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Read the Bible

聖書日本語

創世記 7:12

12 雨は四十日四十夜、地に降り注いだ。

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Ark;   Rain;   Scofield Reference Index - Miracles;   Thompson Chain Reference - Bible Stories for Children;   Children;   Home;   Meteorology;   Pleasant Sunday Afternoons;   Rain;   Religion;   Stories for Children;   Storms;   The Topic Concordance - Perishing;   World;   Torrey's Topical Textbook - Clouds;   Deluge, the;   Rain;  

Dictionaries:

- American Tract Society Bible Dictionary - Seven;   Three;   Bridgeway Bible Dictionary - Creation;   Flood;   Baker Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology - Flood, the;   Easton Bible Dictionary - Deluge;   Rain;   Fausset Bible Dictionary - Fasting;   Jesus Christ;   Noah;   Number;   Year;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Number Systems and Number Symbolism;   Remnant;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - Deluge;   Hexateuch;   Time;   Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament - Circumcision ;   Morrish Bible Dictionary - Type;   The Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary - Noah;   People's Dictionary of the Bible - Chief parables and miracles in the bible;   Flood;   Smith Bible Dictionary - No'ah;  

Encyclopedias:

- Condensed Biblical Cyclopedia - Noah;   International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Day and Night;   Genesis;   Shower;   The Jewish Encyclopedia - Forty, the Number;   Johanan B. Zakkai;   Moses;   Numbers and Numerals;  

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

forty: Genesis 7:4, Genesis 7:17, Exodus 24:18, Deuteronomy 9:9, Deuteronomy 9:18, Deuteronomy 10:10, 1 Kings 19:8, Matthew 4:2

Reciprocal: Genesis 1:6 - Let there Job 36:28 - General Psalms 46:2 - though

Gill's Notes on the Bible

And the rain was upon the earth forty days and forty nights,.... So long it was falling upon it, after the windows of heaven were opened. Aben Ezra would have it, that all things were in such confusion, during the flood, that there was no difference between day and night, since, it is said, "day and night shall not cease any more"; and that after the waters ceased, then Noah knew that forty days and nights had passed, for God had revealed this secret to him; but the text seems more to make against him than for him.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

- XXV. The Flood

The date is here given, at which the flood commenced and the entrance into the ark was completed. “In seven days.” On the seventh day from the command. “In the second month.” The primeval year commenced about the autumnal equinox; we may say, on the nearest new moon. The rains began about a month or six weeks after the equinox, and, consequently, not far from the seventeenth of the second month. “All the fountains of the great deep, and the windows of the skies.” It appears that the deluge was produced by a gradual commotion of nature on a grand scale. The gathering clouds were dissolved into incessant showers. But this was not sufficient of itself to effect the overwhelming desolation that followed. The beautiful figure of the windows of the skies being opened is preceded by the equally striking one of the fountains of the great deep being broken up. This was the chief source of the flood. A change in the level of the land was accomplished. That which had emerged from the waters on the third day of the last creation was now again submerged. The waters of the great deep now broke their bounds, flowed in on the sunken surface, and drowned the world of man, with all its inhabitants. The accompanying heavy rain of forty days and nights was, in reality, only a subsidiary instrument in the deluging of the land. We may imagine the sinking of the land to have been so gradual as to occupy the whole of these forty days of rain. There is an awful magnificence in this constant uplifting of the billows over the yielding land.

Genesis 7:13-16

There is a simple grandeur in the threefold description of the entrance of Noah and his retinue into the ark, first in the command, next in the actual process during the seven days, and, lastly, in the completed act on the seventh day. “Every living thing after its kind” is here unaccompanied with the epithet רעה rā‛âh, evil, or the qualifying term of the land or of the field, and therefore may, we conceive, be taken in the extent of Genesis 6:20; Genesis 7:2-3, Genesis 7:6. At all events the whole of the wild animals did not need to be included in the ark, as their range was greater than that of antediluvian man or of the flood. “And the Lord shut him in.” This is a fitting close to the scene. The whole work was manifestly the Lord’s doing, from first to last. The personal name of God is appropriately introduced here. For the Everlasting now shows himself to be the causer or effecter of the covenant blessing promised to Noah. In what way the Lord shut him in is an idle question, altogether unworthy of the grandeur of the occasion. We can tell nothing more than what is written. We are certain that it would be accomplished in a manner worthy of him.

Clarke's Notes on the Bible

Verse Genesis 7:12. The rain was upon the earth — Dr. Lightfoot supposes that the rain began on the 18th day of the second month, or Marcheshvan, and that it ceased on the 28th of the third month, Cisleu.


 
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