A
couple of weeks ago, we talked about the Flood of Noah: both the physical and the historical evidence
that this huge catastrophe actually took place just as the Bible and other
ancient histories say it did. Today we
want to consider what happened after the time of the Flood.
Tassels
One of the reasons
it’s important to understand the Jewish roots of our faith is that it helps us
understand the meaning of what we read in the Bible. For example, what did Jesus mean when he mentioned
that the Pharisees lengthened their tassels:
"But they do all their works
to be seen by men; for they...lengthen their tassels" (Matt. 23:5)?
Noah’s Flood (Gen. 6-9)
(Click play to watch this video of a recent Japanese tsunami washing away an entire town.)
The
Bible says that there was once a worldwide Flood that covered all the mountains
on earth and destroyed all life on the land surface of the earth: the Flood of Noah (Gen. 7-8). Is this true?
Did it really happen? And if it
really happened, what evidence is there that it happened? If it really affected the whole world,
shouldn’t we be able to see evidence of it all around the world?
Sodom and Gomorrah (Gen. 19)
The last we talked about Abraham, we left
him bargaining with God about the city of Sodom, like a buyer in the market
(Gen. 18:27-32): what if there are fifty righteous? What if 45? How about 20?
How about 10? Why was he
bargaining like this with God? Because
God had revealed his plan to Abraham to destroy Sodom. Abraham was trying to rescue his nephew, Lot,
who lived in that city. So what was the
problem with Sodom, and why did God want to destroy it?
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