Monday, March 4, 2024

How God Changes: March 3, 2024

Genesis 9:8-17                                                Year B, Lent 3

            The story of Noah, the ark, and the rainbow is immensely popular, especially with children.  Thus, it has come up in numerous conversations with my son.  At first, we were just getting the basic story across---but being someone whose job it is to overthink the Bible, I have always been kind of uncomfortable with the children’s bible version of the story. It glosses over the reason for the flood and the destruction it created.  I realize that doesn’t belong in a children’s Bible, but I have always wondered how you transition from the children’s version, to the real version…without just confusing and disturbing kids.   Recently my son asked me why more animals weren’t saved.  It’s rare when I have a clear answer for one of his Bible questions and here there was a clear answer—which was that the ark had limited space.  That made perfect sense to him.  But because I am an Episcopal priest, I had to add, “You know the really confusing thing about the story, why God sent the flood in the first place.”  Joshua was unwilling to engage on this theological topic and he was wise to do so. 

            Two chapters before our reading for today, we read exactly why God decided to send a flood that destroyed the world and killed everyone except one family. The Lord saw that the wickedness of humankind was great in the earth, and that every inclination of the thoughts of their hearts was only evil continually. And the Lord was sorry that he had made humankind on the earth, and it grieved him to his heart.”  The reading isn’t confusing because God isn’t clear.  In fact, this is one of those times when God is clearer than we would like God to be.  The problem is that it doesn’t fit with our image of a loving God.  Just the idea that God would regret creating us is almost unfathomable.

Some people choose to deal with this paradoxical view of God by dividing God into the God of the Old Testament and the God of the New Testament.  And while I hate to cause unnecessary consternation, I have to tell you, it’s the same God.  We don’t get a new God between the end of the Old Testament and the beginning of the New Testament. It’s the very same God throughout the Bible.

            However, that doesn’t mean that God doesn’t change.  There are a lot of people who think that God has never changed—that God cannot change.  Their argument would be that if we believe in a God who is perfect, how could God change? Why would God change? But the story of the flood and the promise that God made after the flood is a clear example of how God has evolved and how God’s relationship with humanity can and does change for the better. 

Often, we look at the story of the flood and think, “Ok, God was clearly very frustrated.  He tried something.  He got it out of his system, and promised to never do it again. Let’s talk about the rainbow now.” It’s tempting to gloss over the hard things, not just with the Bible, but in all kind of different ways.  One thing that is helpful to keep in mind is that this was very early on in God’s relationship with humanity.  The flood story starts in chapter 6 of Genesis---the very first book of the Bible. At this point we have had the story of creation, Adam and Eve and their disobedience and then the very first murder—Adam and Eve’s son (Cain ) killed his brother Abel.  After that Cain is cursed and then in chapter 5 we have the list all of the descendants of Adam.  At this point God’s experience with humanity is limited, and not that great. The next thing we know, God has decided that the earth is cursed and filled with violence and he decides to wipe the whole thing out.  Fortunately one person found favor with God. That one person, Noah, became the opportunity for a new beginning. 

God decided to forge this partnership with a human, allow that human to save representatives of the human race as well as animals of every kind.  God knew that there was something/someone worth saving.  After the flood, and this is where we are today, God promises never to do it again—God will never destroy the world with a flood again.  God even created a sign to help God remember—a rainbow.  That rainbow would not only remind God, but all humanity of God’s love and commitment to the people he created.

The question is why—what changed God’s mind.  Did God realize that humans were inherently good? Did humans improve their behavior. No, in fact, right before he made the covenant with Noah and his family, God said that the inclination of the human heart is evil from youth.  Humans were no less sinful than they were before the flood.  Humanity didn’t change.  God’s relationship with humanity changed. God decided that this was not the way to deal with humanity.  Instead, God would restrain Godself and change his behavior.

Could God continue as a God of justice, punishing the wicked and wiping out the earth every time the world turned violent? Sure, God could absolutely do that. Instead God decided to find a new way to deal with sin and evil, because he saw that this kind of justice wasn’t effective.  It didn’t change people’s hearts.  It didn’t make people good or more loving. Instead God decided to create a relationship with humans and redeem the world from within rather than punish from above and beyond.

God made this choice even though he knew that it would mean more pain for him.   When God first observed the violence of his people, right before he laid out his plan for the flood, it says that the evil of humankind grieved his heart. God knew that in deciding to be in relationship with the people of the world, that meant that God would have to open his heart to a world of grief…for eternity.  Yet this is what God accepted.  God chose love and compassion even though it would bring him ever ending grief.

Now this didn’t mean that God never reacted violently again.  This doesn’t mean that human’s never suffered again.  What it meant is that God never cut himself off from humanity, no matter how much it hurt the heart of God. God never gave up on humans….even, even when we give up on him.

Back in the early days of facebook, people would post their relationship status and one of the options was, “it’s complicated.”  Sometimes I think that’s how I would describe the relationship between God and humanity. It’s complicated. Yes, I believe in a God of unconditional love and compassion, but I also believe that God’s justice can sometimes see harsh when I read the stories in the Bible.  Sometimes that feels contradictory to me.  Yet God is consistent in what angers him.  Why did he say humans were evil at the time of Noah? Violence.  Why did he condemn the people of Ninevah? Violence.  Why was Sodom and Gomorah (one of the most misunderstood stories in the Bible) destroyed? Violence. Certainly God got angry about other things.  Idolatry always ticked him off, but God really could not stand it when people hurt other people. It grieved his heart and it still does. 

God’s relationship with humanity continued to evolve, never more so than when he sent Jesus to the earth. That was when God took his heart and opened it wider. He cracked it wide open. Yes, God was already in relationship with humans.  He loved humans.  But becoming human…that changed everything.  That is when God learned what it was to be truly vulnerable, to feel pain, loneliness and sadness.  God became a human so he could truly be in relationship with humans. 

One of the things that Lent calls us to do is look at our relationship with God and consider changing something so that we can be in a closer to God.  Yet, I think that scares us and we often avoid that opportunity Lent gives us.  Many of us have the same relationship with God now, that we had has children.  God has spent all of human existence evolving and finding ways to be closer to us. Lent is 6 weeks long.  Maybe, just maybe if God can spend an eternity changing, we can take this 6 weeks, to change one small thing, to remove one barrier between us and God. If God can change—can’t we?

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