Genesis 9:1-17 · God’s Covenant with Noah
Called Into Covenant
Genesis 9:1-17
Sermon
by Bill Bouknight
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Did you see the glorious color picture of the rainbow in last Monday's Commercial Appeal? It had to do with Davis Love's victory in last week's Professional Golf Association Championship. Just as he marched triumphantly onto the 18th green, a glorious rainbow arched across the sky. Though the PGA could not have known I would be preaching on the rainbow covenant today, the Lord did. It was mighty nice of them both to provide an advertisement in living color of my sermon focus for the weekend.

Genesis, Chapter 6, tells us that in the early years of human history people were so sinful that God grieved that He had ever created them. Therefore, God decided to send a world-wide flood to destroy all humanity except for Noah and his family. In other words, God started over. But immediately after the flood, God promised never again to destroy all humanity. From then on, for better or for worse, God would work with what he had created. God sent a rainbow as a reminder of that promise.

From the moment that rainbow first appeared! God also knew that a cross would one day be raised on a hill called Calvary. The rainbow committed God to provide a way that sinful humanity could be saved! Whatever the costs might be. God invited humanity into a covenant relationship with him. A covenant is an agreement based on love and trust. By way of contrast, a contract is an agreement based on law. A marriage, for example, is a covenant, an agreement based on love and trust. But a Donald Trump pre-nuptial agreement is a contract based on law.

Why did God want a covenant relationship with us? The staggering truth is that God yearns for our fellowship. Isn't that amazing?! From this first covenant! God led His people step by step across the pages of history and the Bible. Later covenants developed the relationship between God and His people. God’s people had to crawl spiritually before they could walk or run. Each covenant pointed toward the final, climactic covenant--the one that Jesus Christ would seal with his own blood.

Look with me at the development of covenant using your bulletin insert as a guide. The next covenant was with Abraham. He was called out of what is now Iraq and sent toward what is now Israel. In the covenant with Abraham, God assured him of divine care and providence. God also promised that the land which is now Israel would belong to Abraham's descendants and that they would be as numerous as the stars in the sky. Furthermore, God assured Abraham that through his descendants the entire world would be blessed. Abraham and his people were expected to obey and trust God. The male members of the family were commanded to be circumcised as a sign that they were God's people.

Notice how each covenant amplified and developed the previous one. God was on a faith journey with his people. Bob Kaye of the New York Times tells about taking a walk with his grandson Jeremy. They encountered a neighbor who asked his little boy, "How old are you, son?" "Three, " Jeremy replied. “And when will you be four?" Jeremy said, "When I get through being three." That's the way it was with covenant progress. When the people grew into Abraham's covenant, God then graduated them to the next one.

The next covenant was instituted by God hundreds of years later. The descendants of Abraham, the Jewish people, had become slaves in Egypt. God raised up Moses to liberate his people and to take them back to what is now Israel. Before the Promised Land, God gave a new covenant through Moses. Again, God assured that he would lead and bless the Hebrew people. Their responsibility was to trust God and be obedient.

God gave them the Ten Commandments as guidelines for righteous living.

Now, let's move forward once again, to approximately 1,000 years before the birth of Christ. King David was king, and he was "a man after God's own heart." In God’s covenant with David, He reaffirmed his earlier promises to Noah, Abraham and Moses. But God added this vital word: A Messiah who is directly from God, and this Messiah will be a descendent of King David.

Finally, after 1000 years, we come to the climax of the covenant story--the consummation of what a rainbow began thousands of years earlier. Jesus was born! An old prophet named Zechariah, under the influence of the Holy Spirit, declared "God has raised up a mighty savior for us in servant David...thus he has shown the mercy promised to our ancestors, and has remembered his holy covenant, swore to our ancestor Abraham…" (Luke 1:69, 72-73)

All those previous covenants, wonderful as they were, were just promissory notes, just previews of the coming attraction. On the night before Jesus was crucified, he “took a loaf of bread, and after blessing, he broke it, gave it and said, 'Take, eat; this is my body.’ Then he took a cup, and after giving thanks he gave it to them, saying, ‘drink from it, all of you; for this is my blood of the new covenant…” (Matt. 26: 26-28)

Why did there have to be a new covenant? Because the damage of sin was so deep and wide, nothing less than the perfect sacrifice of God himself could atone for it. Hebrews declared, "Jesus entered once for all into the Holy Place, not with the blood of goats and calves, but with his own blood, thus obtaining eternal redemption…For this reason he is the mediator of a new covenant…” (Hebrews 9: 12, 15) As wonderful as those previous covenants were, none could rescue us from the power of sin. None could reconcile us to God. None could change our hearts in a fundamental way. Only the new covenant in Jesus Christ could do all that.

Here is my testimony concerning the New Covenant: I came into this world fundamentally flawed, with a tendency towards selfishiness and rebellion, with an essential brokenness of mind and body. No amount of education or will-power or therapy could fix my deepest flaws. But when I confessed my condition to God, and believed the good news that his son Jesus died on a cross for me, God fundamentally changed my life. Now his Holy Spirit is at work in me, fixing and equipping me. My eternal destiny is assured. Though my present is not without problems, I am more than a conqueror because He lives in me, and his grace is sufficient. "I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me. That’s what it me to live in the New Covenant.

My friend James W. Moore, pastor in Houston, tells the a young man whose wife had died, leaving him with their small son. Back home from the cemetery, they went to bed early, completely worn out from grieving. As they lay there in the darkness, sharing the same bed, numb with sorrow, the little boy broke the stillness with the disturbing question, "Daddy, where is Mommy?” The father hugged the little boy and assured him that mommy was in heaven. But the little boy continued to ask painful questions: "Why isn't she here? When is she coming back?" Finally he said, "Daddy, if your face is toward me, I think I can go to sleep now." And before long, he had drifted off.

The father lay there in the darkness, and then in childlike faith, lifted up his own hurting heart to his Father in heaven, "0 God, the way is dark, and I confess that right now I can not see my way through. But if your face is toward me, somehow I think I can make it." The wonderful news of the New Covenant is that God's face is towards us. If we repent of sin and trust in Jesus Christ as Lord, then once again God is our God and we are his people.

Have you accepted the gracious offer of new life in Jesus Christ? You may do so today, using the form that is printed in your bulletin. Notice that there is a space on the form for declaring your life to Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior. There is an additional space for renewing such a commitment that perhaps has gotten a bit rusty and dusty through neglect. But there is an additional commitment. If one has received the good news, one is obligated to share it with others. There are thousands of persons living here in Memphis that have no personal relationship with Jesus Christ. You may be God’s best chance to reach them. Again, notice your sign-up form. There are several ways listed there by which you can help Christ Church reach out to thousands of lost persons on behalf of Christ.

Dr. Oliver Buford, a missionary in Liberia, was on his way to a particular town one day to preach. He and his driver came to a fork in the road, unsure of which way to proceed. A Liberian happened to be standing there. Dr. Buford mentioned the name of the town where they were going. The Liberian knew just enough English to point in a certain direction and say, “Thataway.” You may not be able to preach, but if you can just stand at crucial forks in people’s lives, pointing in the direction of Christ, and saying “Thataway,” God can use you to save souls. And if you just invite them to Christ Church, I will invite them to Christ.

Several months ago Margaret Wallace of our church was presenting a children’s sermon in our 8:30 service. She added several of her own verses to the beloved children’s song, “Jesus Loves Me.” It so touched by heart that I asked for a copy of it. It is a call to help us share Christ.

“Jesus loves me, this I know, for the Bible tells me so.
There are others who do not know; help me Lord to tell them so.
Though I’m small I can be heard; I’ll tell everyone the good word.
For each person I will pray; they’ll find Jesus this very day.
I won’t stop till it’s so, cause Jesus wants everyone to know!”

Now, I invited you to prayerfully consider and respond to the invitation on your bulletin insert. In a few minutes, I will invite you to fold those forms and pass them to the center aisle. The ushers will collect them as we sing the concluding hymn. Or, you may bring them to this alter personally and leave them here as you dedicate them with prayer. Now let’s consider God’s call to the covenant.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Bill Bouknight