Righteous Old Testament

Righteous Noah

Also known as Noah the Patriarch

A righteous man saved with his family through the Flood and remembered as an ancestor of all later humanity.

Feast Day
December 14
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.

Life

Noah is one of the patriarchs of the Old Testament, remembered as a righteous man who, with his family, was preserved through the Flood and who afterward stands as an ancestor of all later humanity. His life is recorded in the Book of Genesis (chapters 5-9), where he appears as the tenth patriarch in the line of Seth and the son of Lamech.

In the Eastern Orthodox Church Noah is numbered among the Holy Forefathers, the Old Testament ancestors who lived before and under the Law and who are commemorated in the weeks before the Nativity of Christ. His feast is kept on December 14, within the Forefathers cycle. The New Testament holds him up as an example of faith and righteousness.

Timeline 4 moments Read Hide
  1. Genesis 5:28-32 Birth and family Noah is born to Lamech, descended through the line of Seth, the tenth patriarch before the Flood. He becomes the father of three sons: Shem, Ham, and Japheth.
  2. Genesis 6-7 The command to build the ark Finding favor with God amid widespread human wickedness, Noah is commanded to build an ark to preserve his family and pairs of every kind of living creature from the coming Flood.
  3. Genesis 8-9 The covenant after the Flood After the waters recede, Noah offers sacrifice. God establishes a covenant with Noah and, through him, with all humanity, promising never again to destroy the earth by flood, and sets the rainbow as its sign.
  4. Genesis 9:28-29 Later life and death After the Flood Noah cultivates the soil and plants a vineyard. According to the biblical chronology he lives to a great age before his death.

Contributions & Legacy

4 contributions Read Hide

The Flood narrative

The Genesis account (chapters 6-9) relates that, because of the pervasive wickedness of humankind, God resolved to blot out life upon the earth, but that Noah found favor in his sight. Noah was directed to build an ark and to bring into it his wife, his sons Shem, Ham, and Japheth, their wives, and pairs of the living creatures, so that they might be preserved through the deluge.

When the waters had subsided, Noah offered burnt offerings, and God made a covenant with him and with all his descendants, declaring that the earth would never again be destroyed by a flood. The rainbow set in the clouds is given in the narrative as the sign of this covenant (Genesis 9:13). Noah and his sons are blessed and commanded to be fruitful and to multiply (Genesis 9:1).

Commemoration among the Holy Forefathers

In the Eastern Orthodox Church Noah is counted among the Holy Forefathers — the Old Testament ancestors who lived before and under the Law, including Adam, the patriarchs Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the matriarchs, the prophets, judges, and kings. These figures are commemorated on the Sunday of the Holy Forefathers, the second Sunday before the Nativity (falling between December 11 and 17), and again in the Forefathers cycle that prepares for the feast of the Nativity.

The commemoration draws attention to the lineage of faith linking the Old Testament righteous to the coming of Christ, presenting them as part of the history of salvation that culminates in the Nativity.

Patristic typology

Orthodox commentators have read the figure of Noah and the ark typologically. By patristic interpretation, the ark is understood as a figure of the Church — called the "Ark of Salvation" — through which the faithful are carried safely through the waters; in some readings the saving vessel is also associated with the Theotokos. This typological reading is presented as the Fathers' interpretation of the Old Testament event as prefiguring the saving work of Christ through His Church, and is distinct from the events recorded in the Genesis narrative itself.

Witness in the New Testament

The New Testament treats Noah as a model of righteousness and faith. The Letter to the Hebrews lists him among the exemplars of faith, commending him for building the ark in reverent fear (Hebrews 11:7). The Second Letter of Peter calls him a "preacher of righteousness" (2 Peter 2:5).

Christ refers to "the days of Noah" in speaking of the coming of the Son of Man (Matthew 24:37-39), and the First Letter of Peter likens the deliverance of the few souls brought safely through the water in the ark to the salvation effected in baptism (1 Peter 3:20).

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints