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FAIR › Scripture Study Resources: Supplement Your Come, Follow Me Study › Study Resources for the Doctrine & Covenants and Church History › Week 7 Noah Found Grace in the Eyes of the Lord
Genesis 6-11; Moses 8
Noah’s ark became a refuge because he followed God’s instructions exactly. This illustrates how obedience to prophetic direction provides spiritual safety amid the storms of life. (Moses 8:18, 23–24)
Though the world mocked him, Noah fulfilled his prophetic role in warning others of coming judgment. This emphasizes the consistent divine pattern of God sending prophets to prepare His people. (Moses 8:17, 20–21)
The people’s refusal to listen to Noah led to their downfall. This underscores the importance of heeding living prophets today, whose counsel helps us avoid spiritual and temporal dangers. (Moses 8:24)
Just as God gave Noah a covenant sign, He gives us the sacrament and temple ordinances as reminders of His enduring love and assurances of redemption. (Genesis 9:13–17)
God called Noah as a prophet to warn the people and prepare an ark to save his family and all creatures from the coming destruction. For decades, Noah preached repentance, yet the people hardened their hearts and mocked him. Ultimately, the Flood served as both a cleansing judgment on the wicked and a new beginning for God’s covenant people.
If you have questions on this week’s reading, please email your questions to us here.
Practical solutions for someone in faith crisis:
Action Step: Choose one teaching from General Conference or a recent message from the First Presidency and apply it this week.
Noah’s willingness to build the ark — despite ridicule — preserved his family. Likewise, prophetic counsel provides protection and direction in our day. Acting quickly shows faith and invites God’s blessings.
Encouraging Thought:
Safety is not in the absence of the storm, but in the presence of God’s word and our obedience to it.
Action Step: Create or select a daily reminder (phone alarm, scripture note, sticky note) to reflect on your baptismal or temple covenants.
God gave the rainbow to remind Noah of His covenant mercy. Modern covenant symbols — like the sacrament — anchor us to God’s promises and keep His love present in daily life.
Encouraging Thought:
God’s covenants are not only ancient rainbows in the sky but daily anchors of hope in our lives.
Like Noah, we may be surrounded by voices that mock or dismiss righteousness. Standing firm in obedience strengthens faith, protects families, and invites God’s grace.
Encouraging Thought:
Objective: Learners will understand the importance of heeding prophetic warnings despite worldly distractions.
A phone or speaker with background noise (music or chatter), slips of paper with short prophetic quotes.
Activity Steps:
Follow-Up Question: What helps you recognize and act on the voice of living prophets when the world seems loud?
Objective: Learners will appreciate how God uses symbols to remind us of His covenants.
Pictures of rainbows or colored paper strips; chalkboard/whiteboard.
Activity Steps:
Introduction (5 min): Show a picture of a rainbow. Ask learners what feelings or memories they associate with rainbows.
Scripture Discussion (5 min): Read Genesis 9:13–17. Discuss why God chose the rainbow as a token of His covenant and how it would remind future generations of His promise.
Application (5 min): Have learners list or draw modern symbols of God’s covenants (sacrament, temple garments, baptismal font). Discuss how remembering these can strengthen faith.
Follow-Up Question: What daily reminders help you stay true to your covenants with God?
Objective: Learners will discover how obedience and preparation provide spiritual safety.
Small blocks, paper, or items for a simple “ark-building” object lesson.
Activity Steps:
Introduction (5 min): Divide learners into small groups. Ask them to quickly build a small “ark” using blocks or paper. When finished, ask: What made it harder or easier to build?
Scripture Discussion (5 min): Read Genesis 6:22 and Moses 8:18. Emphasize Noah’s exact obedience and patience in building the ark over many years.
Application (5 min): Compare ark-building to building a life of faith — step by step, commandment by commandment. Invite learners to choose one “plank of faith” they can add this week (prayer, scripture study, service).
Follow-Up Question: What “ark of faith” are you building in your life, and how can you strengthen it this week?
Moses 8:20–24 — Noah preaches repentance but is rejected.
Teaching in the Savior’s Way — Principles for strengthening families and communities in righteousness.

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