One Generation to Another

Re:Verse reading–Genesis 10 (day two) One generation shall praise Your works to another, And shall declare Your mighty acts. Psalm 145:4

Both the world and the church were now again reduced to a family, the family of Noah…of which we are the more concerned to take cognizance because from this family we are all descendants. Matthew Henry

Isn’t it incredible that the great God of the universe is also supremely involved and concerned with our individual lives? Adam and Eve, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Through individuals and families God spoke truth, declared justice, and gave hope. It was then incumbent on those people to tell their children. It became their task to share their knowledge of the Lord and to display their trust in the almighty. The role of the parent to demonstrate and instruct their children in faith cannot be underscored. Ultimately these families led to the one individual who did indeed change everything. Jesus is the fulfillment of the promise to redeem. God still uses individuals, he still uses families. Your testimony matters.

Three sons. Three families.

Re:Verse reading–Genesis 10 (day one)

“These are the generations of the sons of Noah, Shem, Ham and Japheth.”–v 1.

It is a mystery, isn’t it?  Three sons.  Same family.  Same instruction.  They saw the same examples of faith.  Two of them gradually drift away from God.  Get busy with life.  Achieve success –but not with the Creator.

The other brother takes a different road.  He stays close to the long legacy of faith in His father’s family.  Adam, Enoch, Methuselah, Noah, SHEM, and eventually Abraham.  One generation after another, learning and living the life/traditions of faith.

Even now, whenever we talk about Anti-Semitism (Shem) or Hebrews (Eber) we are remembering and respecting this family.  As they walked with God, they kept His story alive and changed the world!

“My son, if you will receive my words and treasure my commandments within you. . .then you will discern the fear of the Lord and discover the knowledge of God.”–Proverbs 2:2

Pro-life

Re:Verse reading–Genesis 9:1-17 (day seven)

It was NOT a NEW rule.  (There were some significant changes in this new chapter, but this was not one of them.)  After the flood, God gave Noah the SAME assignment He gave Adam.  “Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth”–v 1.

For all the damage and danger of sin (still infecting the heart of Noah and his sons like a virus–see chapter 10) life was, nevertheless, still good!  Still part of God’s plan.  Still worthy of God’s protection. Babies and families and cities and progress and farms and hospitals. . . the steps that men would take to fill and subdue this earth were, in the eyes of the Creator, still good.

It is a life-affirming perspective.  Courage giving.  Hope inspiring.  God is pro-life!  He is pro-your life!  Calls you to be fruitful.  Commands you to be human and in the truest sense of the word.

We still have a world to build.

Objects of Mercy

Re:Verse reading–Genesis 9:1-17 (day six)

After wiping out all living things save those on the Ark, God demonstrates his mercy by promising never to destroy humanity and all living creatures with a flood again. Objects of wrath have become objects of mercy. Paul wrote in Romans 9:23, “…what if he [God] is willing to make known the wealth of his glory on the objects of mercy that he has prepared beforehand for glory…” Noah, nor his sons, nor any future generation have not changed the condition of humanity; they had not (nor us) become worthy of God’s mercy, or any less worthy of his wrath. That much becomes clear in the later half of Genesis 9! So what is the point? Glory! “To make known the wealth of his glory.” Make no mistake, God was glorified in his display of his wrath in the flood, but “the wealth of his glory” is made known in his mercy!

His patience, or mercy (the display of his glory) is a kindness that ought to lead us to repentance! (Romans 2:4)

A Sign of God’s Grace

Re:Verse reading–Genesis 9:1-17 (day five)

The flood doesn’t change God’s purpose for man. John Piper says, “God created man in his image and aims for man to fill the earth with God’s glory reflected in man’s faith and righteousness”. Noah gets the same marching orders that Adam did. “Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth”. See Genesis 1:28, 9:1, 9:7. Only difference is that Noah is not in the garden. There are real threats. Sin still exists. The human heart (even after the flood) is wicked (see 8:21).

Yet, God makes a covenant. He sends a sign. He reminds the human race of His faithfulness and grace. Man can find hope in the promises and grace of God. Noah found favor (grace) with God. He found hope and courage. The covenant sign (rainbow) was a reminder of God’s faithfulness and man’s opportunity to live in relationship with Him through grace. The sign still reminds us today and will in the future. Revelation 4:3 -And He who was sitting was like a jasper stone and a sardius in appearance; and there was a rainbow around the throne, like an emerald in appearance. God’s grace can save us!!

 

Upside Down

Re:Verse reading–Genesis 9:1-17 (day four)

It was a new day!  The earth had been cleansed by the flood.  Only Noah and his family remained…but some things were changed.  Before the flood, God had given man the green plants for food.  Now, He gave all the beasts of the field and the birds of the sky to man for food.  The animals had always walked in harmony with man, but God placed a fear of man in their hearts.  The results of sin had shaken the whole earth.

Forgiveness can turn our world upside down.  When we enter a covenant relationship with God and receive His forgiveness of our sin…it is a new day for us.  We are cleansed of sin and walk in newness of life!  Our relationship with God through the Holy Spirit has all new rules.  Reasoning by the world’s principles does not take into account the intervention of the Spirit.  Live in obedience and follow the Holy Spirit…btw, you’ll find a lot of what He has to say in Scripture!

Close

Re:Verse reading–Genesis 9:1-17 (day three)  

“Spread out over the earth and multiply on it.”  It seems that more than mere sexual function lies at the heart of this mandate.  We are not only biological, but also intellectual and spiritual and social beings.  God did not say, “Love everybody”, but rather, “Love your neighbor”.  God did not say, “Honor a person on the other side of the world”, but rather, “Honor your father and your mother.”  We find it easy to love the idea of people, but hard to love actual people.  It’s how we live with people close by that will make ours a flourishing society—or not. God commands us to grow more than just the population.  Servanthood and reconciliation and patience and humility must also increase. And that only happens over short distances.

God Blessed Noah

Re:Verse reading–Genesis 9:1-17 (day two)  

And God blessed Noah and his sons and said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth.” vs. 1

120 years, can you imagine? Some 120 years after the original instructions were given, Noah steps off the arc and begins to walk in the dawn of the covenant promise of God. Noah remembers God by sacrificing the clean animals, and then God blesses him and his his family. Noah got ‘job well done’ pat on the back from God for seeing this work through. God does not forget us. He wants to show us his favor and shower his blessings upon us, but have we been faithful with what he has given us to merit a blessing? Our families, our jobs, our lives, do they speak of the sovereign grace of our Lord? He will not forget us, we should not forget him.

New world. New rules.

Re: Verse reading–Genesis 9:1-17 (day one)

“Whoever sheds man’s blood, by man his blood shall be shed.”–v 6.

Disembarking,Noah and his family entered a new world.  Empty of people and animals (except those on the Ark), it was a new chapter.

Some things were the same.  God’s command to “be fruitful and multiply” remained in effect.  The sinfulness of the human heart was still present.  See 8:21.  (Especially instructive because it now referred to Noah and the members of his family)

Some things had changed.  A new covenant gave assurance that God would never again destroy the world in universal judgment. Not, at least, until the end of time.  “While the world remains” says 8:22.  See also 2 Peter 3:7.  In place of His direct intervention, God also gives the responsibility to men to protect human life.  He institutes capital punishment.

Every war, every police officer is a reminder.  Romans 13:4.  In this new world, the deterrence to unjust force will be just force.

 

As in the days of Noah

Genesis 7:1-4, 17-24; 8:1-5, 13-16, 20-22 (day seven)

Q–Does the Bible teach a universal, coming day of wrath?

A–Yes (2 Peter 3:3-11)

Q–Did our Lord warn of this same event?

A–Yes (Matthew 24:27-51, many others moments)

Q–Did Jesus compare people in His day (our day) to those in the days of Noah”?

A–Yes (Matthew 24:37-39)

Q–Is salvation portrayed in scripture as salvation from the wrath to come?

A–Yes (1 Thessalonians 1:10)

Q–Do most people believe in coming wrath?

A–No

Q–Did most people in Noah’s day believe in wrath to come?

A–No

Q–Is the ark a type/picture/shadow of salvation in Christ?

A–Yes. (1 Peter 3:21)

Q–In what ways was the ark similar to salvation in Christ?

A–Provided by God, accessed by faith, only one door, had to be entered, God closed the door.

Q–“How shall we escape if we neglect so great a salvation?”–Hebrews 2:3.

A–There is no answer to this question.