A GOD WHO REMEMBERS
Opening Prayer
Father, teach me through today’s reading in Scripture and show me how I can apply it to my life. Use it to encourage me, to strengthen me, to correct me—in any way I need as I seek to walk more closely with you.
Read GENESIS 8
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8 But God remembered Noah and all the wild animals and the livestock that were with him in the ark, and he sent a wind over the earth, and the waters receded. 2 Now the springs of the deep and the floodgates of the heavens had been closed, and the rain had stopped falling from the sky. 3 The water receded steadily from the earth. At the end of the hundred and fifty days the water had gone down, 4 and on the seventeenth day of the seventh month the ark came to rest on the mountains of Ararat. 5 The waters continued to recede until the tenth month, and on the first day of the tenth month the tops of the mountains became visible.
6 After forty days Noah opened a window he had made in the ark 7 and sent out a raven, and it kept flying back and forth until the water had dried up from the earth. 8 Then he sent out a dove to see if the water had receded from the surface of the ground. 9 But the dove could find nowhere to perch because there was water over all the surface of the earth; so it returned to Noah in the ark. He reached out his hand and took the dove and brought it back to himself in the ark. 10 He waited seven more days and again sent out the dove from the ark. 11 When the dove returned to him in the evening, there in its beak was a freshly plucked olive leaf! Then Noah knew that the water had receded from the earth. 12 He waited seven more days and sent the dove out again, but this time it did not return to him.
13 By the first day of the first month of Noah’s six hundred and first year, the water had dried up from the earth. Noah then removed the covering from the ark and saw that the surface of the ground was dry. 14 By the twenty-seventh day of the second month the earth was completely dry.
15 Then God said to Noah, 16 “Come out of the ark, you and your wife and your sons and their wives. 17 Bring out every kind of living creature that is with you—the birds, the animals, and all the creatures that move along the ground—so they can multiply on the earth and be fruitful and increase in number on it.”
18 So Noah came out, together with his sons and his wife and his sons’ wives. 19 All the animals and all the creatures that move along the ground and all the birds—everything that moves on land—came out of the ark, one kind after another.
20 Then Noah built an altar to the Lord and, taking some of all the clean animals and clean birds, he sacrificed burnt offerings on it. 21 The Lord smelled the pleasing aroma and said in his heart: “Never again will I curse the ground because of humans, even though[a] every inclination of the human heart is evil from childhood. And never again will I destroy all living creatures, as I have done.
22 “As long as the earth endures,
seedtime and harvest,
cold and heat,
summer and winter,
day and night
will never cease.”
Footnotes
- Genesis 8:21 Or humans, for
New International Version (NIV)Holy Bible, New International Version®, NIV® Copyright ©1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.® Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.
Reflect
Contemplate God’s promise: ‘I will not forget you! See, I have engraved you on the palms of my hands’ (Isaiah 49:15, 16).It rained relentlessly for 40 days and ‘the waters flooded the earth’ for 150 days (Genesis 7:12, 24). Noah had been shut inside that ark for over 6 months! However, the comment ‘but God remembered Noah’ (v. 1) does not imply that Noah’s plight had previously slipped God’s memory. God never forgets his people or his promises. But ‘God’s remembering always implies his movement toward the object of his memory.’* To say God remembers is to say that he acts, either in mercy or in judgment, to fulfill his promises.
God’s remembering ‘combines the ideas of faithful love … and timely intervention.’** When God remembered Noah, he intervened by sending ‘a wind’ that made the flood waters recede (v. 1). This ‘wind’ recalls both the Spirit, who hovered over the waters at creation (Genesis 1:2), and ‘the strong east wind’ that drove back the Red Sea in Israel’s great redemption story (Exodus 14:21).
Genesis 6–9 has a mirror-image (chiastic) structure, with Genesis 8:1 as the central verse that divides the text into two parallel sections. The first section describes a ‘de-creation’—the unraveling of God’s creation work (6:9–7:24). God’s remembrance of Noah is the pivotal turning point where God begins to reverse the effects of the flood in a work of ‘re-creation’ (8:2–9:28).***
Apply
How will you remember and respond to the Lord who remembers you and will keep his every promise?
Closing prayer
Lord God, you are always faithful; help me to be mindful of your loving hand at work and then respond to all I see with growing faith and commitment to trust and serve you.
*BS Childs, Memory and Tradition in Israel (SCM, 1962), 34.
**Derek Kidner, Genesis (IVP, 2005), 92.
***See Gordon J Wenham, J Alec Motyer, DA Carson and RT France (eds), New Bible Commentary (IVP, 1994).
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