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In Genesis 9 we read that flood resets the world—but it doesn’t reset the human heart.
Genesis 9 opens with blessing, mandate, and covenant… but it doesn’t take long before something feels off. Why does creation now fear humanity? Why does God permit meat, but forbid blood? Why introduce justice systems right out of the gate? And why, after wiping the slate clean, do we find Noah—Noah, the preacher of righteousness—drunk, exposed, and at the center of one of the most unsettling stories in Genesis?
So what actually happened in that tent? Was Ham just seeing something… or doing something? Why does the text use that loaded phrase, “uncovering nakedness”?
Why do Shem and Japheth respond the way they do—walking backward, almost ceremonially covering their father?
And maybe most confusing of all—why is Canaan cursed instead of Ham?
Is this just a strange footnote… or is it the Bible quietly telling you that even after judgment, sin is still alive and well?
In this episode, we trace what actually changed after the flood—and what didn’t. We’ll look at the shift from Eden-like harmony to a world marked by tension, survival, and shorter lives. We’ll unpack the covenant with all creation—and ask why God promises stability in a world He knows is still broken. And we’ll wrestle with Noah’s failure as a kind of “new Adam”—and what it reveals about the limits of starting over.
Along the way, we’ll connect the dots to the rise of nations, the roots of human conflict, and a sobering truth running underneath it all: a new world doesn’t create new people.
If the flood wasn’t the final answer… what is?
By JoshBrooker/GabeRutledge4.9
7777 ratings
In Genesis 9 we read that flood resets the world—but it doesn’t reset the human heart.
Genesis 9 opens with blessing, mandate, and covenant… but it doesn’t take long before something feels off. Why does creation now fear humanity? Why does God permit meat, but forbid blood? Why introduce justice systems right out of the gate? And why, after wiping the slate clean, do we find Noah—Noah, the preacher of righteousness—drunk, exposed, and at the center of one of the most unsettling stories in Genesis?
So what actually happened in that tent? Was Ham just seeing something… or doing something? Why does the text use that loaded phrase, “uncovering nakedness”?
Why do Shem and Japheth respond the way they do—walking backward, almost ceremonially covering their father?
And maybe most confusing of all—why is Canaan cursed instead of Ham?
Is this just a strange footnote… or is it the Bible quietly telling you that even after judgment, sin is still alive and well?
In this episode, we trace what actually changed after the flood—and what didn’t. We’ll look at the shift from Eden-like harmony to a world marked by tension, survival, and shorter lives. We’ll unpack the covenant with all creation—and ask why God promises stability in a world He knows is still broken. And we’ll wrestle with Noah’s failure as a kind of “new Adam”—and what it reveals about the limits of starting over.
Along the way, we’ll connect the dots to the rise of nations, the roots of human conflict, and a sobering truth running underneath it all: a new world doesn’t create new people.
If the flood wasn’t the final answer… what is?

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