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The most dangerous way to read the Bible is one verse at a time.
Pull a sentence out of its 2,000-year-old context and you don't get the Word of God. You get a mirror for your own ideas.
It's time to stop cherry-picking and start restoring. 🧵
Historically, people lived way past 120 after the Flood. The 120 years wasn’t an age cap, it was a divine countdown clock to judgment. God was giving that corrupt generation exactly 120 years to repent before the floodgates opened.
I'd like to correct a misconception regarding Genesis 6:3. When God said man’s days would be "120 years," He wasn't setting a new maximum age limit for human lifespans.
If that was the case, the Bible broke its own rule immediately after the Flood.
I'd like to correct a misconception regarding Genesis 6:3. When God said man’s days would be "120 years," He wasn't setting a new maximum age limit for human lifespans.
If that was the case, the Bible broke its own rule immediately after the Flood.
The death march of Genesis 5 was ultimately answered and broken by the resurrection of Christ. Every name in this chapter was a necessary step in the grand corridor of history to bring the Savior who permanently conquers the grave.
#TheDailyWord#Genesis5#BibleContext
Genesis 5 lists the generations that carried the seed of humanity across the pre flood world. Millennia later, Luke 3 picks up these exact same names Seth, Enosh, Kenan, Jared, Enoch, Noah and links them directly to the genealogy of Jesus Christ.
The death march of Genesis 5 was ultimately answered and broken by the resurrection of Christ. Every name in this chapter was a necessary step in the grand corridor of history to bring the Savior who permanently conquers the grave.
#TheDailyWord#Genesis5#BibleContext
Genesis 5 lists the generations that carried the seed of humanity across the pre-flood world. Millennia later, Luke 3 picks up these exact same names Seth, Enosh, Kenan, Jared, Enoch, Noah and links them directly to the genealogy of Jesus Christ.
Genesis 5 lists the generations that carried the seed of humanity across the pre flood world. Millennia later, Luke 3 picks up these exact same names Seth, Enosh, Kenan, Jared, Enoch, Noah and links them directly to the genealogy of Jesus Christ.
Genesis 5 lists the generations that carried the seed of humanity across the pre-flood world. Millennia later, Luke 3 picks up these exact same names Seth, Enosh, Kenan, Jared, Enoch, Noah and links them directly to the genealogy of Jesus Christ.
Yet, right in the middle of this death march, God inserts Enoch’s translation and Noah’s birth to show us that His grace will always provide escape hatches and places of rest. The grave is real, but God's redemptive counter movement is more real.
#TheDailyWord#Genesis5
Genesis 5 looks like a giant graveyard on paper because of the recurring line "...and he died." It proves that no amount of longevity, human progress, or century long flex can deliver a man from the spiritual and physical penalty of Adam's original sin.
Genesis 5 looks like a giant graveyard on paper because of the recurring line "...and he died." It proves that no amount of longevity, human progress, or century long flex can deliver a man from the spiritual and physical penalty of Adam's original sin.
Even when the entire world is on the verge of being ruined by perversity, God always secures an anchor for His promise. Men may die, empires may collapse, but the redemptive plan of God will always find a faithful lineage to run through.
#TheDailyWord#Genesis5#BibleContext
Genesis 5 closes with Noah fathering Shem, Ham, and Japheth. Historically, this sets up the survival of humanity. Theologically, it narrows down the messianic searchlight directly onto Shem the son who would carry the torch all the way to Abraham and Israel.
Genesis 5 closes with Noah fathering Shem, Ham, and Japheth. Historically, this sets up the survival of humanity. Theologically, it narrows down the messianic searchlight directly onto Shem the son who would carry the torch all the way to Abraham and Israel.
Lamech’s cry reflects the frustration we feel today when inflation, economic realities, and intense labor yield little results. But notice the prophetic hope he looked to the next generation for a divine interruption of the struggle.
#TheDailyWord#Genesis5#BibleContext
When Lamech names his son Noah ("Rest"), he confesses the deep exhaustion of the human race under the curse, "This one will comfort us in our labor and the painful toil of our hands." The hustle had become heavy, the ground was resisting their effort
Lamech’s cry reflects the frustration we feel today when inflation, economic realities, and intense labor yield little results. But notice the prophetic hope he looked to the next generation for a divine interruption of the struggle.
#TheDailyWord#Genesis5#BibleContext
When Lamech names his son Noah ("Rest"), he confesses the deep exhaustion of the human race under the curse, "This one will comfort us in our labor and the painful toil of our hands." The hustle had become heavy, the ground was resisting their effort.
When Lamech names his son Noah ("Rest"), he confesses the deep exhaustion of the human race under the curse, "This one will comfort us in our labor and the painful toil of our hands." The hustle had become heavy, the ground was resisting their effort
When Lamech names his son Noah ("Rest"), he confesses the deep exhaustion of the human race under the curse, "This one will comfort us in our labor and the painful toil of our hands." The hustle had become heavy, the ground was resisting their effort.
You don't need a perfect environment to build a radical relationship with God. Enoch did it in the middle of a dying, cynical, and corrupt generation. Stop waiting for ideal conditions before you take your spiritual walk seriously.
#TheDailyWord#Genesis5#BibleContext
Enoch lived 65 years normally, but after fathering Methuselah, something shifted. He spent the next 300 years walking in habitual, close fellowship with God. True intimacy with the Creator changes your perspective on parenting, legacy, and daily survival.