It’s been three months since I posted Genesis 5. At this rate I’ll be doing this for the next century. Will you accept that this was the first summer I’ve worked in 15 years and I’m still trying to figure out my groove? No? Okay. Well, let’s just put it behind us and move on, shall we? Genesis 6 is one of those, “Huh?” chapters. “Huh” enough that I’ve really struggled with how to write about it so I’m just going to dive in and we’ll see what surfaces.
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It begins with sons of God finding the daughters of men beautiful so they married them. What the heck? There are a couple of thoughts as to who the sons of God were:
Angels
or
Godly men (descendents of Seth)
The second is the most widely held theory and the one that makes the most sense to me. So if the sons of God were Sethites, then it stands to reason the daughters of men were Cainites and, therefore, wicked hoochies.
What about daughters of God and sons of men?
Apparently it was worth mentioning that these two distinct bloodlines (Righteous Seth/Evil Cain) were intermarrying and those bad girls were rubbing off on those good boys.
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I have a friend who tells her husband “You make me tired”, when she’s frustrated with him (she has a charming Southern accent and it sounds so sweet and genteel when she says it). That’s the sense I get when I read verse 3. People were making God tired so he heaves a deep, wearied sigh and decides to cap their lifespan at 120.
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Verse 4 is very confusing to me.
The Nephilim were on the earth in those days – and also afterward – when the sons of God went to the daughters of men and had children by them. They were the heroes of old, men of renown.
Huh?
The study notes at the bottom of my Bible say the Nephilim were people of great size and strength and the Hebrew word means “fallen ones”. Is it just me, or does that sound like a description of Goliath? It also reads to me like the Nephilim are a result of the intermarriages between the Sethites and the Cainites. And why exactly were they considered heroes?
While people saw the Nephilim as heroes, God saw the thoughts of their hearts – and everybody else’s – as only evil all the time. This filled His heart with pain and He grieved His abominable creation to the point of wiping out humankind.
What?
I believe God to be omniscient which means He knew when He created man this would happen. So if that’s true, why did He go to the trouble of creating something He knew would end up so far from Him? I think I might like to ask Him about this someday.
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Anyhoo, all of civilization is rotten to the core with the exception of one guy and his family. Noah. “Finally something I remember from Sunday school,” I hear you say. Yes, but just hold on. The story doesn’t quite coincide with my recollection, but we’ll get to that in the next chapter.
God tells Noah to build an ark approximately 450 feet long, 75 feet wide and 45 feet high. And Noah says, “Riiiiight.” (Anybody remember that Bill Cosby skit?) That would be four-and-a-half football fields long, three stories high and… um… I can’t think of anything that’s 75 feet wide. But you get the picture. Now days there are cruise ships much larger than that, but think about how humongous it had to have been to people who didn’t have football fields or three story buildings to compare it to. And how in the world did he build something that massive with no power tools?
When the boat’s finished God tells Noah to take his three sons and his wife and his sons’ wives and get on board. Let’s just imagine for a moment that Noah’s daughters-in-law had been teased in high school by the popular girls about their choice of boyfriends – those prudish, boring Noah boys. And maybe even when it begins to rain and all of Noah’s family goes up into the ark those snobby kids had to be busting a gut. But when the mean girls finally start floating on the roof of their houses don’t you know Noah’s girls were thinking, “who’s laughing now?”
God also commanded Noah to take two of every living creature, male and female, and a stocked pantry for both the animals and the people. Did God really mean for that to include things like stink bugs and mosquitoes and snakes? Especially snakes. I mean, for cryin’ out loud, the snake ruined Paradise for us! Why would we want them to survive the flood?
Whatever the case, Noah did everything just as God had commanded him. Good Noah.
Chapter 7 is more of the same, only different…