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We live in a world of thousands of languages and countless cultural differences, but Genesis makes a bold claim that cuts through the noise: every nation traces back to one family after the flood. That single idea can change how we talk about race, identity, and our neighbors, and it is where our devotional starts as we read Genesis 9:18-26 together.
We walk through the sons of Noah and ask why the text highlights Ham as “the father of Canaan.” I share why that detail matters historically and spiritually, especially when you remember Moses is writing for Israel on the way to the Promised Land where the Canaanites live. Along the way, we connect the Bible’s storyline with clear, simple thinking about how human diversity spreads over time, without losing the central point that Scripture is making about our shared origin and shared accountability before God.
Then the tone shifts to a warning that feels painfully modern: Noah plants a vineyard, drinks, gets drunk, and exposes himself. The Bible’s honesty about its heroes is part of its power, and Noah’s failure becomes a sober reminder that spiritual victories do not cancel future temptations. We lean on 1 Peter 5:8, talk candidly about alcohol’s real-world damage from a physician’s perspective, and preview the generational consequences that follow Noah’s sin.
If this devotional helps you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find More Than Medicine.
Support the show
https://www.jacksonfamilyministry.com
https://bobslone.com/home/podcast-production/
By Dr. Robert E. Jackson4.8
4545 ratings
Send us Fan Mail
We live in a world of thousands of languages and countless cultural differences, but Genesis makes a bold claim that cuts through the noise: every nation traces back to one family after the flood. That single idea can change how we talk about race, identity, and our neighbors, and it is where our devotional starts as we read Genesis 9:18-26 together.
We walk through the sons of Noah and ask why the text highlights Ham as “the father of Canaan.” I share why that detail matters historically and spiritually, especially when you remember Moses is writing for Israel on the way to the Promised Land where the Canaanites live. Along the way, we connect the Bible’s storyline with clear, simple thinking about how human diversity spreads over time, without losing the central point that Scripture is making about our shared origin and shared accountability before God.
Then the tone shifts to a warning that feels painfully modern: Noah plants a vineyard, drinks, gets drunk, and exposes himself. The Bible’s honesty about its heroes is part of its power, and Noah’s failure becomes a sober reminder that spiritual victories do not cancel future temptations. We lean on 1 Peter 5:8, talk candidly about alcohol’s real-world damage from a physician’s perspective, and preview the generational consequences that follow Noah’s sin.
If this devotional helps you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find More Than Medicine.
Support the show
https://www.jacksonfamilyministry.com
https://bobslone.com/home/podcast-production/

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