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.