The Flood: Grace
Genesis
6:9 through 9:29 is the next toledot. In this series we are looking at
things in two or three different ways. One way is by looking at the basics
structure of Genesis in terms of the ten toledot sections. The word toledot
is a Hebrew word from the root yalad, meaning to give birth. So it has
the idea of generation or record and it is used as a structural marker in the
book of Genesis in order to mark out different sections over the history of the
book. The beginning of each toledot section could generally be
paraphrased, “This is what happened to the descendants of …”
The
first section of Genesis is the creation narrative in 1:1 to 2:3. The second
section or the first toledot is 2:4 to 4:26, consisting of 72 verses.
This is the period that covers the creation of man and the woman, the
institutions of volition and marriage, as well as the fall, the curse, and the
first murder. That whole section is covered in only 72 verses. The second toledot
begins in 5:1 and extends down through 6:8, and this covers 40 verses. The vast
majority of that is the genealogy of the descendants of Adam through Seth. We
are in the third toledot, the records of the descendants of Noah, 6:9 to
9:29, which covers the flood episode. In the first eleven chapters of Genesis,
which is really the introduction to the book—the book itself focuses on
Abraham, Isaac and Jacob—this is the longest section, 89 verses devoted to
Noah. That means that in terms of proportion this is not just some secondary
story that just got inserted into the text. Under the ministry of God the Holy
Spirit the writer is emphasizing what took place in Noah’s life. This will be
emphasized when we come later on to look at how this is sued in Hebrews chapter
eleven, verse seven: “By faith Noah, being warned of God of things not seen as
yet, moved with fear, prepared an ark to the saving of his house; by the which
he condemned the world, and became heir of the righteousness which is by
faith.” What we see in Hebrews 11 is the spiritual/doctrinal application for
the believer in the Church Age. This does not in any way take away from the
historicity of Noah, but says that Noah is clearly an example, that it is by
means of doctrine (what he believed), because of his trust in God’s revelation,
he became a picture of salvation and deliverance. This is an important,
critical episode in the Old Testament and cannot be skipped over. The fourth toledot
comes up in 10:1 and goes down through 11:9, “This is what happened to the
generations of Shem, Ham and Japheth.” That is also known as the table of
nations. The fifth toledot gives the descent of Shem, 11:10-11:26, and
that ends the introduction. Chapters 1:1 to 11:26 forms the first section of
this book, the introduction.
Then
we get into the major part of the book, and the first toledot is the toledot
of Terah, Abraham’s father, and that is 11:27 to 25:11. That covers 377 verses,
and so it can be seen that at this point the emphasis shifts. Everything up to
that point is under 100 verses and now it jumps to 377. The seventh toledot
is that of Ishmael, 25:12-18, so the descent of Ishmael is relatively
insignificant by comparison. Then eighth toledot of Isaac is 25:19 to
35:29, 354 verses. The ninth toledot is that of Esau, 36:1 to 37:1, 43
verses. The final toledot is that of Jacob, which includes the 12 sons,
especially Joseph, and that is covered 37:2 to 50:26, 414 verses.
If
we just look at proportionality, we see that in the first section Noah gets the
largest chunk of verses, and in the second section which deals with the
patriarchs of Israel it is the descendants of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob that
have the lion’s share of the verses. So this tells us that Noah is not to be
taken lightly. This is a very important section in the book of Genesis.
One
of the ways that we look at the structure here is to see that the author puts
it together in a literary form known as a chiasm. This is a way of structuring
material so that what comes in the middle of the chiasm is emphasized. So here
we are just going to get a brief outline and structure of Genesis 6:9-9:29. The
main idea is the contrast between Noah’s righteousness and its consequences and
the world’s corruption and its consequences. We see that volition has
consequences. You make good decisions from a position of strength, trust in
God, and there is blessing. If you make wrong decisions on the basis of
negative volition and the result is cursing. That is the theme in Genesis:
blessing and cursing.
The
first part, 6:11-13, is God resolves to destroy the corrupt race. The emphasis
is on the corruption of the human race. The Hebrew word for corruption there is
used three times in that section. In the next section Noah builds an ark
according to God’s specifications, 6:14-22. In the third paragraph the Lord
commands the remnant—Noah, his wife, his three sons and their wives, to enter
the ark along with the animals—in 7:1-9. The fourth paragraph, 7:10-16, is the
beginning of the flood, and in the fifth paragraph the flood prevails for 150
days and the mountains are covered by the waters, 7:17-24. Then we come to the
center point: God remembers Noah in 8:1.
In
8:1b-5 we see the recession of the flood for 150 days and the mountains become
visible, so we back out of this flood now, and from 8:1b there is a mirror
reflection of what goes before. So you can’t come along and say this was
cobbled together from two or three different sources. This shows that there is
an integral unity in the text demonstrating that there was one author who put
this together and it is a masterful literary construction. In 8:6-14 the earth
dries out, and that mirrors 7:10-16 where the flood begins. Then God commands
the remnant to leave the ark, 8:15-19, and this parallels 7:1-9 when God
commanded the remnant to enter the ark. Next, Noah builds an altar according to
God’s specifications, 8:20, and this is parallel to Noah building an ark
according to God’s specifications. Then the final paragraph in 8:21, 22, the
Lord resolves to not destroy mankind by water, and that parallels 6:11-13 where
God resolves to destroy the corrupt race. The focal point of the Narrative is
8:1, God remembers Noah. That is what the author is drawing our attention to.
Remember in Hebrew narrative God is always the hero. We tend to look at it in
terms of individual human heroes, but in Hebrew narrative God is always the
hero, not the individual human.
The
key idea of this section is God’s grace which precedes judgment, His judgment
on mankind, and His salvation or deliverance by grace. So the flood episode teaches
grace, judgment, and salvation. Those are the doctrinal emphases in this
section.
The
first thing to point out in the introduction to the toledot is the
principle of grace before judgment.
1)
Before
every divine judgment throughout human history God always gives mankind a
period of grace in which to be saved. He does it in terms of nations, He does
it in terms of individuals, He does it in our own personal spiritual lives.
Before He lowers the boom in divine discipline He will precede that with grace
to give us an opportunity to rebound, to confess our sins, to start getting
back in fellowship ands walking by the Holy Spirit. At this particular time
there was a 120-year period time of intense evangelism before the judgment of
the flood. Actually, what happens throughout history is that God gives grace
and man rejects it.
2)
There
never has been a time in history when mankind did not have the opportunity to
believe in Christ. Whatever the dispensation was, if it was the antediluvian
civilization there was a period of time there for them to respond to the gospel
as it was in that dispensation. Remember, in the Old Testament period the
gospel always anticipated deliverance, it looked forward to the promised seed
of the woman, and that was the focal point of salvation. Just because we don’t
know how the gospel got around, just because we don’t have historical records,
doesn’t mean the gospel did not make its way to many different nations. In
fact, from the little bit of evidence that we do have in the New Testament era
we know that the gospel has made it to a lot of places.
3)
God’s
grace before judgment prior to the fall. God granted the human race 120 years
of warning, according to Genesis 6:3—120 years of hearing Noah proclaim the
gospel. And remember, Methuselah doesn’t die until just before the flood. So
there were others in that line who were believers who were also proclaiming the
gospel. Noah was not the only one, but all of the others were older and they
would have died physically prior to the flood. And as Hebrews 11:7 points out,
not only proclaimed the gospel verbally but the fact that he and his sons were
building the ark was a visual statement of condemnation on that antediluvian
civilization.
4)
In
the Old Testament the prophets warned the Jews about the approaching judgments
of 722 B.C. when the Assyrians took out
the northern kingdom of Israel, and they warned the southern kingdom about the
judgment of Babylon coming in 586 B.C. In fact, 100 years earlier Isaiah was prophesying
about the approaching of the Babylonian defeat.
5)
Jesus
warned the Jews in Matthew 24 about the coming judgment for rejecting Him as
Messiah. They were warned about the Roman armies coming and destroying
Jerusalem.
6)
Every
person has adequate testimony to the existence of God prior to death. Romans
1:20 says: “So that they are without excuse.” That tells us that every human
being has common grace that presents clear evidence that God exists. His
invisible attributes are made clear in the heavens, but man rejects that and
suppresses the truth by means of unrighteousness.
7)
In
the Tribulation period the gospel will be proclaimed as never before in human
history and there will be numerous warnings, grace even in the judgments.
One
of the biggest problems that we have today is a challenge to the historicity of
Noah. People today want to think of this as just another myth, and ancient
legend. Yet, if we look at the Bible what we will see is that throughout the
Old Testament and New Testament there is clear affirmation of the historical existence
of Noah and the judgment of the flood. Isaiah 54:9, “For this is as the waters
of Noah unto me: for as I have sworn that the waters of Noah should no more go
over the earth; so have I sworn that I would not be wroth with thee, nor rebuke
thee.” God is giving a historical warning to Israel in Isaiah 54 and He is
drawing an analogy to the judgment at the time of Noah. If Noah was not a
historical incident then that would invalidate the analogy. Secondly, in God’s
statement He is indicating that the flood was global, not some local flood that
occurred down the Tigris-Euphrates drainage basin, neither was it a local flood
that occurred when the Black Sea overflowed, a recent theory which has been set
forth by a number of archaeologists. If you take the position that it was a
local flood then eventually your whole system is going to collapse into some
sort of accommodation with evolution. This must be taken as universal,
otherwise you are destroying the historicity of the text and it affects
numerous other doctrines.
Ezekiel
14:14, 20 also emphasize the historicity of Noah. “Though these three men,
Noah, Daniel, and Job, were in it, they should deliver but their own souls by
their righteousness, saith the Lord GOD” . . . . “Though Noah, Daniel, and Job, were in it, as I live, saith
the Lord GOD, they shall deliver neither
son nor daughter; they shall but deliver their own souls by their
righteousness.” These two passages treat Noah as a historical individual.
Then we get into the New Testament. Jesus compared the second coming and the characteristics of the earth’s civilizations at the time of the second coming to the way it was at the time of Noah, Matthew 24:37, “But as the days of Noah were, so shall also the coming of the Son of man be. For as in the days that were before the flood they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day that Noah entered into the ark, and knew not until the flood came, and took them all away; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be.” Once again, if Noah isn’t a historically accurate figure then this becomes a meaningless statement. Luke 3:36, “Which was the son of Cainan, which was the son of Arphaxad, which was the son of Sem, which was the son of Noah, which was the son of Lamech.” Noah is located in the genealogy of the Lord Jesus Christ. Luke 17:26, a parallel passage to Matthew 24:27, “And as it was in the days of Noah, so shall it be also in the days of the Son of man. They did eat, they drank, they married wives, they were given in marriage, until the day that Noah entered into the ark, and the flood came, and destroyed them all.” Hebrews 11:7, “By faith Noah, being warned of God of things not seen as yet, moved with fear, prepared an ark to the saving of his house; by the which he condemned the world, and became heir of the righteousness which is by faith.” The writer of Hebrews treats Noah as a historical individual and the flood as a historical event. Peter has two verses: 1 Peter 3:20, “Which sometime were disobedient, when once the longsuffering of God waited in the days of Noah, while the ark was a preparing, wherein few, that is, eight souls were saved by water.” At that point Peter is making a doctrinal application based on the historical veracity of the existence of Noah. 2 Peter 2:5, “And spared not the old world, but saved Noah the eighth person, a preacher of righteousness, bringing in the flood upon the world of the ungodly.”
We
can see from these events that the teachings of both the Old and New Testaments
are grounded on certain historical events having taken place literally and
actually. What we realize is that this runs counter to the assumptions of
modern religious liberalism. For the last 300 years since the Enlightenment the
first eleven chapters of Genesis have been under assault for their historical
veracity. The idea of modern man is that you can have religious truth that is
divorced from history. The Bible doesn’t need to be inerrant, they say, in fact
there’s all kinds of historical, cultural and scientific errors but that
doesn’t affect the truth, the spiritual truths that are there. And that is just
garbage! The Bible, more than any other philosophy or religious system in the
history of the world, has such a tight connection between the doctrines of its
beliefs/the Scripture and the historical foundation, that if you destroy the
historical validity of these doctrines the doctrines themselves are destroyed.
You can’t have the doctrines without their historical situation. You can’t
separate the doctrines of the Bible from the history of the Bible. This means
you can’t have a biblical faith without having a historically, scientifically,
biologically and philosophically inerrant Bible. You cannot have biblical faith
without believing in biblical inerrancy. There has to be historical integrity.
Everything in the Old Testament is based upon certain things having happened in
the history of Israel, and the history of the world prior to the call of
Abraham, and the same thing is true of the New Testament. In fact, Paul makes a
point that if the resurrection didn’t take place as it is described in the
Gospels—a physical, bodily, historical resurrection of Christ—then we are the
most deceived of all people, and there is no Christianity without the
resurrection, there is no Christianity if the Bible is not historically
accurate. That is why it is so important to go into all of these historical
issues and to show why the Bible is valid, why these assaults are not true. We
live in an era when the Bible is constantly under attack by people who say that
these things just aren’t true.
What
we have to realize is that underneath all of this is the importance of the
creator-creature distinction, and that really comes to play in the Noah
narrative, because it is here that we see that God has the right to dictate
terms to His creatures. He has the right to hold us accountable to behavioral
standards. He will hold us accountable. Here we see that sin is abnormal and
destructive and that the creature will eventually be judged, that God is a God
who interferes in human history, and man, the rebellious creature, doesn’t want
a God who is going to interfere in his life. The last thing that he wants is a
God that is going to judge him on the basis of our behavior, the basis of
positive or negative volition. That is because man ever since the fall wants to
absolve himself from any accountability. On the other side here, we see the
biblical view of salvation emphasized, that God as the creator does interfere in
human history, but He interferes first of all with grace, He provides a
solution to the problem, and He provides salvation. That is always the issue.
God’s grace precedes judgment and He always gives mankind enough of an
opportunity to respond.
The
big issue that comes along here as we look at this whole narrative on the flood
is the question: Is this a local flood or is this a universal flood? One of the
things we should always listen for is how somebody interprets the flood. Once
you start compromising with evolution at one point you will end up compromising
at many points. It basically boils down to problems of interpretation, problems
of hermeneutics—people just don’t want to take the Bible literally because it
runs against some presupposition, some assumption that they have that science
has given them accurate information about the age of the earth and the age of
the universe. So our question will be approached from three different lines of
evidence.
These
are: Questions about the text itself; to look at particular words that are used
in the text; the offer of three different arguments that are based on other
grounds other than the specific words of the text.
1)
The
text itself. If the flood was local, why didn’t Noah have to build an ark in
the first place? Modern man did not build a ship equivalent to the size of the
ark until 1856. It was a huge ship and it had more than enough room for the
animals and the humans on board. So if the flood was local he had 120 years to
walk to the other side of the mountains and missed the flood altogether.
2)
If
the flood was local, why did God send the animals to the ark so they would
escape death. There would have been other animals to reproduce that particular
kind of those who were the ones that died. They could have migrated another 100
miles and they would have been out of danger.
3)
If
the flood was local, why was the ark big enough to hold all the kinds of land
vertebrate animals that have ever existed. If only the local Mesopotamian
animals were threatened the ark could have been much smaller.
4)
If
the flood was local, why would birds have been sent on board. They could have
flown across to a nearby mountain range.
5)
If
the flood was local, how could the waters rise to a height of fifteen cubits
(21-22 feet) about the mountains—Genesis 7:20. We have to remember that water
seeks its own level and couldn’t rise to cover the local mountains and leave
the rest of the world untouched.
6)
If
the flood was local, it would not have solved the problem of the corruption of
the human race world-wide.
7)
If
the flood was local, people who did not happen to be living in the vicinity
would not be affected by it. “As it was in the days of Noah.” If the flood was
local then by analogy that would mean the Tribulation would also be partial. If
the flood is reduced to a local situation it has implications for how we
understand the Tribulation.
8)
If
the flood was local, God would have repeatedly broken His promise to never
flood the entire earth again. To be consistent with that it must be a universal
flood.
Particular
words that are in the text. Genesis 6:11 says the earth was filled with
violence—not just part of the earth nut all the earth, it is a universal
problem. Genesis 6:12, all flesh was corrupted, not just those is a specific
locale. Genesis 6:13, the end of all flesh. Genesis 6:17, to destroy all
flesh in which is the breath of life, everything that is on the earth
shall perish. Genesis 6:19, of every living thing, of all flesh.
This isn’t limited local terminology; it is universal terminology. Genesis
6:20, every creeping thing, two of every kind will come to you to
keep them alive. Genesis 7:2, every clean animal by sevens. Genesis 7:4, every
living thing that I have made. Genesis 7:8, everything that creeps on
the ground. Genesis 7:11, all the fountains of the deep were opened, not
just those in the area. Genesis 7:14, every beast, all the
cattle, every creeping thing and every bird. So again and again
and again the verbiage that is used emphasizes a universal flood.
But,
the critics say, all doesn’t mean all, every doesn’t mean every.
For example, “All the men of Judea went out to hear John the Baptist.” Does
that mean all went out to hear him? Probably not, it is just the way we talk
sometimes, but for the sake of argument let’s give them the benefit of the
doubt this time. Let’s see if we can demonstrate a universal flood from other
lines of reason. Genesis 7:19-20, “And the waters prevailed exceedingly upon
the earth; and all the high hills, that were under the whole heaven, were
covered. Fifteen cubits upward did the waters prevail; and the mountains were
covered.” When we look at this the text says that the water was fifteen cubits
higher than the mountains. If we look at the evidences explained in Genesis
7:11ff the ark lasted one year, from the time they went on the ark to the time
the waters dried up. When we put together the depth of the water and the time
it was that high it can only be concluded that this could not have been a local
flood, it would have to be a global flood based on the evidence of the time and
the depth. Furthermore, a second argument that could be used. When looking at
the ark’s distinctive size, design and purpose, it doesn’t make sense that
there was a vessel of that size, that would take that long to construct, to
have a local flood.
2
Peter 3:4-6, “And saying, Where is the promise of his coming? for since the
fathers fell asleep, all things continue as they were from the beginning of the
creation.” Here Peter is characterizing the taunts of the skeptics at the end
times. This is a perfect characterization of the uniformitarian doctrine of
geology, that all things follow the same process of deterioration to day as
they did a thousand, two thousand, one-hundred thousand years ago. “For this they willingly are ignorant of,
that by the word of God the heavens were of old, and the earth standing out of
the water and in the water: whereby the world that then was, being overflowed
with water, perished.” Here we see the same word pairing that we see in Genesis
1:1, and the heavens and the earth is equivalent to the universe. Then there is
a reference to Noah’s flood. In contrast, verse 7, “But the heavens and the
earth, which are now, by the same word are kept in store, reserved unto fire
against the day of judgment and perdition of ungodly men.” So here in vv. 4-7
Peter makes it clear that the judgment that is coming is analogous to the water
judgment that destroyed the antediluvian world, and he is clearly interpreting
the events of Genesis 6-8 as a cosmic cataclysm, not just some small local
flood.
In
conclusion we need to ask why there was a flood at all. First of all we have to
recognize that sin doesn’t just affect us in a sort of spiritual way. We have
fallen prey to too much Greek thought, Greek philosophy that wants to separate
the spiritual from the material. So we think that when we sin it just affects
the spiritual realm. Sin affects nature. You can’t separate these two is if
they are not interrelated and interconnected. Thus, just as sin brings divine
judgment on nature and changes nature we also see throughout Scripture that
nature is part of the way that God judges mankind, and nature itself is
affected. For example, nature is part of the judgment on Sodom and Gomorrah and
nature is affected by Sodom and Gomorrah. The reason the Dead Sea is the Dead
Sea and the reason for that bleak landscape around the Dead Sea is because of
the judgment of fire and brimstone on Sodom and Gomorrah. Then we see nature as
part of the judgment on the Egyptians in the Exodus event, that nature brings
this judgment on the Egyptians but also affected are animals that die as a
result of that judgment. Nature is also included at the time that Christ was
judged for our sins—an earthquake in Jerusalem and darkness on the earth. Then
in the Tribulation we will see that nature is included in the judgments—the sun
and moon are darkened, the oceans are turned to blood, water turns bitter, etc.
Romans 8 makes it clear that there is a connection between the creation and
God’s judgment, vv. 19ff. “For the earnest expectation of the creature waiteth
for the manifestation of the sons of God. For the creature was made subject to
vanity, not willingly, but by reason of him who hath subjected the same in
hope, because the creature itself also shall be delivered from the bondage of
corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of God. For we know that
the whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain together until now.”
Why a flood:
1)
There
is a connection between man’s sin and its effect on nature. God uses nature to
judge mankind.
2)
It
is a graphic visual aid of the necessity of cleansing and purification, just as
there is a need for cleansing and purification at salvation. God had to cleanse
and purify the world of its corruption.
3)
Because
of the invasion of the sons of God there is a need to start everything over.