
⛪ Lesson 10: Upon Whom the Ends Have Come
📘 10.2 Noah’s Evangelism
✨ Steadfast in the Call to Salvation
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🟦 Introduction
Noah was no ordinary man. He was a preacher, a builder, a prophet—but also a father, husband, and son of his time. He lived in a world saturated with moral decay, violence, and indifference toward God. Yet for decades he held fast to a message that no one wanted to hear. No applause, no visible successes, no sign of change—and still: Noah remained faithful.
His story is not merely a glimpse into a distant past, but a mirror for the final generation on this earth. Jesus Himself compared the end times to the days of Noah (Matthew 24:37–39). Peter speaks of mockers who will deny God’s judgment, just as they did in the time of the Flood (2 Peter 3:3–7). In the midst of an indifferent and arrogant world, we are today called to live—and speak—like Noah.
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📖 Bible Study – “As in the Days of Noah…”
a. The World in Noah’s Time (Genesis 6:1–8)
The Bible describes a world full of wickedness: “every inclination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually” (v. 5).
The earth was “corrupt” and “filled with violence” (v. 11).
There reigned moral lawlessness, violence, and spiritual blindness.
These conditions strikingly resemble our own time:
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Lawlessness, corruption, wars, moral collapse
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Technological progress, but spiritual regression
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A “world like in Noah’s days”—outwardly alive, inwardly dead.
b. Matthew 24:37–39: Jesus’ Warning
Jesus compares His return to the days of Noah. What were people doing then?
“They were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage… and did not know until the flood came and swept them all away.”
It was not open rebellion, but deadly indifference. Daily life consumed them so completely that they ignored God’s reality. Their “normal” routine became their ruin.
c. Hebrews 11:7 – Noah’s Faith
Noah built an ark for a flood that no one had ever seen—only on God’s word. He was mocked, ridiculed, perhaps even pitied. Yet he remained faithful. And that faithfulness—not outward success—made him righteous in God’s eyes.
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📖 Answers to the Questions
📌 Question 1: What were the moral conditions in Noah’s time, and how do they resemble our time?
Noah’s time was marked by moral decay, violence, and disregard for God. It was a society in which the self became god. Today we live in an age of individualism, relativism, sexual confusion, and global indifference toward the Creator. The parallels are unmistakable.
Just as then, today the gospel is proclaimed—and just as then, many do not hear it or actively reject it. The ark stands ready—but only a few enter it.
📌 Question 2: How can we continue when our evangelism seems to bear no fruit?
Jesus said, “One sows, another reaps” (John 4:37). Not every seed immediately bears fruit—but every seed matters. Noah preached for 120 years and ultimately saved only his family. In God’s eyes, that was enough—because faithfulness is more important than visible success.
We must not be discouraged when people do not respond. God calls us to faithfulness, not to statistical efficiency. Every seed sown in love can—perhaps years later—sprout. We sow, and God grows in His own time.
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✨ Spiritual Principles
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Obedience despite mockery is a sign of genuine faith.
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God’s standard is not visible success, but faithfulness.
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Evangelism is often a quiet work—like rain that seeps deep into the soil.
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God’s judgment does not come without warning—but His patience has an end.
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The time of grace is not infinite. Today is the day of decision.
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🧩 Application for Daily Life
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Don’t let rejection discourage you—you never know what God is doing in someone’s heart.
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Live so that your life reflects Christ’s message—credible, honest, and loving.
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Use every opportunity to share a kind word, a prayer, or an invitation.
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Persist in prayer—even when you see no change. God hears.
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Work as though you were touching heaven—even if you labor alone.
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✅ Conclusion
Noah stood alone—but with God. He preached for 120 years—to a handful of people. And yet he is called “heir of righteousness” (Hebrews 11:7). In a world of mockers and the ignorant, we are called to be faithful—not famous, but ready. The rainbow at the end of the Flood was God’s answer to Noah’s obedience. At the end of our time, it will be no different.
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💭 Thought of the Day
“Success in heaven means: faithfulness on earth—even if no one applauds.”
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🎨 Illustration – The Ark in the City
The small town lay on the edge of a great metropolis. Amid concrete, hustle, and skyscrapers stood an unassuming wooden house with a broad porch. Every Thursday evening, a handful of people gathered there. No advertising, no modern lighting setup, no livestreams. Just one man, a Bible, and a voice that never gave up. The man’s name was Elias.
He was no famous preacher, had no theological degree, no sponsors, no congregation of hundreds. But he had a calling. Nearly twenty years ago in prayer, a verse fell into his heart—“As in the days of Noah…”—and it never let go. Elias began to preach, first on the street, then in squares, then in front of his house. And finally on that little porch, which soon became synonymous with hope.
But who came? Occasionally a young woman with a stroller, then a homeless man, a teenager who stayed only for the cookies. Elias preached, explained, invited, wept, prayed—and remained alone. Over and over again.
Years passed. The city grew. The people became more digital, faster, more distant. And Elias grew older. His hair grayer, his knees weaker, his voice quieter—but his faithfulness remained unshaken.
Once he was asked, “Why do you still do this, Elias? No one comes.” He answered calmly, “I’m building an ark. Not of wood—but of words. If only one person enters, it’s worth it.”
What no one knew: Elias had once had everything—career, money, a comfortable life. But one night twenty years ago changed everything. In a dream he saw a flood coming over the city—not of water, but of meaninglessness, fear, and lostness. He heard a voice say, “Call them. They don’t know it, but they are drowning.” When he awoke, he knew he would sell his house to build that porch. People laughed at him. His friends turned away. But Elias refused to be deterred.
The last years were hard. Often he sat alone, sang a song, prayed—and went back inside. Yet every Thursday he was there. Until that one evening.
It was rainy. The sky gray, the streets empty. Elias seriously considered skipping—“Come on, no one’s coming,” he muttered, setting his Bible on the table. But then he heard footsteps. First one. Then another. Finally six people stood in the rain. Young, old, silent faces. Strangers.
They said nothing. They sat down. And when Elias spoke, one wept. Then a second. Then all of them. The rain drummed on the roof as Elias spoke of Noah, of the Lamb who wants to save, of the open heavens, and of grace that waits.
After the devotion, a woman approached him. “I saw you here years ago,” she said. “Back then I laughed. But then my husband died. I couldn’t go on. Yet I remembered your light in the darkness. Tonight I wanted to hear what you have to say.”
Elias smiled. “Not me,” he said softly, “but Him. I am only the porch.”
And so he continued to sit week after week on that porch. The city roared, the world called aloud—but Elias remained. For he knew: The ark is needed. Even today. Even when no one looks. Perhaps especially then.