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Grace to You :: esp Unleashing God's Truth, One Verse at a Time

MacArthur Daily Bible

Reading for Today:

-Genesis 7:1–8:22
-Psalm 3:1-4
-Proverbs 1:20-22
-Matthew 4:1-25

Notes:

Genesis 7:11 all the fountains of the great deep were broken up. The subterranean waters sprang up
from deep fountains inside the earth to form the seas and rivers (1:10; 2:10–14), which were not
produced by rainfall, since it never rained before the Flood. the windows of heaven. The celestial
waters in the canopy encircling the globe were dumped on the earth and joined with the terrestrial
and the subterranean waters (see 1:7). The Flood ended the water canopy surrounding the earth and
unleashed the water in the earth. Thus began the earth’s cycle of hydrology, with rain and
evaporation (see Job 26:8; Eccl. 1:7; Is. 55:10; Amos 9:6).

Proverbs 1:22 How long. Three classes of people need wisdom: 1) the simple, who are ignorant; 2)
scorners or mockers, who commit more serious, determined acts; and 3) fools or obstinate
unbelievers, who will not listen to the truth. Proverbs directs its wisdom primarily at the first group.

Matthew 4:4 It is written. All 3 of Jesus’ replies to the devil were taken from Deuteronomy. This one,
from Deuteronomy 8:3, states that God allowed Israel to hunger, so that He might feed them with
manna and teach them to trust Him to provide for them. So the verse is directly applicable to Jesus’
circumstances and a fitting reply to Satan’s temptation. every word that proceeds from the mouth of
God. A more important source of sustenance than food, it nurtures our spiritual needs in a way that
benefits us eternally, rather than merely providing temporal relief from physical hunger.

DAY 4: How significant is the Flood in the overall biblical history?

The Bible treats the Flood as a worldwide event directly brought by God as a judgment on the sin of
humanity. The flood hangs like a warning cloud over all subsequent history. Fortunately, that cloud
also holds a rainbow of God’s promised grace.

Conditions in Noah’s day were ripe for judgment.“ Then the LORD saw that the wickedness of man
was great in the earth, and that every intent of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually”
(Gen. 6:5). This verse provides one of the strongest and clearest statements about man’s sinful
nature. Many other verses make it clear that God had every reason for radical action: Jeremiah 17:9,
10; Matthew 12:34, 35; 15:18, 19; Mark 7:21; Luke 6:45. Other notable Scriptures on the worldwide
flood brought by God include Job 12:15; 22:16; Psalms 29:10; 104:6–9; Isaiah 54:9; Matthew
24:37–39; Luke 17:26, 27; Hebrews 11:7; 1 Peter 3:20; 2 Peter 2:5; 3:5, 6.

The Flood illustrates several important aspects of God’s character and God’s relationship with His
creation: 1) God retains ultimate control of world events; 2) God can and will judge sin; 3) God can
and does exercise grace even in judgment; 4) An even more universal and final judgment will be
carried out on the world based on God’s timetable.

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