Noah too, only a few chapters later, has an episode involving nudity. He got drunk one day and passed out naked in his tent. His son Ham then stumbled in upon him and was cursed for it. Not only Ham but his entire progeny. (Why such a harsh penalty?!) Ham's brothers had to walk in backwards after Ham to cover Noah with a blanket...
From here the theme of nudity and clothing persists in the Bible, right up to the book of Revelation where those who remain in the end are not naked but dressed in white robes. Here the chosen people are not covered by (shameful?) hides and blankets but clothes that remind us of the original light of creation. Or better yet,of Joseph's magnificent coat given to him as a gift from his father to bespeak Joseph's glory.
Clothing and nudity is a subtle yet powerful theme from beginning to end.
And that's just it, or what I believe is one of the most fundamental patterns of the Bible: the peculiar movement that constantly emerges there from being naked in the beginning to being clothed in glory through grace at the end.
"Naked I came from the womb," declared Job, "and naked I will remain!" But in faith and truth Job is not naked in the end. Rather, like those who remain at the end in Revelation, he is clothed in glory through the grace of God. He is not naked but decked in richer and more beautiful clothes than ever before...
It is the same pattern in the book of Job that holds on the broader Biblical scale. From Adam and Eve to those who are dressed in the white robes in the end times. Again and again the movement from being naked to being clothed in glory through grace emerges in the Bible.
Even the hides given to Adam and Eve and the blanket placed upon Noah fit this holy pattern. Despite their shameful connotations.
Thanks be to Job.
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