Introduction to the book of Leviticus
The Book of Leviticus receives its English title from the Latin Vulgate, which is derived from the Greek Septuagint (LXX) title Leuitikon (Λευιτικόν), meaning “Levitical” or “pertaining to the Levites.”
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Commentary on Genesis 10:20
This verse serves as a summary statement concluding the genealogy of Ham’s descendants, organizing them according to their clans, languages, territories, and nations. While appearing to be a simple cataloguing verse, it carries theological significance within the broader context of the Table of Nations.
Theological Significance
The fourfold categorization—clans, languages, lands, and nations—anticipates the diversity that will be further explained in the Babel narrative of Genesis 11. The Orthodox Fathers understood this passage as demonstrating both the providential ordering of humanity and the consequences of human dispersion. Saint John Chrysostom notes that such genealogical records serve to show God’s care for all peoples, not merely the chosen line through Shem.
Typological Reading
The mention of distinct languages before the Babel account has led some interpreters to understand Genesis 10 as describing the post-Babel situation, arranged thematically rather than strictly chronologically. This interpretive approach, common among the Fathers, sees the Table of Nations as a theological map of humanity’s place in God’s economy of salvation.
New Testament Connections
The diversity of nations described here finds its redemptive fulfillment at Pentecost, where the Holy Spirit descends and the apostles speak in the various tongues of the nations. What was divided through sin and pride at Babel is reunited through grace in the Church. The Hamitic peoples, like all nations, are included in the Great Commission and the universal scope of salvation in Christ.
Liturgical Resonance
The Pentecost services of the Orthodox Church explicitly contrast Babel’s confusion with the Spirit’s unifying gift of tongues. The kontakion of Pentecost proclaims that when the Most High confused the tongues, He divided the nations, but when He distributed the tongues of fire, He called all to unity. Genesis 10:20, as part of the pre-Babel ordering of nations, provides the backdrop against which this liturgical theology unfolds.
Patristic Perspective
Saint Ephrem the Syrian and other Fathers saw in these genealogies a reminder that all humanity shares common ancestry and that ethnic divisions, while real, are secondary to our unity in Adam and our potential unity in Christ, the New Adam. The careful recording of nations demonstrates that God knows and cares for each people, preparing them for the eventual proclamation of the Gospel to every nation, tribe, and tongue.
The Book of Leviticus receives its English title from the Latin Vulgate, which is derived from the Greek Septuagint (LXX) title Leuitikon (Λευιτικόν), meaning “Levitical” or “pertaining to the Levites.”

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