Genesis 6:1-8:22 · The Flood
God of Wrath and Grace
Genesis 6:1-8:22
Sermon
by Bill Bouknight
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There is a certain character on a British TV situation comedy who is always saying to someone else, “I have good news and bad news for you. Which do you want first?” Somehow the bad news always turns out to be worse than the good news is good. One day a hospital surgeon told his patient, “ I have some good news and some bad news. Which do you want to hear first?” The patient said, “Give me the bad news.” The doctor said, “We are going to have to amputate both of your feet.” The patient said, “Oh, that’s terrible! What’s the good news?” The doctor said, “The patient in the next room wants to buy your slippers.”

Our scripture today has both bad news and good news about God. The bad news is that He is a God of wrath who can not abide our sin. But the good news is that even his wrath points us toward his grace. The story of Noah tells us that long ago God wiped out all life from this planet except for one man’s family and selected pairs of the Earth’s creatures. While we don’t know precisely how many people perished, it was a holocaust. Thus, we are face to face with the wrath of God, a subject we don’t even like to think about.

We Methodists try to subcontract the message about wrath of God to certain other denominations which I won’t mention. We Methodists focus on the grace of God. But Methodists did not always avoid the subject of God’s wrath. John Wesley’s original invitation to membership in Methodism was simple: “Come all who wish to flee the wrath to come.” Of course, if we minimize one side of God’s character, our witness is whop-sided, and we do not declare the full counsel of God. St. Paul in Romans 11:22 urged us to “Note then the kindness and severity of God.”

Somewhere I heard about an indulgent mother who was trying to get her 5 year old to come to supper. She went out into the back yard and shouted to her son in the adjacent yard, “Honey, this is the third time I have called you. You must come right now, or I’m afraid I’ll have to punish. I’m going to count to three and if you’re not headed this way by then, father and I will have to discuss punishment. One…two…two and one fourth…Baby, better do what Mommy says….two and a half” About that time, an exasperated neighbor shouted across the fence, “THREE for crying out loud!”

This scripture from Genesis, as hard as it is, reminds us that God is not a doting parent who indulges our disobedience. God is altogether righteous and holy. Though God is slow to anger, he is not to be trifled with.

Here two truths that God calls me to declare based upon our scripture. The first is this:

God’s Wrath is a Fearful Reality.

It is what Oswald Chambers calls “the blazing holiness of God.” The Hebrew word for anger occurs 455 times in the Old Testament. On 375 of those occasions it refers to God’s anger. Remember, at times Jesus blazed with anger at the scribes and Pharisees. The Apostle Paul declared, “For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and wickedness of men…”

I have a fear that one day God may confront us preachers and declare, “You unfaithful servants, you changed my love into a sentiments, maudlin mess of mush; and you never warned my people about judgment, justice and my hatred of sin. Lots of people went to hell because you never sounded an alarm.”

When prosperous people like us show callous disregard for the poverty stricken, violence-plagued children of the Memphis housing projects, God’s wrath will be experienced. When a parent neglects a child in his growing years, rationalizing that the extra time on the job buys the family lots of goodies, that parent will experience God’s wrath later. When a person postpones a decision to receive Christ as Savior and Lord, then tries to fill the spiritual vacuum with alcohol or drugs, God’s wrath is on the way. St. Paul tell us in holy scripture that if a person spurns the offer of Christ, then “It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of a living God.” When a person practices any other sexual lifestyle other than fidelity in marriage or celibacy in singleness, God’s wrath is on the way.

But some will say, “Wait a minute. God is love, and that love is incompatible with judgment and wrath.” I don’t think so. I remember my father, dear old Papa. Goodness knows, he was loving and would sacrifice endlessly for us. But I’m here to tell you that I have seen and felt his wrath. I recall a time as a teenager when I was driving too fast. I was stopped by one of Lee County’s finest lawmen. In that little town, the police knew all the teenagers. He lectured me a bit and then said, “Well, Billy, I’m not going to fine you, but first thing tomorrow morning, I’m going to talk to your father about this.” I said, “Wait a minute, sir. If you don’t mind, I would prefer to pay the fine. Whatever you do, don’t talk to Papa!” There was no policeman anywhere as tough as Papa. He could rattle the rafters without even raising his voice. The electricity of his wrath could make your hair stand on end. You see, Papa hated with white-hot intensity anything that could harm me.

That’s the way God is. He is concentrated, pure righteousness and holiness. He hates sin with a seething passion. There is never a wink in God’s eye when it comes to sin. God knows that sin can wreck our lives and doom our eternal souls. In verse 5 of our text we read that in the days of Noah, “the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.” This is the strongest statement concerning human depravity in the Old Testament. Not much has changed, has it? The imagination of many people is still filled with evil. For example, the newspaper reminded us last week that we have satanic cults here in Shelby County, routinely offering animal sacrifices in their pagan rituals. In recent years, some so-called artists have created blasphemous statues, funded by tax monies, as part of the National Endowment for the Arts. As wonderful as the Internet is, it too is afflicted by the desperate wickedness of persons. Some adults misuse it to lure children into sexual abuse.

Verse 6 of our text tells us that God was grieved that he had created human beings. Grief is a love word. Because God cannot overlook our sin, there is always agony in the heart of God. Calvary is a finished sacrifice, but as long as any of us sins, there will be agony in the heart of God.

Note throughout the patience of God. It took quite a while for Noah to build that ark; all during the process we assume that he was preaching and warning the people to repent. The unwillingness of people to heed Noah’s warning and turn from sin must have distressed God. Speaking of patience, waiting for the snails to board the ark must have strained even God’s patience. Peter, writing in the New Testament, declared, “God waiting patiently in the days of Noah, during the building of the ark, in which a few, that is, eight persons, were saved through water…”

Have some of us been trying God’s patience to the breaking point, persisting in conduct and lifestyles that we know are wrong? One never knows when it could be too late to repent. The first truth we must see in the Noah story is this: God’s wrath is a fearful reality.

The other truth we must see is this: The Last Word With God is Always Grace.

Grace means undeserved love, unmerited favor. There is an ark in every flood, and a rainbow after every storm. The last word in our text is not about judgment but about grace. See verse 18, “But I will establish my covenant with you; and you shall come into the ark, you, your sons, your wife, and your son’s wives with you.”

God’s wrath is always corrective or redemptive. Its purpose is to get our attention, to turn us around, to point us toward the grace of God. Paul wrote these words to the Corinthians: “When we are judged by the Lord, we are being disciplined so that we will not be condemned with the world.” There is an ark in every flood and a rainbow after every storm.

Let me close by telling you about a friend of mine in South Carolina whom I will call Frank. He was a banker when I first met him. He and his wife had two young children. He called me one day, desperately in trouble. He had borrowed funds from his bank secretly without going through regular procedures. Even though he had returned the money, the bank’s accounting procedures caught it. He was fired and charged with a

criminal offense. I remember sitting in court with Frank the day he was declared guilty. He was sentenced to a year in the federal correctional institution in Montgomery, Alabama. I visited him several times during that year. If anyone experienced the wrath of God, it was he. He did wrong and paid a fearful price. His wife divorced him. Many people in his situation would have despaired of life itself. But there is an ark in every flood and a rainbow after every storm.

God is alive and well, even in the federal prisons. On one of my visits there, Frank told me some of his past history. He had grown up in a poor, rural town. Athletic achievement was his only ticket to college. He took it. There he met a beautiful girl from a wealthy background. They married after college. He never felt good enough for her, so he tried to purchase her love with a lavish lifestyle. If she even hinted at something she wanted, he would buy it. When she wanted a larger house, he took money from the bank temporarily in order to swing the deal.

Prison was a harsh wake-up call for Frank, a taste of God’s wrath. But there he heard the good news that he, just plain Frank from rural Georgia, was vitally important to Almighty God, so much so that Jesus had died on a cross for him, and would have done it for him alone. Frank decided in that Montgomery prison to trust in Jesus as his Savior and Lord. Subsequently, God transformed his life.

Today Frank is a successful salesman. Though his marriage could not be saved, he is a wonderful father. He knows who he is and whose he is. His security is anchored to Christ. Frank was totally changed by the grace of God. But before he experienced that grace, he tasted the wrath of God.

Perhaps you have already experienced the wrath of God. But remember, there is an ark in every flood and a rainbow follows every storm. When you receive Jesus Christ by faith as your Savior and Lord, that ark and rainbow are yours! And that’s the good news!

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