God’s wrath was displayed in the form of a flood
By the time Genesis reaches chapter six, the problem that began in the garden has spread across the entire world. What started with a bite of forbidden fruit has now grown into widespread corruption. Humanity has not drifted slightly from God. It has moved decisively away from Him.
Scripture describes the moment with sobering clarity. When the Lord looked upon the earth, He saw that the wickedness of mankind was great. Every inclination of the thoughts of the human heart was only evil continually. The text even says that God was grieved. The rebellion of humanity broke the heart of its Creator.
There comes a moment when God says what every just judge must eventually say: enough.
Judgment would come in the form of a flood.
When many people think of this story, they imagine a children’s mural. A wooden boat. Smiling animals. A colorful rainbow. But if we slow down and think about the story honestly, it is not sentimental. It is shocking. It is one of the clearest demonstrations in Scripture that God does not treat sin lightly.
God chooses a man named Noah. The Bible calls him the most righteous man on the earth at that time. Yet when you read the rest of Noah’s life, you quickly realize something important. Noah was not perfect. He was not a flawless hero. In fact, shortly after the flood, he will display his own weakness and sin.
Noah was not chosen because he was sinless. He was chosen because God was gracious.
God instructs Noah to build an ark. A massive boat in a world that had never seen anything like the coming judgment. Noah obeys. For years he builds while also proclaiming a message of repentance. Yet the people around him refuse to listen.
Eventually, the day arrives. The rain begins. The waters rise. The judgment of God covers the earth.
Every person who stood outside the ark stood under God’s wrath. Every person inside the ark stood under His protection.
What kept Noah and his family safe was not their strength, wisdom, or goodness. What stood between them and the flood was a structure of wood. The waters of judgment struck that ark instead of striking them directly. They were sheltered from wrath because something else absorbed it.
The image is difficult to miss. Long before the cross, the Bible was already teaching the same lesson. God’s judgment against sin is real, but He also provides a means of rescue.
When the flood subsides and Noah steps onto dry ground, humanity begins again. Yet even in this fresh start, the human heart has not changed. Noah himself soon demonstrates weakness and failure. The flood cleansed the earth, but it did not cleanse the human heart.
The story leaves us with a sobering realization. Sin is not merely a problem of environment or circumstance. It is a problem rooted deeply within humanity itself.
The flood reminds us that God takes sin seriously. He will not ignore it forever. Judgment is real, and a day of reckoning will come.
Yet even in judgment, God provides a way of salvation.

Story
The Bible is often read in pieces, but it was written as one story. Tracing the singular story of Scripture from creation to commission reveals how every page points to Jesus Christ.

Unity
When we read the Bible in fragments, we gain familiar verses but lose the coherence of God’s unfolding work. This article shows how a piecemeal approach to Scripture weakens understanding, thins meaning, and keeps us from seeing how every part fits into the one story God is telling.

Hero
The Bible was never meant to place us at the center of the story. Reading Scripture rightly means recognizing God as the true hero and seeing every page point to what He has done, not what we hope to do.

Orientation
Reading the Bible as one unified story brings clarity where there was confusion and purpose where there was frustration. When God’s redemptive plan comes into focus, Scripture stops feeling scattered and starts shaping how we read, believe, and live.

Design
The Bible opens with a declaration, not a debate: God exists, and He created everything. Creation is presented as intentional and ordered, revealing a sovereign God whose design establishes the foundation for the entire story of Scripture.

Purpose
Creation was made by Christ and for Christ, meant to display God’s glory rather than our importance. The vastness of the universe points beyond us, reminding us that the world exists to declare who God is and to call us into humble participation in His purposes.
