BSF Genesis: Week 6, Day 5

Today’s Scriptures

Questions:

11.
Methuselah lived 969

12.
After flood lived shorter lives.We have brought more sin into us and magnified the ways that we live in sin. We have corrupted not only ourselves, but our environment and air and food. We have engineered and modified things for our comfort, without knowledge of all of the impacts of those changes. Gen 6:4 = God Said

My Daily Journal:

I’m old enough to remember making mix tapes on cassette.  With analog music each recording was a copy of a copy.  Each copy added my noise and hiss and pops.  A scratch or stretch on the media was passed through to the next copy.

In the same way, Seth was a copy of Adam, but Enosh was a copy of Seth and Kenan was a copy of Enosh.

But when Christ came to this word he was like a a digitally remastered man.  He came from the original without the noise, without the sin.

Our lineage as mankind takes us farther from God, but when we turn our lives over to Christ, through faith, we too are transformed to be copies of Him.

BSF Genesis: Week 6, Day 4

Today’s Scriptures

Questions:

8.
Enoch walked with God (gen 5:22, 24); Enoch pleased God (Heb 11:5); Enoch made faith in God the basis of his life (Heb 11:5-6); Enoch talked to others about the Lord’s command and warned them that God would judge the ungodly (Jude 14-15)

9.
He didn’t : Hebrews 11:5 “Enoch was taken from this life, so that he did not experience death”

10.
a.
All who believe will be lifted up and transformed, will not die (1 Cor 15:51 and 1 Thes 4:17)

b.
If alive, not die; Caught up in the cloud with Jesus; meet Christ F2F; New body; physically and spiritually with the Lord forever

c.
New body – so much of my time and energy is spent on this shell, I’m looking forward to trading up!

My Daily Journal:

Death is not inevitable.  Our existence is so much more than a fatalist “we live and then we die.”  We are ultimately not bound by laws of nature or time.  We are not constrained by our ancestry or the actions of our fathers.  But what truly makes a difference and what truly last are the choices we make.

It is not that all of those things don’t impact and influence us, they do.  But our choice of how we relate to God transcends that and enables us to unite with the divine.

Enoch chose to walk with God for eternity.

BSF Genesis: Week 6, Day 3

Today’s Scriptures

Questions:

5.
a.
And then he died, 5:5, 8, 11, 14, 17, 20, 27, 31

b.

  • The only way to eternal life is to be born again in the spirit
  • If you do not believe in Jesus, you will “die in your sins”
  • Death has reigned ever since the time of Adam
  • Wages of sin is death

6.
All of mankind is made in Adam’s likeness. Because Adam became imperfect, we are copies of that imperfection. Because Adam sinned, we are all sinners. The likeness of God in every person has been corrupted by original sin

7.
a.
Enoch walked faithfully with God 300 years. Enoch walked faithfully with God; then he was no more, because God took him away. Noah: “He will comfort us in the labor and painful toil of our hands caused by the ground the Lord has cursed.”

b.
I can do that.  Enoch didn’t have some special power or calling.  He didn’t have some extraordinary gift or blessing.  He walked.  I walk.  He walked with God.  I can do that.

 

My Daily Journal

One thing I love about the people in the bible is how ordinary they are.  They sin.  They make mistakes.  They live and die.  They are like me.  But they also serve as examples for me.  I can do what Enosh did and call on the name of the Lord.  I can do with Enoch did and walk with God every day.  I don’t have to build an ark (jumping ahead), I can just walk.  It doesn’t take a leap of faith to begin, just a single step.

BSF Genesis: Week 6, Day 2

Today’s Scriptures

Questions:

3.
a.
Began to call on the name of the Lord

b.
Pray daily and in many settings. Lead prayer and worship with my family and with others. Use God’s name throughout my speech in a positive and praising fashion

4.
a.
Extol at all times, praise always on lips, glory in the Lord letting others hear, done with others (exalt together), seek and He answers, delivers from all fears, look on him and become radiant, not covered with shame, poor man called and Lord heard, saved out of troubles, angel of the Lord encamps around those who fear him and he delivers

b.
Look on him and become radiant not covered in shame. We are shameful people. As a christian I am even more aware of my sin and shame. But when I look on the Lord, then others see him and not me.

My Daily Journal:

I liked the discussion of daily habits.  I was reading an book this week that pointed out that it is very rare that we, as humans, have the ability to just “let go” of something.  Instead we are much more successful at grabbing a hold of something else.  With that in mind, it makes me think less of what do I need to quit or remove from my life and more in terms of what new habits I need to form which will replace the bad.

Doing my study daily is a challenge for me (obviously), but that is in part because I haven’t made it a habit.  I don’t have a trigger at which point I do it (like brushing my teeth when I first get up).  I haven’t set a time of day or place.  When I quit smoking I reached out for something else to do with my hands and my mouth.  In my daytime hours I need to substitute other things to do with my mind and my lips.  I need to remove the time thinking about me and substitute it with thoughts about what God wants me to do.  I need to remove the words that give my credit and substitute it with words that praise God.

That can be true of so much of our walk with God.  We try to cram it in to an already packed schedule instead of finding a better balance and order by reaching for it instead.

BSF Genesis: Week 5, Lecture

Life is hard.  Ever since Adam and Eve choose sin, it has tried to jump out and harm us and attack us and draw us away from God over and over and over again.

The bible doesn’t teach us that if we follow God everything is smooth sailing.  Just the opposite.  God tells us to hold on.  But God allows us to choose what we hold on to.

In our lesson tonight we learn about Cain.  Cain decided to hold on to himself.  As we read the verses you can almost see him standing there, pouting with his arms crossed tightly across his chest.  Shut off, defiant, clinging only to himself.

What a dumb thing to hold onto when things get tough.  God says that he is our rock and foundation.  God invites us to let go and cling to him.  God says he never loses a member of his flock.

But let’s look at Cain and what he clings to and how that works for him.

In our first section we are introduced to Cain and Abel.  Cain was a farmer and Abel was a rancher or shepherd.  They were brothers and Cain was the first born son of Adam and Eve.  We don’t know how old they were when our story picks up, but we know people lived for a long time in those days, hundreds of years, but we are brought into the story at a critical point – a point where Cain and Abel brought an offering to the Lord.

We see that both brought a portion of the product of their labor.  But it is also clear that the manner in which they brought it and the nature of the offering were different.  Cain brought “some”.  Abel brought fat portions from some of the firstborn of his flock.

A key difference is in what they were willing to give up or sacrifice to God.  When Abel brought the best of what he had, first, he had to recognize that it was the best.  Second, he had to be willing to sacrifice it, to give it up.  In so doing, he opened the door for God to give him something even greater than what he had produced that had been his best.  And we see that God poured out his favor on Abel AND on his offering.

But that isn’t what happened with Cain.  Cain gave.  He may have given more than Abel, we don’t know.  His offering may have been worth more on the grain market, but there isn’t any indication that he gave the best.  It says he gave “Some”, but it does not say that he gave the best of what he produced.  Meaning, he held onto to that.  He kept what he considered to be best on his own little trophy case, rather than clearing room for the type of trophy God wanted him to have.

What happened?  Cain became very angry and downcast.  Pay attention to that last part.  If you are downcast, where is your focus?  Is it up and to God?  Is it forward and positive?  Remember what happened when Eve filled her vision with the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.  Look at where Cain has his eyes.

God doesn’t need our stuff.  We need to let go.  God teaches us how to do this in his word and by his example.  What did He give?  In addition to everything that exists in the physical universe, He also gave His only Son.  Jesus is the only acceptable sacrifice.

  • What are you doing in “half-hearted faith”?
  • Where do you need to give 100% of your heart?
  • What have you earned or achieved that you are having a hard time removing from your life because “it is so great”?

In our next section, we see that Cain’s actions soon follow his eyes.  But, it is important to realize it did not have to be this way.  God loved Cain so much that he sat down and talked to him, one-on-one (maybe three on one with the whole trinity thing, but you get the point).  God offers him a do-over.  God warns him about the door he is so focused on, the one that follows his downcast gaze, i.e., the door that leads further down.  God tells him, sin is crouching at that door.  You have the power to rule over it, don’t let it pounce on you.  Now, if something is crouching right outside your door waiting to pounce, how are you going to keep it from pouncing on you?  Duh! Use a different door.  God is holding open the door back to him, but…

Soon, Cain commits premeditated murder.  He lures his brother out into a field and whacks him (in the literal sense).  It’s done.  The first recorded death of a human and it is committed by another human.

So God immediately rains down condemnation on Cain, right?  Actually, no.  God’s first action is to offer Cain an opportunity to confess and repent.  “Where is your brother, Abel?”

But Cain doesn’t confess or repent.  He doesn’t fall down and cry out to God.  He keeps going right through that door.  He follows murder with lies and denial and condescension.  “I don’t know.”  “Am I my brother’s keeper?”

God cries out to him to listen and see what he has done.  To recognize his action and change; to see the consequences and curse that he has brought onto himself from the very land that he relies on for a living as a farmer.

But, Cain chooses to close the door.  In verse 14 Cain says to God.  I will be hidden from your presence. Click.

  • What more could God have done to bring Cain back to him?  All he had to do was repent.  But lying and denying are like going the wrong way down the one way street that is supposed to lead back to God.  Should it be any wonder to us if we get hit by a bus?
  • What are you lying about or denying?
  • What are you trying to keep hidden in your life from God?  How is that working out?
  • Where do you complain that what you face is “too much” or “too hard” while at the same time contributing to making it even more, harder and worse?

Our third section gives us insight into the life of Cain.  Clearly, God still saw him, even if he chose not to see God (it is written down in the bible, right).

We see God continued to provide.  He gave gifts of music and carpentry and architecture and craftsmanship and arts.  And what did Cain’s children do?  They denied God.

Look at verses 17-24.  What’s not mentioned?  God.  I looked back starting in Genesis 1:1 and would encourage you to as well.  This is the longest number of verses so far with no mention of God.  In Genesis 1 it is hard to go a single verse without God.  But here, we go multiple generations.  What is the focus?  On accomplishments, on talents, on celebrity and commerce.  Add in a best dressed list and this could be daytime TV.

Not only is there no mention of God, but they quickly take the things that come from God and twist them and misuse them.  Think about it?  How did Cain get married?  Not just where did he find a wife, but actually, who married them?  How did they enter into a holy covenant without God?  Is it any wonder then that a few generations down that sacrament gets stretched further?  Why not marry 2 wives?  Why not kill someone and claim 11 times the protection for it that God offered to Cain?  Why not sing about it?  Wives… I’ve killed a man….

But what will all of this bring them?  All of these accomplishments without faith?  I don’t want to jump ahead, but come back and you learn about how they end up “all wet.”

  • What accomplishment are you holding onto as being yours instead of God’s?
  • Where do you focus on the performer or celebrity instead of the divine who gave the talent?
  • Are you spending your time reading People or reading God?

BSF Genesis: Week 5, Day 5

Today’s Scriptures

Questions:

12.
There are 2 parts to this challenge:
Where did the woman come from? Gen 5:4 says Adam had other sons and daughters
How did she become his wife? Gen 2:24 man shall leave his father and mother and be united to his wife

13.
a. Cain was then building a city named after Enoch
b. Jabal was father of those who live in tents and raise livestock
c. Tubal-Cain forged all kinds of tools out of bronze and iron
d. Jubal was father of all who play stringed instruments and pipes
e. Lamech’s prose/poetry in his address to his wives

14.
a.
God said Cain would be a restless wanderer on the earth, he built a city

b.
Lamach married 2 women and killed a man for wounding him

15.
a.
No mention of God only of accomplishments resulting from God-given gifts and knowledge. Architecture, music, culture, craftsmanship, commerce and the arts are from God, but if we leave him out then we begin to worship the gift instead of the giver

b.
I do it each time I take credit for my own gain and/or gifts.  None of that belongs to me, it is from God.

My Daily Journal:

The question about Cain getting a wife made me ponder that fact.  I think most people will focus on where did the woman come from in their answer, but I think the bigger question is how did they get married and become husband and wife.  God ordained marriage when he made Eve for Adam as bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh.  God not only setup the idea of marriage, but he was a part of the first marriage ceremony.  This was His design.  In most Christian marriages, the commitment made is a 3-way promise between the husband, the wife, and God.  But Cain had decided to “be hidden from God’s presence”.  So how did he get married?  Who performed the ceremony if there was one?  Did they exchange vows with each other or did he just whack her over the head too, ala caveman style?  I ponder this because I think it shows a pattern from the very earliest days of man that, in our sinful nature, we try to pick and choose from the buffet of the things God has provided.

Love my brother, repent, sacrifice… I’ll pass on those.  But I want a big church wedding, just leave all the God stuff out of it.  Consult God about who I’m supposed to marry?  Nah, I can do that without His help.

We do this with marriages, we do it with holidays, we do it with days of rest, we do it with any of the other sacraments and stations and gifts of God and the church. We pick and choose.  In the process, we lose out.  By trying to keep the structure without the creator, we end up with a 2 legged stool or a handful of silk flowers.  It doesn’t work, they may be nice to look at, but they are still fake and not the real deal.

I am appreciative to have God as a partner in our marriage and our family and I wish that for all couples.  You can “get married” without God, but it is not the real deal (because God was part of the deal).

Finally, I loved how Lamech tried to be the Freddie Mercury of his generation:  Wives, I’ve killed a man…

BSF Genesis: Week 5, Day 4

Today’s Scriptures

Questions:

9.
a.
The sarcasm and condescension in his tone (often a defense mechanism): “Am I my brother’s keeper?” My punishment is more than I can bear: driving from land, hidden from presence, restless wanderer, others will kill me. No “I’m sorry”, no desire to change, just concern for self

b.
God is just but does not seek harm. His goal is rehabilitation not punishment as retribution.  He protects us even though we don’t deserve it.

10.
a.
David acknowledge that he had sinned against God and sought mercy. He recognized God’s right and justice and sought to be cleansed not protected. He wanted to get out of sin not out of punishment.

b.
It is hard, but I should be grateful to have those in my life who care enough to tell me.  While it is more gentle to hear from a brother/sister that I love and serve with, it also cuts deeper to the bone.  I pray that I can be better at turning immediately to God rather than trying to stand up on my own and that I set my focus on returning to right and not fixate on the problem.

11.
a.
God is light, no darkness: purified by blood of Jesus. If confess He is faithful, forgives, purifies

b.
Confess and be purified through the cleansing of the blood of Christ (saying “I did it” is not enough, but we must also seek to be purified)

 

My Daily Journal:

Verse 14 was a pivotal verse in my understanding of the relationship between God and Cain.

God has come to Cain and offered him an opportunity to confess and to repent.  But, Cain’s reply is lies.  God admonishes him to look at the mess he has made: the curse that he has brought upon himself from the very soil that he relies on as a farmer.

But, to see the heart of the matter, look at verse 14 piece-by-piece:

  1. Today you are driving me from the land – this is true and is what God said.
  2. and I will be hidden from your presence – God  never said this nor implied it.  God is not limited to a piece of real estate.  If anyone is choosing to be hidden from the others presence it is Cain choosing to be hidden from the presence of God (and we already saw how well that worked for his mom and dad with the fig leaves)
  3. I will be a restless wanderer on the earth – this is true and is what God said.
  4. and whoever finds me will kill me – God  never said this nor implied it.  In regard to this last line it is as if God says, fine, if that is really what you are worried about, someone killing you, then we’ll get that off the table, but, son, you’ve got a lot bigger problems than that made up worry.

Cain chose to hide from God’s presence.  Cain chose the exit door.  Obviously, as we continue to read the rest of the chapter, God knows all about Cain and his family ongoing.  The issue isn’t in God not knowing Cain, but in Cain not knowing God.

When I face consequences of my sin and I adding to them by trying to hide?  Do I invent worries as part of a pity-party or do I turn over my worries to God.

BSF Genesis: Week 5, Day 3

Today’s Scriptures

Questions:

7.
a.
If you do what is right will you not be accepted? Sin is crouching at your door but you must rule over it

b.
God talked with him one-on-one. He doesn’t lower standards but offers him a second chance and confirms Cain has the power to rule over sin

8.
a.
Repent and try again (instead of being sad, make it right). Warning: if you don’t, then you will carry this as darkness in you and it (sin) will take you over – if you shut out the path of light, you will be swallowed by darkness – rule over it, fight it, go the other way.

b.
Any one who does not do what is right is not God’s child, nor anyone who does not love brother/sister. Anyone who loves passes from death to life. Anyone who hates is a murderer. Jesus laid down his life for us, we should lay down our lives for our brothers/sisters.

 

My Daily Journal:

I was struck by the visual of sin crouching at the door.  It brought to mind the game show, The Price is Right.

Host: Well, Cain, I can see you have your mind set on door number 2.  But before you choose that door, let me tell you a little bit about what’s behind it.  You see, sin is crouching just behind that door.

Cain: (continues to stare at door number 2)

Host: You know you can choose door number 1, right?

Cain: (continues to stare at door number 2)

Host: You cannot even imagine the prize package We have assembled if you choose door number 1?

Cain: (continues to stare at door number 2)

Host: You know we offer free do-overs, right?  You can just go back and start the whole sacrifice/offering thing all over again.  What do you say?

Interesting that the bible notes that Cain’s face was downcast.  We learned in the garden that our actions follow our eyes.  Cain’s eyes are cast downward and the only door He can see is the door downward, going the wrong way on the one way street that is supposed to lead to God.  He isn’t opening a prize door, he is staring at the exit.

When I face struggles, do I stop and look to God for a better door or do I see only one way out?  When sin is crouching at the door to my heart do I try to fight it on my own or do I enlist as a soldier in God’s army?

BSF Genesis: Week 5, Day 2

Today’s Scriptures

Questions:

3.
a.
Cain gave some of the fruit, Abel brought fat portion of firstborn.  I don’t think it was the what, but the how and why.

b.
God doesn’t need our offering, but wants our faith and trust. He wants us to be willing to give up what we consider “best” so He can give us something even better.

4.
Yes. I think she learned through the fall that God’s word was truth (and she had just gone through childbirth reminding her of all aspects of that discussion).  God made a promise and now He was beginning to fulfill that promise.

5.
a.
Cain worked the soil, Cain was very angry, his face was downcast

b.
He wanted full recognition and reward. He didn’t want it pointed out that he wasn’t doing his best.

c.
Same. I don’t enjoy being shown that I’m not doing my best

6.
A sacrifice of praise and to do good and to share with others / Through daily prayer and meditation, teaching and writing

My Daily Journal

The part of today’s lesson that really stuck me was God’s attribute as a teacher wanting to help me grow.  God requires a sacrifice, an offering, from me.  Not because He needs something that I have.  God created all of it and owns all of it.  He has put me in place as a steward, but I am only on a temporary work assignment here, where God is eternally in charge and in control.  Instead, the sacrifice and offering is a check on the condition of my heart and head.

God wants me to sacrifice that which I deem to be the best that I have acquired.  If I cannot let go of what I consider to be best out of the things that my labor has produced, then I am blocking God from giving me something better than that out of the work of His labor (which produced everything that exists in 6 days).  If I have already place something on the pedestal of “best” and am not willing to remove it, then how can God give me something better?

With that understanding, it is absurd not to joyfully give up whatever it is that I achieve or acquire with my work because what God can give instead is so much greater.  It isn’t a negotiation, it is an exchange of gifts, given in joy and love.

But that begins with the view of God as a giver.  I think that is at the heart of the difference between Cain and Abel.

Cain may have largely seen God as a God who takes away.  In Cain’s eyes, God took away Cain’s inheritance of the Garden of Eden; He took away the ability to garden without sweat and thorns and thistles, He took away constant peace without constant vigilance and fear.  If Eve saw the fulfillment of the prophecy as immediate, Cain may have been raised as a fighter, as one who uses force to work the ground and as one who is prepared, with force, to crush the serpent’s head.

On the other hand, Abel may have largely seen God as a God who gives.  Abel practiced husbandry of livestock, he cared for animals, he shepherded his flocks and he saw the pain that must have been present in the first animal sacrifice that God had performed with His own hands.  He saw what death looked like and may have recognized God’s grace.

What is my attitude in approaching God and His church?  Do I gladly sacrifice the best that I have acquired perceiving that God gives far better gifts?  Do I see the church and pledge drives and capital campaigns as giving or taking?  Am I willing to contribute some or joyfully give the best that I have acquired?

BSF Genesis: Week 4, Lecture

Think of the Garden of Eden as a private luxury yacht, one the size of a cruise liner.  Life is good.  All you can eat buffets. Beauty is all around you.  You have an amazing captain that walks the deck with you.  There are no fears, no threats, no worries, no sweat.  There is only one rule, stay on the boat (i.e., obey). But one day you are together talking with a serpent and he asks, about the rule and in the process of the conversation you change your perspective from seeing the rule as one meant to protect you to one meant to keep something from you.  You want to be the captain.  So, without much thought, you jump ship.  When you reach the water you find that it isn’t a clear calm body of pure water, it is dirty, yucky, murky, oil and grease and pollution.  The more you splash in it, the more covered you get.  Fortunately, God releases a lifeboat, tied to his ship (through the sacrifice of a living creature), but no more lido deck and no way to get back on the yacht. Until… (we’ll come back to that thought).

Let’s first go into our scripture story this week.  In our first section we read about a conversation that Adam and Eve have with a serpent and the decision they each make that results from that conversation.  We learn that the serpent is a crafty creature and in his craftiness he asks a question; a question with an innuendo.  Did God really say…?  He asks it of Eve, but we are told Adam is with her.  When Eve responds, the serpent’s tone gets even more sarcastic and pointed, basically calling God a liar and someone who is trying to keep things from Adam and Eve.  He says, “you won’t die.. you will be like God knowing good and evil.”  Keep in mind, up to this juncture, they were like God, made in his image and they knew good, because everything around them was good.  So, really what Satan is suggesting is that they should want to know evil.  And, like so often we do ourselves, they let their eyes and their perspective stray.  They turned from being focused on the word of God and the character and attributes of God and they turned their focus to the temptation.  Vs 6 says, “…saw that the fruit was good for food and pleasing to the eye, and also desirable for gaining wisdom,”  Then, they make one of the most pivotal decisions in the history of mankind, they took it and ate it.

There was a TV show years ago with a line, “The devil made me do it.”  But that is wrong.  It is wrong now and it was wrong at the time of Adam and Eve.  The devil prompted them to question God’s word and His character.  The devil lied to them about God’s intentions for them and misled them, but the devil did not force them to eat it.  He didn’t pick the fruit and lie to them that it was some other fruit, so they weren’t deceived.  He didn’t even force a situation of panic or urgency to cause immediate action.  He just tempted them to place their eyes and their focus away from God and onto a lie.  The same way we are tempted today.

Who are you blaming for your sins?  Society, TV, your friends, your parents?  What are you doing to focus your vision every day on God and not on temptation?

So, now their eyes are opened and they see evil.  What panic must have filled them!  I don’t know if you have ever felt a panic attack, but I cannot even imagine the emotion of the situation, the fear, the shame, the uncertainty.  They start sewing together fig leaves, like that is some rational thing to do, and then they hear God walking through the garden.  Panic! Hide!

God calls out to them and the reality that they can’t hide from God must have sunk in and Adam answers back.  God then patiently lets them tell their story.  Adam blames everyone else.  It was Eve, and, by the way, you are the one who put her here.  Eve blames the serpent.  But, both acknowledge and confess.  “I ate.”  Don’t miss that part.  Their confession worked then like our confession does not.  It puts us in a proper position to receive God’s grace.  Adam and Eve should have died immediately.  The consequence of sin is death.  But through their confession, God gave grace, not without cost, but neither what they earned.

When we sin, there are consequences.  The negative consequences of Adam and Eve’s sin was pain, fear, longing, domineering, toil, thorns, thistles, sweat, fight to survive, death.  The serpent was cursed, the ground was cursed.

Think of it like ripples or waves.  When we jumped ship and splashed into the dirty water, we made waves, things were moved and affected.  That is still true today.  One of the tricks the tempter plays is to hide the impacting waves of our sin from us.  It being hidden does not mean it is not there, just that we don’t see it.  Those types of ripples and waves are often the most dangerous.  They create an under tow that can drown not only us, but those around us as well.

Do you recognize that there are no victimless sins?  When you disobey God it has affects, even if you don’t see them, they are there.  What sin are you trying to keep hidden?

But, with all the negative consequences, we also see something amazing if we look hard at the verses.  Here we see the first glimpse of God’s grace.  We see the first mention of our savior, Jesus Christ, and the work that He will do to crush the serpent’s head.  We see the first sacrifice that God made on our behalf, one that transferred our earned death onto another creature.

We see something interesting in that first sacrifice.  It was only a covering.  Think of it as the life preserver or lifeboat that God released for us.  We aren’t out of the water, but we also weren’t immediately pulled under to drown.

But compare that to the work of Christ.  Jesus became man.  He tied a rope around His waist (tying Himself to His Father in heaven – we see him tighten those knots every time He prayed).  He jumped down from the deck and stretched out His arms (on the cross) to grab ahold of us.  Then, using his own strength, He lifted us back into the boat.  It’s like those rescue missions at sea, all we can do is reach for Him, submit and hold on.

Where the first sacrifice was a covering, Jesus’ sacrifice brought us back into a state of righteousness with God, back into unity and communion with Him, back onto the boat.  He didn’t just save us from the deep, but he brought us back into His family.

So, if we are once again “back in the family” and we have been made righteous, why do we still feel the consequences of sin and see it all around us?  Think about those images of birds being rescued from an oil spill in the ocean.  That is us.  God’s work of transforming us starts on the inside.  He places the Holy Spirit in us and begins cleaning the gunk of swimming in sin from our heart, then he works outward.  On the outside, we are still dripping the pollution of sin.  Because we still live on this earth, we are still all wet.  But like the ship is on the water not of the water, we are on this earth, and no longer of this earth.  Jesus said His kingdom is not of this earth and we are subjects of His kingdom.  See, one day, either when we pass from this earth or when Jesus returns, we will be completely transformed.  This filthy flesh will be replaced and made completely clean, inside and out.  We will live in a new heaven and new earth free of sin where there is no serpent (he’ll be spending eternity in a firey pit), no pain, no sorrow, none of the things that sin brought into this world.  We will once again be fully transformed back into walking in the garden with God and it will be good.