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Monday, March 1, 2021

"Never Again" (Genesis 9:8-17)

 


watch - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZO7UDLEhhQU

Second Sunday of Lent, February 28, 2021

 

                       

            You’re out walking and bump into a neighbor.  You two discuss the weather, neighborhood gossip, and then you exhaust the “small talk,” and the conversation veers toward politics.  You get nervous.  You’re pretty sure this friend’s political views are different than yours.  He starts talking about “those evangelicals” and “crazy religious nuts.”  You’re not sure where he’s going with this, but one thing becomes clear to you.  The religion he’s condemning is very different than the faith you practice.  As he rails on, you think, ‘yeah, I’d condemn that too.’

            If he’s willing to listen, how you help him meet the Jesus you know?  First Peter 3:18 might help.  “For Christ suffered for sins once for all, the righteous for the unrighteous, in order to bring you to God.”  Sin cuts us off from God.  Jesus took the penalty for our sins on himself so that we could have a right relationship with God, a relationship not stained by our sins.              Jesus’ death on the cross covers every act of rebellion against God by every person who ever lived.  Never again will God have to intervene in human affairs in order to overcome sin and death.

            Never again is something God has said before, in a familiar story.  In Genesis 9, Noah and his family and a male and female of every animal has just stepped off the ark, the flood waters having receded.  Noah sacrifices an animal as burnt offering to God.  In response, God says, “When I bring clouds over the earth and the bow is seen in the clouds, I will remember my covenant that is between me and [humanity] and every living creature of all flesh; and the waters shall never again become a flood to destroy all flesh.”

            The first time I preached about the flood I focused on sin.  The global damage of the flood, the complete destruction, showed how seriously God takes sin.  So, we should take sin seriously too.  In my 2018 message on the flood story, I was struck by this thought; the Genesis flood is single biggest genocide in human history and it’s perpetuated by God.   

            We see different angles in the flood story: the seriousness of sin; a God-caused event of absolute destruction; and, the idea of “never again.” God will never punish in this way again.  How do we bring together these vantagepoints as we turn to God in search of a deeper relationship with him? 

            The story begins in Genesis 6.  “The Lord saw that the wickedness of humankind was great … and that every inclination of the thoughts of their hearts was only evil continually.  And the Lord was sorry that he had made humankind on the earth, and it grieved him to his heart.  So, the Lord said, ‘I will blot out from the earth the human beings I have created – people together with animals and creeping things and birds of the air, for I am sorry that I have made them” (6:5-7).  Noah’s family and the animals would survive on the ark.

Producers of Christian children’s books and Christian children’s toys have made a lot of money on the flood story.  A child happily makes his little toy giraffes and little toy hippos and little toy kangaroos march and hop onto his little toy ark. 

Outside the actual ark, rainwaters become floodwaters.  A child’s story?  This is genocide perpetuated by God.  The floodwaters eventually recede, the ark comes to rest on Mount Ararat, and in no time, the world is dried up and repopulated. 

When we close the children’s book, tuck the child into bed, and then sit in the dark house with our adult thoughts, does this story that begins with a parade of animals and ends with a sky filled with literally every color in the rainbow disturb us? 

The rainbow is a reminder, but who is it intended to remind?  “God said, ‘…When the bow is in the clouds, I will see it and remember’” (9:16a). Is God worried he will forget and accidently flood the world again?  Does God forget things?  We put post-it notes around our house.  “Remember the grocery list.” “Take the trash out.”  Are rainbows God’s post-it notes?  Oh yeah.  Don’t the flood earth and bring complete destruction again

We see the image of a serene rainbow hovering over a huge boat full of animals.  However, this story is not a set shot.  This story moves, the action jolted along by the turbulent emotions that humans produce in God.  In Genesis 6, God has an internal conversation within God’s own self.  We could go extinct or continue on.  Humans are voiceless and powerless. 

God initiates the covenant.  We accept God’s terms.  God declares what God will not do again.  We can only trust that God keeps his promises.  The covenant covers all of humanity and all living creatures.  Humans bear God’s image, but all animals are precious and, in a sense, in relationship with God.  God initiates the covenant, sets the terms, carries it out, and sets the reminder – the rainbow. 

The disturbing nature of the story as well as the complete one-sidedness of the covenant both show how God complicated is. 

Hebrews 13:8, “Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today, and forever.”

Malachi 3:6, “For I the Lord do not change.”

In one praise song we sing the line, “Incomparable, unchangeable, you see the depths of my heart and you love me the same; you are amazing God.”

Yet, we remember Genesis 1:31: “God saw everything that he had made and indeed it was very good.”  We read that verse alongside Genesis 6:6, “And the Lord was sorry that he had made humankind on the earth.”  From, “[the Lord] saw … it was very good” to “the Lord was sorry” to “I will blot out from the earth the human beings I have created.” Then from, “I will blot out” we arrive at “Never again will there be a flood to destroy the earth.”  Never again.

The prophet Joel asks, “Who knows whether or not God will relent – change His mind – and leave a blessing instead of destruction” (2:12, paraphrased)?

After that big fish spits up the prophet Jonah and he prophesies destruction in Nineveh, God clearly changes God’s mind.  The condemned Ninevites repent, and Jonah 3:10 says, “When God saw what they did, how they turned from their evil ways, God changed his mind about the calamity that he had said he would bring upon them and he did not do it.”

God allows God’s self to be affected by what we do.  The quotes from Hebrews and Malachi that tell us God is unchanging are true, and they are truth.  Yet we see this unchanging God affected by people in the stories of Noah, Moses, and the prophets, Joel, Jonah, and Jeremiah.  With its unanswered questions, the book of Job, leaves us conflicted about how God deals with humanity.  The frustrations and joys, the highs and lows in the life of Jesus offends our sense of fairness.  So many different angles on the God-human relationship pop up in the Bible.  God is unchanging, yet rarely does God appear in the same way.

It’s no wonder your neighbor is confused about what exactly the Gospel is.  The Gospel is true, but cannot be reduced to a formula any more than the irreducibly nuanced notion of love can be defined.  The same praise song that says God is “unchangeable” also claims God is “untamable.”  The Gospel is the good news that God loves us, and at the same time, it’s terrifying to realize God has new experiences.  We can’t predict what God will do next.  God is emotional.  Nahum 1:2c, “the Lord takes vengeance on his adversaries and rages against his enemies.”  In Genesis, we see God heartsick.  At the baptism of Jesus, God delights in his Son.  God is a living being, the eternal one, not confined by any law or fixed principle. 

We must be receptive to God’s Spirit and we must enter the story.  In the flood portion of this story, we see the Lord was “grieved” deep in his heart.  Yet, in Hosea 11 our grieving God says, “How can I give you up, O Israel?  My heart recoils within me; my compassion grows warm and tender” (v.8).

God is emotional and personal, and God experiences the relationship he has with us.  We have to believe God stays true to God’s own self and God’s own word.  Easter is the best evidence that we can trust God.

If God does not change, God’s tactics do.  In the flood, God wiped out sin by destroying nearly all life, and starting over.  In Jesus, God tried something different.  In Jesus, God came as one of us. 

We responded by crucifying him.  Instead of destroying the earth because of sin, God took all the sin on himself.  God took the utter destruction on himself and then counted the crucifixion as a worthy sacrifice that covered the punishment for all humans of all time.  Why?  God loves each one of us.  God loves you completely.

The rainbow helps God remember not to destroy everything again.  The cross helps God forget all our sins.  When he sees the cross and then looks at you and me, he sees us as righteous.  Our relationship with Him is made right. 

That’s where God’s story goes.  Human beings, God’s imager-bearers, are reconciled to God by the death of Jesus and brought into eternal life in the resurrection of Jesus.  The flood story leads to our salvation story in which God enfolds us in His eternal embrace where death ends in “never again,” and life is without end.

AMEN

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