Fasting Day 32 of 40 | Sixth Thursday of Lent –
“Seven days from now I will send rain on the earth for forty days and forty nights, and I will wipe from the face of the earth every living creature I have made.” Genesis 7:4
Can you imagine the work of building the ark and then hearing the message of today’s Scripture? And notice seven and forty appear in it. That seems fitting as this event would shape all of human history.
Ambrose of Milan writes. “How wise also was Noah, who built the whole of the ark! How just again! For he alone, preserved of all to be the father of humanity, was made a survivor of past generations, and the author of one to come; he was born, too, rather for the world and the universe than for himself. How brave he was to overcome the flood! How temperate to endure it! When he had entered the ark, with what moderation he passed the time! When he sent forth the raven and the dove, when he received them on their return, when he left the ark, with what moderation did he make use of these occasions!”
Ambrose of Milan (c. 340-397) in The Duties of the Clergy 1.25, ed. by Philip Schaff (New York: Union Theological Seminary), pp. 86-87.
How did Noah do it? How did he navigate the tempest in a temperate way?
And how can you overcome the floods of life, endure seasons of waiting for God to act, or experience deliverance through storms?
The answer is in Genesis 6:9: Noah “walked faithfully with God.” That is the purpose of Lent to teach us to walk with God in a temperate way.
God, I want to walk with you in temperate way like Noah. Amen.
Know anyone who reminds you of Noah. They walk faithfully with God. They live generously and selflessly when everyone else is greedy and selfish. And they exhibit temperance.
Thank them for their example in your life.
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