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Genesis 9:25 - Exposition

And he said . Not in personal resentment, since "the fall of Noah is not at all connected with his prophecy, except as serving to bring out the real character of his children, and to reconcile him to the different destinies which he was to announce as awaiting their respective races" (Candlish); but under the impulse of a prophetic spirit (Poole, Keil, Lange, Candlish, Murphy, and expositors generally), which, however, had its historical occasion in the foregoing incident. The structure of the prophecy is perfectly symmetrical, introducing, in three poetical verses,

Cursed . The second curse pronounced upon a human being, the first having been on Cain ( Genesis 4:11 ). Colenso notices that all the curses belong to the Jehovistic writer; but vide Genesis 49:6 , Genesis 49:7 , which Tuch and Bleek ascribed to the Elohist, though, doubtless in consequence of the "curse," by Davidson and others it is now assigned to the Jehovist. That this curse was not an imprecation, but a prediction of the future subjection of the Canaanites, has been maintained (Theodoret, Venema, Willet), chiefly in consequence of its falling upon Canaan; but

Be Canaan .

For the formal omission of Ham many different reasons have been assigned.

For the cursing of Canaan instead of Ham, it has been urged—

We incline to think the truth lies in the last three reasons. A servant of servants . A Hebraism for the superlative degree; cf. "King of kings, "holy of holies, "the song of songs". I .e. "the last even among servants" (Calvin); "a servant reduced to the lowest degree of bondage and degradation" (Bush); "vilissima servituts pressus" (Sol. Glass); "a most base and vile servant" (Ainsworth); "a working servant" (Chaldee); "the lowest of slaves" (Keil); παι ͂ ς οι ̓ κε ̔ της ( LXX .), which "conveys the notion of permanent hereditary servitude" (Kalisch). Keil, Hengstenberg, and Wordsworth see an allusion to this condition in the name Canaan ( q . v ; supra ) , which, however, Lange doubts. Shall he be to his brethren . A prophecy which was afterwards abundantly fulfilled, the Canaanites in the time of Joshua having been partly exterminated and partly reduced to the lowest form of slavery by the Israelites who belonged to the family of Shem ( Joshua 9:23 ), those that remained being subsequently reduced by Solomon ( 1 Kings 9:20 , 1 Kings 9:21 ); while the Phenicians, along with the Carthaginians and Egyptians, who all belonged to the family of Canaan, were subjected by the Japhetic Persians, Macedonians, and Romans (Keil).

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