His first act after leaving the ark was


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  1. of sense; for this world and this life alone. Extravagance pervades all circles of society.
  2. Integrity is sacrificed for luxury and display. They that make haste to be rich pervert
  3. justice and oppress the poor, and “slaves and souls of men” are still bought and sold.
  4. Fraud and bribery and theft stalk unrebuked in high places and in low. The issues
  5. of the press teem with records of murder—crimes so cold-blooded and causeless that
  6. it seems as though every instinct of humanity were blotted out. And these atrocities
  7. have become of so common occurrence that they hardly elicit a comment or awaken
  8. surprise. The spirit of anarchy is permeating all nations, and the outbreaks that from
  9. time to time excite the horror of the world are but indications of the pent-up fires of
  10. passion and lawlessness that, having once escaped control, will fill the earth with
  11. woe and desolation. The picture which Inspiration has given of the antediluvian
  12. world represents too truly the condition to which modern society is fast hastening.
  13. Even now, in the present century, and in professedly Christian lands, there are crimes
  14. daily perpetrated as black and terrible as those for which the old-world sinners were
  15. destroyed.
  16. Before the Flood God sent Noah to warn the world, that the people might be led
  17. to repentance, and thus escape the threatened destruction. As the time of Christ’s
  18. second appearing draws near, the Lord sends his servants with a warning to the world
  19. to prepare for that great event. Multitudes have been living in transgression of God’s
  20. law, and now he in mercy calls them to obey its sacred precepts. All who will put
  21. away their sins by repentance toward God and faith in Christ are offered pardon. But
  22. many feel that it requires too great a sacrifice to put away sin. Because their life does
  23. not harmonize with the pure principles of God’s moral government, they reject his
  24. warnings and deny the authority of his law.
  25. Of the vast population of the earth before the Flood, only eight souls believed
  26. and obeyed God’s word through Noah. For a hundred and twenty years the preacher
  27. of righteousness warned the world of the coming destruction, but his message was
  28. rejected and despised. So it will be now. Before the Lawgiver shall come to punish
  29. the disobedient, transgressors are warned to repent, and return to their allegiance; but
  30. with the majority these warnings will be in vain. Says the apostle Peter, “There shall
  31. come in the last days scoffers, walking after their own lusts, and
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  33. saying, Where is the promise of his coming? for since the fathers fell asleep, all
  34. things continue as they were from the beginning.” 2 Peter 3:3, 4. Do we not hear these
  35. very words repeated, not merely by the openly ungodly, but by many who occupy the
  36. pulpits of our land? “There is no cause for alarm,” they cry. “Before Christ shall
  37. come, all the world is to be converted, and righteousness is to reign for a thousand
  38. years. Peace, peace! all things continue as they were from the beginning. Let none
  39. be disturbed by the exciting message of these alarmists.” But this doctrine of the
  40. millennium does not harmonize with the teachings of Christ and his apostles. Jesus
  41. asked the significant question, “When the Son of man cometh, shall he find faith on the
  42. earth?” Luke 18:8. And, as we have seen, he declares that the state of the world will
  43. be as in the days of Noah. Paul warns us that we may look for wickedness to increase
  44. as the end draws near: “The Spirit speaketh expressly, that in the latter times some
  45. shall depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils.”
  46. 1 Timothy 4:1. The apostle says that “in the last days perilous times shall come.” 2
  47. Timothy 3:1. And he gives a startling list of sins that will be found among those who
  48. have a form of godliness.
  49. As the time of their probation was closing, the antediluvians gave themselves up to
  50. exciting amusements and festivities. Those who possessed influence and power were
  51. bent on keeping the minds of the people engrossed with mirth and pleasure, lest any
  52. should be impressed by the last solemn warning. Do we not see the same repeated in
  53. our day? While God’s servants are giving the message that the end of all things is at
  54. hand, the world is absorbed in amusements and pleasure seeking. There is a constant
  55. round of excitement that causes indifference to God and prevents the people from
  56. being impressed by the truths which alone can save them from the coming destruction.
  57. In Noah’s day philosophers declared that it was impossible for the world to be
  58. destroyed by water; so now there are men of science who endeavor to show that the
  59. world cannot be destroyed by fire—that this would be inconsistent with the laws of
  60. nature. But the God of nature, the Maker and Controller of her laws, can use the works
  61. of his hands to serve his own purpose.
  62. When great and wise men had proved to their satisfaction that it was impossible
  63. for the world to be destroyed by water, when
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  65. the fears of the people were quieted, when all regarded Noah’s prophecy as a delusion,
  66. and looked upon him as a fanatic—then it was that God’s time had come. “The
  67. fountains of the great deep” were “broken up, and the windows of heaven were
  68. opened,” and the scoffers were overwhelmed in the waters of the Flood. With all
  69. their boasted philosophy, men found too late that their wisdom was foolishness, that
  70. the Lawgiver is greater than the laws of nature, and that Omnipotence is at no loss
  71. for means to accomplish his purposes. “As it was in the days of Noah,” “even thus
  72. shall it be in the days when the Son of man is revealed.” Luke 17:26, 30. “The
  73. day of the Lord will come as a thief in the night; in the which the heavens shall
  74. pass away with a great noise, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat, the earth
  75. also and the works that are therein shall be burned up.” 2 Peter 3:10. When the
  76. reasoning of philosophy has banished the fear of God’s judgments; when religious
  77. teachers are pointing forward to long ages of peace and prosperity, and the world are
  78. absorbed in their rounds of business and pleasure, planting and building, feasting and
  79. merrymaking, rejecting God’s warnings and mocking his messengers—then it is that
  80. sudden destruction cometh upon them, and they shall not escape. 1 Thessalonians 5:3.
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  82. Chap. 8 - After the Flood
  83. The waters rose fifteen cubits above the highest mountains. It often seemed to the
  84. family within the ark that they must perish, as for five long months their boat was
  85. tossed about, apparently at the mercy of wind and wave. It was a trying ordeal; but
  86. Noah’s faith did not waver, for he had the assurance that the divine hand was upon the
  87. helm.
  88. As the waters began to subside, the Lord caused the ark to drift into a spot
  89. protected by a group of mountains that had been preserved by his power. These
  90. mountains were but a little distance apart, and the ark moved about in this quiet
  91. haven, and was no longer driven upon the boundless ocean. This gave great relief
  92. to the weary, tempest-tossed voyagers.
  93. Noah and his family anxiously waited for the decrease of the waters, for they
  94. longed to go forth again upon the earth. Forty days after the tops of the mountains
  95. became visible, they sent out a raven, a bird of quick scent, to discover whether
  96. the earth had become dry. This bird, finding nothing but water, continued to fly
  97. to and from the ark. Seven days later a dove was sent forth, which, finding no
  98. footing, returned to the ark. Noah waited seven days longer, and again sent forth the
  99. dove. When she returned at evening with an olive leaf in her mouth, there was great
  100. rejoicing. Later “Noah removed the covering of the ark, and looked, and, behold, the
  101. face of the ground was dry.” Still he waited patiently within the ark. As he had entered
  102. at God’s command, he waited for special directions to depart.
  103. At last an angel descended from heaven, opened the massive door, and bade the
  104. patriarch and his household go forth upon the earth and take with them every living
  105. thing. In the joy of their release Noah did not forget him by whose gracious care they
  106. had been preserved. His first act after leaving the ark was

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