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Chapter 7
The Flood
[This chapter is based on Genesis 6 and 7.]
IN the days of Noah a double curse was resting upon the earth in
consequence of Adam's transgression and of the murder committed by Cain.
Yet this had not greatly changed the face of nature. There were evident
tokens of decay, but the earth was still rich and beautiful in the gifts
of God's providence. The hills were crowned with majestic trees
supporting the fruit-laden branches of the vine. The vast, gardenlike
plains were clothed with verdure, and sweet with the fragrance of a
thousand flowers. The fruits of the earth were in great variety, and
almost without limit. The trees far surpassed in size, beauty, and
perfect proportion any now to be found; their wood was of fine grain and
hard substance, closely resembling stone, and hardly less enduring.
Gold, silver, and precious stones existed in abundance.
The human race yet retained much of its early vigor. But a few
generations had passed since Adam had access to the tree which was to
prolong life; and man's existence was still measured by centuries. Had
that long-lived people, with their rare powers to plan and execute,
devoted themselves to the service of God, they would have made their
Creator's name a praise in the earth, and would have answered the
purpose for which He gave them life. But they failed to do this. There
were many giants, men of great stature and strength, renowned for
wisdom, skillful in devising the most cunning and wonderful works; but
their guilt in giving loose rein to iniquity was in proportion to their
skill and mental ability.
God bestowed upon these antediluvians many and rich gifts; but they used
His bounties to glorify themselves, and turned them into a curse by
fixing their affections upon the gifts instead of the Giver. They
employed the gold and silver, the precious stones and the choice wood,
in the construction of habitations for themselves, and endeavored to
excel one another in beautifying their dwellings with the most skillful
workmanship. They sought only to gratify the desires of their own proud
hearts, and reveled in scenes of pleasure and wickedness. Not desiring
to retain God in their knowledge, they soon came to deny His existence.
They adored nature in place of the God of nature. They glorified human
genius, worshiped the works of their own hands, and taught their
children to bow down to graven images.
In the green fields and under the shadow of the goodly trees they set up
the altars of their idols. Extensive groves, that retained their foliage
throughout the year, were dedicated to the worship of false gods. With
these groves were connected beautiful gardens, their long, winding
avenues overhung with fruit-bearing trees of all descriptions, adorned
with statuary, and furnished with all that could delight the senses or
minister to the voluptuous desires of the people, and thus allure them
to participate in the idolatrous worship.
Men put God out of their knowledge and worshiped the creatures of their
own imagination; and as the result, they became more and more debased.
The psalmist describes the effect produced upon the worshiper by the
adoration of idols. He says, "They that make them are like unto them; so
is every one that trusteth in them." Psalm 115:8. It is a law of the
human mind that by beholding we become changed. Man will rise no higher
than his conceptions of truth, purity, and holiness. If the mind is
never exalted above the level of humanity, if it is not uplifted by
faith to contemplate infinite wisdom and love, the man will be
constantly sinking lower and lower. The worshipers of false gods clothed
their deities with human attributes and passions, and thus their
standard of character was degraded to the likeness of sinful humanity.
They were defiled in consequence. "God saw that the wickedness of man
was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of
his heart was only evil continually. . . . The earth also was corrupt
before God; and the earth was filled with violence." God had given men
His commandments as a rule of life, but His law was transgressed, and
every conceivable sin was the result. The wickedness of men was open and
daring, justice was trampled in the dust, and the cries of the oppressed
reached unto heaven.
Polygamy had been early introduced, contrary to the divine arrangement
at the beginning. The Lord gave to Adam one wife, showing His order in
that respect. But after the Fall, men chose to follow their own sinful
desires; and as the result, crime and wretchedness rapidly increased.
Neither the marriage relation nor the rights of property were respected.
Whoever coveted the wives or the possessions of his neighbor, took them
by force, and men exulted in their deeds of violence. They delighted in
destroying the life of animals; and the use of flesh for food rendered
them still more cruel and bloodthirsty, until they came to regard human
life with astonishing indifference.
The world was in its infancy; yet iniquity had become so deep and
widespread that God could no longer bear with it; and He said, "I will
destroy man whom I have created from the face of the earth." He declared
that His Spirit should not always strive with the guilty race. If they
did not cease to pollute with their sins the world and its rich
treasures, He would blot them from His creation, and would destroy the
things with which He had delighted to bless them; He would sweep away
the beasts of the field, and the vegetation which furnished such an
abundant supply of food, and would transform the fair earth into one
vast scene of desolation and ruin.
Amid the prevailing corruption, Methuselah, Noah, and many others
labored to keep alive the knowledge of the true God and to stay the tide
of moral evil. A hundred and twenty years before the Flood, the Lord by
a holy angel declared to Noah His purpose, and directed him to build an
ark. While building the ark he was to preach that God would bring a
flood of water upon the earth to destroy the wicked. Those who would
believe the message, and would prepare for that event by repentance and
reformation, should find pardon and be saved. Enoch had repeated to his
children what God had shown him in regard to the Flood, and Methuselah
and his sons, who lived to hear the preaching of Noah, assisted in
building the ark.
God gave Noah the exact dimensions of the ark and explicit directions in
regard to its construction in every particular. Human wisdom could not
have devised a structure of so great strength and durability. God was
the designer, and Noah the master builder. It was constructed like the
hull of a ship, that it might float upon the water, but in some respects
it more nearly resembled a house. It was three stories high, with but
one door, which was in the side. The light was admitted at the top, and
the different apartments were so arranged that all were lighted. The
material employed in the construction of the ark was the cypress, or
gopher wood, which would be untouched by decay for hundreds of years.
The building of this immense structure was a slow and laborious process.
On account of the great size of the trees and the nature of the wood,
much more labor was required then than now to prepare timber, even with
the greater strength which men then possessed. All that man could do was
done to render the work perfect, yet the ark could not of itself have
withstood the storm which was to come upon the earth. God alone could
preserve His servants upon the tempestuous waters.
"By faith Noah, being warned of God of things not seen as yet, moved
with fear, prepared an ark to the saving of his house; by the which he
condemned the world, and became heir of the righteousness which is by
faith." Hebrews 11:7. While Noah was giving his warning message to the
world, his works testified of his sincerity. It was thus that his faith
was perfected and made evident. He gave the world an example of
believing just what God says. All that he possessed, he invested in the
ark. As he began to construct that immense boat on dry ground,
multitudes came from every direction to see the strange sight and to
hear the earnest, fervent words of the singular preacher. Every blow
struck upon the ark was a witness to the people.
Many at first appeared to receive the warning; yet they did not turn to
God with true repentance. They were unwilling to renounce their sins.
During the time that elapsed before the coming of the Flood, their faith
was tested, and they failed to endure the trial. Overcome by the
prevailing unbelief, they finally joined their former associates in
rejecting the solemn message. Some were deeply convicted, and would have
heeded the words of warning; but there were so many to jest and
ridicule, that they partook of the same spirit, resisted the invitations
of mercy, and were soon among the boldest and most defiant scoffers; for
none are so reckless and go to such lengths in sin as do those who have
once had light, but have resisted the convicting Spirit of God.
The men of that generation were not all, in the fullest acceptation of
the term, idolaters. Many professed to be worshipers of God. They
claimed that their idols were representations of the Deity, and that
through them the people could obtain a clearer conception of the divine
Being. This class were foremost in rejecting the preaching of Noah. As
they endeavored to represent God by material objects, their minds were
blinded to His majesty and power; they ceased to realize the holiness of
His character, or the sacred, unchanging nature of His requirements. As
sin became general, it appeared less and less sinful, and they finally
declared that the divine law was no longer in force; that it was
contrary to the character of God to punish transgression; and they
denied that His judgments were to be visited upon the earth. Had the men
of that generation obeyed the divine law, they would have recognized the
voice of God in the warning of His servant; but their minds had become
so blinded by rejection of light that they really believed Noah's
message to be a delusion.
It was not multitudes or majorities that were on the side of right. The
world was arrayed against God's justice and His laws, and Noah was
regarded as a fanatic. Satan, when tempting Eve to disobey God, said to
her, "Ye shall not surely die." Genesis 3:4. Great men, worldly,
honored, and wise men, repeated the same. "The threatenings of God,"
they said, "are for the purpose of intimidating, and will never be
verified. You need not be alarmed. Such an event as the destruction of
the world by the God who made it, and the punishment of the beings He
has created, will never take place. Be at peace; fear not. Noah is a
wild fanatic." The world made merry at the folly of the deluded old man.
Instead of humbling the heart before God, they continued their
disobedience and wickedness, the same as though God had not spoken to
them through His servant.
But Noah stood like a rock amid the tempest. Surrounded by popular
contempt and ridicule, he distinguished himself by his holy integrity
and unwavering faithfulness. A power attended his words, for it was the
voice of God to man through His servant. Connection with God made him
strong in the strength of infinite power, while for one hundred and
twenty years his solemn voice fell upon the ears of that generation in
regard to events, which, so far as human wisdom could judge, were
impossible.
The world before the Flood reasoned that for centuries the laws of
nature had been fixed. The recurring seasons had come in their order.
Heretofore rain had never fallen; the earth had been watered by a mist
or dew. The rivers had never yet passed their boundaries, but had borne
their waters safely to the sea. Fixed decrees had kept the waters from
overflowing their banks. But these reasoners did not recognize the hand
of Him who had stayed the waters, saying, "Hitherto shalt thou come, but
no further." Job 38:11.
As time passed on, with no apparent change in nature, men whose hearts
had at times trembled with fear, began to be reassured. They reasoned,
as many reason now, that nature is above the God of nature, and that her
laws are so firmly established that God Himself could not change them.
Reasoning that if the message of Noah were correct, nature would be
turned out of her course, they made that message, in the minds of the
world, a delusion--a grand deception. They manifested their contempt for
the warning of God by doing just as they had done before the warning was
given. They continued their festivities and their gluttonous feasts;
they ate and drank, planted and builded, laying their plans in reference
to advantages they hoped to gain in the future; and they went to greater
lengths in wickedness, and in defiant disregard of God's requirements,
to testify that they had no fear of the Infinite One. They asserted that
if there were any truth in what Noah had said, the men of renown--the
wise, the prudent, the great men--would understand the matter.
Had the antediluvians believed the warning, and repented of their evil
deeds, the Lord would have turned aside His wrath, as He afterward did
from Nineveh. But by their obstinate resistance to the reproofs of
conscience and the warnings of God's prophet, that generation filled up
the measure of their iniquity, and became ripe for destruction.
The period of their probation was about to expire. Noah had faithfully
followed the instructions which he had received from God. The ark was
finished in every part as the Lord had directed, and was stored with
food for man and beast. And now the servant of God made his last solemn
appeal to the people. With an agony of desire that words cannot express,
he entreated them to seek a refuge while it might be found. Again they
rejected his words, and raised their voices in jest and scoffing.
Suddenly a silence fell upon the mocking throng. Beasts of every
description, the fiercest as well as the most gentle, were seen coming
from mountain and forest and quietly making their way toward the ark. A
noise as of a rushing wind was heard, and lo, birds were flocking from
all directions, their numbers darkening the heavens, and in perfect
order they passed to the ark. Animals obeyed the command of God, while
men were disobedient. Guided by holy angels, they "went in two and two
unto Noah into the ark," and the clean beasts by sevens. The world
looked on in wonder, some in fear. Philosophers were called upon to
account for the singular occurrence, but in vain. It was a mystery which
they could not fathom. But men had become so hardened by their
persistent rejection of light that even this scene produced but a
momentary impression. As the doomed race beheld the sun shining in its
glory, and the earth clad in almost Eden beauty, they banished their
rising fears by boisterous merriment, and by their deeds of violence
they seemed to invite upon themselves the visitation of the already
awakened wrath of God.
God commanded Noah, "Come thou and all thy house into the ark; for thee
have I seen righteous before Me in this generation." Noah's warnings had
been rejected by the world, but his influence and example resulted in
blessings to his family. As a reward for his faithfulness and integrity,
God saved all the members of his family with him. What encouragement to
parental fidelity!
Mercy had ceased its pleadings for the guilty race. The beasts of the
field and the birds of the air had entered the place of refuge. Noah and
his household were within the ark, "and the Lord shut him in." A flash
of dazzling light was seen, and a cloud of glory more vivid than the
lightning descended from heaven and hovered before the entrance of the
ark. The massive door, which it was impossible for those within to
close, was slowly swung to its place by unseen hands. Noah was shut in,
and the rejecters of God's mercy were shut out. The seal of Heaven was
on that door; God had shut it, and God alone could open it. So when
Christ shall cease His intercession for guilty men, before His coming in
the clouds of heaven, the door of mercy will be shut. Then divine grace
will no longer restrain the wicked, and Satan will have full control of
those who have rejected mercy. They will endeavor to destroy God's
people; but as Noah was shut into the ark, so the righteous will be
shielded by divine power.
For seven days after Noah and his family entered the ark, there appeared
no sign of the coming storm. During this period their faith was tested.
It was a time of triumph to the world without. The apparent delay
confirmed them in the belief that Noah's message was a delusion, and
that the Flood would never come. Notwithstanding the solemn scenes which
they had witnessed--the beasts and birds entering the ark, and the angel
of God closing the door--they still continued their sport and revelry,
even making a jest of these signal manifestations of God's power. They
gathered in crowds about the ark, deriding its inmates with a daring
violence which they had never ventured upon before.
But upon the eighth day dark clouds overspread the heavens. There
followed the muttering of thunder and the flash of lightning. Soon large
drops of rain began to fall. The world had never witnessed anything like
this, and the hearts of men were struck with fear. All were secretly
inquiring, "Can it be that Noah was in the right, and that the world is
doomed to destruction?" Darker and darker grew the heavens, and faster
came the falling rain. The beasts were roaming about in the wildest
terror, and their discordant cries seemed to moan out their own destiny
and the fate of man. Then "the fountains of the great deep" were "broken
up, and the windows of heaven were opened." Water appeared to come from
the clouds in mighty cataracts. Rivers broke away from their boundaries,
and overflowed the valleys. Jets of water burst from the earth with
indescribable force, throwing massive rocks hundreds of feet into the
air, and these, in falling, buried themselves deep in the ground.
The people first beheld the destruction of the works of their own hands.
Their splendid buildings, and the beautiful gardens and groves where
they had placed their idols, were destroyed by lightning from heaven,
and the ruins were scattered far and wide. The altars on which human
sacrifices had been offered were torn down, and the worshipers were made
to tremble at the power of the living God, and to know that it was their
corruption and idolatry which had called down their destruction.
As the violence of the storm increased, trees, buildings, rocks, and
earth were hurled in every direction. The terror of man and beast was
beyond description. Above the roar of the tempest was heard the wailing
of a people that had despised the authority of God. Satan himself, who
was compelled to remain in the midst of the warring elements, feared for
his own existence. He had delighted to control so powerful a race, and
desired them to live to practice their abominations and continue their
rebellion against the Ruler of heaven. He now uttered imprecations
against God, charging Him with injustice and cruelty. Many of the
people, like Satan, blasphemed God, and had they been able, they would
have torn Him from the throne of power. Others were frantic with fear,
stretching their hands toward the ark and pleading for admittance. But
their entreaties were in vain. Conscience was at last aroused to know
that there is a God who ruleth in the heavens. They called upon Him
earnestly, but His ear was not open to their cry. In that terrible hour
they saw that the transgression of God's law had caused their ruin. Yet
while, through fear of punishment, they acknowledged their sin, they
felt no true contrition, no abhorrence of evil. They would have returned
to their defiance of Heaven, had the judgment been removed. So when
God's judgments shall fall upon the earth before its deluge by fire, the
impenitent will know just where and what their sin is--the despising of
His holy law. Yet they will have no more true repentance than did the
old-world sinners.
Some in their desperation endeavored to break into the ark, but the
firm-made structure withstood their efforts. Some clung to the ark until
they were borne away by the surging waters, or their hold was broken by
collision with rocks and trees. The massive ark trembled in every fiber
as it was beaten by the merciless winds and flung from billow to billow.
The cries of the beasts within expressed their fear and pain. But amid
the warring elements it continued to ride safely. Angels that excel in
strength were commissioned to preserve it.
The beasts, exposed to the tempest, rushed toward man, as though
expecting help from him. Some of the people bound their children and
themselves upon powerful animals, knowing that these were tenacious of
life, and would climb to the highest points to escape the rising waters.
Some fastened themselves to lofty trees on the summit of hills or
mountains; but the trees were uprooted, and with their burden of living
beings were hurled into the seething billows. One spot after another
that promised safety was abandoned. As the waters rose higher and
higher, the people fled for refuge to the loftiest mountains. Often man
and beast would struggle together for a foothold, until both were swept
away.
From the highest peaks men looked abroad upon a shoreless ocean. The
solemn warnings of God's servant no longer seemed a subject for ridicule
and scorning. How those doomed sinners longed for the opportunities
which they had slighted! How they pleaded for one hour's probation, one
more privilege of mercy, one call from the lips of Noah! But the sweet
voice of mercy was no more to be heard by them. Love, no less than
justice, demanded that God's judgments should put a check on sin. The
avenging waters swept over the last retreat, and the despisers of God
perished in the black depths.
"By the word of God . . . the world that then was, being overflowed with
water, perished: but the heavens and the earth, which are now, by the
same word are kept in store, reserved unto fire against the day of
judgment and perdition of ungodly men." 2 Peter 3:5-7. Another storm is
coming. The earth will again be swept by the desolating wrath of God,
and sin and sinners will be destroyed.
The sins that called for vengeance upon the antediluvian world exist
today. The fear of God is banished from the hearts of men, and His law
is treated with indifference and contempt. The intense worldliness of
that generation is equaled by that of the generation now living. Said
Christ, "As in the days that were before the Flood they were eating and
drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day that Noah
entered into the ark, and knew not until the Flood came, and took them
all away; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be." Matthew 24:38,
39. God did not condemn the antediluvians for eating and drinking; He
had given them the fruits of the earth in great abundance to supply
their physical wants. Their sin consisted in taking these gifts without
gratitude to the Giver, and debasing themselves by indulging appetite
without restraint. It was lawful for them to marry. Marriage was in
God's order; it was one of the first institutions which He established.
He gave special directions concerning this ordinance, clothing it with
sanctity and beauty; but these directions were forgotten, and marriage
was perverted and made to minister to passion.
A similar condition of things exists now. That which is lawful in itself
is carried to excess. Appetite is indulged without restraint. Professed
followers of Christ are today eating and drinking with the drunken,
while their names stand in honored church records. Intemperance benumbs
the moral and spiritual powers and prepares the way for indulgence of
the lower passions. Multitudes feel under no moral obligation to curb
their sensual desires, and they become the slaves of lust. Men are
living for the pleasures of sense; for this world and this life alone.
Extravagance pervades all circles of society. Integrity is sacrificed
for luxury and display. They that make haste to be rich pervert justice
and oppress the poor, and "slaves and souls of men" are still bought and
sold. Fraud and bribery and theft stalk unrebuked in high places and in
low. The issues of the press teem with records of murder--crimes so
cold-blooded and causeless that it seems as though every instinct of
humanity were blotted out. And these atrocities have become of so common
occurrence that they hardly elicit a comment or awaken surprise. The
spirit of anarchy is permeating all nations, and the outbreaks that from
time to time excite the horror of the world are but indications of the
pent-up fires of passion and lawlessness that, having once escaped
control, will fill the earth with woe and desolation. The picture which
Inspiration has given of the antediluvian world represents too truly the
condition to which modern society is fast hastening. Even now, in the
present century, and in professedly Christian lands, there are crimes
daily perpetrated as black and terrible as those for which the old-world
sinners were destroyed.
Before the Flood God sent Noah to warn the world, that the people might
be led to repentance, and thus escape the threatened destruction. As the
time of Christ's second appearing draws near, the Lord sends His
servants with a warning to the world to prepare for that great event.
Multitudes have been living in transgression of God's law, and now He in
mercy calls them to obey its sacred precepts. All who will put away
their sins by repentance toward God and faith in Christ are offered
pardon. But many feel that it requires too great a sacrifice to put away
sin. Because their life does not harmonize with the pure principles of
God's moral government, they reject His warnings and deny the authority
of His law.
Of the vast population of the earth before the Flood, only eight souls
believed and obeyed God's word through Noah. For a hundred and twenty
years the preacher of righteousness warned the world of the coming
destruction, but his message was rejected and despised. So it will be
now. Before the Lawgiver shall come to punish the disobedient,
transgressors are warned to repent, and return to their allegiance; but
with the majority these warnings will be in vain. Says the apostle
Peter, "There shall come in the last days scoffers, walking after their
own lusts, and saying, Where is the promise of His coming? for since the
fathers fell asleep, all things continue as they were from the
beginning." 2 Peter 3:3, 4. Do we not hear these very words repeated,
not merely by the openly ungodly, but by many who occupy the pulpits of
our land? "There is no cause for alarm," they cry. "Before Christ shall
come, all the world is to be converted, and righteousness is to reign
for a thousand years. Peace, peace! all things continue as they were
from the beginning. Let none be disturbed by the exciting message of
these alarmists." But this doctrine of the millennium does not harmonize
with the teachings of Christ and His apostles. Jesus asked the
significant question, "When the Son of man cometh, shall He find faith
on the earth?" Luke 18:8. And, as we have seen, He declares that the
state of the world will be as in the days of Noah. Paul warns us that we
may look for wickedness to increase as the end draws near: "The Spirit
speaketh expressly, that in the latter times some shall depart from the
faith, giving heed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils." 1
Timothy 4:1. The apostle says that "in the last days perilous times
shall come." 2 Timothy 3:1. And he gives a startling list of sins that
will be found among those who have a form of godliness.
As the time of their probation was closing, the antediluvians gave
themselves up to exciting amusements and festivities. Those who
possessed influence and power were bent on keeping the minds of the
people engrossed with mirth and pleasure, lest any should be impressed
by the last solemn warning. Do we not see the same repeated in our day?
While God's servants are giving the message that the end of all things
is at hand, the world is absorbed in amusements and pleasure seeking.
There is a constant round of excitement that causes indifference to God
and prevents the people from being impressed by the truths which alone
can save them from the coming destruction.
In Noah's day philosophers declared that it was impossible for the world
to be destroyed by water; so now there are men of science who endeavor
to show that the world cannot be destroyed by fire--that this would be
inconsistent with the laws of nature. But the God of nature, the Maker
and Controller of her laws, can use the works of His hands to serve His
own purpose.
When great and wise men had proved to their satisfaction that it was
impossible for the world to be destroyed by water, when the fears of the
people were quieted, when all regarded Noah's prophecy as a delusion,
and looked upon him as a fanatic--then it was that God's time had come.
"The fountains of the great deep" were "broken up, and the windows of
heaven were opened," and the scoffers were overwhelmed in the waters of
the Flood. With all their boasted philosophy, men found too late that
their wisdom was foolishness, that the Lawgiver is greater than the laws
of nature, and that Omnipotence is at no loss for means to accomplish
His purposes. "As it was in the days of Noah," "even thus shall it be in
the days when the Son of man is revealed." Luke 17:26, 30. "The day of
the Lord will come as a thief in the night; in the which the heavens
shall pass away with a great noise, and the elements shall melt with
fervent heat, the earth also and the works that are therein shall be
burned up." 2 Peter 3:10. When the reasoning of philosophy has banished
the fear of God's judgments; when religious teachers are pointing
forward to long ages of peace and prosperity, and the world are absorbed
in their rounds of business and pleasure, planting and building,
feasting and merrymaking, rejecting God's warnings and mocking His
messengers--then it is that sudden destruction cometh upon them, and
they shall not escape. 1 Thessalonians 5:3.
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