Friday, August 16, 2013

Genesis 7: Looking for People to Save

God was looking for people to save.
He found only one: Noah.
We have a choice to make when we read Genesis 7. We can choose to focus on all the people who died in the great flood God brought upon the earth OR we can focus on the one man God saved (along with his very fortunate, coattail-riding family members).
If we focus only on the horror of those who perished in the flood, we're likely to get the wrong idea about God's heart and character. If we go down that path, it's hard not to wonder how God could be loving and yet blot out children, puppies and literally everything "in whose nostrils was the breath of the spirit of life" (vs. 22).
That's the very rock upon which many souls have shipwrecked, isn't it?
How could a good God not only allow suffering and death, but actually even cause it, as He did here?
Well, this is exactly why I believe it's incredibly important to look at all of God's Word to see what He is really like. If we pull isolated, admittedly tough stories like this one out of context, we're doomed to come to wrong conclusions about who God is.
That's why, in fact, I set out on this blogging adventure -- to have a truer, more complete knowledge of this God I've chosen to follow.
As I mentioned in some earlier posts, I think we just can't comprehend how evil evil really is, how pervasive it had become by Genesis 7, and how much destruction and pain it causes. In truth, God didn't destroy anything in the flood that wasn't already doomed to self-destruct anyway. The sinful choices of earth's inhabitants had already set the planet on a quick path to destruction. Things fall apart pretty fast when evil takes over, whether we're talking about individual lives or entire civilizations.
Let's not overlook the incredibly important truth here in Genesis 7 that God was actively looking for people to save, desperately looking for any whose hearts were turned toward Him. Yes, "innocent" children were killed in the great flood, but we mustn't forget that God sees all of time and He knew the path those kids were going down. There was obviously, literally no hope for any of them in a world gone so wrong. Removing them from such pervasive, destructive evil was evidently the most loving option. (Let me quickly add here that ONLY God can ever make a call like that. It's never ... ever ... okay for us to kill babies or children using this same rationale. We don't know what God knows.)
I see in Genesis 7 that sin is a big, big deal to God. It destroys all the good plans He has for His creation. It grieves Him and yes, it makes Him righteously angry. And even though God is full of grace, mercy, patience and longsuffering, we should never forget that sin is still a big deal to Him. Letting it go too far is playing with fire ... or water, in this case. Lots of water.
It's also clear in Genesis 7 that God sees those who honor Him. He sees. Sometimes we think He doesn't, but He does. And He so cared about righteous Noah that He even allowed him to bring his unrighteous loved ones onto the ark with him. Noah's wives, kids and daughters-in-law should have been pretty darn thankful for old Noah and his godly heart. He was the only thing keeping them from sleeping with the fishes. Why did God do that? Why did He spare Noah's family? Well, maybe to spare Noah additional pain. I mean, this whole ark and flood thing was no picnic for Noah, and he might have been completely shattered if he had lost everyone he loved. And really, would Noah have felt blessed and rewarded by God if he had been stuck on the ark completely alone with a bunch of stinky, noisy, high-maintenance animals?
Or maybe God spared Noah's family because, practically speaking, God obviously needed some people to survive and replenish the earth. Oh sure, He could have opted to replay Genesis 1 again -- sort of a "Creation Remix" -- but I think it's interesting that He chose not to go that route. Maybe because when God sets a plan in motion, He sees it through until the end. One garden of Eden, one sinless couple, one fall. Personally, I don't think God wanted to go through all of that again. He had a plan in place and knew that He could ultimately keep working His plan, even with fallen creatures constantly trying to thwart it, until He brings about the eternally perfect new heaven and earth Scripture promises.
Whatever the reason, Noah's family got a free pass from the flood.
It's theologically tricky to sort it all out -- way above my pay grade and beyond my intellect -- but throughout the Scriptures we see examples and indications that our own holiness in some ways and in some situations profoundly impacts the well-being of our loved ones. When we're blessed, they often are, too. Ultimately, we will all stand before God individually to give an account for what we did with God's offer of eternal salvation through faith in Christ, but this I know: The most loving thing we can do in this life for the people we love is to walk intimately and passionately with God. Some of our blessings are sure to spill out on them.
God was not looking for people He could sadistically destroy. He was looking for people He could save.
He still is.
That's the heart of the God I love.




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