The Generations Of The Sons Of Noah (10:1-32)
Neal Pollard
With his next use of “toledoth” (generation), Moses gives the background for all the nations. Everyone on earth today has descended from one of these three men–Ham, Shem, or Japheth. This table of nations is both informative and important. One can consult various commentaries (Kenneth Matthews has a twenty-page discussion in the New American Commentary, while Kurt Strassner has a much more concise breakdown in the Opening Up Commentary series) of the nations which descended from these three men.
The latter ties today’s Eastern Europe to Japheth (10:2-5), North Africa and the Middle East (on the southern and eastern coasts of the Mediterranean) to Ham (10:6-19), and the dominant nations of the Middle East to Shem (10:21-31)(51). But there is more to this list than a geography and ethnic studies lesson. Moses is setting the reader up for the material he will share in the next chapter, when the people of earth will disperse and settle in various places ( see 5,11,18, etc.).
The observation of Reyburn and Fry is correct when they say, “This follows a pattern that is repeated a number of times in Genesis, in which the individuals and their descendants who are not in the line chosen by God are mentioned first, while those who are in the chosen line are mentioned last, and the story then continues with them” (Handbook, 228). You see that first in Genesis 4-5, and you will see it again in Genesis 10-11. There are a few matters of note which Moses lays out in giving this genealogical record.
First, he mentions the mighty hunter, Nimrod (8-12). He is so renowned for these skills that subsequent great hunters were likened to him. Look up “hunter” in the dictionary and one of its synonyms is “nimrod.” He will be listed in the genealogies of 1 Chronicles 1:10, then in the prophetic work of Micah (5:6). Yet, more important than his skill is the place he settled. Though Moses would not have to deal directly with them, the Assyrians would factor prominently in the later history of Israel. The foreknowledge of God is at work here, informing the people of God of the “genesis” of this wicked enemy. Verses ten through twelve unambiguously mention not only Babel (i.e., Babylon–another later, even stronger enemy), but Nineveh and Assyria. These are kingdoms and lands built by Nimrod.
See also more local enemies which would plague Moses’ ancestors, Moses himself, and Moses’ descendants. He mentions where the original inhabitants of the promised land originated. Ham’s descendants would give us the Canaanites, Amorites, Hivites, Jebusites, and Girgashites (13-17), along with the other thorns in the people’s sides. Soon, Moses will be moved by God’s Spirit to share His promise to Abraham concerning the ultimate expulsion of these people in favor of his descendants (15:18ff).
Among others of Ham’s descendants are the inhabitants of Sodom and Gomorrah, who will also feature prominently in the narrowing focus on Shem’s (8th great-grandson), Abraham (19). They will grow so wicked that God destroys them. Here, we are simply taught of their origin.
Moses is setting up the reader for one family among all the nations, while giving us five generations of Seth (Shem, Arpachsad, Shelah, Eber, and Peleg; see ch. 11). In this accounting, Moses is more interesting in giving us the rest of the descendants of Shem before he rivets in on Abraham’s line. One other interesting line, nestled in those genealogies of Shem, is the statement made about Peleg. “In his days the earth was divided” (25). While many take this to refer to the incident at Babel, when the inhabitants were socially divided, it is also possible that this refers to a breaking up of the continents into a continental drift. A study of earth’s major land masses shows a complementary form between those separated by seas and oceans. Robert Utley tells us, “The Hebrew term literally means ‘irrigation canals’ which would fit southern Mesopotamia, but the popular etymology is ‘divisions’” (How It All Began, 123). Given the ambiguity of the word in this context, no one should be dogmatic about either position.
Isn’t it incredible all the layered, even subtle, discoveries possible when studying even apparently obscure, mundane chapters of the Bible? This rich book is full of discoveries waiting for the Bible student to find by mining its inspired veins. With this listing, Moses gets down to the more specific interest of his inspired record.
