The Event of the Flood
The verb ‘asah, “make,” which refers to Noah’s actions, also is a key-
word in the Genesis Creation account (Gen. 1:7, 16, 25, 26, 31; Gen.
2:2). Noah’s acts of obedience to God are like God’s acts of creation.
What we can take from this link is that the Flood is not just about God
punishing humanity, but about God saving us, as well.
Read Genesis 7. Why does the description of the Flood remind us of
the Creation account? What lessons can we learn from the parallels
between the two events?
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An attentive reading of the text covering the Flood reveals the use
of many common words and expressions within the Creation story:
“seven” (Gen. 7:2, 3, 4, 10; compare with Gen. 2:1–3); “male and
female” (Gen. 7:2, 3, 9, 16; compare with Gen. 1:27); “after its kind”
(Gen. 7:14, NKJV; compare with Gen. 1:11, 12, 21, 24, 25); “beasts,”
“birds,” “creeping things” (see Gen. 7:8, 14, 21, 23; compare with Gen.
1:24, 25); and “breath of life” (Gen. 7:15, 22; compare with Gen. 2:7).
The Flood story reads, then, somewhat like the Creation story. These
echoes of the Creation accounts help reveal that the God who creates is
the same as the God who destroys (Deut. 32:39). But these echoes also
convey a message of hope: the Flood is designed to be a new creation,
out of the waters, which leads to a new existence.
The movement of waters shows that this event of creation is, in
fact, reversing the act of Creation in Genesis 1. In contrast to Genesis
1, which describes a separation of the waters above from the waters
below (Gen. 1:7), the Flood involves their reunification as they explode
beyond their borders (Gen. 7:11).
This process conveys a paradoxical message: God has to destroy what
is before in order to allow for a new creation afterward. The creation of
the new earth requires the destruction of the old one. The event of the
Flood prefigures the future salvation of the world at the end of time:
“ ‘I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and the first
earth had passed away’ ” (Rev. 21:1, NKJV; compare with Isa. 65:17).
What in us needs to be destroyed in order to be created anew?
(See Rom. 6:1–6.)