
Kids Talk About God
What is the lesson of Noah and the Ark?
By Carey Kinsolving
   Noah and the ark, according to Nicole, eight: âNoah had built an ark, and other people did not believe him. He got two of each animal, and then he loaded all of his stuff. It flooded, and he lived.â
A child who once appeared on Art Linkletterâs TV show thought the lesson of loading all the animals two-by-two was obvious: âIf you donât get married, you get left behind.â
Well, thatâs one lesson, but not the one Noah or the Lord had in mind.
âWe should be more like Noah,â says Jenna, 10.
Why? Noah was the only one in his generation who ob-eyed the Lord. Even though Noah lived in a generation described as âcorruptâ and âviolent,â he âfound grace in the eyes of the Lordâ (Genesis 6). Corruption and violence. Does this sound like the evening news or the morning newspaper?
âEveryone except Noah was wicked,â says Maria, 11. âHe probably had a lot of peer pressure.â Iâm sure he did, Maria. Imagine being the only person in the world following God.
If Noah lived in our day, late night comedians would never run out of material for jokes. Right up until the day Noah closed the door to the ark, Iâm sure people were telling the latest Noah jokes. Who but a crackpot would build a gigantic ship with no water around?
Brittany, 11, says we learn from Noah to resist peer pressure and ridicule by doing what God says: âEven if people doubt you and say youâre crazy, just ignore them. Remember, youâre doing it for God.â
Brittany, your advice sounds like something the Apostle Paul wrote, âAnd whatever you do, do it heartily, as to the Lord and not to menâ (Colossians 3:23).
Noah is described as a just man who walked with God. Anyone who walks with God can resist the temptation to go along with the crowd, even when the crowd resorts to ridicule.
Another lesson we could learn is âDonât laugh at your neighbor âcause they might be right,â says Rebekah, 10.
The laughter of Noahâs peers stopped the day it began to rain. The good news is that God made a covenant (symbolized by the rainbow) that he would never again destroy the world by water. The bad news for the scoffers of this generation is that the flood is only a token of a greater judgment to come.
Jesus compared the people of Noahâs day to the generation who will witness his triumphant return to the earth. Like Noahâs generation, they will engage in the normal activities of life with no thought of an impending judgment by God. Jesus said he will return âat an hour you do not expectâ (Matthew 24:44).
âGod can destroy us at any time, and we should believe that because we need to be ready at the second coming of Christ,â says Garrett, 12.
Think about this: Just as God provided the ark in Noahâs day, he has prepared a safe haven from judgment in our day. The floodwaters, according to the Apostle Peter, symbolize baptismal waters, and baptism symbolizes salvation through the death, burial and resurrection of Jesus Christ (I Peter 3:21-22). On the cross, Jesus absorbed the flood of Godâs judgment for our sins.
Memorize this truth: âAnd Noah did according to all that the LORD commanded himâ (Genesis 7:5).
Ask this question: Are you willing to do what God wants you to do even though your friends will make fun of you?
   Listen to a talking book, download the âKids Color Me Bibleâ for free, watch Kid TV Interviews and the Mission Explorers Documentary at www.KidsTalkAboutGod.org.
Bible quotations are from the New King James Version.
