The Bible Recap - Day 002 (Genesis 4-7) - Year 5
Episode Date: January 2, 2023SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! Seriously, go there. - Join our PATREON/RECAPtain community for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Win a trip to Israel! - Listen ...to WayFM FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Matthew 22 - Mark 12 - The Bible Project: God, Abraham, Demons, & Giants Q+R - Subscribe to the Bible Recap! PREP EPISODES (in case you haven’t listened yet): Let's Read the Bible in a Year (Chronological Plan)! How I Learned to Love (Reading) the Bible Why Reading the Whole Bible is Important (interview with Lee McDerment) Preparing to Read the Bible Avoiding Common Mistakes: What to Look for When You Read the Bible Reading the Bible in Community SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Today we read about the first children, Kane and Abel.
And speaking of children, if you have any nearby, you may want to preview this episode
before sharing it with them.
So just a heads up on that.
Kane and Abel carried out the sin nature of their parents.
The thing about being not God is that we're by nature
less than perfect.
Yesterday, when God finished creating,
he declared it very good and he blessed man.
But being very good and being blessed
are entirely different than being perfect and complete.
There is zero chance that imperfect man
would live up to God's standard of perfection.
And we saw that played out today when Cain murdered his brother Abel.
What's interesting to me in this passage is that this murder happened about 2,500 years
before God gave Moses the Ten Commandments, but Cain's still new murder was wrong, even
though it hadn't been written out on the tablets.
Those stone tablets weren't necessary for mankind to know right from wrong.
Cain even knew what gestures required.
He knew there would be a natural consequence for his actions.
Because in 414, he feared other people killing him and response to him killing his brother.
One of the things people often ask when they read this story is where did Cain's wife
come from?
Because we see in 417 that he got married.
Scripture points to all humanity being descended from Adam
and Eve, so it doesn't seem like God created a bunch of people independent of them.
However, scripture does tell us that Adam and Eve had lots of children after Cain
enabled, so it seems likely that Cain could have married one of his sisters or nieces.
You're probably like, hold up, Tara Lee.
I know, that's weird.
This is one of the least weird things we're going to cover in scripture.
It's not even the weirdest thing we're going to cover today.
But here's something interesting I found when I dug into this.
The scientific reason incest is problematic and dangerous is because of the genetic load,
which didn't exist back then.
I don't think it's a stretch to assume that Adam and Eve didn't have any genetic mutations,
but that those developed over generations.
So, it wouldn't necessarily
have been dangerous at that point. It wasn't until much later that God banned incest,
and up until that point, it seems like it could have been the tool he used to populate the Earth.
By the way, this doesn't suggest that God has changed, it just shows us that he has an orderly plan.
Here's another example of that. Yesterday we saw that mankind started out as
vegetarians, possibly even vegans, but tomorrow we'll see where he tells people to eat meat.
God is intentional about all these things. Only he would know at what point genetic mutations
would be a problem for mankind. So only he would know when incest has served its purpose
and crossed into dangerous territory. Okay, I'm going to go into something a little weirder here, but hang in there.
Genesis 6 has a lot going on, and I'm going to try to break down some heavy stuff in short,
simple explanations.
In 6-4, we see the term, Sons of God used.
This is one way Scripture refers to angelic beings.
This is an interesting section, and there are a lot of theories on it.
But the prevailing understanding among historic Jewish text was at the term,
sons of God referred to fallen angels, which means that the sons of God, the fallen angels,
took human wives and had children with them, creating this crossbreed of angels and humans.
In this section of Scripture, they are referred to as the Nephilim.
In Matthew 22 and Mark 12, we see that the angels in heaven don't procreate,
but that could potentially be for two reasons.
First, the angels in heaven are referred to as elect angels,
who live within the bounds of God's rules and don't rebel against him.
But second, Scripture seems to indicate that all angels are male.
We never see a female angel in Scripture.
So, if they're all male, they can't procreate among themselves.
But if they were to procreate with human females, then theoretically this kind of crossbreeding
would be possible. If that's the case, then there's a strong chance that the fallen angels
procreating with women corresponds to the increasing wickedness on the earth.
Now, why would fallen angels want to do this? Here's a popular theory.
If you're an angel who resided in heaven
with God the Father and God the Son and God the Spirit,
and you knew that the plan from before the creation
of the earth was that someday,
God the Father was going to send God the Son to earth,
born as a human named Jesus,
who was conceived by God the Spirit
to redeem and restore everything,
and then you rebelled against God in His kingdom? Wouldn't you want to thwart that plan? Wouldn't you want to counter
fit it in an attempt to deceive people and defeat Him? So it could be that the enemy was
trying to corrupt the human bloodline to prevent the birth of the Messiah by counterfitting
the supernatural and natural union. It's possible. It's important that we hold all this with
an open hand because we don't have enough info here. We don't want to scream where scripture whispers. But if
this did happen the way the ancient Jews understood it, then God wiping out all this crossbreed
population via the flood, which is about to happen, totally makes sense. He's wiping
out the enemy's attempt to wipe out the Messiah's bloodline. And in this scenario, the only
family whose bloodline
hadn't been infiltrated by fallen angels
was Noah's family, so God preserved them.
Are you still with me?
If all of that is really confusing,
check out the show notes for a link to more info on this.
And if you don't know how to find the show notes
on your particular podcast app,
try googling the name of the app you're using
along with the word show notes,
or you can go to thebibelrycap.com forward slash links to see all
the show notes for the whole year. Now, regardless of what happened, we know that
God has set apart this family, these particular descendants of Adam and Eve, as
the family he is in relationship with. More on that in a second. Okay, a few tidbits
about the arc that might help you picture the scale of this monstrosity.
According to 615, it was one and a half football fields long,
the width of a six-lane interstate, and as tall as a four-story building.
Noah was a pretty smart man, so he probably took the tiniest version of all the animals,
and we have way more breeds of animals these days, so I'm sure God knew that was the perfect size
to hold whatever he needed to hold. Probably didn't smell great though.
In 618, God makes a covenant with Noah.
God is continuing to work through this one family of people.
Before the floodwaters come, he lets Noah know that this is only the beginning of their
relationship.
Noah is not going to die.
Then, in 7-6, the flood occurs.
If the timeline is aiming to be precise, the flood would have happened 1,656 years
after Adam and Eve were created.
We've covered a lot of ground in just six chapters.
You can see that Genesis is not really heavy on the details.
That's an average of 276 years per chapter.
That's like trying to summarize the history of America
in one chapter.
God leaves out lots of information, and that's okay because our aim isn't to know everything.
Our aim is to know God.
Speaking of which, where did you see your God shot today?
Where did you see God's character displayed?
What picture of Him was presented to you?
Here's my God shot.
In all we read today, I saw God's sovereignty on display.
Nothing can thwart his will.
Nothing can keep him from his plan to rescue the people he has entered into relationship with.
The enemy's attempts to thwart the bloodline of Christ did not prevail.
And even if you don't subscribe to that particular interpretation of Genesis 6,
we see his sovereignty over weather and creation.
He is at work in all things to restore fallen humanity in relationship with himself.
And that's good news for all of us because he's where the joy is.
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