Summary: 1) The Stipulations of the Covenant (Genesis 9:8-11), 2) The Sign of the Covenant (Genesis 9:12-16), 3) The Summary of the Covenant (Genesis 9:17)

One of the most extraordinary and beautiful natural wonders is the rainbow. It intrigues everybody. And rainbows have fascinated people throughout the ages. There are many things you could consider about rainbows. A rainbow is a bent or curved line in the sky composed or consisting of seven colors...red, orange, green, blue, indigo, and violet. Kids were sometimes taught to remember those colors by the name Roy G Biv, red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet. Since only one color of light is observed from each raindrop because the sun hits each different raindrop at a different angle, an incredible number of raindrops is required to produce the magnificent spectrum of color as big as it is that is characteristic of a rainbow. Usually a rainbow is seen when part of the sky is dark and there is rain in one part of the sky and the sun is shining in the other. And for the rainbow to be visible, the sun has to be behind the observer who is, in effect, facing the rainbow.

For Noah and his family the tragedy of the flood is behind them, they are facing God and Genesis 9 presents a beautiful picture of God’s grace. In effect, God’s Son is behind the elements of the covenant promise that God gives. In Genesis 9:1-7, we see that the Flood is over. All around Noah and the inhabitants or the ark are the vestiges of a changed earth and death everywhere, of course, drowning all of humanity with the exception of eight people, and all the animals except those that were on the ark, devastating the earth. Noah comes out of the ark. He enters into the new world at the beginning of chapter 9. And in verses 1 to 7 of this chapter, Noah and his family are told what they were to do. They were to reproduce. They were to rule. They were to eat. And they were to execute those who took life, capital punishment. Now in verses 8 to 17, God says what He’s going to do. The exhortation to Noah now becomes promise from God.

We read Genesis 9:8–17 in the context of a culture that leads us to believe that the world is mostly the result of our decisions, our actions, and our choices. We have the world and its future in our hands. It is up to us to make human history come out right, or right will not be done. God help us if this is our situation, for we have proved time and again that our hands are bloody and we cannot do the right, no matter how hard we try (Van Harn, R. (2001). The lectionary commentary : Theological exegesis for Sunday’s texts (17). Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans)

In Genesis 9:8-17 God offers "The Covenant of Grace". In it we see: 1) The Stipulations of the Covenant (Genesis 9:8-11), 2) The Sign of the Covenant (Genesis 9:12-16), 3) The Summary of the Covenant (Genesis 9:17)

1) The Stipulations of the Covenant (Genesis 9:8-11)

Genesis 9:8-11 [8]Then God said to Noah and to his sons with him, [9]"Behold, I establish my covenant with you and your offspring after you, [10]and with every living creature that is with you, the birds, the livestock, and every beast of the earth with you, as many as came out of the ark; it is for every beast of the earth. [11]I establish my covenant with you, that never again shall all flesh be cut off by the waters of the flood, and never again shall there be a flood to destroy the earth." (ESV)

Apparently before the Flood there was no rain. Remember the earth was protected by a water-vapor canopy that made the entire planet uniform in its sort of semi-tropical climate. And they had not known rain and that made a very benign kind of weather in a very protected kind of environment where the ultra-violet rays of the sun were filtered out and so men lived to be almost a thousand years old and animals lived to be very, very old, hence reptiles, the animals that grow all their life, became dinosaurs.

At the Flood it rained for the first time. The earth exploded. Gas and material went into the sky, broke up the canopy, it came down as water and deluged the earth for 40 days and 40 nights until literally with that and the fountains of the deep underneath the great reservoirs of water in the belly of the earth belching forward literally covering the entire planet. But now in the new world, rain is going to be common. In the new world it’s going to rain regularly all over the planet as God moves the water in the hydrological cycle, it’s evaporated up out of the ocean, goes into the clouds, carried across the land, deposited on the land, falls on the land, runs into streams, runs into rivers, runs back into the sea and the hydrological cycle works like that. Water is absolutely critical to man’s life since, I suppose, somewhere around 90-plus percent of us is water. It’s very important for us. So this rain is going to fall from God as a blessing on the just and the unjust. It’s going to make things grow. It’s necessary for life, providing beauty on the earth and food. Rain is going to be common.

But Noah didn’t yet know that. If you went to somebody who lived in Vancouver and said, "How do you like the rain?" They might say, "Well, I don’t mind the rain, you kind of get used to it. But if you said to Noah, "Say, Noah, what do you think of rain?" That question alone would make his heart stop. He would say, "I’ve only seen it once and I did not like it. The one time it rained I wound up in a boat over a year with my family and a bunch of smelly animals. You don’t want any rain. Plus, everybody on the planet died and all the animals. Rain is very bad." And the first drop that hit his forehead, he might have grabbed Mrs. Noah and the gang and headed back to the ark and said, "We better get in, it’s going to rain again." That’s all he knew, that’s the only rain he ever knew. Not to worry, Noah, not to worry. It will rain and rain will be a part of life, but it will never be a worldwide devastation such as that first rain.

Here starting in Genesis 9:8, we have three discourses from God to the family of Noah, the eight people that constitute the entire population of the earth humanly speaking. We will spend just about all our time on Gen. 9:8-11 discussing the "The Stipulations of the Covenant" But to illustrate the elements of the covenant, I will be referring to the end of verse 17 in this section.

What God says in these three speeches to Noah, his wife, three sons and their wives is essentially God’s message to all humanity because all humanity is constituted in those eight people. This is Elohim’s first speech, verse 8, "Then God said/spoke to Noah and to his sons with him." They are humanity, the men represent the women who are their wives, they are humanity. God speaks directly to the whole human family, the whole human race.

Notice exactly how it is rendered in verse 9: "Behold, I establish my covenant with you and your offspring after you,.

The main point of this chapter is that God is going to make a promise. This is what I’m going to do, God says, I’m going to make you a covenant, a berith, a promise made by God to man. This is very important because this establishes that God is a covenant maker as part of His personal commitment to man. He is a promiser who makes covenants. From now on throughout the entire Bible, God is known as a covenant making God who is faithful to keep His covenant. This covenant with Noah is the first explicit of 5 divinely originated covenants in Scripture explicitly described as “everlasting.” The other 4 include: 1) Abrahamic (Gen. 17:7); 2) Priestly (Num. 25:10–13); 3) Davidic (2 Sam. 23:5); and 4) New (Jer. 32:40) (MacArthur, J. J. (1997). The MacArthur Study Bible (electronic ed.) (Ge 9:16). Nashville: Word Pub.)

God makes it with Noah’s family which constitutes all of humanity, so really it is a covenant or a promise that He gives to all mankind. Beyond that, even makes the promise to the animals, all creatures on the earth. And the promise is a very simple one, I’ll never do what I just did again. I will never again drown the world in a universal flood.

The word "covenant," berithis used seven times here...seven times. This is truly a covenant. And the repetition is powerful, it strengthens the covenant. Verse 9, "I do establish," that is imminent future, that means immediately I will establish this. Verse 11, "I establish," that’s present. And then verse 17, "I have established," present perfect. In these three verses God says: I will do it immediately, I do it, I have done it. God initiates, enacts, and completes the covenant. Why this covenant? Well simply for the blessing of humanity from the mercy of God, for the goodness of life from the goodness of God, and for humanity ’s enjoyment, from God’s grace.

When God says that "I establish my covenant" we must understand first, that the covenant is unilateral. That means it’s a covenant made by one, a bilateral covenant would be made by two. This is a unilateral covenant. That is the promise is singularly on the part of God. He is doing it without any consideration of man and His will, He’s doing it without any consultation with man. He’s doing it without any negotiation with man. This is not a mutual agreement. God is not saying if you do this and do that then I’ll do this and I’ll do that. If you don’t do this and do that, then I won’t do this and do that. It is not like that. It is: God Himself. Look at verse 11, "I establish My covenant." Verse 12, "This is the sign of the covenant that I make between me and you." Verse 17, "This is a sign of the covenant that I have established." Never we, always I. The promise, the covenant is unilateral. God determines to make this promise on His own, without consultation with man.

• Naturally speaking, people love darkness rather than light and their ways, from God’s standpoint, are only evil continually. When God changes the circumstances of a life, it is because He took the action. Therefore, no one can boast that they saw the wisdom of faith or they got their act together etc. It is God who opens the eyes and changes the life. He shows an individual the error of their ways, enables them to repent of sin and gives them the strength to move forward. Nevertheless, God will judge and punish the unrepentant. The story of the flood is a prime example.

Secondly, it is not only unilateral, it is unconditional...it is unconditional. He says, "I establish." Verse 11, "I establish." Again in verse 17, "I have established." The word "establish" qumin Hebrew means to erect, to make firm, to make stand solidly. In other words, I set this in concrete. I establish. There are no conditions on the part of humanity to validate it or invalidate it. Nothing humanity does can cause Me to make it or break it. There are no conditions in humanity that make him deserve the covenant, no conditions in humanity that make him sustain the covenant and no conditions in humanity that can cause the termination of the covenant. It is a covenant that is unilateral and unconditional. God says that I’m doing it and that’s it and it has nothing to do with what you do or don’t do.

• When God acts to redeem a person it is not because they got their act together. From God’s standard, our works are as filthy rags, and worthless to merit salvation. It is only the righteousness of Christ that satisfied God’s wrath. Faith means clinging to Christ’s righteousness alone for eternal life.

Now that’s pretty remarkable because the fact of the matter is, humanity is as wicked as they were before the Flood. But nonetheless, this is not a conditional covenant. It is unilateral, it is unconditional, and thirdly, it is inviolable. That’s negative. The positive would be it’s secure...it’s fixed. That is it can be fully trusted because, you notice, God says that it is My covenant, My covenant. And He repeats that. Verse 9, verse 11, verse 15, and elsewhere between Me and the earth, between Me and all flesh that is on the earth. It is inviolable because it is a covenant made by the eternal God who cannot change and cannot lie.

• Satan and our own doubts will tell us that we don’t deserve God’s love. And on our own personal merit basis we don’t. But that is not the basis of God’s love and promises. It is based on God’s character and word, not our failings. When we stumble into sin, we must resist the temptation to flee from God’s presence and the fellowship of His saints. We need to confess the sin and cling to Him and His fellowship.

Fourth, the promise is also universal, "I Myself do establish My covenant with you...with you," that is with humanity. God was speaking to the entire human race when He was talking to Noah and his sons with him, and, of course, their wives as well. Listen to this, no other covenant in force directly applies to all humanity. The Priestly Covenant, the Abrahamic, the Davidic, the New Covenant, they don’t apply to all humanity. This is the only one that applies to everybody. This one, listen now, is the basis of common grace. This is the covenant that is the basis of God’s goodness to all of humanity. No one who will ever live on the earth from the first eight people after the Flood, no one who ever lives after that will be left out of this covenant. This promise is universal. Look at verse 10, "With every living creature." Verse 11, "With you and all flesh." Verse 12, "Between Me and you and every living creature that is with you for all successive generations." Verse 15, "With you and every living creature of all flesh." And verse 16, "Between God and every living creature of all flesh." And verse 17, "Between Me and all flesh that is on the earth." Nobody is going to ever be left out of this promise. It is universal.

Fifth, it is perpetual...it is perpetual. Verse 12, end of the verse, "All successive generations...all successive generations." And verse 16, "It is the everlasting covenant." Not everlasting in the sense of eternal, but in the sense of lasting throughout all of time. And we know how long it will last. Back in chapter 8 verse 22, "As long as the earth remains... God will preserve the earth until the final judgment (2 Pet. 3:7,13); the earthly order will not end prematurely (Whitlock, L. G., Sproul, R. C., Waltke, B. K., & Silva, M. (1995). Reformation study Bible, the : Bringing the light of the Reformation to Scripture : New King James Version (Ge 8:22). Nashville: T. Nelson.).

So you have here a covenant that is unilateral, unconditional, inviolable, universal and perpetual. Sixth, and finally it is a covenant that is physical...physical. As clearly indicated back in verse 9, He says, "With your descendants after you," that’s the perpetual aspect of it, and then verse 10, "and with every living creature that is with you, the birds, the livestock/cattle, and every beast of the earth with you, as many as /of all that came out of the ark, it is for every beast of the earth." This is why we can say this is a "physical" and not just a "spiritual" covenant due to the inclusion of the animals. This is not a covenant that’s going to go on in the new heavens and the new earth. This is not a covenant for the next life. No. The fact...look at verse 10, the fact that all the animals share in this covenant indicates that it is a physical temporal covenant. The Abrahamic Covenant is a spiritual one. The Priestly Covenant is a spiritual one. The Davidic Covenant is a spiritual one. The Mosaic Covenant was, of course, a spiritual covenant, demonstrating the sinfulness of man. The New Covenant is a spiritual covenant. This is a temporal, physical covenant. The animals are mentioned in verse 10 and they’re mentioned in verse 12 under every living creature, and in verse 15, under every living creature of all flesh, that is all kinds of flesh, and verse 16, every living creature of all flesh, verse 17, all flesh that is on the earth. This is so far-reaching that it physically covers all living beings, all living beings.

So the covenant is unilateral, unconditional, inviolable, universal, perpetual and has to be physical because it includes animals. Now here’s the covenant, verse 11, I establish my covenant with you, that never again shall all flesh be cut off by the waters of the flood, and never again shall there be a flood to destroy the earth." (ESV) God says I’m never going to drown the world. This was pledged all the way back in chapter 6 verse 18. "I will establish My covenant with you, you shall enter the ark, you and your wives," and so forth. I’m going to protect you. That was kind of the first inkling that God was going to do something remarkable in saving them and sparing them. God said that to Noah when he first came out of the ark (8:21)? Why should God repeat his promise? Luther points out that Noah and the members of his family must have lived in great trembling. The sense of the awesomeness of the yearlong experience they had just gone through hadn’t left them. All around them was evidence of fearful destruction. God saw that these frail creatures of dust needed all the assurance he could give them (Jeske, J. C. (2001). Genesis (2nd ed.). The People’s Bible (96–97). Milwaukee, Wis.: Northwestern Pub. House.).

Please turn to Isaiah 54

Genesis 9 explains that there will be local floods, storms, volcanic eruptions, all of the bits and pieces of that first cataclysmic Flood will come but they’ll be localized. Never again a worldwide disaster such as I sent. I won’t do that again. That is My promise.

Isaiah 54:9-10 [9]"This is like the days of Noah to me: as I swore that the waters of Noah should no more go over the earth, so I have sworn that I will not be angry with you, and will not rebuke you. [10]For the mountains may depart and the hills be removed, but my steadfast love shall not depart from you, and my covenant of peace shall not be removed," says the LORD, who has compassion on you. (ESV)

Isaiah appropriately used the term hesed (“steadfast love”), and called God’s faithfulness in preserving us from existence in a mindless, meaningless cosmos, hurtling to certain destruction or slowly dying like an untended fire, his “covenant of peace.” (Gowan, D. E. (1988). From Eden to Babel : A commentary on the book of Genesis 1-11. International theological commentary (106). Grand Rapids, Mich.: W.B. Eerdmans Pub. Co.)

In terms of a universal flood, God says I won’t do it again. Not that you don’t deserve it, I just won’t do it. The Flood did not change the character of mankind, nor did it return him to the position of innocence which he enjoyed before the Fall. But it was a warning to man that God will not tolerate sin and whenever man chooses to sin, divine judgment soon follows. Yet never again will that judgment be in the form of a universal, globe-encircling flood (KJV Bible commentary. 1997 (36). Nashville: Thomas Nelson.).

This is His promise. God promises here to be merciful to all humanity. This is the patience and forbearance of God, this is the age of mercy, this is the age of grace. This covenant is related to the other covenants. This is common grace, but God will be especially gracious to the world through Abraham’s people Israel because through them the Scripture will come and through them the Savior will come. And He will be especially gracious to those who accept the Word and accept the Savior through the Davidic Covenant because through the Davidic Covenant the Messiah will come and establish the glory of His Kingdom. And through His covenant with Moses, He will establish the holy standard by which people will see their sin and by which people will know how God wants them to live. And He will send the New Covenant which will provide the forgiveness of sin to all who believe and be ratified through the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.

Illustration: In modern times we define a host of relations by contracts. These are usually for goods or services and for hard cash. The contract, formal or informal, helps to specify failure in these relationships. The Lord did not establish a contract (with His people). He created a covenant. There is a difference.

Contracts are broken when one of the parties fails to keep his promise. If, let us say, a patient fails to keep an appointment with a doctor, the doctor is not obligated to call the house and inquire, “Where were you? Why didn’t you show up for your appointment?” He simply goes on to his next patient and has his appointment-secretary take note of the patient who failed to keep the appointment. The patient may find it harder the next time to see the doctor. He broke an informal contract.

According to the Bible, however, the Lord asks: “Can a mother forget the baby at her breast and have no compassion on the child she has borne? Though she may forget, I will not forget you!” (Isa. 49:15). The Bible indicates the covenant is more like the ties of a parent to her child than it is a doctor’s appointment. If a child fails to show up for dinner, the parent’s obligation, unlike the doctor’s, isn’t canceled. The parent finds out where the child is and makes sure he’s cared for. One member’s failure does not destroy the relationship.(In a covenant we see God’s) commitment to love (Larson, C. B. (2002). 750 engaging illustrations for preachers, teachers & writers (95). Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books.).

2) The Sign of the Covenant (Genesis 9:12-16)

Genesis 9:12-16 [12]And God said, "This is the sign of the covenant that I make between me and you and every living creature that is with you, for all future generations: [13]I have set my bow in the cloud, and it shall be a sign of the covenant between me and the earth. [14]When I bring clouds over the earth and the bow is seen in the clouds, [15]I will remember my covenant that is between me and you and every living creature of all flesh. And the waters shall never again become a flood to destroy all flesh. [16]When the bow is in the clouds, I will see it and remember the everlasting covenant between God and every living creature of all flesh that is on the earth." (ESV)

In times when contracts were not reduced to writing, it was customary, on the occasion of solemn vows, promises, and other ‘covenant’ transactions, to appoint a sign, that the parties might at the proper time be reminded of the covenant, and a breach of its observance be averted (Skinner, J., 1851-1925. (1910). A critical and exegetical commentary on Genesis. (172). New York: Scribner.).

The sign is also stated repeatedly. The sign is stated in verse 12. It is established in verse 13. It is guaranteed for the future in verses 14 and 15. And God will notice it in verse 16. So the repetition is part of the comprehensive character of this covenant and its attendant sign.

When God gave Abraham a covenant, the sign was circumcision. When He gave Moses a covenant, the sign was Sabbath, according to Exodus 31:16 and 17. Circumcision is given as the sign in Genesis 17:11. But here’s the sign of this covenant. “The Sabbath, the rainbow, and circumcision are, in fact, signs of the three great covenants established by God at the three critical stages of the history of mankind: the creation … the reestablishment of mankind after the flood … and the birth of the Hebrew nation.”( Hamilton, V. P. (1990). The Book of Genesis. Chapters 1-17. The New International Commentary on the Old Testament (317). Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co.)

This is the sign of the covenant, verse 12, And God said, "This is the sign of the covenant that I make between me and you and every living creature that is with you, for all future/ successive generations. And there He repeats all the components of the covenant.

Here’s the sign in verse 13: I have set my bow in the cloud, and it The sign, the oath, the mark, the symbol, the evidence that God has made a promise, this is the assurance, this is the guarantee, and this is a covenant made with all humanity, all animals, and so God has to have a sign that everybody can see, so He says, "I have set my bow in the cloud."The word "bow" here is not rainbow, it’s bow, qeshethin Hebrew. It’s the same word for a battle bow, a weapon of death and destruction. In Near Eastern literature there are often deities depicted with a bow, wielding destruction. And the Old Testament pictures God like that. Exodus 15:3 says, "The Lord is a warrior." Habakkuk 3:9, "His bow is made bare." Zachariah 9:14, "His arrows are lightning." God is depicted as a warrior with a bow. In the Flood, God the Warrior shot His lightning arrows, pierced the earth, the earth broke open, exploded and then the sky fell, and certainly with it arrows of lightning and destruction. He bent His bow in wrath. But from now on, follow this, God has hung up His bow and He hung it in the sky where everybody can see it. Next time you see a rainbow, realize that’s God’s bow. He hung it up because this is not the time of judgment, this is the time of peace. God hung His bow as a sign of His mercy toward a world of sinners. Every sinner on the planet that sees the bow sees a sign of peace.

This is a token of His promise, never to destroy the world again as He did until the very end of human history when the whole universe will be destroyed by fire, as 2 Peter 3 describes it. There will come a day when the universe will be destroyed and replaced by a new heaven and a new earth where there will be only the righteous and eternal peace and holiness. In the future, God will pick up His bow again. But for now, the bow is the sign of mercy, it’s the sign of grace, it’s the sign of peace. The great God who is a warrior has hung up His bow.

When you look at the earth’s surface and you see rugged, deep sea basins, rugged high mountain ranges, and strata and canyons, and polar caps and fossil-bearing rocks, and the general atmosphere, that’s a reminder of the destruction of the Flood. But when you see the rainbow, that’s a reminder that it will never happen again. Though man deserves it, back in chapter 8 verse 21, "I’ll never again curse the ground on account of man even though the intent of man’s heart is evil from his youth, I’ll never again destroy every living thing." Humanity isn’t going to be any different. Man will be fallen. Sin will bound. The problem will be the same. But God’s won’t execute His wrath until Christ returns. So the rainbow then, beloved, is a symbol of grace, it’s a symbol of mercy. The only time you see a rainbow is after a...what?...storm. It’s when the storm is passed and the sun shines through. A rainbow is a picture then of grace after judgment. And when you see the rainbow, it’s God who hung His bow after the judgment.

God’s eye of grace and our eye of faith meet when we look at the rainbow. Faith lays hold of the promise attached to the sign. You see, the merit is in what the sign speaks of. There is no faith in a promise and there is no assurance in a sign—the word and the sign go together. God makes a promise and attaches a sign to it. Now the rainbow is God’s answer to Noah’s altar. It is as if God says, “I’ll remember, and I’ll look upon it. (McGee, J. V. (1997). Thru the Bible commentary (electronic ed.) (Ge 9:17). Nashville: Thomas Nelson.)

This is the age of grace. Verse 14 and 15, [14]When I bring clouds over the earth and the bow is seen in the clouds, [15]I will remember my covenant that is between me and you and every living creature of all flesh. And the waters shall never again become a flood to destroy all flesh. You say, "Does God need visual reminders?" No. But this is His way to tell us that He doesn’t forget...He doesn’t forget. "Remember", the word remember is familiar Old Testament covenant language, God never forgets His promise, God remembers His covenant and God is faithful. And so in verse 16, [16]When the bow is in the clouds, I will see it and remember the everlasting covenant between God and every living creature of all flesh that is on the earth." (ESV)

Please turn to Romans 3

The covenant that we have seen in Genesis 9 reminds us, too, of the ultimate work of the new covenant, when God’s wrath was propitiated by his own Son on the cross, so that all who are in Christ find grace instead of wrath

Romans 3:21-28 [21]But now the righteousness of God has been manifested apart from the law, although the Law and the Prophets bear witness to it-- [22]the righteousness of God through faith in Jesus Christ for all who believe. For there is no distinction: [23]for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, [24]and are justified by his grace as a gift, through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus, [25]whom God put forward as a propitiation by his blood, to be received by faith. This was to show God’s righteousness, because in his divine forbearance he had passed over former sins. [26]It was to show his righteousness at the present time, so that he might be just and the justifier of the one who has faith in Jesus. [27]Then what becomes of our boasting? It is excluded. By what kind of law? By a law of works? No, but by the law of faith. [28]For we hold that one is justified by faith apart from works of the law. (ESV) (cf. 1 John 2:2).

Christ, the greater Noah, saves his people from the waters of death by his faithful obedience and atoning sacrifice. Praise be to his name! (Hughes, R. K. (2004). Genesis : Beginning and blessing. Preaching the Word (148). Wheaton, Ill.: Crossway Books.)

Every time you see a rainbow, listen to me, it represents the victory of grace over judgment. What does this world deserve? Judgment. What does it get? Grace because this is the age when God has hung up His bow. The triumph of mercy over wrath, this is the age for us to go to the ends of the earth and tell them of God and His mercy, God and His grace.

Illustration: There are many people who carry the scars of the past within them. There is a book by William Styron entitled Sophie’s Choice. It tells the story of a young Jewish woman who survived one of the German death camps. She was confronted with a choice as she entered the camp. This choice is not talked about in the early pages of the book. It comes out only in the end. But when you get to it you know that it alone explains the agony of the earlier pages. As Sophie entered the death camp she had two children with her. One of the guards, apparently on a whim, told her she could keep one child but would have to let the other go off to the furnaces to die. This marred the mother irredeemably, and in the end she committed suicide because she was not able to cope with the past. There are people who have wounds like that—people who have suffered loss and tragedy.

Yet we know that God is the God of beauty. God makes signs of beauty to say, “I know that life is filled with tragedy. Sin is ugly. But I am the God of beauty. I am the God who is able to overcome these things, and I call you away from them to myself.” At the end of the Bible, in Revelation, we have a picture of God sitting on his throne around which is a rainbow. Look forward to that and let God’s beautiful sign minister to your soul (Boice, J. M. (1998). Genesis : An expositional commentary (389). Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker Books.).

3) The Summary of the Covenant (Genesis 9:17)

Genesis 9:17 [17]God said to Noah, "This is the sign of the covenant that I have established between me and all flesh that is on the earth." (ESV)

Verse 17 is a final recapitulation, one last speech. The whole Flood story is a revelation of God’s holy wrath. God is a God of vengeance, a God of judgment. But the rainbow is a sign that God is also a God of mercy and a God of grace and a God of patience and a God of peace. There will be a final wrath to come in which the universe will be destroyed by fire and all unrepentant sinners will perish, between the Flood and that final time is the period of grace and the bow of God, the bow of a warrior hangs in all its beauty over the earth against the clouds of judgment as the beauty of grace touching heaven at its arc and touching earth at its ends, to tell all humanity that God is gracious to sinners.

Please turn to Revelation 3

The rainbow is a product of sunshine and storm, and its colors remind us of the “manifold (many-colored) grace of God” (1 Peter 4:10). The rainbow appears to be a bridge between heaven and earth, reminding us that in Christ, God bridged the chasm that separated man from God. We meet the rainbow again in Ezek. 1:28 and Rev. 4:3 (Wiersbe, W. W. (1993). Wiersbe’s expository outlines on the Old Testament (Ge 9:1–17). Wheaton, IL: Victor Books.).

Revelation 3:17-22-4:3 [17]For you say, I am rich, I have prospered, and I need nothing, not realizing that you are wretched, pitiable, poor, blind, and naked. [18]I counsel you to buy from me gold refined by fire, so that you may be rich, and white garments so that you may clothe yourself and the shame of your nakedness may not be seen, and salve to anoint your eyes, so that you may see. [19]Those whom I love, I reprove and discipline, so be zealous and repent. [20]Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in to him and eat with him, and he with me. [21]The one who conquers, I will grant him to sit with me on my throne, as I also conquered and sat down with my Father on his throne. [22]He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches.’" [4:1]After this I looked, and behold, a door standing open in heaven! And the first voice, which I had heard speaking to me like a trumpet, said, "Come up here, and I will show you what must take place after this." [2]At once I was in the Spirit, and behold, a throne stood in heaven, with one seated on the throne. [3]And he who sat there had the appearance of jasper and carnelian, and around the throne was a rainbow that had the appearance of an emerald. (ESV) (cf. Rev. 10:1)

Like a loving father, Christ will reprove those whom he loves (cf. Prov. 3:12), calling them to repent before he intervenes in judgment. He stands at the door and knocks, not as a homeless transient seeking shelter but as the master of the house, expecting alert servants to respond immediately to his signal and welcome his entrance (Luke 12:35–36; James 5:9). To the one who opens the door in faith and obedience, Christ will come in and will eat with him, which is a picture of close personal fellowship.

As John receives a heavenly vision of God on his throne and of the slain Lamb, whose triumph qualifies him to open a scroll and execute God’s future purposes for history, he sees the destruction of all his foes, and the vindication of those who trust in him. As the Lamb who opens the scroll’s seals, John sees images of God’s instruments of judgment and of the saints who will receive salvation. The luminous colors—jasper, carnelian, emerald (and specifically the rainbow)... together signify the splendor and majesty of God (Crossway Bibles. (2008). The ESV Study Bible (2469). Wheaton, IL: Crossway Bibles.).

(Format note: Some base commentary from http://www.gty.org/resources/sermons/90-263/gods-rainbow-covenant)