by jimwalton » Thu May 29, 2014 10:16 am
The "what if" question is always difficult, if not impossible, to answer. To me the most honest answer is that God would have motivated him to do it. Case studies:
- Moses, when God called him to approach Pharaoh and lead his people to freedom, said, "Nope, get somebody else" (Ex. 4.13). Um, Moses ended up approaching Pharaoh and leading his people out of Egypt.
- Jonah, when God told him to go to Nineveh to preach against it, ran in the opposite direction (Jonah 1.3). Jonah ended up in Nineveh, for sure.
We are not to infer that God is a bully. Both Moses and Jonah were righteous men, and willing to follow God. They objected to the particular task, but God persuaded them that his presence would go with them.
To continue on, we know that Noah was a righteous man, and that he walked with God. It would certainly be weird for him to defy God, but if he had a distaste for the task (it was a bit on the enormous side of the scale), God would have, presumably, encouraged Noah with reassurances, as was his pattern (that we discover later). What we find through the text is Noah's complete, and apparently unfaltering, obedience (Gn. 6.22; 7.5). Deciding not to build the ark doesn't seem to have been on Noah's mind, according to the record we have.