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Genesis 5:21 -

The dedicated and initiated child grew up, like an Old Testament Timothy let us hope, to possess, illustrate, and proclaim the piety which was the distinguishing characteristic of the holy line. At the comparatively early age of sixty-five he begat Methuselah . Man of a dart (Gesenius), man of military arms (Furst), man of the missile (Murphy), man of the sending forth—sc. of water (Wordsworth), man of growth (Delitzsch). And Enoch walked with God (Elohim). The phrase, used also of Noah, ( Genesis 6:9 ), and by Micah ( Genesis 6:8 . Cf. the similar expressions, "to walk before God," Genesis 17:1 ; Psalms 116:9 , and "to walk after God," Deuteronomy 13:4 ; Ephesians 5:1 ), portrays a life of singularly elevated piety; not merely a constant realization of the Divine presence, or even a perpetual effort at holy obedience, but also "a maintenance of the most confidential intercourse with the personal God (Keil). It implies a situation of nearness to God, if not in place at least in spirit; a character of likeness to God ( Amos 3:3 ), and a life of converse with God. Following the LXX . ( ευ ̓ ηρε Ì στησε δε Ì ε ̓ νω Ì χ τω ͂ͅ θεω ͂ͅ ), the writer to the Hebrews describes it as a life that was "pleasing to God," as springing from the root of faith ( Hebrews 11:5 ). Yet though pre-eminently spiritual and contemplative, Jude tells us ( Jude 1:14 , Jude 1:15 ) the patriarch's life had its active and aggressive outlook towards the evil times in which he lived. After he begat Methuselah . "Which intimates that he did not begin to be eminent for piety till about that time; at first he walked as other men' (Henry). Procopius Gazeus goes beyond this, and thinks that before his son's birth Enoch was "a wicked liver," but then repented. The historian's language, however, does not necessarily imply that his piety was so late in commencing and it is more pleasing to think that from his youth upwards he was "as a shining star for virtue and holiness (Willet). Three hundred years. As his piety began early, so likewise did it continue long; it was not intermittent and fluctuating, but steadfast and persevering (cf. Job 17:9 ; Proverbs 4:18 ; 1 Corinthians 15:58 ). And begat sons and daughters. "Hence it is undeniably evident that the stats and use of matrimony doth very well agree with the severest course of holiness, and with the office of a prophet or preacher" (Poole). And all the days of Enoch were three hundred and sixty-five years. " A year of years" (Henry); "the same period as that of the revolution of the earth round the sun. After he had finished his course, revolving round him who is the true light, which is God, in the orbit of duty, he was approved by God, and taken to him" (Wordsworth). Modern critics have discovered in the age of Enoch traces of a mythical origin. They conclude the entire list of names to be not older than the time of the Babylonian Nabonassar, and believe it to be not improbable that "the Babylonians regulated the calendar with the assistance of an Indian astrologer or ganaka (arithmetician) of the town of Chanoge " (Von Bohlen). But "it would be strange indeed if just in the life of Enoch, which represents the purest and sublimest unity with God, a heathen and astrological element were intentionally introduced;" and, besides, "it is almost generally admitted that our list contains no astronomical numbers that the years which it specifies refer to the lives of individuals, not to periods of the world; and that none of all these figures is in any way reducible "to a chronological, system" (Kalisch). And Enoch walked with God . " Non otiosa ταυτολογι ì α ," but an emphatic repetition, indicative of the ground of what follows. And he was not . Literally, and not he (cf. Genesis 12:1-20 :36; Jeremiah 31:15 ; και Ì ου ̓ χ ευ ̓ ρι ì σκετο LXX .). "Not absolutely he was not, but relatively he was not extant in the sphere of sense." " Non amplius inter mortales apparuit " (Rosenmüller). "If this phrase does not denote annihilation, much less does the phrase "and he died." The one denotes absence from the world of sense, and the other indicates the ordinary way in which the soul departs from this world" (Murphy). For God (Elohim) took him. Cf. 2 Kings 2:3 , 2 Kings 2:5 , 2 Kings 2:9 , 2 Kings 2:10 , where the same word לָקַח is used of Elijah's translation; ο ̔ τι μετε ì θηκεν αυ ̓ το Ì ν ο ̔ θε ì ος , LXX .). Though the writer to the Hebrews ( Genesis 11:5 ) adopts the paraphrase of the LXX ; yet his language must be accepted as conveying the exact sense of the words of Moses. Analyzed, it teaches

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