Thursday, June 25, 2026

Babeling Book

I was reading this morning in the book of Genesis about Noah, the flood and the events following the flood.  After the flood killed all living creatures not on the ark, God directed Noah's sons and their wives to be fruitful, multiply and cover the Earth.  That worked for a bit until a group of his descendants settled on the plain of Shinar.  They decided to build a tower there so they could "make a name for themselves" and NOT be scattered over the earth.  This is the first post-flood mention of humanity's ultimate sin: putting ourselves and our needs above God and what he desires for us.  God stepped in, confused their language, and caused them to disperse and cover the Earth as originally directed.  The tower became known as the Tower of Babel.  The Mesopotamian word Babel means "gateway to the gods" and is associated with the Hebrew word, balal, which means to mix, jumble, or confuse.  The Greeks later translated the word Babel to Babylon.  Babylon continues to represent the desires of men and political systems to be greater than God all the way through the Old and New Testaments until its final destruction in Revelation 18: "Fallen, fallen is Babylon the Great".   God, help us to remember that you are the greatest and that nothing we create can come close to what you have for us.

Bonus fact: While the english word "babble" is actually derived from a Germanic word mimicking infantile, indistinct speech, its proliferation is connected with the biblical account of the Tower of Babel.

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