The Genesis Flood
M ark F. Rooker
Mark F. Rooker is Professor of Old
Testament and Hebrew at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary. He
previously taught at Criswell College and
Dallas Theological Seminary. Dr. Rooker
is the author of numerous articles and
books. His m ost recent work is a
commentary on Leviticus in the New
American Commentary Series.
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Introduction
History of Flood Accounts in the
Ancient World
The memory of a massive deluge of
water is attested in many distinct and
varied cultures of the world. Accounts of
the occurrence of a great flood has been
found in Greece, Mesopotamia, Australia,
India, Malaya, Polynesia, China, Japan,
and among the cultures of the Western
Hemisphere. In all there are sixty-eight
different legends of a massive flood.1 No
other event in biblical history has as much
extra-biblical attestation.
The flood stories that most closely
resemble the biblical narrative come from
southern Mesopotamia. Three distinct
legends have been discovered. The best
known is the Gilgamesh Epic, which
relates how a certain Utnapishtim2 was
arbitrarily chosen and warned of a coming deluge. Some scholars associated with
the Comparative Religion School have not
only attempted to link the Mesopotamian
and biblical floods but have also suggested that the Genesis account is dependent on the Mesopotamian prototypes.
Indeed, the shared details between the
Mesopotamian stories and the Genesis
narrative are striking. They share the
following features: (1) only one man is
warned of the coming deluge and
instructed to build a vessel; (2) the water
vessels are lined with pitch for insulation
(Heb. koper; Akk. kupru); (3) the chosen
man is commanded what he is to bring
into his boat; (4) specific mention is made
of closing the door of the boat; (5) the deluge exterminated both man and beast; (6)
mountains appear before the flood waters
begin to abate; (7) the boat lands on top
of a mountain; (8) birds are released from
the opening of a window; and (9) sacrifices are offered after the flood is over.3
Attempts to relate the accounts, however, have not produced a consensus, and
claims of direct literary dependence have
been largely abandoned. As G. von Rad
stated in 1972: “Today, forty years after
the height of the Babel-Bible controversy,
the dossier on the relation of the biblical
tradition to the Babylonian story of the
Flood as it is in the Gilgamesh Epic is
more or less closed. A direct dependence
of the biblical tradition on the Babylonian
is no longer assumed.”4 Each account has
distinctive elements and the differences
are often more significant than the similarities.5 The contrast between the ethical
monotheism of the biblical account and
the pagan polytheistic outlook of the
Mesopotamian versions is particularly
distinctive. The gods of the Babylonian
accounts are often vindictive, capricious,
and deceive both humans and each other.
Even the writers of these accounts display
little reverence for these gods.6 Consistent
with the lack of ethics among the pagan
gods is the lack of moral and ethical
explanations for the purpose of the deluge.7 There are no ethical or moral reasons provided for the selection of the lone
individual surviving the flood. Moreover,
the gods are ultimately subservient to
nature as they are somewhat startled by
the conditions that resulted from the deluge. They are appalled at conditions over
which they have no control.
But how does one account for the specific terminological and literary connections between the Mesopotamian and
biblical accounts? It is quite possible that
some of the memories of Noah’s flood
were carried to different cultures such as
Mesopotamia where they were corrupted
from the true and inspired description
now faithfully recorded in the Genesis
narrative.
Interest in the Flood and Noah’s ark
transcends the biblical narrative and has
been a continual subject of fascination. As
early as the first century A.D. Flavius
Josephus, the Galilean General turned
historian, cites a common belief that relics of the ark were known to be preserved
in Armenia. Similar evidence may be
found in Rabbinic Literature and from
Berossus, a Babylonian priest who wrote
in Greek ca. 275 B.C.8 Late last summer,
an expedition sponsored by the National
Geography Society discovered remnants
of human habitation, apparently inundated by a great flood several thousand
years ago, under the Black Sea. Many
believe this discovery is independent evidence of the biblical flood.9
The Flood and Critical Scholarship
In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, critical biblical scholars
had a field day with the story of the Flood.
The Flood narrative in the Book of Genesis was a test case for the critical source
theory of the Pentateuch popularized by
J. Wellhausen in 1878.10 Because of the
repetition that occurs in the account the
critics were quick to assign the repeated
events to different sources, the alleged
J and P sources. The repeated events were
often listed as follows:
Male and
Female animals
God sees man’s
wickedness
God commands
to enter ark
Noah enters ark
Flood comes
Waters increase
All flesh destroyed
God rules out
future
destruction
J
P
7:2
6:19; 7:9, 16
6:5-7
6:11-13
7:1-3
7:7-9
7:10
7:17b
7:22-23
6:18-20
7:13-16
7:11
7:18-20
7:21
8:21-23 9:9-11
Since the mid-twentieth century, however, this method has increasingly fallen
out of favor even among critical scholars.
Rather than indicating another source,
repetition has been demonstrated as an
effective way of indicating emphasis. 11
Another criterion for dividing the
Pentateuch into various sources was
based on the different names for God, i.e.,
Yahweh and Elohim. In Genesis 1-11, the
name Yahweh was said to belong to the
alleged J source while Elohim was said to
be the name of God in the P source. H.
Leupold pointed out the flaw with this
criterion long ago when he observed that
the different names for God were not to
be attributed to hypothetical sources but
rather were intentionally used by the
author for specific reasons. The name
Yahweh was used in the text when God’s
gracious dealings with Noah and mankind are emphasized while Elohim was
used to focus on God’s role as Almighty
Ruler of heaven and earth, who brings
judgment upon the disobedient.12
Assuming the literary cohesion of the
account of the Flood, B. W. Anderson
maintains that the Flood narrative was
arranged according to a pattern of antithetical parallelism, in which the second
half of the story reflects the sections of the
first half but in reverse order. This parallelism, which is common in the Old Tes-
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tament, accounts for the repetition. He
analyzes the repetition in the following
manner, suggesting that God’s graciousness to Noah is the central theme of the
story:
Transitional introduction (6:9-10)
1. Violence in God’s creation (6:11-12)
2. First divine address: resolution to
destroy (6:13-22)
3. Second divine address: command
to enter the ark (7:1-10)
4. Beginning of the flood (7:11-16)
5. The rising flood waters
5. (7:17-24)
GOD’S REMEMBRANCE OF NOAH
6. The receding flood waters
6. (8:1-5)
7. The drying of the earth (8:6-14)
8. Third divine address: command to
leave the ark (8:15-19)
9. God’s resolution to preserve order
(8:20-22)
10. Fourth divine address: covenant
10. blessing and peace (9:1-17)
Transitional conclusion (9:18-19)13
The Flood Is Universal
In the Bible the Flood is the primary
archetypal act of judgment on fallen humanity. For at least eight reasons the
Flood described in Genesis 6:9-9:17
should be considered world-wide rather
than local:
1. The phrase “under the whole
heaven” (Gen 7:19) cannot be
reduced to a local situation.
2. The purpose of the Flood was to
judge the entire population of
humanity apart from righteous
Noah.
3. The large size of the ark would not
be necessary if the Flood were
restricted to a local domain.
4. Second Peter 3:3-7 describes an
overwhelming catastrophic event.
5. A local flood could not cover the
Ararat Mountains, which reach
17,000 feet, for over a year.
6. The promise never to destroy the
earth again with a flood has
universal implications. Many have
died in local floods since the time of
Noah.
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7. If the Flood were local, Noah and
his family could have easily
migrated to another country rather
than build an ark.
8. Only a worldwide flood could
account for the attestation of
legends in virtually all regions of
the world.14
The Narrative of the Flood Account
Introduction
While the account of the Genesis Flood
begins properly at Genesis 6:9, the narrative of Genesis 6:1-8 clearly supplies the
immediate historical background, since
Noah, who will survive the great deluge,
was already introduced in Genesis 5:32.
In the latter text we are told that Noah
was the son of Lamech and that he would
bring relief (nhm)15 to the world, which
was cursed since the Fall (5:29). In addition, Noah represented the tenth generation from the creation (1 Chr 1:1-4; Luke
3:36-38). He was five hundred years old
when he became the father of Shem, Ham,
and Japheth (Gen 5:32).
The Sons of God Marry the
Daughters of Men (Gen 6:1-4)
Genesis 6:1-4, which forms the immediate background to the Flood account, is
one of the most disputed passages in the
Bible. The account speaks of “the sons of
God” who took16 “the daughters of men”
as their wives. The debate centers on the
identity of “the sons of God.” Of the
numerous interpretations, the two most
common proposals are to identify “the
sons of God” as fallen angels or as the
godly line of Seth.17
Two supports for taking “the sons of
God” as angels are the use of the phrase
“sons of God” to refer to angels in Job 1:6;
2:1; and 38:7, and the Septuagint’s translation of Genesis 6:2 as “angels of God.”
The apocryphal book 1 Enoch (6:2) also
seems to point in this direction. In addition, proponents of this view cite 1 Peter
3:19, 20; 2 Peter 2:4-6; and Jude 6 as New
Testament references to Genesis 6 that
show “the sons of God” to be angels.
Prominent church fathers such as Justin,
Tertullian, Cyprian, Ambrose, and Lactantius, as well as prominent Jewish
interpreters such as Philo and Josephus,
and several rabbinical writers also take
this position. One objection to this view
is that in Matthew 22:30 Jesus teaches that
angels do not marry (cf. Mark 12:25; Luke
20:34—36).18
The alternative interpretation argues
that “the sons of God” and “the daughters of men” represent two different families of mankind; “the sons of God” are the
descendants of Seth while “the daughters
of men” are the offspring from Cain. The
line of Seth were those characterized by a
pure worship of God. They may have
received the appellation “sons of God”
from the fact that early on they began to
call upon the name of the LORD (Gen
4:26). The designation of God’s true worshipers as His sons is common in the Old
Testament (Exod 4:22; Deut 14:1; 32:5, 6,
18, 19; Isa 1:2; 43:6; 45:11; Jer 31:20; Hos
11:1; Ps 73:15) and is a common motif in
the New Testament as well (Rom 8:14-17;
Gal 3:26; 4:6; Eph 1:5; Heb 12:7). The line
of Cain, on the other hand, represented
those who had rejected the worship of the
one LORD. These two distinct groups that
had been differentiated by character (see
Gen 4:26; 5:22, 29) were now beginning
to commingle, and thus the moral distinctions between the two lines were on the
verge of being obliterated.19 The great sin
in the account of Genesis 6:1-8 is thus that
the godly line of Seth had compromised
its faith and began to intermarry with the
ungodly line of Cain. In essence they
became unequally yoked with unbelievers (2 Cor 6:14).20 F. Schaeffer summarizes
the violation from the larger context: “The
history of divided humanity develops
from the two main lines delineated in
Genesis 4:16-24 (the line of Cain) and
Genesis 4:25-5:32 (the line of Seth). In the
account which follows these genealogies,
we are introduced to a world in which
moral decay comes to so permeate society that only one man is left in the godly
line.” 21 Early church fathers such as
Chrysostom and Augustine advocated
this interpretation. Additional support for
this view include the following observations: (1) there is no other reference to
angels anywhere in the context. The judgment of the Flood is upon men not angels;
and (2) the combination of the verb lqh
(take) with ishah (a wife) is a common
expression in the Old Testament for the
act of marriage (Gen 24:4; 21:21; 11:29;
12:19), and Jesus said angels do not
marry.22 This view is in keeping with the
later prohibition of intermarriage with the
Canaanites (Deut 7:1-4) and with unbelievers (2 Cor 6:14). “There is a constant
prohibition throughout the Old and New
Testaments against the people of God
marrying those who are not of the people
of God.”23 Thus the Jewish rabbis argued
that in addition to violence (Gen 6:11), the
immorality described in Genesis 6:1-4 was
also a cause for the Flood. 24
God’s Plan to Judge the World
(Gen 6:5-7)
In Genesis 6:5 it is apparent that the
human condition has sunk to new depths.
Man’s thoughts are described as continually evil. This situation demands a universal judgment upon man’s rebellion. The
wickedness of man in this verse was correctly observed by Martin Luther as the
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locus classicus for the natural depravity of
the human heart. The expression “the
Lord saw” invites comparison with the
Creation account, most notably by contrast with the affirmative declaration that
“God saw” all He had made and it was
good (Gen 1:4, 10, 12, 18, 21, 25, 31).25 This
emphatic declaration came only after the
creation process was complete and God
had made man and woman in His own
image. Now, in this expressive statement
about the condition of the human heart
God saw that the human intentions were
only evil (see Rom 7:18). This statement
is a pointed conclusion to what began
with the Fall. As Skinner stated: “The
ground of the pessimistic estimate of
human nature so forcibly expressed in v.
5 is rather the whole course of man’s development as hitherto related, which is
the working out of the sinful knowledge
acquired by the Fall.” 26 This working out
of sinful knowledge would include the
murders of Cain and Lamech, as well as
the marriages of the godly line with the
ungodly line.
As a result God was sorry27 that He
made man (Gen 6:6).28 This effect upon
God communicates something of the
incomprehensibility of the intrusion of sin
into the world.29 Human evil has reached
its ultimate depths. The limits of divine
tolerance being breached, the world must
now be purged of its corruption.30 The
just punishment for such a perversion of
the original creation is the blotting out of
life which the Lord God had made (6:7).
Man’s morality has adversely affected the
natural created order. Thus the creation
now awaits its final redemption along
with fallen humanity (Rom 8:19-22). Yet
in the midst of this section dominated by
the themes of sin and punishment there
is a ray of hope based solely on God’s
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grace: “Noah found favor in the eyes of
God” (6:8).31 The word translated favor
(hen) is from the root hnn, which refers to
“grace” or “unmerited favor.”32
Structure of the Flood Account
U. Cassuto breaks down the structure
of the Flood account into twelve paragraphs. Each paragraph deals with a
given episode in the sequence of events,
and all the paragraphs are linked together
by literary connections between words
and expressions. The series of paragraphs
is composed of two basic groups, each
comprising six paragraphs. The first six
depict, step by step, the acts of Divine justice that bring destruction upon the earth,
which had become filled with violence
(6:9-12, 13-22; 7:1-5, 6-9, 10-16, 17-24). The
second group shows us the various consecutive stages of the Divine compassion
that renews life upon the earth (8:1-14, 1517, 18-22; 9:1-7, 8-11, 12-17).33 This paper
will follow a four-point outline, with the
main divisions coming after the second
point. This divides the Flood account in
two main sections, similar to Cassuto’s
analysis.
In the larger context of the primeval
history of mankind described in Genesis
1-11 Skinner noted that the author’s primary interest in the Flood account is to
mark a departure of God’s dealings with
the world, to explain the modification of
the original constitution of nature (9:1-7),
and to provide the immediate historical
background for the establishment of the
first of the three great covenants, 9:8-17.34
God Instructs Noah to Build an Ark
to Escape the Judgment of the
Wicked (6:9-22)
Noah Walked with God, but the Wicked
Corrupted the Earth (Gen 6:9-12)
Three things are said about Noah in
this section: he was righteous, blameless,
and he walked with God.35 Several scholars see in the description of Noah as righteous and blameless the opposite of what
characterizes the rest of humanity: violence and corruption (Gen 6:11). The virtues of righteous (tsaddiq) and blameless
(tamim), used here for the first time, are
virtues favored by God. Righteousness is
often understood as a legal term applying to the person who is declared righteous in a court (Exod 23:7; Deut 25:1; and
Prov 17:15). This indicates that the individual is above reproach when measured
against God’s standards. The term blameless is often found in ritual texts describing an animal with no blemish or defect
that qualified for sacrificial use (Exod 12:5;
Lev 1:3, 10). When applied to the moral
sphere, it refers to one without moral or
ethical blemish, one with unimpeachable
integrity. According to Psalm 15:2 and
101:6, this person, like Noah, is one who
walks with God.36 The latter description
was also used of Enoch, an ancestor of
Noah who walked with God and was
delivered from death (Gen 5:22-24).37 This
connection between Enoch and Noah
may foreshadow Noah’s deliverance from
death while the rest of humanity was
destroyed by the Flood.38 Ezekiel recognizes Noah as one of the outstanding
illustrations of righteous living in all
antiquity (Ezek 14:14, 20).
Noah was unique in his day because
the rest of mankind was corrupt and had
filled the earth with violence (6:11). The
concept of “corruption” (root, sht) may be
viewed as a general term describing the
violation of the divinely appointed order
God had established in Creation.39 “Violence” (hamas) gives a more specific explanation of the corruption that existed dur-
ing Noah’s time. While the term hamas is
normally translated “violence,” because
of its use here and in other contexts, some
have suggested that the term should
be understood to apply to any action
that disregards the sanctity and inviolability of human life. The term occurs in
parallelism with terms for “falsehood,”
“deceit,” or “bloodshed,” and is applied
to such sins as idolatry (Ezek 8:17), deceptive business methods (Ezek 28:16),
divorce (Mal 2:16), and slanderous words
(Ps 140:1-3 [Heb. 2-4], 11 [Heb. 12]; Prov
3:31-32; 16:29). 40 Man had been commanded to “multiply and fill (ml’) the
earth” (Gen 1:28), but now, because of
man, “the earth was filled (ml’) with violence.” The earth’s inhabitants had corrupted their way—they had transgressed
the natural bounds God had established
in Creation. These sins are against nature
(Rom 1:26).
The use of the inclusive terms “the
earth,” and “all flesh”41 indicates that a
universal judgment was unavoidable.
Although God created everything and
declared it “good,” it is now apparent that
circumstances have radically changed. In
humanity, the pinnacle of God’s creation,
the change is unmistakable. Sailhamer
noted the connections of this section,
which focuses on the extent of the Fall and
man’s corruption, to the original Creation:
Here (6:5-7) and throughout the
Flood story, there are numerous
ties established with the Creation
account in chapter 1. The effect is to
show that the Flood was a reversal
of God’s good work of Creation. In
chapter 1 God is shown as the one
who prepared the good land for man
and his family. In the account of the
Flood, on the other hand, God is
shown as the one who takes this
good land from man when he acts
corruptly and does not walk in
God’s way. . . . The cause for the
63
Flood is tied directly to the earlier
account of the fall of man in chapter
3. As a result of the Fall, man had
obtained the “knowledge of good
and evil” (tov wara‘, 3:22). It is clear
from the previous narratives that the
author does not consider man’s having obtained a knowledge of “good
and evil” to be beneficial for man. . .
. After the Fall, when man had to
find the “good” on his own, what
God “saw” (wayyar’, v. 5) was not
that his Creation was good; but
rather, the Lord “saw” (wayyar’) how
great man’s wickedness (ra‘at) on the
earth had become, and that every
inclination of the thoughts of his
heart was only evil (ra‘) .42
God Distinguishes the Righteous from
the Wicked (6:13-22)
Verses 13-22 of chapter 6 open with the
phrase “Then God said to Noah.” This
phrase, which occurs seven times in this
narrative (Gen 6:13; 7:1; 8:15; 9:1, 8, 12, 17),
is an extension of the choice and selection
of Noah and is continuing evidence that
Noah had found favor with God. This section contains the instructions for building
the ark, which at four hundred fifty feet
long, seventy five feet wide, and forty five
feet high, has dimensions similar to some
modern sea-going vessels.43
The term for the ark (tebah) suggests a
box-like craft with no rudder or sail or any
other navigational device. The fate of the
occupants of this vessel was solely in
God’s hands. The only other occurrence
of the term tebah in the Old Testament is
in Exodus 2 where the term is used for
the small basket that transported the baby
Moses through the water. Cassuto has
commented on the significance of this
correlation:
The exclusive occurrence of ark here
and in Exod 2:3-5 is certainly no
coincidence. By the verbal parallel,
the Torah wished, apparently, to
draw attention to the parallelism of
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theme. In both cases there is to be
saved from drowning one who is
worthy of salvation and is destined
to bring deliverance to others; here
it is humanity that is to be saved,
there it is the chosen people; here it
is the macrocosm that has to be
preserved, there it is the microcosm.
The experiences of the fathers foreshadow the history of the descendants. 44
After announcing that He will bring
the Flood upon the earth and destroy all
flesh from under heaven (Gen 6:17), God
avowed that He would establish a covenant with Noah and his family (Gen
6:18). This is the first occurrence of the
important theological word “covenant”
(berit) in the Bible. (This covenant, which
is spelled out in Genesis 9:9-17 after the
Flood, is founded on grace, just like the
Mosaic covenant [Exod 19:4, 5] and the
New covenant [Matt 26:28]. 45 ) God
instructed Noah to bring male and female
pairs of every living creature into the ark
so as preserve each species (Gen 6:19-20).
The precise enumeration of the species of
animals clearly evokes the order of animals in Genesis 1. Details of this process
are not provided but we must assume that
God controlled this operation by stimulating the animals to preserve their lives
and their species. This section closes with
the announcement that Noah exercised
complete obedience to God’s demands
(Gen 6:22).
The Lord Destroys the Wicked by
the Flood but Preserves Noah and
His Family (7:1-24)
The Lord Preserves Noah from Judgment (Gen 7:1-9)
The beginning of this new section is
marked by the phrase, “Then the LORD
said to Noah” (Gen 7:1). In Genesis 7:2
further information is provided about the
animals to be taken into the ark. The
single pairs were unclean (Gen 6:19-20),
but here Noah is commanded to take
seven pairs of clean animals. This difference is attributed to the fact that it was
the clean animals only that would be a
food source for the humans on the ark.
Thus there is an assumption that the
distinctions between clean and unclean
animals were understood before they
were delineated later in the Mosaic law
(Leviticus 11; Deuteronomy 14).46
The reason for taking these animals
into the ark is explicitly stated in Genesis
7:4: God was to send rain on the earth for
forty days and nights to blot out every
living thing on the earth.47 The rest of this
section continues the theme of Noah’s
obedience to the Lord’s command to take
the animals into the ark (Gen 7:5, 9).
The Lord’s Judgment Destroys the
Wicked (7:10-24)
In the second month of the six hundredth year of Noah’s life the fountains
of the great deep and the floodgates of the
sky burst open (7:10-11). The description
of the great upheaval of the flood is
clearly reminiscent of Genesis 1 where the
waters above and below the firmament
were separated. Now they are merged
again, as if to reverse the work of creation
and place the earth back into its original
chaotic state (Gen 1:2).48
After the Flood Recedes Noah Left
the Ark and Offered a Sacrifice to
God (8:1-22)
God Restores His Creation after
Judgment (8:1-19)
“God remembered”49 Noah and the
animals in the ark and sent a “wind”
(ruah) to pass over the earth (8:1). As God
begins to fashion the earth after the del-
uge there is a clear terminological connection with the Creation account where
God’s wind or spirit (ruah) was at work
over a submerged earth (Gen 1:2).50 The
conditions God brought forth in Genesis
7:11 were abruptly terminated as the
fountains and floodgates were closed
and the rains came to an end (8:2). The
waters of the Flood thus steadily receded
until the seventeenth day of the seventh
month when the ark came to rest on
Mount Ararat (8:4). By the first day of the
tenth month the tops of the mountains
became visible (8:5). To investigate the
extent to which the water had receded,
Noah sent out a raven from the ark, which
made repeated forays (8:7) as it apparently fed upon vegetation and carrion that
it might have obtained from floating carcasses.51 Next Noah sent out a dove, but
it soon returned. After another seven days
he sent the dove from the ark again, but
this time the bird returned with a freshly
picked olive leaf. The olive tree, which
does not grow in great altitudes, indicated
that the waters had sufficiently abated
(8:11). When the dove was sent out again
seven days later, it did not return (8:12),
indicating that it found suitable living
conditions.
When the land itself was sufficiently
dry, God commanded Noah to leave the
ark with his sons and their wives, along
with the living creatures (8:13-17). In a
clear allusion to the creation account (Gen
1:22), the animals are let out “so they can
multiply on the earth and be fruitful and
increase in number upon it” (Gen 1:17).
This allusion, combined with the image
of Noah’s family emerging from the ark,
indicate that God’s plan and program are
about to commence.
65
The Restored Remnant Acknowledges Their Gratitude by Sacrifice
(8:20-22)
Noah’s immediate response to his
deliverance from destruction was to build
an altar to the LORD. Thus man’s first act
in response to divine deliverance was one
of worship (see Gen 2:1-3). On this altar
Noah offered a burnt offering sacrifice to
the LORD. The burnt offering (root ‘olah),
which literally means “that which
ascends,” was a sacrifice that not only was
a means of expiation but was also particularly distinguished as a dedicatory sacrifice to the LORD. Noah offered a burnt
offering in gratitude for the Lord’s work
on his behalf. God was pleased with this
offering: “God smelled the soothing
aroma.” 52 The latter technical formula
was often used in cultic texts (Exod 29:18,
25, 41; Lev 26:31) to indicate God’s
approval of the sacrifice. In expressing
satisfaction with Noah’s offering God
vowed never to curse the ground again
on account of man,53 even though “the
intent of man’s heart is evil from his
youth” (8:21). This latter statement is
virtually identical to the description of
human depravity in 6:5, which justified
the coming of the judgment in the Flood.
Here, after the Flood, the statement functions like a divine observation of the
nature of the human predicament. The
Flood has not improved man. Though the
motivation for the Flood still remains,
God will never again take the some course
of action. In spite of human depravity,
God commits Himself to His world.54
This is an indication of the graciousness
of God who kindly tolerates sinful
humanity.55
In his forbearance, the Lord pledges a
regular flow in the course of nature (Gen
8:22). The order of nature is indicated by
66
four series of environmental and temporal contrasts. The rhythm of life reflected
in these ordered processes indicates that
a flood will never again disrupt this consistency.56 There will certainly be natural
catastrophes after the Flood, but these will
be on a local, not universal, level. The
aftermath of the Flood is thus an affirmation of Creation and speaks ultimately not
of divine punishment but of God’s faithfulness to preserve his creation.57
God’s Covenant with the New
World (9:1-17)
Life Is to be Produced and Preserved
on Earth (9:1-7)
With God’s relationship with mankind
reestablished after the Flood, God now
calls on Noah to be fruitful and multiply
(Gen 9:1, 7), just as He commanded Adam
(Gen 1:28). Mankind is in effect to start
anew. Man’s dominion over the animal
kingdom (Gen 1:28) is reestablished and
the animal world will now fear the presence of man (Gen 9:2). The meat or flesh
of animals is permitted for food as long
as the blood has been drained (Gen 9:3-4;
cf. Lev 17:11, 14; Deut 12:23). This is the
first important, biblical statement made
about the theological significance of the
term blood. Delitzsch summarized the
reason for the dietary restriction on blood:
Blood and life are one, inasmuch as
they are in one another in a relation
of intercausation; the blood is not the
same as the life, but it is before all
other constituents of the animal corporeality the manifestation, material
and vehicle of that life, which pervades, fashions and continuously
regenerates the corporeality. This
relation of the life to the blood, a far
more direct one than to the flesh (for
the blood is the medium of life to the
latter), is indicated by the juxtaposition of nfshv and dmv, which at the
same time suggests the reason for
this prohibition of the blood, viz. a
sacred reverence for that principle of
life flowing in the blood, which even
as that of the animal is derived from
God, who bestows a participation in
His all-animating life. . . . This prohibition of blood is repeated seven
times in the Mosaic legislation
besides Lev 19:6; 3:17; 7:25-27; 17:1014; Deut 12:16, 23, 24; 15:23, and
gives as a further reason, Lev 17:11,
that the blood is an atonement,
bannefesh, by reason of the life that
is in it.58
While it is permissible to shed the
blood of animals for food, man should not
become calloused so as to think he could
also shed the blood of a human being
(Gen 9:6). The significance of human life
needed to be stressed at this juncture since
all but eight members of the world’s
population had just lost their lives. Moreover, the explicit sin that necessitated the
Flood was violence. Capital punishment
for murder limits man’s violent acts.
Those who take a life made in God’s
image commit such an atrocity that they
forfeit their privilege to live. Furthermore,
human beings are responsible for carrying out the sentence of capital punishment (Gen 9:6b). 59 This responsibility
certainly led to the establishment of courts
and other legal means to carry out justice
and punishments not only in ancient
Israel but also in other cultures under the
influence of biblical revelation.
God Promises to Preserve Creation
(9:8-17)
This section is divided into two subsections—9:8-11 and 9:12-17—by the occurrence of two divine proclamations “God
spoke to Noah” (Gen 9:8), “And God
said” (Gen 9:12). The key term, is the term
berit, “covenant,” which occurs seven
times, resuming the promise made before
the Flood in Gen 6:18. The promise is that
God would never again destroy the earth
by a flood. As the Flood affected both
man and the animal world, this pledge is
established with both man and beast (Gen
9:9-11).
The sign of this covenant is the rainbow (Gen 9:12-13), which is mentioned
elsewhere in Scripture in connection with
the glory of God (Ezek 1:28; Rev 4:3; 10:1).
The rainbow serves as a sign for God to
remember His promise not to judge the
earth with a worldwide flood ever again
(Gen 9:14-17). As the term for rainbow
(qeshet) was most frequently used for the
bow in warfare, the appearance of this
sign may be a token to indicate that God
will no longer make man the target of His
anger as He did in the Flood.60
Conclusion
The Flood: The Undoing of Creation
The profound significance of the Flood
may be indicated from the fact that there
are numerous allusions to the Creation
account in the Flood narrative. Various
elements in the account of the Flood echo
terms and concepts from the Creation narrative. The two primary verbs used in the
Creation account (‘asah and bara’; Gen
1:26-27) are employed in the announcement of the decision to wipe out the
human race, but in reverse order (Gen
6:7). This may be an early hint in the narrative that what is taking place in the
Flood is a reversal of the process of Creation, or Creation’s undoing. Whereas
Creation in Genesis 1 was largely a matter of separation and distinction, the
Flood reversed this order. Based on similar observations, Kruger well stated: “The
flood replays the creation account in
reverse.”61
The reference to the animals that were
to be taken into the ark (Gen 6:20; 7:14)
67
are clear allusions to the organizational
categories that had been delineated in
the Creation week (Gen 1:21, 24-25). The
destruction caused by the waters of the
Flood followed the same sequence of the
Creation: the water first covers the earth
and its high mountains, then birds, cattle,
beasts, all swarming creatures and finally
man (Gen 7:13-22). 62 The provision of
food Noah was to take in the ark (Gen
6:21) depends on the earlier reference on
what God had provided for man to eat
(Gen 1:29-30).
For several reasons Noah should be
considered a second Adam. First of all, he
was apparently the first man born after
the death of Adam (5:28-29), an indication
that he will be the second father of
humanity. Like Adam, Noah had three
sons, one of whom rebelled against the
law of God. Additional connections to the
Creation account include the role of the
wind in Genesis 8:1 in sweeping back the
flood waters as in Genesis 1:2, the rhythm
of life established in Genesis 1:14 being
resumed in Genesis 8:22, the blessing of
Genesis 9:7 which repeats Genesis 1:28,
and the fact that both narrative accounts
are followed by a genealogical list of the
Table of Nations (4:17-26; 5:1-32; 10).63
Ross also noted additional associations of
the Flood account to the early chapters of
Genesis:
The parallels to the beginning of
Genesis must not be missed in these
next few units of the book. In this
first unit the fountains of the deep
and the windows of heaven brought
a flood over the whole earth (chaos),
but then the waters abated and dry
land appeared as the seas were once
again gathered into their places (creation). In the next unit, Noah was
commissioned to be fruitful and
multiply and replenish the earth, for
he now was the new man of the
earth. But then in the following unit
68
Noah’s failure was displayed in his
lying naked, just as the knowledge
of nakedness was evidence of the
fall. In both cases curses resulted
from the failures. There is thus a
deliberate parallel between Adam
and Noah and between Adam’s
world and Noah’s world. With Noah
there is a new beginning of God’s
creation, but there is also a new
beginning of evil.64
Timeless Truths from the Flood
Narrative
The Human Heart Is Depraved
In the preface to the Flood account
(Gen 6:5), man is described as wicked and
the intent of his thoughts as continually
evil. After the Flood waters have subsided
(Gen 8:21), the same essential portrait of
man is given. The Flood has not radically
changed man’s basic nature. Even Noah
himself, the only righteous and blameless
man prior to the Flood, became drunk
and his son Ham committed the sin of
looking upon his father’s nakedness (Gen
9:20-27). The human race is characterized
by sin (Jer 17:9; Ps 5:9; 14:3; Rom 3:10-18).
Jesus himself depicted the human race as
evil (Luke 11:13).
God Is Displeased with Sin and Must
Judge It
We are told that when God saw the
pervasive wickedness of man He was
grieved in his heart that He had made
man (Gen 6:6). The nature of God requires
that He judge man’s sin. Because God is
holy He cannot wink at sin. For man, this
judgment is a judgment of death, which
God promised would be the outcome for
violation of His commands (Gen 2:17).
This judgment is fair and just based on
the fact that God created man (Gen 6:7).
We clearly see in this sequence of events
that sin and judgment are thus interrelated. Judgment is the outcome of sin.
The verb used for “destroy” in the Flood
account (shahat, 6:13) is the same root for
the word corrupt in 6:11, indicating the
intrinsic relationship between crime and
punishment. “What God decided to
destroy (v. 13) had been virtually selfdestroyed already.”65 The punishment is
commensurate with the crime.
But in judging man, a purpose of Creation has been undone, since man, the
pinnacle of Creation, was to be God’s representative and have dominion over what
God had created (Gen 1:28-30). Instead,
because of man’s degradation, what God
had made must be destroyed. One purpose of man’s creation in the image of
God was to have communion with God
(Gen 2:1-3). Man’s evil heart has thwarted
this purpose, and so “death in the Flood
is no more than the outworking of man’s
behavior.”66
God’s act of judgment is as personal as
His creation of man. God stated in the
Creation, “Let us make man in our image”
(Gen 1:27), but in the Flood God states “I
will destroy man whom I created” (Gen
6:7); “I will destroy them with the earth”
(Gen 6:13); “I Myself am bringing the
floodwaters on the earth” (Gen 6:17). The
personal judgment is necessary because
man, who alone is made in God’s image,
is the only creature that can have fellowship with God. Of all God’s creation, only
man was to enjoy a unique communion
with the Creator. This makes man’s sin,
which breached God’s law and fractured
the personal relationship man had with
God, all the more deplorable.
Sin and judgment as well, as the recognition of Noah’s righteousness, are
based on the existence of an accepted, universally binding morality. This conventional morality is acknowledged in the
Genesis narratives before Israel received
the Law from God on Mount Sinai. This
assumption of an assumed moral code is
necessary to condemn such actions as
murder (Cain, Lamech) and homosexuality (Sodom and Gomorrah) as evil. That
a moral law is binding on all humanity is
confirmed in the eschatological judgment
of the earth in Isaiah 24:5. In the New
Testament we find the same teaching in
Paul’s recognition of the universal, innate
consciousness of sin (Rom 2:14).
In the subsequent revelation of Scripture, the themes of sin and judgment are
addressed in terminology associated with
the Flood. The Pentateuch uses the terminology of washing with water as a symbol for purging of sins (Lev 8:6, 21). The
New Testament picks up the same connection (Titus 3:5). Peter makes a comparison between the flood of water and the
end of the world (2 Pet 3:6-7). Conditions
preceding the Flood serve as a type and
warning of the events at the end of time
(Matt 24:36-42; Luke 17:26-27).
At the outset of biblical revelation we
have this word about God’s deadly anger
over sin. This must be in the back of
every reader’s mind as he studies subsequent revelation. God is angry with sin
and must judge it. As Mark Twain reportedly said, “It is not the difficult things in
the Bible that bother men. It is the things
I do understand that keep me up at
night.” Certainly what principally disrupts the sleep and rest of all sinners is
that we are ultimately accountable to God
in judgment (Heb 9:27). The doctrine of
judgment for sin is one that cannot be
avoided.
God Is a God of Mercy and Grace
It is not by mistake that the first occurrence of the word “grace” in the Bible
should come in the narrative of the
69
Flood—the greatest display of judgment
the world has ever witnessed—as grace
can only be understood in the context of
man’s depravity and God’s righteous
anger. The tumultuous judgment of the
Flood stands at the beginning of the Bible
to provide the necessary setting for God
to demonstrate His grace. Noah, to be
sure, is undeserving, but he finds favor
with God. Every subsequent mention of
grace in the succeeding pages of Scripture
must be understood against this backdrop
of man’s just condemnation.
In the Flood account we also find the
first occurrence of the word, “remember”
(zkr). God remembering Noah is also an
aspect of God’s grace. According to C.
Westermann, to remember is to apply
mercy toward the one threatened with
death.67 Grace demonstrated by the Flood
is found in the New Testament, which sees
the Flood as a type of baptism (1 Pet 3:1822). Both the Flood and water baptism
symbolize a way through death into life.
By saving only a remnant of people
God was saving man from himself.
Clearly, the Flood portrays mankind on
the brink of destruction and extinction.
God’s concern for man is shown after the
Flood as He affixes the most severe penalty to those who commit murder (Gen
9:6). The ordained establishment of capital punishment for murder conveys the
high value the Bible places upon human
life. This is essential in view of the savage atrocities already committed by Cain
and Lamech before the Flood (Genesis 4).
The post-flood legislation is meant to limit
human violence.
Those Who Receive God’s Grace Should
Live Godly Lives
It is only after Noah received God’s
grace that we hear of his godly character
70
(Gen 6:8-9). Righteousness and blamelessness pertain to two distinct aspects of a
life with which God is pleased. These
qualities were demonstrated by Noah in
his obedience (Gen 6:22; 7:5, 9, 16; 8:1519, 20). In this text righteousness refers to
societal faithfulness and loyalty in personal relationships while blamelessness
normally refers to ritual purity. Noah
found favor with God and man (see 1 Sam
2:26; Luke 2:52). He loved God with his
whole being and his neighbor as himself
(Deut 6:5; Lev 19:18; Matt 22:34-40).68 He
is distinct from those of his generation,
who are corrupt and violent. He alone
stood against the values and morality of
his culture. It was disobedience to God’s
command that brought on the tumult of
the Flood, and it is obedience to God that
enabled mankind to survive. Thus obedience to God affects our own lives, our
families, the creatures of the world, and
the entire earth. Noah had to obey God
to avoid the judgment. Every event that
determines the course of human history
is set in motion by God’s command and
man’s obedience.69
Because Noah found favor in the eyes
of the Lord, God spared him, his family,
and many animals from the judgment of
the Flood (Heb 11:7; 1 Pet 3:20). Noah’s
finding favor at the outset of the narrative (Gen 6:8) is no doubt significant as
the qualities Noah then demonstrates
flow from this initial electing grace. The
Apostle Paul makes the identical point in
Ephesians 2:1-10. We are saved by faith
alone, but faith that saves is not alone; it
is verified by good works.
Extended grace and favor leads to
fellowship with God. Seven times in the
narrative the statement is made that God
spoke to Noah (Gen 6:18; 7:1; 8:15; 9:1, 8,
12, 17). Grace was the foundation of
Noah’s life as it is the foundation of
every believer’s life today. “It was grace
alone that gave Noah his spiritual position before God. He was saved by grace
alone.”70 Those who receive this grace like
Noah should walk in righteousness, that
is, in obedience. Noah did all that God
commanded him (6:22; 7:5, 9). Believers
are to do the same today (John 14:15;
1 John 2:3).
The choice of Noah and the instruction
he received stem solely from God’s grace.
Later in Israel’s history the Law was given
to the nation also in the context of grace,
coming immediately after the formative
saving event of the Old Testament, the
Exodus from Egypt. Grace, and only
grace, can provide a way of escape. As in
the giving of the Law to the nation of
Israel, the commands given to Noah
should be seen in this context of grace.
Indeed, these commands were given for
Noah’s survival: “Make for yourself an
ark”(Gen 6:14); “Take for yourself all the
food that is eaten” (Gen 6:21); “Come into
the ark” (Gen 7:1); and “Go out of the ark”
(Gen 8:16). The commands are not heavy
burdens for those who receive grace, the
commands are for their good. In obeying
God’s ordinances and commands man
can then experience abundant life (Deut
32:47; John 10:10). As Jesus said, “My yoke
is easy and My burden is light” (Matt
11:30).
The People with Whom God Is Pleased
May Be Few
Noah had separated himself from the
wicked and was separated from sinners
in judgment (Psalm 1). The solitary obedience and survival of Noah address the
biblical theme of a faithful remnant that
occurs throughout the Scripture. We find
the remnant theme in the time of Elijah
(1 Kgs 18:22; 19:14) and particularly in the
writing prophets Amos and Isaiah. 71
Throughout Israel’s history, a select number have identified themselves with the
people of God. The New Testament continues this theme in that only a remnant
of the Jewish nation responds with belief
upon the arrival of their Messiah (Rom
9:6). Only a remnant of the nation of
Israel belongs to God. This theme is also
reflected in Jesus’ statement that those
who find life will be few (Matt 7:14). In
church history men like Athanasius,
Luther, and Knox felt that they were alone
in their faithfulness to God and His Word.
The biblical Flood is the earliest reference
to the remnant theme in the Bible.
God Is Sovereign over Creation and
Has Control of the Forces of Nature
Perhaps no other narrative in Scripture,
outside the Creation event itself, illustrates this truth more forcibly. As with no
other event in world history, the earth
stood at the brink of annihilation, sovereignly determined by God in response to
human wickedness. Yet, there was never
a time when conditions were outside of
God’s control. He not only brought on the
deluge, but also preserved Noah’s rudderless ship amid the annihilation.
God shut the ark’s door on the very
same day the Flood began (Gen 7:13-16).
He is not only sovereign over matter but
over time as well. The Flood illustrates
God’s complete control of nature and all
the circumstances of life. He preserves
and sustains His Creation (Gen 8:21-22;
Matt 5:45); the wind and the sea still obey
Him (Mark 4:41). God knows how to
deliver the godly out of temptation and
reserve the unjust for punishment at the
day of judgment (2 Pet 2:9).
71
ENDNOTES
11
J. Lewis, “Flood,” Anchor Bible Dictionary, 2:798. For a helpful geographical layout of the various
traditions, see J. Boice, Genesis: An
Expositional Commentary Volume 1,
Genesis 1:1-11:32 (Grand Rapids:
Zondervan, 1982) 285-287.
22
In other Mesopotamian accounts he
is called Ziusudra or Atrahasis.
33
See S. E. Loewenstamm, “mabbul,”
Encyclopaedia Biblica, 4:601-602 [In
Heb.], and N. Sarna, Understanding
Genesis: The Heritage of Biblical Israel
(New York: McGraw-Hill, 1966) 4347.
G. von Rad, Genesis, rev. ed., Old
Testament Library (Philadelphia:
Westminster, 1972) 123. See also N.
Sarna, Genesis, JPS Commentary
(Philadelphia: Jewish Publication
Society, 1989) 48.
55
Lewis, 799.
66
J. Skinner, A Critical and Exegetical
Commentary on Genesis, 2nd ed.,
International Critical Commentary
(Edinburgh: T. &. T. Clark, 1910) 178.
77
One Mesopotamian tradition relates
the cause of the flood to the noise of
the people.
88
See L. Feldman, “Josephus’ Portrait
of Noah and its Parallels in Philo,
Pseudo-Philo’s Biblical Antiquities,
and Rabbinic Midrashim,” Proceedings of the American Academy of Jewish Research 55 (1988) 31-57, and L.
Ginzburg, The Legends of the Jews:
Notes to Volumes I and II From the Creation to the Exodus (Philadelphia:
Jewish Publication Society, 1968)
5:186, n. 48.
99
Tim Friend, “Evidence Possibly Tied
to the Biblical Flood Found in Sea,”
USA Today, 13 September 2000, 4A.
44
72
10
J. Wellhausen, Prolegomena to the History of Israel (1878; reprint, New
York: World, 1957).
11
For a recent analysis of the source
critics’ approach including a discussion of the analysis of the flood, see
M. Rooker, Leviticus, New American
Commentary 3B (Nashville: Broadman & Holman, 2000) 23-39.
12
H. Leupold, Exposition of Genesis
(Grand Rapids: Baker, 1942) 1:281.
13
B. Anderson, “From Analysis to
Synthesis: The Interpretation of
Genesis 1-11,” Journal of Biblical Literature 97 (1978) 38. Similarly, a more
detailed chiastic arrangement may
be found in G. Wenham, “The
Coherence of the Biblical Flood,”
Vetus Testamentum 28 (1978) 336-348.
14
See H. Vos, “Flood (Genesis),” ISBE
2:317-318; J. Davis, Paradise to Prison:
Studies in Genesis (Salem, WI:
Sheffield Publishing Company,
1998) 126; and H. Morris, The Genesis Record (Grand Rapids: Baker/
San Diego: Creation-Life, 1976) 182.
15
The etymology seems to be a wordplay on the similarly sounding roots
nhm, meaning “comfort,” and nh
(Noah), meaning “rest.”
16
The wording of Gen 6:2 recalls the
account of the Fall in Gen 3:6 where
Eve saw that the tree was good, and
took and ate.
17
For an excellent layout of the major
interpretations regarding the identity of “the sons of God,” see J.
Walton, Chronological and Background Charts of the Old Testament,
2nd ed. (Grand Rapids: Zondervan,
1994) 98.
18
This objection may be countered by
the observation that Jesus refers to
angels in heaven whereas the Gen-
esis 6 passage pertains to fallen angels that may not have been hindered from marrying and having
sexual relations with humans. It is
of interest, however, that in Luke
20:36 angels and sons of God are
distinguished by Jesus.
19
Leupold, 1:249. Leupold is somehat
distinctive in that he holds that “the
daughters of men” may have been
of either line, and thus refer to
women who lack spiritual qualities
(1:252).
20
See J. Calvin, Commentaries on the
First Book of Moses, trans. J. King
(Grand Rapids: Baker, 1979) 1:237239.
21
F. Schaeffer, Genesis in Space & Time
(Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press,
1972) 127.
22
Jude 6, 7 is concerned with fornication, whereas Gen 6:1-4 specifically
deals with marriage (see Davis, 111112).
23
Schaeffer, 132.
24
See especially Feldman, 37, and
Ginzburg, 5:173, n. 17.
25
It is not an accident that the declaration that all God made was good
occurs seven times. For an exhaustive treatment of the use of symbolic
numbers in the Book of Genesis,
particularly in the Creation and
Flood accounts, see U. Cassuto,
“biqqoret,” Encyclopaedia Biblica,
2:318-335 [In Heb.].
26
Skinner, 150.
27
Frequently we find in Scripture the
expression “God was sorry” or
“God repented” (Exod 32:14; 1 Sam
15:11; Jer 18:7-8; 26:3, 13, 19; Jonah
3:10). The meaning of the phrase is
qualified here by the expression “He
was grieved in His heart.”
28
The three roots of the three verbs in
Gen 6:6 nhm (sorrow), ‘sh (made),
and ‘sb (grieved) are the same verbal roots employed in Gen 5:29 in
introducing Noah, suggesting that
it is Noah who has been chosen to
bring some remedy to this intolerable situation. Moreover, the root ‘sb
occurs twice in the discourse on the
curse (Gen 3:14-19) to describe the
new condition of man and woman
brought about by the Fall (Gen 3:16,
17). The term thus links terminologically with the Creation account
and the experience of the first man
and woman, suggesting that in
some way Noah’s purpose is to remedy the effects of the Fall.
29
Von Rad, 117.
30
Sarna, Genesis, 47.
31
The words for grace or favor (hn)
and Noah (nh) form an anagram in
Hebrew (one term is the reverse
spelling of the other).
32
The use of the root demonstrates the
idea of “without reason,” “without
cause,” or “unmerited favor” (see 1
Sam 19:15; 25:31; Job 1:9; 2:3; 9:17;
22:6).
33
U. Cassuto, A Commentary on the
Book of Genesis, 2 vols., trans. I.
Abrahams (Jerusalem: Magnes,
1984) 2:30-31.
34
Skinner, 149.
35
By the placing of the phrase “with
God” first in the final phrase (Gen
6:9) the author underscores that the
source of Noah’s righteous and
blameless living is his relationship
with God.
36
It is worth noting that in Ps 15:2 the
quality of being blameless, often
translated as “integrity,” is placed
in the foremost position of those
qualities necessary to maintain fellowship with God.
37
Significantly, Enoch was the seventh
in line from Adam, while Noah was
the tenth. These indicate significant
places in the genealogy just as Boaz
and David occupy the seventh and
tenth positions in the genealogy of
Perez (Ruth 4:18-20).
38
See J. Sailhamer, “Genesis,” in The
Expositors Bible Commentary, ed. F.
Gaebelein (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1990) 2:81.
39
See Skinner, 159.
40
See Cassuto, A Commentary on the
Book of Genesis, 2:52-53, and Sarna,
Genesis, 51.
41
It is probable that the animals are to
be included in the phrase “all flesh.”
Man’s sins have affected animals
and the earth (Hos 4:2-3; Isa 1:2-7;
Jer 23:10; Rom 8:19-22). Sin often
leaves in its wake a host of innocent
victims.
42
Sailhamer, 80.
43
See Skinner, 161, and Sailhamer, 8384.
44
Cassuto, A Commentary on the Book
of Genesis, 2:59.
45
D. Kidner, Genesis: An Introduction
and Commentary, Tyndale Old Testament Commentaries (London:
Tyndale/Downers Grove: InterVarsity, 1967) 89.
46
The same point could be made also
from Genesis 15 were it is only clean
animals that are sacrificed in the
covenant making ceremony.
47
The number forty is a symbolic
number in the Bible often associated
with a trial and purging from evil
(Num 14:33; Exod 24:18; 1 Kgs 19:8;
Jonah 3:4; Matt 4:2; Acts 1:3).
48
This reversal of Creation is also sup-
ported from the use of the term
tehom to describe the waters (Gen
1:2; 7:11). For a defense that God’s
original creation is described in Gen
1:2, see M. Rooker, “Genesis 1:1-3:
Creation or Re-Creation?” Part 1,
Bibliotheca Sacra 149 (July-September 1992) 316-323, and ibid., Part 2,
Bibliotheca Sacra 149 (OctoberDecember 1992) 411-427.
49
In the Bible remembering, especially
when God is the subject, is not a recollection of thought but a focusing
on the object of the memory and
faithful intervention on behalf of the
object (Gen 9:15; 19:29; 30:22; Exod
2:24; 6:5; Luke 1:54, 55).
50
Sailhamer notes a parallel to the
Exodus as well in the wording of the
Genesis 8. Just as God remembered
his covenant (Exod 2:24) and sent a
strong wind to dry up the Red Sea
to allow dry land to appear (Exod
14:21-22), so also in the Flood God
remembered Noah, sent a wind so
the people may eventually come out
of the ark on dry ground (p. 89).
51
Sarna, Genesis, 57.
52
Hebrew nihoah, “soothing aroma,”
sounds much like noah, “Noah.” For
discussion of the significance of the
burnt offering, see Rooker, Leviticus,
84-93.
53
The occurrence of the terms ‘adam
(man) and ‘adamah (ground) recall
the original creation in Genesis 1-2.
54
D. J. Clines, “Noah’s Flood: The
Theology of the Flood Narrative,”
Faith and Thought 100 (1972-73) 140.
55
Alternatively, Kidner argues that the
resolution not to destroy man again
is based on Noah’s sacrifice, which
typifies the sacrifice made once for
all by Jesus Christ (Rom 3:25, 26)
73
(p. 93).
Skinner, 158.
57
Clines, 140.
58
F. Delitzsch, A New Commentary on
Genesis, 2 vols. (Minneapolis: Klock
& Klock Christian Publishers, 1978)
1:284-285.
59
Poetic justice is established in the
putting to death of one who takes
another human life. The first three
Hebrew words of Gen 9:6 describe
the crime and are placed in reverse
order in the announcement of the
sentence (see Sarna, Genesis, 61).
60
See Von Rad, 134.
61
H . A . J . K r u g e r, “ C re a t i o n Uncreation Reflection of Reversal
Motifs in Genesis 9:18-24 (25-29),”
in Proceedings of the Twelfth World
Congress of Jewish Studies (Jerusalem:
World Union of Jewish Studies,
1999) 129.
62
For a discussion of other biblical
texts that allude to the Creation pattern, see M. Fishbane, “Jeremiah IV
23-26 and Job III 3-13: A Recovered
Use of the Creation Pattern,” Vetus
Testamentum 21 (1971) 151-167.
63
Sarna, Genesis, 49-50.
64
A. Ross, Creation and Blessing (Grand
Rapids: Baker Books, 1988) 189.
65
Clines, 134-135.
66
Ibid., 137.
67
C. Westermann, Genesis 1-11: A Continental Commentary, trans. J. Scullion (Minneapolis: Fortress, 1994)
441.
68
The Ten Commandments also
exhibit this twofold division (see
Rooker, Leviticus, 65-77).
69
Westermann, 424.
70
W. H. Thomas, Genesis: A Devotional
Commentary (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1946) 72-73.
56
74
71
G. Hasel, The Remnant: The History
and Theology of the Remnant Idea from
Genesis to Isaiah (Berrien Springs,
MI: Andrews University Press,
1972).
75