The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 10: The Tower of Babel
< Prev T. of C.
... 5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
... Next >
Part: A
B
C
The dwellers on the plain of Shinar disbelieved God's covenant
that He would not again bring a flood upon the earth. Many of
them denied the existence of God and attributed the Flood to the
operation of natural causes. Others believed in a Supreme Being,
and that it was He who had destroyed the antediluvian world;
and their hearts, like that of Cain, rose up in rebellion against
Him. One object before them in the erection of the tower was
to secure their own safety in case of another deluge. By carrying
the structure to a much greater height than was reached by the
waters of the Flood, they thought to place themselves beyond all
possibility of danger. And as they would be able to ascend to the
region of the clouds, they hoped to ascertain the cause of the
Flood. The whole undertaking was designed to exalt still further
the pride of its projectors and to turn the minds of future generations
away from God and lead them into idolatry.
When the tower had been partially completed, a portion of it
was occupied as a dwelling place for the builders; other apartments,
splendidly furnished and adorned, were devoted to their
idols. The people rejoiced in their success, and praised the gods of
silver and gold, and set themselves against the Ruler of heaven
and earth. Suddenly the work that had been advancing so prosperously
was checked. Angels were sent to bring to naught the
purpose of the builders. The tower had reached a lofty height, and
it was impossible for the workmen at the top to communicate
directly with those at the base; therefore men were stationed at
different points, each to receive and report to the one next below him
the orders for needed material or other directions concerning the
work. As messages were thus passing from one to another the
language was confounded, so that material was called for which [p. 120] was not needed, and the directions delivered were often the reverse
of those that had been given. Confusion and dismay followed.
All work came to a standstill. There could be no further harmony
or co-operation. The builders were wholly unable to account for
the strange misunderstandings among them, and in their rage
and disappointment they reproached one another. Their confederacy
ended in strife and bloodshed. Lightnings from heaven,
as an evidence of God's displeasure, broke off the upper portion
of the tower and cast it to the ground. Men were made to feel
that there is a God who ruleth in the heavens.
Up to this time all men had spoken the same language; now
those that could understand one another's speech united in
companies; some went one way, and some another. "The Lord scattered
them abroad from thence upon the face of all the earth."
This dispersion was the means of peopling the earth, and thus
the Lord's purpose was accomplished through the very means
that men had employed to prevent its fulfillment.
But at what a loss to those who had set themselves against God!
It was His purpose that as men should go forth to found nations
in different parts of the earth they should carry with them a
knowledge of His will, that the light of truth might shine
undimmed to succeeding generations. Noah, the faithful preacher
of righteousness, lived for three hundred and fifty years after the
Flood, Shem for five hundred years, and thus their descendants
had an opportunity to become acquainted with the requirements
of God and the history of His dealings with their fathers. But they
were unwilling to listen to these unpalatable truths; they had no
desire to retain God in their knowledge; and by the confusion of
tongues they were, in a great measure, shut out from intercourse
with those who might have given them light.
The Babel builders had indulged the spirit of murmuring
against God. Instead of gratefully remembering His mercy to
Adam and His gracious covenant with Noah, they had complained
of His severity in expelling the first pair from Eden and
destroying the world by a flood. But while they murmured
against God as arbitrary and severe, they were accepting the rule
of the cruelest of tyrants. Satan was seeking to bring contempt
upon the sacrificial offerings that prefigured the death of Christ;
and as the minds of the people were darkened by idolatry, he led
them to counterfeit these offerings and sacrifice their own children [p. 123] upon the altars of their gods. As men turned away from God, the
divine attributes—justice, purity, and love—were supplanted by
oppression, violence, and brutality.
Part: A
B
C
< Prev T. of C.
... 5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
... Next >
|