Sunday, February 18, 2018

Sermon: The Gospel of Noah

Genesis 9:8-17
The Gospel of Noah
James Sledge                                                                                       February 18, 2018

My mother-in-law collects Noah’s arks, and she gave me a wooden one that sits on a bookshelf in my office. The little animal pairs are typically lying on their sides because children who accompany a parent into my office can rarely resist playing with them. Like those animals on my bookshelf, the animals in the Noah story have proved irresistible to people over the years. That’s just one of the reasons the flood story in Genesis is so misunderstood, even by those in the Church.
Many know the broad strokes of the story: a wicked world, the good and faithful Noah, and a plan to start over fresh. The whole idea seems rather primeval or primitive. It’s an entertaining story in a way, but it has little to say to us, or so many believe.
Many cultures in the ancient Middle East had some sort of flood story. Some scholars speculate that a catastrophic flood centuries earlier provided the raw material for such myths, and it’s safe to say that people of ancient Israel were familiar with more than one version of the story. If you read the story in Genesis with any care, you will notice parts of at least two different accounts included there.
The writers and editors who pull together the book of Genesis are happy to include these sometimes conflicting accounts because they are only peripherally interested in reporting what happened. Their real interest is to use the story, along with other stories in the first eleven chapters of Genesis, to address deep, theological questions about the nature of God and about God’s relationship to creation, especially the human creature. It is this primary purpose of these stories that gets missed when we imagine them to be primitive, ancient tales.
The Noah story begins, some three chapters prior to our reading, with this comment. Yahweh saw that the wickedness of humankind was great in the earth, and that every inclination of the thoughts of their hearts was only evil continually. And Yahweh was sorry that he had made humankind on the earth, and it grieved him to his heart.  Or perhaps, it grieved her to her heart. Men wrote down the stories after all.
A heartbroken God may seem strange to us, but the Hebrew Bible has no problem portraying a God emotionally impacted by humanity. And so the flood story begins. You’ve surely heard it. A great ark is constructed and animals of every sort are brought on board. Subterranean springs burst forth and rain falls for forty days and nights. Creation returns to its pre-creation chaos where the Spirit of God moved over the waters. But finally, after months, God remembered, and the waters begin to subside. Now, as the story is often understood, creation and humanity can start fresh.

And yet, when Noah first comes off the ark, builds an altar, and makes an offering, God says to Godself, "I will never again curse the ground because of humankind, for the inclination of the human heart is evil from youth; nor will I ever again destroy every living  creature as I have done.”
Did you hear that? The very reason given for the flood, the evil inclination of human hearts, not only still exists, but it is now cited as the reason God will not destroy. The flood itself seems to have changed nothing about humanity or creation. If anything has changed, it is God’s heart. The story began with a God described as hostile toward wayward and wicked humanity, but it ends with hostility transformed into commitment. Divine speech shifts from talk of judgment for sin to promise, to gospel, the good news of perpetual commitment.
____________________________________________________________________________
When the various threads that make up the book of Genesis are woven together into the work we have today, Israel is a broken and defeated people. Babylon had destroyed Jerusalem and carried into exile all those of any importance. It was impossible to avoid thoughts of this as punishment for breaking covenant with God, for ignoring the warnings of countless prophets. God was finally done with them, had abandoned and forgotten them.
Ancient Israel is hardly alone in worrying that God had finally had enough and is done with them. Most of us have experiences of life descending into chaos. The shootings this week are but the latest example. Often such moments are accompanied by crises of faith, doubts about God. Who has not at some point feared that God has forgotten them, or its modern equivalent, that God simply doesn’t exist?
But the Noah story speaks a powerful word of gospel to people caught up in chaos of their or other’s making. God will not forget. No matter how pained God’s heart is over the state of creation or humanity, God will not walk away.
God makes a covenant with Noah, with his descendants, and with all the creatures of the earth. God is fully and totally committed to Israel, to humanity, to Creation. And to prove it, God gives a sign. God hangs up God’s bow.
All those rainbows painted on nursery walls may obscure the fact that this bow is a weapon of war, a weapon that God now retires. Even more remarkable, God says of this bow, “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 you and  every living creature of all flesh.” The story speaks of the rainbow as a sign, a reminder, for God. This string tied around the divine finger is the text’s colorful, narrative way of describing the depth of God’s commitment to creation.
Modern people are not used to story being used to proclaim sophisticated theology, and so we too often focus on issues of science or history. But the writers here make an astounding proclamation of gospel to a people who are up to their necks in chaos. God is for you. God’s promise is still good. God will remember you.
___________________________________________________________________________
On a recent Sunday following our 10:45 worship service, a small, ad hoc group of church members met with Diane and me to discuss how we might do Lent well here at FCPC. I had sent them some notes on Lent and the scripture readings that would likely be used for sermons each week, along with liturgy and scripture from Ash Wednesday and Easter, the bookends around the season of Lent.
I had my own notions of how this discussion would go, how to help it along. I asked the group how Lent would help us move from Ash Wednesday to Resurrection. We bounced ideas around for a bit, but then one of the members turned us in a different direction. He spoke of Lent more in terms of stoppage than movement, a pause, a fallow time, and we began to discuss the season as a time of stillness where we become more deeply rooted in faith that it might spring forth with renewed vigor in the glorious light of Easter.
We decided to think of Lent as a fallow time for letting go of those things that get in the way of following Jesus, get in the way of deep faith. We’re not really talking about giving up things for Lent, but of letting go of whatever is a hindrance to being disciples.
But as we work to identify those things that are hindrances for us as individuals or as a congregation, as we seek to take seriously Jesus’ call to deny oneself and take up the cross, we will do well to hold onto the gospel promise right here in the story of Noah – the good news that our waywardness, our tendency to move and act in ways contrary to God’s purposes for our lives, the chaos created by our foolishness or the foolishness of others, are not cause for God to reject or abandon us. Nothing can break God’s commitment to those covenant promises made to humanity and to all creation.
As we enter into this Lenten season that ends at the cross and the grave, let us listen for the echoes from Noah’s story found at the cross, echoes of a God who cannot and will not give up on us, no matter how terribly we grieve God, even to the very core of God’s own heart.

No comments:

Post a Comment