8 Then
God said to Noah and to his sons with him, 9 “As for me, I am
establishing my covenant with you and your descendants after you, 10 and with every living
creature that is with you, the birds, the domestic animals, and every animal of
the earth with you, as many as came out of the ark. 11 I establish my
covenant with you, that never again shall all flesh be cut off by the waters of
a flood, and never again shall there be a flood to destroy the earth.” 12 God said, “This is the
sign of the covenant that I make between me and you and every living creature
that is with you, for all future generations: 13 I have set my bow in
the clouds, and it shall be a sign of the covenant between me and the earth. 14 When I bring clouds
over the earth and the bow is seen in the clouds, 15 I will remember my
covenant that is between me and you and every living creature of all flesh; and
the waters shall never again become a flood to destroy all flesh. 16 When the bow is in the
clouds, I will see it and remember the everlasting covenant between God and every
living creature of all flesh that is on the earth.” 17 God said to Noah,
“This is the sign of the covenant that I have established between me and all
flesh that is on the earth.”
Genesis 9:8-17
A couple of beginning thoughts…this is normally
our Old Testament text for the first Sunday of Lent, but our college students
are leading worship next week, so we’ll use different texts. Nick, Kathy, and I
will also be focusing on the theme of covenant during Lent, so we’ll begin
today—at the very beginning.
And at the very beginning, God created, looked around at what had been created and proclaimed it
good. A world full of colors and
creatures and sunlight and moonlight; green land and blue waters; a creation
bursting with promise and hope and life. And it was good. But in that beginning
life began to evolve and humans began to realize their sin as they saw each
others’ nakedness. There was jealousy and pettiness in those first descendants
that led to one brother taking the life of another, murder that continued
through generations. God looked around at this good creation that had been
marred by the sin of humans—looked around and saw the wickedness of humankind.
The description given to us in the 6th chapter of Genesis is not a
pretty one:
The Lord saw the wickedness of
humankind was great in the earth, and that every inclination of the thoughts of
their hearts was only evil continually. And the Lord was sorry that he had made
humankind on the earth, and it grieved him to his heart. So the Lord said, “I
will blot out from the earth the human beings I have created-people together
with animals and creeping things and birds of the air, for I am sorry that I
have made them.
God grieved over them, hated their wickedness, mourning that
beautiful part of creation that had been molded with loving hands, regretting
the day they had been made.
But, even in the midst of that madness and chaos and
disorder, there was a ray of hope in the midst of darkness—a part of that
creation that remained good. There was a man named Noah, a descendant of the
murderous Cain. God loved Noah and entrusted him with the little part of
creation that would be left after God sent a flood to wipe the chaos away. God
planned to start over and created Noah to preserve that new creation. God told
him to build a boat strong enough to withstand the flood waters that would soon
wipe the earth away, big enough to take in 2 animals of every kind, precious
enough to hold Noah’s precious family who would be saved with him. You know Noah
must have been good, because most of us would have questioned God about this
one. I, for one, would have protested and said, “Maybe I’ll do this God, but
only if I don’t have to bring the snakes with me.”
You know, we so often tend to sanitize this story—to not
deal with the harshness and severity and destruction of it. Instead of dealing
with the reality of what happens here, we want to make it the stuff of nursery
walls and camp songs; the cute animals coming on in twosies, twosies, elephants
and kangaroosies, roosies—but it’s not. The ark must have been awful and hard
to build, with Noah feeling lots of guilt for his family being the last one on
the earth. The ark would be burdened with the smell of animals and the
territorial fights that were sure to ensue between them. It must have been
awful and hard for Noah, knowing that he and his family would be the last part
of God’s creation standing after the flood, awful knowing that they would see
everyone else washed away to their deaths.
And it was awful. Just as there was nothing good about the
Earth that God could find, there is nothing good about this part of the story.
The flood was horrible; the death all around was horrible. And God sensed that.
After God blew breath and the flood waters receded showing the barrenness left
of the earth, God looked around. God made a promise of new life in the middle
of the nothingness, a promise never to do it again. God made a promise: “I will
never again curse the ground because of humankind, for the inclination of the
human heart is evil from youth; nor will I ever again destroy every living
creature as I have done.” It was a beautiful promise to be sure, but, as we all
know, promises are easily broken. And God knows us and knows that we can’t help
being broken and acting broken because sin is in our hearts from the beginning.
So God took it one step further and made a covenant, a promise to be sure, but
something more binding—a covenant is a promise, an oath, a hope that comes from
the heart, a promise of hope between God and all of us, something that is deep
and meaningful. A covenant bears the promise to all of us that God will never
break God’s word to us, and so it is lifelong and necessary for us to live in
the world. God said to Noah, “I am establishing my covenant with you and your
descendants after you, and with every living creature that is with you…that
never again shall all flesh be cut off by the waters of a flood to destroy the
earth…I will remember my covenant that is between me and you and every living creature
of all flesh; and the waters shall never again become a flood to destroy all
flesh.” God made that covenant with Noah, makes it with all of us since we are
all descendants, God’s children together. Never again, God says.
The covenant, that original covenant with God and with all
of us, is binding for God, a promise and oath that will never be broken by our
Creator. This covenant reminds us that God is good to us all of the time and
always will be. But God also knows that we will not always be good back, knows
that we are so prone to breaking covenant. It even happened with Noah—God made
that original covenant with Noah after Noah built the ark out of such
overwhelming faithfulness. Noah and his family were fruitful—they multiplied
and filled the earth just as God asked. But it wasn’t easy. Can you imagine how
heavy all that was for Noah—for he and his family to be the only humans who
were picked to survive a flood that would wipe out the rest of the earth? Can
you imagine the survivor’s guilt? Although he honored the covenant with God, he
lived a broken life, weighed down by guilt, one that culminated with him being
drunk and naked and having to be covered up by his sons. Even as he continued
to spread life as he planted in the vineyard, he was ultimately broken by
survival, broken by life. But despite all of that, God’s promise of life, of
creation, continued.
There is a lot of darkness in Noah’s story, a lot of broken
earth and broken people. I don’t know about you, but I’ve felt a lot of times
lately that maybe we are there again, in a place where God looks at the world
as broken and broken down, heavy with the weight of sin and violence, heavy
with the burden of people who tear each other down and hurt each other without
even a moment of hesitation. I’ve felt several times in the last few years that
we might be in the time of Noah again.
When I heard the stories from an elementary school in
Newtown, stories of 5 year olds who had up to 12 bullet wounds each in their
little bodies, I looked to the sky and wondered and asked, “What kind of world
are we living in, God?” So many times lately, as I’ve heard of hundreds of
school girls kidnapped by Boko Haram in Nigeria, girls who have been raped and
held for ransom and have become not suicide bombers—but suicide bombs—as
explosives have been strapped to their bodies, I wonder. When I see us all
become so convinced that we have the market on truth and everyone else is
wrong, and when I see the ways we tear each other down over social media, I
wonder. When I hear about three twenty-something Muslim students who are
executed in their apartments in Chapel Hill, I wonder. When I watch our elected
leaders of all parties act like children who threaten to take their toys from
the sandbox and go home instead of talking and compromising, I wonder. And, of
course, as I watch the spread of ISIS—a group who kills all the men in Iraqi
villages and keeps their women and children, raping and pillaging them; a group
who kidnaps foreigners, holding them for years until they know the world is
watching, murdering them brutally in increasingly barbaric ways, I wonder. I
wonder how the world will deal with these people who kidnap a young refugee
worker from Syria, hold her and do God only knows what to her, only to set her
up to be murdered. Folks with no conscience certainly won’t listen to reason or
suddenly be overcome by compassion and we are left to wonder if even bombs will
stop them. I honestly thought this this week after hearing about Kayla
Mueller’s death: “Maybe it’s time for God to go all Old Testament and send
those flood waters into this broken world again, wipe the slate clean, and just
start over.”
Thankfully, though, that’s just my view of our broken and
sinful world. And thankfully that’s not God’s view. Although I imagine that God
is still disgusted and sad and grieved by what we do to the world and to each
other, God still says, “Never again.” Although I imagine that God says it over
and over and over again and often tires of it, God still stands by that covenant:
Never again. Although I imagine we probably often make God mad enough to fill
the earth again, God stands firm to the covenant: Never again will I fill the
earth with the flood waters and destroy my creation.
Notice that God doesn’t require any promises, any oaths, any
words God knows we can’t back up from Noah or from us. God makes the covenant
with us knowing that any promises we make in return will be broken because we
are broken, because perfection was broken in the garden by us almost as soon as
it was created by God. But God makes the promise of covenant anyway. God sets
the bow in the clouds anyway as a sign of covenant for all of us.
I love how my favorite storyteller, Barbara Brown Taylor
says it:
From now on, God…will bind himself
to creation in peace, promising himself to it…God chooses to ally himself with
the cantankerous creation whatever the cost…We have all of us got a place in
that ark—not because we, like Noah and his crew, are all that righteous, but
because it has pleased God to preserve our lives. Because life is sacred to
God, and having destroyed it once, God has promised never to do it again. If we
go on perishing, it may have less to do with divine fiat that with our own
amnesia. We have forgotten who we are and what we are supposed to be doing. We
have forgotten whose covenant partners we are and how that covenant—not to
mention that God—means for us to be bailing water and handing out life vests as
fast as we can, so that every living creature who rides this ark with us may share
the unmitigated joy of walking down the rickety ramp to plant a foot, a paw, a
hoof on dry land.
“Never again,” says God, promising, covenanting to Noah and
each and every one of us that we have a place in the ark. God makes that
covenant with us, even knowing that we are broken and that we can’t help but
sin. God makes that covenant with us, promising with every breath and every
word and every action that we are a part of the kingdom. And because of that
amazing covenant, we are called to every single thing we can to honor God, to
honor God’s covenant promises to us—to live in thanksgiving as we make sure
that every creature is able to set foot on the good soil of the earth.
I love that this story of Noah and God and covenant is one
of our lectionary passages for the first Sunday of Lent. As we are about to
journey through these long, barren, Lenten days, we are called to examine our
lives in every way. We are called to look at this grace God has given the
planet because God wants us to live in harmony, honoring the earth, honoring
each other, honoring God. Lent gives us the chance to examine and explore how
to reach out despite our brokenness; how to break free from what weighs us down
and reach out to those in need; how to love deeply while at the same time
recognizing our mortality and sin. Let us be reminded of that during this week
as we journey towards Ash Wednesday and Lent.
As we close, I would like to take some time to read some
beautiful, haunting words from Kayla Mueller, the American who showed her love
for God by working with Syrian refugees. She was kidnapped two years ago by
ISIS and proved dead this week. These are tough, but necessary words to hear
from a woman of great faith—a young woman who had already done so many great
things in the world, a woman who could have done so much more if she had not
been taken, a woman who loved so greatly while also recognizing her own sin,
her own mortality. She wrote these words in a letter after she had been
kidnapped:
If you could say I have 'suffered' at all
throughout this whole experience it is only in knowing how much suffering I
have put you all through; I will never ask you to forgive me as I do not
deserve forgiveness. I remember mom always telling me that all in all in the
end the only one you really have is God. I have come to a place in experience
where, in every sense of the word, I have surrendered myself to our creator
because literally there was no else…and by God and by your prayers I have felt
tenderly cradled in freefall. I have been shown in darkness, light and have
learned that even in prison, one can be free. I have come to see that there is
good in every situation…I pray each day that if nothing else, you have felt a
certain closeness and surrender to God as well and have formed a bond of love
and support amongst one another. The thought of your pain is the source of my
own, simultaneously the hope of our reunion is the source of my strength.
Please be patient, give your pain to God. I know you would want me to remain
strong. That is exactly what I am doing.
Amen. Let us pray.
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