“Noah was a righteous man, the only blameless person living on earth at the time, and he walked in close fellowship with God.” Genesis 6:9 (NLT)
There’s only one way to get the kind of courage it took for Noah to keep going after receiving such a big dream from God: He had to stay close to God.
Hebrews 11:7 says, “Faith led Noah to listen when God warned him about the things that he could not see” (GW).
Noah heard God speak. Do you ever wonder why you don’t hear God speak? I hear God by getting near to God. I can't hear God when I'm far away. I’ve got to get near to God.
That means I spend time with God every day—reading and studying the Bible, talking to him in prayer, being quiet, and just listening to God.
The Bible says that Noah “walked faithfully with God” (Genesis 6:9 NIV). Another translation of this verse says that Noah “walked in close fellowship with God” (NLT). When I walk with someone, that means I am near to them.
Walking with someone implies several other things. First, it implies affiliation. In other words, I'm not ashamed to be with them. I'm not worried about telling people I follow Jesus.
Second, the Bible tells us in Amos 3:3 that two people cannot walk together unless they agree. When I walk with God, I agree to go where he wants to go and do what he wants me to do. I am obedient to his will.
Third, walking with God means I'm in alignment. If I'm walking with God, I'll be out of step with the world. I'll do things differently than other people because God’s way is counter-cultural.
Walking with God is affiliation, agreement, and alignment with his Word and his will. Noah walked with God, and he wasn't afraid of disapproval or rejection or criticism or even a worldwide flood. He knew that when you’re walking with God, you're near to God, and there is nothing to fear.
In summary:
Genesis 6:9 and Hebrews 11:7 highlight Noah as a man of exceptional character who stood in stark contrast to the corruption of his era through his "walk" with God. This intimacy wasn't just a feeling; it was a disciplined lifestyle of proximity that allowed him to hear divine instructions others missed. By maintaining constant affiliation, agreement, and alignment with God, Noah developed the resilience to pursue a counter-cultural mission despite public ridicule. The text argues that hearing God’s voice is a direct result of physical and spiritual nearness, requiring daily habits of prayer and study to remain in step with a divine pace rather than a worldly one.
Bottom Line:
Spiritual clarity and the courage to pursue "big dreams" are not sudden gifts, but the natural byproducts of a daily, disciplined walk in close fellowship with God.
Next Step:
Commit to a "Proximity Review" this week. Identify one specific time of day where I currently allow "worldly noise" (social media, news, or work chatter) to crowd out my ability to listen. Replace just 15 minutes of that time with intentional silence or Scripture reading to realign my identity as someone who prioritizes God's voice over public opinion. This disciplined action ensures that when God gives me my next "impossible" instruction, I'm already close enough to hear the whisper.
