There has been much speculation concerning the passage about the sons of God and the daughters of men. The “sons of God” were not angels having sex with women. The "sons of God" were the godly descendants of Seth. The “daughters of men”
were the ungodly descendants of Cain. The Nephilim were giants
intellectually and physically. They were also know as bullies and tyrants. They were not necessarily large men.
(1Jn 3:10) You
can tell God's children from the devil's children, because those who
belong to the devil refuse to do right or to love each other.
Gen 6:3b
... his days will be a hundred and twenty years.
The
book of Jasher (referred to in Joshua10:13 and 2 Samuel 1:18) states
that God called Noah to preach against the evil the people were doing
and He gave them 120 years to repent. At the end of the 120 years this
is is what the Lord saw...
Gen 6:5
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.
What a condemning verse...every inclination and evil all the time.
Gen 6:6
The LORD was grieved that he had made man on the earth, and his heart was filled with pain.
He was displeased in the very center of His being. He was displeased with their unbelief and their wickedness.
And so God sent the flood.
Scripture
says that Noah was blameless. It doesn't mean that Noah was without
sin. It means he sinned but he was not blamed for his sins.
Did
Noah and Mrs. Noah only have the three sons or did they have other
children? Seems that there were lots of years before the births of these three sons for
Mrs. Noah to bear many, many children. And yet, only three were saved
from the flood. What does that say about the other children they may
have had?
Noah took two of every unclean animal
and seven pairs of every kind of clean animal and seven pairs of every
kind of bird. The animals came willingly to the ark. Jasher also tells
us that it took Noah and his sons five years to build the ark.
Gen 7:11
In
the six hundredth year of Noah's life, on the seventeenth day of the
second month-- on that day all the springs of the great deep burst
forth, and the floodgates of the heavens were opened.
The
floodgates of heaven opened when the heavy water vapor above the
earth (the canopy) fell in the form of intense rain. Water trapped inside the earth's crust gushed
out when the crust of the earth was broken by earthquake activity.
This was an extremely violent time. More details may be found in the
study, The Biblical View of Creation.
The book of
Jasher records that many people came begging Noah to let them come into the ark
once the earth began to tremble violently. They wanted to come into
the ark and be saved, but their hearts were still bent toward evil and
so the wild animals that surrounded the ark drove the people back, according to Jasher.
The
waters covered the mountains to a depth of more than twenty feet. The
high mountains then may not have been the high mountains as we know them
today. The continents were shifted in the flood.
Genesis 7 tells us that God sent a wind over the earth and the water receded.
Wind is caused by hot spots and cold spots. There was no strong wind
before the flood because the temperature was essentially the same over
the earth.
The ark came to rest on the mountains
(plural) of Ararat. It was a range of mountains, not specifically a
mountain peak named Ararat.
When Noah sent out the raven it "kept flying back and forth".
Seems as if the raven didn't return to the ark, but just kept
flying. The waters had not yet receded so was the raven feasting on
dead things that had floated to the surface? After all, ravens are carrion birds and eat dead meat.
Notice
when the animals came out of the ark they came out in an orderly
manner…one kind after another. It wasn't a stampede. Wonder of they
came out in alphabetical order? Aardvarks first???
The first thing Noah did when he left the ark was to offer a sacrifice to God. Look how God reacted. … “he said in his heart….” . And God was pleased with Noah's sacrifice and gave the promise to never again destroy life in this way.
Gen 9:11
I
establish my covenant with you: Never again will all life be destroyed
by the waters of a flood; never again will there be a flood to destroy
the earth.”
Gen 8:22
As long as the earth endures, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night will never cease.
Prior
to the flood, the earth experienced a tropical atmosphere with
basically only one season. Temperatures didn't vary much. There was
warmth in the day and coolness in the evening. (see Genesis 3:8)
Back to Noah's sacrifice...
Gen 8:21
The LORD smelled the pleasing aroma and said in his heart: "Never again will I curse the ground because of man, even though every inclination of his heart is evil from childhood. And never again will I destroy all living creatures, as I have done.
What a great illustration of God’s mercy and grace. Even though every inclination was still evil.
Before
the flood, animals were not afraid of man. After the flood they were.
Why? The animals were now allowed by God for food for man. The
animals had reason to be afraid of man. People were no longer vegetarians. They were allowed to eat meat.
Why
did the
rainbow make such an impact on Noah and his family? Why did God use
the rainbow as a sign? We see rainbows all the time. The canopy that
covered the earth was the reason. It shielded the surface of the earth
from direct sunlight. The days before the flood were overcast. People
had never seen direct sunlight before. They had never seen a rainbow
before, since rainbows are created as direct sunlight shines through
water vapor. There can be no rainbow on a totally overcast day. When
the canopy fell in the form of rain, it allowed solar and cosmic
radiation to strike the surface of the earth as well as affect the
people and the animals living on it. After the flood, the longevity of
man began to decrease. The length of life was drastically shortened.
The main contributors of the shortening of lifespans were radiation into
the gene pool and a drastic change of diet. Remember, after the flood,
people were no longer vegetarians but were allowed to eat meat.
Subsequent Scriptures will relate the shortened lifespans. The canopy
was essentially a protection by God against harmful radiation. It was
because of sin that God removed His protection. An application for us
today...when we sin, God often removes His hand of protection and allows
us to suffer the consequences of our sins.
Gen 9:22
Ham, the father of Canaan saw his father's nakedness and told his two brothers outside.
One
definition of the Hebrew word "saw" (a combination of the Hebrew words
"raah" and "eth") is "to enjoy" or "have experience with". Ham didn't
just see Noah's nakedness. He did something about it. Why
else would a curse on Ham's descendents be a result? Also, could it be
that Ham got Noah drunk on purpose so that he could gaze on Noah's
nakedness? (see page 997)
Habakkuk 2:15
“Woe to him who gives drink to his neighbors, pouring it from the wineskin till they are drunk, so that he can gaze on their naked bodies.
Why
did Noah curse Ham’s son? It was Ham who did a disrespectful thing to
Noah, yet it was Ham's descendants who will suffer the consequences.
This is a classic example of how when we sin, it usually affects more
than just the sinner. Other people often get hurt in the process. (See the previous application for today).
Look back at Gen 6:6....and his heart was filled with pain.
Shouldn't we want to everything we can to keep from filling God's heart with pain?
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