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Genesis 6-9a

Genesis 6-9a

18 Dec 2025 - Theology

Genesis 6-9a - Noah and the Flood

Genesis 6:5 - “And God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.”

Problems:

The Flood Stories

There were many flood narratives known at the time that are still preserved today. Cultural Memory - many cultures remember an event because it actually happened

Epic of Gilgamesh - Sumeria/Mesopotamia:

Other Flood Stories Biblical Flood Narrative
Polytheistic Monotheistic
Reason for the flood is annoying humans Reason for the flood is God is against evil
Flood seems out of the gods’ control God is in control of the flood

The Biblical God is quick to get humans back on the right track.

Two Tellings of the Flood Narrative

J Source P (Priestly) Source
Calls for 7 pairs of clean animals and one pair of unclean animals (7:2-3) Calls for only 2 (one pair) of each animal (6:19-20, 7:9,15)
Flood lasted 40 days and 40 nights (7:4,12,17) Flood lasted 150 days (7:24, 8:3)
Uses the name Lord (Anonai/YHVH) for God Uses the name God (Elohim)
Adonai wanted to destroy the world because it was a mistake to create people with hearts that could lean toward evil (6:7) Elohim wanted to destory the world because people were spoiling it with violence (6:11-13)

J Stories - Adonai operates in our world:

P Stories - Detailed

P stories tell us that God is interested in making covenants.

Chiasm

Middle - Genesis 8:1 - “And God remembered Noah, and every living thing, and all the cattle that was with him in the ark: and God made a wind to pass over the earth, and the waters assuaged.”

wind = ruach - breath, the Spirit of God. The same word ruach is found in Genesis 1:2
The Flood story corresponds to the Creation story.
In Genesis 8:17 there is the same message given as in the first (P) story of creation (Genesis 1:28): “be fruitful, and multiply.”

Sabbath - Genesis 9:8-17

Chiasm - Genesis 9:14-15 - “… I bring a cloud over the earth, that the bow shall be seen in the cloud: And I will remember my covenant…”

This covenant is a Sabbath from destroying! The bow is pointed away from the earth and towards the heavens.

Genesis 8:1 and Genesis 9:15 - If it says that God “remembered”, then does that mean He had forgotten? No, the sign of the covenant (the rainbow) is in the sky so He can never forget, even if we humans do.

This is an example of a Suzerain - Vassal covenant.

Even though there is evil, God promises that He will never again send a flood to destroy the earth.

Moral of the Stories

J - Adonai discovers that people will always be both good and evil, but it is not good to destroy the world just because some people are evil.
P - Human violence is evil, and evil must always be punished. After the evil is punished, the world can go on and multiply and be fruitful again.

References

  1. The Hebrew - Greek Key Study Bible (KJV Version)
  2. The BEMA Podcast, Episode 4: His Bow in the Clouds
  3. The Torah Portion-by-Portion by Rabbi Seymour Rossel (2007)