Scripture: Genesis 6:1-8
Structure:
- Introduction
- Genesis 6:1-4 – God’s limits
- Genesis 6:5-8 – God’s grief
- Conclusion
Introduction:
Good morning everyone.
When you pour concrete you have a certain amount of time to spread and smooth the mix while it is still wet. But once it goes hard you can’t work the concrete anymore. It has gone past the point of no return.
It’s similar with clay. While the clay is wet and soft the potter can turn it and shape it on his wheel. If the clay doesn’t form the shape he wants at first, he can just add some more water and reshape it. But once the clay has set he can’t reform it anymore. It has gone past the point of no return.
Today we continue our new sermon series on the story of Noah. Last week we heard about Noah’s genealogy. This week we learn a little more about the state of the world, and the state of God’s heart, shortly before the flood. People had become hardened in their evil ways – like concrete or clay they had gone past the point of no return. From Genesis 6:1-8 we read…
When human beings began to increase in number on the earth and daughters were born to them, 2 the sons of God saw that the daughters of humans were beautiful, and they married any of them they chose. 3 Then the Lord said, “My Spirit will not contend with humans forever, for they are mortal; their days will be a hundred and twenty years.”
4 The Nephilim were on the earth in those days—and also afterward—when the sons of God went to the daughters of humans and had children by them. They were the heroes of old, men of renown.
5 The Lord saw how great the wickedness of the human race had become on the earth, and that every inclination of the thoughts of the human heart was only evil all the time. 6 The Lord was grieved that he had made human beings on the earth, and his heart was filled with pain. 7 So the Lord said, “I will wipe from the face of the earth the human race I have created—and with them the animals, the birds and the creatures that move along the ground—for I am grieved that I have made them.” 8 But Noah found favour in the eyes of the Lord.
May the Spirit of Jesus illuminate God’s word for us.
God’s limits:
Have you ever tried to play a game of patience with some of the cards missing?
Have you ever tried to play a game of Scrabble with some of the letters missing?
Have you ever tried to finish a jigsaw with some of the pieces missing?
It’s frustrating isn’t it.
In some ways Genesis 6, verses 1-4 is like that. We don’t have all the pieces and so we can’t get the full picture. We are left guessing about the details.
For example, in verse 2 we read about the sons of God who married the daughters of men. Who were these ‘sons of God’?
The only other time that exact same phrase ‘sons of God’ is used in the Old Testament it refers to angels, heavenly creatures (in Job). Consequently, the early church fathers interpreted ‘sons of God’ to mean fallen angels.
We see this concept of fallen angels in the 1998 film, City of Angels, starring Nicolas Cage and Meg Ryan. In this film, an angel called Seth falls in love with a human woman and gives up his immortality as an angel in order to be with her. Sadly, the woman dies soon afterwards and Seth is stuck on earth.
The 2014 film version of Noah’s story, starring Russell Crowe, took a similar interpretation, portraying the ‘sons of God’ as fallen angels called ‘Watchers’ who roamed the earth looking for redemption and a return to heaven.
Most modern Biblical scholars don’t see it this way though. I suppose the idea of fallen angels mating with human women to produce some kind of half angel, half human hybrid[1] seems a bit far-fetched in a rigorous academic environment. So, as an alternative, the experts are more inclined to interpret the ‘sons of God’ as human rulers, sort of like kings or tyrants. They do this on the basis that kings and rulers in the ancient world were sometimes referred to as the ‘sons of God’. Not that people necessarily thought of human kings as divine. It was more a way of acknowledging their status and authority to rule.
Verse 4 tells us the Nephilim were on the earth in those days. The identity of the Nephilim is another puzzle to us modern readers. Apparently they were the offspring of the ‘sons of God’ and human women. In any case, the Nephilim were famous as mighty men and heroes of old. In the book of Numbers, they are associated with giants.
The ancient Jewish readers may well have known what was meant by the ‘sons of God’ and the ‘Nephilim’ but those pieces of the jigsaw are lost to us now, so we can’t say with any certainty who they were.
What we do know is they were creatures of God; they were not divine nor even semi-divine. And God was not happy with them. If you take the view that the ‘sons of God’ were fallen angels, then these angels had crossed a boundary, between heaven and earth, that they shouldn’t have. And if you take the view that the ‘sons of God’ were human rulers, then these tyrants were oppressing people in an organised way. They were sort of like mafia bosses. God needed to put some limits in place for the well-being of his creation.
With this in mind, we read in verse 3 of Genesis 6 that God said: “My Spirit will not contend with humans forever, for they are mortal; their days will be a hundred and twenty years.”
Reading this in most English translations it sounds like God is putting a limit on the human life span of 120 years. The problem with this interpretation is that some people born after the flood lived longer than 120 years. The Bible tells us, for example, that Abraham lived to be 175.
It could be that the 120 years is a general rule, for which God is free to make exceptions, as in the case of Abraham. Or, it could be the 120 years doesn’t refer to human life spans, but rather to the length of time God would wait before sending the flood. We do notice in other parts of the Bible that God gives people fair warning and an opportunity to change before executing his judgement.
Either way, God’s grace is evident in the limits that he sets. If we take the 120 years limit to refer to human life spans (allowing for the odd exception) then God is actually limiting the spread of evil. If the ‘sons of God’ are not allowed to live too long, then their evil regimes and oppression are also limited. Imagine the damage that would be done if Hitler or Stalin or some other fascist dictator was allowed to live for 900 years or more. It doesn’t bear thinking about. God’s judgment and his grace go together.
On the other hand, if we take the 120 years to refer to the time God planned to wait before sending the flood, then God’s grace is evident in the opportunity he gives for people to come to their senses and change their wicked ways.
Perhaps the more important thing to focus on here is that life is God’s to give and take as he thinks best. God says, “My Spirit will not contend with humans forever, for they are mortal;
To be mortal means we die, we don’t live forever. The bodies we are given in this life wear out eventually.
The only reason we are alive is that God has breathed his Spirit into us. Our life is on loan from God. God is free to take back his Spirit (his breath of life) whenever he wants. When God takes a life it isn’t murder. He is not taking something that belongs to someone else. He is taking back what was always his in the first place.
The mistake we human beings always seem to make is thinking that our lives, our time, our bodies, our money, our everything else belongs to us and is ours to do with as we want. But your life is not your own; it belongs to God.
Imagine you are a high flying business executive and your boss gives you a credit card for your expenses. You can legitimately use this card to fill up the work car with petrol, to pay for your hotel room when you have to go on a business trip, to wine and dine clients and to pay for any other work related expenses.
Of course, your boss is the one paying the bill. So if he sees you have been using the credit card for things that are not work related, he has every right to cancel your credit and give you the sack.
In giving us life, it’s like God has given each of us a credit card. We are free to use the card to buy almost anything we want but there is a limit on that card. We can’t go beyond the limit. God gets the credit card statements. He sees what we buy. He sees the way we spend our life. And if we spend ourselves in a way that is harmful and doesn’t serve his purpose then he is entitled to cut our credit.
Now God is generous and he doesn’t usually give people the sack the first time they mess up. But he is still our boss. He’s the one paying the bill, not us. We are here at God’s expense. We need to be careful to not take advantage of his goodness.
Human beings, in the days of Noah, were misappropriating the life God had given them. People generally were not spending their lives in service to God. They were using the credit card of their life to oppress and abuse others. God is generous and patient but, in his wisdom and grace, he imposes limits. There is a day of accounting with God.
Jesus made this very clear in a number of his parables – in particular the one in Matthew 25 about the Master who entrusted his three servants with large sums of silver. Two of the servants doubled what they had been given and were allowed to keep it when the master returned. The third servant buried his silver in the ground. The master was not happy with him and he lost it all.
The silver in this parable represents the life and gifts God has given us. The point of the story is not to use our lives to make lots of money. The point is that we should use the life we have been entrusted with to serve and glorify God.
God’s grief:
Sometimes we read the Bible in the same way we might look into a mirror. We just see our own reflection. That’s not always a bad thing. In fact, looking into a mirror can be helpful if we are looking a bit scruffy and need to brush our hair or have a shave. Just as long as we look away when we’ve finished.
Other times though the Bible functions less like a mirror and more like a lens or a telescope that helps us to see God more clearly.
Genesis 6, verses 5-8, act like a mirror and a lens simultaneously. They reflect the human heart and they show us God’s heart at the same time.
Verse 5 reads: The Lord saw how great the wickedness of the human race had become on the earth, and that every inclination of the thoughts of the human heart was only evil all the time.
The English language doesn’t really have a single word to do justice to the ancient Hebrew idea of the human heart. In English we think of the heart either literally (as a pump in our chest for circulating blood and keeping us alive) or we think of the heart metaphorically as the place where our emotions come from. We tend to associate the heart with tender or romantic feelings.
But to the ancient Hebrew mind the human heart isn’t just a container for emotions. The human heart is also where thoughts, and moral decisions come from. We could say the heart is the seat of the will. The heart is like the rudder or steering wheel of the soul. Our heart determines the direction we take in life, whether we are aware of it or not.
When we talk about giving our heart to Jesus, what we mean is letting Jesus be the pilot or driver of our life. Letting the hand of Christ take hold of the rudder of our soul to set our life in the right direction.
In Matthew 15:19 Jesus said, “For out of the heart come evil thoughts, murder, adultery, sexual immorality, theft, false testimony and slander. These are what make a person ‘unclean’.”
Returning to Genesis 6, when God saw the great wickedness of the human race; in other words, when he saw the injustice, the immorality, the murder, the oppression, the slander and so on, he traced all that bad behaviour to its source and it led him straight to the human heart.
God saw that every inclination of the thoughts of the human heart was only evil all the time. It is difficult to imagine a worse indictment.
If the human heart is like a rudder for our soul, then this means the human heart was continually in the grip of evil. It wasn’t like people only made bad choices half the time. They kept making bad choices all the time. The rudder of their heart was jammed toward violence and greed.
The comprehensive state of evil in Noah’s day foreshadows the Godlessness of society in the days leading up to Christ’s return.
In 2nd Timothy chapter 3, the apostle Paul writes…
But mark this: There will be terrible times in the last days. 2 People will be lovers of themselves, lovers of money,boastful, proud, abusive,disobedient to their parents,ungrateful, unholy, 3 without love, unforgiving, slanderous, without self-control, brutal, not lovers of the good, 4 treacherous,rash, conceited,lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God— 5 having a form of godliness but denying its power. Have nothing to do with such people.
Returning to Genesis 6. Verse 6 tells us,The Lord was grieved that he had made human beings on the earth, and his heart was filled with pain.
Wow. This is what we call the pathos of God. When I read this verse I feel like taking a moment’s silence.
Think about it. The Scripture does not say that God was angry because of the wickedness of the human race. No. It says he was grieved that he had made human beings. He was not enraged. He was filled with pain. The evil heart of humankind deeply affects the loving heart of God. As Walter Brueggemann observes, ‘What we find here is not an angry tyrant but a troubled parent who grieves over the alienation.’ [2]
God is our Father. He is our parent. His heart toward us is love.
First the Lord saw. He saw the rudder of the human heart was constantly directed toward evil all the time.
Next the Lord felt. God did not just take a quick peek at the human heart. He took a good, long, hard look and in doing so he made himself vulnerable. He felt the grief and pain of human injustice.
Then, having seen and having felt, the Lord decided what he would do. From verse 7 we read: So the Lord said, “I will wipe from the face of the earth the human race I have created—and with them the animals, the birds and the creatures that move along the ground—for I am grieved that I have made them.”
Sometimes people say to me, ‘How could God do that? How could he kill all those people in the flood, not to mention the animals and birds as well?’
While I can understand why people might ask this question, it bypasses what the text is saying. It is not just the world that is in crisis here, it is the very heart of God. The Biblical narrative is more concerned with the deep grief within God.
The flood story is about the hurt God endures because of his wayward creation.
For the people who drowned their suffering was over. For God it continues. We see the suffering heart of God in the person of Jesus on the cross.
The flood story is not primarily about us – it’s about God.
God took no pleasure in the flood. God did not want to drown his creation. I expect he would have preferred to repair the situation if he could. Sadly, things had gone past the point of no return. Like concrete (or clay) humanity had gone hard and become set in its ways – people were no longer malleable. The Lord was left with little choice but to start again.
When an animal dies in a river its rotting carcass contaminates the water downstream. You can’t drink from the river without getting sick. So you have little choice but to remove the dead carcass; then the water can flow clean again.
If human history is like a river, then the wickedness of the human race in Noah’s time, was like a rotting carcass in the stream of human history. God had to remove the corruption and decay so that humanity down-stream wasn’t poisoned. I imagine if God had allowed things to carry on as they were the suffering would have been even greater.
Conclusion:
Our reading this morning finishes on a note of hope. In verse 8, after God has decided to wipe out his creation, we read…
But Noah found favour in the eyes of the Lord.
It seems Noah was the exception to the rule. Unlike his contemporaries Noah’s heart (the rudder of his soul) was not always directed toward evil. Noah allowed God to steer the course of his life.
Last Sunday we heard how Noah’s father, Lamech, said his son would bring them relief. Lamech may not have realised the full meaning of what he was saying. It’s not just us human beings who are pained by sin. Our sin causes God pain as well. As a righteous man Noah was able to offer some relief to God.
The fact that God’s heart can be grieved by human behaviour also implies that we can bless God’s heart by the choices we make, we can bring joy to his heart.
What can you do this week to bless God’s heart?
Questions for discussion or reflection:
What stands out for you in reading this Scripture and/or in listening to the sermon? Why do you think this stood out to you?
Who might the ‘sons of God’ refer to, in Genesis 6:2? Why do you think the writer of Genesis mentions them?
Why did God set a limit of 120 years? In what ways do we see God’s grace in the limits he sets?
Where does life come from and who does it belong to? How are you using the credit card (of life) that God has given you?
What does the Bible mean by the human heart? How does the human heart affect God’s heart?
Why do you think God decided to bring a great flood on the earth?
In what way did Noah provide some relief for God? In what way might you be able to bless God’s heart this week?
[1] John Walton uses the term ‘hybrid’ in his NIVAC commentary on Genesis, although he doesn’t support the view that the ‘sons of God’ were fallen angels.
[2] Refer Walter Brueggemann’s commentary on Genesis, page 77.