Something bad was going to happen. Really bad. A natural disaster of biblical proportions -- a flood so deep that even the mountaintops would offer no escape. So God ordered Noah to build an ark.
Noah got down to business. He built an ark, and a big one. Four hundred and fifty feet long -- big enough to hold his family, an awful lot of animals, and all the provisions he would need.
The rest of humanity got down to business as well. Their business was disunity. You could say disunity was their middle name. It’s who they were. It’s what defined them. It’s what drove them. Disunity manifests itself in various ways. First and foremost is disunity among people who differ. It doesn’t matter how they differ. It can be their genders, their sexual orientations, their races, their classes, their national identities. Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels
is essentially a satire about disunity. In it humankind is literally at war over which end of an egg was the top and which was the bottom. So I guess just about any difference can be exploited in the cause of disunity.
Then there are less obvious forms of disunity. There is what you could call “disunity by omission” where you simply decline to acknowledge anyone who differs from you. You surround yourself with people just like yourself. You don’t know, or care to know, anyone who differs.
And too there is disunity that hits closer to home. There is disunity within families. This usually occurs when one or more members of the family are willfully blind to their responsibility to fulfill their right role as mother, father, son, daughter, brother, or sister. This stirs up all manner of dysfunction -- resentment, compensation, argumentation, disloyalty, betrayal, and avoidance.
Yes, the rest of humanity thrived on disunity in all its various manifestations. They turned to it as a dog to its vomit, to reference the graphic prophet Jeremiah. And this is precisely why the rest of humankind didn’t build arks. They certainly could have. They saw Noah constructing his. A 450 foot ark is pretty hard to hide. They could have asked him about it. “Why the ark, Noah? Expecting rain?” But they didn’t really need to. You see a 450 foot ark being loaded up, and you add two and two. But they were too preoccupied with their disunity.
Then the flood hit. Noah was ready for it. Floods aren’t all that bad when you have an ark. When you don’t have an ark, though, it’s a different story. The rest of humanity went down fighting, and not in any good way. It must have been horrifying. There’s a big difference between when good people die and when bad people die. I’ve learned this through experience.
So the point of the story, or at least the point of the beginning of the story (since there is much more to it) is to warn us to be prepared for the floods that will surely assail us, and of course not just literal floods – all the disaster and tragedy and calamity that will surely assail us.
And this is the point of the story. The point is not to raise the question, “Why the floods in the first place?” “Why will floods surely assail us?” There will never be an answer to that question. Humankind has been searching for it for thousands of years. The search has been and will forever be fruitless. So maybe that’s not our question to ask. Instead we must acknowledge and accept that floods will surely assail us. It’s a component of an existence we will never fully comprehend. Floods will surely assail us, and we must prepare for them. So then the question then becomes how? How do we prepare for the floods that will surely assail us?
It begins with naming and claiming your convictions. All people need convictions to live by. Otherwise who are they? What are they about? I know mine. Probably yours are the same. My convictions are that Jesus Christ was the Son of God and so his words and his actions teach me how to live in accord with God. And his words teach that love is at the heart of existence and his actions teach the ultimate goodness of existence. And so I follow him. Above all. First and foremost. These are most likely our common convictions.
Although perhaps you may be less convinced than I that Jesus Christ was the Son of God, but it doesn’t really matter. He is still worth following. You have to follow someone. You can’t create convictions based upon nothing more yourself. Think about that for a minute. How would that work? Your convictions are based upon yourself and nothing more? It’s barely conceivable. No you have to follow someone. Who else are you going to follow? Karl Marx?
And Jesus said that if you simply follow him, you will come in time to affirm that he is the Son of God. It’s kind of like when you adopt. Someone hands you a child you’ve never met before, and that child is not having the best day of their life, because their life has had precious few best days. Someone hands you a child, then they leave. It can feel strange at first, and uncertain. So they say in the adoption business, “Fake it till you make it.” That’s what you can do in this case. Fake it till you make it.
At any rate, it begins in naming and claiming your convictions. And then you begin to enact your convictions. Because if you hold convictions, you must enact them. Convictions and their enactment go hand in hand. You don’t hold convictions then hide them under a bushel. This would make you a weakling or a hypocrite and no one wants to be a weakling or a hypocrite? So you do something, you do anything, to enact your convictions.
And in enacting your convictions, you grow stronger and braver, more empowered and confident. You become a positive force. You discover that you have the power to make things better. For yourself and for those around you. And then you are prepared. The flood that will surely assail you does. Something bad happens, really bad. No matter what it is that happens to you or someone you love, you have the power to make things better. You can contribute help, support, hope, aid, sanctuary, time, comfort, advice, accompaniment, truth, faith witness, and prayer.
Jesus said it a bit more succinctly. “Everyone who hears these words of mine and does them is like a wise man who built his house on rock. The rain fell, the flood came, and the winds beat against that house, but it did not collapse because it had been founded on rock.”
So here’s to arks. And here’s to foundations. Amen.