The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 7: The Flood
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As time passed on, with no apparent change in nature, men
whose hearts had at times trembled with fear, began to be
reassured. They reasoned, as many reason now, that nature is above
the God of nature, and that her laws are so firmly established
that God Himself could not change them. Reasoning that if the
message of Noah were correct, nature would be turned out of
her course, they made that message, in the minds of the world,
a delusion—a grand deception. They manifested their contempt
for the warning of God by doing just as they had done before the
warning was given. They continued their festivities and their
gluttonous feasts; they ate and drank, planted and builded, laying
their plans in reference to advantages they hoped to gain in
the future; and they went to greater lengths in wickedness, and
in defiant disregard of God's requirements, to testify that they
had no fear of the Infinite One. They asserted that if there were
any truth in what Noah had said, the men of renown—the wise,
the prudent, the great men—would understand the matter.
Had the antediluvians believed the warning, and repented of
their evil deeds, the Lord would have turned aside His wrath, as
He afterward did from Nineveh. But by their obstinate resistance
to the reproofs of conscience and the warnings of God's prophet,
that generation filled up the measure of their iniquity, and became
ripe for destruction.
The period of their probation was about to expire. Noah had
faithfully followed the instructions which he had received from
God. The ark was finished in every part as the Lord had directed,
and was stored with food for man and beast. And now the servant
of God made his last solemn appeal to the people. With an agony
of desire that words cannot express, he entreated them to seek a
refuge while it might be found. Again they rejected his words,
and raised their voices in jest and scoffing. Suddenly a silence fell
upon the mocking throng. Beasts of every description, the fiercest
as well as the most gentle, were seen coming from mountain and
forest and quietly making their way toward the ark. A noise as of
a rushing wind was heard, and lo, birds were flocking from all [p. 98] directions, their numbers darkening the heavens, and in perfect
order they passed to the ark. Animals obeyed the command of
God, while men were disobedient. Guided by holy angels, they
"went in two and two unto Noah into the ark," and the clean
beasts by sevens. The world looked on in wonder, some in fear.
Philosophers were called upon to account for the singular
occurrence, but in vain. It was a mystery which they could not
fathom. But men had become so hardened by their persistent
rejection of light that even this scene produced but a momentary
impression. As the doomed race beheld the sun shining in its
glory, and the earth clad in almost Eden beauty, they banished
their rising fears by boisterous merriment, and by their deeds of
violence they seemed to invite upon themselves the visitation of
the already awakened wrath of God.
God commanded Noah, "Come thou and all thy house into the
ark; for thee have I seen righteous before Me in this generation."
Noah's warnings had been rejected by the world, but his influence
and example resulted in blessings to his family. As a reward for
his faithfulness and integrity, God saved all the members of his
family with him. What encouragement to parental fidelity!
Mercy had ceased its pleadings for the guilty race. The beasts of
the field and the birds of the air had entered the place of refuge.
Noah and his household were within the ark, "and the Lord shut
him in." A flash of dazzling light was seen, and a cloud of glory
more vivid than the lightning descended from heaven and
hovered before the entrance of the ark. The massive door, which it
was impossible for those within to close, was slowly swung to its
place by unseen hands. Noah was shut in, and the rejecters of
God's mercy were shut out. The seal of Heaven was on that door;
God had shut it, and God alone could open it. So when Christ
shall cease His intercession for guilty men, before His coming
in the clouds of heaven, the door of mercy will be shut. Then
divine grace will no longer restrain the wicked, and Satan will
have full control of those who have rejected mercy. They will
endeavor to destroy God's people; but as Noah was shut into the
ark, so the righteous will be shielded by divine power.
For seven days after Noah and his family entered the ark, there
appeared no sign of the coming storm. During this period their
faith was tested. It was a time of triumph to the world without.
The apparent delay confirmed them in the belief that Noah's [p. 99] message was a delusion, and that the Flood would never come.
Notwithstanding the solemn scenes which they had witnessed—the
beasts and birds entering the ark, and the angel of God closing the
door—they still continued their sport and revelry, even making a
jest of these signal manifestations of God's power. They gathered
in crowds about the ark, deriding its inmates with a daring
violence which they had never ventured upon before.
But upon the eighth day dark clouds overspread the heavens.
There followed the muttering of thunder and the flash of lightning.
Soon large drops of rain began to fall. The world had never
witnessed anything like this, and the hearts of men were struck
with fear. All were secretly inquiring, "Can it be that Noah was
in the right, and that the world is doomed to destruction?"
Darker and darker grew the heavens, and faster came the falling
rain. The beasts were roaming about in the wildest terror, and
their discordant cries seemed to moan out their own destiny and
the fate of man. Then "the fountains of the great deep" were
"broken up, and the windows of heaven were opened." Water
appeared to come from the clouds in mighty cataracts. Rivers
broke away from their boundaries, and overflowed the valleys.
Jets of water burst from the earth with indescribable force, throwing
massive rocks hundreds of feet into the air, and these, in falling,
buried themselves deep in the ground.
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