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| Of Methuselah’s Age, Which Seems to Extend Fourteen Years Beyond the Deluge. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 11.—Of Methuselah’s
Age, Which Seems to Extend Fourteen Years Beyond the
Deluge.
From this discrepancy between the
Hebrew books and our own arises the well-known question as to the
age of Methuselah;804
804 Jerome (De Quæst. Heb. in
Gen.) says it was a question famous in all the churches—Vives. | for it is computed that he lived
for fourteen years after the deluge, though Scripture relates that
of all who were then upon the earth only the eight souls in the ark
escaped destruction by the flood, and of these Methuselah was not
one. For, according to our books, Methuselah, before he begat the
son whom he called Lamech, lived 167 years; then Lamech himself,
before his son Noah was born, lived 188 years, which together make
355 years. Add to these the age of Noah at the date of the
deluge, 600 years, and this gives a total of 955 from the birth of
Methuselah to the year of the flood. Now all the years of the
life of Methuselah are computed to be 969; for when he had lived
167 years, and had begotten his son Lamech, he then lived after
this 802 years, which makes a total, as we said, of 969 years.
From this, if we deduct 955 years from the birth of Methuselah to
the flood, there remains fourteen years, which he is supposed to
have lived after the flood. And therefore some suppose that,
though he was not on earth (in which it is agreed that every living
thing which could not naturally live in water perished), he was for
a time with his father, who had been translated, and that he lived
there till the flood had passed away. This hypothesis they adopt,
that they may not cast a slight on the trustworthiness of versions
which the Church has received into a position of high authority,805
805 “Quos in auctoritatem
celebriorum Ecclesia suscepit.” | and because
they believe that the Jewish mss. rather
than our own are in error. For they do not admit that this is a
mistake of the translators, but maintain that there is a falsified
statement in the original, from which, through the Greek, the
Scripture has been translated into our own tongue. They say that
it is not credible that the seventy translators, who simultaneously
and unanimously produced one rendering, could have erred, or, in a
case in which no interest of theirs was involved, could have
falsified their translation; but that the Jews, envying us our
translation of their Law and Prophets, have made alterations in
their texts so as to undermine the authority of ours. This
opinion or suspicion let each man adopt according to his own
judgment. Certain it is that Methuselah did not survive the
flood, but died in the very year it occurred, if the numbers given
in the Hebrew mss. are true. My own
opinion regarding the seventy translators I will, with God’s
help, state more carefully in its own place, when I have come down
(following the order which this work requires) to that period in
which their translation was executed.806
806 See below, book xviii. c.
42–44. | For the present question, it is
enough that, according to our versions, the men of that age had
lives so long as to make it quite possible that, during the
lifetime of the first-born of the two sole parents then on earth,
the human race multiplied sufficiently to form a
community.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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