Today's promise: Obeying God brings
great joy
Could I be as consistent
as Noah?
So Noah did everything
exactly as God had commanded him.
Genesis 6:22 NLT
A man of consistent obedience
Imagine someone who
doesn't pay employees cheap wages even though he enjoys a fancy house and
swanky cars. Someone who doesn't indulge in movies full of sultry sex scenes.
If you know such a person, you may have found someone seeking consistent
obedience to God and his Word.
Noah went against the
grain of his generation. As Genesis 6:9 says, "Noah was a
righteous man, the only blameless man on earth at the time. He consistently
followed God's will and enjoyed a close relationship to him." He stood out
from others of his time whose thoughts and actions were "consistently and
totally evil." (Genesis 6:5)
Apparently folks had
never seen rain fall out of the sky (Gen. 2:5), but Noah obeyed God's
instructions: hammering, sawing, and building for 120 years (Gen.
6:3). Noah warned people of God's judgment (2 Pet. 2:5), but even if
he had never said a word, his pounding hammer rang a warning of wrath to come.
Later, the truth of those words echoed as the ark floated above a world of
corpses.
After Noah's family of
eight emerged into a washed-out world, he held a thanksgiving service. If God
was pained by a world of ungrateful human beings (Gen. 6:6), he must have
been consoled by a grateful Noah (Gen. 8:20).
Sadly, the father who
was buoyed atop a world of water got drunk on land (Gen. 9:20-27). It only
takes one indiscretion to mar a life of righteousness.
A bow with arrows was a
principal weapon in ancient warfare. After the world was washed away in Noah's
time, God set a rainbow in the sky to remind us that He would never again
destroy the world by water. Our God is consistently faithful.
From Men of Integrity Devotional Bible with
devotionals by the editors of Men of Integrity magazine (Christianity
Today, Intl), Tyndale House Publishers (2002), p 13
Content is derived
from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation and other publications of Tyndale
Publishing House
No comments:
Post a Comment