Far from being detached, the root of any tree constantly provides nourishment for the tree as it grows far above. The constantly inform the tree and support it. When reading Noah this week, I was tapping into the ancient roots of our people, and found issues very much at the forefront of our consciousness: Global climate change, moral relativism, information security and identity theft, privacy, preservation of bio-diversity and the problem of communication, just to name a few.
Our actions and those of our country have far reaching effects on the world we live in. Noah’s generation saw that up close, as they drowned in a flood of their own making. Noah teaches the importance of preserving animals and other species before they are extinguished by our careless destruction of nature. Save the species, the bio-diversity. Noah didn’t just save animals that had a “use†but many species that humans have no use for.
Its not that Noah is a tree-hugging, granola chomping, vegi eating hippie. No, Noah ate meat, with God’s permission, he loved to drink and have a good time. He used the earth for his own pleasure and benefit. But Noah knew that life, nature, and the planet, are gifts that need stewardship, not exploitation and destruction.
Shabbat Shalom
Mufti, the flood was G-d’s response to humanity’s moral depravity at the time. That was the cause and effect.
Got this in my inbox:
Why was the flood of their own making?
Great comment. Fully agree.
May a Gentile Christian ask a question? In one English translation of Genesis 9: 8-16 the word ‘covenant’ appears seven times, and an eighth time in v. 17 (other English translations there are only seven instances, within vv 8-17). In the Hebrew, how many times does it appear – seven or eight? Do the historic interpreters remark upon the number of instances?
In the midst of a terrifying [climate-change-worsened?] drought in Australia (our city water supply is at 25% and falling, I cling to this passage in Genesis and remind myself that G-d has – a covenant with the earth: v. 13, English translation, ‘the sign of the covenant between me and the earth’.