Genesis 11:1-9 Pastor Nathan P. Kassulke
Build on the Rock Summer Series 2 June 10, 2018 “The Tower of Babel”
God had a plan, but the people had a different plan. That describes a pattern that we find repeatedly throughout the Bible. And it starts very early in the history of the world God created. He created a perfect world. Everything fit together and worked together. The two perfect people were united to each other and to God. They lived in a paradise, a perfect paradise. God had a plan for the perfect paradise to continue. But the people came up with a different plan. No, it was not originally their idea. It was a plan hatched by Satan himself. But the people went with that plan, the eating of the forbidden fruit, instead of sticking to God’s plan. Many years later, the people of another time had a plan that they would continue in their wickedness. They would do whatever they wanted, whatever felt good to them. And they wouldn’t worry about what anyone else thought, least of all about what God thought. Their plan was different from God’s plan, and so he intervened by sending a flood that destroyed a world full of wickedness and rescued only a small handful of faithful followers of God, Noah and his family. God had a plan, but the people had a different plan. That describes the account before us today as well. The second building project that we consider in our summer series is one of the very first building projects mentioned in the Bible. It is the Tower of Babel. God had a plan. Even after the flood had wiped out the earth, God had a plan. He wanted people to multiply and to settle over the earth. Just as he had once shared the plan with Adam and Eve to be fruitful and multiply, God wanted the people in the post-flood world to do the same. God had made the world for people. They were to have dominion over it, and according to the plan of God even after the flood, people would be found all over the earth where they would live, marry, raise families, and worship God. But the people had a different plan. They found a nice place to settle down, and they decided to stay there. Why say any painful good-byes? Why leave friends or relatives behind? Why go off to new and different places when you can settle down together? And then came the next phase of the people’s plan. “Let’s build a tower. But we won’t make it just any tower. We will build a tower that will reach up to the heavens. We’ll build a whole city, but the tower will be the centerpiece of it all. It will stand tall in the plain and proclaim to everyone that we have accomplished something. We will be famous, just like our tower!” So the people got to work, carrying out their plan instead of God’s plan. It is bad enough that the plan the people were following was not God’s plan, but if we think a bit deeper than that, we find the real problem with the people’s plan. It’s a problem that we call sin. And this is just one of many episodes that demonstrates so clearly just how insidious, just how dangerous, just how sinister sin really is. The problem is that sin is turning one’s back on God to be concerned only with oneself. That was the way it was when sin first entered a previously perfect world. Adam and Eve, tested and tempted by the devil’s whispers, concluded that God was withholding something from them. In spite of being set in the middle of paradise itself, they came to want the one thing that they weren’t supposed to have. And Satan convinced them that what God was withholding from them was something that they would really want. And want it they did, so they took the forbidden fruit, and they ate it. The pattern was set. And so many sins follow that same pattern. Fast-forward again through several intervening generations and the devastation of the flood, and look at what happened around the Tower of Babel. The people thought that God was trying to withhold something from them. If they would scatter, they would miss out on something. They wouldn’t be happy with God’s plan. They wanted what they wanted. They wanted what God told them they should not have. Don’t you see that same pattern playing itself out in your life, too? The problem of sin really hasn’t changed that much, has it? God tells us that we should help others and serve others, but we figure that will take away from our enjoyment of life. We want to help ourselves. God assigns us important roles and gives us responsibilities, maybe as parents or as children or as employers or employees. There are any