Genesis 5:5
Context5:5 The entire lifetime 1 of Adam was 930 years, and then he died. 2
Genesis 5:23-24
Context5:23 The entire lifetime of Enoch was 365 years. 5:24 Enoch walked with God, and then he disappeared 3 because God took 4 him away.
Isaiah 65:22
Context65:22 No longer will they build a house only to have another live in it, 5
or plant a vineyard only to have another eat its fruit, 6
for my people will live as long as trees, 7
and my chosen ones will enjoy to the fullest what they have produced. 8
[5:5] 1 tn Heb “all the days of Adam which he lived”
[5:5] 2 sn The genealogy traces the line from Adam to Noah and forms a bridge between the earlier accounts and the flood story. Its constant theme of the reign of death in the human race is broken once with the account of Enoch, but the genealogy ends with hope for the future through Noah. See further G. F. Hasel, “The Genealogies of Gen. 5 and 11 and their Alleged Babylonian Background,” AUSS 16 (1978): 361-74; idem, “Genesis 5 and 11,” Origins 7 (1980): 23-37.
[5:24] 3 tn The Hebrew construction has the negative particle אֵין (’en, “there is not,” “there was not”) with a pronominal suffix, “he was not.” Instead of saying that Enoch died, the text says he no longer was present.
[5:24] 4 sn The text simply states that God took Enoch. Similar language is used of Elijah’s departure from this world (see 2 Kgs 2:10). The text implies that God overruled death for this man who walked with him.
[65:22] 5 tn Heb “they will not build, and another live [in it].”
[65:22] 6 tn Heb “they will not plant, and another eat.”
[65:22] 7 tn Heb “for like the days of the tree [will be] the days of my people.”
[65:22] 8 tn Heb “the work of their hands” (so KJV, NASB, NIV, NRSV); NLT “their hard-won gains.”