Moses 8: Noah and the Flood
Aaron P. Schade and Matthew L. Bowen, "Moses 8: Noah and the Flood," in The Book of Moses: from the Ancient of Days to the Latter Days (Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University; Salt Lake City: Deseret Book), 363鈥80.
Introduction
In Moses 8 we move from the story of Enoch to Noah and a prelude to the Flood. With Zion 鈥渇led鈥 and the righteous taken up into heaven, the earth was enveloped in wickedness. But God had not abandoned his efforts to save his children over whom he had wept, and Noah was going to become that beacon of hope amid hopelessness. Moses 8 illuminates Noah鈥檚 and the Lord鈥檚 efforts to call people to repentance. Noah becomes a pivotal figure in the Lord鈥檚 revelations to the Prophet Joseph Smith.[1] After a short pause while he and Church members began to gather in Ohio, Joseph, with Sidney Rigdon as his scribe, resumed translation of the Old Testament and Moses 8 sometime around February 1831.[2]
Moses 8 acts as something like an introduction or transition to the story of the Flood as contained in Genesis and links the narratives of Enoch and Noah in ways absent from the Bible. It speaks of Noah鈥檚 progenitors, his ordination and ministry, and his efforts to call the people of his day to repentance. We learn that even though Noah was baptizing and people were receiving the Holy Ghost, the earth continued to become corrupted and filled with violence. Some people even sought Noah鈥檚 life (see v. 26).
The earliest editions of the Book of Moses did not contain the full story of the Flood. Of this brevity and the incomplete nature of this Noah narrative in relation to the Genesis account and the fuller Joseph Smith Translation project as a whole, Jeffrey Bradshaw and David Larsen note the following:
With the close of Moses 7 we begin the story of Noah, which continues to the end of Moses 8 and on through Genesis 6:14鈥9:29. The abrupt ending of the book of Moses in the middle of the story of Noah was because, in the original 1851 publication of the Pearl of Great Price, Elder Franklin D. Richards did not have access to the original manuscripts of the JST, but only to early versions of the JST published in church periodicals and to an incomplete, handwritten portion of some portions of JST Genesis. Elder Richards simply published everything he had at the time.[3]
In terms of Noah and the larger, broader account situated in Genesis, including the rest of the Flood story and Joseph Smith鈥檚 translation of it, nothing beyond the Lord鈥檚 decree 鈥渂ehold I will destroy all flesh from off the earth鈥 (v. 31) has been included in Moses 8. Nevertheless, a continuation of the expanded story (see, e.g., the textual expansions in JST Genesis 9) can be found in the OT1 and OT2 translation copies.[4]
This chapter explores the significance of the genealogical and historical data given at the beginning of Moses 8. It also considers how Moses came to understand the guiding importance of the comfort/
Noah and his sons鈥 status and behavior as 鈥渟ons of God鈥 starkly contrasts with the 鈥渟ons of men鈥 and the 鈥渄aughters of [Noah鈥檚] sons鈥 (vv. 13鈥15) whose violence, continuous evil, and corruption were precipitating the Flood (see vv. 22, 28鈥30). We thus view the struggle between good and evil through the lens of obedience and disobedience to the covenant. 鈥淎lthough sin will be ever present, each life is still valuable, made in the image of God. [And although] Saints and sinners . . . will express that image differently . . . , both have value in God鈥檚 sight as his image bearers.鈥[6] Thus Noah will teach his people in an effort to save and preserve them. Toward that end, teachings about repentance, covenants, and ordinances (namely, baptism, bestowal of the Holy Ghost, and ordination after the order of God) were of utmost importance, and Moses 8 specifically addresses this.
Covenants are a significant theme in the Flood story in Genesis[7] and must have had a profound effect on Moses as a receiver of the covenant in his day.[8] In Moses 8 we witness more clearly the people鈥檚 rejection of Noah and the doctrine of Christ and the growing wickedness that had been triggering the planned divine response in the form of a flood for generations. In spite of the abysmal state of human depravity that demanded wholesale divine destruction, Moses would learn that, in light of the plan of salvation revealed to Enoch in Moses 7, the Flood was really an expression of divine justice, mercy, and love.[9]
From Enoch to Methuselah, Lamech, and Noah
The importance of the continuance of the righteous line from Adam through Seth down to Enoch, and further down to Noah and his sons, Japheth, Shem, and Ham, takes center stage at the beginning of Moses 8.[10]
1 And all the days of Enoch were four hundred and thirty years.[11]
2 And it came to pass that Methuselah, the son of Enoch, was not taken, that the covenants of the Lord might be fulfilled, which he made to Enoch; for he truly covenanted with Enoch that Noah should be of the fruit of his loins.
3 And it came to pass that Methuselah prophesied that from his loins should spring all the kingdoms of the earth (through Noah), and he took glory unto himself.[12]
4 And there came forth a great famine into the land, and the Lord cursed[13] the earth with a sore curse, and many of the inhabitants thereof died.
5 And it came to pass that Methuselah lived one hundred and eighty-seven years, and begat Lamech;
6 And Methuselah lived, after he begat Lamech,[14] seven hundred and eighty-two years, and begat sons and daughters;
7 And all the days of Methuselah were nine hundred and sixty-nine years, and he died.[15]
8 And Lamech lived one hundred and eighty-two years, and begat a son,
9 And he called his name Noah, saying: This son shall comfort[16] us concerning our work and toil of our hands, because of the ground which the Lord hath cursed.
10 And Lamech lived, after he begat Noah, five hundred and ninety-five years, and begat sons and daughters;
11 And all the days of Lamech were seven hundred and seventy-seven years, and he died.
12 And Noah was four hundred and fifty years old, and begat Japheth; and forty-two years afterward he begat Shem of her who was the mother of Japheth, and when he was five hundred years old he begat Ham.[17]
In line with the Lord鈥檚 covenant with Enoch regarding Noah and his posterity鈥攑osterity that included Jesus Christ himself (see Moses 7:51鈥53, 59鈥64)鈥擬oses learned that Methuselah, the son of Enoch, was not taken to heaven with the rest of Zion in order that this covenant might be fulfilled in the birth of Noah and the preservation of his seed.[18] Noah鈥檚 birth and naming in terms of divine comfort (Moses 8:9) and rest is particularly significant in light of the promises the Lord concerning Noah and his posterity. Moreover, Noah begat three sons: Japheth, Shem, and Ham. The order of their birth differs from the order given in the biblical text, where it lists Shem, Ham, and Japheth.[19] Shem, the second-born son, apparently became the birthright son, beginning a pattern that we see later in the stories about Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, and Ephraim.[20] The Book of Moses clarifies that Ham was born later to a different mother than Japheth and Shem were born to.
鈥淭his Son Shall Comfort Us鈥: The Thematic Significance of Naming Noah
Genesis 5:29 (Moses 8:9) offers the following explanation for Noah鈥檚 naming that presents a powerful play on words and alliteration of the etymological root of Noah鈥檚 name, connecting it to the theme of comfort: 鈥淎nd he [Lamech] called his name Noah [苍艒补岣], saying, This son shall comfort us [测臅苍补岣ツ僲脓苍没] concerning our work and toil of our hands, because of the ground which the Lord hath cursed.鈥[21] This prophetic naming seems to primarily have in view the spiritually, long-running curse of the ground going back to the Fall and reiterated throughout the Book of Moses. However, the horizons of the etiology for Noah鈥檚 naming may encompass both physical and spiritual 鈥渨ork鈥 and 鈥渢oil鈥 looking backward and forward. This expanded etiology gives us a much better sense of how Noah would provide comfort and to whom.
Noah鈥檚 鈥渘ame and its poetic etymology introduce some of the verbal motifs and theological themes that dominate the next four chapters鈥 of the Genesis Flood story.[22] What is clear is that in the vision of Enoch, the Lord showed him the coming of Noah and the temporal salvation of his family in the ark. The contextualized explanation that Noah鈥檚 father, Lamech, gave for Noah鈥檚 naming referred back to the words of Enoch when he saw Noah, the ark, and all of the souls who were destroyed in the Flood.[23] The Book of Moses text explains the 鈥渦s鈥 to whom Lamech referred and the 鈥渦s鈥 whom Noah 鈥渃omforted.鈥 It also helps us understand why they needed to be comforted, particularly Enoch, who experienced such misery over perishing human souls that his 鈥渉eart swelled wide as eternity鈥 (Moses 7:41). Their 鈥渨ork鈥 and 鈥渢oil鈥 went far beyond livelihoods of farming and herding. It also included the preaching of the gospel and the salvific effects the covenant would have on preserving Noah鈥檚 family through the Flood.
Noah鈥檚 naming is significant for another major reason within the Flood narrative: the theme of divine rest.[24] Although the biblical text and the Book of Moses explain the name 苍艒补岣 in terms of the similar-sounding verb 苍岣 (鈥渃辞尘蹿辞谤迟/
In the Book of Moses, the theme of divine 鈥渞est鈥 is much more expansive than in Genesis. We recall that after Enoch鈥檚 soul 鈥渞efuse[d] to be comforted鈥 and he saw 鈥渢he coming of the Son of Man鈥 in Moses 7, he saw the earth weeping and crying out for rest: 鈥淲hen shall I rest, and be cleansed from the filthiness which is gone forth out of me? When will my Creator sanctify me, that I may rest, and righteousness for a season abide upon my face?鈥 (v. 48). Noah鈥檚 name constituted a promise of divine rest. However, this rest would come only in the ultimate sense when Christ came 鈥渋n the days of wickedness and vengeance, to fulfil the oath which I have made unto you concerning the children of Noah; and the day shall come that the earth shall rest, but before that day the heavens shall be darkened, and a veil of darkness shall cover the earth; and the heavens shall shake, and also the earth; and great tribulations shall be among the children of men, but my people will I preserve鈥 (vv. 60鈥61; emphasis added). Noah would be preserved through the Flood, bringing peace and rest to his progenitors, and it was his posterity, specifically the Savior, who would bring eternal peace and rest to all humankind. The earth鈥檚 permanent 鈥渞est鈥 could not come until the 鈥渟on of Man,鈥 the divine descendant of both Enoch and Noah, would come again. The Savior鈥檚 second coming and the coming together of Zion from beneath and Enoch鈥檚 Zion from above would finally result in divine rest for the earth (v. 64). Moses 7鈥8 thus provide the lens through which to view the story of the Flood. Returning to Noah鈥檚 naming in Moses 8:9鈥斺渢his son shall comfort us鈥濃攚e can now see Noah as a type or foreshadower of the mission of Jesus Christ.[28]
Noah and His Sons Receive the Priesthood, Declare the Gospel
Following the genealogical and historical information that introduces Moses 8, the text takes us back thematically to the previous chapters that recount the struggles of preaching and believing.
13 And Noah and his sons hearkened unto the Lord, and gave heed, and they were called the sons of God.[29]
14 And when these men began to multiply on the face of the earth, and daughters were born unto them, the sons of men saw that those daughters were fair, and they took them wives, even as they chose.
15 And the Lord said unto Noah: The daughters of thy sons have sold themselves;[30] for behold mine anger is kindled against the sons of men, for they will not hearken to my voice.
16 And it came to pass that Noah prophesied, and taught the things of God, even as it was in the beginning.
17 And the Lord said unto Noah: My Spirit shall not always strive with man, for he shall know that all flesh shall die; yet his days shall be an hundred and twenty years; and if men do not repent, I will send in the floods upon them.
18 And in those days there were giants[31] on the earth, and they sought Noah to take away his life; but the Lord was with Noah, and the power of the Lord was upon him.
19 And the Lord ordained Noah after his own order,[32] and commanded him that he should go forth and declare his Gospel unto the children of men, even as it was given unto Enoch.
20 And it came to pass that Noah called upon the children of men[33] that they should repent; but they hearkened not unto his words;
21 And also, after that they had heard him, they came up before him, saying: Behold, we are the sons of God; have we not taken unto ourselves the daughters of men? And are we not eating and drinking, and marrying and giving in marriage? And our wives bear unto us children, and the same are mighty men, which are like unto men of old, men of great renown. And they hearkened not unto the words of Noah.
The statement that Noah and his sons 鈥渨ere called the sons of God鈥 takes us back to Moses 6:68 and Adam鈥檚 reception of the priesthood by oath and covenant: 鈥淏ehold, thou art one in me, a son of God; and thus may all become my sons.鈥 Noah and his sons became covenant sons of God and holders of the Melchizedek Priesthood. Moses 8:19 mentions that the Lord not only 鈥渙rdained Noah after his own order鈥濃攖hat is, 鈥渁fter the order of the Son of God鈥[34]鈥攂ut also commissioned him to preach the everlasting 鈥淕ospel鈥 as a preacher of righteousness and a prophet, just as he had commissioned Enoch in Moses 6. Noah was preaching to save souls, not condemn them, and the decisions of the people were bringing about their own condemnation. As part of the covenant that was about to save him and his family through the Flood, Noah sought desperately to help others onto that path of salvation. The Prophet Joseph Smith explained:
Now taking it for granted that the scriptures say what they mean, and mean what they say, we have sufficient grounds to go on and prove from the bible that the gossel [gospel] has always been the same; the ordinances to fulfil its requirements, the same; and the officers to officiate, the same; and the signs and fruits resulting from the promises, the same: therefore, as Noah was a preacher of righteousness he must have been baptised and ordained to the priesthood by the laying on of the hands, &c.[35]
Noah comprehended what this all meant, but although he ministered to save people from spiritual and physical suffering, they paid him no heed. A statement by the Prophet Joseph Smith helps explain why Noah preached so passionately to save lives. After citing Genesis 6:13, Joseph noted, 鈥淸T]hus we behold the keys of this priesthood consisted in obtaining the voice of Jehovah that he talked with him [Noah] in a familiare and friendly manner, that he continued to him the keys, the covenants, the power and the glory with which he blessed Adam at the beginning.鈥[36] The Lord鈥檚 direct, personal involvement in Noah鈥檚 ordination and prophetic commission to save souls speaks volumes about his concern for Noah鈥檚 generation who, having lost their way and become 鈥渙nly evil continually鈥 (Moses 8:22), were about to perish in the Flood. Noah came to see what Enoch had come to see: the worth of souls in the eyes of God.
Noah鈥檚 Preaching and Calls to Repentance
22 And god saw that the wickedness of men had become great in the earth; and every man was lifted up in the imagination of the thoughts of his heart, being only evil continually.
23 And it came to pass that Noah continued his preaching unto the people, saying: Hearken, and give heed unto my words;
24 Believe and repent of your sins and be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ, the Son of God, even as our fathers, and ye shall receive the Holy Ghost,[37] that ye may have all things made manifest; and if ye do not this, the floods will come in upon you; nevertheless they hearkened not.
The Lord and Noah were tireless in their efforts to call people to repent.[38] Noah and his sons prophesied, preached repentance, and taught the people the Lord鈥檚 plan. This consisted of the Lord鈥檚 immediate plan concerning them and the broader plan of salvation. Moses 8:23鈥24 makes it clear that teaching the plan of salvation emphasized the doctrine of Christ in all its essentials[39]鈥攆aith in Jesus Christ; repentance; baptism in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins; reception of the Holy Ghost; enduring to the end in faith, hope, and charity; and exaltation. Those principles constituted the true plan of happiness.
While many during Enoch鈥檚 time repented after hearing his preaching and 鈥渢he Holy Ghost fell on many, and they were caught up by the powers of heaven into Zion鈥 (Moses 7:27), the people鈥檚 response to the preaching of Noah and his sons was almost universally negative: 鈥渢hey sought Noah to take away his life鈥 (Moses 8:18), and 鈥渢hey hearkened not鈥 unto Noah鈥檚 words (Moses 8:20, 21, 24). This appears to have broken Noah鈥檚 heart (see v. 25), and he may have felt as the Lord did when Enoch saw him lamenting: 鈥淯nto thy brethren have I said, and also given commandment, that they should love one another, and that they should choose me, their Father; but behold, they are without affection, and they hate their own blood; and the fire of mine indignation is kindled against them; and in my hot displeasure will I send in the floods upon them, for my fierce anger is kindled against them鈥 (Moses 7:33鈥34). The Lord had told Enoch, 鈥淭here has not been so great wickedness as among thy brethren鈥 (v. 36). That condition, too, had only worsened by the time of Noah.
On the Threshold of the Flood: Grieved at Heart
The final verses of Moses 8 convey how difficult this time of imminent destruction was for God and Noah. The account describes an awful scene of wickedness, violence, and the continuously evil state of the thoughts and hearts of the people. Such behavior might suggest that the actions of the people had undone creation (v. 26 is replete with creation language) and its divine purpose to make possible their immortality and eternal life (Moses 1:39). 鈥淚ndeed, 鈥榳hat God decided to 鈥渄estroy鈥 [Genesis 6:13] had been virtually self-destroyed already.鈥欌[40] Yet we also see in Moses 8 the hope that Noah and God鈥檚 covenant would bring after the Flood by way of a new creation with Noah and his family at its head.
25 And it repented [飞补测测颈苍苍腻岣尘][41] Noah [Heb. 苍艒补岣],[42] and his heart was pained that the Lord had made man on the earth, and it grieved him at the heart.
26 And the Lord said: I will destroy man whom I have created, from the face of the earth, both man and beast, and the creeping things, and the fowls of the air; for it repenteth Noah that I have created them, and that I have made them; and he hath called upon me; for they have sought his life.[43]
27 And thus Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord; for Noah was a just man, and perfect[44] in his generation; and he walked with God,[45] as did also his three sons, Shem, Ham, and Japheth.
28 The earth was corrupt before God, and it was filled with violence.
29 And God looked upon the earth, and, behold, it was corrupt, for all flesh had corrupted its away upon the earth.
30 And God said unto Noah: The end of all flesh is come before me, for the earth is filled with violence, and behold I will destroy all flesh from off the earth.[46]
From the fall in the Garden of Eden and Cain鈥檚 murder of Abel to the wickedness and violence that prevailed in the wake of secret combinations and apostasy by the time of the Flood, repentance was not pursued and earth鈥檚 inhabitants were now ripening for destruction. All that God had declared 鈥済ood鈥 in the Creation was being reversed and undone through wickedness.
鈥淭he Lord saw鈥 is a reversal of the positive evaluation of everything God created [Genesis 1:31]: 鈥淕od saw everything that he had made, and indeed, it was very good.鈥 Reference to the human 鈥渉eart鈥 (濒脓产, 濒脓产膩b) denotes more than one鈥檚 emotions, as is often asserted, since the heart is also the seat of one鈥檚 intellect and will.
Humanity鈥檚 heart is evil, and Yahweh鈥檚 heart is broken [6:6]. The narrator exposes Yahweh鈥檚 inner life as painfully grief-stricken and deeply distressed. 鈥淧ain鈥 has become the common experience of all humans in this world (颈峁a梗腻产么苍 in 3:16, 17 and 5:29) and is paralleled by the anguish of God (the verb 士峁, 鈥渋t grieved him,鈥 [6:6]). The Bible鈥檚 emotive language portrays no Aristotelian unmoved Mover, but a passionate and zealous Yahweh moved by his pathos into action. NRSV鈥檚 鈥渟o the Lord said鈥 might be better translated, 鈥渟o the Lord decided鈥 (v. 7), thus introducing his measured decree. Specific terms and themes of v. 7 combine the creation account of Gen 1 with the 鈥渕an鈥-鈥済round鈥 emphases of the Eden narrative, in order to show that all has been undone. The result is a divine decree that is both devastating and undeniably just. God鈥檚 magnificent creation has been irrevocably ruined, and his passion and sorrow drive God into action.[47]
鈥淎ll Flesh Had Corrupted His Way upon the Earth鈥
The final three verses of the Book of Moses take us back to what had become of God鈥檚 creations: 鈥淎nd God looked upon the earth, and behold, it was corrupt.鈥 Regarding this language in Genesis 6:12, Gordon Wenham writes, 鈥淭he deliberate echo of [Genesis] 1:31 here heightens our sense of the tragedy that has overtaken the world since its creation. Then God was pleasantly surprised by his creation: here he is shocked by its corruption.鈥[48] In the creation account, where God 鈥渟aw everything that [he] had made, and behold, all things which I made were very good鈥 (Moses 2:31) or 鈥渧ery obedient鈥 (Abraham 4:31), he sees that it has now become the opposite. In a real sense the Flood would constitute an uncreation of the earth and a return to the unorganized state wherein it existed before the completion of God鈥檚 creations. This all comes as the people defy and reject God鈥檚 ways.[49] As a result of the people鈥檚 wickedness and impenitence, the Lord would need to 鈥渦ncreate鈥 and 鈥渞e-create鈥 the earth through the Flood.
鈥淚 Will Destroy All Flesh from Off the Earth鈥
In stating that 鈥渢he end of all flesh is come before me,鈥 the Lord asserted that he had decided to take action. Wenham observes, 鈥淭he phrasing of the divine decree 鈥楾he end of all flesh has been determined by me鈥 (literally, 鈥榗ome before me鈥) suggests its irrevocability. The issue has been brought before the divine king and he has decided to act (cf. Esth 9:11).鈥[50] President John Taylor suggested that the Flood was an act of both divine justice and mercy, allowing the Lord鈥檚 justice to 鈥渙vertake鈥 the wicked (after their complete rejection of Noah and his prophecies) and constituting a merciful action toward the unborn:
This antediluvian people were not only very wicked themselves, but having the power to propagate their species, they transmitted their unrighteous natures and desires to their children, and brought them up to indulge in their own wicked practices. And the spirits that dwelt in the eternal worlds knew this, and they knew very well that to be born of such parentage would entail upon themselves an infinite amount of trouble, misery and sin. And supposing ourselves to be of the number of unborn spirits, would it not be fair to presume that we would appeal to the Lord, crying, 鈥淔ather, do you not behold the condition of this people, how corrupt and wicked they are?鈥 鈥淵es.鈥 鈥淚s it then just that we who are now pure should take of such bodies and thus subject ourselves to most bitter experiences before we can be redeemed, according to the plan of salvation?鈥 鈥淣o,鈥 the Father would say, 鈥渋t is not in keeping with my justice.鈥 鈥淲ell, what will you do in the matter; man has his free agency and cannot be coerced, and while he lives he has the power of perpetuating his species?鈥 鈥淚 will first send them my word, offering them deliverance from sin, and warning them of my justice, which shall certainly overtake them if they reject it, and I will destroy them from off the face of the earth, thus preventing their increase, and I will raise up another seed.鈥 Well, they did reject the preaching of Noah, the servant of God, who was sent to them, and consequently the Lord caused the rains of heaven to descend. . . . But, says the caviller, is it right that a just God should sweep off so many people? Is that in accordance with mercy? Yes, it was just to those spirits that had not received their bodies.[51]
When we consider how a just and merciful God could allow the destruction of so many of his children at one time, we should bear in mind the unfathomable, eternal characteristic of Jesus Christ and his Father who sent him, as described by Nephi: 鈥淗e doeth not anything save it be for the benefit of the world; for he loveth the world, even that he layeth down his own life that he may draw all men unto him. Wherefore, he commandeth none that they shall not partake of his salvation鈥 (2 Nephi 26:24). The Lord鈥檚 love for those souls who were perishing came through clearly in his conversation with Enoch. Both the Lord and later Enoch wept. Their grasp of the big picture and overall plan of salvation was their source of comfort in a seemingly hopeless situation. Secured within the framework of salvation for the dead, as witnessed by Enoch, the Flood, like the Savior鈥檚 atonement itself, constituted a divine act of divine justice, mercy, and ultimately love.[52] Regarding everything that God does, perhaps Eliza R. Snow said it best:
How great, how glorious, how complete
Redemption鈥檚 grand design,
Where justice, love, and mercy meet
In harmony divine![53]
For the world at large and its wickedness specifically, the Flood story brought a temporary end. For Noah, his family, and the covenant that the Lord would continue to honor after the Flood, the story constituted a new beginning, a second creation with God鈥檚 plan of redemption at the forefront. The Flood would cover the earth, but Christ鈥檚 atonement would reveal the overarching love of God and his plan of salvation for all his children. Through Noah, his forefathers would receive comfort. Through Christ, the world would be comforted by his redemptive mercy. For Moses, through whom the Lord revealed ordinances and covenants pertaining to the temple and the law of sacrifice, these lessons revolving around the covenant must have been profound, just as they were for the Prophet Joseph Smith and the early Saints of the present dispensation鈥攁nd just as they can be for us today. The remainder of JST Genesis continues the story that ends with Moses 8. Indeed, Moses 1鈥8 offers the Latter-day Saints and the world a unique lens through which to view, interpret, and understand the rest of the Bible, both Old and New Testaments. We now come to the last chapter, which will focus on the effect the Book of Moses had on the development of temple ritual within the restored Church.
Notes
[1] For example, the Lord revealed to the Prophet Joseph Smith, 鈥淭he priesthood was first given to Adam, he obtained the first presidency and held the of it from generation to generation; he obtained it in the creation before the world was formed as in Gen. 1鈥 26, 28, he had dominion given him over every living creature. He is Michael the Archangel spoken of in the scriptures. Then to Noah who is Gabriel, he stands next in authority to Adam in the priesthood. He was called of God to this office, and was the father of all living in his day and to him was given the dominion. These men held keys first on earth and then in heaven. The is an everlasting principle and existed with God from eternity, and will to eternity, without beginning of days or end of years. The keys have to be brought from heaven whenever the gospel is sent.鈥 Discourse, between circa 26 June and circa 4 August 1839鈥揂, as Reported by William Clayton, pp. 11鈥12, The Joseph Smith Papers; emphasis added. This concept of Noah as the father of all living in his day became a promise for which Enoch and Methuselah would rejoice (see Moses 8:2鈥3).
[2] Moses 8:1鈥30 was probably completed between February 1 and March 7, 1831 (just before Doctrine and Covenants 45 when the revelation to start the New Translation was received). See Faulring, Jackson, and Matthews, Joseph Smith鈥檚 New Translation of the Bible, 57; Matthews, 鈥淎 Plainer Translation,鈥 96; and Jackson, Book of Moses and the Joseph Smith Translation Manuscripts, 3. According to Muhlestein in 鈥淩evelations Surrounding the 鈥楴ew Translation,鈥欌 47, Moses 7:2鈥8:12 was received after December 12, 1830, and Moses 8:12鈥30 was received in February 1831.
[3] Bradshaw and Larsen, In God鈥檚 Image, 2:199. 鈥淭he earliest printing of Book of Moses material took place in August 1832, when Moses 7 was printed in its entirety in the Church鈥檚 Independence, Missouri, newspaper, The Evening and the Morning Star. . . . In March 1833, Moses 6:43鈥68 was printed in the same newspaper, and Moses 5:1鈥16 and 8:13鈥30 appeared the following month.鈥 Jackson, Book of Moses and the Joseph Smith Translation Manuscripts, 12鈥14. See Editor, 鈥淭he Gospel,鈥 The Evening and the Morning Star 1, no. 11 (April 1833): 81鈥82.
[4] See Faulring, Jackson, and Matthews, Joseph Smith鈥檚 New Translation of the Bible, 109鈥18, 622鈥31; and Matthews, 鈥淧lainer Translation,鈥 377鈥81. For a more in-depth treatment of the Flood as portrayed in the Genesis and Moses accounts, see Schade, 鈥淔lood Story.鈥
[5] Many Bible scholars recognize the role of flood narratives in portraying the theme of salvation. See, e.g., Waltke, Genesis, 156; Moberly, Theology of the Book of Genesis, 110, 120; Wenham, Genesis 1鈥15, 156鈥57, 206鈥7; Hartley, Genesis, 100; and Arnold, Genesis, 104.
[6] Waltke, Genesis, 119鈥20.
[7] The word covenant (berit) is repeated throughout the Flood narrative. See, e.g., Sarna, Genesis, 62; Wenham, Genesis 1鈥15, 175; and Arnold, Genesis, 110. Obedience to the covenant was a mechanism of salvation for Noah and his family. God was saving them through the covenant. For various components of the covenant in the Enoch and Flood stories, see Jackson, Restored Gospel and the Book of Genesis, 114鈥18.
[8] For a possible link between a Flood theology and covenant renewal in ancient Israel, see Sailhamer, Genesis, 131, where Genesis 8鈥9 is compared to Exodus 24:4鈥18 with a focus on creation, salvation, deliverance, blessings, signs, and covenant renewal.
[9] For the Flood as an act of love, see 鈥淭he Flood Was an Act of Love,鈥 in Old Testament Student Manual: Genesis鈥2 Samuel, 55鈥56. Chrysostom, archbishop of Constantinople (fl. 386鈥407), referred to the destruction of the Flood as 鈥渁 strange form of loving kindness.鈥 Moberly, Theology of the Book of Genesis, 111. According to Chrysostom, God said, 鈥淚 brought on the deluge out of love, so as to put a stop to their wickedness and prevent their going to further extremes.鈥 Louth, Genesis 1鈥11, 154. See also discussion in Schade, 鈥淔lood Story,鈥 132鈥34.
[10] Genealogies in the Bible establish quintessential information and serve important functions in establishing identities鈥攊n this case, identification with God and righteousness as keepers of covenants. 鈥淩ather than seeing the genealogies as unfortunate necessities, we must read them as essential components of our story.鈥 Arnold, Genesis, 83. The significance of the genealogical structure of Genesis 5 has been described as follows: 鈥淚n another significant deviation, the records of the godly Enoch and Noah do not end with the refrain of death. Enoch鈥檚 unusual ending is a testimony to the hope of righteousness in the line of Seth. Noah鈥檚 unfinished record leaves an opening for the story of the Flood. The narrator also highlights great moments in history and important personages by creatively schematizing his genealogies. By presenting ten generations both before and after the Flood, the narrator sets the Flood as the great divide between Adam and Abraham. Noah is the savior at the end of the antediluvian history, and Abraham is the savior at the close of the postdiluvian history. With Noah, the Creator makes a covenant to save his creation; with Abraham, the Lord of history makes a covenant to save the nations. The number ten indicates simple completeness and a convenient round number.鈥 Waltke, Genesis, 111.
[11] 鈥淜JV reads: 鈥榯hree hundred sixty and five years.鈥 The difference can be accounted for by adding Enoch鈥檚 age of sixty-five years in Moses 6:25鈥攖he age at which Methuselah was born to him and at which he received his prophetic call鈥攖o the three hundred sixty-five years representing the length of Enoch鈥檚 ministry during the 鈥榙ays of Zion.鈥欌 Bradshaw and Larsen, In God鈥檚 Image, 2:223. This information is consistent with a later revelation given to the Prophet Joseph Smith that gives a more detailed breakdown of Enoch鈥檚 earthly lifespan: 鈥淓noch was twenty-five years old when he was ordained under the hand of Adam; and he was sixty-five and Adam blessed him. And he saw the Lord, and he walked with him, and was before his face continually; and he walked with God three hundred and sixty-five years, making him four hundred and thirty years old when he was translated鈥 (Doctrine and Covenants 107:48鈥49).
[12] The Prophet Joseph Smith learned in an 1835 revelation of the priesthood ordinations of these men. He was also given to know that 鈥淢ethuselah was 100 years old when he was under the hand of Adam. Lamech was 32 years old when he was ordained under the hand of Seth. Noah was 10 years old when he was ordained under the hand of Methuselah. Three years previous to the death of Adam, he called Seth, Enos, Cainan, Mahalaleel, Jared, Enoch and Methuselah, who were all high priests, with the residue of his posterity, who were righteous, into the valley of Adam-ondi-ahman, and there bestowed upon them his last blessing. And the Lord appeared unto them, and they rose up and blessed Adam, and called him Michael, the Prince, the Archangel.鈥 Instruction on Priesthood, between circa 1 March and circa 4 May 1835 [D&C 107], p. 86, The Joseph Smith Papers. We also learn that Methuselah 鈥減rophesied鈥 concerning his posterity (Moses 8:3) and that he would be a progenitor of the human family 鈥渇rom Noah.鈥 Joseph Smith explained that 鈥渢he Priesthood continued from Lamech to Noah.鈥 History, 1838鈥1856, volume C-1 [2 November 1838鈥31 July 1842], p. 18 [addenda], The Joseph Smith Papers.
[13] The text mentions 鈥渁 great famine in the land鈥 during this period of time and that the Lord renewed his 鈥渃urse鈥 upon the earth in continuance of an ongoing theme. Note that the earth/
[14] At age 187, Methuselah the son of Enoch sired Lamech, the father of Noah. Joseph Smith said of Lamech: 鈥淭he next great grand patriarch who held the keys of the priesthood was Lamech See Gen 5 Chap 28 & 29 verses鈥 [鈥榏And Lamech lived 182 years and begat a Son and he called his name Noah saying this same shall comfort us concerning our work and the toil of our hands because of the ground which the Lord has Curst.[鈥橾鈥 Instruction on Priesthood, circa 5 October 1840, p. 8, The Joseph Smith Papers.
[15] According to the book of Genesis and Book of Moses chronologies, Methuselah lived the longest of all the antediluvian people at 969 years. The genealogies hereafter feature decreasing life spans. See Arnold, Genesis, 86鈥87.
[16] There is a thematic wordplay on Noah between the terms comfort and rest throughout Moses 7鈥8. Bowen, in 鈥淥nomastic Tale of Two Noahs,鈥 266, explains: 鈥淚n the context of the narrative, Enoch鈥檚 declaration 鈥I will refuse to be comforted鈥 clearly anticipates the formal etiology subsequently proffered in Genesis 5:29/
[17] In a September 1832 revelation, Joseph Smith learned that Noah bestowed the priesthood upon his posterity. See Revelation, 22鈥23 September 1832 [D&C 84],鈥 p. [1], The Joseph Smith Papers; compare Doctrine and Covenants 84:14鈥15. Moses 8:27 seems to imply that Noah鈥檚 sons also 鈥渨alked with God.鈥
[18] See Jackson, Restored Gospel and the Book of Genesis, 112.
[19] See discussion in Bradshaw and Larsen, In God鈥檚 Image, 2:225.
[20] See Schade, 鈥淚saac and Jacob,鈥 349鈥55.
[21] This explanation in the paratactic Genesis narrative leaves one with the impression that Noah would simply offer 鈥渃omfort鈥 to the human family in terms of easing the burdens of agriculture. Exegetes frequently connect this explanation forward to Noah鈥檚 postdiluvian wine-making activities as described in Genesis 9:20鈥21. See, e.g., Waltke, Genesis, 115; and Wenham, Genesis 1鈥15, 129. If there is an agricultural component to the reference, the text does not specifically answer the question as to how Noah might offer relief from the cursing of the ground from this agricultural perspective. However, Genesis 9 may offer some explanation of Noah鈥檚 successful abilities at viniculture. The passage does seem to express human suffering: 鈥淭his is the first statement in Genesis that humans experienced such agonizing pain and distress that they longed for relief. It also discloses that even those who worshiped God were experiencing God鈥檚 curse on the ground. Such agony resulted from God鈥檚 general curse; it was not punishment for specific wrongdoing by members of Seth鈥檚 line. Lamech鈥檚 hope for relief was realized when Noah grew the first vineyard and made wine ([Genesis] 9:20).鈥 Hartley, Genesis, 92鈥93. The major focus of the text appears to rest on the spiritual labors and consequences associated with the Flood and spiritual downfall detailed in Moses 8. The Book of Moses etiology may have a more immediate and serious 鈥渃ursing鈥 of the land in view, namely, the 鈥済reat famine鈥 that had killed so many people (see Moses 8:4) and from which Noah will offer some relief through his toil.
[22] Wenham, Genesis 1鈥15, 128.
[23] See Bowen, 鈥淥nomastic Tale of Two Noahs,鈥 263鈥98. Noah鈥檚 name is first mentioned in relation to Moses 7:42鈥43 (three times), where the text records: 鈥淎nd as Enoch saw this, he had bitterness of soul, and wept over his brethren, and said unto the heavens: I will refuse to be comforted; but the Lord said unto Enoch: Lift up your heart, and be glad; and look. And it came to pass that Enoch looked; and from Noah, he beheld all the families of the earth; and he cried unto the Lord, saying: When shall the day of the Lord come? When shall the blood of the Righteous be shed, that all they that mourn may be sanctified and have eternal life?鈥 (Moses 7:44鈥45; emphasis added).
[24] See Szink, 鈥淰ision of Enoch,鈥 13鈥14, 18. This subject is treated in greater depth in Bowen, 鈥淥nomastic Tale of Two Noahs,鈥 264鈥74.
[25] It is appropriate that Noah鈥攚hose name means 鈥渢o rest, give rest, settle, provide quiet, appease,鈥 and perhaps by extension 鈥渢o comfort鈥濃攊s called to cry repentance to the people. Genesis 6:8 employs an additional wordplay on 苍艒补岣 in terms of Hebrew 岣ツ搉, 鈥済race鈥: 鈥淏ut Noah [苍艒补岣] found grace [岣ツ搉] in the eyes of the Lord.鈥 See Moses 8:27. Levenson, in 鈥淕enesis: Introduction and Annotations,鈥 21, states, 鈥淭he sudden mention of Noah (v. 8)鈥攚hose Heb name (鈥榥-岣モ) is 鈥榝avor鈥 (鈥樶弗-n鈥) spelled backwards鈥攊ndicates that human perversion and divine grief will not be the last word.鈥 Noah鈥檚 father had given him the name because 鈥渢his same shall comfort us concerning our work鈥 (Genesis 5:29), and Noah鈥檚 great-grandfather Enoch, who after viewing the flood that would come upon Noah鈥檚 generation 鈥渞efuse[d] to be comforted鈥 (Moses 7:44), did indeed find some comfort in witnessing the day of the Lord and the redemption of the world.
[26] See discussion in Moses 8:25.
[27] 鈥淎fter the waters abated, the ark came to rest on the mountains of Ararat ([Genesis] 8:4). The picture of the ark resting creates an interesting wordplay since the verb used here (鈥榬est鈥 苍飞岣) is the same from which Noah鈥檚 name is derived. In a similar play on his name, he brings 鈥榬elief鈥 to humanity (测臎苍补岣ツ僲脓苍没, 5:29), and now Noah, whose name itself means 鈥榬est,鈥 rides the ark to its resting place. Noah鈥檚 righteousness blesses humanity with relief and preserves its remnant, along with the animals, in the resting ark in Ararat.鈥 Arnold, Genesis, 104. 鈥淎t the close of the flood account, the author makes a direct reference to the sacrificial importance of these 鈥榗lean animals.鈥 They were taken into the ark to be used as offerings ([Genesis] 8:20鈥21). The Lord鈥檚 acceptance of these offerings (wayy膩ra岣 yhwh 示et -r锚a岣 hann卯岣ヅ峚岣, 鈥榯he pleasing aroma,鈥 8:21) is cast in the terminology of Leviticus 1:17 (r锚a岣 n卯岣ヅ峚岣 layhwh, 鈥榓n aroma pleasing to the lord鈥). As we might expect, these same events at the end of the flood are tied specifically to the notion of a covenant (9:8, 11). The author of the Pentateuch uses the ark in the flood narrative to foreshadow the salvation that comes through the tabernacle and the covenant.鈥 Sailhamer, Genesis, loc. 4424鈥29.
[28] Passages throughout the scriptures will reflect these themes of divine comfort. While Noah 鈥渃omforted鈥 Enoch and the patriarchs as the one through whom the Messiah would come (Moses 7:53), Jesus Christ is the true 鈥渃omforting鈥 Son who would not only comfort Enoch, Noah, and Zion and the Saints of all ages, but also give the earth her millennial rest (see, e.g., Isaiah 51:3; 52:9; 54:9鈥13; Mosiah 12:23; 15:30; compare 15:18; 3 Nephi 16:16鈥20; 3 Nephi 22:9鈥13).
[29] The phrases 鈥渟ons of God鈥 and 鈥渄aughters of men鈥 in these passages have led to theories paralleling Greek mythology and unions between divine beings and human beings. See, e.g., Bandstra, Reading the Old Testament, 74. Others view 鈥渟ons of God鈥 as symbolic. Parker, in 鈥淪ons of (the) God(s),鈥 in Van der Toorn, Becking, and Van der Horst, Dictionary of Deities and Demons in the Bible, 796, surmises, 鈥淚t is clear that the author is summarizing traditional mythical material about divine-human unions as an illustration of the disorder that prevailed immediately before the flood.鈥 A possible solution is to see these phrases as referring to people who were associated with either keeping (sons or daughters of God) and breaking (sons or daughters of men) their covenants with God. See Moses 8:13鈥15 and the contrast used in these designations describing hearkening and not hearkening to the voice of God. An apocryphal Dead Sea Scrolls text, Genesis Apocryphon (1Q20 1QapGen VI, 20), uses the term 鈥渉oly ones鈥 in contrast with 鈥渄aughters of man鈥 in the account about Noah. See Vermes, Complete Dead Sea Scrolls, 482. These verses appear to describe a situation based on obedience and disobedience to the laws of God. See discussion in Hartley, Genesis, 95鈥96; and Day, Studies in Genesis 1鈥11, 77鈥80.
[30] The language of these passages is focused on people鈥檚 behavior (forsaking covenants and pursuing destructive paths) that led to wickedness and its consequences (both spiritual and physical), rather than on obedience and its consequences. 鈥淪elling oneself鈥 in scripture is found in statements such as 鈥淸They have ]sold themselves to do evil in the sight of the Lord, to provoke him to anger鈥 (2 Kings 17:17) and 鈥淲hen these things have passed away a speedy destruction cometh unto my people; for, notwithstanding the pains of my soul, I have seen it; wherefore, I know that it shall come to pass; and they sell themselves for naught; for, for the reward of their pride and their foolishness they shall reap destruction; for because they yield unto the devil and choose works of darkness rather than light, therefore they must go down to hell鈥 (2 Nephi 26:10). These passages in Moses address the behavior of people within and without the covenant who forsook or disregarded their own covenants of eternity in exchange for the wickedness of Noah鈥檚 day. In the story of Noah there appears to be no in-betweens鈥攖he thoughts of the people were evil continually (Moses 8:22). The covenant would save Noah and his family, and the focus here is that people were forsaking the Lord鈥檚 covenant and Noah was trying to reclaim them. The covenant was meant to keep people on the path of safety and prevent the societal corrosion that had overtaken the people of Noah鈥檚 day in disastrous proportions. God was not sending the Flood because a few things had gone wrong with society; he was sending it because all things had gone wrong (for former covenant keepers and all other people alike). Elder Neal A. Maxwell explained that God intervened 鈥渨hen corruption had reached an agency-destroying point that spirits could not, in justice, be sent to earth.鈥 Maxwell, We Will Prove Them Herewith, 58. According to President John Taylor, 鈥淕od destroyed the wicked of that generation with a flood. Why did He destroy them? He destroyed them for their benefit, if you can comprehend it.鈥 Taylor, in Journal of Discourses, 24:291.
[31] In the Moses account we read of warnings, calls to repentance, and the declaration that the Flood could be averted by repenting of wickedness and turning back to the covenant. Perhaps this turmoil is highlighted in the term giants, which may refer not to tall people but rather to apostates who had fallen away from the covenant and were seeking Noah鈥檚 life. The Hebrew word used in the Genesis text to describe 鈥済iants鈥 is 谞驻诇 (npl), a root meaning 鈥渢o fall,鈥 perhaps as in 鈥渇allen ones,鈥 and may refer to such apostate behavior. The translation of this word in the Bible has been notoriously problematic and is charged with mythological meaning. See discussion in Mangum, Custis, and Widder, Genesis 1鈥11, at Genesis 6:1鈥22. Hebrew 谞职驻执诇执讬诐 and Greek 纬委纬伪谓蟿蔚蟼 are generally translated as 鈥済iants鈥 (Brown, Driver, and Briggs, Hebrew and English Lexicon, 658) and are often viewed through traditions associated with Greek mythology and a race of giant warriors or even semi-gods who were lost in major battles and imprisoned in the region of the dead. However, 鈥渢he term in Hebrew implies not so much the idea of great stature as of reckless ferocity, impious and daring characters who spread devastation and carnage far and wide.鈥 Jamieson, Fausset, and Brown, Commentary Critical and Explanatory, 21. The interpretation of the Hebrew Nephilim as 鈥渇allen ones鈥 seems to work in terms of those who had 鈥渇allen and were no more鈥 (Day, Studies in Genesis 1鈥11, 83), in this case fallen spiritually. Whatever the etymology, the term in the Flood story implies that the Nephilim 鈥渃ontributed to the increasing state of wickedness鈥 (Hartley, Genesis, 97), and it generally refers to these people in a negative light. In the Old Testament they are generally described as great people (kings, warriors) who act in opposition to God or his people. See Walton, Genesis (NIV Application Commentary), 296.
[32] 鈥淭he Lord ordained Noah after his own order. In other words, the Lord ordained Noah to 鈥榯he Holy Priesthood, after the Order of the Son of God鈥 (D&C 107:3. Cf. Alma 13:1鈥2, 9; JST Genesis 14:28).鈥 Bradshaw and Larsen, In God鈥檚 Image, 2:228.
[33] Compare 鈥淣oah called upon men鈥 (OT1; compare Moses 8:20) and 鈥淣oah called upon the children of men鈥 OT2). Jackson, Book of Moses and the Joseph Smith Translation Manuscripts, 11.
[34] Joseph Smith Translation, Genesis 14:28 and Hebrews 7:3; Doctrine and Covenants 107:3.
[35] Times and Seasons, 1 September 1842, p. 904, The Joseph Smith Papers.
[36] Instruction on Priesthood, circa 5 October 1840鈥 p. 8, The Joseph Smith Papers.
[37] OT1 reads 鈥渁nd ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost鈥 (compare Moses 8:24). OT2 has 鈥渁nd ye shall receive the Holy Ghost.鈥 Jackson, Book of Moses and the Joseph Smith Translation Manuscripts, 11.
[38] Emphasizing God鈥檚 desires, 鈥淣oah鈥檚 story becomes the occasion for the rabbis to highlight God鈥檚 compassion. Taking 120 years to build the ark, Noah has ample time to warn his hard-hearted compatriots of their doom. In hopes they would repent, God even tacks on an additional week at the end to give one last chance for repentance.鈥 Pleins, 鈥淔lood,鈥 in Sakenfeld, New Interpreter鈥檚 Dictionary of the Bible, 2:467.
[39] See, e.g., Reynolds, 鈥淭rue Points of My Doctrine,鈥 26鈥56.
[40] Clines, 鈥淭heology of the Flood Narrative,鈥 135. It is commonly accepted in biblical studies that the Flood constituted a re-creation of life, paralleling the context and language of the creation stories in Genesis. See, e.g., Sailhamer, Genesis, loc. 4282, which discusses the Flood story with the reversal of creation as given in its Edenic state, but also its immediate connections with the conditions of the Fall in Genesis 3. 鈥淭he Flood defaces the original creation headed by Adam and cleanses the earth for its re-creation headed by Noah. Warren Gage notes striking parallels between the prediluvian and postdiluvian worlds, making Adam the father of humanity and Noah its father in the postdiluvian world.鈥 Waltke, Genesis, 127. The Flood鈥檚 preoccupation is with hope, salvation, and covenantal responsibility, rather than a total concentration on judgment and destruction. Later prophets in the Bible drew upon language of the Flood (polluting and violence) to foreshadow and describe Judah鈥檚 impending destruction and exile, but they also used the story to highlight hope for a new start and 鈥渁 鈥榥ew order,鈥 introducing a 鈥榬adical change in the mechanism of sin.鈥 Gen 8:15鈥9:17 thus parallels prophetic descriptions of a new solution to the sin-punishment cycle that caused Judah鈥檚 destruction.鈥 Huddleston, Eschatology in Genesis, 141. 鈥淭he creation has refused to be God鈥檚 creation. That essential fracture between creator and creation is the premise and agenda of the flood narrative. This text provides a way to reflect on the meaning and cost of that fracture and upon the future that is yet in prospect between God and God鈥檚 world.鈥 Brueggemann, Genesis, 74. The story is about loss but also about gain.
[41] The King James text of Genesis 6:6鈥7 reads 鈥淎nd it repented the Lord that he had made man on the earth, and it grieved him at his heart. And the Lord said, I will destroy man whom I have created from the face of the earth; both man, and beast, and the creeping thing, and the fowls of the air; for it repenteth me that I have made them鈥 (emphasis added). The verb used in expressing repenting (鈥渋t repented the Lord that he had made man on earth鈥) is from the root 鈥谞讞诐鈥 (Brown, Driver, and Briggs, Hebrew and English Lexicon, 905鈥6) which, besides repenting, has meanings such as to be sorry, to be moved to pity, to have compassion (for others), or to suffer grief or distress. See Swanson, Dictionary of Biblical Languages. The Arabic term 賳賻丨賻賲賻 (苍补岣尘补) can mean 鈥渢o breathe pantingly鈥 and may help describe the exasperated anguish of both God and Noah, highlighting the compassion being depicted in the account where repentance is the desired outcome. The Lord and Noah are not repenting for God鈥檚 having created and brought life to his children; rather, they are expressing compassion for them and the state they have created for themselves through their own wickedness. Genesis 6:6 uses parallel verbs pertaining to the fact that the Lord 鈥渨as grieved to his heart鈥 and was experiencing 鈥渆motional pain.鈥 Biblical Studies Press, NET Bible, at Genesis 6:6. See discussion in Schade, 鈥淔lood Story,鈥 128.
[42] The Book of Moses associates the emotion of 鈥渞epentance鈥 or 鈥渞egret鈥 (飞补测测颈苍苍腻岣尘) with Noah, rather than with the Lord, strengthening the force of the intended Hebrew wordplay. See Joseph Smith鈥檚 comments in History, 1838鈥1856, volume E-1 [1 July 1843鈥30 April 1844], p. 1755, The Joseph Smith Papers. The Book of Moses articulates the difficulty that God and Noah experience. The Lord appears to have taken Noah鈥檚 reaction to the human corruption and violence very seriously.
[43] 鈥淎s Paul writes, 鈥業f I were still pleasing to men, I should not be servant of Christ鈥 (Gal. 1:10). Noah is not pleasing to his generation, but he finds favor with God.鈥 Reno, Genesis, 116.
[44] 鈥淣oah was a perfect man, and his knowledge or revelation of what was to take place upon the earth, gave him power to prepare and save himself and family from the destruction of the flood. This knowledge, or revelation, like the preceeding one to Abel, was not believed by the inhabitants of the earth. They knew Adam was the first man, made in the image of God; that he was a good man: that Enoch walked with God three hundred and sixty-five years, and was translated to heaven without tasting death: but they could not endure the new revelation: the old we believe because our fathers did, but away with new revelations鈥攁nd the flood swept them away.鈥 Times and Seasons, 15 August 1842, pp. 889鈥90, The Joseph Smith Papers.
[45] 鈥淏y inserting the heading of Noah鈥檚 genealogy before the flood, the explanation for Enoch鈥檚 deliverance from death (鈥榟e walked with God,鈥 5:22) is made the basis for Noah鈥檚 rescue from the flood: 鈥榟e walked with God鈥 (6:9). Thus in the story of Noah and the flood, the author repeats the lesson of Enoch: Life comes through 鈥榳alking with God.鈥欌 Sailhamer, Genesis, loc. 4028鈥30. Noah was not only a 鈥渞ighteous man,鈥 but a man of perfect integrity and one who, along with his sons, appears to have 鈥渨alked with God鈥 in the same way that Enoch and his people walked with God. Elder Robert L. Simpson observed, 鈥淣oah tasted of the joy of life because he adhered firmly to the principles of righteousness.鈥 In Conference Report, October 1968, 97.
[46] 鈥淲hen speaking about the blessings pertaining to the gospel, and the consequences connected with disobedience to its requirements, we are frequently asked the question, what has become of our Fathers? will they all be damned for not obeying the gospel, when they never heard it? certainly not. But they will possess the same privilege that we here enjoy, through the medium of the everlasting priesthood, which not only administers on earth but in heaven, and the wise dispensations of the great Jehovah; hence those characters referred to by Isaiah will be visited by this priesthood, and come out of their prison, upon the same principle as those who were disobedient in the days of Noah, were visited by our Saviour, -[who possessed the everlasting, Melchizedec priesthood,]- and had the gospel preached to them, by him.鈥 Times and Seasons, 15 April 1842, p. 760, The Joseph Smith Papers.
[47] Arnold, Genesis, 91. 鈥淕od is aware that something is deeply amiss in creation, so that God鈥檚 own dream has no prospect of fulfillment. With that perverted imagination, God鈥檚 world has begun to conjure its own future quite apart from the future willed by God (cf. 11:6). As a result, verse 6 shows us the deep pathos of God. God is not angered but grieved. He is not enraged but saddened. God does not stand over against but with his creation. Tellingly, the pain he bequeathed to the woman in 3:16 is now felt by God. Ironically, the word for 鈥榞rieve鈥 (鈥榓蝉补蠀) is not only the same as the sentence on the woman (鈥榩ain鈥 3:16), but it is also used for the state of toil from which Noah will deliver humanity (5:29). The evil heart of humankind (v. 5) troubles the heart of God (v. 6). This is indeed 鈥榟eart to heart鈥 between humankind and God. How it is between humankind and God touches both parties. As Ernst W眉rthwein suggests, it is God who must say, 鈥業 am undone鈥 (cf. Isa. 6:5; Wort und Existenz, 1970, pp. 313).鈥 Brueggemann, Genesis, 77.
[48] Wenham, Genesis 1鈥15, 171.
[49] Genesis 6:12 reads 鈥渁ll flesh had corrupted his way [Heb. 诲补谤办么] upon the earth.鈥 The reading of the pronoun is ambiguous in the Hebrew (it or his). OT1 manuscript contains an interesting variation from the KJV text. Moses 8:29b reads 鈥渁ll flesh had corrupted its way.鈥 Old Testament Revision 1, p. 20, The Joseph Smith Papers. Given the early themes of Genesis and especially the Book of Moses, perhaps the reading 鈥渉is鈥 (referring to God) is to be preferred. Elder Harold B. Lee explained, 鈥淭o Noah the Lord declared that because all flesh had corrupted his way upon the earth, that he proposed to destroy man from the face of the earth [see Genesis 6:5鈥13]. So, in a lesser degree, in every dispensation, the Lord has commanded that if members of his Church, having taken upon them his name, should sin grievously and refuse to repent, they should be cut out from among his people, lest they be a stumbling block to the world. To continue all such in membership would be to reflect discredit and dishonor upon the work of our Heavenly Father.鈥 In Conference Report, October 1945, 47.
[50] Wenham, Genesis 1鈥15, 172.
[51] Taylor, in Journal of Discourses, 19:158; punctuation corrected.
[52] See discussion in Schade, 鈥淔lood Story,鈥 149鈥52.
[53] 鈥淗ow Great the Wisdom and the Love,鈥 Hymns, no. 195.