Proper 4 / Pentecost 2 / OT 9
Devotional
Water From the Well
Lectionary Devotional For Cycle A
Object:
Now the earth was corrupt in God's sight, and the earth was filled with violence.
-- Genesis 6:11
The story of Noah and the ark might be considered the first "rapture story," such as was made popular in the "Left Behind" series. If you have ever wondered why a good God does not simply snatch the good people away to safety and then cleanse the earth of evil, this story can help you explore how Genesis reflected on the same question. The temptation to believe that you can overcome evil by destroying it with superior force would be faced by Jesus in his wilderness temptation (Matthew 4:8-10). Further, it is the temptation that every strong nation faces. For Noah the issue, as it was also described in the Garden of Eden, was one of trust and obedience to God. Like Abraham in Genesis 12:1-3, Noah was asked to turn his back on the familiar and prepare for a journey of unknown dimensions based on his trust in God. In preparation, one saw the care of God for his creation. God acted to preserve a representative sample of all forms of life. God did punish, but God also protected. What is not described in this portion of the scripture, but what we discover in the larger story, is that this attempt to purify by separation failed because the temptation to evil is not an external force outside of ourselves but a temptation inherit in our human nature. If some are saved out of this corrupt world, unless their human nature is sacrificed, the same problem will reoccur wherever they find themselves.
-- Genesis 6:11
The story of Noah and the ark might be considered the first "rapture story," such as was made popular in the "Left Behind" series. If you have ever wondered why a good God does not simply snatch the good people away to safety and then cleanse the earth of evil, this story can help you explore how Genesis reflected on the same question. The temptation to believe that you can overcome evil by destroying it with superior force would be faced by Jesus in his wilderness temptation (Matthew 4:8-10). Further, it is the temptation that every strong nation faces. For Noah the issue, as it was also described in the Garden of Eden, was one of trust and obedience to God. Like Abraham in Genesis 12:1-3, Noah was asked to turn his back on the familiar and prepare for a journey of unknown dimensions based on his trust in God. In preparation, one saw the care of God for his creation. God acted to preserve a representative sample of all forms of life. God did punish, but God also protected. What is not described in this portion of the scripture, but what we discover in the larger story, is that this attempt to purify by separation failed because the temptation to evil is not an external force outside of ourselves but a temptation inherit in our human nature. If some are saved out of this corrupt world, unless their human nature is sacrificed, the same problem will reoccur wherever they find themselves.

