Genesis 9:1-17 · God’s Covenant with Noah
Wild Beasts
Genesis 9:8-17
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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As Lent begins let your congregation reflect not just on the private, individual journey to the cross, but on the cosmic, communal nature of God's redeeming activity.

This Sunday marks the first Sunday of Lent. Lent is traditionally thought of as a special period of time, once again forty days, set aside for introspection, self-denial, prayer, and study as the events of Passion week and Easter Sunday approach. As Christians we should find ourselves journeying towards the cross, drawing nearer week by week. The focus of this week's texts startle us with the suggestion that this is not a human journey only, but that all of creation accompanies us. Plants, animals, the entire earth itself, join with humanity on this spiritual homecoming, through the covenants established between God and creation eons ago.

Of all our many sins and shortcomings worthy of contemplation during the Lenten season, probably the sin of species pride, or specieism, is the one most rarely considered. If anything, Lent probably has elevated the human-centeredness of the Christian faith, focusing on the impending extraordinary acts of love and sacrifice, and on the wondrous salvific nature of Christ's death and resurrection for all humanity. But this week's texts should redirect our homocentrism, and force us to acknowledge the special relationship that exists between God and all of creation. The reality of that relationship points up the arrogance of the human perspective - a perspective that declares other orders of creation as "lower forms of life," that is based on a skewed interpretation of and fixation on dominion, and fails to recognize the interdependence of all created life. By abandoning our species pride we may be able to perceive the scope and depth of God's sacrificial love, not just for humanity, but for the vast complex of all the cosmos. As John 3:16 is best translated: "For God so loved the cosmos ..."

Let us start this year's Lenten journey by recognizing God's unique commitment to all creation, which redefines our own relationship to the earth and its inhabitants. Regardless of what expectant parents are prone to say, we don't come into the world. We come out of it, as both creation stories in Genesis 1 and 2 make plain. Nature is not our resource, our tool, our commodity, our machinery, our stage. It does not speak our language. It is our brother, our sister, our ancestor, with a voice different from ours. Shock your people out of their specieism by informing them that the Bible teaches (in Genesis 1) that God had a separate and distinct relationship with dogs and cats and even plants before God had a relationship with them.

The creation story in Genesis 1 portrays God delightedly weaving together the various fabrics of God's imagination into the complex network of a living, breathing planet. Each and every phase of this creative activity bears the personal fingerprints of God. The human beings God creates on the sixth day of the Genesis 1 story reside in the same relationship to God as does the rest of creation: complete dependence upon God for their very existence, and continued dependence upon their fellow creatures for sustaining their existence. There is no hint that the relationship between God and non-human creation is diminished in any way because of the presence of this new human order of life. Indeed, the text this week from Genesis 9 indicates that God still perceives creation as a holistic unit of life, which is why God's wrath and the flood waters are poured out on both human and non-human creation alike.

If all the earth suffers with humanity in the deluge of punishment meted out in the flood, then, this week's texts teaches us that it is with all created things that God re-establishes an enduring covenantal relationship, unmindful of the sins and shortcomings this life brings with it. 1 Peter 3:18-22 reminds us of the miraculous continuation of God's commitment to this covenant through the redeeming nature of Christ's death and resurrection. If Christ's death was a saving event for even the antediluvian generation, then salvation is for the entire order of created beings. All those who faced punishment are now redeemed. All life is now able to achieve its fullest expression of being through the grace of God's sacrificial love. The gospel is not simply news of our redemption from the world. The gospel promises redemption of the world.

It is no coincidence that the somber period of Lent occurs, for those of us in northern climates at least, during the late Winter/early Spring - a time still cold, still barren, still swaddled in silence. As Easter and Spring approach, the cycle of life begins again: Leaves begin to bud, grass begins to grow, hibernating animals awaken, the entire earth rouses to its rebirth. All creation not only illustrates for us the redemption of life through Christ's death and resurrection; it also participates in that event as full partner with humanity in the covenanted love of God the Creator.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Works, by Leonard Sweet