Hebrew Word Study – Ark – Tevah תבה Taw Beth Hei

Genesis 6:14: “Make thee an ark of gopher wood; rooms shalt thou make in the ark, and shalt pitch it within and without with pitch.”

Isaiah 54:9: “For this is as the waters of Noah unto me: for as I have sworn that the waters of Noah should no more go over the earth; so have I sworn that I would not be wroth with thee, nor rebuke thee.”

It is curious that Isaiah refers to the flood as the waters of Noah. Why was it not called the waters of God’s judgment? Why did God instruct Noah to build an ark, there could have been any number of ways to escape the flood.  God could have carried Noah away to a high mountain or created a special uninhabited place on earth that the flood would not touch and carry him and his family there. Why make him spend 120 years building an ark in front of all the people. Surely a 120-year-old conspiracy theory that the world was going to be destroyed by a flood sent from God would surely take some traction after that length of time. I mean we even have people who still believe the earth is flat. 

It is fairly obvious that God wanted to give ample warning of a flood, Noah was called to be an evangelist who ended up with not even one convert after 120 years of preaching.  I mean, among the population there had to be someone, even the crackiest of crackpots that would have taken his message seriously. But Noah had no converts. 

If there was a revival if people did cry out to God in repentance would God have repealed his decree of destruction?   God decreed that Israel would be destroyed after worshipping the golden calf.  But God repealed that decree.  Destruction was decreed upon Nineveh but God repealed that decree as well.  

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The Midrash is pretty harsh on Noah. For the obviously did a poor job of evangelism.  People would approach him and as; “Why are you doing this?” Noah would answer that God was bringing a flood.  Yet, when the flood came there was not one single baal tehsuvah – repentant.  How do you account for that?  I mean what was to stop someone from grabbing a hammer and saw and building their own ark?  There is no record that anyone did.

The Midrash points out that Abraham pleads with God for mercy over the coming destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah.  Moses cried out to God to spare the nation of Israel after the golden calf incident. There is no indication that Noah prayed for the people. Jewish commentators go so far as to say that Noah really had little compassion for the people around him. Ok, maybe the old boy was truly lacking in public relations but how can you account for the fact that in all that time he failed to win over one person. The sages teach that this is why Isaiah called it Noah’s flood. Noah could have prevented this destruction had he been willing to stand in the gap for his people like Moses. One man saved a whole nation.  One man could have saved the world, but Noah failed in his mission to win people back to God, to provide an opening for the Spirit of God to soften the hearts of the people. 

In order to win over the people, one’s motives must be pure. Look at the word for ark, it is teivah which means a chest, coffin, or a basket.  It is a loan word from Middle Egyptian which represented a box that had words written on it. Jewish teachers explain that another definition of the word teivah is words. The ark represented the Word of God. It was a picture of God’s Words, Words from His heart about coming destruction if people do not repent.  

Noah’s involvement was limited to his sense of what he ought to do for the people, as opposed to a true concern for their well-being.  He understood the necessity to act for the sake of another, this is what made him a righteous man. But he failed to evangelize from his heart.  There is an old Jewish saying: “Words that come from the heart, enter the heart.”  Noah’s evangelism came from a sense of duty and obligation. He won no one to God. Deep down a person will always sense whether you truly have his interest at heart or you’re filling a need of your own by seeking to convert them. If you share the Gospel from just a desire to do the right thing but without really caring about that person, your efforts will have a scant response. 

I grew up in the Baptist church where I was encouraged to evangelize, witness, and be a soul winner. I had little to no results. I only did this evangelism stuff so I could impress others in my little Christian community with my zeal. I did it to fulfill an obligation to God and to maybe make my reservations in heaven a little more secure. I mean I knew salvation was not by works, I was taught that really well by the preachers, but I had this idea that the preachers could be wrong about this faith only thing in getting to heaven, so just to be on the safe side, I backed it up with a lot of good works, just in case. But I never succeeded in winning any souls. I was like old Noah, I was fulfilling my duty, and if the raptured occurred I would be going up alone with no one going up by my side that I led to the Lord.

We learn two things about evangelism from this story about Noah.  One is that you must have true love and compassion for the people you are trying to win to the Lord.  The second is that if you do not have that compassion, then stop trying to evangel and start spending that time in prayer.  Prayer is what will attach your heart and soul to God and when your heart and soul are attached to God, God’s heart will attach to yours, you will feel God’s compassion and desire for the lost. When someone knows that you truly care about them and not getting another notch on your Scofield Bible, they will start to tune into the Spirit of God within you.  

It all starts with more than just living righteously, it also involves living prayerfully. 

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