Genesis 9:1-17 · God’s Covenant with Noah
The Covenant Of Amazing Grace
Genesis 9:1-17
Sermon
by Durwood L. Buchheim
Loading...

"The earth is degenerating these days. Bribery and corruption abound. Children no longer mind their parents. Everyone wants to write a book, and it is evident the end of the world is fast approaching."1

Sounds like the evening news or tomorrow’s headlines, doesn’t it? The truth is that this description of society was found inscribed on an Assyrian tablet dated 2000 B.C.

Jurgen Moltmann, professor of theology at the University of Tubingen, West Germany, shares this modern observation concerning our anxious age:

The nightmare of Armageddon has replaced the political vision of hope for life, freedom, and justice throughout the world: The monster of the nuclear apocalypse is felt everywhere. "Apocalypse Now" is not only a film title these years; people everywhere are hearing the bells of the world’s clock ring for the last time. "Five minutes to twelve" is a running introduction to new terror reports, be it about environmental pollution, about methods of mass extermination or about the starvation of millions in the Third World.2

We are at the beginning of the season of Lent. This is a precious time of the year for many Christians, our annual journey to Easter. Through the gospel reading for this Sunday, we are reminded that this journey begins in the wilderness. The business of living has been compared to a wilderness journey. We know that wildernesses can foster the spirit of worry and anxiety. Our age has been called the "age of anxiety."

So it seems that the basic worries of life never change, but neither do the promises of God! Once again we will hear these promises through some great and memorable stories from the Old Testament. Appropriately we begin our Lenten journey in the first book of the Old Testament, which is known by its Greek name, Genesis, which means beginning or coming into being. One of the great emphases of this book of beginnings is the promise of God.

The conclusion to the powerful story of Noah and the flood contains such a promise.

This promise of hope comes at a hopeless time. In the first six chapters of Genesis we see the progress of sin, like a fast growing cancer moving into and corrupting all society. The fall of Adam and Eve set in motion a chain reaction of evil and the whole universe was infected. In this long period of time things went from bad to worse. Cain murdered his brother Abel. Lamech introduced polygamy. Unnatural marriage alliances were formed.

We read in the sixth chapter of Genesis, "The Lord saw that the wickedness of humankind was great in the earth, and that every inclination of the thoughts of their heart was only evil continually. And the Lord was sorry that he made humankind on the earth, and it grieved him to his heart." Sin is unchecked and the universe is moving toward disaster. When evil becomes a way of life and decency long forgotten and absent, the pressure for moral justice brings with it forces of destruction. The flood is the judgment of God, but also the inevitable fruit of the growing evil of humanity.

But equally important, God demonstrates mercy by delivering a remnant with whom a new beginning is made. It is important to note that God’s judgment comes from a heart of sorrow and not from a vindictive, revengeful spirit. The ultimate aim of God’s wrath is repentance and restoration, never revenge and destruction. This hope-filled purpose of God is shared in the promise of our text, "I establish my covenant with you, that never again shall all flesh be cut off by the waters of a flood, and never again shall there be a flood to destroy the earth."

Since God’s promise is contained in God’s "covenant," it is important that we have some understanding as to the meaning of this rather strange word - at least strange to modern ears. Nevertheless, try to stay tuned to my wavelength, because this is an important biblical word and it will be back time and time again in the Lenten texts that are to come.

To ease us into these covenant waters, think agreement for the word covenant.

There are three main agreements described in the first five books of the Bible: 1) The agreement with Abraham, where God says, "I am God Almighty; walk before me, and be blameless. And I will make my covenant between me and you, and will multiply you exceedingly;" 2) The agreement with the children of Israel made at Mount Sinai, where God says, "You have seen what I did to the Egyptians, and how I bore you on eagles’ wings and brought you to myself. Now, therefore, if you will obey my voice and keep my covenant, you shall be my own possession among all peoples; for all the earth is mine, and you shall be to me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation" (Exodus 19:4-6).

These important agreements (covenants) are made by God with the people of Israel. It is God’s redemptive initiative that establishes these agreements. They are agreements (covenants) of grace. Out of these agreements of grace come the obligation of God’s people to live obediently in these "agreed-upon" relationships.

In our text for today, we have the third God-established agreement. However, this agreement is not made only with the people of Israel, but with all humankind. It could be described as God’s "amazing grace" agreement never again to destroy the earth by flood. This is the promise of hope in divine preservation.

It is the promise of a new beginning that is the foundation of this hope. God’s promises lead to a new future. Just as God once began with Adam and Eve, God now begins with the family of Noah. This new beginning does not take place in a new paradise, a new garden of Eden. People are not magically transformed into goodness. We are still sinful. Sin has brought changes into God’s creation with which we still have to live and contend. But God loves us! The great hope here is that God has not quit on us or on creation. God still rules. God’s promises and commands still hold. God remains lovingly concerned about us and the world we live in. After the flood (judgment), humanity is permitted to begin anew, with new promises and blessings.

The first sign of that promise of hope was the single olive leaf which the dove brought back to the ark. In our text this hope is expressed in the covenant relationship, "I establish my covenant with you, that never again shall all flesh be cut off by the waters of a flood ..." (v. 11).

God’s covenants (remember, we are talking about God’s agreements) are guaranteed by signs. In the case of this amazing grace covenant, the sign is the rainbow. The rainbow, which appears after storms, is a fitting and beautiful symbol of hope. Through the chaos that the sin-storm has caused in our world, God is still present with a patient love that promises never again to destroy the earth with a catastrophe like the flood.

We have hope because our God is a gracious and patient God. In the covenant with Noah, God demonstrates love for all living creatures. In a later time, Peter makes the connection with Christian baptism, as he recalls for us the days of Noah and how eight persons were saved through the water (1 Peter 3:20). As the flood cleansed the world from the effects of sin, so the waters of baptism cleanse us. In this great hope there is power to face the stormy seas of life.

We have to be careful here that our faith in God’s promises, which are the foundation of our hope, do not make us "passive" Christians. This happens when we substitute faith for our human responsibility. When this happens faith becomes an escape hatch and we become resigned to our fate - what will be, will be. This kind of faith is not childlike but childish and irresponsible. We humans now have the power to annihilate ourselves. The covenant with Noah is no guarantee that God somehow is going to limit our power to destroy ourselves if we want to.

In the real world hope also has to do battle with the spirit of cynicism. Cynics see little or no hope for our time. On the other hand this kind of hopeless spirit can and does lead to violence and destruction - a what-have-we-got-to-lose attitude. On the other hand the cynical spirit is not far removed from the spirit of eat, drink and be merry. Just leave us alone. Eventually the world will be destroyed, either slowly but surely through pollution, or quickly by the bomb. So leave us alone to enjoy what remains and what is left of a world that is beyond salvation. What else makes sense but to live for the moment and to live for ourselves?

But Christian hope is not to be found in a blind faith that retreats from reality and certainly not in a cynical denial of hope. Faith holds together in tension, both our experiences and our expectations.3 We long for justice and desire a God who will guarantee it, but this also makes us vulnerable to irresponsible escapism and false religious comfort. We come back to the primary basis of our hope which is God’s grace and not our experiences. "Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen" (Hebrews 11:1).

For the Christian, the most powerful symbol for "assurance of things hoped for" is the cross of Christ. The cross is the center of our journey through life. It reminds us of struggle, the struggle for faith that we might have hope. But like the story of the flood, only with a how much more the cross of Christ reveals the continuing costly and amazing grace of God. Once more the season of Lent invites us to be still and trust this grace, for in this amazing grace is our hope. In this hope there is power to live the purposeful life.

Again quoting Moltmann:

"The Christian hope is not directed for a happy end of world history.... In the moment of deathly danger, God’s stories in the Bible speak and awaken hope where otherwise there is nothing else to hope. The memories of being rescued from disaster do not deny disaster. They speak of the God who made the hopeless disaster of his people his own and who led his people out of it.... The answer of hope to the threatening danger of annihilation is the life with a raised head and unequivocal self-commitment. And if the end of the world would happen tomorrow, ‘Let us plant our apple tree today.’ (M. Luther)"4


1. The source of this quotation is unknown to the author.

2. Jurgen Moltmann, "God, Hope, and Nuclear Catastrophe," (Perspectives, April 1988, pp. 7-10).

3. Douglas John Hall, Lighten Our Darkness, (Philadelphia, Westminster Press, 1976). I am indebted to this book and other writings (and lectures) by Hall on the matter of realistic hope in our time.

4. Ibid, Jurgen Moltmann, p. 10.

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Power To Change, The, by Durwood L. Buchheim