Methuselah

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For other uses, see Methuselah (disambiguation).

Methuselah or Metushélach (Hebrew: מְתוּשֶׁלַח / מְתוּשָׁלַח, Standard Mətušélaḥ / Mətušálaḥ Tiberian Məṯûšélaḥ / Məṯûšālaḥ ; "Man of the dart," or alternatively "when he dies/died, it will be sent/has been sent") is the oldest person whose age is mentioned in the Hebrew Bible. The name Methuselah has become a general synonym for any living creature of great age.

Summary

Template:Cleanup-section Methuselah is mentioned in Genesis as the son of Enoch and the father of Lamech (father of Noah), whom he fathered at the alleged age of 187. A close reading of the dates in the Old Testament reveals that Methuselah is said to have died in the year of the Great Flood, but the Bible does not say that he was among those who died in the flood. Some have interpreted his name as a prophecy: when he dies, the Flood will come. In that case, the long life has an allegorical dimension, showing that God withheld judgment on humans for a very long time.

According to the Bible, he reached the age of 969 years. Genesis 5:27 states, "And all the days of Methuselah were nine hundred sixty and nine years: and he died" (American Standard Version). Genesis 5:5 states, "So all the days that Adam lived were nine hundred and thirty years, and he died." (American Standard Version). Assuming Adam's life began at the time of creation, Adam was alive when Methuselah was born. This makes Methuselah the human link between Adam and Noah (assuming Methuselah died at the time of the flood, or at least after Noah's birth).

However, in the ancient texts from which the English Bible was translated, there are variations of the ages of the patriarchs in different versions. The Samaritan Pentateuch gives ages adjusted to exactly match the flood.[1]

Methuselah is also mentioned in the apocryphal Book of Enoch as being the son of Enoch and as having brothers. The writer tells Methuselah of the coming Deluge and of a future Messianic kingdom.[2]

Using Bishop Ussher's Bible chronology from the creation to Nebuchadnezzar II provides the following dates: [3]

  • 4004 B.C.E. - Creation
  • 3317 B.C.E. - Birth of Methuselah
  • 3000 B.C.E. - Approximate building of the Great Pyramids of Giza
  • 2348 B.C.E. - Death of Methuselah and Noah's flood

Lifespan

Modern science puts the natural limit on current human longevity below 130 years; the oldest person documented beyond reasonable doubt, Jeanne Calment, died at 122. This being the case, Methuselah's lifespan has been a source of much speculation. Some resolve the issue by suggesting that Methuselah's long lifespan is not meant to be taken literally, while others attribute it to translation errors inflating a shorter lifespan. Biblical literalists, on the other hand, have proposed several reasons that might explain a drastic decrease in the human lifespan after the Flood. The most compelling, however, is the fact that Gen. 6:3 says, "And the Lord said, 'My spirit shall not strive with man forever, for he is indeed flesh; yet his days shall be one hundred and twenty years.'" This is interpreted by some as a prophecy that man's lifespan would be gradually shortened over time, as punishment for sin, regardless of the fact many of the lifespans questioned by non-creationists occur well after Genesis. Further, according to Genesis chapter 2, prior to 'the fall' in the Garden of Eden man could have lived forever.

Creationists accept the ages recorded in the Bible,[4] and have speculated on reasons for the dramatic decrease in lifespans following the Great Flood of Noah's time. One reason claimed is that conditions before the flood caused much less ultraviolet light from the sun to impact the earth, and that this allowed for longer life spans. The Institute for Creation Research has posited that a 'vapor canopy' surrounded the earth before the Flood, and that it was the source of the floodwaters. Such a canopy would also have protected humankind from what they allege to be aging effects of the sun's ultraviolet rays. After the dissipation of the canopy during the Flood, according to this theory, lifespans dropped rapidly to what they are today. Mainstream scientists have rejected the vapor canopy theory, asserting that it does not stand up to any scientific analysis.[5]

Young Earth creationist Carl Wieland alternatively speculates that the decline in lifespan is because of the drastic reduction in population due to the Flood, causing a genetic bottleneck in which the genes that were 'coded for longevity' were lost. One such genetic factor could have involved the shortening of telomeres.[6]

Christians point out that the Bible says God shortened the normal human lifespan to a maximum of 120 years (Genesis 6:3).

Witness Lee's "Four Falls of Man" hypothesis claims that man's life span was shortened four times, due to sin: from everlasting to 1,000 (first fall: Adam's), from 1,000 to 500 (second fall: the Earth around the time of Noah), from 500 to 250 (third fall) and finally from 250 to 120 (fourth fall brings in the law with Moses).

Notably, in the times of King David, when actual ages were recorded, the ages of the kings generally were in the range of 40-70 years old.

If one assumes that the age of 969 indicates months instead of years (indicating a mistranslation), Methuselah's age is calculated as 80.75 years (969/12), which is a more realistic lifespan, but this requires that months be in the modern twelfths of a year. Another theory suggests lunar cycles were mistaken for the solar ones. If this is the case, each lifespan from Genesis would be shortened by a factor of 12.37 and give ages for Methuselah and his contemporaries that resemble those of modern humans. However, objections to such life-shortening calculations have been raised on the grounds that, if reductions by these factors are carried out, several biblical fathers would have had children while they themselves were approximately five years old.[7]

One solution involving translation error is proposed by Robert Best, who suggests that inaccurate conversion between various ancient Sumerian numerical systems produced the ages of Methuselah, Noah, and kin out of archaic Sumerian numerals. Best calculates that Methuselah's actual age would have been 85, and that he would have had his first son at age 17 (instead of age 187).[8]

The passage in Genesis 6:3 has been used to justify the hypothesis that God put a limit of 120 years on the length of human life. Others believe this 120 year time period is a reference to a time of probation placed on mankind leading up to the flood. The rapid shortening of human life may be explained by the introduction of flesh food into the human diet mentioned in Genesis 9:3. An alternative explanation is the writer of Genesis 6:3 did not know of anybody who lived longer than 120 years.

See also

  • Aging
  • Back to Methuselah, a set of plays by George Bernard Shaw
  • Dvapara Yuga
  • Longevity
  • Longevity myths
  • Maximum life span
  • Genealogies of Genesis#Genesis_5_numbers
  • Methuselah Mouse Prize
  • Methuselah (tree)
  • "Requiem for Methuselah," an episode of Star Trek
  • 2000 Year Old Man, a recurring Methuselah comedy routine by Carl Reiner and Mel Brooks.
  • Methuselah's Children, a work of fiction by Robert A. Heinlein about long lived humans as a result of genetic selection.
  • The Methuselah Factor, a book by Vernon Eric Bridges[9][10], a far-fetched story of longevity.


Notes

  1. Donald V. Etz (1993), Vetus Testamentum, vol. 43, no. 2, pp. 171-189
  2. The Book of Enoch. Retrieved 2006-08-29.
  3. Ussher chronology
  4. James A. Borland, "Did People Live to be Hundreds of Years Old Before the Flood? Yes.," in The Genesis Debate, Ronald F. Youngblood (editor), Nelson (publisher), Nashville, TN 1986.
  5. Steiger, Frank. Creationist Vapor Canopy. Retrieved 2006-08-29.
  6. Wieland, Carl. Living for 900 years. Retrieved 2006-08-29.
  7. Centenarians. Retrieved 2006-08-29.
  8. Best, Robert, Noah's ark and the Ziusudra Epic, chapter 7
  9. Vernon Eric Bridges (2007) The Methuselah Factor ISBN 9780954229221
  10. http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/0954229223

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

External links

  • Complete Bible Genealogy Family tree of Methuselah
  • [[wikisource:Catholic Encyclopedia (1913)/Methuselah "|Methuselah]".] Catholic Encyclopedia. (1913). New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  • The Methuselah Foundation A foundation dedicated to researching the end of aging.
 Hebrew Bible Genealogy from Adam to David
Creation to Flood Adam Seth Enos Kenan Mahalalel Jared Enoch Methuselah Lamech Noah Shem
Origin of the Patriarchs Arpachshad Shelah Eber Peleg Reu Serug Nahor Terah Abraham Isaac Jacob
Nationhood to Kingship Judah Pharez Hezron Ram Amminadab Nahshon Salmon Boaz Obed Jesse David

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