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Three words change everything. After 150 days of water prevailing, after all flesh dying, after creation coming undone—“But God remembered Noah.” Divine remembrance isn’t about God recalling something he forgot. It’s about God acting on his commitment. When God remembers, things change. The wind blows—ruach, the same word as Spirit, the same breath that hovered over the waters in Genesis 1. The fountains close. The waters recede. The ark rests on Ararat. This is re-creation. And if you’re in your own flood right now, wondering if God has forgotten, this passage says the wind may already be blowing before you feel it.
By Michael WhitworthThree words change everything. After 150 days of water prevailing, after all flesh dying, after creation coming undone—“But God remembered Noah.” Divine remembrance isn’t about God recalling something he forgot. It’s about God acting on his commitment. When God remembers, things change. The wind blows—ruach, the same word as Spirit, the same breath that hovered over the waters in Genesis 1. The fountains close. The waters recede. The ark rests on Ararat. This is re-creation. And if you’re in your own flood right now, wondering if God has forgotten, this passage says the wind may already be blowing before you feel it.