Noah was also instructed to bring enough living animals onto the Ark to re-populate the earth.
Noah sent for a raven, which he released from the Ark, and then a dove.
Noah is commemorated as a prophet in the Calendar of Saints of the Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod on November 29.
Still another rabbinical opinion declares that the mutilation of Noah was committed by Canaan, but was caused by Ham in telling his brothers of his father's nakedness in Canaan's presence (Ex.
One tradition holds that 72 persons outside of Noah's family were saved in the Ark—people who had been converted by Noah's preaching.
The actual end of the story, with Noah cursing his own descendants to be slaves, has been the subject of much elaboration in the later Abrahamic traditions, and is immensely influential in Western culture.
Disembarking from the Ark, Noah built an altar to God, the first altar mentioned in the Bible, and made an offering.
The Qur'an generally forbids abortion out of respect for God as the cause of life.
References to N?h, the Arabic form of Noah, are scattered throughout the Qur'an, but no single narrative account of the entire Deluge is given.
Noah was the one exception: He was "a righteous man, blameless among the people of his time, and he walked with God."
Noah awoke and cursed Ham's son Canaan to slavery, while giving his blessing to Shem and Japheth: "Blessed by the Lord my God be Shem; and let Canaan be his slave.
English Noah (Hebrew: ?????, Noach; Arabic: ???, N??; "Rest") was the tenth and last of the antediluvian patriarchs.
Noah is also portrayed as "the first tiller of the soil" and the inventor of wine.
Noah is called a "preacher of righteousness" in 2 Peter 2:5, and the First Epistle of Peter equates the saving power of baptism with the Ark saving those who were in it.
The Talmud also contains several speculations about the nature of Ham's sin, which was so serious as to deserve Noah's curse.
The dimensions of Noah's Ark were 450 feet long, 75 feet wide and 45 feet high.
Noah's son Ham saw his father naked and informed his brothers, who covered Noah while averting their eyes.
A direct connection to the story of Noah and his Flood is seen by many scholars in the figure of Utnapishtim, a character from the Mesopotamian Epic of Gilgamesh.
Other Talmudic traditions hold that Noah sinned by becoming drunk with wine after leaving the Ark.
The Talmud also contains several speculations about the nature of Ham's sin, which was so serious as to deserve Noah's curse.
Noah died 350 years after the Flood, at the age of 950, the last of the immensely long-lived antediluvian patriarchs.
Numerous searches and several alleged sightings of Noah's Ark have been reported.
The idyllic scene did not last, however, as Noah became drunk, had his nakedness exposed to his children, and ended up cursing his grandson Canaan, to be a slave.