Charles Ellicott Commentary


Charles Ellicott Commentary
"And he said, Cursed be Canaan; A servant of servants shall he be unto his brethren." — Genesis 9:25 (ASV)
Cursed be Canaan. — The prophecy of Noah takes the form of a poem, like Lamech’s boast in Genesis 4:23-24. In it, Ham is passed over in silence, as though his unfilial conduct, recorded in Genesis 9:22, made him unworthy of a blessing, while it was not so wicked as to bring on him a curse. The whole weight of Noah’s displeasure falls on Canaan, whose degraded position among the nations is three times insisted upon.
A servant of servants. That is, the most abject of slaves. This was fulfilled in the conquest of Canaan by Joshua, but the race had nevertheless a great future before it.
The Hittites were one of the foremost nations of antiquity, and the Sidonians, Tyrians, and Phoenicians were such famous traders, that Canaanite is in our version translated merchant, without even a note in the margin (for example, Proverbs 31:24). But the whole race was enslaved by one of the most terrible and degrading forms of idolatry, and as Shem’s blessing is religious, so possibly is Canaan’s curse.
Lenormant (Manual of Ancient History of the East, 2:219) says of their religion, “No other people ever rivalled them in the mixture of bloodshed and debauchery with which they thought to honour the Deity.” He also quotes Creuzer, who says, “The Canaanite religion silenced all the best feelings of human nature, degraded men’s minds by a superstition alternately cruel and profligate, and we may seek in vain for any influence for good it could have exercised on the nation.”