Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
The Ark and the Cross
The Ark and the Cross
Apr 19, 2025 10:03 AM

  Wednesday, March 5, 2025

  The Ark and the Cross

  “This is the account of Noah and his family. Noah was a righteous man, the only blameless person living on earth at the time, and he walked in close fellowship with God.” (Genesis 6:9 NLT)

  Once sin entered the world, it didn’t take long for it to reach a tipping point. Genesis 3 tells us about the temptation of Adam and Eve and their decision to disobey God. And just three chapters later, we find these words: “TheLordobserved the extent of human wickedness on the earth, and he saw that everything they thought or imagined was consistently and totally evil.So the Lord was sorry he had ever made them and put them on the earth. It broke his heart” (Genesis 6:5-6 NLT).

  Because God is perfectly just, He demands punishment for sin. That punishment is death. God determined to destroy every living thing on the earth. What stopped Him? “Noah found favor with the Lord” (verse 8 NLT).

  Noah was not a sinless man, but he was a righteous man. He had a close relationship with God. He prioritized God’s will and was obedient to His call. Because of Noah’s faithfulness, God provided a way to save those who were connected to this righteous man from His judgment.

  Noah built an ark—an enormous sailing vessel—according to the Lord’s precise instructions. He herded two (male and female) of every type of animal onto the ark, along with the necessary provisions. Then he, his wife, his three sons, and their wives boarded the vessel.

  Seven days later, the rains started. Torrential downpours continued for forty days. Everyone and everything that was not on the ark was destroyed by the floods. Eight people were saved from God’s judgment because of one person’s righteousness.

  Noah and his family, along with the animals on the ark, were responsible for repopulating the earth. They were part of God’s new creation. But Noah’s righteousness was imperfect, and sin reared its ugly head again. People pursued evil instead of good. They disobeyed God instead of following His will. The trend toward wickedness continues today. We don’t have to look far to find Satan’s influence in our culture.

  And because God is still perfectly just, that means another judgment is coming. Jesus says in Matthew 24:37-39, “When the Son of Man returns, it will be like it was in Noah’s day. In those days before the flood, the people were enjoying banquets and parties and weddings right up to the time Noah entered his boat.People didn’t realize what was going to happen until the flood came and swept them all away. That is the way it will be when the Son of Man comes” (NLT).

  And this time, He is the means of salvation. What the ark did for Noah and his family is what Jesus does for everyone who believes in Him—that is, offer protection from God’s holy wrath. Noah’s salvation came from an ark made of wood. Jesus’ salvation comes from a cross made of wood.

  Copyright © 2025 by Harvest Ministries. All rights reserved.

  Photo Credit: ©GettyImages/JoeLena

  For more relevant and biblical teaching from Pastor Greg Laurie, go to www.harvest.org

  and

  Listen to Greg Laurie's daily broadcast on OnePlace.com.

  Watch Greg Laurie's weekly television broadcast on LightSource.com.

  In thanks for your gift, you can receive a copy of theHouse of David: 30 Days with the Man After God’s Own Heart.

  King David was a shepherd, a warrior, a king—and a man after God’s own heart. Official companion to the Amazon Prime series House of David, a new devotional from Pastor Greg Laurie dives deep into David’s life, the psalms he wrote, and the lessons we can learn from his triumphs and struggles. Grow in your walk with God as you explore the extraordinary life of David. Get your copy today with your gift to Harvest Ministries.

  Click here to find out more!

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY
The Social Crisis of Our Time
Those who, like the Swiss economist Wilhelm Röepke, dislike both a laissez faire economy and a planned or state-manipulated one usually hope for a “Third Way” skirting both. Originally published in 1942, this thoughtful, richly textured work is Röepke’s first formulation of the “Third Way.” Röepke saw causes ranging from Christianity’s decline, the rise of ideology and the “cult of the colossal” to the surge in bining to produce “the social crisis of our time”: the rise of “mass...
Environmental Overkill
If one believes what passes for science these days, the world is about to end. The globe is warming, ozone is disappearing, smog is expanding, forests are shrinking, species are dying, and carcinogens are spreading. What were once thought to be good--population growth and technological advance--are actually bad. Without radical change, it is said, the environment and mankind are doomed. Sadly, this is what Vice President Gore, Environmental Protection Agency head Carol Browner, a host of congressmen and senators,...
The Catholic Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
In his 1891 encyclical Rerum Novarum, Leo XIII condemned socialism as contrary to nature, liberty, natural justice, mon sense; predicted its failure; and upheld private property, personal initiative, and natural inequality. Forty years later, Pius XI’s Quadragesimo Anno established social justice as a central concept in Catholic social teaching. This evolution culminated in John Paul II’s Centesimus Annus (1991), which condemns socialism and the “social assistance state” and endorses a morally conscious capitalism. An plished phenomenological philosopher, author of...
The Churching of America
The award winning book The Churching of America is a dramatic rewriting of American religious history with a free-market bent. The authors write: “[the] most striking trend in the history of religion in America is growth – or what we call the churching of America.” Making use of a traditional church-sect distinction, Finke and Stark argue that historians have seen religion in decline in America, because their assumptions led them to look at the wrong religious institutions. Finke and...
A Jewish Conservative Looks at Pagan America
Don Feder reminds me of Paul Caplan, a Reform rabbi in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and of Peter Himmelman, perhaps the only practicing Orthodox Jew to carve out a career for himself in rock and roll. Like Rabbi Caplan and Peter Himmelman, Feder exhibits a palpable joy about his faith–and a passion strong enough to attract people in search of God. Feder, who writes editorials for the brassy tabloid The Boston Herald, writes about one experience at the office: When...
Beyond the New Right
Starting roughly from the mess we all admit we are in, John Gray, fellow in politics at Jesus College, Oxford University, subtly, valiantly, and sometimes brilliantly addresses all of the major problems facing liberal democratic society in this collection of four essays written during the past decade. Avowedly conservative in a lineage that links him with Michael Oakeshott (the greatest conservative theorist of our time, he thinks), F.A. Hayek, eventually with Edmund Burke, and, more tenuously, with Thomas Hobbes,...
Earth in the Balance
There has been much talk in the last couple of months about the Religious Right's growing involvement and influence within the Republican Party. Amid all the concern about the threat to our civil liberties represented by Pat Robertson's Christian Coalition, the media has greatly neglected the emergence of a more serious menace: Capture of the Democratic Party by the Ecological Religious Left. Vice President Al Gore has emerged as the spokesman of eco-paganism, a pantheistic prophet of global environmental...
When Austrians Came to America
Economists of the Austrian school in recent years, writes Karen Vaughn, “present no less than a fundamental challenge” to how members of their field view their work and the world around them. “At the very least,” she says, “Austrian economics is plete reinterpretation of the methods, substance, and limitations of contemporary economics. At most, it is a radical, perhaps even revolutionary restructuring of economics.” So she writes in the introduction to her splendid book, Austrian Economics in America: The...
Public Education: An Autopsy
Market based schooling sounds like a contradiction in terms to public school teachers' unions; it sounds like a non sequitur to hard-pressed denominational schools; it's Greek to the average taxpayer; but it's the next step to education critic Myron Lieberman. Eight years ago, Lieberman published Beyond Public Education, in which he prophesied the emergence of a market-based, non-establishment challenge to the clichés about educational reforms which flooded the nation in the years following publication of A Nation At Risk...
Candles behind the Wall
Since the collapse of the Soviet empire, legion has been the number of studies and theories seeking to explain how and why its end came about as it did. However, few are as convincing as that put forth by Barbara von der Heydt in her new book, Candles behind the Wall: Heroes of the Peaceful Revolution That Shattered Communism. Von der Heydt’s thesis can be summed up in a munism failed because it was unable to make people forget...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved