The Bible Recap - Day 188 (Jonah 1-4) - Year 5
Episode Date: July 7, 2023SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! Seriously, go there. - Join our PATREON community for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits - Check out Way Nation’s Pr...ayer Wall here! FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Video: Jonah Overview - 2 Kings 14:25 - Matthew 12:39-42 - Map: Jonah's Journey - Become a RECAPtain! SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Congratulations!
Today, we finished our 18th book of the Bible, so let's talk about it.
Chono is a prophet who lived during the time of King Jerry II, a king in the Northern Kingdom of Israel.
This is around 750 BC.
Some people regard this book as allegory and not as historical fact, but one important thing
to note, it's almost certainly not a parable, because one of the characteristics of parables
is that they have anonymous characters, not real humans with names, whereas Jonah is
mentioned by name in both the book of Second Kings and by Christ
himself in Matthew 12.
And on top of that, it's far more complex than any other parables we have in Scripture.
Regardless whether you view it as allegory or history, the things it reveals to us about
God remain the same.
He shows love and mercy to many of his enemies, choosing to adopt them into his family.
Jonah is probably the author of this book because it includes details only he would know.
And since a lot of the book shows how foolish and selfish Jonah was,
it probably serves as evidence that he was able to look back on things with a healthy dose of
humility and humor. It seems like he eventually learned not to take himself too seriously, hopefully.
But that's definitely not how he started out.
When God first commissions Jonah to go rebuke the Ninevites
for their wicked ways, Jonah boxed at the idea.
But we don't find out why until later.
The reason is, Jonah hates the Ninevites.
He doesn't want them to repent,
and he knows that if he goes and rebuke them,
that's what they'll do. Is there someone like this for you? Someone you hope doesn't
get to experience God's mercy? I remember having a conversation with someone once, mentioning
a death row conversion, and the person I was talking to said, I don't believe that.
There's no way God would save that person, not after all they've done. That's Jonah's
attitude, too.
He seems to have a real us versus them mentality.
We're all naturally inclined toward people
who are like us, who look like us and act like us
and dress like us, that's very normal,
but that's exactly the problem.
Since God himself isn't confined to a body
and we're all made in his image,
then there's something in every single person
that has a point of connection for him. So he spreads his love out to people from among
every nation. And Jonah's arrogant attitude, whether it's racist or self-righteous or both,
is not going to cut it for a person following Yahweh. God doesn't let him off the hook.
Jonah tries to run, as though you can run from a God who is everywhere.
He hops a ship to Tarshish, which was probably located in modern Spain.
And Nineveh, where God told him to go, is in modern-day Iraq,
which is the opposite direction of Spain if you're coming from where he lived in Israel.
We'll link to a map of Jonah's travels in the show notes in case that's helpful.
Pretty soon, a storm hits, and the sailors are looking for any god who can save them.
Jonas fesses up that he's the reason they're all about to die, and they're astonished at his rebellion.
It's interesting that these pagan sailors have a higher regard for Yahweh's commands than Jonas the Prophet does.
Jonas tells them to throw him overboard, and they do, but not before
they throw a bunch of cargo overboard first. Like we've talked about before, we never
sin in a vacuum. Jonah sin impacts the people around him. But when Jonah finally obeys,
his obedience impacts them as well. Because then, the storm calms, and the text tells us that they
feared God. Whether that was a
fleeting response or a change of heart, we don't know. Then God demonstrates his
sovereignty over the actions of animals by appointing a big fish to swallow him
up. While the text never specifically says it's a whale, that's a pretty
fair assumption. It's just not 100% certain. And Jonah stays there for three days
and three nights. Christ quotes this incident
in Matthew, paralleling his time in the grave with Jonah's time in the fish's belly.
In chapter 2, Jonah prays a beautiful prayer of thanksgiving, despite being covered in
digestive enzymes. He seems grateful to have been rescued from death at sea and seems to
trust that he's getting out of this fish alive one way or another. But strangely, repentance is entirely absent from his prayer. His heart
hasn't changed, despite God's mercy toward him. After his prayer, the fish vomits him up on the
shore, where God repeats his call to Jonah to go tell the Ninevites to repent. So Jonah, unrepentant, takes a road trip to Ninevah
to tell other people to repent.
Jonah shows up with his rebuke
and just like we saw with the sailors,
the keen of this notoriously wicked place
shows more humility and obedience
than the Prophet sent to warn them.
The whole country fasts in sackcloth and ashes,
signs of repentance and mourning, and God relents
from bringing disaster on them for their wickedness.
He's always eager to forgive, but us, not so much as Jonah demonstrates.
God even uses reluctant and bitter people in His plan for redemption.
Chapter 4 is full of Jonah's pride, bitterness, and self-pity. He so self-focus that he can't
rejoice that an entire nation has turned from their wicked ways. He begs God to kill
him. And maybe he still has hope that Nineveh is going to screw things up because he pitches
a tent within view of the city, maybe hoping it will be swallowed in an earthquake or something.
But even in Jonas' bitterness, God is still kind to him,
comforting him with shade. Jonah keeps asking God to kill him, but God keeps keeping him alive.
And when God tries to point out Jonah's irrational behavior, Jonah gets moody and sassy.
And the book ends abruptly with God telling Jonah how merciful he is.
Jonah knows this already and hates it. He wants God's mercy for
himself, but not for anyone else. There are so many great things about God in this
book that it was hard to narrow down my God shop for today, but I'm gonna go
with a verse that has become one of my favorites in all of scripture. Jonah
2.8 says, those who pay regard to vain idols for sake their hope of steadfast love.
It's been so true in my own life, time, and time again, chasing after those fleeting
joys to fill me up and satisfy me, and they always leave me empty.
But when I disengage from those things and engage with the one true God, I am always met
with his steadfast love.
It was there all along.
That's what steadfast love is.
It's right there with me.
He's waiting patiently for me to notice.
He's where the joy is.
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