Genesis 5:27

27 All the days of Metushelach were nine hundred sixty-nine years, then he died.

Genesis 5:27 Meaning and Commentary

Genesis 5:27

And all the days of Methuselah were nine hundred and
sixty nine years, and he died
This was the oldest man that ever lived, no man ever lived to a thousand years: the Jews give this as a reason for it, because a thousand years is God's day, according to ( Psalms 90:4 ) and no man is suffered to arrive to that. His name carried in it a prediction of the time of the flood, which was to be quickly after his death, as has been observed, (See Gill on Genesis 5:21). Some say he died in the year of the flood; others, fourteen years after, and was in the garden of Eden with his father, in the days of the flood, and then returned to the world F1; but the eastern writers are unanimous that he died before the flood: the Arabic writers F2 are very particular as to the time in which he died; they say he died in the six hundredth year of Noah, on a Friday, about noon, on the twenty first day of Elul, which is Thout; and Noah and Shem buried him, embalmed in spices, in the double cave, and mourned for him forty days: and some of the Jewish writers say he died but seven days before the flood came, which they gather from ( Genesis 7:10 ) "after seven days"; that is, as they interpret it, after seven days of mourning for Methuselah F3: he died A. M. 1656, the same year the flood came, according to Bishop Usher.


FOOTNOTES:

F1 Shalshalet Hakabala, fol. 74. 2.
F2 Apud Hottinger, p. 244.
F3 Bereshit Rabba, sect. 32. fol. 27. 3. Juchasin, fol. 6. 1. Baal Habturim in Gen. vii. 10.

Genesis 5:27 In-Context

25 Metushelach lived one hundred eighty-seven years, and became the father of Lamekh.
26 Metushelach lived after he became the father of Lamekh seven hundred eighty-two years, and became the father of sons and daughters.
27 All the days of Metushelach were nine hundred sixty-nine years, then he died.
28 Lamekh lived one hundred eighty-two years, and became the father of a son,
29 and he named him Noach, saying, "This same will comfort us in our work and in the toil of our hands, because of the ground which the LORD has cursed."
The Hebrew Names Version is in the public domain.