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<p>Here we have the first mention of Noah, of whom we shall read much in the following chapters. Observe,</p>
<p class="tab-1">I. His name, with the reason of it: <i>Noah</i> signifies <i>rest</i>; his parents gave him that name, with a prospect of his being a more than ordinary blessing to his generation: <i>This same shall comfort us concerning our work and toil of our hands, because of the ground which the Lord hath cursed</i>. Here is, 1. Lamechs complaint of the calamitous state of human life. By the entrance of sin, and the entail of the curse for sin, our condition has become very miserable: our whole life is spent in labour, and our time filled up with continual toil. God having cursed the ground, it is as much as some can do, with the utmost care and pains, to fetch a hard livelihood out of it. He speaks as one fatigued with the business of this life, and grudging that so many thoughts and precious minutes, which otherwise might have been much better employed, are unavoidably spent for the support of the body. 2. His comfortable hopes of some relief by the birth of this son: <i>This same shall comfort us</i>, which denotes not only the desire and expectation which parents generally have concerning their children (that, when they grow up, they will be comforts to them and helpers in their business, though they often prove otherwise), but an apprehension and prospect of something more. Very probably there were some prophecies that went before of him, as a person that should be wonderfully serviceable to his generation, which they so understood as to conclude that he was the promised seed, the Messiah that should come; and then it intimates that a covenant-interest in Christ as ours, and the believing expectation of his coming, furnish us with the best and surest comforts, both in reference to the wrath and curse of God which we have deserved and to the toils and troubles of this present time of which we are often complaining. “Isa. Christ ours? Isa. heaven ours? <i>This same shall comfort us</i>.”</p>
<p class="tab-1">II. His children, Shem, Ham, and Japheth. These Noah begat (the eldest of these) when he was 500 years old. It should seem that Japheth was the eldest (<a class="bibleref" title="Gen.10.21" href="/passage/?search=Gen.10.21">Gen. 10:21</a>), but Shem is put first because on him the covenant was entailed, as appears by <a class="bibleref" title="Gen.9.26" href="/passage/?search=Gen.9.26">Gen. 9:26</a>; where God is called the <i>Lord God of Shem</i>. 69b To him, it is probable, the birth-right was given, and from him, it is certain, both Christ the head, and the church the body, were to descend. Therefore he is called <i>Shem</i>, which signifies a <i>name</i>, because in his posterity the name of God should always remain, till he should come out of his loins whose name is above every name; so that in putting Shem first Christ was, in effect, put first, who in all things must have the pre-eminence.</p>