Godly Play - Noah and The Flood
Godly Play - Noah and The Flood
Godly Play - Noah and The Flood
Creation Level 2
NOAH AND THE FLOOD
Gen 6:9-22, 9:8-17
When children are seated in a semi-circle ready to listen to the story, place the gold box/bag,
containing the materials you will need, carefully beside you.
Move Noah, Noah’s wife and the rest of the animals into the ark.
God told Noah to go into the ark. Noah and his family and all the animals boarded
the ark.
Raise the ark a little and hold above the ground as you say:
It rained for forty days and nights.
Encountering the Word Through Godly Play/Awakenings/Diocese of Ballarat/10
Raise the ark higher, rock the ark, as you say:
The water rose higher and higher over the earth. The ark was tossed and turned
on the water.
Hold up the dove and then fly the dove back to the ark.
He released a dove to find out if there was dry land.
The dove came back exhausted. There had been no dry place for it to rest!
Bring Noah, his wife and the animals out of the ark; place them together on the underlay
in front of the ark – Noah and his wife in the centre.
God called to Noah, “Come out of the ark. Let the animals go free to live on the
earth.” Noah, his family and all the animals left the ark. Noah built an altar and
gave thanks to God.
Place the rainbow coloured material around the figures in an arc or make arc movement
with your hand.
God then put a beautiful rainbow across the sky.
God said to Noah, “Look at the bow in the sky. It is a sign of a covenant I make
with you and all living creatures. I will protect and care for all of creation. The
earth will not be destroyed again. I am with you.”
Leave Noah and wife in centre. Move the animals out of the ark in different directions.
Noah and his family lived on the earth for many, many more years.
I Wonder:
I wonder what Noah thought when God asked him to build the Ark?
I wonder what message God is telling us in this story?
I wonder why God loves us so much, even when we do the wrong thing?
The story of Noah and the great flood follows the pattern of other flood stories in the
ancient literature of Israel’s neighbours. The story is told in Genesis 6-9. It uses simple
language a much repetition, suggesting this story may have come from a long history of
oral storytelling. The story reprises some of the elements of the seven day account of
creation in Genesis 1. Again, God is hovering above the waters (Gen 8:1) perhaps to
suggest that the flood offers a renewal of the original creation, a chance to start again with
the righteous humans and the blameless animals. Everything has been washed clean by
the waters of creation.
A covenant or agreement, is made between God and Noah and his descendants. The
sign of the covenant is a rainbow. The image of God given in this narrative is ambiguous.
On the one hand God is presented as angry and vengeful, unhappy with the corruption
that has entered God’s good creation; on the other hand, God is shown as compassionate
and forgiving.
Maurice Ryan 2003, Expressions Book 6