Today's Scripture Reading (June 22, 2025): 1 Chronicles 1
It appears that every culture has its own set of longevity
myths. It is the foundation of ideas like "The Fountain of Youth," movies
like" Cocoon," and rumors of the benefits of inaccessible places,
usually high up in a remote portion of a mountain range, like "Shangri La."
There, people live, but time refuses to take a toll on their bodies; at least,
it refuses to have an effect as long as the person remains in this location of
longevity. We are still creating these myths. Several people believe that there
is no reason that anyone who reads these words should die unless they are
involved in an extraordinary accident. According to these dreamers, medical
science will soon advance to a place where all diseases can be cured and where
aging can be slowed down to an imperceptible crawl. While these dreamers are
far from the majority, these people walk among us and share their beliefs with
anyone willing to listen. Shangri-La has been found and is located throughout
the Earth.
There was a belief in the early Christian church that the Apostle
John would never die. The Apostle himself addresses this immortality rumor at
the end of his Gospel. John concludes his telling of the Gospel story with
these words, part of a conversation between Jesus and Peter about John;
Jesus answered, "If I want him to remain alive until I return,
what is that to you? You must follow me." Because of this, the rumor spread
among the believers that this disciple would not die. But Jesus did not say
that he would not die; he only said, "If I want him
to remain alive until I return, what is that to you" (John 21:22-23)?
I have often wondered if this comment might be the
real purpose behind the writing of John's Gospel. Perhaps John's Gospel was
simply a tool the disciple used, not just to fill in the blanks left by the
other Gospel writers but also to say goodbye to Christians in far-flung places
of the known world. He had heard rumors that he would live forever, but deep
inside, John knew they were false. He may have survived the attacks of the
power structure around him that were intended to result in his death, but he
also knew the ravages with which age was impacting his body. Maybe his hand
shook now as he wrote the end of his story. Death was coming, and the Gospel
was just one way of letting them know that soon he would be gone.
According to the Bible, the person who lived the
longest in all of creation was a man named Methuselah, who died at the age of
969. Scholars have attempted to assign an alternate meaning to the ages
recorded in Genesis; perhaps they were simply indicating the length of certain
family dynasties, or maybe the word we have translated as 'years' should be
understood as 'months.' If Methuselah died at the age of 969 lunar months, he
would have been approximately 78 years old, which falls within a much more
comfortable age range for our skeptical minds. However, the problem with this
idea is that if it is to be applied to all the ages mentioned in the early
sections of the Bible, then Enoch would have become the father of Methuselah
when he was about five years old.
But if we take Genesis as we find it if we can find
it in our hearts to admit that maybe God kept these saints alive longer in the
early days than he does now (and this meaning would seem to be supported by
what appears to be a change of heart on the part of God in Genesis 6:3 - Then the Lord said, "My Spirit will not
contend with humans forever, for they are mortal; their days will be a hundred
and twenty years"),
then Methuselah died during the same year that the great flood occurred. He was
the last of this list of men, other than Noah himself, to live until the flood.
And part of me has always wondered if God was waiting for Methuselah to die
before he brought the flood or if Methuselah perished in the flood.
Ancient traditions have sought to answer that very
question. According to the Book of Enoch, a work that dates back to
approximately 200 years before the birth of Christ, Enoch tells his son
Methuselah that God will one day bring a great flood upon the Earth. This revelation
might explain why Noah accepted the news of the flood so easily from God; the
story of the impending flood had already been told in his family for a few
generations. It was a story that Noah had heard directly from his grandfather,
Methuselah.
According to the Book of Jasher, a rabbinic text
from the 16th Century, Methuselah and Noah went around together
trying to encourage the people of the Earth to return to God. But they failed. Jasher
tells us that Methuselah lived to see the building of the Ark but died seven
days before the flood began because God had promised that this good man would
not die with those who were unrighteous.
Tomorrow's Scripture Reading:
1 Chronicles 2
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