Pastor Tim Patoka
God’s Zoo: All Kinds of Animals
June 20, 2021
Why did God Save All Kinds of Animals? Genesis 7:6-24 1) Because of God’s Judgment for Sin in the Flood 2) Because of God’s Love for his Believing Children We who live in the Sonoran Desert know how valuable water is, especially as we wait for the monsoon rains to come. I wonder how many thousands, if not millions, of people have been praying that this year’s monsoons rains now only be especially wet to make up for last year’s no-show, but that they shower upon as soon as possible. But sometimes, too much of something can also be a bad thing! Whenever heavy monsoon rains come upon us, we see how those in low-lying places get flooded, driving routes across town get quite creative, and roads suddenly show their age. Every hurricane season we hear how those who live on the coast get bombarded by intense wind and rainfall costing billions of dollars in damage and costing thousands of lives. Even in the babbles of a brook or the rushing of a rapid, we see how water works its destructive force by slowly eroding away its banks to redirect a river’s course or deepen a canyon’s depth. For something that is so essential to life, water sure can be destructive. Yet nothing we’ve seen can compare to the destruction that the waters of the Flood wrecked upon our world. In this God-worked natural disaster, as described for us in Genesis chapter 7, we see how God used it to flush out almost every taint of sin in this world along with countless animal bystanders. Yet God didn’t destroy everything. Rather, he kept alive Noah, his immediate family, and at least 1 pair of all kinds of land-based animals in the ark. As we consider the why and what of God’s Flood upon the world, we’ll ask ourselves, “why did God save all kinds of animals?” It’s first of all because they needed saving from the judgment that God was going to bring upon the world because of mankind’s abundant and persistent sin. But it’s secondly because these animals would be one way that God would show his love for his believing children. 1) Because of God’s Judgment of Sin in the Flood A lot has happened in salvation history since we last met for worship. It’s been around 2,000 years since Adam and Eve fell into sin and the human race has not done all that well. They have fallen into abundant and persistent sin to such an extent that God’s heart is saddened and filled with regret. God decides to end these sinners’ time of grace with a worldwide Flood so that Noah and his believing family could effectively do a restart on the human race. So God tells Noah that he has 120 years to build the ark as sketched by God to house every human and land-based animal that will survive the Flood. And Noah gets to work building this barge that is 450 feet long, 75 feet wide, and 45 feet high. To put that in perspective, the ark would have been about 1 and a half football fields long, 1