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Genesis 25:8  (American Standard Version)
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Adam Clarke
<< Genesis 25:7   Genesis 25:9 >>


Genesis 25:8

Then Abraham gave up the ghost - Highly as I value our translation for general accuracy, fidelity, and elegance, I must beg leave to dissent from this version. The original word yigva , from the root gava , signifies to pant for breath, to expire, to cease from breathing, or to breathe one' s last; and here, and wherever the original word is used, the simple term expired would be the proper expression. In our translation this expression occurs Genesis 25:8, Genesis 25:17; Genesis 35:29; Genesis 44:33; Job 3:11; Job 10:18; Job 11:20; Job 13:19; Job 14:10; Lamentations 1:19; in all of which places the original is gava . It occurs also in our translation, Jeremiah 15:9, but there the original is naphecah naphshah , she breathed out her soul; the verb gava not being used. Now as our English word ghost, from the Anglo-Saxon gast , an inmate, inhabitant, guest, (a casual visitant), also a spirit, is now restricted among us to the latter meaning, always signifying the immortal spirit or soul of man, the guest of the body; and as giving up the spirit, ghost, or soul, is an act not proper to man, though commending it to God, in our last moments, is both an act of faith and piety; and as giving up the ghost, i.e., dismissing his spirit from his body, is attributed to Jesus Christ, to whom alone it is proper, I therefore object against its use in every other case.

Every man since the fall has not only been liable to death, but has deserved it, as all have forfeited their lives because of sin. Jesus Christ, as born immaculate, and having never sinned, had not forfeited his life, and therefore may be considered as naturally and properly immortal. No man, says he, taketh it - my life, from me, but I lay it down of myself; I have power to lay it down, and I have power to take it again: therefore doth the Father love me, because I lay down my life that I might take it again, John 10:17, John 10:18. Hence we rightly translate Matthew 27:50, , he gave up the ghost; i.e., he dismissed his spirit that he might die for the sin of the world. The Evangelist St. John 19:30, makes use of an expression to the same import, which we translate in the same way, , he delivered up his spirit. We translate Mark 15:37, and Luke 23:46, he gave up the ghost, but not correctly, because the word in both these places is very different, , he breathed his last, or expired, though in the latter place (Luke 23:46) there is an equivalent expression, O Father, into thy hands , I commit my spirit, i.e., I place my soul in thy hand; proving that the act was his own, that no man could take his life away from him, that he did not die by the perfidy of his disciple, or the malice of the Jews, but by his own free act. Thus He Laid Down his life for the sheep. Of Ananias and Sapphira, Acts 5:5, Acts 5:10, and of Herod, Acts 12:23, our translation says they gave up the ghost; but the word in both places is , which simply means to breathe out, to expire, or die; but in no case, either by the Septuagint in the Old or any of the sacred writers in the New Testament, is or , he dismissed his spirit or delivered up his spirit, spoken of any person but Christ. Abraham, Isaac, Ishmael, Jacob, etc., breathed their last; Ananias, Sapphira, and Herod expired; but none, Jesus Christ excepted, gave up the ghost, dismissed, or delivered up his own spirit, and was consequently free among the dead. Of the patriarchs, etc., the Septuagint uses the word , failing, or , he ceased or rested.

An old man - Viz., one hundred and seventy-five, the youngest of all the patriarchs; and full of years. The word years is not in the text; but as our translators saw that some word was necessary to fill up the text, they added this in italics. It is probable that the true word is yamim , days, as in Genesis 35:29; and this reading is found in several of Kennicott' s and De Rossi' s MSS., in the Samaritan text, Septuagint, Vulgate, Syriac, Arabic, Persic, and Chaldee. On these authorities it might be safely admitted into the text.

Being full of days, or full of years - To be satiated with days or life, has been in use among different nations to express the termination of life, and especially life ended without reluctance. It seems to be a metaphor taken from a guest regaled by a plentiful banquet, and is thus used by the Roman poets. Lucretius, lib. iii., ver. 947, ridiculing those who were unreasonably attached to life, and grievously afflicted at the prospect of death, addresses them in the following manner: -

Quid mortem congemis, ac fies?

Nam si grata fuit tibi vita anteacta, priorque,

Et non omnia pertusum congesta quasi in vas

Commoda perfluxere, atque ingrata interiere:

Cur non, ut Plenus Vitae Conviva, Recedis ?

Fond mortal, what' s the matter, thou dost sigh?

Why all these fears because thou once must die?

For if the race thou hast already run

Was pleasant, if with joy thou saw' st the sun,

If all thy pleasures did not pass thy mind

As through a sieve, but left some sweets behind,

Why dost thou not then, like a T hankful G uest ,

Rise cheerfully from life' s A bundant Feast?

Creech.

Et nec opinanti mors AD caput astitit ante,

Quam Satur, ac Plenus possis discedere rerum

Ib. ver. 972.

And unexpected hasty death destroys,

Before thy greedy mind is F ull of J oys . Idem.

Horace makes use of the same figure: -

Inde fit, ut raro, qui se vixisse beatum

Dicat, et exacto Contentus tempore vitae

Cedat, ut Conviva Satur, reperire queamus .

Sat. l. i. Sat. i. ver. 117.

From hence how few, like S ated G uests ,

depart From life' s F ull B anquet with a cheerful heart?

Francis.

The same image is expressed with strong ridicule in his last Epistle -

Lusisti satis, edisti satis, atque bibisti;

Tempus Abire tibi est .

Epist. l. ii., ver. 216.

Thou hast eaten, drunk, and play' d E nough ;

then why So stark reluctant to leave off, and D ie ?

The poet Statius uses abire paratum Plenum vita , "prepared to depart, being Full of Life," in exactly the same sense: -

Dubio quem non in turbine rerum

Deprendet suprema dies; sed abire paratum ,

Acts Plenum Vita. Sylv. l. ii., Villa Surrentina, ver. 128.

The man whose mighty soul is not immersed in dubious whirl of secular concerns, His final hour ne' er takes him by surprise, But, Full of Life, he stands Prepared to Die.

It was the opinion of Aristotle that a man should depart from life as he should rise from a banquet. Thus Abraham died Full of days, and Satisfied with life, but in a widely different spirit from that recommended by the above writers - He left life with a hope full of immortality, which they could never boast; for He saw the day of Christ, and was glad; and his hope was crowned, for here it is expressly said, He was gathered to his fathers; surely not to the bodies of his sleeping ancestors, who were buried in Chaldea and not in Canaan, nor with his fathers in any sense, for he was deposited in the cave where his Wife alone slept; but he was gathered to the spirits of just men made perfect, and to the Church of the first-born, whose names are written in heaven; Hebrews 12:23.




Other Adam Clarke entries containing Genesis 25:8:

Genesis 15:15
Genesis 25:8
Genesis 35:29
Numbers 31:2
1 Chronicles 23:1
Luke 16:9
Acts 5:5

 

<< Genesis 25:7   Genesis 25:9 >>

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