Genesis 9:1-7
God blesses humanity with renewed purpose while establishing the sanctity of life and accountability under His authority.
Scripture Text
9:1 God blessed Noah and His sons, and said to them, “Be fruitful, multiply, and replenish the earth.
9:2 The fear of You and the dread of You will be on every animal of the earth, and on every bird of the sky. Everything that moves along the ground, and all the fish of the sea, are delivered into Your hand.
9:3 Every moving thing that lives will be food for You. As I gave You the green herb, I have given everything to You.
9:4 But flesh with its life, that is, its blood, You shall not eat.
9:5 I will surely require accounting for Your life’s blood. At the hand of every animal I will require it. At the hand of man, even at the hand of every man’s brother, I will require the life of man.
9:6 Whoever sheds man’s blood, His blood will be shed by man, for God made man in His own image.
9:7 Be fruitful and multiply. Increase abundantly in the earth, and multiply in it.”
God blesses humanity with renewed purpose while establishing the sanctity of life and accountability under His authority.
Genesis 9:1-7 presents God’s post-flood blessing and command for humanity to multiply, establishes a new order in human-animal relations, and institutes the sacred value of human life with the requirement of justice for murder.
That people would recognize the sanctity of human life, live under God’s authority, and pursue obedience in both blessing and responsibility.
- 9:1–7 God blesses Noah and His sons, renews the mandate to be fruitful and multiply, grants animals for food, prohibits the eating of blood, and establishes accountability for the shedding of human blood on the basis of the image of God.
- 9:8–17 God formally establishes His covenant with Noah, His descendants, and every living creature, promising never again to destroy all flesh by a flood and appointing the rainbow as the covenant sign.
- 9:18–19 Noah’s sons are identified as the ones from whom the whole earth will be populated.
- 9:20–23 Noah plants a vineyard, becomes drunk, lies uncovered in His tent, Ham sees His father’s nakedness and tells His brothers, and Shem and Japheth respectfully cover Noah without looking upon Him.
- 9:24–27 When Noah awakes and learns what happened, He pronounces a curse upon Canaan and blessings related to Shem and Japheth.
- 9:28–29 The chapter concludes with Noah’s remaining years and death.
- Do not treat the image of God as diminished in humanity.
- Do not overlook the seriousness of the command regarding bloodshed.
- Do not interpret dominion as license for abuse of creation.
- Do not ignore the continued presence of sin after the flood.
- Do not separate blessing from responsibility.
- Do not assume justice is optional or secondary.
- Do not overlook the connection between blood and life.
- Do not detach this passage from the creation mandate.
- Do not minimize the value of human life.
- Covenant Significance : Genesis 9 is a decisive covenant chapter because it contains the formal establishment of the Noahic covenant. This covenant is universal in scope, extending not only to Noah and His descendants but also to every living creature and the earth-order itself. Its central promise is that God will not again destroy all flesh by a flood, and its sign is the bow set in the cloud. The covenant establishes the stable stage of common-grace history in which later redemptive covenants will unfold. It does not save sinners eternally in itself, but it preserves the world in which the redemptive story continues and in which the promised seed line may advance.
- Old Testament Foundation : Genesis 1:26-31
- Old Testament Foundation : Genesis 8:20-22
- Old Testament Foundation : Isaiah 54:9-10
- Old Testament Foundation : Jeremiah 33:20-25
- Old Testament Foundation : Psalm 8:4-8
- Thematic Parallel : Genesis 8:20-22
- Thematic Parallel : Genesis 10:1-32
- Thematic Parallel : Genesis 11:10-26
- Thematic Parallel : Romans 3:23
Human life bears God’s image and is sacred, and God governs life and justice under His authority, pointing forward to the need for ultimate redemption and restoration.