Friday, May 11, 2012

Birth of Nations - Genesis 10, 11


Sermon Nuggets Mon May 7 -            

Verses – Gen 10 - This is the account of Shem, Ham and Japheth, Noah’s sons, who themselves had sons after the flood.
The Japhethites;  The Hamites  The Semites
32 These are the clans of Noah’s sons, according to their lines of descent, within their nations. From these the nations spread out over the earth after the flood

The Birth of Nations

            We have been studying how  Noah and his family were saved while the rest of the world was destroyed in God's just judgment. When the flood was over, Noah presented an offering to the Lord. God was pleased and made a promise to Noah, "Never again will I curse the ground because of man, even though every inclination of his heart is evil from childhood." (8:21) And then God gave Noah (and us) a rainbow which was to always serve as a reminder of God's promise.

            The flood is over. The ground has dried. But the problem remains. God still says that "every inclination of man's heart is evil from childhood." He does not say this in the past tense . . . it is present tense. The idea that mankind is basically good, or born innocent, is something that is never supported in Scripture. God had punished the world because they revolted against righteousness

            Beginning with chapter 10 we have recorded the descendents of the three sons of Noah- Ham, Shem, and Jepheth.  Genesis again demonstrates the birth of the nations as revealed through the story of the tower of Babel in the next chapter. But the records of the Bible want us to understand how with the long years and the blessings of the Lord people begin to populate the earth and seemingly divide up according to clans.

            The events in chapter 10 and 11 are significant because it helps explain the beginning of nations as a further result of sin. I am troubled how quickly mankind moves toward evil against their fellow man. I am appalled how quickly nations rise up against nations and how pride and power is at odds from the smallest of tribes to the largest. Prejudice and hatred keep creeping in the most unlikely spots. Why racial tension continues within churches and ethnic superiority is practiced among Christians is still to our shame.

            I am taken back when white Christians use such offensive terms as' nigger'. I can’t understand it when I am in Russia how among some believers showed discrimination against the Ukrainians. When exploring the opportunity to teach in Ukraine I was not prepared for the question why I would even considered teaching in Russia. It was as if I had to pick one country or the other.  Jewish Christians and Arab Christians have much to get over to love one another.

Of course the work of God in our lives does break down the barriers. It is indeed the will of God that we be a family of God by faith and not divided up by race, or nationality. But even among those born again Christians they were tolerance but sometimes little love. I think we can and should recognize differences, but also promote what causes unity..

             Even when there is a rebirth of the world, the heart needs changing. Even with a second change the world doesn’t take long to degrade back into sinful ways. That is the story of mankind.

But look at our own lives. Many are given a second chance and they go back to their old ways. God gave mankind a second chance. Not that they started back with the Garden of Eden, not that they were without sin like they were in paradise, rather they could begin anew with sinful natures to teach the truths of God and the horrible destruction of the world by flood.  We need changed hearts. We need a Savior.

Pastor Dale

Sermon Nuggets Tues May 8 

Gen 11:  Now the whole world had one language and a common speech. 2 As people moved eastward, they found a plain in Shinarand settled there.
3 They said to each other, “Come, let’s make bricks and bake them thoroughly.” They used brick instead of stone, and tar for mortar. 4 Then they said, “Come, let us build ourselves a city, with a tower that reaches to the heavens, so that we may make a name for ourselves; otherwise we will be scattered over the face of the whole earth.”
5 But the Lord came down to see the city and the tower the people were building. 6 The Lord said, “If as one people speaking the same language they have begun to do this, then nothing they plan to do will be impossible for them. 7 Come, let us go down and confuse their language so they will not understand each other.”
8 So the Lord scattered them from there over all the earth, and they stopped building the city. 9 That is why it was called Babel —because there the Lord confused the language of the whole world. From there the Lord scattered them over the face of the whole earth.


The Cause of Disorder - Man’s pride.

As the genealogies are listed in the latter part of this chapter we see how theses nations from Ham, Shem, and Jepheth’s lines began. Since the whole earth had one language and one speech God brought confusion when people groups could no longer understand one another.

The act of building a tower at Babel was not the sin. Sky scrappers are not the sin against God. Eventually we have built buildings that reach the heavens. I’ve been to the top of the IDS building in Minneapolis, as well as the World Trade Center in New York City and we tried to get to the top of the Sears Tower in Chicago, still the tallest. The building in and of itself was not the issue. As usual, the Bible gives us the very answer to our question. What sin did they commit? V. 4 They pursued personal greatness. The act of building Babel was not the sin but constructing the tower to declare their own greatness was their downfall. Notice the pronouns. “Come let us.  Build ourselves and city so we may make a name for ourselves.

They were trying to make a name for themselves. They were looking for fame. They wanted the glory instead of God. That pride is the center of most sin. That was what Satan centered in on with Eve and Adam. You will be like God if you eat this fruit. That was the sin that caused the fall of Lucifer from heaven. He was angel of beauty who wanted to be like God and even surpass him.

Pride is at the core to rebel in many ways against God. Stuart Biscoe passed on the story of a man who was so humble said, “don’t bother opening the door, I’ll just slide underneath.”

  When he did he looked and stood up and said, “Did you see that?”

In our society when sports figures make such astounding salaries for playing a game. When university basketball stars can think they do not have to go to class like everyone else, and when you don’t play up to my pride I will show you I don’t need you. I’ll go to the NBA and make millions of dollars. When presidents, governors, or policemen think they are above the law it all stems from pride. “I am better than the rest.” That is the beginning of destruction, disunity and downfall.

CS Lewis writes. “Pride gets no pleasure out of having something, only out of having more of it than the next man. We say that people are proud of being rich, or cleaver, or good looking, but they are not. They are proud of being richer, or cleverer, or better looking than others. It is in the comparison that makes you proud- the pleasure of being above the rest. Nearly all those evils which people put down to greed or selfishness are really far more the result of pride.”

Pride is the enmity against God. As long as you are proud, you cannot know God. Wherever we find that our religious life is making us feel that we are better than someone else, we may be sure that we are being acted on, not by God, but by our pride.      

I am reminded of the story of the frog that died because of pride. The birds were preparing to go south for the winter. The frog thought he’d like to escape winter go with them. He came up with a plan. He asked the neighbor geese if they would hook a stick around their feet between two of them and he would hold on in the middle with his mouth and they could carry him south. The plan worked fine until they were going by another flock of birds who said, “What a marvelous idea, who ever thought of something as brilliant as that?” Trying to answer, the frog plunged to his death.

Pride comes in many forms but has only one end: Destruction. The people in the land of Shinar sought to become famous by building a magnificent city and tower. Their ambitions consume them.

If we were to put on a seminar for corporate executives, managers, and secular leaders wouldn’t the efforts of the people of Babylon show successful characteristics?  Greatness, Glory, and Unity would serve as a great outline to a motivational talk. Be number one. Up to this point every significant building or creation project had been either orchestrated by God or carried out by God ... to bring himself glory. At the core of our rebellion is the pride of mankind.

Pastor Dale


Sermon Nuggets Weds May 9 

Verses- Gen 11: 4 Then they said, “Come, let us build ourselves a city, with a tower that reaches to the heavens, so that we may make a name for ourselves; otherwise we will be scattered over the face of the whole earth.”
5 But the Lord came down to see the city and the tower the people were building. 6 The Lord said, “If as one people speaking the same language they have begun to do this, then nothing they plan to do will be impossible for them

Cause of Disorder- Man’s Accomplishments

In addition to the pride of mankind, there is another way it which it is displayed. It is the misconception we are in charge. They believed they could do what no one else could do. They would build a city, with a tower that reaches to the heavens. We can do it. We’re number one. Pride is often displayed in the power of mankind. What is it that man cannot accomplish or set his heart out to do? They wanted to reach to the heavens, to be famous, to control their future destiny. They wanted to be like God, and they used their skill and know how to do it.

Baked bricks and tar were the keys to their fame and future. They wanted to use hard brick and tar, rather than stone and mortar. They used what was believed to be a more advanced technology of firing bricks in kilns to make them harder and more durable. They also made them larger (up to a foot square) and flatter in order to support more weight than an ordinary brick. That was advanced technology.

That is much the way people today speak of computers, the internet, cell phones, and entertainment technology. The story of the Titanic is about man's misplaced trust in his own inventions and ingenuity. "Not even God can sink Titanic," they said at the start of the voyage. So confident were they, they didn't even carry a full load of life rafts. The latest technology assured them that the ship was unsinkable. And yet, ironically, the very technology that made Titanic "unsinkable," speeded her sinking.
           
            Now there's nothing wrong with technology, per se, just as there is nothing wrong with baked bricks, tar, and tall towers. It's what we do with them and why we build them. When our faith, hope, and trust is in our tools, when we use our technology to reach up to heavens, to amass fame and fortune, to seize control our destiny and shake our fist at God, then we are guilty of misplaced power.
           
This tower is sort of an architectural symbol, a means for them to assert their greatness. If men were allowed to build this city, despite the many obstacles, then men would erroneously conclude that they could do anything they set their minds to. A bit of that mentality was evidenced when man first set foot on the moon. If you recall what was said, "One small step for man, one giant step for mankind." When man's ingenuity was successfully employed to overcome the many barriers to reaching the moon's surface, man felt that no problem was beyond human solution.
           
We don’t have to look far to see how things promoted to be the answer doesn’t match up to the hype. Everything has a glitch in it. A rocket gets lost. A computer is hacked. A reactor melts down. Oil spills. I think God has a sense of humor when it comes to showing man how really powerful and great he is. And then laughs when he brings him down to humility.
           
We tend to think that the work of our hands will assure us of some kind of immortality beyond the grave. They not only wanted the largest city with the highest tower... they wanted it to last a long time.. Such power causes disorder.

God had a plan. Since they forgot about God as they made their plans, it is no surprise that the Lord's plans are a bit different from theirs. Look at what they were trying to do. to sidestep God's instructions and not "be scattered over the face of the earth" as God commanded. Man’s plans were to build a monument "to themselves" (they were seeking to be honored and revered by others . . . a right that is God's alone) to reach to the heavens.

The problem in Babel is the problem in our day. It is essentially a belief which ignores God. It claims man’s greatness, not God, is the most important part of the universe. We, as humans, determine our own morals. We get to decide what is right and what is wrong. Instead of looking to God for those standards, we use reason and experience to determine what is moral and what is not.

It is arrogant, foolish and even blasphemous for human beings to claim they can control their own destiny apart from God. We have gotten so used to listening to secularist propaganda, that even many Christians have unknowingly bought into some of the deceptions.

So what was God's response?  Vs 7 Come let us go down. He confused language. Boy did he ever! Today there are over 3,000 languages and dialects. That ceased the building project and scattered the people He altered everything they were planning. Their disobedience went against God's plan.

Pastor Dale

Sermon Nuggets Thurs May 10

Verses- Gen 11: 8 So the Lord scattered them from there over all the earth, and they stopped building the city. 9 That is why it was called Babel —because there the Lord confused the language of the whole world. From there the Lord scattered them over the face of the whole earth.        


God’s Cure includes God’s Will     

            Man’s plans is not God’s will. God’s will for the race was to be fruitful and multiply, to fill the earth and subdue it.  They had a different plan and that was to unite and stay together. So judgment fell and to insure they would spread around, language was used to divide people into groups so they wandered off with people they understood and formed their own people groups. This was the birth of nations. Chapter 10 is an explanation 

It was God’s will to have Christians go throughout the world. They didn’t want to do it in the book of Acts, so God also caused a great persecution to occur so people of the world could hear the good news, and what happened? Christians were scattered. It is always best to follow God’s will, because one way or another He does get it accomplished. Sooner or later it happens.
The people wanted to make a name for themselves. They want to accomplish something of which they can be proud. But God has another plan. Oh, yes, He lets them make a name for themselves: "Babel." Throughout history it will be a name synonymous with failure. Rather than becoming famous, these people become infamous.

Everything backfires at Babel, but that's no surprise. Human beings are no match for God. When there are conflicts between God's plans and man's plans, it doesn't take a genius to figure out who is going to win. Human beings versus God is an even greater mismatch. Even if our entire race pooled all of its power, wealth, wisdom and weapons, we would still be no match for God.

Psalm 2:2,4 The kings of the earth take stand and the rulers gather together against the Lord and against his Anointed One. The One enthroned in heaven laughs; the Lord scoffs at them.”

 That is still true today. Stealth bombers, super computers and laser weapons don't change the equation one bit. God is God. We are not. He alone is the Lord and sovereign of the universe.

The lesson from Babel is that man is not God. God is God. If that's true, it is then foolish to ignore the Lord while making plans and living life. We cannot be independent of God. Our plans will always fail unless they are consistent with His will. We are no match for God.

Now God’s will is order in a way that may surprise you. Acts 2 talks about the order and unity. Notice at Pentecost where there is many languages there is one message. Do you know what it is? It is the gospel! In the gospel there is no language barrier. In this coming of the Holy Spirit God has another plan. It is to populate heaven and 3,000 people were added that day alone. God’s will is to bring righteousness and forgiveness to mankind. That happens through the work of Jesus Christ on the cross and the infilling of the Holy Spirit in our lives.

God is seen in both the story of Babel and Penticost accomplishing His will and yet in one passage He is dispersing and in the other gathering. God does the same in the church.

Sometimes when men fight for power, he scatters. Others times he blesses and gathers. Sometimes when men want their plans, he scatters; seek God’s will he gathers. The will of God is always revealed in the word and the principles of it. Obedience is key.


Pastor Dale


Sermon Nuggets Fri May 11

Verses Gen 11:1-9

God’s Cure includes God’s Ways

God’s ways are not always man’s ways.  Our technologies can't save us. Our tools and toys can't bring us to heaven; they can't secure our destinies. Only God can do that. On He can reach down to us to help us, to save us. The work of God is the cross.

Jesus came to redeem us. He empowered his followers to make disciples of all nations by means of baptizing and teaching. It was certainly the work of God at Pentecost. Nothing like that is man’s power or plan or procedure. Thousands of people were baptized and taught in their own language. Now we have a new birth in the nations. It is a spiritual birth. People representing the nations of the world, repented and were baptized. They turned from sin to Christ, from unbelief to faith, from despair to hope, from death to life. .

I remember listening to a speaker a number of years ago who asked  “If God were to remove His Holy Spirit from the earth, would your church be any different? He pointed out that a lot of things we do as Christians, a lot of things we do in church, could probably be done without God's help. We could still have services, we could still sing hymns, we could still have potluck dinners, and sports teams. We could carry on with teaching the Bible and we could all still be nice to each other. We can sing songs of praise, but without God it is not worship. We can be Minnesota nice to each other, but without God it is not fellowship. I can preach heart-warming and thought-provoking sermons, but without God they will never provide nurture for our souls
           
My fear is that sometimes even when we do church, we kind of leave God out. We do things a certain way not because it is what the Lord is calling us to do, but because  everyone else is doing it this way. Or because we have always done it this way. Or because more people will come to our church if we do this.

            As we look and plan for the future how do we protect from the tools that help in evaluation and yet feel confident it is God’s leading and not man’s plan? What protects us from programs that might be like man made towers up to God to make a name for ourselves? It doesn’t mean a thing if it isn’t he work of God in our lives, and we desire to follow Him. Prayer and the Word become our corrective guidelines, not to mention obedience to the Spirit.

But it is not just churches which sometimes try to be independent of God. We do it as individuals too, and there are lots of "independent Christians" around. Do you live your life wanting God’s work in it, or your own decisions?

Ps 127:1-5 Unless the LORD builds the house, its builders labor in vain. Unless the LORD watches over the city, the watchmen stand guard in vain. In vain you rise early and stay up late, toiling for food to eat-- for he grants sleep to those he loves.
     
            There will come a time when united with believers of all nations will understand one another. Revelation 5:9 “And they sang a new song, saying: “You are worthy to take the scroll and to open its seals, because you were slain, and with your blood you purchased for God persons from every tribe and language and people and nation.” There is a global activity that God approves of: Worship in the name of Jesus. Many languages but one song. We will all understand. God's passion and desire is to gather the nations, not around a tower made of bricks and tar, but around the cross of His Son and His sacrifice. Many languages recognize that He is Lord of Lords and King of Kings. All of creation is made to reflect the glory of God, not the genius of mankind. The praises of the most high is delight to Him and blessing to us. Not going through motions or emotions, but founded on the faith with hearts loving God.

            There is one Lord Jesus Christ crucified for our sin and raised for our eternal life, whether He is proclaimed in Korean, Chinese, Japanese, Russian, Spanish, Portuguese. Many languages, but one Holy Spirit, one Baptism, one Lord's Supper, one forgiveness, one salvation from sin and death. Luke tells us that the early church "devoted themselves to the apostles' teaching and to the fellowship, to the Breaking of the Bread and to the prayers." Doctrine, fellowship, the Lord's Supper, and prayer in many languages by one Church in the name of Jesus.

            Are you trusting your own ingenuity, ability and wisdom instead of the Lord? Is there pride that refuses to humble itself before God. Do you live your life for yourself with your plans and wants? Whatever it is, my friend, it is a tower that is leading to no where. When you get to the top you will discover that the ladder was placed on the wrong building! It is only as we trust in Christ that we will find what the people of Babylon and the people of every age has been looking for. It is only in the person of Jesus that we can find forgiveness for our sin. That is the cure of Order.

  Every time you hear someone talking in a foreign language remember that these languages came about because mankind refused to acknowledge God. Every time you see a tall building, think of the foolishness of those who try to "reach to Heaven" Every time you see some great achievement, or hear of some award man has won, let it remind you to put it into perspective the greatest deeds of men cannot compare to the greatness of our God. Who alone has power and authority and majesty forever and ever?

Pastor Dale

Friday, May 4, 2012

Rainbow Promises - Genesis 9


Sermon Nuggets Mon April 30 

Verses- Gen 9

Rainbow Promises

Robert Ballard is an explorer who was looking for ancient shipwrecks off the north coast of Turkey. He decided to check out the flood theory mentioned here in Genesis. Columbia University researchers Wm Ryan and Walter Pittman have speculated that when the European glacier melted, the Mediterranean Sea overflowed into what was then a smaller fresh water lake to create the current Black Sea. Ballard used a side scan sonar and found an ancient coastline and change from freshwater to saltwater mollusks dating from about 7,000 years ago. He scooped up shells from the bottom included both freshwater mollusks from before the flood and saltwater mollusks from after the flood. They were dated at the Oceanography Institution in Massachusetts and freshwater shells were about 7,400 years old. The saltwater ones dated to 6,800 years ago. This exciting discovery encourages them to seek for evidences of stone walls, pottery, and  hearths.

I remember various documentaries done on previous sightings of Noah’s ark on one of the mountains of Turkey during a time when there was some melting of layers of ice and snow.  Notes and journals were made of people of the last century. Some expeditions were made in recent decades and some photos were found to be a large rock, and others believed to be authentic. The late astronaut James Irwin had done extensive research on those findings and has written a book.

The fact that God’s Word says it, doesn’t convince the world that it is true. I suspect even if the ark was uncovered there would be debates as to why it was really a hoax. Some always choose not to believe the Bible. But more secular archeologists are turning to the Bible to look for finds consistent with the recorded history.

But more important than the evidences of the flood are some of the promises of God. It used to be among men that his word was binding. Especially among Christians it was considered that a man was as good as his word. Strangely, many Christians have been ripped off by other Christians. Many have learned the ethics of the world instead of the Bible. Many find they do not have to pay their bills and obligations legally and that seems more attractive that honesty and integrity. Many are making vows and going back on what was intended by some loophole or law that would keep them from paying, or cheating. I am surprised how many churches are filling court appointments for disputes because agreements are just no longer kept.

It is interesting to observe that the infinite, all-powerful, changeless God of the universe has chosen to deal with men in the form of covenants. The Noahic Covenant of Genesis chapter 9 is the first biblical covenant of the Bible.

Did you know the Noahic Covenant, is still in force today? It also provides us with a pattern for all of the other biblical covenants. As we come to understand this covenant, we will more fully appreciate the significance of all of the covenants, and especially the New Covenant instituted by our Lord Jesus Christ.

 That is the topic of study this week

Pastor Dale


Sermon Nuggets Tues May 1 

Verses Gen 8:  21 The Lord smelled the pleasing aroma and said in his heart: “Never again will I curse the ground because of humans, even though every inclination of the human heart is evil from childhood. And never again will I destroy all living creatures, as I have done. 22 “As long as the earth endures, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night will never cease.”
       Gen 9:15 - 16I will remember my covenant between me and you and all living creatures of every kind. Never again will the waters become a flood to destroy all life. 16 Whenever the rainbow appears in the clouds, I will see it and remember the everlasting covenant between God and all living creatures of every kind on the earth.”

  
God’s Promise to Himself

            Have you ever made promises to yourself? Usually the best promises are the ones we make to ourselves. It depends on a person’s self will, of course. When you make a promise to yourself it doesn’t really matter what others think or say. You are committed to carrying out something you want to carry out for personal reasons.

This is how we read this paragraph before Chapter 9. God is making a promise to Himself that he will never again curse the ground because of the actions of man, and it doesn’t make any difference to God how evil mankind is He will not destroy him in this way again by a flood.You can be assured we will have the seasons just like he planned and ordained in the earth until the end of the earth when he has made another plan clear in the Bible and heavens and earth will not be like this any longer, but destroyed.

The reason this commitment is binding it that it has nothing to do with man. It has everything to do with God. He said “I am going to treat mankind in a certain way even though they fall back into the same sins as before.” This is a promise I make to myself.

Now the character of God is far more trustworthy than the character of mankind. We can make promises to ourselves and mean them completed but continue to break them. I am told the problem many alcoholic have is that they make promises never to drink again, but until they can come to the place in their life it is for them to make to themselves they will not often success in stopping to drink.

But then we are also told that most people need to make contracts or covenants with other people to stop drinking. They need other people to hold them accountable and to encourage one another and support one another to keep their promises. Because thousands of promises are broken by an alcoholic who promises his spouse, or family member, or courts that they will not drink. We hear that the person will never stop drinking until they are convinced they need to stop for themselves.

God had made a promise not to destroy mankind, but to save him. God had determined before the world was created to make a promise to himself. II Thes 2:13;  “But we ought always to thank God for you, brothers loved by the Lord, because from the beginning God chose you to be saved through the sanctifying work of the Spirit and through belief in the truth.”

It would be to bring those who by faith believe in God and put their trust in him to bring them eternally into glory, a place prepared for him. Although most will not respond to God’s offer of salvation and will be destroyed by hell, still He will keep his word and not destroy the earth until Jesus Comes again. So we can count on it because it is based on his promise to himself and his character is not week. God does not need a support group. He does what he says. If there is one promise you know will be kept it is a self promise.

            When it comes to making promises there are some things to be considered. Who made it? Some people can always be counted on because they keep their word. Secondly, do they have the resources to carry out their promise? Some might have good intentions, but promises might be nothing more than hopeful dreams. Does the person have the resources as well as the abilities to carry out the promises?

            When it comes to fulfilling promises there are also unforeseen circumstances. That changes the situations drastically. I have said to my kids I won’t make promises, but this is what I intend to do. I had to say that after learning the hard way, that sometimes promises cannot be kept because of unforeseen circumstances.

            That is why I like the promises of God. First it doesn’t depend on mankind. It is by someone who always keeps his word, he has the ability, he has the desire, there are no unforeseen circumstances that he doesn’t know about. You can’t goof him up. That’s worth following.

            What promises have you made to yourself? What do you do when you do not live up to that promise? What would encourage you to keep your promises? Is it in keeping with honoring God?

Pastor Dale


Sermon Nuggets Weds May 2- 

Gen 9: Then God blessed Noah and his sons, saying to them, “Be fruitful and increase in number and fill the earth. 2 The fear and dread of you will fall on all the beasts of the earth, and on all the birds in the sky, on every creature that moves along the ground, and on all the fish in the sea; they are given into your hands. 3 Everything that lives and moves about will be food for you. Just as I gave you the green plants, I now give you everything.
4 “But you must not eat meat that has its lifeblood still in it. 5 And for your lifeblood I will surely demand an accounting. I will demand an accounting from every animal. And from each human being, too, I will demand an accounting for the life of another human being.
6 “Whoever sheds human blood,by humans shall their blood be shed; for in the image of God has God made mankind.
7 As for you, be fruitful and increase in number; multiply on the earth and increase upon it.”

God’s Promise to Mankind.

Ray Stedman titles these verses “Rules of the Game,” and I think he has truly caught the significance of this section. A new beginning, with a new set of rules, is evident by the similarity of these verses to Genesis chapter one.

If you compare the agreement with Adam and the agreement with Noah representing mankind you will notice some similarities and differences. Here and there Genesis 1:28 God blessed His creatures and told them to be fruitful and multiply. Here and there God prescribed the food man could eat. There are differences, however, which indicate that the new beginning is to be different from the old. God pronounced the original creation ‘good’. The world of Noah’s day received no such commendation, for the men who possessed it were sinful.

Adam was charged to subdue the earth and to rule over the animal kingdom. Noah was given no such command. Instead, God placed in the animals a fear of man by which man could achieve a measure of control over them.

 When we went to the Shedd’s aquarium in Chicago we watched from the underside a show of dolphins doing their various tricks. They jumped on cue, and swam and did a variety of crowd pleasing stunts. Man has a certain control over animals, even wild animals because God made mankind as ruler over the earth and sometimes those animals fear man who provides discipline. And other times they are trained by positive reinforcement, food, or attentions, which some animals respond to better.

There are other comparisons and contrasts with Adam and Noah. Gen 2:5,6 tells us that no rain was on the ground before . The mist apparently allowed for the environment to let bodies live long and warm and not the extremes we experience since that canopy was turned unto a deluge. That hothouse was gone. Now the semitropical climate of the whole earth has changed. There are Arctic Zone, Temperate Zone and Tropic Zone. There is rain to water the earth.

            Apparently, Noah and his descendants could eat flesh and apparently for the first time animals were now used as food. When we read about the millennial kingdom it assumes there will not be this same fear or attack of animals for food by both human and wild. The lion will lay down with the lamb and a young child will play with poisonous snakes and not be hurt.

There was, however, one stipulation. They could not eat the blood of the animal, for the life of the animal was in its blood. This was to teach man not only that God values life, but that He owns it. God allows man to take the life of animals in order to survive, but they must not eat the blood. One may puzzle that flesh could be eaten after the flood, but not maybe protein was now necessary for life. But more likely, however, man must be brought to the realization that, because of his sin, he could only live by the death of another. Man lives by the death of animals.

Most important of all, man is taught to reverence life. Men before the fall were obviously men of violence who, like Cain  and Lamech in Gen 4 had no regard for human life. This is more emphatically stated in vs 5 &6,: “And surely I will require your lifeblood; from every beast I will require it.   And from every man, from every man’s brother I will require the life of man.   Whoever sheds man’s blood, by man his blood shall be shed, for in the image of God He made man.”

The life of man was precious and belonged to God. It was God’s to give and His alone to take. Animals which shed man’s blood must be put to death. Men who willfully take the life of another must be put to death ‘by man’. In addition to murder, suicide is prohibited by God’s command in these verses. This passage relates to the subject of abortion also. Man is not to shed the blood of man.  Shouldn’t we consider at the time a fetus has blood, it has life? That should stop the partical birth abortions right there, not to mention life begins at conception.

Since Man is created in the image of God, murder is much more than an act of hostility against man—it is an affront to God. Now God provided something else in his promise to mankind.  Society is developed under God’s laws take the life of the murderer. In this act of capital punishment, man would act on behalf of God—he would reflect the moral image of God, namely, His indignation and sentence upon the murderer. Government acts in God’s behalf in punishing the evildoer and rewarding those who do good : here is another new law. He has the authority over mankind to preserve and protect and punish even put to death those whose actions are violent against others. God has established civil government which can do things that an individual cannot and should not do. “Let every person be in subjection to the governing authorities. For there is no authority except from God, and those which exist are established by God.”

 Just like the animal kingdom is to be controlled, to a great extent, by means of their fear of man. Man’s most violent sinful tendencies, also, are kept in check by his fear of the consequences. Any society which loses its reverence for life cannot endure long.

Because of this, mankind can live in relative peace and security until God’s Messiah has dealt the death blow to sin. And so a new age has dawned.Because of God’s promise to man we still are under this covenant and agreement with God and how we are to preserve and protect mankind until Christ comes again.


Pastor Dale


Sermon Nuggets Thurs- May 3 

Gen 9: 12 And God said, “This is the sign of the covenant I am making between me and you and every living creature with you, a covenant for all generations to come: 13 I have set my rainbow in the clouds, and it will be the sign of the covenant between me and the earth. 14 Whenever I bring clouds over the earth and the rainbow appears in the clouds, 15 I will remember my covenant between me and you and all living creatures of every kind. Never again will the waters become a flood to destroy all life. 16 Whenever the rainbow appears in the clouds, I will see it and remember the everlasting covenant between God and all living creatures of every kind on the earth.”
17 So God said to Noah, “This is the sign of the covenant I have established between me and all life on the earth.”

God’s Promise to the World- Rainbow

            Kennth Trent tells of his airplane trip with his family when they encountered a severe thunderstorm. The pilot announced that he was going to take the plane to a higher altitude in order that the plane might fly above the storm. As they flew above the clouds the sun was shining in all its glory which was hidden from the people below. Those on the plane also beheld a wondrous sight; a glorious rainbow stretching from horizon to horizon in the shape of a perfect circle. The rainbow, as a multi-colored halo, was a spectacle to behold!

His young daughter was the most thrilled with what she saw. She cried: "Daddy, daddy, look, it’s a rainbow and we’re seeing it from the same side that God sees it from!"

To the people below all they could vision was storm clouds but we were flying above the clouds, in the glory of the sunshine and in perfect position to see the rainbow that God had put in the clouds.
At the conclusion of a shower of rain, God said that he would put a bow in the sky that would be an everlasting sign of a promise between God and all living creatures on the earth. This promise was that God would no longer destroy the whole earth with a flood.

Every time you and I see a rainbow fill the sky after the rain, we can be reminded of one of God’s awesome promises that have remained true throughout the ages of time. The Bible associates the rainbow with a manifestation of divine glory. The rainbow has always been a source relating to the divine promises of God’s glory and power. The spiritual significance of Noah’s rainbow was a sign of God’s love and pledge of His sparing mercy

Every covenant has its accompanying sign. The sign of the Abrahamic Covenant is circumcision (Genesis 17:15-27); that of the Mosaic Covenant is the observance of the Sabbath day (Exodus 20:8-11;). The “sign” of the rainbow is appropriate. It consists of the reflection of the rays of the sun in the particles of moisture in the clouds. The water which destroyed the earth causes the rainbow. Also, the rainbow appears at the end of a storm. So this sign assures man that the storm of God’s wrath (in a flood) is over. What a comfort to know that God’s faithfulness is our guarantee.

At one time, a group of theologians from different faiths and religions gathered in London, England, to discuss religion. On one particular day they were considering the question: “What separates Christianity from all other religions?” That is a great question. Is there anything about Christianity that is different or distinguishes it from every other faith? Quite frankly, the theologians were stumped until C. S. Lewis walked into the room. C. S. Lewis had a simple answer when he heard the question: “What separates Christianity from all other religions?” C.S. Lewis said, “That’s easy. It’s grace.”

After the flood, after the waters had receded, and after only eight people walked out on dry land, God came to Noah in Genesis chapter 9 to make a contract of grace. God said, “I will never, ever do that again. I will never again destroy the earth with a flood.”

 And then do you know what God did? God signed His contract of grace. Have you ever seen God’s signature? Sure you have. God signed the sky. The rainbow is God’s signature of grace.

Now science would have a real convenient explanation for the rainbow. Science would say something like this: “Well, as the waves of light pass through the prism created by the drops of water in the rain clouds, the light ray is separated into different bands of color creating the display we see in the sky.” That is what science would say about a rainbow. But that explanation is so shallow that science might as well be blind.

God takes this occasion to make a covenant with mankind. It is a visible repeated reminder of that pledge. Never again will there come a flood to destroy the whole world. And it is a reminder even in the midst of our storms he will save. Throughout the scriptures, the rainbow is the emblem of God’s loving faithfulness to His covenant with His people, and the pledge of sure hope to them.

But it is God’s signature to us as well. In this world we will have tribulation, but be of good cheer, Jesus said, “I have overcome the world.”  From destruction comes His glory and new world awaits.

Pastor Dale

           
Sermon Nuggets Fri May 4- 

Verses- Gen 9: 18 The sons of Noah who came out of the ark were Shem, Ham and Japheth. (Ham was the father of Canaan.) 19 These were the three sons of Noah, and from them came the people who were scattered over the whole earth.
20 Noah, a man of the soil, proceeded to plant a vineyard. 21 When he drank some of its wine, he became drunk and lay uncovered inside his tent. 22 Ham, the father of Canaan, saw his father naked and told his two brothers outside. 23 But Shem and Japheth took a garment and laid it across their shoulders; then they walked in backward and covered their father’s naked body. Their faces were turned the other way so that they would not see their father naked.
24 When Noah awoke from his wine and found out what his youngest son had done to him, 25 he said,
“Cursed be Canaan!     The lowest of slaves will he be to his brothers. ”
26 He also said, “Praise be to the Lord, the God of Shem! May Canaan be the slave of Shem.
27 May God extend Japheth’s territory; may Japheth live in the tents of Shem, and may Canaan be the slave of Japheth.”
28 After the flood Noah lived 350 years. 29 Noah lived a total of 950 years, and then he died.

God’s Promises to Noah 

            Two of the three promises have already been completed for Noah. First was the destruction of earth’s creatures. Secondly, God would save Noah and his family and the animals. Thirdly, God would make Noah the father of the new people.

Noah would be the seed from the rest of the world that exists. Yes, we are all sons and daughters of Adam, but it is equally true we are all sons and daughters of Noah.
 His covenant to not destroy the earth would be lasting until Jesus comes again. It has so far and no reason to doubt it will be until Christ’s coming.

            Notice before the flood men lived to enormous ages, Animals who fossils are being found under the layers of deposits by the flood were much larger than similar animals today. Some scientists suppose that a canopy of vapor of water which was above the firmament may have shut out some of the infrared rays of the sun and diminished the aging effect.The long life was also allowed to Noah and his immediate family. Then it was cut off dramatically. Many of the children of Noah and Shem and Ham and Jepeth died long before their parents died. But the world quickly populated from the Fertile Crescent area.

Just like the environment and God’s command limited human life, so it seems that spoilage of food came quicker also. Before bacteria was restrained, food did not spoil as soon and fruit juice did not ferment as readily. Perhaps in the new earth Noah planted a vineyard and drank wine and was drunk. Or perhaps it shows sin soon after the ark landed. Either way Noah was drunk and lay naked in the tent.

Drunkenness many times is condemned in the Bible. The abuse of alcohol has been a problem with many cultures and societies. But the events that happened after are not really as clear to us as it might be to the culture which first read it. His son, Ham saw the nakedness of Noah in the tents and told his brothers. I assume it was not an accidental opening the tent door and whoops lets leave him be in privacy, or cover him up. But rather there must have been something not spelled out here. It is likely according to some commentaries that he mocked or made fun of the situation, or told his brother to come and watch their father which was disrespect. Either way, his brothers took a garment and hid their faces and covered up their father.

            Later there would be very strict commands among the Jews not to observe the nakedness of father or mother or others of close kin. Nudity leads to lust and adultery. a lack of respect, a lack of godly fear. So when Noah awoke and became aware what happened he pronounced a curse on Hams son because of Hams disrespect.

            The curse also is not given in great detail. Canaan should be servant to his brethren. Children are often punished for the sins of their fathers and Canaan was no exception.

            Let me make clear a misinterpretation that some people promote to this day. Last century slave owner would use this verse to say that black race were descendants of Ham and were meant to be slaves and cursed. Canaan was clearly the father of the Canaanites who were definitely Caucasian. Historically, the Canaanites were conquered and subdued by various people, including the Israelites under Joshua.

Noah lived to a very advanced age. Other prophets point to Noah and the covenant to illustrate Gods’ patience, God’s assurance of keeping his promises. Jeremiah speaks of God’s future blessing by reminding men of God’s faithfulness in keeping the Noahic Covenant.

That covenant in many ways foreshadowed the new covenant. The new covenant found in Jesus Christ with the sign being the cup and the broken bread point us to the new kingdom of which our Lord is King.

One pastor wanted to pull a surprise on his children and told them We’re going to Junction City Kansas. “We will have lots of fun there.”

 Secretly he was going to spend one afternoon there and take the kids to Disney World. The Dad kept up the morale by describing the wonders of Junction City- playgrounds, swimming pool, ice cream stand, maybe a bowling alley.

When they arrived Dad gave them the surprise “You know it’s kind of boring here, Why don’t we just drive to Disney World”

 He expected the kids to jump up and down in delight. Instead they complained wanting to go swimming, bowling and have ice cream and stay in Kansas.

God’s promises things on this earth, This is part of the Noahic Covenant. But his big surprise for his kids is Heaven.

CS Lewis wrote to a friend :”The hills and valleys of Heaven will be to those you now experience not as a copy is to an original, nor as a substitute to the genuine article, but as a the flower to the root, or a diamond to the coal” Our desires are too small. We stamp our feet and insist on merry-go round in Junction City when Disney World’s space Mountain lies just down the road.

These promises to Noah and mankind were shadows the greatest of promises ahead.

Pastor Dale

Friday, April 27, 2012

A New Beginning - Genesis 8


Sermon Nuggets Mon April 23  

Verses Gen 8


A New Beginning
            Since Sermon Nuggets are recycled old sermons I preached from Chapter 8 of Genesis as a communion service and tied in a brief way thanksgiving of Noah and the sacrifice of thanksgiving with sharing our thanks to God for our new beginning due to the death burial and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
            As we look at chapter 8 Noah and his family emerge from the ark and are standing on solid ground. There is a a new world and a new beginning. We have already seen in this series from Genesis these stories in the Old Testament are actual history – that is, they are not myth but actual historic occurrences. From these stories in our lives we can relate to the spiritual principles. We learn about God about faith, about the way the men and women of old practiced their life lived in the grace and glory of God. We learn about obedience and blessing.
            If you add it all up all the days Noah was on the ark we conclude he and his family spent one year and 17 days in the ark. That’s a long time in a cramped space with lots and lots of animals. This was no luxury cruise in the Caribbean. The Bible does not tell us anything about Noah’s thoughts or challenges while on the ark. We can only imagine his personal emotions during the long time they spent in the ark. We know that he was a man of faith who took God at his Word.
            But he was human, too. The sea is a lonely place. It could not have been easy to be shut up inside the ark with his family and all those animals. Did he wonder if God had forgotten him? I could not blame him if he had his doubts. How long must he be in this situation.
            The thought that comes to me is that we have a promise from God that He would overcome this world. We know the Jesus will return and there will be a new world. But for now we wait and work. Our world today is far different from Noah’s ark and life confined in the ship, but the wait sometimes feels long for us to see Gods promises come about. We would do well to remind ourselves of Noah who was saved from distruction.
He had done what God had said. He had preached to the unbelieving world. He cannot see the sun because of the cloud cover. There is no course to follow, just drifting on the surface of the endless, endless ocean.
            The message of Genesis 8 is in the first verse, “But God remembered Noah…”
Maybe you feel like you are in a waiting period in your life. You are waiting for the next step or promise of God. It seems long. It is easy to doubt. But don’t’ forgot. God knows. He has not forgotten.

Pastor Dale 

Sermon Nuggets Tues April 24-

Verses- Gen 8:1-5  1 But God remembered Noah and all the wild animals and the livestock that were with him in the ark, and he sent a wind over the earth, and the waters receded. 2 Now the springs of the deep and the floodgates of the heavens had been closed, and the rain had stopped falling from the sky. 3 The water receded steadily from the earth. At the end of the hundred and fifty days the water had gone down, 4 and on the seventeenth day of the seventh month the ark came to rest on the mountains of Ararat. 5 The waters continued to recede until the tenth month, and on the first day of the tenth month the tops of the mountains became visible.


God Remembers
            We begin with passage with the words, “And God remembered Noah.” Now we realize that God does not forget. He didn’t look down upon the earth with the horrible flood and all of the sudden say, “Oh, where is everyone? Oh I remember now, Noah is down there in the ark. I better do something about it.?
            The emphasis on God remembrance is simply that God keeps his promises. He is doing what He said He would do. He said he would do three things. First He would destroy the world. Secondly, He would save Noah and his family and a couple of each animal and seven pairs of other animals. And thirdly, He would start over with Noah’s clan.
            The Bible also speaks of God remembering in other places. God remembered Abraham, God remembered Rachel, God remembered Hannah. There was a personal relationship with people. But based on promises God is holding true to his word. God is saying that he will honor his word. When it says Noah found favor with God, He gave Noah instructions to build an ark, and Noah obeyed and did everything the Lord told him to do. God gave him a promise that from him would come the new people. He saved Noah from the flood and is now going to start over again in the world.
            As chaplain in the hospital in Cambridge I volunteer a week just like some other pastor’s do. I’ve been involved with some serious car accidents and talking with folks in the emergency room.  Although some folks were quite seriously injured others escaped with minor injuries. Repeatedly, there was great thankfulness by those who were spared serious injury or death. When you face the fact that you could have died or been permanently disabled the response is almost always a deep sense of gratitude. One is thankful for life and for faculties of the body happens. They were not thankful for what happened, but grateful for what didn’t happen.
Notice the comments made by those who have gone through hurricanes, tornados, and other tragic storms. People who have been spared realize what could have happened and are filled with thanksgiving. Sometimes those who have experience no hardships, difficulties and trails are thankful, but not to the same degree or depth of those for whom those situations have been real and close.
            When God remembered Noah, the ordeal for the family was coming to an end. They lost everything but God was starting over through them.  Noah was more aware of the grace of God and he was spared punishment.
            There has been a play produced, Hell’s gates and Heaven’s portals. Many have seen the video of it. This play portrays people dying and being at the gates of Hell or the portals of Heaven depending on whether they repented of sin and turned by faith to Jesus Christ. It was a dramatic and sobering portrayal of eternity without Christ or with Christ. The sense of thankfulness was enhanced when one realizes what we have been spared Hell by the grace of God.
            God remembered you and me. God knows us by name. As God’s children there are so many problems that we will not have to face. There but for the grace of God go I.
            He remembers you!

Pastor Dale
 
Weds April 25

Verses Gen 8:6-17 6 After forty days Noah opened a window he had made in the ark 7 and sent out a raven, and it kept flying back and forth until the water had dried up from the earth. 8 Then he sent out a dove to see if the water had receded from the surface of the ground. 9 But the dove could find nowhere to perch because there was water over all the surface of the earth; so it returned to Noah in the ark. He reached out his hand and took the dove and brought it back to himself in the ark. 10 He waited seven more days and again sent out the dove from the ark. 11 When the dove returned to him in the evening, there in its beak was a freshly plucked olive leaf! Then Noah knew that the water had receded from the earth. 12 He waited seven more days and sent the dove out again, but this time it did not return to him.
 13 By the first day of the first month of Noah’s six hundred and first year, the water had dried up from the earth. Noah then removed the covering from the ark and saw that the surface of the ground was dry. 14 By the twenty-seventh day of the second month the earth was completely dry.
 15 Then God said to Noah, 16 “Come out of the ark, you and your wife and your sons and their wives. 17 Bring out every kind of living creature that is with you—the birds, the animals, and all the creatures that move along the ground—so they can multiply on the earth and be fruitful and increase in number on it.”



Signs of Hope
            Noah was looking for signs that the flood was coming to an end. I’m sure he was tired of being around those animals day and night. In the play, Noah the Musical, they depict how difficult it was to stay in the ark with the animals. We see patience is needed to be cramped up with the hard work of taking care of the animals plus their own needs. They couldn’t exactly dump the fertilizer in the fields. I can’t imagine living conditions for a year without “getting out of the house”.
            So he sent out a raven. Since ravens feast on rotting flesh, it no doubt found plenty to eat  on the surface of the ocean. It flew back and forth but did not return to the ark. The first time Noah sent out a dove, it came back because the water wasn’t low enough. The second time the dove returned with an olive leaf, indicating that plants were beginning to grow. The third time he sent out a dove, it didn’t come back at all. Noah  knew then that the end of the flood must be very near.
            But why did he send the birds in the first place? God had told him when the flood would start but not when it would end. He needed to know the approximate date it would begin so he could build the ark in time. But God never told him how long the flood would last because he didn’t need to know. One of the first questions people ask often even before they have surgery is “How long will it take?” or “How long do I have to be in the hospital?” We want to know when it is going to end or we can get back to normal. It is a good thing to have hope when our troubles will end.
            Often, it is the not knowing that wears us down. “When will this end?” And the answer is always: “In God’s time, not one day sooner, not one day later.” God can make the dry ground appear anytime he chooses. We may feel forgotten and abandoned in the flood, but the dry land will appear in due time.
            Notice also that Noah didn’t get out of the ark for a long time even after the first land appeared. I think after a year on the ark, I would have jumped over the side and started swimming for shore as soon as the first peak poked through the surface of the water. But Noah still had lots of waiting to do.
            In our impatience or in our frustration or desperation we may try to hurry up God. We might try to leave the ark too soon. But we miss out on faith, hope and trust that are part of our listening lessons that comes with patience. That is much easier for me to say than to practice. I am not a good patient. I am not a good waiter.
             And just as God gave Noah a sign, he still gives signs and tokens of his grace today. Often it is a Scripture or a song repeated at just the right moment. Or a phone call or a letter that came when we felt like giving up. God does not always spare us the pain of life, but he gives us tokens, roses that bloom in the snow, to remind us that even in our sadness and even in our despair, we are never alone, never forgotten.
            But there are signs that give us hope that God is at work. Little things that are notes from God He has not forgotten us. Thy raven could eat on dead fish and dead things all around, but the dove needed vegetation. There were signs things were ready when Noah saw the fig leaf. Then when the dove did not return it was a sign of hope.
            In verses 16-17 the Lord instructed Noah to leave the ark with his family and the animals. As far as we can tell, this is the first time God had spoken to Noah since he told him to enter the ark. As Noah watched and waited, he went about his duties, wondering when the Lord would speak to him again. His family stayed faithful to what they knew to be true. It did not matter if he “felt” like it or not. He knew that God had led him this far, and he believed that God had his best interests at heart.
            It is hard to wait. But the best thing is to remain faithful for what you know God wants from you. It is a obedience and trust.  Someone put the truth this way:” Do not doubt in the darkness what God has shown you in the light.” When the time comes, God will speak to you again. He has given us His promise to never leave us and never forsake us. He will speak to you again even after a quiet time. He always does but not always on our timetable.

Pastor Dale

Sermon Nuggets Thurs April 26 – 

Gen 8:18-22 18 So Noah came out, together with his sons and his wife and his sons’ wives. 19 All the animals and all the creatures that move along the ground and all the birds—everything that moves on land—came out of the ark, one kind after another.
  20 Then Noah built an altar to the LORD and, taking some of all the clean animals and clean birds, he sacrificed burnt offerings on it. 21 The LORD smelled the pleasing aroma and said in his heart: “Never again will I curse the ground because of humans, even though every inclination of the human heart is evil from childhood. And never again will I destroy all living creatures, as I have done.
 22 “As long as the earth endures, seedtime and harvest,  cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night will never cease.”

Noah Remembered
           Now they were leaving the known for the unknown. The world they had known was gone forever. Cities gone, roads gone, homes gone, people gone. Geography changed, landmarks all different. Nothing looked the same. Everything was new.
           The thought occurred to me that it must have been hard to leave the boat even though they looked forward to the day they could get out. This was their life and security for over a year and now that step into the unknown is a step of faith. I think this might be light our knowledge of the new world we experience after death. But this life on earth is what we know. It is hope of heaven that gives us security, but who wants to “leave this boat”? We love this life we know and can be anxious when we have to go through the shadow of death.
           The first thing mentioned after Noah and his family left the ark was to build an altar unto God to offer thanksgiving. Noah was filled with thanksgiving. God did not only remember Noah, Noah remembered God. 
             Noah recognized that he owed everything to the Lord. It was God who warned him, God who told him to build the ark, God who designed the ark, God who called the animals to the ark two by two, God who shut the door, God who preserved the ark through the flood, God who brought the ark to a safe place, and it was God who told Noah when it was safe to leave the ark. God did it all! Noah was just along for the ride!
             The word tells us that 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." As long as the earth endures, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night will never cease."
              When we offer up "the sacrifice of praise...God is well pleased" Heb. 13:15-16 "Through Jesus, therefore, let us continually offer to God a sacrifice of praise-- the fruit of lips that confess his name. And do not forget to do good and to share with others, for with such sacrifices God is pleased.”
               Noah sacrificed to God. It was an expression from his heart and his actions. That pleases God. Actions without attitude don’t mean anything. Attitude without actions don’t mean much. It is the combination of thanksgiving from attitude that motivates action. Thanksgiving is shown in our actions for what God provides.    If we are thankful in our hearts, we will be thankful in our daily living. "Thanksgiving is thanks-living!" That is, a thankful spirit is translated into our actions. Every good gift and every perfect gifts is from above and comes down from the Father of lights with whom is not changing, neither shadow of turning. Jms 1:17
             Each generation would repeat the problems of the previous generation. In the context of the sacrifice, the Lord made a promise: "I won't destroy them again." But he didn't say how he would answer the problem. What could God do for a race like this?
              This counsel of God with himself is instructive. The problem of a righteous God and a sinful population and his refusal to destroy them completely leaves him ultimately with only one choice. It's not outlined here, but it's the greatest story of all, the story of how God would take their punishment on himself. God’s promise was to himself. It did not rest on man’s actions, but God’s actions. That is where the cross comes in. Man is worth saving, but I will do so for those who demonstrate faith in me.
             Bible instructs us to come before God, not only with "prayer and supplication," but also "with thanksgiving" (Phil. 4:6). Prayer and thanksgiving are seldom seen one without the other in the Scriptures.
          "Enter into his gates with Thanksgiving and into his courts with praise: Be Thankful unto him and bless his name. (Psalm 100:4)
             John Piper said, “Suppose you give someone a gift at a party and he opens it and loves it. He fondles it and shows it off and speaks of it the whole evening. But never once does he even look at you or speak to you the giver. He is totally enthralled with the gift. What do we say of such a person? We say he is an ingrate. Why? Because his emotion of joy over the gift has no reference to the goodwill of the giver.”

Pastor Dale
           
Sermon Nuggets Fri April 27 

Verses- Gen 8:  20 Then Noah built an altar to the LORD and, taking some of all the clean animals and clean birds, he sacrificed burnt offerings on it.

How We Remember
             The altar was a way provided by God for mankind to give to the Lord from his flocks or heard a sacrifice for sin, for worship, for thanksgiving. This story is repeated as a means of how God saved the world from destruction. The ark becomes a picture of the door of salvation. It is available by the grace of  God to come through the door who is Jesus Christ. John 10:9  “I am the door: by me if any man enter in, he shall be saved, and shall go in and out, and find pasture.”
             We have another sacrifice who is Jesus Christ our access to the Father. The communion observance is a means also of remembrance. It is a time to think of  the destruction to come and know by the promise of God we have the promise of eternal life and not eternal damnation. The communion meal pictures for us a thanksgiving meal. The provider is God. It is remembering God because he first remembered us. 
            At the time of communion we are also celebrating our new beginning with a new life in Jesus. We are a new creation. Old things are passed away and all things become new.
When Jesus died he said “remember me.”. Because we have sinned there is consequence for our sin, but Jesus took our place. His suffering saved us. To all who accept Jesus as their savior they are freely forgiven of all the past, all the present, all the future. We are made new in God’s eyes.  We have lots to be thankful for.
We have been purchased with the blood of Jesus to begin again. We are starting over. Jesus died that we can have a new start. We have the same animals. We go to school and the kids are the same. The family is the same, our job or work is the same, but we are different in Jesus. We have a new kingdom.
           Today is a new day. It is a gift from God. We not only have been spared from destruction, we embrace newness in Jesus and this is a reminder that we have been bought with a price. We belong to God.

Pastor Dale
           

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