In Genesis 11, we address an apparent contradiction. The Bible does not contradict itself but there are a few apparent contradictions and we will deal with those as we encounter them. Then after a short interruption to describe what happened at the Tower of Babel, we go right back into the genealogy where we left off in chapter 10. I apologize in advance… maybe, if you haven’t played the audio yet… I said begat a couple of times and switched back and forth between begat and fathered. Some of us grew up with chapters full of begats before learning there were modern translations. To be fair, 40 or 50 years ago there were not nearly as many translations in English as there are today.
Author Archives: Clark Bunch
Read the Bible: Genesis 10
From time to time as we read through the Bible we will come upon chapters that are almost entirely genealogy. If you thought Genesis 9 had quite a bit then fasten your seat belt. I am not an expert in Hebrew names but many of these will at least be somewhat familiar if you know anything at all about cities, nations and empires in the Old Testament. If you have been with us for a few chapters then hopefully you have developed a routine of some sort. So open your Bible (or app, or web browser, what have you) and let’s read some names I can barely pronounce.
Read the Bible: Genesis 9
At the end of Genesis 8, God said in his heart he would never again destroy all flesh. In chapter 9 he establishes a covenant with Noah and his sons, with all flesh including the animal kingdoms as a matter of fact, that he will never again destroy all flesh and there will never again be such a flood. He places his sign, the rainbow, in the clouds as a reminder.
Satur-deja Vu
Before I joined Facebook, before Twitter existed, there was WordPress. In 17 years I have put up 2,025 posts, logged 2,593 comments and as of Friday evening have 800,558 views. (If you included stats from My Other Blog, which preceded The Master’s Table by a couple of months, that adds another 465,835 views). Blogging is not what it used to be; in 2012 I had over 124,000 just that year alone. Like I say, Facebook and YouTube were relatively new and there was no Twitter, FB Reels, TikTok or Instagram yet. People were so bored they read stuff that I wrote!
Continue readingRead the Bible: Genesis 8
Genesis 8 contains one of my most favorite verses in all of scripture. It should encourage us that we are never alone in this world. God can see, God can hear, his arm is not shortened so that he cannot save. God is near. As the flood waters subside, God makes a promise to himself to never again curse the ground and destroy all living things.
Read the Bible: Genesis 7
I posted yesterday about why the Old Testament uses The LORD as the name for God. If you are subscribed via email or follow The Master’s Table on Facebook you probably saw that but here is a link just in case.
The flood story takes place across three chapters. In Genesis 6, God gives Noah instructions to build the ark and Noah does according to all the LORD commands. In chapter 7 Noah and his family, with at least two of every animal enter the ark, and the flood comes. It rains for 40 days and 40 nights but the flood lasts much longer than that. That’s where we will leave our brave hero today but join us tomorrow for Genesis 8 and one of my favorite verses in the entire scripture.
Read the Bible: the LORD
You can listen to the audio version of this article, read the post, or do both:
As I write this article, we are only six chapters into our study of Genesis. God has already been referred to several times as “the LORD” and I want to do more than say something about it in one of the chapter discussions or include a note on the next chapter post.
Continue readingRead the Bible: Genesis 6
I am trying to do a better job at having a professional sound but I live in the real world. I do not have a recording studio with sound proof walls, I live in a house with other people and pets. I don’t know if you can hear dogs bark outside, or the clicky clack of their feet on the floor, or cars passing or the train; but I can and it drives me nuts.
Look on the bright side; anything you do for God, anything you do that will help people find God, learn more about him or seek his will, the devil will be opposed to. So I might be talking out my head here but if the enemy is opposing me then maybe I’m doing something right. Let’s look at Genesis 6, talk about the issues, and identify what we can know for sure about Noah, his family, and what he did in response to God’s instructions.
Read the Bible: Genesis 5
Genesis 5 looks like genealogy, and it is, but there are three interesting things we will note in this chapter; and only two of them are in the list of genealogy.
*Note: in the audio recording I claim that Noah only lived to be 950 years old. That is wrong; Noah only lived 930 years. I made the recording without my laptop. That’s where the music file is saved and where I had taken a few notes. I hope I have learned my lesson.
**Note: I apologize for all of the noises, the sliding around, bumping, etc. I was looking for a more controlled environment than my house full of family members and pets. This was recorded at church, at the same podium I preach from on Sunday morning. I was standing instead of sitting and apparently cannot keep my hands still. I need to do three things: Obtain a decent podcast mic, sit at my desk or dinning room table and at the very least use a basic editing software. Let’s see how long it takes knowing better to turn into doing better.
Read the Bible: Genesis 4
The Bible will not answer all our questions, and that is never more obvious than when looking at the first few chapters of Genesis. The Bible gives us a huge amount of information; some people set ambitious goals of reading through the entire Bible in one year. Many fail while others have never even tried. Our goal is to see what the Bible is saying to us and trust that it is enough. We have what God means for us to have.
It is still hard to read a selection such as Genesis 4 and wonder “Who told they guys to build altars? Why are they sacrificing anything?” We know there were occasions that God spoke to human beings. Presumably everything he said did not get written down. He could have easily communicated instructions that are not recorded. We have a certain understanding of what the historical record should be based on Western Civilization from around the time of Philip and his son Alexander, circa 300 B.C. or so. That is the beginning of the modern era; ancient historians, of Eastern civilizations at that, did not think about creating a complete historical record the way we do.
Let’s look at what scripture tells us of Cain and Abel. The ancient text may not stand up to our modern literary criticism but there is nothing we can do about that.

