To repeople the desolate e


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  1. Chap. 10 - The Tower of Babel
  2. To repeople the desolate earth, which the Flood had so lately swept from its moral
  3. corruption, God had preserved but one family, the household of Noah, to whom he had
  4. declared, “Thee have I seen righteous before Me in this generation.” Genesis 7:1. Yet
  5. in the three sons of Noah was speedily developed the same great distinction seen in
  6. the world before the Flood. In Shem, Ham, and Japheth, who were to be the founders
  7. of the human race, was foreshadowed the character of their posterity.
  8. Noah, speaking by divine inspiration, foretold the history of the three great races
  9. to spring from these fathers of mankind. Tracing the descendants of Ham, through the
  10. son rather than the father, he declared, “Cursed be Canaan; a servant of servants shall
  11. he be unto his brethren.” The unnatural crime of Ham declared that filial reverence
  12. had long before been cast from his soul, and it revealed the impiety and vileness of
  13. his character. These evil characteristics were perpetuated in Canaan and his posterity,
  14. whose continued guilt called upon them the judgments of God.
  15. On the other hand, the reverence manifested by Shem and Japheth for their father,
  16. and thus for the divine statutes, promised a brighter future for their descendants.
  17. Concerning these sons it was declared: “Blessed be Jehovah, God of Shem; and
  18. Canaan shall be his servant. God shall enlarge Japheth, and he shall dwell in the
  19. tents of Shem; and Canaan shall be his servant.” The line of Shem was to be that of
  20. the chosen people, of God’s covenant, of the promised Redeemer. Jehovah was the
  21. God of Shem. From him would descend Abraham, and the people of Israel, through
  22. whom Christ was to come. “Happy is that people, whose God is the Lord.” Psalm
  23. 144:15. And Japheth “shall dwell
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  25. in the tents of Shem.” In the blessings of the gospel the descendants of Japheth were
  26. especially to share.
  27. The posterity of Canaan descended to the most degrading forms of heathenism.
  28. Though the prophetic curse had doomed them to slavery, the doom was withheld for
  29. centuries. God bore with their impiety and corruption until they passed the limits
  30. of divine forbearance. Then they were dispossessed, and became bondmen to the
  31. descendants of Shem and Japheth.
  32. The prophecy of Noah was no arbitrary denunciation of wrath or declaration of
  33. favor. It did not fix the character and destiny of his sons. But it showed what would
  34. be the result of the course of life they had severally chosen and the character they had
  35. developed. It was an expression of God’s purpose toward them and their posterity in
  36. view of their own character and conduct. As a rule, children inherit the dispositions
  37. and tendencies of their parents, and imitate their example; so that the sins of the
  38. parents are practiced by the children from generation to generation. Thus the vileness
  39. and irreverence of Ham were reproduced in his posterity, bringing a curse upon them
  40. for many generations. “One sinner destroyeth much good.” Ecclesiastes 9:18.
  41. On the other hand, how richly rewarded was Shem’s respect for his father; and
  42. what an illustrious line of holy men appears in his posterity! “The Lord knoweth the
  43. days of the upright,” “and his seed is blessed.” Psalm 37:18, 26. “Know therefore
  44. that the Lord thy God he is God, the faithful God, which keepeth covenant and mercy
  45. with them that love him and keep his commandments to a thousand generations.”
  46. Deuteronomy 7:9.
  47. For a time the descendants of Noah continued to dwell among the mountains where
  48. the ark had rested. As their numbers increased, apostasy soon led to division. Those
  49. who desired to forget their Creator and to cast off the restraint of his law felt a constant
  50. annoyance from the teaching and example of their God-fearing associates, and after a
  51. time they decided to separate from the worshipers of God. Accordingly they journeyed
  52. to the plain of Shinar, on the banks of the river Euphrates. They were attracted by the
  53. beauty of the situation and the fertility of the soil, and upon this plain they determined
  54. to make their home.
  55. here they decided to build a city, and in it a tower of such stupendous height as
  56. should render it the wonder of the world.
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  58. These enterprises were designed to prevent the people from scattering abroad in
  59. colonies. God had directed men to disperse throughout the earth, to replenish and
  60. subdue it; but these Babel builders determined to keep their community united
  61. in one body, and to found a monarchy that should eventually embrace the whole
  62. earth. Thus their city would become the metropolis of a universal empire; its glory
  63. would command the admiration and homage of the world and render the founders
  64. illustrious. The magnificent tower, reaching to the heavens, was intended to stand as
  65. a monument of the power and wisdom of its builders, perpetuating their fame to the
  66. latest generations.
  67. The dwellers on the plain of Shinar disbelieved God’s covenant that he would not
  68. again bring a flood upon the earth. Many of them denied the existence of God and
  69. attributed the Flood to the operation of natural causes. Others believed in a Supreme
  70. Being, and that it was he who had destroyed the antediluvian world; and their hearts,
  71. like that of Cain, rose up in rebellion against him. One object before them in the
  72. erection of the tower was to secure their own safety in case of another deluge. By
  73. carrying the structure to a much greater height than was reached by the waters of the
  74. Flood, they thought to place themselves beyond all possibility of danger. And as they
  75. would be able to ascend to the region of the clouds, they hoped to ascertain the cause
  76. of the Flood. The whole undertaking was designed to exalt still further the pride of its
  77. projectors and to turn the minds of future generations away from God and lead them
  78. into idolatry.
  79. When the tower had been partially completed, a portion of it was occupied as a
  80. dwelling place for the builders; other apartments, splendidly furnished and adorned,
  81. were devoted to their idols. The people rejoiced in their success, and praised the
  82. gods of silver and gold, and set themselves against the Ruler of heaven and earth.
  83. Suddenly the work that had been advancing so prosperously was checked. Angels
  84. were sent to bring to naught the purpose of the builders. The tower had reached a lofty
  85. height, and it was impossible for the workmen at the top to communicate directly with
  86. those at the base; therefore men were stationed at different points, each to receive
  87. and report to the one next below him the orders for needed material or other directions
  88. concerning the work. As messages were thus passing from one to another the language
  89. was confounded, so that material was called for which

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