Escaping God

7:53 AM


How many things wrong can you find with the following picture? 

Now, try the same exercise with a story from the Bible. Genesis 6 through 9 recounts the story of Noah and the flood, and Genesis 10 contains perhaps the best, most condensed list of biblical baby names possible. At the beginning of chapter 11 is the story, often overlooked in Christian studies, of the tower of Babel—the story of a people who try to reach heaven by building a tower only to have God, in anger, scatter the people and confound their language. So, what’s wrong with the picture? What did this people do that was so wrong that God would punish them so dramatically? 

Problem 1.

There is a way to get to heaven. In Moses 7 Enoch and the people he was able to reclaim and convert to righteousness built a city founded on unity of heart, thought, principal, and behavior. This “Zion” was, in the course of time, “taken up into heaven” (Moses 7:18-21). The key to their success comes before the oft-read verse: “The fear of the Lord was upon all nations, so great was the glory of the Lord, which was upon his people” (v. 17). A society founded on the Lord Jesus and the principles of His gospel as dictated to prophets and apostles is a society ready to be, through time and lots of repentance, in the presence of God. The people of Babel had the same goal but denied the path thereto. 
 
How many today claim a cure or salve for the pains of mortality and can offer, at best, only a temporary band aid or, at worst, diversion from true healing. How many offer diversions from commandments and covenants and yet claim immunity from consequences? How many would draw us away from our choice to follow Jesus and His apostles simply so they can, as the people of Babel said, “make us a name” for themselves. Regardless of the motivation, No construction, whether physical, philosophical, or philanthropic can lift a person to the level of God for how can mortality raise mortality? Only God can open the doors to heaven; only God can open a heart to salvation, and He does it through the ministry of His Son and the teachings of His anointed servants.

Problem 2.

The purpose of building a tower may not have actually been to reach the front steps of the heavenly mansions at all. One detail points to a more devious aim. The record states that the tower-builders used “slime” to cement the bricks together. The Hebrew word, “chemar“ denotes a water-proof mortar akin to bitumen. Hence, they built a tower that was to be, not only tall, but water proof. Coming so recently after the Flood a natural conclusion would be that these people, knowing how God reacted to widespread wickedness in the past, attempted to build a place that was impervious to His hand. 

God recognized this at their motive when he “came down to see the city and the tower” (v. 5). He commented that the people (like Enoch’s people but obviously with a different goal) were “one” and that now, because they had built this tower, they assumed that “nothing will be restrained from them, which they have imagined to do” (v. 6). In other words, they thought they had successfully placed themselves out of God’s reach so that His consequences for their intended sins could not touch them. This, of course, is impossible with an all-powerful God in a plan designed on the very principle that we utilize our agency to the blessing or detriment to our soul. 

Contrast all this with the Savior’s words, “I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me” (John 14:6). There is a way to heaven; there is a way to reach, not the potential of our mortal abilities but the potential of the divine within us. As Enoch commanded his people, “teach it unto your children, that all men, everywhere, must repent, or they can in nowise inherit the kingdom of God, for no unclean thing can dwell there, or dwell in his presence; for, in the language of Adam, Man of Holiness is his name, and the name of his Only Begotten is the Son of Man, even Jesus Christ, a righteous Judge, who shall come in the meridian of time” (Moses 6:57).

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