worldly power, and, through Christ, make us heirs
of all things.
187. Furthermore, we learn from this prophecy that Noah, by a special
illumination of the Holy Spirit, was enabled to see, in the first
place, that his posterity would remain forever, and in the second
place, that the family of Ham, though they were to be rulers for a
time, would perish at last and above all would lose the spiritual
blessing.
188. However, the explanation given above (ch 4, para 182) with
reference to the descendants of Cain, applies also here. I do not
entertain the opinion that the offspring of Ham were doomed, without
exception. Some found salvation by being converted to faith, but such
salvation was not due to a definite promise but to uncovenanted grace,
so to speak. Likewise the Gibeonites and others were saved when the
children of Israel occupied the land of Canaan. Job, Naaman the
Syrian, the people of Nineveh, the widow of Zarephath, and others from
the heathen were saved, not by virtue of a promise, but by
uncovenanted grace.
B. Blessing Pronounced Upon Shem.
189. But why does Noah not say, "Blessed be Shem," instead of,
"Blessed be Jehovah, the God of Shem"? I answer that it is because of
the magnitude of the blessing. The reference here is not to a temporal
blessing, but to the future blessing through the promised seed. He
sees this blessing to be so great that he cannot express it; hence, he
turns to thanksgiving. It seems that Zacharias was thinking of this
very passage when he said, for a similar reason, "Blessed be the Lord,
the God of Israel" (Lk 1, 68).
190. Noah's blessing takes the form of thanksgiving unto God. God, he
says, is blessed, who is the God of Shem. In other words: It is
needless for me to extend my blessing over Shem, who has been blessed
before with spiritual blessing; he already is a child of God, and from
him the Church will be continued, as it was continued from Seth before
the flood. Full of wonderful meaning is the fact that Noah joins God
with Shem, his son, and, as it were, unites them.
191. Noah's heart must have been divinely illumined since he makes
such a distinction between his sons, rejecting Ham with his posterity
and placing Shem in line with the saints and the Church because the
spiritual blessing, given in paradise concerning the seed, would rest
upon him. Therefore, this holy man blesses God and gives thanks unto
him.
C. Blessing Pronounced Upon Japheth.
V. 27. _God e
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