Noah's Ark Building Instructions
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Genesis 6:14 Make thee an ark of gopher wood; rooms shalt thou make in the ark, and shalt pitch it within and without with pitch. Having warned Noah of the...
show moreMake thee an ark of gopher wood; rooms shalt thou make in the ark, and shalt pitch it within and without with pitch.
Having warned Noah of the impending flood, God now tells him how to survive it.
Notably, God’s instructions require Noah to demonstrate faith.
While God could miraculously protect Noah and his household inside a magic underwater bubble, He instead requires Noah to create his own means of survival at his own expense long before the first drop of rain falls.
Noah’s salvation is to take the form of a boat—an ark.
The Hebrew word used to describe the vessel is somewhat unusual, appearing in the Bible only here in the story of Noah and at Exodus 2:3–5.
In the latter, it refers to the container in which Moses’ mother set him afloat on the Nile River.
Some commentators think the word, deriving from an Egyptian term, means, chest or box; others think it means, palace.
In Noah’s context, it perhaps implies the special role the ark will play as a container of the precious life within.
This was a hollow chest, a box designed to float on water, made of gopher-wood.
Probably cedar or cypress trees are in view, abundant in the mountains of Armenia.
The precise kind of wood is uncertain since the word gopher is not a translation but a transliteration, that is, a literal rendering of the sounds of the original Hebrew word.
The fact that this is the only place in the Old Testament where this word is used adds to the uncertainty.
“Make thee an ark of gopher wood.” Gopher wood is an almost indestructible wood very much like our redwood in California.
“Rooms shalt thou make in the ark.” The word for “rooms” has the idea of nest.
The elephant would need a room, but the mole would not need quite that much space.
He could be given just a little dirt in a corner, and that is all he would need.
“And shalt pitch it within and without with pitch.” The ark was to be made waterproof.
Genesis 6:15
And this is the fashion which thou shalt make it of: The length of the ark shall be three hundred cubits, the breadth of it fifty cubits, and the height of it thirty cubits.
The dimensions of the ark are impressive, even by modern standards: conversion of 18-inch cubits to feet yields a length of 450 feet, a breadth, or width of 75 feet, and height of 45 feet.
At first glance, the 33,750 square feet of floor space is impressive enough, but Genesis 6:16b, has more to add to this.
The total volume computes to more than 1.5 million cubic feet.
This equates to the capacity of about 375 modern tractor trailers!
Note that Noah’s ark is conceived as a free-floating barge, not as a steerable ship.
Therefore none of its capacity will be occupied by any kind of propulsion system.
The impression that most people have of the ark is the impression they were given by the little Sunday school pictures which made it look like a houseboat.
It was, to me, a very ridiculous sort of a travesty.
It was an exaggerrated immataion of the ark instead of a picture of it like it actually was.
To begin with, the instructions for the building of the ark reveal that it was quite sizable.
“The length of the ark shall be three hundred cubits.” If a cubit is eighteen inches, that ought to give you some conception of how long this ark was.
The question arises as to how they could make it substantial in that day.
My fellow Christian Siblings, we are not dealing with cavemen.
We are dealing with a very intelligent man.
You see, the intelligence that the race has today came right through Noah, and he happened to be a very intelligent man.
Noah is not making an oceangoing ship to withstand fifty-foot waves.
All he is building is a place for life, animal life and man, to stay over quite a period of time—not to go through a storm, but just to wait out the Flood.
For that reason, the ark might lack a great deal that you would find on an oceangoing ship, and that would give it a great deal more room.
If a cubit is 18 inches, 300 cubits would mean that the ark was 450 feet long.
That is a pretty long boat, but the relative measurements is the thing that interests me.
For instance, I noted that the New Mexico, one of our battleships of the World War II era, was built 624 feet long, 106¼ feet wide, and with a mean draught of 29½ feet.
By comparison the ark had practically the same ratio; so that you did not have a ridiculous looking boat at all.
But one which would compare favorably with the way they build ships today.
Genesis 6:16
A window shalt thou make to the ark, and in a cubit shalt thou finish it above; and the door of the ark shalt thou set in the side thereof; with lower, second, and third stories shalt thou make it.
The Hebrew word translated window occurs only here in the Old Testament, so the problem of exact meaning is similar to that of “gopher” in verse 14.
The translators of the old Greek version known as the (sep-twuh-gnt) - Septuagint, who lived two centuries before Christ, seem to have been just as perplexed in their translation. “By an assembling, you shall make the ark; and by a cubit you shall complete it from above.”
Presumably, the ark is to have many openings below an overhanging roof for light and ventilation.
And the door of the ark shalt thou set in the side thereof; with lower, second, and third stories shalt thou make it.
The door of the ark will allow the loading of cargo and animals.
It is likely sealed with pitch before the journey.
Because the ark is to include three habitable stories, its floor space will exceed 100,000 square feet.
“A window shalt thou make to the ark.” The window was not a little slit made in the side of the ark.
Have you ever stopped to think about the stench that there might be with all those animals in there over that period of time?
The window was a cubit high and went all the way around the top of the ark.
The roof must have overlapped the window quite a bit.
That is the way they ventilate a gymnasium today.
At the state fair in Dallas, Texas, the buildings in which the animals are housed have a window which goes all the way around at the top.
With all the animals they have there, it is not an unpleasant place to be. People were sitting in there eating their meals and also sleeping.
It seems to be very comfortable, and the odor does not seem to be bad.
It has been said that poor Noah had to stick his head out this little window in order to live.
That’s ridiculous.
That is man’s imagination and not what the record says here at all.
“And the door of the ark shalt thou set in the side thereof.” The ark had only one door, and that is important.
Christ said, “I am the way” and “I am the door to the sheepfold,” and He is the door to the ark.
“With lower, second, and third stories shalt thou make it.” The ark had three decks, you see, and then, I take it, one either on top or on the bottom which would make four decks.
Was there a door for each deck?
I am rather of the opinion there was only one door and not one for each floor, but frankly, that is beside the point.
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Author | Jerry M. Joyce |
Organization | Jerry Joyce |
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