Showing posts with label Genesis 7. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Genesis 7. Show all posts

Thursday, October 20, 2022

Noah found Favor

 Read Genesis 7

How did Adam and Eve know how to make clothes?

How did Cain and Abel know to make offerings to God?

How did Abel know what would please God?  Or was it a lucky guess?

How did Cain know that there were other people in the world?  He was afraid that someone would kill him if he was sent away. How did he know that there was someone out there?

How did Noah know that it was God talking to him?  The Lord walked with Adam and Eve, but a lot of evil had come into the world and we don’t hear about the Lord out for walks.  How did Noah know that it was God calling him to this impossible task?

How did Noah know the difference between clean and unclean animals?  Sure, there is a list in Leviticus 11, but that was hundreds or years down the road.

We talked before that we might just have more questions than answers during this time of study.  That’s just fine.  It’s often the case in adult education.  The inquisitive adult usually completes a course of study with more questions than answers.

The more we know, the more we hunger to learn more, but we do want some answers.

The answers are:

God created.

He created good.

Mankind sinned.

There were consequences.

Mankind sinned profusely.

God judged the world.

A remnant was saved.  Humankind was worth saving.

We don’t know:

Where Cain’s wife came from.

How Abel knew to make a pleasing offering.

How Noah knew clean from unclean animals.

We do know that Will and Ariel Durant did not write Genesis.  Every detail is not put into writing. We do have what we need.

What do we need for what? To follow the story of God’s relationship with his creation with special attention to humankind. 

I like to study history, especially military history and political history.  I like to see the strategy and tactics of historical battles.  I like to see how our constitution and branches of government came to be and evolved into what they are now. 

My mind is not as sharp as it once was, but there are still political, social, and historical things that pique my interest.  The more I study, the more questions I have.  Sometimes I find answers.

As we study Genesis, we get some very clear answers and we get  some things that are not answered.  The world, including Christians, will speculate.  Be careful not to give theories and speculation—sometimes defined as interpretation—the same credibility as scripture.

Explore, but hold fast only to scripture.  Secular history should be secondary to scripture. It’s good to buttress our understanding of scripture, but should never contradict scripture.

Explore, but trust God over your own understanding. We have talked about this wrestling match.

Explore, but be Berean.  Test what someone has to say against the scriptures.

So where does that leave us in this beginning account of Noah and the flood?

Noah did everything that God commanded him.  Noah—to include his family—found favor with God.  Noah had trusted God through this entire process and now God would save him and his family as a righteous remnant.

God judged the wicked but preserved a righteous remnant.  Surely Noah and his family had all sinned, but somehow Noah had a right relationship with God.

The story of God’s relationship with humankind would continue through Noah.  We are all here today because God’s favor fell upon Noah.

If we don’t remember anything else about the flood, remember that Noah found favor in the eyes of the Lord.

Keep reading.  There’s a rainbow coming soon.

Amen.

God Shut the Door

 Read Genesis 7


Grammatically, this chapter is not entirely chronological, but you can see the chronology. The floodwaters are described and then the animals come, but we can see that Noah had the ark loaded with every creature, some more than others, and food for the lot of them.

You have to wonder if there was any disparity in accommodations between the clean and unclean animals. That’s food for concurrent discussions on another day.  For the moment, let’s consider that Noah had done all that he was commanded to do.  The ark was loaded.  The rain was coming.

Don’t you just love it when a plan comes together?  Wait!

The door was open.

The door to the ark was open.  Noah had done everything just as the Lord commanded, but the door was open.  Noah had never been to a flood before, but this open-door business surely wasn’t going to work.  The door was open.

Noah had built the ark.  It had never rained.  Noah probably didn’t know what a flood was, but he did exactly as he was told and built this massive ship.

Noah made sure that he had the right number of animals.  He had seven pairs of clean animals.  He had seven pairs of each sort of bird.  He had two of each of the other animals.  They were paired for mating and furtherance of the species.

Noah didn’t have to organize a safari to round up the animals.  They came to him.  That part falls under the category of cool beans.  The animals came to Noah.

Noah did all that God commanded him to do.  He was 600 years old.  On the seventeenth day of the second month of the year that Noah turned 600, water started emerging from the ground and rain began to fall. This flood thing—this thing never seen before—it was happening.

Some people give CCR credit for the song Have You Ever Seen the Rain, but I think Noah might have written an early version.

And on that same day, Noah and his family entered the ark.  The flood was beginning and the door to the ark was open.

Maybe Noah could rig a quick pulley system and put those elephants to work and pull that door closed.

If they tried to push it closed from the outside.  Someone would be left behind.

Noah had done everything that God commanded, but the door was open.

We don’t know if Noah wondered how to close it or if this whole thing was just a test of his faith before he and his family drowned.  We don’t see any thoughts or conversation about the door being open.

Noah had trusted God this far and completed this seemingly impossible task, but he had been given no instructions on how to shut the door.

Those that entered, male and female of all flesh, entered as God had commanded him; and the Lord closed the door behind him.

The Lord shut him in.

Imagine having done all that Noah had done and wondering if he would be undone by this single detail.  Noah couldn’t shut the door himself.

If God could have held off on the flood for a couple more months, Noah surely could have rigged a pulley system.  Noah could have built a small raft and rounded up some extra elephants and had one of his sons have them push the door closed, and then floated on the raft attached to the ark by a rope, until he floated high enough to climb the rope to openings at the top of the ark.

If Noah had only been given instructions as to how to close the door, he surely would have done it.  He did everything just as God commanded him, but God had not commanded him to find a way to close the door.

We don’t know how big the door was, but it would need to fit giraffes and elephants, rhinos and hippos through it.

If it wasn’t something that could also double as a ramp, it would need a pier built next to the ship for boarders could walk straight across and the door could close in a lateral motion.   We just don’t know, but closing the door would seem to be another monumental task, except this time God did not give Noah instructions on what to build or what to do other than entering the ark.

The Lord closed the door behind him.  The Lord shut him in.

Noah trusted God throughout this entire endeavor.  Noah loaded the ark with the substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen.  Noah had faith that God had told him exactly what he needed to know and needed to do.

Noah trusted God that God himself knew best.  Father knows best and Noah stayed the course of faith throughout.

Do you know what else was missing from God’s instructions to Noah? There was something else not in the design.  Maybe there was more than one thing.

Let’s start with lifeboats.  There was nothing in the design about lifeboats.  No modern ship would be allowed to leave port without sufficient lifeboats for all aboard.  Modern lifeboats are supposed to be unsinkable.  It makes you wonder why they don’t build the entire ship out of the same stuff that they build lifeboats.

There were no lifeboats.  Once Noah did what he was told to do, his life was aboard that ark.  His salvation was in the ark. God did not give a contingency plan.  There was no Plan B.  There were no just-in-case instructions.

Once Noah had done his part, it was like God said:  “I’ll take it from here.”

Yes, Noah and his family would need to tend to the animals.  They needed to be fed and the stalls needed to be cleaned.  I bet Noah had the best compost pile ever.  Those two worms that came aboard were probably two million worms by the end of the voyage.

What else was missing?  There were no sails.  Noah had no means of trying to keep this huge ship on course, if he could even figure out what course to set it on.  John Masefield’s words would not come for millennia.

I must go down to the seas again, to the lonely sea and the sky,

And all I ask is a tall ship and a star to steer her by;

And the wheel’s kick and the wind’s song and the white sail’s shaking,

And a grey mist on the sea’s face, and a grey dawn breaking.

 

There would be none of that.  There were no sails.  There was no rudder.  Any and everything having to do with navigation belonged exclusively to the Lord.

God shut the door to the ark.

God knew that lifeboats would not be needed.

God alone would direct the ship while all were embarked.

Noah did exactly what God had commanded him to do. His part was to trust and obey.  His part was faith.

Noah did what he was told but Noah trusted God to do whatever needed to be done for the salvation of his family. That included shutting the door.

I’ll just bet Noah composed an early version of Trust and Obey.  While we do his good will, he abides with us still, and with all who will trust and obey.

The Psalms would not come until much later, but I’ll venture a guess that Noah’s crew might have had their own version of Psalm 150:6

Let everything that has breath praise the Lord.

Praise the Lord.

Having breath surely took on a whole new meaning when all of the lifeforms on the planet that needed air to breathe were drowning. Countless people and animals took their last breaths at this time.

As we consider Noah’s family entering the ark and God shutting the door, I ask us to consider two verses that most of us have memorized.  They are Hebrews 11:1 and Proverbs 3:5-6.

Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.  Trust in the Lord with all of your heart and lean not on your own understanding.  In all your ways acknowledge him and he will make your paths straight.

Noah trusted.  Noah had faith, but more than that, he trusted and probably didn’t understand much of what he was instructed to do.  He couldn’t see each and every part of where God was taking him.

Noah surely walked by faith not sight. Let’s consider what we have learned today in the context of the full biblical witness.

As we walk with the Lord, we must live by faith not sight much of the time.  We must trust even when we don’t understand. We must live in the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.

OBTW—these things are contrary to the patterns of the world.

We need to obey the Lord and what he has commanded us will not be a burden to us. We are to take every thought captive and make it obedient to Christ.

We must know that the Lord delights more in our obedience than in our offerings and sacrifices.

We are studying Noah and the flood.  Let’s through in a vocabulary word for you to use at lunch when you are eating with your other friends who worship elsewhere.  It’s antediluvian.  That means before the flood.

Postdiluvian would be after the flood.

Why did I through those two words in?  So, people will know that you are studying Noah and the flood because today’s message was about trust and obedience.  It was about walking by faith not sight.  It was about living in the substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen.

It was about trusting God will do what he needs to do even when we don’t understand it.  It’s about stepping out in faith even when God doesn’t give us all the information.

We are studying Noah but singing Trust and Obey. The author of Hebrews tells us:

By faith Noah, when warned about things not yet seen, in holy fear built an ark to save his family.

Through Noah’s faith, God pronounced judgment upon the world while preserving a righteous remnant.

Through obedience to God and the fear of the Lord, Noah manifested faith and trust in his actions.  He did what he was commanded to do by God and trusted that God would do whatever else needed to be done.

I am going to speculate that Noah did all of this without anxiety.  Could you imagine building a huge ship year after year, decade after decade with an anxiousness abiding within you?  You would have a heart attack or nervous breakdown before the end of the first decade. You would be toast.

Noah obeyed God and trusted God and had faith in God and did everything God told him to do, even when he didn’t see how all the pieces fit together, and I believe he did it without anxiousness. I think somehow he knew the peace of the Lord.

Are we up for that?  Can we obey and trust?  Does our own understanding have to be satisfied before we will act on God’s instructions to us, or will we simply trust and obey and be at peace because God knows exactly what he is doing and telling us to do?

My prayer is that we answer in the affirmative.

Amen.