Mark Driscoll: Noah Was Not a Righteous Man
This article is about one of my pet peeves.
It bugs me so much that I have gone through my kids’ picture Bibles over the years with a Sharpie, scratching out the error so my kids can get the story straight. With all the buzz about Noah lately, it seemed like a good time to connect Noah to the gospel of Jesus Christ.
The Wrong Moral
The most common way Christians butcher the story of Noah is by misreading what the Bible actually says. The story is wrongly told that there were a bunch of bad guys who drowned and one good guy who got a boat. The moral of this story is that if you are a good guy, then God will save you from death and wrath.
The problem?
This is not the gospel. This is just good old-fashioned works: “Be a good person and you can get saved; otherwise, you can just die.”
Not a Good Guy
Slow and careful Bible reading is really important everywhere, including here. The order of events is very important and deliberate.
Genesis 6:5-9 says, “The Lord saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every intention of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. And the Lord regretted that he had made man on the earth, and it grieved him to his heart. So the Lord said, ‘I will blot out man whom I have created from the face of the land, man and animals and creeping things and birds of the heavens, for I am sorry that I have made them.’ But Noah found favor in the eyes of the Lord.
“These are the generations of Noah. Noah was a righteous man, blameless in his generation. Noah walked with God” (ESV).
First, Genesis 6:5–7 states the total depravity of everyone on the earth with one of the most negative declarations about human sin in all of Scripture. We are told that God saw that every person was only evil all of the time. God was grieved that He had made humanity because they filled His heart with pain. This statement does include Noah, who was simply one of the sinfully wicked men on the earth who grieved God.
Everyone was a sinner in Noah’s day, just like everyone is a sinner in our day.
Second, Genesis 6:8 then explains the process by which God chose to save and bless Noah. It says, “But Noah found favor [grace] in the eyes of the Lord.”
Noah did not begin as a righteous man, but rather he began as a sinner not unlike everyone else on the earth in his day. The only difference between Noah and the other sinners who died in the flood of judgment was that God gave grace to Noah.
Noah was not a good guy but a graced guy.
Grace and Favor
Beautifully, the word favor is the same Hebrew word for grace that appears here for the first time in the Bible. It’s the same word that is echoed repeatedly by Paul and other authors throughout the New Testament as they proclaim that salvation is by grace through faith alone.
Everyone was a sinner in Noah’s day, just like everyone is a sinner in our day. God had no good person to work through to accomplish His plan of redemption. God worked, as He always has, by saving an undeserving sinner through grace, thereby enabling them to live a righteous life by grace, as is taught in the next verse.
The only difference between Noah and the other sinners who died in the flood of judgment was that God gave grace to Noah.
Genesis 6:9 then explains the effects of God’s grace to Noah saying, “This is the account of Noah. Noah was a righteous man, blameless among the people of his time, and he walked with God.”
Indeed, Noah was a blameless and righteous man who, like Enoch, “walked with God” (Gen. 5:24). But Noah was only this sort of man because God saved him by grace and empowered him to live a new life of obedience to God by that same grace.
The good news of Noah is that a bad guy received God’s good grace, and that same God still saves the same way today.
Mark Driscoll is the founding pastor of Mars Hill Church, based in Seattle. He is the author of more than 15 books, including his latest, A Call to Resurgence: Will Christianity Have a Funeral or a Future? This article was originally posted on theresurgence.com.