Gabe Stalnaker's exposition of the Tower of Babel (Genesis 11:1-9) presents this narrative as a foundational illustration of the doctrines of human depravity, divine sovereignty, and salvation by grace alone. The sermon demonstrates that mankind's attempted tower-building represents direct rebellion against God's explicit command to scatter and replenish the earth, revealing that judgment alone (the flood) does not transform the sinful nature of humanity—only God's sovereign grace through Christ's redemptive work accomplishes genuine transformation. Stalnaker emphasizes that the multiplication of languages serves as perpetual evidence of mankind's sinful condition and rebellion against divine authority, connecting this judgment to the central gospel truth illustrated in Isaiah 53, where Christ's substitutionary atonement accomplishes what human works cannot. The preacher argues that salvation operates entirely upon God's initiative ("let us" spoken by the Trinity) rather than human effort, and that true repentance constitutes a sovereign change of mind from self-directed rebellion to submission to God's will. Through careful exegetical comparison of man's repeated "let us" (expressing autonomous will) with God's "let us" (expressing sovereign grace), Stalnaker clarifies the fundamental distinction between false religion (works-righteousness) and true gospel salvation (God's completed work at Calvary), establishing that the Babel account exposes both human sin and divine mercy as central to Reformed soteriology.
“Judgment is not what makes men and women to be new creatures. It takes the mercy of God through the death and the blood of Jesus Christ, slaying the old creature... It takes God making old things to be passed away and all things to be made new.”
“Let us... those two words right there are two of the most dangerous words that could ever come out of a man or a woman's mouth. Let us, not if it's the Lord's will, let us.”
“The only reason that any of us were stopped in our tracks and redeemed from all of our rebellion and sin against God, the only reason is because the Trinity God said, let us. The Father said, I'll do the choosing. The Son said, I'll do the saving. And the Spirit said, I'll do the quickening and the calling.”
“Every truly saved soul will cry, the Lord did it... That's the gospel. The Lord did it, that's salvation. The Lord did it and he gets all the glory for it.”
The Tower of Babel story in Genesis 11 illustrates humanity's rebellion against God's command to scatter and populate the earth.
Genesis 11:1-9, Genesis 9:1
The confusion of languages at Babel shows that despite human rebellion, God's sovereign will ultimately prevails.
Proverbs 16:9, Genesis 11:1-9
The scattering at Babel reflects God's judgment on human pride and establishes the necessity of His grace for salvation.
Ephesians 2:8-9, Genesis 11:1-9
The Babel account illustrates total depravity by showing humanity's inclination to rebel against God’s commands.
Genesis 11:1-9, Romans 3:23
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