“The Records Of The Generations Of Shem” (11:1-32)
Neal Pollard
The observation of Shem’s genealogies is a significant turning point in the book of Genesis. With it, Moses is closing his focus on the global situation and initiating his focus of his family situation. As we will see, this family warrants special attention for at least two reasons. First, this family would eventually be the Jewish nation, and, second, this family would eventually give the world its Savior.
Before giving this special information, though, Moses shows us what happened to the rest of the world and how the population spread to different lands. In fact, notice the bridge between the two chapters: ” These are the families of the sons of Noah, according to their genealogies, by their nations; and out of these the nations were separated on the earth after the flood” (10:32).
How were they separated? That is the task of Genesis 11:1-9. The people gather in the plain of Shinar, hundreds of miles due east of the Jordan River, and begin a building project. Most translations call their structure a “tower,” and the root of the word signifies “greatness” and “growing up.” A tower would be the highest or greatest structure in a town or area. Certainly, that seems to be what is intended by this construction feat.
When we think tower, we think tall, narrow defensive building (Swanson, Dict. Of Bib. Lang., np). But just how narrow and tall, we aren’t told. Neither are we told if this was to protect them from enemies or an attempt to prepare for a future calamity like the flood which wiped out their predecessors. We do know that their motivation seems self-serving (4) and lacking in faith (4). We also know that the Lord saw a unity on such a shaky foundation as a cause for divine concern (6). Their intention certainly seems in conflict with God’s mandate to “be fruitful and multiply; populate (lit., “swarm in”) the earth abundantly and multiply in it” (9:7).
Some years ago, in teaching about God’s eternal plan of salvation, I shared these lessons to be learned from Babel:
- They Left God Out Of Their Plans (3-4)
- They Had Improper Motives (4)
- We Cannot Hide Ourselves Or Our Work From God (5)
- The Value Of Unity (6)
- God Is In Control And Always Has The Last Word (7)
- Division Thwarts (8)
- Unless The Lord Build The House, They Labor In Vain Who Build It (Ps 127:1)
Whenever God confuses their languages and communication is so hindered, they stop building and scatter (8). The city with the tower came to known as Babel, a name then and now that means confusing or confusion (i.e., to babble; cf. Acts 17:18).
In Genesis 11:10-32, Moses turns his attention away from the rest of the earth and examines Seth’s family tree. As I teach “scheme of redemption,” I call these generations planks on a bridge leading us closer to Christ: Shem, Arpachsad, Shelah, Eber, Peleg, Reu, Serug, Nahor, Terah, and Abraham (10-26). God is building a bridge to allow us to be reconciled to Him, accomplishing it generation by generation through time. As with Babel, nothing could subvert God’s intentions and plans in bringing His Son, our Savior, into this world.
Within this lineage of Shem, Moses includes the “generations of Terah” (27-32). In so doing, he explains how Lot came to be traveling with Abram and Sarai, with the loss of his father, Haran (27-28). Moses also introduces us to an important fact which will come to the foreground later, that Sarai “was barren; she had no child” (30). He also introduces what he will explain in the next chapter, the sojourn of Abram, Sarai, and Lot from Ur to Canaan (31-32). They pause their journey in Haran, where Abraham’s father, Terah, dies (32). We will learn more about this journey in the next chapter.
