And the Lord said, “Behold, they are one people, and they have all one language, and this is only the beginning of what they will do. And nothing that they propose to do will now be impossible for them (Genesis 11:6).
The first part of chapter 11 describes what led to the dispersion of the people and multiple languages mentioned in chapter 10.
The First Problem: There is in our DNA a drive toward self-determination, the need to control our circumstances, independence, and a desire for self-sufficiency. The Lord calls us live in obedience to his direction. In this chapter we see people gathering in one place when the Lord commanded that they fill the earth (9:1).
The Second Problem: The people set out to build a city and a tower. I always thought that the purpose of the tower was to reach God. But the Word says that it was to “make a name for ourselves.” In essence, self-worship. Some believe that these towers (ziggurats) found in Mesopotamia were temples. Regardless, the actions of the people violated the Lord’s command to worship him.
The Lord’s Solution: The Lord saw, once again, that people were setting their own course in life and that they would do whatever they wanted. He confused their language which forced them to migrate by language group.
Abram: The chapter concludes with the descendants of Shem with specific attention on the line leading to Terah, Abram, and Lot and their migration from Ur in Mesopotamia to Haran in what is now southwestern Turkey.
There is no better story in the Old Testament, or perhaps the whole Bible, for depicting the difference between the ladder-defined life and the cross-defined life than that of the Tower of Babel. Tullian Tchividjian
We will pick up Abram and Lot In late July. For the next three months we will look at the promise of hope in times of despair.