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This opening sermon of our new series "Antihero” takes us into the uncomfortable aftermath of Noah's story, challenging our assumptions about biblical heroes. We often know Noah for his faithfulness in building the ark and surviving the flood, but Genesis 9 reveals a sobering truth: even this great man of faith stumbled in his private life. The teaching explores how Noah, who resisted a wicked culture for 500 years and faithfully obeyed God through an apocalyptic flood, later failed in the privacy of his tent through drunkenness and exposed shame. This isn't just ancient history. It's a mirror reflecting our own struggles with maintaining devotion to God when no one is watching. The central lesson cuts deep: our character, not our reputation, defines who we truly are. Past faithfulness doesn't guarantee future faithfulness. We learn that sin in our private lives inevitably spills into public consequences, affecting not just ourselves but generations after us. The call here is urgent and practical: don't let the pace of your public religious life outpace your private devotion to Jesus. Unlike Noah, who merely survived the storm, we're invited to thrive in Jesus at all times, building our character in those quiet, honest moments where only God sees us.
By Artisan City ChurchThis opening sermon of our new series "Antihero” takes us into the uncomfortable aftermath of Noah's story, challenging our assumptions about biblical heroes. We often know Noah for his faithfulness in building the ark and surviving the flood, but Genesis 9 reveals a sobering truth: even this great man of faith stumbled in his private life. The teaching explores how Noah, who resisted a wicked culture for 500 years and faithfully obeyed God through an apocalyptic flood, later failed in the privacy of his tent through drunkenness and exposed shame. This isn't just ancient history. It's a mirror reflecting our own struggles with maintaining devotion to God when no one is watching. The central lesson cuts deep: our character, not our reputation, defines who we truly are. Past faithfulness doesn't guarantee future faithfulness. We learn that sin in our private lives inevitably spills into public consequences, affecting not just ourselves but generations after us. The call here is urgent and practical: don't let the pace of your public religious life outpace your private devotion to Jesus. Unlike Noah, who merely survived the storm, we're invited to thrive in Jesus at all times, building our character in those quiet, honest moments where only God sees us.