us? and is not this a print of
Adams image (Gen 3:6)?
(b) If the Lord by His holy law and wise providence puts a restraint upon us to keep us back from anything, does not that restraint whet the edge of our natural inclinations, and makes us so much the keener in our desires? And in this do we not betray it plainly that we are Adams children (Gen 3:2-6)?
(c) Which of all the children of Adam is not naturally disposed to hear the instruction that causeth to err? And was not this the rock our first parents split upon (Gen 3:4-6)?
(d) Do not the eyes in your head often blind the eyes of the mind?
(e) Is it not natural to us to care for the body, even at the expense of the soul?
(f) Is not everyone by nature discontented with his present lot in the world, or with some one thing or other in it?
(g) Are we not far more easily impressed and influenced by evil counsels and examples than by those that are good?
(h) Who of all Adams sons needs be taught the art of sewing fig leaves together to cover their nakedness (Gen 3:7)?
(i) Do not Adams children naturally follow his footsteps in hiding themselves from the presence of the Lord (Gen 3:8)?
(j) How loth are men to confess sin, to take guilt and shame to themselves? Was it not thus in the case before us (Gen 3:10)?
(k) Is it not natural for us to extenuate our sin, and transfer the guilt upon others?
II. I PROCEED TO INQUIRE INTO THE CORRUPTION OF NATURE IN THE SEVERAL PARTS THEREOF. Man in his natural state is altogether corrupt: both soul and body are polluted, as the apostle proves at large (Rom 3:10-18).
1. Of the corruption of the understanding.
(1) There is a natural weakness in the minds of men with respect to spiritual things. The apostle determines concerning everyone that is not endued with the graces of the Spirit, That he is blind, and cannot see afar 2Pe 1:9).
(2) Mans understanding is naturally overwhelmed with gross darkness in spiritual things. He has some notions of spiritual truths, but sees not the things themselves that are wrapt up in the words of truth, Understanding neither what they say, nor whereof they affirm (1Ti 1:7). In a word, natural men fear, seek, confess, they know not what.
(3) There is in the mind of man a natural bias to evil, whereby it comes to pass that whatever difficulties it finds while occupied about things truly good, it acts with a great deal of ease in evil, as being in that case in its own element (Jer 4:22).
(4) There is in the carnal mind an opposition to spiritual truths, and an aversion to receive them. It is as little a friend to Divine truths as it is to holiness.
(5) There is in the mind of man a natural proneness to lies and falsehood, which favours his lusts.
(6) Man is naturally high-minded; for when the gospel comes in power to him it is employed in casting down imaginations, and every high thing that exalteth itself against the knowledge of God (2Co 10:5).
2. Of the corruption of the will. The will, that commanding faculty, which at first was faithful and ruled with God, is now turned traitor and rules with and for the devil. God planted it in man wholly a right seed, but now it is turned into the degenerate plant of a strange vine.
(1) There is in the unrenewed will an utter inability for what is truly good and acceptable in the sight of God.
(2) There is in the unrenewed will an aversion to good. Sin is the natural mans element; he is as unwilling to part with it as fish are to come out of the water on to dry land.
(3) There is in the will of man a natural proneness to evil, a woeful bent towards sin.
(4) There is a natural contrariety, direct opposition, and enmity in the will of man to God Himself and His holy will (Rom 8:7).
3. The corruption of the affections. The unrenewed mans affections are wholly disordered and distempered: they are as the unruly horse, that either will not receive, or violently runs away with, the rider.
4. Corruption of the conscience (Tit 1:15).
5. Corruption of the memory. Even the memory bears evident marks of this corruption. What is good and worthy to be remembered, as it makes but slender impression, so that impression easily wears off; the memory, as a leaking vessel, lets it slip (Heb 2:1).
6. Corruption of the body. The body itself also is partaker of this corruption and defilement so far as it is capable thereof. Wherefore the Scripture calls it sinful flesh (Rom 8:3). We may take this up in two things.
(1) The natural temper, or rather distemper, of the bodies of Adams children, as it is an effect of original sin, so it has a natural tendency to sin, incites to sin, leads the soul into snares, yea, is itself a snare to the soul.
(2) It serves the soul in many sins. Its members are instruments or weapons of unrighteousness whereby men fight against God (Rom 6:13).
III. I SHALL SHOW HOW MANS NATURE COMES TO BE THUS CORRUPTED. Adams sin corrupted mans nature and leavened the whole lump of mankind. The root was poisoned, and so the branches were envenomed: the vine turned into the vine of Sodom, and so the grapes became grapes of gall. Adam by his sin became not only guilty but corrupt, and so transmits guilt and corruption to his posterity (Gen 5:3; Job 14:4). By his sin he stripped himself of his original righteousness and corrupted himself; we were in him representatively, being represented by him as our moral head in the covenant of works: we were in him seminally, as our natural head; hence we fell in him, and by his disobedience were made sinners, as Levi in the loins of Abraham paid tithes (Heb 7:9-10).
IV. I SHALL NOW APPLY THIS DOCTRINE OF THE CORRUPTION OF NATURE.
Use 1.–For information. Is mans nature wholly corrupted? Then–
(1) No wonder that the grave opens its devouring mouth for us as soon as the womb has cast us forth, and that the cradle is turned into a coffin to receive the corrupt lump: for we are all, in a spiritual sense, dead born; yea, and filthy (Psa 14:3), noisome, rank, and stinking as a corrupt thing, as the word imports.
(2) Behold here as in a glass the spring of all the wickedness, profanity, and formality which is in the world; the source of all the disorders in thy own heart and life.
(3) See here why sin is so pleasant and religion such a burden to carnal spirits: sin is natural, holiness not so.
(4) Learn from this the nature and necessity of regeneration. First, this discovers the nature of regeneration in these two things–
(a) It is not a partial, but a total change, though imperfect in this life. Thy whole nature is corrupted; therefore the cure must go through every part.
(b) It is not a change made by human industry, but by the mighty power of the Spirit of God. A man must be born of the Spirit (Joh 3:5). Secondly, this also shows the necessity of regeneration. It is absolutely necessary in order to salvation (Joh 3:4).
Use 2.–For lamentation. Well may we lament thy case, O natural man! for it is the saddest case one can be in out of hell.
Use 3.–I exhort you to believe this sad truth. Alas! it is evident that it is very little believed in the world. Few are concerned to get their corrupt conversation changed; but fewer, by far, to get their nature changed. Most men know not what they are, nor what spirits they are of; they are as the eye, which, seeing many things, never sees itself. But until you know everyone the plague of his own heart, there is no hope of your recovery. (T. Boston, D. D.)
A dark view of sin
If a doctor knows that he can cure a disease, he can afford to give full weight to its gravest symptoms. If he knows he cannot, he is sorely tempted to say it is of slight importance, and, though it cannot be cured, can be endured without much discomfort. And so the Scripture teachings about mans real moral condition are characterized by two peculiarities which, at first sight, seem somewhat opposed, but are really harmonious and closely connected. There is no book and no system in the whole world that takes such a dark view of what you and I are; there is none animated with so bright and confident a hope of what you and I may become. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
The sinfulness and cure of thoughts
1. Of the subject, every man.
2. Of the act, every thought.
3. Of the qualification of the act, only evil
4. Of the time, continually.
The words thus opened afford us this proposition: That the thoughts, and inward operations of the souls of men, are naturally universally evil, and highly provoking. In this discourse, let us first see what kind of thoughts are sins.
1. Negatively. A simple apprehension of sin is not sinful. Thoughts receive not a sinfulness barely from the object. That may be unlawful to be acted which is not unlawful to be thought of.
2. Positively. Our thoughts may be branched into first motions, or such that are more voluntary.
(1) First motions: those unfledged thoughts and single threads, before a multitude of them come to be twisted and woven into a discourse; such as skip up from our natural corruptions, and sink down again, as fish in a river. These are sins, though we consent not to them, because, though they are without our will, they are not against our nature, but spring from an inordinate frame, of a different hue from what God implanted in us. How can the first sprouts be good, if the root be evil? Not only the thought formed, but the very formation, or first imagination, is evil.
(2) Voluntary thoughts, which are the blossoms of these motions: such that have no lawful object, no right end, not governed by reason, eccentric, disorderly in their motions, and like the jarring strings of an untuned instrument. These may be reduced to three heads.
I. In regard of God.
II. Of ourselves.
III. Of others.
I. In regard of God.
1. Cold thoughts of God. When no affection is raised in us by them.
2. Debasing conceptions, unworthy of God. Such are called in the heathen vain imaginations (Rom 1:21). Such an imagination Adam seemed to have, conceiting God to be so mean a being, that he, a creature not of a days standing, could mount to an equality of knowledge with Him.
3. Accusing thoughts of God, either of His mercy, as in despair; or of His justice, as too severe, as in Cain (Gen 4:13).
4. Curious thoughts about things too high for us. It is the frequent business of mens minds to flutter about things without the bounds of Gods revelation (Gen 3:5). God knows that your eyes shall be opened. Yet how do all Adams posterity long after this forbidden fruit!
II. In regard of ourselves. Our thoughts are proud, self-confident, self-applauding, foolish, covetous, anxious, unclean, and what not?
1. Ambitious. The aspiring thoughts of the first man run in the veins of his posterity.
2. Self-confident. Edoms thoughts swelled him into a vain confidence of a perpetual prosperity; and David sometimes said, in the like state, that he should never be moved.
3. Self-applauding. Either in the vain remembrances of our former prosperity, or ascribing our present happiness to the dexterity of our own wit.
4. Ungrounded imaginations of the events of things, either present or future. Such wild conceits, like meteors bred of a few vapours, do often frisk in our minds.
(1) Of things present. It is likely Eve foolishly imagined she had brought forth the Messiah when she brought forth a murderer (Gen 4:1).
(2) Of things to come, either in bespeaking false hopes, or antedating improbable griefs. Such are the jolly thoughts we have of a happy estate in reversion, which yet we may fall short of.
5. Immoderate thoughts about lawful things. When we exercise our minds too thick, and with a fierceness of affection above their merit; not in subserviency to God, or mixing our cares with dependencies on Him.
Worldly concerns may quarter in our thoughts, but they must not possess all the room, and thrust Christ into a manger; neither must they be of that value with us as the law was with David, sweeter than the honey or the honeycomb.
III. In regard of others. All thoughts of our neighbour against the rule of charity: Such that imagine evil in their hearts, God hates (Zec 8:17). These principally are–
1. Envious, when we torment ourselves with others fortunes.
2. Censorious, stigmatizing every freckle in our brothers conversation 1Ti 6:4).
3. Jealous and evil surmisings, contrary to charity, which thinks no evil 1Co 13:5).
4. Revengeful; such made Haman take little content in his preferments, as long as Mordecai refused to court him (Est 5:13); and Esau thought of the days of mourning for his father, that he might be revenged for his brothers deceits: Esau said in his heart, etc. (Gen 27:41). In all these thoughts there is a further guilt in three respects, viz
1. Delight.
2. Contrivance.
3. Reacting.
1. Delight in them. The very tickling of our fancy by a sinful motion, though without a formal consent, is a sin, because it is a degree of complacency in an unlawful object.
2. Contrivance. When the delight in the thought grows up to the contrivance of the act (which is still the work of the thinking faculty). When mens wits play the devils in their souls, in inventing sophistical reasons for the commission and justification of their crimes, with a mighty jollity at their own craft, such plots are the trade of a wicked mans heart. A covetous man will be working in his inward shop from morning till night to study new methods for gain; and voluptuous and ambitious persons will draw schemes and models in their fancy of what they would outwardly accomplish.
3. Reacting sin after it is outwardly committed. Though the individual action be transient, and cannot be committed again, yet the idea and image of it remaining in the memory may, by the help of an apish fancy, be repeated a thousand times over with a rarefied pleasure, as both the features of our friends, and the agreeable conversations we have had with them, may with a fresh relish be represented in our fancies, though the persons were rotten many years ago. Having thus declared the nature of our thoughts, and the degrees of their guilt, the next thing is to prove that they are sins.
There are three reasons for the proof of this, that they are sins.
1. They are contrary to the law, which doth forbid the first foamings and belchings of the heart, because they arise from an habitual corruption, and testify a defect of something which the law requires to be in us, to correct the excursions of our minds (Rom 7:7).
2. They are contrary to the order of nature, and the design of our creation. Whatsoever is a swerving from our primitive nature is sin, or at least a consequent of it. But all inclinations to sin are contrary to that righteousness wherewith man was first endued.
3. We are accountable to God, and punishable for thoughts. Nothing is the meritorious cause of Gods wrath but sin. Having proved that there is a sinfulness in our thoughts, let us now see what provocation there is in them, which in some respects is greater than that of our actions.
Now, thoughts are greater in respect–
1. Of fruitfulness. The wickedness that God saw great in the earth was the fruit of imaginations. They are the immediate causes of all sin. No cockatrice but was first an egg.
2. In respect of quantity. Imaginations are said to be continually evil. There is an infinite variety of conceptions, as the Psalmist speaks of the sea, wherein are all things creeping innumerable, both small and great, and a constant generation of whole shoals of them; that you may as well number the fish in the sea, or the atoms in the sunbeams, as recount them.
3. In respect of strength. Imaginations of the heart are only, i.e., purely evil. The nearer anything is in union with the root, the more radical strength it hath.
4. In respect of alliance. In these we have the nearest communion with the devil. The understanding of man is so tainted, that his wisdom, the chiefest flower in it, is not only earthly and sensual (it were well if it were no worse), but devilish too (Jam 3:15). If the flower be so rank, what are the weeds?
5. In respect of contrariety and odiousness to God. Imaginations were only evil, and so most directly contrary to God, who is only good. Our natural enmity against God (Rom 8:7), is seated in the mind.
6. In respect of connaturalness and voluntariness. They are the imaginations of the thoughts of the heart, and they are continually evil. They are as natural as the estuations of the sea, the bubblings of a fountain, or the twinkling of the stars.
The uses shall be two, though many inferences might be drawn from the point.
1. Reproof. What a mass of vanity should we find in our minds, if we could bring our thoughts, in the space of one day, yea, but one hour, to an account! How many foolish thoughts with our wisdom, ignorant with our knowledge, worldly with our heavenliness, hypocritical with our religion, and proud with our humiliations!
2. Exhortation. We must take care for the suppression of them. All vice doth arise from imagination. Upon what stock doth ambition and revenge grow but upon a false conceit of the nature of honour? What engenders covetousness but a mistaken fancy of the excellency of wealth? Thoughts must be forsaken as well as our way (Isa 55:7). That we may do this, let us consider these following directions, which may be branched into these heads:
1. For the raising good thoughts.
2. Preventing bad.
3. Ordering bad when they do intrude.
4. Ordering good when they appear in us.
1. For raising good thoughts.
(1) Get renewed hearts. The fountain must be cleansed which breeds the vermin. Pure vapours can never ascend from a filthy quagmire. What issue can there be of a vain heart but vain imaginations?
(2) Study Scripture. Original corruption stuffs us with bad thoughts, and Scripture-knowledge would stock us with good ones; for it proposeth things in such terms as exceedingly suit out imaginative faculty, as well as strengthen our understanding. Judicious knowledge would make us
approve things that are excellent (Php 1:9-10); and where such things are approved, toys cannot be welcome. Fulness is the cause of steadfastness.
(3) Reflect often upon the frame of your mind at your first conversion. None have more settled and more pleasant thoughts of Divine things than new converts when they first clasp about Christ, partly because of the novelty of their state, and partly because God puts a full stock into them; and diligent tradesmen at their first setting up, have their minds intent upon improving their stock. Endeavour to put your mind in the same posture it was then.
(4) Ballast your heart with a love to God. David thought all the day of Gods law, as other men do of their lusts, because he inexpressibly loved it: Oh, how I love Thy law! It is my meditation all the day (Psa 119:97). I hate the habit of faith is attended with habitual sanctification, so the acts of faith are accompanied with a progress in the degrees of it. That faith which brings Christ to dwell in our souls will make us often think of our Inmate.
(6) Accustom yourself to a serious meditation every morning. Fresh-airing our souls in heaven will engender in us a purer spirit and nobler thoughts. A morning seasoning would secure us for all the day. In this meditation, look both to the matter and manner. First, Look to the matter of your meditation. Let it be some truth which will assist you in reviving some languishing grace, or fortify you against some triumphing corruption; for it is our darling sin which doth most envenom our thoughts: As a man thinks in his heart, so is he (Pro 23:7). Secondly, Look to the manner of it. First the glances of the eye, soon on and soon off; they make no clear discovery, and consequently raise no sprightly affections. Secondly, Let it be affectionate and practical. Meditation should excite a spiritual delight in God, as it did in the Psalmist: My meditation of Him shall be sweet: I will be glad in the Lord (Psa 104:34); and a Divine delight would keep up good thoughts, and keep out impertinencies.
(7) Draw spiritual inferences from occasional objects. David did but wisely consider the heavens, and he breaks out into self-abasement and humble admirations of God (Psa 8:3-4). Glean matter of instruction to yourselves, and praise to your Maker, from everything you see; it will be a degree of restoration to a state of innocency, since this was Adams task in paradise.
2. The second sort of directions are for the preventing bad thoughts. And to this purpose–
(1) Exercise frequent humiliations. Pride exposeth us to impatient and disquieting thoughts, whereas humility clears up a calm and serenity in the soul.
(2) Avoid entangling yourselves with the world. This clay will clog our minds, and a dirty happiness will engender but dirty thoughts.
(3) Avoid idleness. Serious callings do naturally compose mens spirits, but too much recreation makes them blaze out in vanity. Idle souls as well as idle spirits will be ranging.
(4) Awe your hearts with the thoughts of Gods omniscience, especially the discovery of it at the last judgment.
(5) Keep a constant watch over your hearts. David desires God to set a watch before the door of his lips (Psa 141:3): much more should we desire that God would keep the door of our hearts.
3. The third sort of directions are for the ordering of evil thoughts, when they do intrude; and–
(1) Examine them. Look often into your heart to see what it is doing; and what thoughts you find dabbling in it call to an account; inquire what business they have, what their errand and design is, whence they come, and whither they tend.
(2) Check them at the first appearance. If they bear upon them a palpable mark of sin, bestow not upon them the honour of an examination.
(3) Improve them. Poisons may be made medicinable. Let the thoughts of old sins stir up a commotion of anger and hatred.
(4) Continue your resistance if they still importune thee, and lay not down thy weapons till they wholly shrink from thee.
(5) Join supplication with your opposition. Watch and pray are sometimes linked together (Mat 26:41). The diligence and multitude of our enemies should urge us to watch, that we be not surprised; and our own weakness and proneness to presumption should make us pray that we may be powerfully assisted.
4. A fourth sort of directions is concerning good motions; whether they spring naturally from a gracious principle, or are peculiarly breathed in by the Spirit. There are ordinary bubblings of grace in a renewed mind, as there are of sins in an unregenerate heart; for grace is as active a principle as any, because it is a participation of the Divine nature. But there are other thoughts darted in beyond the ordinary strain of thinking, which, like the beams of the sun, evidence both themselves and their original. And as concerning these motions joined together, take these directions in short–
(1) Welcome and entertain them. As it is our happiness, as well as our duty, to stifle evil motions, so it is our misery, as well as our sin, to extinguish heavenly.
(2) Improve them for those ends to which they naturally tend. It is not enough to give them a bare reception, and forbear the smothering of them; but we must consider what affections are proper to be raised by them, either in the search of some truth, or performance of some duty.
(3) Refer them, if possible, to assist your morning meditation; that, like little brooks arising from several springs, they may meet in one channel, and compose a more useful stream.
(4) Record the choicer of them. We may have occasion to look back upon them another time, either as grounds of comfort in some hour of temptation, or directions in some sudden emergency; but constantly as persuasive engagements to our necessary duty. Thus they may lie by us for further use, as money in our purse.
(5) Pack them with ejaculations. Let our hearts be ready to attend every injection from heaven with a motion to it, since it is ingratitude to receive a present without returning an acknowledgment to the benefactor. As God turns His thoughts of us into promises, so let us turn our thoughts of Him into prayers. (S. Charnock.)
Man has made himself what he is
I would a thousand times sooner believe that man made himself what he is than that God made him so, for in the one case I should think ill of man only, in the other I am tempted to blame his Maker. Just think, I pray you, to what conclusion our reason would conduct us in any analogous case. You see, for example, a beautiful capital still bearing some of the flowers and foliage which the chisel of a master had carved upon the marble. It lies prostrate on the ground, half-buried among weeds and nettles; while beside it there rises from its pedestal the headless shaft of a noble pillar. Would you not conclude at once that its present position, so base, mean, and prostrate, was not its original position? You would say the lightning must have struck it down, or an earthquake have shaken it, or some ignorant barbarian had climbed the shaft and with rude hand had hurled it to the ground. Well, we look at man, and come to a similar conclusion. There is something, there is much that is wrong, both in his state and condition. His mind is carnal, and at enmity with God; the imaginations of his heart are only evil continually, so says the Bible. His body is the seat of disease; his eyes are often swimming in tears; care, anticipating age, has drawn deep furrows on his brow; he possesses noble faculties, but, like people of high descent, who have sunk into a low estate and become menials, they drudge in the service of the meanest passions. (T. Guthrie, D. D.)
The flood of evil
Gods all-piercing eye cannot read wrongly. The Spirits hand cannot pen error. Undoubted verity speaks here with open mouth. Thus with sorrowing reverence we draw nearer to the fearful picture. In the foreground stands Wickedness. This is a frightful monster. It is antagonism to our God. Whose is this wickedness? The wickedness of man. Man, and man alone of all who breathe the vital air, claims wickedness as his own. His crime sinks earth into a slough of woe. The degradation is world wide. The cause is wholly his. Wickedness is his sole property. Therefore, O man, see your exclusive specialty. Boast not of any excellency. Glory not of reason, faculties, power, mind, intellect, talent. Parade not your stores of acquired wisdom, your investigating knowledge, your elaborating skill. But rather blush that your superiorities claim wickedness as their territory. The picture next exhibits mans heart. This is the home of the affections–the springhead of desires–the cradle of each impulse. Here the character receives its form. This is the rudder of the life. This is the guide of walk. As is the heart, such is the individual. Here schemes, and plans, and purposes are conceived. This is the mother of contrivance and device. What is naturally transacted in this laboratory? The reply here meets us. Every imagination–every germ of idea–every incipient embryo of notion–every feeling, when it begins to move–every passion, when it stirs–every inclination, as it arises, is only evil. Terrific word! Evil. Here wickedness comes forth in another but not less frightful form. Evil. It is the offspring of the evil one. Only evil! No ray of light mitigates the darkness. No spark alleviates the impure night. No righteous spot relieves the sinful monotony. No flower of goodness blooms in the rank desert. No rill finds other vent. All flow in the one channel of evil–only evil. Turn not too quickly from this picture. It is not yet complete. The full hideousness is only evil continually. What! is there no respite? Is evil never weary? Does not intermission break the tremendous sameness? Ah! no. There is no moment of a brighter dawn. Countless are these imaginations; but they all show one feature–evil continually. There is no better aspect. When the Father of lights gives saving grace, then instantly the foulness of the inner man is seen. Then the illumined conscience testifies, Behold, I am vile. When the revealing Spirit uplifts the heaven-lit torch, then newborn vision discerns the sin-sick ruin. But out of these materials God peoples heaven with a redeemed multitude, pure and glorious as Himself. Yes, through grace, there is relief large as the need. There is a remedy, mighty to heal the deepest depths of the disease. The sinner is not forever buried in hopeless guilt. God, from all eternity foreseeing the Fall and its tremendous woe, devised a reparation wide as the breach. This gracious work is entrusted to His beloved Son. Sin destroyed creature righteousness. Jesus brings in a righteousness Divine. But the gospel-mercy is richer yet. Natures heart is, as has been shown, a quarry of vile materials. It cannot be mended. These stones can frame no holy fabric. But grace works wonders. The Holy Spirit comes, and a new creation springs to life. He takes away the stony heart. He creates it gloriously clean. Thus old things pass away. Thus all things become new. The moral desert smiles fruitful and fragrant as Edens garden. (Dean Law.)
Universal corruption
I. THE CAUSES OF THE CORRUPTION.
1. Original sin. This the prime cause; from this fertile source of evil arose many fruits, each of which in its turn and place strengthened and intensified the wickedness.
2. Pride. This would be fostered by growing numbers and wealth of men. If they were expelled from the garden, had they not now many and fenced cities? To this may be added pride of individual strength, which the flattery of others might inflame. The Nephilim and their redoubtable progeny would be regarded as leaders and champions.
3. Sensuality. Sons of God and daughters of men. Even to the better trained mere beauty, devoid of piety, became a snare, The result was godless and ill-trained children, who in their turn became the progenitors of a yet more sinful race.
4. Idolatry, which diverted the attention from the holy God, and fixed it on human qualities, etc.
II. THE UNIVERSALITY OF THE CORRUPTION.
1. In regard to each individual. From the heart outwardly through all the life. The heart includes conscience and consciousness, will and desire, intellect and emotion, understanding and affection.
2. In regard to the race. All flesh. There were few exceptions. God never left Himself without witness (Enos, Enoch, Noah, etc.).
3. They were thus corrupt, notwithstanding the preaching of Noah and the example of Enoch.
4. The wickedness of man various. Idolatry. Violence. Violence the effect of idolatry.
5. Till now all men spoke one language.
III. THE CONSEQUENCES OF THIS CORRUPTION. God, beholding, resolved to destroy man. Sceptics say the experiment failed–that men are as bad now as they were before. Before it can be said to have failed its object must be defined. It was punitive rather than remedial. As a punishment it did not fail. The story of the deluge stands out in history as a Divine protest against sin; and as a substantial proof that God is able, when and how He pleases, to destroy the earth in the last great day. To furnish a proof of the possibility of the future judgment seems to have been another object (2Pe 2:4-6; 2Pe 3:3-14). Another purpose served by the deluge is to illustrate and certify the reward of godliness. This seen in the character and preservation of Noah. The Divine estimate of sin and holiness one of the most important things for the world to know. (J. C. Gray.)
The universal corruption
1. The progress of corruption was not arrested. It increased as the tide of population rolled on. For a time the true people of God, the adherents of the house of Seth, kept themselves unspotted from the world. But even this barrier was at last overthrown (Gen 6:1-2). There were very plausible reasons for their cultivating a good understanding, at least with the less abandoned of the ungodly faction. Thus, in the first instance, the useful arts and the embellishments of social life began to flourish, as has been seen in the house of Cain (Gen 4:19-24). Agriculture, commerce, music, and poetry were cultivated among his descendants and brought by them to a high pitch of perfection. Were the children of Seth to forego the benefit of participating in the improvements and advantages thus introduced into the social system? Then again, secondly, the lawless violence, of which Lamechs impious boast of impunity (Gen 4:23-24) was a token and example, and which soon became general so as to fill the earth, might seem to warrant, and indeed require, on grounds of policy some kind of dealing between the persecuted and harassed people of God and the more reasonable and moderate of their opponents. The result was that to a large extent there ceased to be a separate and peculiar people testifying for God and reproving sin; and a new race of giants, powerful and lawless men, overspread the whole earth (Gen 6:4). The salt of the earth lost its savour, wherewith was it to be seasoned (Mar 10:50)?
2. At last the patience of the Lord is represented as worn out. The period of His long suffering has arrived. The day of His wrath is at hand. What must that wrath be which the Lord so pathetically expresses His reluctance to inflict; and in reference to which He solemnly declares that it would have been good for the men of that old world that they had never been made, and for the traitor apostle that he had not been born? Such is now the state of the world lately so blessed. It is abandoned by the Creator as unfit for the purposes for which it was created. He changes, therefore, His work into a work of desolation. One man alone believes, to the saving of his house, and becomes heir of the righteousness that is by faith (Heb 11:7). Noah finds grace in the eyes of the Lord. (R. S. Candlish, D. D.)
Evil thoughts
Some thoughts be the darts of Satan; and these non nocent, si non placent. We cannot keep thieves from looking in at our windows, but we need not give them entertainment with open doors. Wash thy heart from iniquity, that thou mayest be saved: how long shall thy vain thoughts lodge within thee? They may be passengers, but they must not be sojourners. (T. Adams.)
It repented the Lord that He had made man
The sincerity of the Divine compassion
Marvellous words indeed, words such as no man could have ventured to use respecting God, words too strong and bold for anyone to have employed but God Himself.
I. What the words DO NOT MEAN.
1. They do not mean that Gods purpose had been frustrated. That cannot fail.
2. They do not mean that an unexpected crisis had arisen. God foresees all.
3. They do not mean that God is subject to like passions and changes as we are. He does not vary as we vary, nor repent as we repent. Instability is the property of the creature, not of the Creator.
4. They do not mean that He has ceased to care for His creatures. Wrath, indeed, has gone out against the transgressor; yet neither man himself, nor his habitation, the earth, has been overlooked by God–far less, hated and spurned. The words intimate neither the coldness nor the dislike of the Creator toward the creature. It is something very widely different which they convey; a sadder, tenderer feeling; a feeling in which, not indifference, but profound compassion, is the prevailing element.
II. What the words DO MEAN.
1. That God is represented to us here as looking at events or facts simply as they are, without reference to the past or future at all.
2. That Gods purposes do not alter Gods estimate of events, or His feelings respecting individuals and their conduct.
3. That God is looking at the scene just as a man would look at it, and expressing Himself just as a man would have done in such circumstances. He sees all the present misery and ruin which the scene presents, and they affect Him according to their nature; and as they affect Him, so does He speak, in the words of man. But now let us look at the words of our text–repenting,–grieving at the heart.
(1) Repent. The word frequently occurs in the same connection as in our Exo 32:14; 1Sa 15:11; 1Sa 15:35; Jer 26:13; Jer 26:19).In these and other like passages it denotes that change of mind which is produced towards an object by an alteration of circumstances.
(2) Grieve. The word used in reference to man is found in such places as 2Sa 19:2; and, in reference to God, in such as Psa 78:40; Isa 63:10. In these passages the word denotes simply and truly what we call grief; and then, in the passage before us, as if to deepen the intensity of the expression, and to show how thoroughly real was the feeling indicated, it is added, at His heart. The grief spoken of is as true as it is profound. It is not the grief of words. It is not the grief of fancy or sentiment. It is true sorrow of heart. We come now to ask, Why did the Lord thus grieve at His heart?
1. He grieved to see the change which sin had made in the work of His hands. Once it was very good, and in this He had rejoiced. Now, how altered! Creation was a wreck. Mans glory had departed. The fair image of his Maker was gone!
2. He grieved at the dishonour thus brought upon Himself. It was, indeed, but a temporary dishonour; it was one which He would soon repair; but still, it was an obscuration of His own fair character; it was a clouding of His glory; it was an eclipse, however transient.
3. He grieved at mans misery. Man had not been made for misery. Happiness, like a rich jewel, had been entrusted to him. He had flung it away, as worthless and undesirable. He had offered it for sale to every passer-by; nay, he had cast it from him as vile. This wretchedness filled His soul, and overshadowed this once blessed earth. How, then, could God but grieve?
4. He grieved that now He must be the inflictor of mans misery. There had, for long years, been an alternative. He could be gracious; He could be long suffering. But now this alternative is denied. Such was the accumulation of sin; such was its hatefulness; such were its aggravations, that grace can no longer hold out against righteousness; long suffering has exhausted itself, and judgment must take its course. (H. Bonar, D. D.)
Evil of sin in the sight of God
I. We may inquire, first, WHAT WERE THE CAUSES OF SO GREAT CORRUPTION AS THEN PREVAILED.
1. One of these was the intermarriage of the sons of God, or believers, with the daughters of men, or unbelievers. When the clear waters of the Mississippi, Ohio, and Illinois mingle with the turbid Missouri, they never regain their purity, but flow darkly on to the ocean; so when the children of Seth made affinities with the race of Cain, there was no regaining of moral purity until the generations of men had been buried in the waters of the deluge.
2. Another cause of the wickedness of the men before the flood was probably in their neglect of the Sabbath, and of Gods public worship. Of this neglect we have the following evidence. In the days of Seth and Enos it is said, then men began to call upon the name of the Lord. This is supposed to refer to some regular assemblies for public worship, and as it is spoken in connection with Seth and his posterity, we may infer that it was confined to them. Indeed, it is said of Cain that he went out from the presence of the Lord, and he complained that he should be hid from Gods presence; not His omnipresence certainly, but from some visible display of His glory, in that place where the sons of God worshipped. In that separation from God and His worship the descendants of Cain rapidly increased in wickedness; for, if the Sabbath and its worship were banished from among us, enlightened and religious us we are, one half century might witness the most abominable idolatries, and call for another cleansing deluge.
3. The long life of the antediluvians was yet another cause of their wickedness. After the flood, God shortened mans days from a little less than a thousand to a little less than a hundred years, because brevity of life is favourable to piety. It is in seeing our fellow creatures die almost as soon as they begin to live, that sin is checked, and the things unseen and eternal gather power. And what a curse to society might such a long life prove! Think of a drunkard polluting the earth with his breath nine hundred years; of an infidel scattering the poison of his works century after century; of the adulterer, the robber, the murderer, protracting their existence through thirty of our generations! The world would groan to have the grave close over them.
4. It is mentioned again, as a cause of their wickedness, that they were an ambitious race. There were mighty men and men of renown in those days, we are told, though we ask with a smile, who were they, and what did they do? for the antediluvian Napoleons and Caesars have left no record of their exploits. There were giants too in those days, and we generally associate with them the idea of great wickedness, for great strength puffs up its possessor, and makes him forget God. It was an age of great worldliness too for our Lord says, They ate, they drank, they bought, they sold, they married and were given in marriage, until the day when the flood came; meaning that they were absorbed in these things, for in mere eating and drinking there could be no sin. It was, moreover, an age of great civilization and refinement; for there were those who handled the harp and the organ, and artificers in all the mechanic arts. These may be made subservient to piety, but too often great skill in them, as, indeed, great worldly attainments of any kind, are apt to draw the heart off from God, so that the most refined people may be the most ungodly.
II. HOW GREAT THAT WICKEDNESS WAS, we may gather from the strong language of our text, and from other portions of Scripture. And God saw, we are told, that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. The earth also was corrupt before God, and the earth was full of violence. And what rendered this sinfulness the more guilty was, that the world was then in its youth, retaining probably more of its infant beauty than it now has in its wrinkled old age.
III. But we may especially see in our text and subject THE EVIL OF SIN IN THE SIGHT OF GOD. It destroyed a world which God created; nay, more, as far as might be, it destroyed the worlds Creator, when the Son of God died for it on the cross.
IV. Let us TAKE CARE OF RELAPSING INTO THAT STATE IN WHICH SIN SHALL NOT GRIEVE US AT THE HEART AS IT DOES OUR GOD. We are like Him, we are His, if we share His holy hatred of sin. But we are in continual danger of growing callous and indifferent to it, so that though once in the while, at long intervals, when some gross offence has been committed, or when something has specially aroused us, we are softened and contrite; yet our general frame is one of indifference to our offences. (W. H. Lewis, D. D.)
It repented the Lord that He had made man
Dismissing at once, as they deserve to be dismissed, these coarser and more repulsive aspects of the language before us, we will claim rather for it this most beautiful characteristic; that it speaks of the sympathy of God Himself with that very view of human life which is taken by the best and purest of His children and servants below. There are times when the contemplation of the misery and sin of the world is almost overwhelming to those who would keep (if it be possible) both their faith and their reason. The words here written of God Himself are exactly descriptive of them–it repents them that God has made man on the earth; it grieves them at the heart. They can take little comfort in the thought of the one or the two perfect in their generations, while they see the bulk of mankind suffering without hope, and living without God in the world. They can take little comfort in the thought of a heaven opened to the believing and the holy, if it implies that the very opposite and antithesis of a heaven is crowded with masses and multitudes of rejecters and despisers and neglecters of the gospel. Oh, why did God–they ask themselves, and there is none to answer–why did God make all things worse than for nought? Why did He create upon the earth a race predestined to a choice foreseen to be of evil? Why did He not either bias that inevitable choice for good, or else blot out instantly from existence the creature that had used liberty for self-destruction? With such questions all thoughtful men at times have vexed themselves. It is something, I say this morning, to read here of the sympathy of God Himself with the perplexity; to find the Bible speaking of God repenting Himself that He has created–vexing Himself at the very heart for these terrible consequences of the origination of human life and human free will. And I read in this record much more than a fruitless or hopeless lamentation. I read here, first of all, that which should reconcile heart and conscience to the necessity of a judgment. The verso which says, It repented Him, is followed by the verse which says, I will destroy–I must bring a flood of waters. Yes, we could not wish that this evil should be immortal. We could not wish that vices and crimes, cruelties and defilements, should go on forever repeating themselves on a suffering earth. If we saw any clear proof that the world, taken as a whole–not in a few of its privileged spots, but all over and everywhere–was improving, was on the way, surely however slowly, towards a millennium of health and welfare, we might leave contentedly the question of the when and the how, and be willing that there should be patience, in heaven as on earth, over a seed growing secretly and a promise gradually developing. But is it thus with us? Is the growth of good, in the world as a whole, and of good as a whole–the higher good as well as the lower, the spiritual good as well as the physical–is this growth discernible? Side by side with the growth of good, is there not an equal, or a more than equal, growth of evil? On what night of this earths history does not the enemy go forth, while men sleep, to sow his counterfeit grain? Who shall flatter us with the hope that either free trade or cheap literature, either compulsory education or shilling Bibles, have in them the secret of regenerating thoroughly this bad old world, or of rendering superfluous that aboriginal faith of the Church, The day of the Lord will come: the judgment shall sit, and the books be opened? For my part, I think that I can leave in Gods hands the exercise of that judgment and the settlement of its issues. There is, to me, almost an impertinence in trying to settle for Him, in this twilight of our knowledge, either the exact meaning of His terms, or the precise measurements of His eternity. I only know that saints and righteous men have been reconciled to the expectation of a judgment, not by the thought of the just recompense of the wicked, but by the thought of the putting down of evil, and the introduction of a new heaven and earth–this very heaven and earth it may be–wherein dwelleth righteousness. It would be no kindness to the sinner to let him sin on forever and not die. God sympathizes with us in our sense of this worlds evil; and if He had not in His view a glorious future, from which the spectre of misery shall be absent, and in which the demon of sin shall be forgotten and out of mind, He would say literally that it repented Him to have created–He would say indeed, and also do it, that He must annihilate the work of His own hands. But there is an alternative, and He has provided it. (Dean Vaughan.)
Sinful defection
I. That such is the pestilent nature of sin as to provoke God, who did make the world, to mar it, and unmake it again.
II. A general defection is a most certain forerunner of a universal destruction. (C. Ness.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 5. The wickedness of man was great] What an awful character does God give of the inhabitants of the antediluvian world!
1. They were flesh, (Ge 6:3,) wholly sensual, the desires of the mind overwhelmed and lost in the desires of the flesh, their souls no longer discerning their high destiny, but ever minding earthly things, so that they were sensualized, brutalized, and become flesh; incarnated so as not to retain God in their knowledge, and they lived, seeking their portion in this life.
2. They were in a state of wickedness. All was corrupt within, and all unrighteous without; neither the science nor practice of religion existed. Piety was gone, and every form of sound words had disappeared.
3. This wickedness was great rabbah, “was multiplied;” it was continually increasing and multiplying increase by increase, so that the whole earth was corrupt before God, and was filled with violence, (Ge 6:11😉 profligacy among the lower, and cruelty and oppression among the higher classes, being only predominant.
4. All the imaginations of their thoughts were evil – the very first embryo of every idea, the figment of every thought, the very materials out of which perception, conception, and ideas were formed, were all evil; the fountain which produced them, with every thought, purpose, wish, desire, and motive, was incurably poisoned.
5. All these were evil without any mixture of good – the Spirit of God which strove with them was continually resisted, so that evil had its sovereign sway.
6. They were evil continually – there was no interval of good, no moment allowed for serious reflection, no holy purpose, no righteous act. What a finished picture of a fallen soul! Such a picture as God alone, who searches the heart and tries the spirit, could possibly give.
7. To complete the whole, God represents himself as repenting because he had made them, and as grieved at the heart because of their iniquities! Had not these been voluntary transgressions, crimes which they might have avoided, had they not grieved and quenched the Spirit of God, could he speak of them in the manner he does here?
8. So incensed is the most holy and the most merciful God, that he is determined to destroy the work of his hands: And the Lord said, I will destroy man whom I have created; Ge 6:7. How great must the evil have been, and how provoking the transgressions, which obliged the most compassionate God, for the vindication of his own glory, to form this awful purpose! Fools make a mock at sin, but none except fools.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
To the heart the Scripture commonly ascribes all mens actual wickedness, as Psa 41:6 Pro 4:23; 6:14,18; Jer 17:9; Mat 15:19; Rom 3:10, &c.; thereby leading us from acts of sin to the original corruption of nature, as the cause and source of them.
Evil continually, i.e. that man was perpetually either doing or contriving wickedness; that not only his actions were vile, but his principles also; his very soul, yea, the noblest part of it, which might seem most free from the contagion; his mind and thoughts were corrupt and abominable, and so there was no hope of amendment.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
5, 6. God saw it . . . repented . .. grievedGod cannot change (Mal 3:6;Jas 1:17); but, by languagesuited to our nature and experience, He is described as aboutto alter His visible procedure towards mankindfrom being mercifuland long-suffering, He was about to show Himself a God of judgment;and, as that impious race had filled up the measure of theiriniquities, He was about to introduce a terrible display of Hisjustice (Ec 8:11).
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
And God saw the wickedness of man was great in the earth,…. That it spread throughout the earth, wherever it was inhabited by men, both among the posterity of Cain and Seth, and who indeed now were mixed together, and become one people: this respects actual transgressions, the wicked actions of men, and those of the grosser sort, which were “multiplied” r as the word also signifies; they were both great in quality and great in quantity; they were frequently committed, and that everywhere; the degeneracy was become universal; there was a flood of impiety that spread and covered the whole earth, before the deluge of waters came, and which was the cause of it: this God saw, not only by his omniscience, by which he sees everything, but he took notice of it in his providence, and was displeased with it, and determined in his mind to show his resentment of it, and let men see that he observed it, and disapproved of it, and would punish for it:
and [that], every imagination of the thoughts of his heart [was] only evil continually: the heart of man is evil and wicked, desperately wicked, yea, wickedness itself, a fountain of iniquity, out of which abundance of evil flows, by which it may be known in some measure what is in it, and how wicked it is; but God, that sees it, only knows perfectly all the wickedness of it, and the evil that is in it: the “thoughts” of his heart are evil; evil thoughts are formed in the heart, and proceed from it; they are vain, foolish, and sinful, and abominable in the sight of God, by whom they are seen, known, and understood afar off: the “imagination” of his thoughts is evil, the formation of them; they were evil while forming, the substratum of thought, the very beginning of it, the first motion to it, yea, “every” such one was evil, and “only” so; not one good among them, not one good thing in their hearts, no one good thought there, nor one good imagination of the thought; and so it was “continually” from their birth, from their youth upwards, throughout the whole of their lives, and all the days of their lives, night and day, and day after day, without intermission: this respects the original corruption of human nature, and shows it to be universal; for this was not only true of the men of the old world, but of all mankind; the same is said of men after the flood as before, and of all men in general without any exception, Ge 8:21. Hence appears the necessity of regeneration, and proves that the new creature is not an improvement of the old principles of corrupt nature, since there is no good thing in man but what is put into him; also the disability of man to do that which is good, even to think a good thought, or do a good action; therefore the works of unregenerate men are not properly good works, since they cannot flow from a right principle, or be directed to a right end.
r “augescere”, Junius Tremellius, Piscator “multiplicaretur”, Schmidt.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Verses 5-8:
“Wickedness” is ra’ath, tumultuous wickedness. The entire human race had become wicked in God’s Sight. This was no slight misdeed, but man’s wickedness was wide-spread, deeply ingrained into every aspect of society. Wicked mankind turned his great powers and talents and wisdom to sensuality and violence throughout the inhabited earth. Jesus described this condition in His comparison of the “last days” just prior to His Return with the pervasive wickedness of the pre-flood world, Mt 24:37-39; Lu 17:26, 27.
“Imagination” is yetzer, a device or fashioned purpose. This term denotes the purpose fashioned from the inner meditations of the heart. Man’s sin was the product of the depravity in his innermost being. All he designed and produced was for but one purpose: the gratification of the sin-nature.
“Repented” is yirnnahem, from naham, “to groan or pant.” The grammatical structure here denotes grief or lamentation. This does not imply that God changed His mind nor that He wavered in His purpose. Man’s sin caused grief to Jehovah.
Jehovah pronounced judgment upon the depravity of the pre-flood world. “Destroy” is machah, “blot out or wipe away.” This verb implies the means by which the destruction would take place: a “washing away” in a deluge. Jehovah determined to wipe out the entire human race. Included in this destruction would be the lower animals, the beasts and creeping things over which man exercised dominion. This was not an impulsive act of revenge on Jehovah’s part, but it was a solemn pronouncement of the awful effects of sin. Not only would the sinner be subject to judgment, but the effects would pervade all with whom he had to do.
“Noah found grace.” This is the first appearance of the term “grace.” It is the same as the “grace” of the New Testament, see Ro 4, 5; Eph 2. The reason Noah found grace in the eyes of Jehovah is clarified in Heb 11:7. It was in response to Noah’s faith.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
5. And God saw that the wickedness of man was great. Moses prosecutes the subject to which he had just alluded, that God was neither too harsh, nor precipitate in exacting punishment from the wicked men of the world. And he introduces God as speaking after the manner of men, by a figure which ascribes human affections to God; (269) because he could not otherwise express what was very important to be known; namely, that God was not induced hastily, or for a slight cause, to destroy the world. For by the word saw, he indicates long continued patience; as if he would say, that God had not proclaimed his sentence to destroy men, until after having well observed, and long considered, their case, he saw them to be past recovery. Also, what follows has not a little emphasis, that ‘their wickedness was great in the earth.’ He might have pardoned sins of a less aggravated character: if in one part only of the world impiety had reigned, other regions might have remained free from punishment. But now, when iniquity has reached its highest point, and so pervaded the whole earth, that integrity possesses no longer a single corner; it follows, that the time for punishment is more than fully arrived. A prodigious wickedness, then, everywhere reigned, so that the whole earth was covered with it. Whence we perceive that it was not overwhelmed with a deluge of waters till it had first been immersed in the pollution of wickedness.
Every imagination of the thoughts of his heart. Moses has traced the cause of the deluge to external acts of iniquity, he now ascends higher, and declares that men were not only perverse by habit, and by the custom of evil living; but that wickedness was too deeply seated in their hearts, to leave any hope of repentance. He certainly could not have more forcibly asserted that the depravity was such as no moderate remedy might cure. It may indeed happen, that men will sometimes plunge themselves into sin, while yet something of a sound mind will remain; but Moses teaches us, that the mind of those, concerning whom he speaks, was so thoroughly imbued with iniquity, that the whole presented nothing but what was to be condemned. For the language he employs is very emphatical: it seemed enough to have said, that their heart was corrupt: but not content with this word, he expressly asserts, “every imagination of the thoughts of the heart;” and adds the word “only,” as if he would deny that there was a drop of good mixed with it.
Continually. Some expound this particle to mean, from commencing infancy; as if he would say, the depravity of men is very great from the time of their birth. But the more correct interpretation is, that the world had then become so hardened in its wickedness, and was so far from any amendment, or from entertaining any feeling of penitence, that it grew worse and worse as time advanced; and further, that it was not the folly of a few days, but the inveterate depravity which the children, having received, as by hereditary right, transmitted from their parents to their descendants. Nevertheless, though Moses here speaks of the wickedness which at that time prevailed in the world, the general doctrine (270) is properly and consistently hence elicited. Nor do they rashly distort the passage who extend it to the whole human race. So when David says,
‘
That all have revolted, that they are become unprofitable, that is, none who does good, no not one; their throat is an open sepulcher; there is no fear of God before their eyes,’ (Psa 5:10)
he deplores, truly, the impiety of his own age; yet Paul (Rom 3:12) does not scruple to extend it to all men of every age: and with justice; for it is not a mere complaint concerning a few men, but a description of the human mind when left to itself, destitute of the Spirit of God. It is therefore very proper that the obstinacy of the men, who had greatly abused the goodness of Gods should be condemned in these words; yet, at the same time, the true nature of man, when deprived of the grace of the Spirit, is clearly exhibited.
(269) Per ἀνθρωποπάθειαν
(270) That is, the “general doctrine” of man’s total and universal depravity. — Ed.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(5) And God saw.Really, And Jehovah saw.
Imagination.More exactly, form, shape. Thus every idea or embodied thought, which presented itself to the mind through the working of the heartthat is, the whole inner nature of manwas only evil continuallyHeb., all the day, from morning to night, without reproof of conscience or fear of the Divine justice. A more forcible picture of complete depravity could scarcely be drawn; and this corruption of mans inner nature is ascribed to the overthrow of moral and social restraints.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
5. God saw only evil A fearful picture of human depravity, in its thoroughness and universality . The genealogy of the lust and violence that now raged through the world is powerfully traced in a few pregnant words . First, the foul heart, then the thinking, (process,) then the thought, (product,) the imaged sin, ( ,) then the foul deed . From the corrupt heart swarm the carnal thoughts; in these are bred the sinful imageries and purposes, whence are spawned the abominable crimes which break upon the world. How philosophically is this deluge of universal evil traced by secret channels to the parent fountains in the human heart. Comp. Mat 15:19.
Continually Hebrews only evil all the day . There is terrible emphasis in the few Hebrew monosyllables here employed, which express the idea of sin in every thought and deed, at every time and place .
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
‘Yahweh saw that the wickedness of man was great in the world (or “in the land”), and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.’
The occult activity, which had clearly become commonplace, emphasised the depths to which man had sunk, and it is quite clear that the menfolk had connived in it. Indeed without the illustration of verses 1-4 this description and what follows would be inexplicable.
In the past men have murdered their kinsmen, and others, and have been spared, revealing God’ compassion and mercy. Thus something particularly awful was required to bring about what was to happen. These humans are judged to have become totally caught up in evil, and that includes the surviving sons and daughters of Lamech, and possibly even of Methuselah. Indeed he might himself have died in the flood. The description is very emphatic. Every imagination of the thought of the heart continually evil. This is not just man sinning, it is a great deal more than that. There is no goodness, no compassion, no altruism, no thoughtfulness, no unselfishness, no genuine love, nothing that makes life wholesome. Satanic possession has indeed gripped the land.
Notice the contrast between Gen 1:31 where ‘God saw all that he had made and it was very good’ with these verses ‘Yahweh saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth — and was sorry that he had made man on the earth’. The creation was good, but once man took over it sank to this.
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
God Resolves to Destroy Man
v. 5. And God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. v. 6. And it repented the Lord that He had made man on the earth, and it grieved Him at His heart. v. 7. And the Lord said, I will destroy man whom I have created from the face of the earth; both man and beast and the creeping thing and the fowls of the air; for it repenteth Me that I have made them.
Fuente: The Popular Commentary on the Bible by Kretzmann
Gen 6:5. The wickedness of mangreat, &c. God saw their wickedness to be great, after the period of the hundred and twenty years which he had granted them to return and repent; he saw that they amended not, but arrived at the highest pitch of depravity, both in principle and practice. The longevity of the antediluvians is alone sufficient to account for that enormous height of wickedness to which they arose, according to this text and the traditions we have of their excessive lust, impiety, and violence.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
DISCOURSE: 13
EXTENT OF MANS WICKEDNESS
Gen 6:5. God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.
THE extent of mans wickedness is far greater than the generality of mankind have any conception of. Whilst a persons words and actions are inoffensive before men, he is supposed to conduct himself acceptably to God. And even when his words and actions are blameworthy, he is judged as having nothing wrong in his intentions, and as possessing, on the whole, a good heart. But God looks chiefly at the heart, which is the fountain from whence every thing that is evil proceeds [Note: Mat 7:21-23.]: and his testimony respecting it is, that the heart, not of this or that more egregious offender, but of every man by nature, is deceitful above all things and desperately wicked. In the passage before us, God assigns his reason for destroying the whole world by an universal deluge. And that we may be suitably affected by it, I shall set before you,
I.
The testimony of God respecting man
He speaks more immediately respecting the antediluvian world
[In general, the wickedness of man was great in the earth. No doubt, every species of wickedness was committed, in the most shameless manner. But, more particularly, the hearts of men were evil; the thoughts of their hearts were evil; the imaginations of the thoughts were evil, and this too without exception, without mixture, without intermission; for every imagination was evil, and only evil, and that continually What an awful statement is here!
But how could this he ascertained? Who could he competent to judge of this? and on what authority is this declared? I answer, It is the declaration of God, who can discern all things; for all things are naked and opened before him [Note: Heb 4:13.] ; and he himself says, I know the things that come into your mind, every one of them [Note: Eze 11:5.]. And, as he knows every thing, so he is able to estimate the quality of every thing; for he weigheth the spirits [Note: Pro 16:2.]. And this is his testimony, after a thorough inspection of every human being.]
But the same must be spoken of man at this day
[God himself repeats the same testimony, in relation to those who survived the deluge, and of all their descendants [Note: Gen 8:21.]. And it is as true of us, as it was of them. In proof of this, I will appeal to your own observation and experience. What, from observation, would you yourselves say was the state of the world around you? Do you not see that evil of every kind obtains to a vast extent; and that piety, except in some very narrow circles of persons whom the world, regards as weak enthusiasts, is altogether banished; insomuch that you may mix in society for months and years, and yet never once hear them speak with admiration and gratitude respecting all the wonders of Redeeming Love? Of what passes in the hearts of others you are not able to judge; and therefore, in relation to that, I appeal to every mans own experience. What has been the state of your hearts? As to your words and actions, I will suppose them to have been correct: but your hearts, your thoughts, the imaginations of your thoughts, what report must you give of them? Have they been all correct? or, could you bear that man should see them as God has seen them? The proud, the envious, the uncharitable, the angry, the vindictive, the impure thoughts, say, (whether carried into effect or not) have they not sprung up within your hearts as their proper soil, and so occupied the ground, that no holy fruits would grow unto perfection? If occasionally a transient thought of good has arisen, how coldly has it been entertained, how feebly has it operated, how soon has it been lost! And, at all events, if compared with what the Law requires, and what God and his Christ deserve at your hands, tell me whether it do not fall so short of your duty, that you cannot venture to call it good, but only evil of a less malignant kind?
Know ye then, all of you, that this is your real state before God: and now learn,]
II.
What effect it should produce upon you
Certainly this view of our state, and especially as attested by the heart-searching God, should produce in us,
1.
Humiliation
[Even on a review of our words and actions, I am convinced there is not any one of us who has not reason to be ashamed, especially if those words and actions be tried by the standard of Gods holy Law. But who amongst us could bear to have all his thoughts inspected and disclosed? Who would not blush, and be confounded before God and man, if his heart were exposed to public view, so that every imagination of every thought of it should be disclosed? Yet God beholds it all; and has as perfect a recollection of all that has passed through our minds from our earliest infancy to this present moment, as if it had passed not an hour ago. What then becomes us, but the deepest humiliation? In truth, our religious thoughts, when compared with what they ought to have been in number and intensity, are no less a ground of humiliation, than those which have sprung from a more impure source; since they prove, indisputably, how defective are our conceptions of Gods excellency, and how faint our sense of the Redeemers love. I call on you then, every one of you, my brethren, to lothe yourselves for your abominations, and to abhor yourselves, as Isaiah did, and as holy Job did, in dust and ashes [Note: Isa 6:5 and Job 42:6.].]
2.
Gratitude
[We have often told you, that God has sent to us a Saviour, even his only dear Son; and that through Him all our iniquities, how great soever they may have been, shall be forgiven. But methinks, this is only a cunningly-devised fable: for, how can it be supposed, that God should ever have shewn such mercy, and manifested such love, towards such vile creatures as we? But, brethren, however incredible it may appear, it is true, even the very truth of God. Notwithstanding all you have done amiss, God is not willing that any of you should perish, but that all should come to repentance and live. Yes, brethren, he has laid all your iniquities on his only-begotten Son; who, agreeably to the Fathers will, has expiated them by his own blood, and will take them away from your souls for ever. Tell me, then, whether gratitude do not well become you? Tell me, whether there should be any bounds to your gratitude? What, think you, would the fallen angels feel, if such mercy were shewn to them? And what are millions of the redeemed now feeling before the throne? Oh, let your souls be penetrated with a measure of their love, and your songs of praise abound day and night, even as theirs.]
3.
Fear
[Though your hearts may have been renewed by divine grace, you are renewed, brethren, only in part: you have still the flesh within you, as well as the Spirit; and you carry about with you still a body of sin and death, from which, to your dying hour, you will need to be delivered. In fact, your whole life must be a putting-off of the old man, and a putting-on of the new. I need not tell you what precautions people take, when they carry a light in the midst of combustibles, which, if ignited, will spread destruction all around. Know, that ye carry such combustibles about you, wherever you go; and you know not how soon you may come in contact with somewhat that may cause a desperate explosion. You all know how David fell, in an unguarded moment; and what a dreadful tissue of evil was produced by one sinful imagination. Know ye, then, what corrupt creatures ye are: be sensible of your proneness to commit even the vilest abominations: and pray, day and night, to God, to hold up your goings in his ways, that your footsteps slip not. It was from sad experience that Peter spoke, when he said, Be sober, be vigilant; for your adversary, the devil, goeth about as a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour: whom resist, steadfast in the faith [Note: 1Pe 5:8.]. He had indulged self-confidence, and had slept when he should have watched: and hence arose his fall, which speaks loudly to every one of us. Be ye, then, not high-minded; but fear: and what I say unto one, I say unto all, Watch.]
Fuente: Charles Simeon’s Horae Homileticae (Old and New Testaments)
And GOD saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.
Reader! pause over this verse, and read it twice before you dismiss it once. When you have duly attended to it, look within, and see whether your own case corresponds to it. If you are tempted to doubt the truth of it, in your own instance, consult Jer 17:9-10 . If this affords no conviction, read that sweet promise, or rather, that string of promises, Eze 36:25-29 . And then recollect that these precious promises can be nothing to you, if you are ignorant of the want of them. Great Father of mercies! graciously bestow them on me, for I need them every hour!
Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Gen 6:5 And GOD saw that the wickedness of man [was] great in the earth, and [that] every imagination of the thoughts of his heart [was] only evil continually.
Ver. 5. The wickedness of man was great in the earth. ] Which was now grown so foul, that God saw it but time to wash it with a flood; as he shall shortly do again with streams of fire. He destroyed the world then with water, for the heat of lust; he shall destroy it with fire, for the coldness of love, as saith Ludolfu. a
And that every imagination of the thoughts.
a De Vita Christ ., lib. ii., cap. 7.
b All the thoughts extensively are intensively only evil, and protensively continually.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: Gen 6:5-8
5Then the LORD saw that the wickedness of man was great on the earth, and that every intent of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. 6The LORD was sorry that He had made man on the earth, and He was grieved in His heart. 7The LORD said, I will blot out man whom I have created from the face of the land, from man to animals to creeping things and to birds of the sky; for I am sorry that I have made them. 8But Noah found favor in the eyes of THE LORD.
Gen 6:5 the LORD saw that the wickedness of man was great This section of Scripture emphasizes the development of evil in the heart of mankind (BDB 906, KB 1157, Qal IMPERFECT, cf. Gen 6:11-13 b; Gen 8:21; Psa 14:3; Psa 51:5) which is a direct paradox to the goodness of creation in Gen 1:31.
and that every intent of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually This result of Adam and Eve’s fall had reached universal proportions. All but eight people were hopelessly affected by evil. They dwelt on evil thinking night and day!
The concept of evil intent (ysr, BDB 428) becomes the rabbinical understanding of mankind’s moral nature. They see mankind as exercising one of two intents (good or evil). This famous proverb, in every man’s heart is a black and a white dog; the one you feed the most becomes the biggest (paraphrase), describes mankind. This view of mankind is strengthened by Gen 4:7. Jewish theologians do not emphasize Genesis 3 but Genesis 6 as the source of evil in the world. Children are not evil at birth because moral responsibility comes only with knowledge (bar mitzvah, bat mitzvah). Evil consists of choices!
Gen 6:6 the LORD was sorry. . .He was grieved in His heart These are anthropomorphic phrases. The first is interpreted the LORD heaved with a sigh (BDB 636, KB 688, Niphal IMPERFECT). The second is interpreted the LORD was grieved into His heart (BDB 780, KB 864, Hithpael IMPERFECT). These are intense Hebrew phrases (cf. Gen 34:7; Gen 45:5; 1Sa 2:33; 1Sa 20:34; 2Sa 19:2; Psa 78:40; Isa 54:6). God is often spoken of in the Bible as being sorry or repenting (cf. Gen 6:6-7; Exo 32:14; 1Sa 15:11; 2Sa 24:16; Jer 18:7-8; Jer 26:13; Jer 26:19; Jon 3:10). However, other passages assert that God never repents or changes His mind (cf. Num 23:19; 1Sa 15:29; Jer 4:28; Psa 132:11). This is the tension that always occurs when we use human terms to describe God. God is not a man, but the only words we have to describe Him and His feelings are human terms. It must be asserted that God is not fickle. He is steadfast and longsuffering in His redemptive purpose for humanity, but mankind’s response in repentance of sin often determines God’s actions in a particular situation (cf. Psa 106:45; Jonah).
Theologically it is God who changes, not mankind. God chooses to work with sinful humanity. His goal is the same-a righteous people who reflect His character. This will only be accomplished by a new heart, a new covenant (cf. Jer 31:31-34; Eze 36:26-38). God chooses grace over judgment!
Gen 6:7 I will blot out man whom I have created The term blot out means to wash away (BDB 562, KB 567, Qal IMPERFECT, i.e. the flood). The animals suffer because of the sin of mankind (cf. Rom 8:19-22). The fish are not included in this judgment. This judgment is not based on the capricious actions of the gods as in the Mesopotamian accounts but the moral evil of humanity. This evil remains even within the family of righteous Noah (cf. Gen 8:21-22) but God’s grace chooses to cover continuing human evil until the coming of Christ (cf. Galatians 3).
Gen 6:8 in the eyes of the LORD This is another example of anthropomorphic phrases to describe God, see SPECIAL TOPIC: God Described As Human (anthropomorphism) . He does not have eyes, He is a Spirit. This is metaphorical for God’s all-knowingness (i.e. omniscience).
Fuente: You Can Understand the Bible: Study Guide Commentary Series by Bob Utley
GOD = Jehovah. App-4.
wickedness = lewdness, moral depravity. App-44.
great = multiplied. Very emphatic.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
imagination
Or, the whole imagination. The Hebrew word signifies not only the imagination but also the purposes and desires.
Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes
God: Gen 13:13, Gen 18:20, Gen 18:21, Psa 14:1-4, Psa 53:2, Rom 1:28-31, Rom 3:9-19
every imagination: or, the whole imagination, The Hebrew word signifies not only the imagination, but also the purposes and desires. Gen 8:21, Deu 29:19, Job 15:16, Pro 6:18, Ecc 7:29, Ecc 9:3, Jer 17:9, Eze 8:9, Eze 8:12, Mat 15:19, Mar 7:21-23, Eph 2:1-3, Tit 3:3
thoughts: Jer 4:14
continually: Heb. every day
Reciprocal: Gen 6:12 – for all Gen 11:6 – imagined Deu 31:21 – I know 1Ch 28:9 – the imaginations 1Ch 29:18 – in the imagination 2Ch 22:3 – his mother Job 1:5 – in their hearts Job 22:15 – the old way Psa 10:4 – thoughts Psa 17:4 – works Psa 24:4 – pure Psa 52:1 – O mighty Psa 53:1 – Corrupt Pro 10:20 – the heart Pro 21:8 – way Pro 24:9 – thought Pro 27:19 – so Isa 55:7 – his thoughts Isa 65:2 – after Jer 9:14 – walked Jer 16:12 – evil Jer 18:12 – we will walk Jer 44:22 – could Eze 24:12 – her great Eze 28:15 – till iniquity Hos 10:9 – did Mat 7:11 – being Mat 7:13 – for Luk 1:51 – the imagination Luk 11:13 – being Luk 11:39 – but Joh 3:6 – born of the flesh Rom 1:21 – but became Rom 5:13 – until Rom 7:18 – that in me Eph 2:3 – by Jam 1:14 – when Jam 4:5 – The spirit 1Pe 3:20 – sometime
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
AN AWFUL SIGHT
And God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually, etc.
Gen 6:5-7
I. In these verses, it will be said, we see the results of the Fall. God made man innocent, and man fell when he lost this independent virtue, this innoceney of his own; as the first father lost it, all his descendants, by the decree of God or by some necessity of their relationship, lost it too; hence arose the need for Divine grace, and for men being made partakers of a righteousness which is not their own.
Now, if we follow the Scripture narrative closely, we shall find that it directly negatives this statement. It tells us that God said, Let us make man in our own image, after our likeness. Such words absolutely exclude the idea that man, according to his original constitution, possessed anything of his own. They affirm him to be good only in so far as he reflects that which exists perfect in another, so far only as he confesses Him to be the Good. God pronounced His creation very good, because no creature was standing in itselfbecause the highest creature, to which all the others looked up, himself looked up to his Maker and saw his perfection in Him.
II. The principle that man was made in the image of God is not a principle which was true for Adam and false for us. It is the principle upon which the race was constituted and can never cease to be constituted. Adams sin consisted in disbelieving that law and acting as if he were not under it. The Divine order has not been interrupted because a man refused obedience to it; it is only made more evident by that violation. Man has set up a self-will, has fallen under the dominion of the nature which God had given him. This very act is a step in his education, a means by which God will teach him more fully what he is, what he is not; how he may thwart the purposes of his Creator, how he may conspire with them.
III. The story of the Flood, as told in Scripture, is a most memorable part of the history of man, expounding the course of Gods dealings with him. He is grieved that He made man, because men were living wholly at variance with the law under which they were created. He uses the powers of nature to destroy those who had made themselves the slaves of nature. The righteous government which physical things obey is thus indicated. Gods repentance is reconciled with His divine, unchangeable will. There is a true and holy repentance in God, otherwise there could be no repentance in us.
Rev. F. D. Maurice.
Illustration
The purpose of creation had been frustrated by mans wickedness, and therefore God determined to destroy man. God, seeing that ruin must come, from mans sin, acted judicially, as in the first instance He had acted creatively. The question would seem to have been simply this: Shall sin be left to kill the human race slowly, as if inch by inch, without My asserting judicial rights, or shall I distinctly interpose, as I did in Eden, and bring judgment down upon iniquity? God was bound to take the second course, if He was to protect not only His own dignity, but the integrity of truth and righteousness. Divine forbearance was exhausted: It grieved the Lord at his heart that He had made man on the earth. This was the moral reason for the Floodrighteousness was asserted, sin judged, goodness preserved, evil destroyed.
Fuente: Church Pulpit Commentary
Gen 6:5. God saw that the wickedness of man, &c. Abundance of sin was committed in all places, by all sorts of people; and those sins in their own nature most gross, and heinous, and provoking; and committed daringly, and in defiance of heaven. And that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually A sad sight, and very offensive to Gods holy eye! This was the bitter root, the corrupt spring: all the violence and oppression, all the luxury and wantonness that was in the world, proceeded from the corruption of nature; lust conceived them, Jas 1:15, see Mat 15:19. The heart was evil, deceitful, and desperately wicked; the principles were corrupt, and the habits and dispositions evil. The thoughts of the heart were so. Thought is sometimes taken for the settled judgment, and that was biased and misled; sometimes for the workings of the fancy, and those were always either vain or evil. The imagination of the thoughts of the heart was so; that is, their designs and devices were wicked. They did not do evil only through carelessness, but deliberately and designedly contrived how to do mischief. It was bad indeed, for it was only evil, continually evil, and every imagination was so. There was no good to be found among them, no, not at any time: the stream of sin was full, and strong, and constant; and God saw it. Here is Gods resentment of mans wickedness. He did not see it as an unconcerned spectator, but as one injured and affronted by it; he saw it as a tender father sees the folly and stubbornness of a rebellious and disobedient child, which not only displeases but grieves him, and makes him wish he had been written childless.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Gen 6:5 to Gen 9:17. The Flood.This section has been very skilfully composed from both J and P. There are numerous repetitions: Gen 6:5-8 and Gen 6:12 f.; Gen 7:7-9 and Gen 7:13-16; Gen 7:11 and Gen 7:12; Gen 7:17 and Gen 7:18 f.; Gen 7:21 and Gen 7:23; Gen 8:2 a and Gen 8:2 b. There are also differences of representation. According to Gen 6:19 f., Gen 7:15 f., the animals go in by pairs; according to Gen 7:2 f. the clean go in by sevens (or seven pairs), the unclean by pairs. In Gen 7:11 the Flood is caused by the breaking up of the fountains of the great deep and the opening of the windows of heaven, in Gen 7:12 by a long-continued rain. According to Gen 7:12 the rain continued forty days, according to Gen 7:24 the waters prevailed 150 days. There are also phraseological and stylistic differences, those characteristic of P being specially prominent. The analysis into two sources has been effected with almost complete unanimity. To P belong Gen 6:9-22, Gen 7:6; Gen 7:11, Gen 7:13-16 a, Gen 7:17 a (except forty days), Gen 7:18-21, Gen 7:24, Gen 8:1-2 a, Gen 8:3 b Gen 8:5, Gen 8:13 a, Gen 8:14-19, Gen 9:1-17. To J belong Gen 6:5-8, Gen 7:1-5, Gen 7:7-10; Gen 7:12; Gen 7:16 b, Gen 7:22 f., Gen 8:2 b Gen 8:3 a, Gen 8:6-13 b, Gen 8:20-22. In both cases some slight elements are due to the redactor. When the analysis has been effected, two all but complete stories appear, bearing the marks of P and J.
Difficult questions are raised as to the relation in which these stories stand to other Deluge narratives. A very large number exists, and of these many are independent. It is still debated whether the legends go back to the primitive period of history before the dispersion; this is not probable, for the date would be so early that oral tradition would hardly have preserved it. Presumably many were local in their origin, for such catastrophes on a small scale must have been numerous, and some of the stories may have been coloured and enriched by contamination with others. These parallels, however, must be neglected here, except the Babylonian accounts. Two of these are known to us, and fragments of a third have been recently discovered. The two former tell substantially the same story, though with considerable differences in detail. One is preserved in the extracts from Berossus given by Alexander Polyhistor. The other was discovered by George Smith in 1872. It comes in the eleventh canto of the Epic of Gilgamesh. It describes how the god Ea saved Utnapistim by commanding him to build a ship and take into it the seed of life of every kind. He built and stored it, and when the rain began to fall entered the ship and closed the door. A vivid description is given of the storm, and the terror it inspired in the gods. On the seventh day he opened the ship, which settled on Mount Nizir. After seven days he sent out a dove, and then a swallow, both of which returned; then a raven, which did not return. Then the ship was left and he offered sacrifice, to which the gods came hungrily. Bels anger at the escape was appeased by Ea on the ground that the punishment had been indiscriminate, and the hero with his wife was granted immortality. The coincidences with the Biblical account are so close that they can be explained only by dependence of the Biblical on the Babylonian story, though not necessarily on the form known to us. Probably the Hebrews received it through the Canaanites, and it passed through a process of purification, in which the offensive elements were removed. The Hebrew story is immeasurably higher in tone than the Babylonian. In the latter Bel in his anger destroys good and evil alike, and is enraged to discover that any have escaped the Flood. The gods cower under the storm like dogs in a kennel; and when the sacrifice is offered, smell the sweet savour and gather like flies over the sacrificer. In the Biblical story the punishment is represented as strictly deserved by all who perish, and the only righteous man and his family are preserved, not by the friendly help of another deity, but by the direct action of Him who sends the Flood.
The question as to the historical character of the narrative still remains. The terms seem to require a universal deluge, for all flesh on the earth was destroyed (Gen 6:17, Gen 7:4, Gen 7:21-23), and all the high mountains that were under the whole heaven were covered (Gen 7:19 f.). But this would involve a depth of water all over the world not far short of 30,000 ft., and that sufficient water was available at the time is most improbable. The ark could not have contained more than a very small proportion of the animal life on the globe, to say nothing of the food needed for them, nor could eight people have attended to their wants, nor apart from a constant miracle could the very different conditions they required in order to live at all have been supplied. Nor without such a miracle, could they have come from lands so remote. Moreover, the present distribution of animals would on this view be unaccountable. If all the species were present at a single centre at a time so comparatively near as less than five thousand years ago, we should have expected far greater uniformity between different parts of the world than now exists. The difficulty of coming applies equally to return. Nor if the human race took a new beginning from three brothers and their three wives (Gen 7:13, Gen 9:19) could we account for the origin, within the very brief period which is all that our knowledge of antiquity permits, of so many different races, for the development of languages with a long history behind them, or for the founding of states and rise of advanced civilisations. And this quite understates the difficulty, for archology shows a continuous development of such civilisations from a time far earlier than the earliest to which the Flood can be assigned. A partial Deluge is not consistent with the Biblical representation (see above). And an inundation which took seventy-three days to sink from the day when the ark rested on the mountains of Ararat till the tops of the mountains became visible (Gen 8:4 f.) implies a depth of water which would involve a universal deluge. The story, therefore, cannot be accepted as historical; but it may and probably does rest on the recollection of an actual deluge, perhaps produced by a combination of the inundation normally caused by the overflow of the Tigris and Euphrates with earthquake and flooding from the Persian Gulf.
Fuente: Peake’s Commentary on the Bible
The sins of humanity generally 6:5-8
The second reason for the flood was the sinfulness of humanity generally.
Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)
Men and women’s actions were very wicked and their thoughts and affections were completely evil by this time (cf. Gen 6:11-12; Rom 1:18-32).
"Near the turn of the 19th century F. W. Farrar wrote a book entitled Seekers After God. The book was a popular seller and was in considerable demand. A certain western bookseller had a number of requests for the volume but had no copies available. He sent a telegram to the dealers in New York requesting them to ship him a number of the books. After awhile a telegram came back which read, ’No seekers after God in New York. Try Philadelphia.’" [Note: D. Edmond Hiebert, Working with God: Scriptural Studies in Intercession, pp. 100-101.]