38th Street Church of Christ
3904 38th Street NW  Canton, Ohio  44718
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Finding Grace In God's Eyes
(Genesis 6:5-8)

I.          Introduction.

            A.        When God finished creating the world, and all that is in it,
                        He passed judgment on what He had made:  “Then God
                        saw everything that He had made, and indeed it was very
                        good. . . .” (Genesis 1:31).

                        1.         From that perfect beginning, the world had now
                                    sunk to level represented in Genesis 6:5:  “. . . the
                                    wickedness of man was great . . . , and every intent
                                    [or “thought”] . . . of his heart was only evil
                                    continually.”

                        2.         Human kind had increasingly ignored God and
                                    followed the course of providing for its own
                                    pleasures and self-indulgence.  Highlighted, again,
                                    in Genesis 6:11-12 (READ).

                        3.         Now, God’s judgment was different:  “. . . the Lord
                                    was sorry that He had made man on the earth, and
                                    He was grieved in His heart.” (Genesis 6:6).  That
                                    judgment required a response – sin required
                                    punishment.

                                    a.         God is not impersonal.  He’s deeply
                                                involved in affairs of His creation, and
                                                deeply affected by attitudes and actions of
                                                His creatures.

                                    b.         Humanity’s sins “grieve” God.  In Noah’s
                                                time, as in our time, sin consumes people;
                                                it makes God sorrowful.

                        4.         Sin also calls for action.

                                    a.         For people, it requires repentance (change
                                                of mind that produces a change in attitude
                                                that is seen in a change of conduct.)

                                    b.         For God, it requires consequences
                                                (violations of His law must be punished.)

            D.        In His displeasure with the world and its wickedness, and
                        as He pronounces judgment upon the world and prepares to
                        destroy it by water, there is this note of mercy:  “. . .Noah
                        found grace in the eyes of the Lord.”  (verse 8).

                        1.         In this wicked world, Noah retained God’s favor.
                                    Because he was different, a man who “. . . walked
                                    with God, . . .” (Genesis 6:9), Noah was pleasing
                                    to God.

                        2.         Doesn’t mean Noah was sinless, but that he was
                                    righteous.  He is found “perfect” (i.e. “blameless”)
                                    in contrast to those around him whose only
                                    concern was to satisfy their own desires.  Noah’s
                                    concern was to satisfy God.  In return God blessed
                                    Noah, and his family, and spared them the
                                    destruction with which He was to judge the world.

            E.         With this as background, look specifically at three (3)
                        questions:

                        1.         Why Noah?  Why did he “find grace in the eyes
                                    of the Lord?”

                        2.         How can we find such grace?  How does this apply
                                    to us?

                        3.         Why do we need such grace?

II.        NoahHow He Found Grace In God’s Eyes.

            A.        To answer first question, “why Noah?”, look at
                        Genesis 6:9 (READ).

                        1.         Noah is described as “just man” – some
                                    translations say a “righteous man.”  Either
                                    way, reference is to Noah’s moral relation to
                                    God.  More elaboration on this characteristic
                                    is found in Hebrews 11:7:  “By faith Noah,
                                    being divinely warned of things not yet seen,
                                    moved with godly fear, prepared an ark for the
                                    saving of his household, by which he condemned
                                    the world and became heir of the righteousness
                                    which is according to faith.”  

                        2.         To understand this quality of righteousness,
                                    consider 4 points:

                                    a.         Noah took God at His word.  He believed
                                                the message which God sent him.  Not only
                                                did he believe the message, he staked
                                                everything on its truth.  His life became one
                                                continued and concentrated preparation for
                                                what God had said would come.

                                    b.         Noah was not deterred by the mockery of
                                                others.  While the sun shown, while the land
                                                remained dry, Noah’s work must have
                                                looked foolish.  Who would build a great
                                                ship on dry land, far from water?  Noah
                                                abandoned his other work to concentrate
                                                on this one work.  The wisdom of God is, so
                                                often, foolishness with people.

                                    c.         Noah’s faith and righteousness was a
                                                judgment on others.  By obeying God, he
                                                presented a contrast to those who would not
                                                listen to him as he prepared the ark and
                                                “[preached] righteousness” . . . “. . . [to] . . .    
                                                “the world of the ungodly.”  (II Peter 2:5). 
                                                Righteousness condemns evil.

                                    d.         Noah was righteous through faith.  In
                                                Genesis 6:9, Noah is the first person in the
                                                Bible to be called [“dikaios”,] “just.”  When
                                                others broke God’s commandments, Noah
                                                kept them.  When others were deaf to God’s
                                                warnings, Noah listened to them.  When
                                                others laughed at God, Noah reverenced
                                                him.

                        3.         Noah was one, lone man who stood for God at a
                                    time when all others abandoned that moral
                                    relationship to Him.  Therefore, Genesis 6:9 says,
                                    he was “. . .  perfect in his generations.”
                                    Other renderings use word “blameless.”  This is
                                    his moral relationship to other people.  He was not
                                    sinless, but a man of moral integrity and sincerity –
                                    in his dealings with others.    

                        4.         “Why Noah?”:  because he “walked with God.”
                                    (6:9).  This is how he showed his righteousness,
                                    sincerity, and integrity.

                                    a.         He “. . . did according to all that God
                                                commanded him, . . .” (Genesis 6:22;
                                                7:5).

                                    b.         He proclaimed obedience to God, and
                                                lived obedience to God.  And, he did this
                                                in an unrighteous, corrupt, sinful world.

            B.        With this understanding of what Noah’s favor with God
                        was all about, why he found “grace in the eyes of the
                        Lord”, how, then, can we find such grace?  How does this
                        apply to us?

III.       Finding Grace In God’s Eyes And The Need For Such Grace.

            A.        We don’t face threat of worldwide flood, but we still need
                        God’s grace for our salvation.

                        1.         After Noah and his family were saved, God
                                    promised that He would never again destroy the
                                    world in such a way.  God gave the sign of His
                                    promise, the rainbow:  “The rainbow shall be in
                                    the cloud, and I will look on it to remember the
                                    everlasting covenant between God and every
                                    living creature of all flesh that is on the earth.”
                                    (Genesis 9:16).

                        2.         But, we still face prospect of the end of the
                                    physical world, or our own physical end,
                                    whichever comes first.

                                    a.         Peter reminds us that, just as world was
                                                once destroyed by water, so it shall be
                                                again destroyed, by fire, when Jesus
                                                appears a second time.  (READ
                                                II Peter 3:10-12).

                                    b.         In this reminder is a question:  “. . . what
                                                manner of persons ought you to be in holy
                                                conduct and godliness?”  (verse 11).

                                    c.         Question answered in II Peter 3:14 (READ).
                                                Another way to phrase this:  “be serious
                                                about finding grace in eyes of the Lord.”

                        3.         As only righteousness survived the great flood, so
                                    only righteousness will survive the end of the world
                                    the second time.  As everything else will be
                                    destroyed, only eternal values will insure us eternal
                                    life.

                        4.         Like Noah, our salvation lies in finding grace in
                                    God’s eyes.  How can we do this?

            B.        As God does not change, the requirements He established
                        for past generations apply to us today.  To find grace in
                        God’s eyes, we, too, must be:

                        1.         “Just”, or justified.  The good news of the gospel is
                                    that God sent His Only Son to be our justification –
                                    to take the guilt for sin upon Himself in order to
                                    free us from its consequences.

                                    a.         Romans 5:8-9:  “But God demonstrates His
                                                own love toward us in that while we were
                                                still sinners, Christ died for usMuch more
                                                then, having now been justified [acquitted;
                                                made righteous] by His blood, we shall be
                                                saved from wrath through Him.”

                                    b.         Being justified, we can have the “peace
                                                with God Peter referred to in II Peter 3:14,
                                                and Paul spoke of in Romans 5:1
                                                “Therefore, having been justified by faith,
                                                we have peace with God through our Lord
                                                Jesus Christ.”

                                    c.         Our righteousness comes by faith in Jesus;
                                                He is the justifier of those who have faith in
                                                Him (Romans 3:26).

                        2.         Like Noah, we also must be “. . . perfect in [our
                                    generation]. . . .”  The call to us is to also stand
                                    with God when others have abandoned Him and
                                    His moral standards.

                                    a.         We are to be servants of God, not slaves to
                                                sin, or the fashion of the times.  The good
                                                news of the gospel is that God has provided
                                                the necessary means for our “perfection.”

                                    b.         The blood of Christ cleanses us from the
                                                stain of guilt for our sins.
                       
                                    c.         The Word of God guides us to perfection
                                                (completeness, maturity).  (II Tim. 3:17:
                                                all of God’s Word is given so, “that the
                                                man of God may be complete, thoroughly
                                                equipped for every good work.”

                                    d.         The Spirit of God strengthens us, to help us
                                                in our daily struggles (Ephesians 3:16).

                        3.         All of these provisions allow us, like Noah to
                                    “. . .[walk] with God.”  To live as God desires we
                                    should live, even in a wicked world.  (READ
                                    Ephesians 4:17-20).

                                    a.         Like Noah, this means keeping all of
                                                God’s commands, to best of our ability.

                                    b.         Like Noah, this means being an example
                                                and a teacher of righteousness: 
                                                I Peter 2:9:  “. . . that you may proclaim
                                                the praises of Him who called you out of
                                                darkness into His marvelous light.”).

III.       Conclusion.

            A.        When we turn from sin and turn to God we find grace in
                        God’s eyes – just as Noah did.  That grace is our salvation,
                        as it was Noah’s and his family’s.

            B.        Peter makes a comparison between Noah’s salvation and
                        that of Christian:  (READ I Peter 3:20-21).  Here, Peter
                        says 3 things about baptism:

                        1.         It is not merely a physical cleansing.  Rather, it’s
                                    a spiritual cleansing, a cleansing of the spiritual
                                    person.  God’s grace makes us pure again –
                                    something we cannot do for ourselves.

                        2.         It is a pledge to God, a pledge to accept the terms
                                    of God’s covenant with humanity.  In baptism, we
                                    are saved and enter into a covenant relationship
                                    with God.  We accept the salvation God offers and
                                    the responsibilities it requires.  We become part of
                                    God’s family and Christ’s body, the church.

                        3.         Salvation is dependent upon the resurrection of
                                    Christ.  It’s the risen Christ who cleanses us; the
                                    risen Lord to whom we are joined; the risen Lord
                                    who is our help and strength.

            C.        God told Noah to build the ark with faith that destruction
                        would come upon the wicked world.  God tells us to be
                        baptized for the remission of our sins with faith in His
                        promise to provide eternal life to all who will obey Him.
                        Faith and obedience – that’s how we find grace in God’s
                        eyes.

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