00:00
00:00
00:01
Transcript
1/0
Please rise for the public reading
of the Word of God. I remind you that the reading of
Scripture is an element of worship, not just the preaching. This
is the most direct unfiltered voice from the scriptures that
we hear. Our New Testament lesson comes
from the Olivet Discourse, Matthew 24. We'll read verses 36 to 44. But of that day and hour, no
one knows, not even the angels of heaven, but my Father only. But as the days of Noah were,
so also will be the coming of the Son of Man. For as in the
days before the flood they were eating and drinking, marrying
and giving in marriage until the day that Noah entered the
ark, and did not know until the flood came and took them all
away, so also will the coming of the Son of Man be. Then two
men will be in the field, one will be taken and the other left.
Two women will be grinding at the mill. One will be taken,
and the other left. Watch, therefore, for you do
not know what hour your Lord is coming. But know this, that
if the master of the house had known what hour the thief would
come, he would have watched and not allowed his house to be broken
into. Therefore, you also be ready for the Son of Man is coming
at an hour you do not expect. This is the gospel of our Lord
Jesus Christ. We'll turn now to the story that
Jesus spoke of, the days of Noah, in Genesis chapter six, our Old
Testament lesson and our sermon text. We'll read Genesis six, one to
13. Now it came to pass when men
began to multiply on the face of the earth and daughters were
born to them, that the sons of God saw the daughters of men
that they were beautiful, and they took wives for themselves
of all whom they chose. And the Lord said, my spirit
shall not strive with man forever. For he is indeed flesh, yet his
days shall be 120 years. There were giants on the earth
in those days, and also afterward, when the sons of God came in
to the daughters of men, and they bore children to them. Those
were the mighty men, who were of old, men of renown. Then the
Lord saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth.
and that every intent of the thoughts of his heart was only
evil continually. And the Lord was sorry that he
had made man on the earth, and he was grieved in his heart,
so the Lord said, I will destroy man whom I have created from
the face of the earth, both man and beast, creeping thing and
birds of the air, for I am sorry that I have made them. But Noah, found grace in the
eyes of the Lord. This is the genealogy of Noah. Noah was a just man, perfect
in his generations. Noah walked with God. And Noah
begot three sons, Shem, Ham, and Japheth. The earth also was
corrupt before God, and the earth was filled with violence. So
God looked upon the earth, and indeed it was corrupt, for all
flesh had corrupted their way on the earth. And God said to
Noah, The end of all flesh has come before me, for the earth
is filled with violence through them, and behold, I will destroy
them with the earth. The grass withers, the flower
fades, the word of God stands forever. Amen. You may be seated. The Book of Ecclesiastes is a
difficult book, but it's a book that especially our young people
should consider. speaking for a moment to our
covenant children and covenant youth, those who are of tender
years. Here's what Solomon says in that
book. The preacher says, remember now
your creator in the days of your youth, before the difficult days
come and the years draw near when you shall say, I have no
pleasure in them. While the sun and the light,
the moon and the stars are not darkened, and the clouds do not
return after the rain. Remember your creator now, before
that day comes. In our studies in Genesis, we
have come to what Solomon described. We've come to difficult days.
120 year countdown to judgment. When the sun and the light and
the moon and the stars are going to be darkened, God's gonna flip
the switch, turn off the lights, and the clouds shall return after
the rain. Indeed, there's gonna be rain,
a lot of rain. 40 days, 40 nights of nonstop
rain. We've come to the days of Noah.
In some ways, these days were ordinary. Life went on. What
did Jesus say? They ate, they drank, they married
wives, they were given in marriage. Life went on, but looming in
the background was the certain threat, the imminent reality
of God's judgment. Now, why was that? And we've
been looking at this chapter for a few weeks now, and we saw
before that Genesis records an escalation of evil. You have
two children in a sandbox fighting over a toy, and it escalates
into World War III, a nuclear holocaust. That's what we find
in this passage. That's what we find in this book.
It starts with the sin of Adam, and it leads to an avalanche
of sin. Whatever cultural development,
there's a spiritual downgrade. And in the immediate context,
whatever the sons of God were doing, and whoever they were,
their sin led to great evil. which in turn led to God's judgment.
Congregation, we come to difficult days, so dark, that listen to
what the Bible says. It says that the wickedness of
man was great in the earth, and every intent of the thoughts
of his heart was only evil continually. Dark days, difficult days, discouraging
days. Maybe you feel like you're living
in days like that now at the level of your family, the level
of your work, your marriage, your city, your states, the world. Congregation, I have good news
for you. I have the best news. that in
this dark night, there was a spark of light. In these dark days,
there was a ray of hope. And it's found in verse eight.
That's what we're gonna focus on this morning. Verse eight,
just shines out of the darkness, but Noah found grace in the eyes
of the Lord. Praise the Lord. Hallelujah,
what a Savior our God saves sinners. We're gonna look at this passage
under two basic headings, the problem of sin and the solution
of salvation. Something's wrong, God fixes
it. First, the problem. The bad news
is that by nature, we are all sinners who deserve God's judgment. That's the bad news. And in this
passage, we find a graphic, grotesque portrait of sin and misery. Three big sins. This is a bit
of review, but we started with Adam in the garden, and then
we had Cain in the land, and now we have the sons of God who
sin in such a way that it affects the entire world. Regardless
of what view you take of the sons of God, again, I favor the
angelic interpretation in some form. The improper mingling of
the sons of God with the daughters of men led to, through the giant
warrior tyrants, great evil. Great evil, perhaps the fallen
angels gave dark knowledge to men, but there is a contagious,
toxic spread of vice in civilization. Look at verse five again. The
Lord saw the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and every
intent of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. I'm tempted to want to try to
expound that passage, but instead, I can think of no better expositor
than Gerhardus Voss, who said four things about Genesis 6-5. First, he said, notice the intensity
and extent of evil, great in the earth. Second, Notice its
inwardness. Every imagination of the thoughts
of his heart. Not just on the outside, but
the enemy within. Third, the absoluteness of the
sway of evil, excluding everything good, only evil. And then fourth,
the habitual, continuous working of evil, continually, all day
long. That is a graphic and grotesque
portrait of sin and misery. It's really, if we had no other
verse in the Bible, the proof text on total depravity. Radical
in its depth and comprehensive in its scope. You might hear
from sociologists and guidance counselors and psychologists
that we're all basically good. You know, there's a nice spark
of human kindness in everyone, and if we would just put our
political and cultural and religious differences aside, we could all
just get along. Well, that's a lie straight from
the pit of hell. It's simply not true. We are not basically
good. On the other side of the fall
of Adam, we are basically bad. This is the shocking and scandalous
teaching of the word of God that we are by nature sinners deserving
judgments outside of Christ. We're not basically good. Now
what does this look like? Well the portrait continues in
verse 11. The earth also was corrupt before God and the earth
was filled with violence. So God looked upon the earth
and indeed it was corrupt for all flesh had corrupted their
way on the earth. It's corrupt and it is violent. Of course, there's a vertical
dimension to this. Men are shaking their fists in
the face of God. There's high-handed rebellion
against God on high, but they're also sinning against their neighbors,
their fellow men. Jesus says the two great commandments
are love God, love your neighbor. Well, when you sin, you sin against
God primarily, vertically, but you also stand against your fellow
man horizontally. There's a note of pleasure here,
going back to the sons of God and the daughters of men, a perverse
pleasure, but also a power grab, a domination. Corrupt and violent. If that was true in the days
of Noah, is it still true today? Turn on the news, look around
you. We have people who call good
evil and call evil good. We have butchers who cut up children. in the name of LGBTQ plus agendas. We have assaults on nature itself
and on nature's God. We have denials of creation in
so-called reformed churches. We have the blood of unborn children
crying out from the ground for vengeance. We have a land filled
with blood, violence, corruption, perversion, with minivans getting
toppled and storefronts getting set on fire. We are in a similar
day, a day of corruption, a day of violence. And this kind of
great evil, whether you look at the Roman Empire, you look
at the days of Noah, you look at our own day, as evil begins
to populate the earth and multiply and divide, Sooner or later, God cuts it
down. It demands judgment, and that's
what we find in verse six. The Lord was sorry that he had
made man on the earth, and he was grieved in his heart. Remarkably personal language. So the Lord said, I will destroy
man whom I have created from the face of the earth, both man
and beast, creeping thing and birds of the air, for I am sorry
that I have made them. It's a language, on the surface,
of regret. I am sorry that I made this world
and it has become so wicked. It's a hard verse, because as
you read it, you might reasonably ask the question, I thought God
was unchangeable and immutable, I thought God was simple and
impassable, without body, parts, or passions. So how can the Bible
describe God this way? Well, just as a side note, I
wanna explain it. This is what theologians who
like to use big words call anthropomorphic or anthropopathic language. You might say, what does that
mean? Well, here's what it means. The language used here of God, though
true, is figurative, not literal. And we know that because elsewhere
we are told explicitly that God does not and cannot change his
mind. Numbers 23, 19, God is not a
man. that he should lie, nor a son
of man that he should repent. Has he said, and will he not
do? Or has he spoken, and will he
not make it good?" What's going on here is this, God who is simple,
God who is one, God who is without body, parts, or passions is described
using the figurative language of human emotions. Why? To communicate to us as creatures
his posture towards sin and his determination, his sovereign
purpose to punish it, to punish that sin. Do you see what's going
on? does not, cannot change his mind. He is utterly immutable
and unchangeable, but to convey to us who are but creatures of
the dust something of his posture of holiness towards wickedness,
the Bible uses this figurative language of human emotions to
communicate something of that reality. as well as his sovereign
purpose to punish sin. Jeremiah 18, the instant I speak
concerning a nation and concerning a kingdom to pluck up or to pull
down and to destroy it, If the nation against whom I have spoken
turns from its evil, I will relent of the disaster that I thought
to bring upon it. And the instant I speak concerning
a nation and concerning a kingdom to build it and to plant it,
if it does evil in my sight so that it does not obey my voice,
then I will relent concerning the good with which I said I
would benefit it. So this is not God changing his
mind. This is the immutable, the eternal,
the unchangeable God expressing to us his posture of holiness
towards wickedness and his purpose, which he tells us in Jeremiah
18, that when people are wicked, he brings down judgment. This
is the unchanging God's unchanging mode of operation. In the face
of great evil, God says, I'm going to hit the reset button. You might wonder, when's this
gonna happen? When's it gonna happen for our nation? When did it happen for Rome?
When did it happen for Greece, or Medo-Persia, or Babylon? When
did it happen in the days of Noah? Well, how long? Verse three
tells us, and the Lord said, as he's looking out at great
evil, my spirit Reference to the Holy Spirit in the Old Testament. We serve a triune God, Father,
Son, and Holy Ghost. My spirit shall not strive with
man forever, for he is indeed flesh, yet his days shall be
120 years. Spirit, God says, the Holy Spirit
will not always strive. ethically with man, or it could
be translated, he will not always rule or abide physically with
man. One way or another, whether his
restraining power will be removed, or whether he will physically
leave them as they perish, one way or another, there is going
to come a day of judgment. 120 years, this could refer to
a lifespan, that men had much longer lifespans, as we saw in
the genealogies before the flood. Now they're gonna be shortened
to 120 years. Well, there's a problem with
that, because later we have longer lifespans after the flood, and
then eventually shorter than 120 years after the flood. Just
look at Psalm 90. 70, or by reason of strength, 80 years. That doesn't
seem to be what's being talked about. Not a lifespan of 120
years, but rather a time frame. God is saying, because of their
wickedness, I am going to, in 120 years, bring down the hammer
of judgments. I'm going to hit the stopwatch. And when it hits 120 years, know
that the day of judgment is nigh. It's a countdown. And it provides
time for two things. One, for sin to fill up, for
iniquity to fill up. to reach a certain threshold,
and two, it graciously provides opportunity for men, women, and
children to repent. God is long-suffering. God is
gracious. God is compassionate. And here's
what's amazing. What was going on in this 120-year
period? Sometimes you think the only
thing that was happening was that people were living their worst life
now, and then Noah was building an ark. But he was doing more
than building an ark. What was he doing? He was preaching. He was doing what I'm doing this
morning. He was crying out to his generation, it's gonna rain. It's gonna rain and y'all better
repent of your sins and climb aboard the ark or you're going
to perish. Judgment's coming. Repent before it's too late.
We know that because in 2nd Peter 2 5 Noah is designated a preacher
of righteousness a herald of the righteousness of God and
So God gave them a hundred and twenty years to listen to the
plaintive ministry of this righteous man an opportunity to repent
and As Peter says, the Lord is not slack concerning his promise,
as some count slackness, but is longsuffering toward us, not
willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance. Ezekiel tells us that God is,
he doesn't take delight in the death of the wicked. He would
use the language of the covenant rather that they turn and repent,
though he is sovereign over all. Well, as you look at this, sin. this need for judgment, and then
an intervening period of 120 years for sin to fill up and
for people to have the opportunity to repent, this is providing
a historical pattern that will play out again and again. Not
always with 120 years, but this idea that God waits for the iniquity
of the Amorites to fill up before he sends in Joshua and Caleb
to wipe out the inhabitants of Canaan. that God gave the Jews
who rejected Jesus in AD 30. He gave that generation 40 years
of opportunity to repent. But then he brought down the
hammer of judgment upon Jerusalem and upon the temple in AD 70. And congregation This pattern
plays itself out, whether it's the golden lion of Babylon, or
the silver bear of Medo-Persia, or the bronze leopard with four
heads and four wings of Greece, or the iron... fearsome monster
of the Roman Empire, God gives men and nations time for their
sin to fill up and an opportunity to repent. And if they do not
repent, God brings judgment. And I tell you that this is true
of all men in all nations. This is true of the United States
of America. We've been blessed for 200 years to enjoy life,
liberty, and property, but if we continue in impenitence, and
the pattern in the Bible and the pattern in history is true,
that if we, as a people, do not humble ourselves, confess our
sins, and pray to the Lord of Heaven, how can we not expect
His judgment to fall? In fact, I tell you, the judgment
has already begun. Romans 1 tells us that when men
give themselves to other men and women to other women in an
unnatural way, that is not just crying out for judgment, it is
an expression of God's judgment. He has given those people over
to their sins. Judgment has begun. But whether
we're talking about the days of Noah, the days of Rome, the
days of the United States of America, this pattern, of sin,
of judgment, and of an intervening period of delay, this ultimately
prefigures a final event. A final event to come. When Babylon
fell, Isaiah tells us, he describes it using astrological imagery.
The sun is taken out. The stars fall. It's the picture
of an empire crumbling. But that imagery points forward
to a final, a definitive day of the Lord, spoken of in Matthew
24, which we just read, and in Luke 17. But of that day and
hour, no one knows, not even the angels of heaven, but my
Father only. But as the days of Noah were,
so also will the coming of the Son of Man be. He's coming in an hour you do
not expect. Spirit is not going to strive
forever, both in the history of a nation and in the history
of the world. The Spirit does not strive forever.
And so my urgent exhortation to you, this is true of every
generation since Noah, you need to prepare for rain. Prepare
to meet thy God. Because ultimately, at the end
of history, it's going to rain. If you're not in the ark, You're
going to get wet, you're gonna drown. If you're not in Christ,
you're going to perish in everlasting fire, separated from the presence
of God. So let this pattern, this picture,
set forth in this historical event, put the fear of God into
you as you think about the coming of Christ on the clouds of heaven
to judge the quick and the dead. Well, we've spent a lot of time
talking about the bad news. We're all sinners, we're all
busted, we all deserve judgment. That's a very depressing sermon
you've preached so far. But that's often the way it works
in the prophets, isn't it? Often for chapters and chapters,
it's just oracles of woe and doom and gloom and judgment.
It's important to listen to that, that urgent cry for repentance. But as it is in the prophets,
so it is here that in the dark night, there is spark of light. In this difficult day, there's
a ray of hope. I love this verse. I love this
verse. But Noah found grace in the eyes
of the Lord. As hundreds, thousands, millions,
perhaps billions were in pursuit of their own lusts, the lusts
of the flesh, the lusts of the eyes and the pride of life, Noah
found grace. God saves sinners. The solution, the good news is
that though we are sinners, by grace, through faith, in Christ
alone, we can be saved. And we know that because Noah
found grace. Reminds me of Ephesians 2 where it lists how we are dead
in trespasses and sins, and you have that beautiful turn, but
God, made us alive together with Christ. Well, here it's, but
Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord. Now, some will argue
that the following verse provides the reason for why he found grace,
because you might wonder, why this man? What was so special
about Noah? And some will say, if you look
at verse nine, we learn something unique about him. Noah was a
just man, perfect or blameless in his generations. Noah walked
with God. Matthew Henry says, this is not
a sinless perfection, but a perfection of sincerity. This man sincerely
followed the Lord. It's a reminder of someone we
saw recently, right? Enoch's remarkable testimony.
Enoch walked with God. Well, here we see that Noah walked
with God. holy conduct before Him, holy
communion with Him. I heard a sermon recently where
the preacher said that this walking with the Lord speaks of an experiencing
and enjoying of God's company. Noah enjoyed spending time with
God. Now, is that the reason why he
found grace? Now, it's true. that God promises
to reward sincere obedience. It pleases Him when we obey Him. What does John say? I delight
to know that the children walk in the truth. When you sincerely,
from a heart of love and thanksgiving, do the right thing, your Heavenly
Father smiles upon that. Even as you parents know what
it's like to smile at your children when, even under great duress,
they do the right thing anyway. That's all true. But I'm actually
not convinced that's the relationship between these two verses. Actually,
I think the relationship is the reverse between verses eight
and nine. Congregation, and this is theologically
true at a bedrock level, regardless of your exegesis, but at a bedrock
level, it's not that Noah found grace because he walked with
God. He walked with God because he
found grace. You see the difference? He didn't
earn God's favor. It's because he was shown grace
that this man walked with the Lord. It's not the reason he
found favor, but the evidence that he had found favor. And it makes sense, because what
is grace? By definition, grace is undeserved, indeed ill-deserved,
unmerited, demerited favor. Noah was born in sin and conceived
in sin. He was guilty He was broken,
and he deserved God's wrath. But something was different,
and that was that God set his electing, sovereign grace and
love upon this wicked man. And the evidence that he had
done so was this subsequent walk of righteousness before the face
of God. I love how Matthew Henry puts
it, the effect of God's favor to him. It was God's goodwill
to him that produced this good work in him. He was a very good
man, but he was no better than the grace of God made him." You
see, God met Noah where he was and not where he should have
been. That might be an encouragement to you this morning. God meets
you where you are, not where you should have been, but then
God doesn't leave you where you are. He takes you up. He transforms
you by His grace. By grace alone, through faith
alone, in Christ alone, this man, Noah, was justified, adopted,
and sanctified. And I say in Christ alone, because
what was Noah trusting in? He wasn't trusting in his own
works of merit. He was looking back to the first
proclamation of the gospel to Adam and Eve, Genesis 3.15. He
was looking to the seed of the woman who was gonna crush the
head of the serpent. He was looking, by faith, to
Jesus. The reason Noah found grace was
God's good pleasure. And he loved Noah with an everlasting
love. Because God set his grace upon
him, and that grace not only forgave him, but transformed
him, Noah stood out. Noah did not look like the rest
of the world. Noah was the odd man out. was a man who was marked out. He swam against the tide. As
G.K. Chesterton said, it takes a living
thing to swim against the tide. And Noah was a man who was alive.
He was a man who had been set free. He was a man who had been
pardoned. He was a man who had been forgiven.
He was a man who had been sanctified. He was a man who was being transformed
by the grace and power of God. And so he swam against the tide.
Young people, as you enter into situations where people are offering
you all sorts of things, where they are offering you pleasures
that you know are illicit, where they are offering you money that
you know would be ill-gotten, when they are encouraging you
to laugh at jokes that you know would violate Paul's instruction
about coarse jesting, you have an opportunity. to be the dead
thing that swims with the tide, or you can be the live thing
that swims against the tide, and you can stand out as Noah
did in his generation, realizing that though the world mocks you,
though the world scoffs at you, you've found favor in the eyes
of the Lord, and that's all that really matters. Noah. was a remarkable man. Ezekiel mentions him in chapter
14. He says, even if these three
men, Noah, Daniel, and Job were in it, they would deliver only
themselves by their righteousness, says the Lord. Even though Noah,
Daniel, and Job were in it, as I live, says the Lord God, they
would deliver neither son nor daughter. They would deliver
only themselves by their righteousness. This is an exemplar, an example,
a model for us. And the key, don't forget the
key, is the previous verse, verse eight, Noah found grace. How can we apply this great truth? I wanna leave you with a couple
applications. First, these are dark days, these
are difficult days, and some of you, whether because of the
national situation, international situation, or much more intimate,
the state of your home, some friendships that have fallen
on hard times. You're in difficult days, and it can be very demoralizing
to feel like, in an office place, you're the only one who cares
about the glory of God. It can be very discouraging. I wanna encourage you that 7,000 have not bowed the knee to Baal,
that even when the whole world seems like it's going in the
wrong direction, There is always a remnant according to the election
of grace. God will build his church and
the gates of hell shall not prevail against it. We can care not what
men think of us because all that matters is that you find grace
and favor in the eyes of the Lord. Henry again says, let this
be the summit of our ambition. to find grace in the eyes of
the Lord. Herein, let us labor that present
or absent, we may be accepted of him. It sounds cliche, but
we play for an audience of one. We labor for the glory of God. And no matter what people think
of you or say of you now, Just fast forward, if history were a YouTube video,
and you were scrubbing through it, you would barely move at
all, and you're at the final day, and you're looking face
to face with Jesus, and Jesus looks at you, and he says, well
done, good, faithful servant, enter into my joy. At that day,
when you look back, who cares what people thought of you? Who
cares if you stood out? Who cares if you were the odd
man out? If all that matters is that you find favor in the
eyes of the Lord, let's put this in perspective and be encouraged
by it. Second is an exhortation, and
I've already hinted at this, but this passage is screaming
to us. If you're not a believer, if you're outside the ark, if
you're not trusting in Christ or if you're trusting your own
works to save you, you need to flee. You should be afraid. Flee
from the wrath to come. Seek the Lord while he may be
found. Call upon him while he is near,
as that 120-year clock is ticking, or that five-year clock, or that
one-minute clock. And having found God, or rather,
after he's found you, as you've turned to him and you've been
brought home to him, as you rested upon Christ alone, having found
grace from God, I urge you to walk with God all the days of
your life. May it be said of us in a crooked
and perverse generation, but Dave found grace in the eyes
of the Lord. But Jim found grace in the eyes of the Lord. But
Madeline found grace in the eyes of the Lord. that Fritz found
grace in the eyes of the Lord, that all of us, to a man, to
a woman, to a child, have found grace in the eyes of the Lord,
not because of what we can do, but because of what he has done. This is good news. This is the
best news. God saves sinners. Let us pray.
But Noah Found Grace
Series Genesis: Book of Beginnings
| Sermon ID | 21025020255371 |
| Duration | 38:17 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - AM |
| Bible Text | Genesis 6:1-8; Matthew 24:36-44 |
| Language | English |
Documents
Add a Comment
Comments
No Comments
© Copyright
2026 SermonAudio.