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GENESIS
- Chapters 5-11
As
we continue our trip through GENESIS, let’s recap …
LAST
WEEK’S MESSAGE
In
Chapter 1, the first thing we learned was God is.
Not that God is this, or God is that, but simply that God is. We also discovered that He is the creator of all things,
including humans. Chapter
1 shows us the power of God’s spoken word and the beauty of
His earthly creations. In
Chapter 2, we saw a detailed account of how He made mankind.
As
we progressed into Chapter 3, we saw that because of our sin,
everything that was beautiful in Chapters 1 & 2,
was destroyed in Chapter 3.
We went from the fall of man in Chapter 3, to the very
first murder in Chapter 4.
We saw the evil stubbornness of our sinful nature when God
asked Cain where his brother Abel was, and Cain disrespectfully
replied, “I don’t know – am I my brother’s keeper?”
Chapter
4 says Cain was cursed and God made him leave the area where he
killed his brother. But
we saw that even while God was punishing him by making him leave,
God also loved Cain enough to protect him so others would not murder
him.
The
next thing we want to look at is the genealogy that began to
populate the earth.
CHAPTER
5 – From Adam to
Noah
To
be truthful, unless you are looking up your personal ancestors,
genealogy can get kind of boring.
Starting in Chapter 5, we have a list of
who-begat-who, starting with the creation of Adam and continuing
until the time of Noah, who built the ark. Most of us tend to skim over these lists, but we must be very
careful, because sometimes we will find the most interesting things
buried in these passages.
A
quick example is in 1 CHRONICLES 4.
That passage is verse after verse of who begot whom, and
right in the middle of that list, two verses stand out like a neon
light. In these two
verses, we hear about a man names Jabez who prayed a prayer that was
so powerful, it is still affecting millions of people today.
And then it goes right back into the list of genealogy.
Many
people wonder why the Bible would include a boring list of
genealogy. Here is a
true story that might explain it better than I can.
There
was a man by the name of Gideon Miller.
He was about 5’6” and had size 16 shoes. He was married
to a German woman who had been a member of the Hitler Youth. Now,
that was odd, because Gideon was a Jew.
After
WWII, Gideon and his wife made their way to America and ended up in
Las Vegas where he began gambling.
He soon realized that he was also an alcoholic.
He was considered a dangerous type of man who could not be
trusted in business or personal dealings.
He
eventually started going to Alcoholics Anonymous, which was being
held in a back room of a church on the Las Vegas strip.
One evening, he got to the meeting much earlier than anyone
else, so he began looking around for something to read while he
waited on the others to get there.
He found a Bible and began to thumb through it.
He took the Bible home with him after the meeting and kept
reading it.
Gideon
said he wasn’t getting too much out of it at all, until he came to
the genealogy of Jesus. He
said he suddenly realized that Jesus wasn’t a Christian; He was a
Jew – just like Gideon was! He
said that was the thing that turned the Bible into a personal
testimony for him.
That
long line of “who-begot-who” made Jesus real to one man and
brought him to accept Jesus as Savior.
So, we must be very careful when deciding to skip any part of
Scripture, because all of it has the unbelievable power to change
our hearts.
Let’s
now talk about more consequences of our sin.
CHAPTER
6 – The Account
of the Flood
In
GENESIS 6:1, we read where man had begun to increase in
numbers on the earth. That
would tell us that many generations had come and gone; enough to
populate much of the known region in those days.
We also learn about two lines of people; the Godly line and
those who were evil. The
Godly line married into the line that was not godly, causing them to
become ungodly, too.
In
fact, in VERSE 5, it says,
‘The
Lord saw how great man’s wickedness on the earth had become, and
that every inclination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil
all the time. The Lord
was grieved that He had made man on the earth, and His heart was
filled with pain. So,
the Lord said, “I will wipe mankind, whom I have created, from the
face of the earth – men and animals, and creatures that move along
the ground, and birds of the air – for I am grieved that I have
made them.”
Can
you imagine living in a society where everyone was evil?
Sometimes I think today’s people must be just like the
people of those days. And
it grieves me deeply to even think that God is so disappointed in us
that he would wipe us out. But
that is what we deserve.
ROMANS
3:23 tells us that we have all sinned and come short of the
glory of God. In ROMANS
6:23, tells us that the wages of our sin is death.
That is what we deserve for sinning against our Creator.
In
Chapter 6, we see where a man named Noah found favor in the
eyes of God because he was a righteous man.
God told Noah to build an ark.
Now you have to understand that in those days, a big boat
like that was unheard of. Some scholars
say it hadn’t even rained upon the earth yet, and here Noah is,
taking over 100 years to build an ocean going vessel where there was
no water. This shows that Noah really did lean on God, and not on his
own understanding.
Let’s
concentrate on Noah’s Ark, for a few moments.
There are many lessons in this story that can help us in our
walk with Christ today. Here
are just some of the things to be learned from this event.
To be secure in the future, you must plan ahead.
After all, it wasn’t raining when Noah began building the
ark.
You
are never too old to work for God.
Noah was 600 years old when he finished making the ark.
Everybody is in such a hurry.
We busy ourselves with the running back and forth, not with
the outcome of the job we are doing. But
speed isn’t everything. Noah
had cheetahs onboard the ark, but he also had snails.
Sometimes,
we repeat stories so often we forget the insight in them.
For example, Noah probably had help with the building of the
ark. And if that is the
case, there is no doubt that some of those who helped may have known
more than Noah about carpentry.
But just knowing about a subject does not always work to your
benefit. When the floods came, even those carpenters who knew more
than Noah – perished like everyone else.
In
Chapter 8, we are shown that the first thing Noah did when he
came out of the ark and let the animals go was to build an altar to
honor God. And because
of that altar, and the sacrifices upon that altar, God promised to
never curse the land again, even though man’s heart was evil from
childhood.
Let’s
read about …
CHAPTER
9 – The Blessing
from God
And
in Chapter 9:1, it says that God blessed Noah and his sons. He told them to go and multiply and fill the earth, and then
in Verse 2, God handed control of all living things over to
mankind.
In
Verses 8-16, we find the Rainbow Covenant.
That is where God promised to never again destroy the earth
by flood. He said the sign of his promise would be the everlasting
rainbow. That whenever
a rainbow appeared in the clouds, we would be reminded of His
promise, and He would also remember.
Our
whole belief is based on faith; faith in God through Jesus Christ.
But too many times I think humans have intelligent faith but
fail to have heart faith. Let
me explain.
Noah
obeyed the Lord in building the ark.
That was intelligent faith.
He lent intellectual capacity to something of God.
But when Noah and his family stepped into the ark to have the
door sealed shut behind them, it became heart faith.
He put his life and the lives of his children at stake,
depending totally on God for their survival.
In other words, he had to trust God with all his heart.
Today,
we might go to church and say all the right things, but when do we
fully trust in God? Usually,
we only give God our complete attention and total faith when we are
at the literal end of our rope with nowhere else to go, isn’t it?
I
am sure you have heard the story where a man was climbing a mountain
and it became very late and very dark.
In this darkness, he slipped and began falling.
He cried out to God to save him from certain disaster. After
crying out, he felt his rope snap tight and he stopped falling.
By
now, he had lost all of his tools, including his flashlight. In the total darkness of night, he could not see anything.
All of a sudden, he heard God tell him to let go of the rope.
In panic, he did what we do when God tells us to do
something. He started
coming up with reasons why he couldn’t do it.
This went on for hours, and he finally told God that he was
not going to let go of the rope.
He
died in the sub-zero temperatures that night.
The next morning, the search team found him hanging from the
rope, two feet above the ground.
Had the man trusted God fully, he would have lived, but he
gave up his life rather than trust the God who could have, and would
have, saved him. How many times have we refused blessings in our lives because
we just didn’t want to trust fully in what God wanted us to do?
Noah
stepped into the ark and the door was sealed.
He had put himself and his family in the very hands of God.
They would live or they would die, depending on what God
would do. And nowhere
in the Bible does it say that Noah had any doubts. That is total trust. That
is total faith. That is
what we are supposed to have today.
As
we leave Chapter 9, I want to ask you to remember how God has
said that we have evil in our hearts all the time.
That seems to be the human condition of our hearts.
That is evidenced by what a pastor did when he was a young
boy.
As
he rode in the family car, he would see construction men working on
the road, and so he decided that was what he wanted to do when he
grew up. One day, while
he was still a child, he made up a realistic looking stop sign and
attached it to a broom handle.
Then, he proceeded to go out into the road, holding it up and
directing cars to stop.
When
the first car stopped, he panicked, dropped the sign where he stood,
and ran home as fast as his little legs would carry him.
Why did he do that? He
did that because he suffered from what I call, “The lack of
man.” Let me explain.
The
little boy knew he wasn’t supposed to go out of his yard, but he
did because he wanted to. He
knew he wasn’t supposed to go into the street, but he did because
he wanted to. Mankind
is that way. We do what
we want, no matter what God wants us to do.
Our first choice is always what we want, not what God wants
for us.
When
the car stopped, the little boy ran home in fear because he now had
to be accountable for what he had done.
He instinctively knew that he was going to be held
responsible for disobeying his parents.
And
when our world collapses because of the choices we have made to
please ourselves, we run to God in the same panic as that little boy
ran home. We run to God, screaming for Him to help us out of harm’s
way. It seems that only
when we fail do we begin to realize that we have done something
wrong. Until that
failure, all we can concentrate on is how much we want to do that
particular thing.
CHAPTER
10 – The Nations
from Noah’s Sons
Chapter
10 is another list of genealogy.
But I think this one is a bit different.
It not only tells who fathered whom, it also tells how the
nations of men came about. It
all started with Noah’s three sons; Japheth, Ham, and Shem.
Each of these sons created a line of peoples, and through the
centuries, they created more lines of peoples.
When you draw it out on paper, it looks very similar to our
modern day workflow charts used in many businesses.
The
lines of descendants belonging to Japheth were called the
Japethites. Many
scholars believe that this line includes today’s Orientals, Greeks
and European Caucasians.
The
lines of descendants belonging to Ham were called Hamites. Last week, I spoke of the Hittites. This line came from the original Hamites.
This group of people is believed to have become what is known
today as Egyptians, Africans and some of the Orientals possibly.
From
Shem, sprang the Semites, which is believed to include today’s
Jews, Arabs, and other Arabic nations.
You can best remember the two lines from Shem because one
built a name for themselves in Babylon and the other built a name
for themselves in Abraham.
Now,
let’s end today’s teaching with ….
CHAPTER
11 – The Tower of
Babel
In
Chapter 11:1-9, we read about the Tower of Babel. Before the
Tower of Babel, man’s history with God had been anything but good.
There was that fiasco in the Garden of Eden, and that led to
things going from bad to worse until God finally wiped out
everything He had made, except for one righteous man and his family.
Now,
sometime in between the Great Flood and the introduction of Abraham
in Chapter 12, we find this story about the Tower of Babel.
Let’s
read Chapter 11:1-9.
‘Now
the whole world had one language and a common speech. As men moved eastward, they found a plain in Shinar and
settled there. They
said to each other, “Come, let’s make bricks and bake them
thoroughly.” They
used brick instead of stone and tar for mortar.
Then
they said, “Come, let us build ourselves a city, with a tower that
reaches to the heavens, so that we may make a name for ourselves and
not be scattered over the face of the whole earth.”
But
the Lord came down to see the city and the tower that the men were
building. The Lord
said, “If as one people speaking the same language, they have
begun to do this, then nothing they plan to do will be impossible
for them. Come, let us
go down and confuse their language so they will not understand each
other.”
So,
the Lord scattered them there over all the earth, and they stopped
building the city. That
is why it is called Babel – because there the Lord confused the
language of the whole world. From
there, the Lord scattered them over the face of the whole earth.’
One
of the greatest fears known to man is the fear of being left out;
shunned; or not recognized by others.
Humans have this inherent need to be recognized by others.
That is why very few children dream of having a factory job
when they grow up, but most kids dream of being astronauts, movie
stars, or having other attention-getting careers.
In
verse 4, the people wanted to build a city that had a tower
in it that reached heaven. Why
did they want to do that? It
certainly was not so they could get closer to God.
The verse says it was so they could make a name for
themselves and be known! Their
only motivation in doing this was to have everyone look at how
important they were. They wanted to be recognized by the whole world. They built a
tower that stretched towards the heavens in hopes of finding the
recognition they so desperately sought.
There
was one episode of ‘The Apprentice’ where “the Donald” took
the winning team up in a helicopter to show them every tower he had
built in New York, and then he spent the next half hour telling them
what he had done that was so special.
That is the exact same need for boasting and recognition that
caused the Tower of Babel to be built.
That
is also the same type of need for recognition that the Pharisees in
the New Testament craved. They
satisfied themselves on being called Rabbi as they walked along the
market place, and they demanded respect because they had so much
knowledge of Scriptures. The
Pharisees knew the Word, but they had no idea what the Word meant.
The only problem with having this type of attitude is that it
makes you place yourself in the spotlight and when you do this, you
automatically take God out of the spotlight.
God
wants, and deserves, to have our total focus on Him and Him alone.
So, when they were building the Tower of Babel, God confused
their language so they could not understand one another.
This caused them to divide into groups who had the same
language, and those groups wandered away to start their own
civilization elsewhere. That
is where the word “babbling” came from.
When people talk in such a way as to not make sense, we call
it babbling.
Will
the Praise Team come forward?
Let
me summarize today’s message for you.
After Adam and Eve sinned and left the Garden, civilization
flourished. But as it
flourished, it became more and more wicked.
Finally, God was so grieved that He was going to kill
everything, but then He saw one man who found favor.
That man was Noah. So,
God had Noah build an ark, which would save him, his family, and two
of every living creature. Then
God let the world flood and destroyed all that was evil.
After
the flood, civilization again prospered, but as it did, it again
became evil. Eventually,
man had turned their backs on God to the extent that they wanted to
be the center of all attention, so they started building the Tower
of Babel.
I
think the main lesson today is for us to realize what God wanted us
to be like, and how far away we have walked from that plan.
We need to realize just how sinful we are. And if we realize how sinful our nature is, we will then
realize how there will come a day when we shall pay the price for
our selfish desires.
God
has given us thousands of years to repent and come back to Him, but
we have ignored those chances.
What about you? Can
you look back in your life and see places where God has tried to get
your attention? Can you look back in your life and see where you have chosen
to ignore His calling? Most
of us can.
But
the question of the day is – what are we planning on doing about
it?
INVITATION
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