Episode Overview
In this episode, Jess dives into one of the most debated and misunderstood passages in Scripture: Book of Genesis 6:1–13.
Why did the Flood happen?
Was it symbolic—or historical?
Who were the “sons of God”?
What were the Nephilim?
And how does this event shape our understanding of God’s justice, mercy, and authority today?
This episode explores the spiritual, historical, and theological significance of the pre-Flood world—and why the Flood remains foundational to a biblical worldview.
Key Themes Covered
1. Why the Flood Matters
The Flood is not a children’s story—it is central to biblical authority.
Jesus Himself affirmed the historicity of Noah and the Flood:
The episode discusses:
Research referenced:
2. The “Sons of God” — Who Were They?
Genesis 6:1–2 introduces one of the Bible’s most mysterious phrases: sons of God.
Interpretations explored:
Supporting passages:
Second Temple Jewish background:
This section explores the idea that the pre-Flood world was not just morally corrupt—but spiritually corrupted.
3. The Nephilim and Ancient Legends
Genesis 6:4 introduces the Nephilim.
The only other biblical reference:
The episode compares global traditions of giant or demigod figures, including:
Are these distorted cultural memories of real pre-Flood events?
4. God’s Grief and the Mercy of Judgment
Genesis 6:5–6 reveals that God was grieved in His heart.
The Flood was not reckless destruction—it was judicial mercy.
To allow violence and corruption to continue indefinitely would have been cruelty.
God preserved a remnant.
5. Noah: Preacher of Righteousness
Noah found favor in the eyes of the Lord.
Noah’s faithfulness:
6. Death, Sheol, and Christ’s Proclamation
This episode also discusses:
Referenced passages:
What does this mean for justi
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