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Most people don’t realize there’s a “half-life” to fame. Even the biggest athletes, actors, and leaders get swallowed by cultural forgetting faster than we expect, and the numbers are humbling. We start there, then follow the thread to a strange exception: Noah. Thousands of years later, his name still lands, and not because it’s cute or comforting, but because it’s tied to a warning the Bible refuses to let the world erase.
From 2 Peter chapter 2, we walk through Peter’s courtroom-style defense of God’s coming judgment, where the flood becomes Exhibit B. We talk about why flood accounts show up across cultures, why the Genesis text reads like a global event, and why attempts to shrink it into a regional disaster create bigger problems than they solve. We also tackle the practical objections people raise, from the ark’s size to the animals, and explain why “kind” is not the same as “species” in the argument being made.
Then we bring it home. The most haunting detail isn’t the rain, it’s the line that says the Lord shut the door. The ark becomes a picture of salvation, urgency, and trust when obedience looks ridiculous and evidence feels delayed. If you’ve ever wondered what you’re supposed to do with hard biblical claims about judgment and mercy, this is a clear, personal place to wrestle with it.
Subscribe for more, share this with a friend who loves big questions, and leave a review to help others find the show. What part of the Noah story challenges you most right now?
Support the show
Discover more wisdom from God's Word: https://www.wisdomonline.org
By Stephen Davey5
99 ratings
Send us Fan Mail
Most people don’t realize there’s a “half-life” to fame. Even the biggest athletes, actors, and leaders get swallowed by cultural forgetting faster than we expect, and the numbers are humbling. We start there, then follow the thread to a strange exception: Noah. Thousands of years later, his name still lands, and not because it’s cute or comforting, but because it’s tied to a warning the Bible refuses to let the world erase.
From 2 Peter chapter 2, we walk through Peter’s courtroom-style defense of God’s coming judgment, where the flood becomes Exhibit B. We talk about why flood accounts show up across cultures, why the Genesis text reads like a global event, and why attempts to shrink it into a regional disaster create bigger problems than they solve. We also tackle the practical objections people raise, from the ark’s size to the animals, and explain why “kind” is not the same as “species” in the argument being made.
Then we bring it home. The most haunting detail isn’t the rain, it’s the line that says the Lord shut the door. The ark becomes a picture of salvation, urgency, and trust when obedience looks ridiculous and evidence feels delayed. If you’ve ever wondered what you’re supposed to do with hard biblical claims about judgment and mercy, this is a clear, personal place to wrestle with it.
Subscribe for more, share this with a friend who loves big questions, and leave a review to help others find the show. What part of the Noah story challenges you most right now?
Support the show
Discover more wisdom from God's Word: https://www.wisdomonline.org

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