mh_parser/scraps/Gen_10_21-Gen_10_32.html
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<p>Two things especially are observable in this account of the posterity of Shem:—</p>
<p class="tab-1">I. The description of Shem, <i>v</i>. 21. We have not only his name, <i>Shem</i>, which signifies <i>a name</i>, but two titles to distinguish him by:—</p>
<p class="tab-1">1. He was <i>the father of all the children of Eber</i>. Eber was his great grandson; but why should he be called the father of all <i>his</i> children, rather than of all Arphaxads, or Salahs, etc.? Probably because Abraham and his seed, Gods covenant-people, not only descended from Heber, but from him were called <i>Hebrews</i>; <a class="bibleref" title="Gen.14.13" href="/passage/?search=Gen.14.13">Gen. 14:13</a>; <i>Abram the Hebrew</i>. Paul looked upon it as his privilege that he was a <i>Hebrew of the Hebrews</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="Phil.3.5" href="/passage/?search=Phil.3.5">Phil. 3:5</a>. Eber himself, we may suppose, was a man eminent for religion in a time of general apostasy, and a great example of piety to his family; and, the holy tongue being commonly called from him the <i>Hebrew</i>, it is probable that he retained it in his family, in the confusion of Babel, as a special token of Gods favour to him; and from him the professors of religion were called <i>the children of Eber</i>. Now, when the inspired penman would give Shem an honourable title, he calls him <i>the father of the Hebrews</i>. Though when Moses wrote this, they were a poor despised people, bond-slaves in Egypt, yet, being Gods people, it was an honour to a man to be akin to them. As Ham, though he had many sons, is disowned by being called <i>the father of Canaan</i>, on whose seed the <i>curse</i> was entailed (<a class="bibleref" title="Gen.9.22" href="/passage/?search=Gen.9.22">Gen. 9:22</a>), so Shem, though he had many sons, is dignified with the title of <i>the father of Eber</i>, on whose seed the blessing was entailed. Note, a family of saints is more truly honourable than a family of nobles, Shems holy seed than Hams royal seed, Jacobs twelve patriarchs than Ishmaels twelve princes, <a class="bibleref" title="Gen.17.20" href="/passage/?search=Gen.17.20">Gen. 17:20</a>. Goodness is true greatness.</p>
<p class="tab-1">2. He was <i>the brother of Japheth the elder</i>, by which it appears that, though Shem is commonly put first, he was not Noahs first-born, but Japheth was older. But why should this also be put as part of Shems title and description, that he <i>was the brother of Japheth</i>, since it had been, in effect, said often before? And was he not as much brother to Ham? Probably this was intended to signify the union of the Gentiles with the Jews in the church. The sacred historian had mentioned it as Shems honour that he was the father of the Hebrews; but, lest Japheths seed should therefore be looked upon as for ever shut out from the church, he here reminds us that he <i>was the brother of Japheth</i>, not in birth only, but in blessing; for <i>Japheth was to dwell in the tents of Shem</i>. Note, (1.) Those are brethren in the best manner that are so by grace, and that meet in the covenant of God and in the communion of saints. (2.) God, in dispensing his grace, does not go by seniority, but the younger sometimes gets the start of the elder in coming into the church; <i>so the last shall be first and the first last</i>.</p>
<p class="tab-1">II. The reason of the name of Peleg (<a class="bibleref" title="Gen.10.25" href="/passage/?search=Gen.10.25">Gen. 10:25</a>): Because <i>in his days</i> (that is, about the time of his birth, when his name was given him), <i>was the earth divided</i> among the children of men that were to inhabit it; either when Noah divided it by an orderly distribution of it, as Joshua divided the land of Canaan by lot, or when, upon their refusal to comply with that division, God, in justice, divided them by the confusion of tongues: whichsoever of these was the occasion, pious Heber saw cause to perpetuate the remembrance of it in the name of his son; and justly may our sons be called by the same name, for in our days, in another sense, is the earth, the church, most wretchedly divided.</p>