
Genesis 6-11 & Moses 8 I Come Follow Me I Handmaidens, Harems and Heroines I Lynne Hilton Wilson
Feb 2, 2026
A lively look at Noah, the Flood, and the Tower of Babel through the Joseph Smith Translation. Focus on often-overlooked women in Noah’s family and their roles aboard the ark. Comparisons to other flood traditions and details about ark logistics and lineage timelines. Reflection on Abram’s family, Sarah’s complexity, and themes of faith, repentance, and covenant continuity.
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Human Choice, Not Angelic Interbreeding
- The Joseph Smith Translation reframes 'sons of God' and 'daughters of men' as descendants of Adam and Eve with moral agency.
- This perspective emphasizes preaching, repentance, and human choice before the Flood.
Noah as Remaining Preacher
- Noah is portrayed as Enoch's descendant who remains to preach while many righteous are translated.
- The text links translation of the righteous with continued opportunities for the wicked to repent before judgment.
Noah's Women As Covenant Laborers
- Lynne describes Noah's wife and daughters-in-law as essential laborers who covenant with God before boarding the ark.
- She imagines their long, exhausting duties caring for thousands of animals during the ark's year-long voyage.





