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Genesis
Chapter 10

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Book of Genesis Chapter 10

Audio Bible Study - Genesis 10:1-5

Verse 1. “Now these are the records of the generations of Shem, Ham, and Japheth, the sons of Noah; and sons were born to them after the flood.”

The opening chapters of the Book of First Chronicles provide an additional chronology of the descendents of the sons of Noah, which shall be referred to as we proceed through this Chapter in the Book of Genesis. There are other genealogies in Scripture as well, and they will be mentioned when such references are needed for understanding. We will examine “the generations of Shem, Ham and Japheth, the sons of Noah…” One of the interesting facts about the names of their descendents in this chapter is that less is known about them than we would hope, but what is known will be shared. Almighty God knows EVERYTHING about them, and He is acquainted with you as well.  If you ever feel lost, you're not, for God is with you, even if the world does not know who you are.

Note that the children of these men and their wives consisted of “sons (and daughters)… born to them after the flood,” suggesting that the three sons of Noah and their wives previously did not have children before the flood came and none of them were born during the year that the eight survivors of the Great Flood remained on the ark. All “were born to them after the flood,” as it says in this verse.  Eight people and eight people only were survivors of the Pre-Flood world.

Verse 2. “The sons of Japheth were Gomer and Magog and Madai and Javan and Tubal and Meshech and Tiras.”

The “sons of Japheth,” as also named in 1 Chronicles 1:5-7, are listed first among the grandsons of Noah, even though Japheth was not to be in the line of the Messiah. That honor would be a blessing given to Shem, progenitor of the Asian peoples, as seen in the genealogy contained in Luke 3:36 and its context. “Gomer” likely meant “completion,” and if he was the oldest of Japheth’s sons, then his name represents that feeling of completion when a child is brought into the world. Nations that have been thought to be descended from "Gomer" and his wife include many early settlers of Europe, defined as those west of the Caucasus mountains, such as the Irish, Welsh, Germans, Turks and also the Scythians.

Magog” likely meant “region of Gog,” two names that will be seen again as part of the final battle mentioned in Revelation 20:8. Nations associated with the name, “Magog,” have included the Irish and Scythians (again), along with the Finns and the Slavs. “Madai” was Japheth’s third son and his name meant “middle.” Nations descending from him are said to include the Persians, Medes and Kurds. “Javan” literally meant “Greece,” including not only today's Greeks, but it also refers to a people that originally settled across the water from Greece in the area called Ionia. The people of “Tubal” include the original settlers of the Iberian Peninsula, such as the Basques, and also those to the east in the country of Georgia. “Meshech” meant “tall” and he was likely the progenitor of the Great Russians. “Tiras” was the ancestor of certain Germanic tribes, including the Jutes, Goths and Teutons.  Many of the Jutes sailed to Britain in later centuries, along with the Angles and Saxons; conquering and establishing territory on that island.

Verse 3. “The sons of Gomer were Ashkenaz and Riphath and Togarmah”

Listed in this section of Scripture are the sons of Noah, followed by a listing of his grandsons and other descendents, beginning in this verse with seven sons of Japheth. The names and probable future lineage of his sons was given in Verse 2. Three sons of “Gomer” (completion) are listed here. The first one is “Ashkenaz,” listed also in Jeremiah 51:27 as among the national groups that would in the future attack Babylon in God's retribution for what that city-state did in later years to Israel.

Riphath” is called by the name, “Diphath,” in 1 Chronicles 1:6, reflecting one of the difficulties in discovering facts about their lives and descendants. Names of ancient people and nations tend to differ depending on who wrote about them. Countries don’t have the same names for other nations, such as the largest country on the Iberian Peninsula, which calls itself “Espana,” but the English call it “Spain” and the French, “L'Espagne.” The historian Flavius Josephus placed “Riphath” at the north of the Caspian Sea. The last grandson of Japheth named in this verse is “Togarmah,” who is thought to be the ancestor of the Armenians, who are still called “the House of Thorgom,” which indeed is a derivation of the name, “Togarmah.”

Verse 4. “The sons of Javan were Elishah and Tarshish, Kittim and Dodanim.”

Javan” is the fourth son of Japheth listed in Verse 2, and Javan’s own sons, the grandsons of Japheth are listed here. “Elishah” can be translated “God is salvation,” suggesting that at least some members of this family looked to the Lord, and the descendents of this man settled in Ionia, part of what is now Western Turkey. The famous “blue and purple” dyes produced by the people of "Elishah" are mentioned in Ezekiel 27:7. “Tarshish” is mentioned a number of times in Scripture. It was the place Jonah intended to go to in his attempt to avoid the call of God (Jonah 1:3). The place had many ships (Psalm 48:7) and it is thought this “Tarshish” was located on the coast of Spain.

Kittim” or “Chittim” in Scripture is the island of Cyprus in the Mediterranean Sea. In Daniel 11:30, the descendents of "Kittim" are described as a maritime people, a nation of sailors and shipbuilders. Less is known of the descendents of “Dodanim,” likely Japheth’s youngest son. 1 Chronicles 1:7 calls him “Rodanim,” and Flavius Josephus, the Jewish historian of 2000 years ago does not mention him or his descendents at all.

Verse 5. “From these the coastlands of the nations were separated into their lands, every one according to his language, according to their families, into their nations.”

Up until the time of this verse, and for a likely extensive time after the moment, there was only one language utilized by all in the human race. The very thought of “another language” would not have been comprehended by anyone on earth. The phrase, “every one according to his language” tells us this verse refers to a time after the building of the so-called “tower” associated with “Babel” and the scattering of human languages, as seen in Genesis 11:1 and in the verses that follow.

The act in which “nations were separated into their lands” is also future from the moment of this verse, referring to the sudden event reflected in Genesis 11:8 when God abruptly “scattered (humanity) abroadover the face of all the earth.” The various languages of the earth did not come about through a gradual process, though such a process has been occurring since that time and it is still happening today. The evolution of languages into their present forms began by a sudden change. And the “nations were separated into their lands” through an unexpected wrenching of individuals from one place to another.

Father, We place our trust in You. We need You so much.  Forgive us our sins and help us to learn from the past, especially as it revealed in Your Word, the Bible.  Fill us with Your Holy Spirit and let us learn from You.  We thank You and praise Your Holy Name.  In Jesus Name.  Amen.

Audio Bible Study - Genesis 10:6-10

Verse 6. “The sons of Ham were Cush and Mizraim and Put and Canaan.”

We now look at a historical sketch about the offspring of “Ham,” son of Noah. One of Noah's grandsons was to be “Nimrod,” a most unusual man who “became a mighty one on the earth,” as we will see in Verse 8. Nimrod’s father was “Cush,” son of Ham. The word “Cush” literally means “black,” and you can see the words “Cush” and “Ethiopia” used interchangeably in various Bible translations, as in Isaiah 18:1 and Jeremiah 13:23 - depending on which translation you might be using. Many of the Cushites became settled in Eastern Africa and the ancient Egyptian name for Ethiopia was  a corrupted form of the name, “Cush.”

Mizraim” in the Hebrew literally meant “Egypt.” This son of Ham was the progenitor of the ancient Hamitic Caananites and Mizraim also contributed his DNA to the modern Egyptians. Those of “Put” are thought to be the Libyans of North Africa. The words “Libya” and “Put” or “Pul” are often used interchangeably in various translations, in places like Nahum 3:9. “Canaan” meant “Low.” Egyptian inscriptions preserved since 1800 BC used the name “Canaan” for coastal dwellers who lived anywhere north from Egypt into what is now Lebanon and beyond.

Verse 7. “The sons of Cush were Seba and Havilah and Sabtah and Raamah and Sabteca; and the sons of Raamah were Sheba and Dedan.”

Several sons of “Cush” are listed in this verse and one more is named in Verse 8. “Seba,” a son of Cush has often been confused with “Sheba,” his nephew, the son of his brother, Raamah. However, Psalm 72:10 refers to “the kings of Sheba and Seba,” indicating that this is a real historical division, describing peoples descended from two separate men. “Seba” has been named as the ancestor of the people who live in the countries of Yemen and Eritrea East Africa, north of Ethiopia.

Havilah” meant “circle” and this grandson of Ham is thought to be an ancestor of the inhabitants of the Sinai Peninsula. “Sabtah” has been associated with the Hadhramis people to the east of Yemen. “Raamah” meant “trembling” and his descendents have been associated with the Arabian Peninsula and a coastal people of the Red Sea. “Sabteca” has been thought to be the ancestor of a Sabaean people north of Ethiopia and near Eritrea. Raamah’s son, “Sheba,” has been connected with Sabaean people in a variety of African locations. “Dedan” was one of the ancestors of the people of Saudi Arabia.

Verse 8. “Now Cush became the father of Nimrod; he became a mighty one on the earth.”

We now discover a great grandson of Noah who “became a mighty one on the earth.” We have always had “mighty” people among us. Generals, admirals, kings, queens, presidents, rock stars, famous athletes, and so on, but this “Nimrod” was much greater than someone who just had a title and seemed to be someone important. He was more along the line of Alexander the Great of Macedonia, who took Greece and then conquered the Persian Empire. The historian, Flavius Josephus, credits him with instigating the Tower of Babel project. “Nimrod” was indeed a “mighty one,” a legendary person for any time.

He was a military conqueror, a city builder, and probably much more. Records were no doubt written during those times, passed on for future readers such as Moses, who ultimately wrote the Book of Genesis. Verbal records also are a part of every generation, and Nimrod probably came into the lore of humanity in distorted forms, and he may well have become part of Greek and Roman legends. Some have wondered if he possibly came into “history” as the part horse, part man, Sagittarius, considered in mythology to be a “mighty hunter” like it says about Nimrod in Verse 9.

Verse 9. “He was a mighty hunter before the Lord; therefore it is said, ‘Like Nimrod a mighty hunter before the Lord.’”

Nimrod” can be translated as “strong,” but the more likely translation is “we will revolt,” which says something about his father, Cush (Verse 8), and it also speaks about the character of Nimrod himself. He was a “mighty hunter,” an activity which is further described as “before the Lord” or more likely, “against the Lord.” The “Targums” were later Jewish translations from the Hebrew (which was becoming a “dead" language at the time the Targums were written), into the various Aramaic dialects of that later time.

The Targums translated “before the Lord” as “in the face of the Lord” or “in defiance of him” as both Flavius Josephus and the Targums viewed it. Nimrod very likely WAS a hunter of animals, but the name and the context of his life suggests that he was a “hunter of men,” subduing them, conquering and enslaving them for what was to be the world’s first great Hamitic empire, though the scale of his wars would have been less numerically than wars fought in later empires. This was an ungodly, violent man.

Verse 10. “The beginning of his kingdom was Babel and Erech and Accad and Calneh, in the land of Shinar.”

Nimrod” (Verses 8 and 9) was a great general, a conqueror, the builder of the first great Empire in what might be called “modern” times. And he did all this “before the Lord” (Verse 9), which might better be translated “in the face of the Lord” for he was not a godly man. Flavius Josephus, a Jewish historian of 2000 years ago, said that Nimrod “changed the government into tyrannyturning men from the fear of Godto bring them into a constant dependence upon (Nimrod’s) power” (Antiquities IV).

Nimrod’s first conquest was the city-state of “Babel,” also known as “Babylon,” a symbol of ungodly rebellion throughout history. He then turned his armies southeast to “Erech” which meant “size,” taking that place as well. He then marched on “Accad” and “Calneh.” All of these city-states were located in the alluvial plain of the “land of Shinar,” which in later centuries was to be called Babylonia. Today, much of that area is called “Iraq.”

Father, we put aside our own attempts at power; instead placing our faith in You.  Help us to truly be Your people, in the power and love of God.  In Jesus Name.  Amen.

Friday Study 4/17/09 - Genesis 10:11-15

Verse 11. “From that land he went forth into Assyria, and built Nineveh and Rehoboth-Ir and Calah,”

Nimrod, son of Cush, grandson of Ham, had become a “mighty one on the earth,” as we saw in Verse 8. He was the first recorded conquering emperor who marched forth into battle and subdued the known world of that time. As reflected in this verse, his armies now marched from the area of Babylonia “into Assyria,” where, after defeating the armies in that place militarily, he began to build cities, as conquerors sometimes do.

Ninevah” was to become, in future centuries, the capital of "Assyria," a city renowned in antiquity for its remarkable size (Jonah 3:3). He also built “Rehoboth-Ir,” a name which can be translated “broad places” or “broad streets,” and “Calah,” another great city of ancient Assyria. “Ninevah” is well known to historians and archaeologists, whereas the latter two cities disappear from Scripture after the time of this verse.

Verse 12. “and Resen between Nineveh and Calah; that is the great city.”

Some have thought that “Rehoboth-Ir” and “Calah” of the preceding verse were actually suburbs of “Nineveh,” but in this verse, “Resen,” which meant “fortress,” is stated as being “between Nineveh and Calah,” suggesting that there was some distance between these three cities. All of them were becoming essentially just one place though, because Nimrod the conquering dictator was busily attacking all over the region and making these places his own.

In the “Zondervan Bible Dictionary,” “Calah” was said to have been “rebuilt by Shalmanezer I” in subsequent centuries, then later "abandoned and rebuilt once more” in about 1000 BC. Out of all of these notable cities, it was “Resen” that was called “the great city” by contemporaries, as reflected in these words written somewhat later in time by Moses, prince of Egypt, leader of Israel, and the human author of this Book of Genesis.

Verse 13. “Mizraim became the father of Ludim and Anamim and Lehabim and Naphtuhim”

At the time of what is called the “Genesis Flood,” the number of people in humanity went from probably millions to very few indeed. A civilization had been destroyed and many were killed.  It had become a world of unrepentant sinners who committed unspeakable acts (Genesis 6:11-13).  And yet God loves us all and He provided well for the future because in the eight survivors were all the genetic dominant and recessive characteristics necessary to produce humanity out of those few. Previously in this chapter, we were given a look at the sons of Japheth, who would eventually be found all over the earth, but predominantly they had been placed into what is now called Europe, becoming in time also the dominant group of the North American nations of today.

The names in Verse 13 and its context, now reveal the sons and grandsons of Ham, son of Noah, and these were to be the various peoples that not only populated Africa, but also these “Hamitic” people became the first “world” conquerors, dominating other groups for many centuries. Four great-grandsons of Noah are mentioned in this verse, notable because they banded together, forming villages, tribes and then nations. “Mizraim” is the Hebrew name for Upper and Lower Egypt, which is called the “land of Ham” in Psalm 105:23. “LudimAnamimLahabim and Naphtuhim” are all associated with North Africa and Egypt especially. The "Ludim" have been thought to be the “Moors” who were to successfully invade Spain in later centuries. They were NOT the “Lud” of Genesis 10:22.

Verse 14. “and Pathrusim and Casluhim (from which came the Philistines) and Caphtorim.”

This verse continues the listing of great grandsons of Noah, through his son, Ham, and his grandson, "Mizraim." Moses, the author of the Book of Genesis, was helpful in this verse because he revealed that the Philistines descended from this man, "Casluhim," who was the progenitor of a group that extended from the Nile River in Egypt, along the coast and inland, north into today’s country of Lebanon. They also traveled in ships throughout the Mediterranean and the people of the island of Crete are included in their lineage.

All three of these descendents of Noah were Hamitic people, which is to say they came from Noah’s son, Ham, who carried the genetic predisposition for offspring that were more adept at producing melanin, a brown-colored skin pigment. Historically, a predominance of the various Hamitic people have been thought of in relation to the continent called “Africa,” but the descendents of Ham are also seen over much of the world.

Verse 15. “Canaan became the father of Sidon, his firstborn, and Heth”

Another grandson of Noah, through his son, "Ham," was the “Canaan” of this verse. This is the same “Canaan” who was “cursed” by his grandfather, Noah, as seen in Genesis 9:24-27. Noah was upset because he had been embarrassed by his “youngest son,” Ham, and essentially wrote Canaan “out of his will” in relation to what had happened. The Canaanites of the future would ultimately and for a time, become subservient to the descendents of Shem, events that may stem from Noah’s blessing and curse.  At various points in history, it should be noted that all three of these basic groups that came from Shem, Ham and Japheth, have risen to power and then declined, and that process is continuing.

Sidon” was to become, in future centuries, an important, fortified Phoenician city-state, about 20-miles north of the city of Tyre, in what is now called “Lebanon.” Sidon was about fifty miles from Nazareth and would be visited by Jesus Christ, as seen in Matthew 15:21. “Heth” was to be an ancestor of a powerful people known as the “Hittites.” Mention of them is made in Genesis 23:3 and 27:46, where we see that Isaac and Rebecca's son, Esau, married two women from that lineage.  It's interesting that somewhat recent scholars denied the existence of the Hittites, scoffing about Biblical accounts of them, until archeological evidence proved beyond any doubt that the Hittites actually were a very real people in the history of the world.

Thank You, Father, for revealing so much about the history of this world.  There is much we don't understand, and we pray that we may become open to Your leading as to what our ancestry is really all about.  Help us to see that all of us are one people, one human race.  In Jesus Name.  Amen.

Audio Bible Study - Genesis 10:16-21

Verse 16. “and the Jebusite and the Amorite and the Girgashite”

Moses, the human author of these verses, now mentions future tribes rather than simply naming the first person in the bloodline of the various groups he is mentioning. These are all peoples descended from Ham, son of Noah, and Mizraim, grandson of Noah. These verses are a sketch, giving us a brief, but valuable synopsis of the Cushite people who spread from the mountains of Ararat, into Africa and over much of the world.

The word “Jebusite” refers to a literal people who resided in and around the city of Jerusalem, in what is now Israel. They were never to be completely driven out of the Land of Promise by the Israelites and it is written that, “the Jebusites dwell withBenjamin in Jerusalem to this day” (Judges 1:21). The “Amorites,” a name which meant “mountain dwellers,” became a tribe of people who lived on both sides of the Jordan River in Israel, chiefly in the Judean mountains (Genesis 14:7, Joshua 10:5). “Girgashite” refers to a group of people who were named in Joshua 24:11 as having been “delivered” into the “hand” of Israel.

Verse 17. “and the Hivite and the Arkite and the Sinite”

Hivite” can be translated “villagers” or “settlers in cities,” referring to groups who lived in Shechem (Genesis 33:18 to 34:2 & context), at Gibeon (Joshua 9:1-3), and at the foot of Mount Hermon (Joshua 11:3), all roughly within the land known as “Canaan.” The “Arkite” tribes were located, according to Flavius Josephus, in the city of Arka, in Lebanon, a city later called “Caeserea Libani,” under the Romans. “Arkite” meant “belonging to Arka.” “Sinite” meant “people in the east,” and they were likely located to the east of Arka, in what is present-day Lebanon.

Note that the descendents of Shem, Ham and Japheth also included groups of people in many parts of the world who are not named in these verses.  The focus of this and other genealogies in Scripture is upon those nations and people who immediately relate to to the people who were to be called "Israel," and through that nation, to the Messiah, the Christ, who was to emerge from Israel into the midst of these national groups.

Verse 18. “and the Arvadite and the Zemarite and the Hamathite; and afterward the families of the Canaanite were spread abroad.”

“Arvad” translates as “wandering” and “Arvadite” meant “inhabitant of Arvad.” The Arvadites in 800 BC, occupied and held the small, rocky island called Arados, north of Tripoli, in what is now Northern Lebanon. The people called “Zemarite” inhabited a now-ruined Phoenician city called “Simya” - the remains of that place is called “Sumrah” to this day. The place of the “Hamathite” was a fortified city north of Damascus, Syria, and the word, “Hamath,” meant “fortification.” The place is called “Hamath the Great” in Amos 6:2 and marked the extent of King Solomon’s kingdom, as seen in 1 Kings 8:65. The people of Hamath were overrun by the armies of Assyria, where they merged into the populace and later became known as Samaritans (2 Kings 17:24, 30).

The phrase, “the families of the Canaanite were spread abroad,” refers to the events following the building of the “tower,” as seen in Genesis 11:4 & forward. “The Lord scattered them abroad from there over the face of all the earth,” causing many to be sent from the “land of Shinar” (Genesis 11:2) and into other parts of the world. “The Lord confused” their languages, and from the moment of Genesis 11:12, humanity began to settle in divergent groups, like the Arvadites, Zemarites and Hamathites of this verse.

Verse 19. “The territory of the Canaanite extended from Sidon as you go toward Gerar, as far as Gaza; as you go toward Sodom and Gomorrah and Admah and Zeboiim, as far as Lasha.”

The furthest extent of Canaanite expansion is seen in this verse. They would inhabit the land that would later be promised to Abraham (Genesis 13:14-15) and is now called Israel. The southern border of Canaan included what is presently the “Gaza” Strip. “Sidon” was a coastal city in the center of what is now called Lebanon. “Gerar” was a Canaanite city in the northern Negev where Abraham made treaties with King Ambimelech (Genesis 20 and 26).

It’s interesting that the cities of “Sodom and Gomorrah” were still in existence at the time of this verse. The Book of Genesis was written by Moses, but those cities had been destroyed before he was born, suggesting that Moses used earlier written materials while the cities were still in existence to compile this Book. It’s possible that oral histories were also consulted, but considering that “Moses was learned in all the wisdom of the Egyptians” (Acts 7:22), he likely had studied within the extensive libraries in Egypt. “Admah” and “Zeboiim” were at the southern end of the Dead Sea and were “cities of the plain” that were later destroyed with Sodom and Gomorrah (Genesis 19:24-29). “Lasha” is thought to have been on the eastern side of the Dead Sea.

Verse 20. “These are the sons of Ham, according to their families, according to their languages, by their lands, by their nations.”

For centuries “the sons of Ham” dominated much of the world. They conquered and ruled, enslaved people, waged war and then somewhat declined. It’s so interesting that God knew everything about them, just as He knows everything about all nations today. Many of the places, languages and people in these verses are obscure, though well-meaning historians have conflicting opinions about them, but God knew and knows every person who has ever lived, whether from “Ham” or not.

And He has loved them, just as He loves each one of us. “The sons of Ham,” including those who lived in the place called “Canaan” were deeply loved by God, to the extent that God sent His precious Son right into the heart of that land, that place, and what the people had to do was trust in Him, just as it is for us today. “For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life” (John 3:16). Will we find many of “the sons of Ham” in what is called “heaven” or "eternity?"  Yes, we will.

Verse 21. “Also to Shem, the father of all the children of Eber, and the older brother of Japheth, children were born.”

Shem” was the oldest of the three sons of Noah. “Ham” was the youngest of the three, as seen in Genesis 9:24, and “Japheth” was the middle son. As it says in this verse, Shem was the “older brother of Japheth.” And also we see that “children were born” to Shem and his wife, which was also true for his brothers and their wives. Those descended from “Shem” have often been termed as “Semitic” people. The special significance of the life of Shem was found in God’s choice that he was to be in the line of the Messiah, the Christ of God.

As we will see, the predominance in the line of Shem that will follow, is that his descendents ended up mostly in the direction of what we call the continent of Asia. And his offspring carried what became a dominant characteristic for many of his descendents – the production of carotene in the skin. Another typical factor is blood type. Only 16% of the world’s population is Type B, but that type is very common in Asia. The Jews, including Jesus, are sons of Shem; so are the Chinese, along with the "Indian" people of the Americas.

Father, we confess that as a people, we actually know very little about what life is all about.  You are the wellspring of life and we ask that You will send us Your Holy Spirit so that we will grasp Your Word and be led into real life, real understanding.  We look to You, Lord.  Please lead us in the way everlasting.  In Jesus Name.  Amen.

Audio Bible Study - Genesis 10:22-26

Verse 22. “The sons of Shem were Elam and Asshur and Arpachshad and Lud and Aram.”

Twenty-six “sons of Shem” are named in the verses that follow. Actually, most of them would be better described by the term “descendents” since they actually were mostly his grandsons and great grandsons. The first one listed is his son, “Elam,” a name that is translated, “hidden.” Elam’s immediate descendents stretched from the Persian Gulf to the Red Sea, and some say to the Caspian Sea, and they were a Persian group that spoke a language not normally considered “Semitic” (of Shem). The principal area of ancient Elam is now called “Iran.”

Asshur” meant “level plain,” a name associated with not only the Assyrians, but also with their chief “god” as well. It has been said that Asshur built a significant city on the Tigris River. “Arpachshad” was born “two years after the flood” (Genesis 11:10) and out of all these people, he and his father were selected to be in the line of the Messiah, the Christ (Luke 3:23, 36). Arpachshad has been associated with the people of southern Turkey and also with the Sumerian city of Ur, on the Euphrates River. “Lud” was to become the ancestor of the Lydians of Asia Minor, called “Luddu” in Assyrian inscriptions from 700 BC. “Aram” (“high, exalted”) was the ancestor of the Aramaeans. They were a people centered on the Balikh River in Northwestern Mesopotamia, which is now in the country of Turkey.

Verse 23. “The sons of Aram were Uz and Hul and Gether and Mash.”

Aram,” as we saw in the preceding verse, was the most notable ancestor of the tribe and nation called the Aramaeans. Aram was possibly the youngest of the sons of Shem, because he was listed last among them. Four of Aram’s sons, Seth’s grandsons, are listed in this verse. Obviously, all of Seth’s sons had daughters as well, or the human race would have died out right at the time of this verse, and this can be seen in Genesis 11:11, where we see that Seth had "other sons and daughters."

Uz” likely meant “firmness” and his descendents blended into the people of the deserts of Arabia. “Hul” translates as “circle,” a name associated with the old Egyptian name for the modern Syrians. The historian, Flavius Josephus said they were ancestors of the people of Armenia. “Gether” meant “fear” and this man was the ancestor of people who blended into the people of Arabia. “Mash,” also called “Meshech” in 1 Chronicles 1:17, is associated with the Armenians, and was mentioned in Psalm 120:5.

Verse 24. “Arpachshad became the father of Shelah; and Shelah became the father of Eber.”

Arpachshad” is notable because he was selected to be in the line of the Messiah, the Christ, as seen in Luke 3:35. His son, “Shelah,” which translates as “sprout” or “request,” also bore that honor, for he was in the Messianic line also, as was his son, “Eber” (Luke 3:34). “Eber” meant “the region beyond” and all three of the men in this verse were listed in the line that led to Abraham, and through him, to the Hebrew people, today called the “Jews” who are found in many places around the world, but especially in the resurrected country called “Israel.”

Verse 25. “Two sons were born to Eber; the name of the one was Peleg, for in his days the earth was divided; and his brother's name was Joktan.”

As we saw in the preceding verse, “Eber” may be translated as “the region beyond.” Eber is the son of Shelah, who was the son of Arpachshad, son of Shem, son of Noah. In those days, names seemed to often have been chosen, not because they sounded nice, but as a way of describing notable events, as we see in this verse. They also often reflected the actions of godly relatives, who prayed and then chose a name in relation to some prophetic word from God. Two sons of Eber are named in this verse, but note that Genesis 11:25 observed that Eber had "other sons and daughters," as well.

The first son of Eber named in this verse was “Peleg,” which simply meant, “division,” relating to the time when two great events occurred that changed history. The first one was the scattering or division of languages (Genesis 11:6-7). Previously, all languages were just one with no tendency to change, but now interpreters were needed, for understanding was remarkably lessened. The second division involved the location of the various members of humanity. “The Lord (suddenly) scattered them abroad from there over the face of all the earth…” (Genesis 11:8). One moment they were building a city in Southwest Asia, and in the next, they were in Australia, America, Europe, the Far East and just about everywhere else. As it says in Genesis 11:8 about that event, “They ceased building the city.” “Joktan” meant, “he will be made small.” for reasons known only to his parents and to God.

Verse 26. “Joktan became the father of Almodad and Sheleph and Hazarmaveth and Jerah”

Joktan”’s name meant “he will be made small,” and as people tend to do, he seems to have attempted to overcome a negative legacy by having as many children as possible. Thirteen sons of Joktan are named in this verse and in the ones that follow, and he also would have had numerous daughters as well, though they are not named in this Book of Genesis. “Almodad" was apparently the oldest because he was listed first, and his name meant “the beloved.” He is traditionally associated with the nation called “Yemen.”

Sheleph” translates as “drawn out” and the name has been linked to a tribe of central Arabia, and also to “Salif” or “Sulaf,” a district in Yemen. Note also that some historians have thrown up their hands and said that nothing certain can be determined about most of these names, but others have provided interesting information about them. “Hazarmaveth” meant “village of death,” an interesting choice of names for a child. “Jerah” is translated “moon,” and he is thought to be another son whose offspring blended into the group called “Arabians.”

Lord, we are all descended from Noah and one or more sons of Noah and their wives.  Help us to understand we are one people who need to stop being afraid and start helping each other.  Lead us to the love of God which is in Christ Jesus.  In His Name.  Amen.

Audio Bible Study - Genesis 10:27-32

Verse 27-28. “and Hadoram and Uzal and Diklah and Obal and Abimael and Sheba.”

The listing of the sons of "Joktan," a descendent of Shem, son of Noah, continues in these verses. Joktan's name meant “he will be made small,” for reasons not revealed in Scripture, and he seems to have attempted to overcome the possibly prophetic meaning attached to his name by having as many children as he could. Thirteen sons are listed and there would have been daughters as well. The Roman historian, Pliny, said that his son, “Hadoram,” whose name meant “Hadar is exalted,” had descendents who lived on the south coast of Arabia.

Uzal” was not only the name of a son of Joktan, but the name has been thought by some to be the ancient name of a section and city located in the country of Yemen, a place populated by Uzal's descendents. “Diklah” meant “palm tree” - his legacy became associated with the date palm region of Arabia, especially between the mouth of the Tiber River and the Persian Gulf. “Obal” translates “to be bare,” “Abimael” meant “God is Father” and the locations of the descendants of these two sons are not known. “Sheba” literally meant “seven, an oath,” and the descendents of this Semitic man apparently blended with Cushites, forming the group represented by the Queen of Sheba who later visited King Solomon (1 Kings 19:1-13). That Queen was definitely a historical figure, by the way, for she was specifically mentioned by Jesus Christ (Matthew 12:42).

Verse 29. “and Ophir and Havilah and Jobab; all these were the sons of Joktan.”

The phrase, “all these were the sons of Joktan,” refers to the thirteen male offspring of Joktan, son of Eber, named in this and in the preceding verses. For the most part, Joktan’s offspring remain obscure in history, though it is known they are mostly Semitic people who contributed to the gene pools of those of Arabian descent who lived in Arabia, Iraq, Yemen and it would include the Palestinians as well. It is true, however, that the Semitic people who surrounded the contact point of Asia and Africa, sometimes intermarried and blended with those who descended from Cush.

Ophir” meant “rich,” and since it was decided early in human history that gold had considerable value because of its beauty and malleability; this son was likely connected with the “gold of Ophir” mentioned in 1 Chronicles 29:4. “Havilah” meant “circle,” a place and people mentioned in Genesis 25:16-18 as the limit of Ishmaelite territory, and in 1 Samuel 15:7, it’s the place where King Saul of Israel defeated the Amalekites. “Jobab” meant “to call shrilly,” and his name is associated with the people of Arabia.

Verse 30. “Now their settlement extended from Mesha as you go toward Sephar, the hill country of the east.”

The words, “their settlement” refers to the ancient distribution of the “sons of Shem,” a phrase mentioned in the next verse, which is really a rendering of more than just his sons. We have just been spending a considerable time in this section with the “sons of Joktan,” who were actually Shem’s descendants, in the generations that followed. “Mesha” (retreat) is thought to have become a people in ancient Arabia, and “Sephar” (numbering) is called “the hill country of the east.” Some have thought that these early descendants of Shem, one of the survivors on the ark of Noah, were found all the way from Arabia to India in the east.  But the intent of these genealogies is to focus on those descendents that relate to the eventual nation Israel, created out of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, who were descended from Shem, son of Noah.

Verse 31. “These are the sons of Shem, according to their families, according to their languages, by their lands, according to their nations.”

In these verses in Genesis, the emphasis is on the various national groups who were in proximity to Israel, a country that would later come into existence.  In addition to the Arabian people, “The sons of Shem,” son of Noah, produced among their descendants the Chinese and the American Indians. Those of Israel are also a Semitic people. The line of Shem that led to the Messiah, the Christ, is stated in reverse order in Luke 3:23-38. Three of those descendants were Abraham, Isaac and Jacob (Luke 3:34), the human fathers of the Jewish people. “Shem” was chosen by God to be in the line of the Messiah, the Christ of God.

Obviously, there is much cross-over in the world between the descendants of Shem, Japheth and Ham, the three sons of Noah. It is possible there is no such person as a true son of Shem or either one of the other brothers in the world today. But many of these tribes, formed after they were “scattered,” as seen in Genesis 11:8, were isolated for centuries, and inbreeding tends to turn recessive genes into dominant characteristics, which is why the descendents of the three sons of Noah have produced offspring that can be identified millennia after these events occurred.

Verse 32. “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.”

The word “nations” in these verses would be better translated as “tribes” that eventually built walled cities for protection and then tended to emerge into city-states that dominated whole territories. Some of them became empires that took over entire sections of the world, but our modern concept of “nations” with specific national boundaries was seldom a part of the ancient world of that time.  Notice, by the way, that even though the "sons of Noah" were scattered over the world, the emphasis in these verses is on the groups that would relate in subsequent centuries to the nation Israel.  This genealogy, which may have been taken from previous writings, was written in its final form by a Jewish author (Moses).

But there is no doubt among those who trust in Scripture that “out of these,” the three sons of Noah named Shem and Japheth and Ham, the whole world as we know it, “was separated on the earth after the flood.” Genesis 9:18-19 is very specific that “the sons of Noah" who went out of the ark were Shem, Ham, and Japheth… "these three were the sons of Noah, and from these the whole earth was populated.” Those “sons of Noah” are the fathers of all who live.  There was a world-wide flood in which millions lost their lives, an ark that saved a few, and out of those few came everything and everyone in the world of today.

Father, thank You for this genealogy, which gives us a glimpse of how all that is had its beginning.  Especially, thank You for revealing that everything of this world, including the continents and our own bodies, were created by You, and it was all done for Your good purposes to bless all who live on this earth.  In Jesus Name.  Amen.

Ron Beckham, Pastor
Friday Study Ministries

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