| THE SIGNS
OF JONAH
Dr. Ralph Blair
A Sermon Preached at City Church, New York, June 23, 2002
What do you think is America’s No. 1-selling children’s video?
It’s a Bible story starring a talking tomato and cucumber. And in October,
more than a thousand big screens across the country will be showing the VeggieTales
version of Jonah and the Whale.
But a sermon on "Jonah and the Whale?" This stuff of tacky tchotchkes
and bubble bath for kids? A sermon on a silly story about a guy who gets swallowed
by a whale? And any Bible Quiz nerd knows it wasn’t a whale anyway.
It was a "big fish." So – don’t "save the whale"
part. But then it’s a silly story about a guy who gets swallowed by
a big fish. So it still sounds far-fetched, even – dare we say –
fishy. Sounds like something right out of The National Enquirer!
Actually, the book of Jonah is a sensationalistic expose. But maybe there’s
a very good reason it’s survived for some 25 centuries. Maybe there’s
a very good reason it’s read every year on Yom Kippur, holiest day of
the Jewish calendar. Nothing comic or kitsch in that! Maybe the book of Jonah
is, after all, more for grown-ups than for kids.
The book of Jonah is a carefully composed satire that features an 8th-century
Jewish prophet. It’s a parable, really. And as such, it has one main
point. That main point is this: To be outraged over God’s grace to outsiders
is outrageous!
Jonah’s our fellow New Yorker. And not just because "Jonah"
means "pigeon." Like pigeons, he "flies the coop." Like
us, he’s flawed. His flaw is so common, Jonah may as well be Jones.
Yet, the warning is this: Don’t "keep up with the Jonahs."
Watch out for the signs of Jonah in your life!
"Now the word of the Lord came to Jonah son of Amittai, saying: ‘Get
up and go at once to Nineveh, that great city, and cry out against it; for
their evil has come up before me.’ But instead, Jonah took a ship bound
for Tarshish so he could get away from the Lord and get out of the Lord’s
mission to Nineveh."
A children’s Bible story book says: "When God said ‘Go!’
Jonah said ‘No!’" And "No" is a complete sentence,
as Anne Lamont notes. Here, it’s a complete rejection of God’s
will.
Nineveh was the capital of Assyria – modern Iraq. She was Israel’s
deadly foe. So Jonah’s happy to agree with the Lord that Nineveh is
indeed evil, but he’s not happy that pagans are to be given the Lord’s
word in order to repent and be saved.
Shown the indisputable evil of Nineveh, Jonah failed to learn the first
lesson of such divine disclosure. In the words of the 18th-century founder
of the Hasidic movement: "If a man has beheld evil, he may know that
it was shown to him in order that he learn his own guilt and repent; for what
was shown to him is also within him." [Baal Shem Tov]
So, instead of going east to Nineveh, Jonah "flies the coop" to
the west. In doing so, he becomes the only Old Testament prophet to so rebelliously
refuse the call of the Lord. He boards a boat bound for the other end of the
known world, a destination for defiance that could not have been more remote.
(By the way, Jonah took flight in the same Mediterranean Sea on which John
Henry Newman wrote his poem about Jonah – printed on the front of today’s
order of worship.)
Jonah’s resistance to the Lord’s will was rooted in his hatred
of the pagans the Lord loved. They were, after all, Israel’s enemies.
As an orthodox Israelite, Jonah knew of the irresistible grace of the Lord.
He knew that the power of the Lord’s prevenient grace paves the way
through proclamation to repentance. And, in the case of Nineveh, he couldn’t
stand it. We are Jonahs, too. We can’t stand it when God’s grace
goes to those we don’t like – let alone to those we see as our
deadly enemies.
Now as a prophet of Israel, Jonah knew full well that – as he’d
later acknowledge – the Lord is the Creator of all those seas he planned
to use as his escape route from the Lord. The Psalmist says it’s impossible
to ever get beyond the jurisdiction of the Lord – even "if you
settle on the farthest side of the farthest sea." How could Jonah have
thought he could actually move even a millimeter away from the Lord’s
worldwide judgment and mercy? But when we have reason enough to rationalize
a self-serving jealousy, even the irrational seems to make sense. Self-righteousness
rips good sense to shreds.
So Jonah tried to flee from the Lord and gracelessly resists his calling
to take the Lord’s grace to pagans. But that irresistible grace of the
Lord never lost track of him. He was intercepted by "a violent wind the
Lord unleashed at sea" – the Wind of the Lord’s own Spirit
over the Lord’s own sea.
"The huge storm so scared the sailors that each prayed to his gods
and tossed cargo overboard. But Jonah was asleep below deck."
Desperate sailors are doing double-duty. They’re trying to lighten
the storm-tossed ship and, at the same time, sacrifice to their gods. But
down below, the self-exiled quitter is in such a depressive stupor that he
can’t get up out of bed. The Hebrew term indicates the depth of his
disobedient and disillusioned distraction. It’s the very opposite of
the scene of a slumbering Jesus, at peace with God, in a storm-tossed boat
of a later day. The chaos of Jonah’s disobedience threatens to engulf
everyone. That’s true of disobedience, whether in public or private
life, at church, at work, wherever – and whether in the greed and lust
of the few that devastate the many or in retaliating remedies that do the
same.
So the captain enlists a listless Jonah to pitch in and pray: "Get
up and call out to your God." The verbs "get up" and "call
out" here echo the Lord’s call to "get up and call out"
to Nineveh. Here’s this pagan sea captain ordering a prophet of Israel
to talk to the very One the prophet’s not speaking to these days! Are
we like Jonah here too? Pagans all around us are praying to silly self-constructions
and praising false gods while we resist prayer and praise to the one true
God. We pout in self-pity because we’re mad at God. We’re mad
that God is love. And we resist God’s call to be a blessing to people
we’re mad at -- people God loves. That’s madness. So we’re
depressed, too.
Why does this polytheistic pagan sea captain tell Jonah to call out to the
God of Israel? Well, he desperately wanted some god’s attention and
thought it couldn’t hurt to appeal for aid from even a foreign god!
The captain’s hope: "Maybe he’ll take notice of us."
This pagan shows more confidence in an unknown god than the prophet shows
in the God he knows. But for Jonah, there should be no "maybes"
about it. Of course He’ll notice! He sees everything on His storm-tossed
sea! If these sailors know this is no ordinary storm, Jonah, too, can figure
it out. Jonah knows which way the Wind of the Lord is blowing.
Meanwhile, the frantic sailors struggle on. Casting all that stuff overboard
hasn’t worked. So they cast lots to their gods. That’s an ancient
"throw of the dice" to see who’s at fault. They discover it’s
this guy down in the bottom of their boat. He’s the one down at the
bottom of this evil. And by the way, the same Hebrew word is used for the
evil of Nineveh!
Jonah and Nineveh were guilty of the same evil? Yes. Maybe not the very
same manifestation, but it’s the very same motivation: Pride, Envy,
Self-righteousness. Wouldn’t Jesus one day say that the many manifestations
of evil all proceed from the same heart of evil? Wouldn’t Paul one day
trap his fellow Jews by castigating the Gentiles to point out that the Jews
were guilty in the same way? And today, we understand psychologically that
people are prone to judge others for that of which they, themselves, are guilty.
That’s actually how they can believe the worst about others. They sense
it in themselves even though they won’t actually admit this. Do we know
ourselves well enough to know that this is true? So it isn’t strange
to read that the rebel prophet of Israel and the rebel pagans of Nineveh practice
the same evil rebellion against the Lord.
"The sailors asked Jonah, ‘What is your business? Where do you
come from? What is your country?… What have you done?’"
Having discovered Jonah to be the immediate source of the problem, the frightened
sailors realize there’s more to it. "What’s your business?"
Jonah’s business is supposed to be the Lord’s business. But he’s
not doing business with the Lord these days. "Where do you come from?"
Jonah’s supposed to be coming from the Lord with the Lord’s message
to Nineveh way back there in the opposite direction. But instead, he’s
coming from his own ill-conceived self-centeredness. And the message is now
blowing back against him. "What have you done?" Indeed. What has
he done? And – they might have added: "What have you left undone?"
"Jonah acknowledges: ‘I am a Hebrew and I worship Yahweh, the
God of heaven, who made the sea and the land.’"
He calls himself a "Hebrew" – a term Israelites used with
foreigners. And even though Jonah has been doing his damnedest to damn the
Ninevehites by getting as far away from the Lord as he could get, he now finds
out from bitter experience that the Lord is inescapable. And, sooner or later,
so is the Lord’s truth and grace we try to outrun. So, in desperation,
the One whose call he’s been refusing is still the One he calls his
Lord – however stiffly. He identifies his Lord as the One who made the
sea – the sea that’s now so dangerous – and the One who
made the dry land that now seems so safe. Even the dry land of Nineveh! He
knows he’s up against more than a storm at sea. He’s up against
the Sovereign of all seas. And it’s all because of his sin. And his
sin is dragging innocent sailors down into the depths with him.
If non-Christians catch us in disobedience, what is our reply to their question:
"Who are you? What is your business? Where are you coming from? What
have you done?" Is our verbal witness as much a contradiction to our
behavior as Jonah’s? Is Jonah’s conscience revealed in his confession
of faith – no matter how much it’s at variance to his commitment?
Is our conscience better revealed in our confession of faith or in our commitment
of faith? Some talk the talk. Some walk the walk. Some can walk and talk at
the same time.
Jonah seems to see that it is his fault they are all in this mess. Faced
with the inescapable evidence, but still not acting on it, Jonah pleads: "Get
rid of me." Instead of taking the initiative and jumping overboard, Jonah
passes the buck to the sailors for solution. He expects them to clean up his
mess. And in doing so, to make themselves complicit in his death?
At this point, these pagans show more mercy for Jonah, their enemy, than
Jonah has had for the pagans of Nineveh, his enemy. The sailors assume, of
course, that, if they were to throw Jonah into the sea, his death might be
avenged by his god. So they try their best to save themselves without sacrificing
Jonah in the process. They continue to struggle valiantly. But it’s
to no avail.
Finally, calling on this unknown Lord to forgive them for what they’re
about to do – which is more repentance than Jonah had had – they
throw Jonah overboard. And immediately, as Jonah sinks down under the waves,
the waves settle down around the sailors. And the sailors praise Jonah’s
Lord for answering their prayers and they gratefully add Israel’s God
to their pantheon.
Now we’ve all heard Dr. Boyd assure us on so many Sunday mornings
that "all seas are the seas of God, and if we sink we sink but deeper
into Him." So Jonah was not going to be allowed to sink beneath the reach
of the Lord, any more than he had been allowed to sail beyond the reach of
the Lord. The Lord is wherever we are.
"And the Lord called a big fish to swallow Jonah, and Jonah was in
the stomach of the fish for three days and three nights."
Perhaps you never thought that "sink[ing] but deeper into Him"
might mean sinking into the stomach of a fish. But we’d best not try
to hold God hostage to our own notions of how best to "sink but deeper
into Him."
Pagan sailors obey the call to rid themselves of the one who refused to
obey the call to preach to pagans. A big fish obeys the call to swallow the
one who refused to obey the call to fish for repentance at Nineveh. Sometimes,
we who think we’re on-call for the Lord can’t hold a candle to
those we think aren’t on-call at all.
Now, saved from the storm and safely stowed in the stomach of the fish,
Jonah has a few days and nights free for reflection. That’s more than
many readers do. As Thomas Carlyle complained, too many of us get stuck in
speculating over what’s going on inside the stomach of the fish instead
of seeing into the mind of Jonah. So let’s go deeper, and listen in
to what’s going on inside Jonah’s head and heart.
"And Jonah prayed to the Lord: You cast me into the heart of the sea
and all Your waves washed over me. And I said, ‘I am cast out of Your
sight. How shall I ever look again on your holy Temple? [Jonah seems to think
that the Lord can’t see him just because he can’t see the Lord!]
The seaweed was wrapped around my throat. … And from the depths I called
to You and You lifted my life from the doors of death.’"
Jonah’s prayer of relief recounts that he called out and was answered
– though not in the way he’d thought he’d be answered. He
called out to the Lord who had called out to him, and though Jonah had not
answered that call, his own call to the Lord was answered. The Lord answers
our call even when we refuse to answer the Lord’s call. But we don’t
call the shots. We’re told that even before Jonah called out, the Lord
had already called on the fish that then faithfully answered the call to catch
the drowning prophet.
"With a song of praise, I will sacrifice to You. Salvation comes from
the Lord!"
That’s how Jonah concludes his prayer. "Salvation comes from
the Lord!" Indeed it does. But might this be only pious posturing? After
all, it was this message of generous grace that made Jonah balk at preaching
it in the first place. He could not stand the Lord’s sending him to
enemies that might repent and receive this salvation that comes from the Lord!
Well now, having been given undeserved deliverance instead of deserved death,
would Jonah now be able to see himself in the mirror of fellow sinners rather
than caricature them as the evil other? Would gratitude for his own deliverance
produce a grateful desire for their deliverance? Says Flannery O’Connor:
"It is hard to make your adversaries real people unless you recognize
yourself in them – in which case, if you don’t watch out, they
cease to be adversaries." Jonah had been watching out for his own ill-conceived
welfare. Watch out, Jonah. You might just get another chance to watch out
for the welfare of others just like yourself. But to do that, you have to
go back and begin again where you went wrong.
So the fish, no longer able to stomach this guy, throws up. And Jonah lands
on the beach.
"The Lord called to Jonah: ‘Get up and go to Nineveh, that great
city, and preach to them as I told you to.’ This time, Jonah went to
Nineveh. And he preached these words: ‘Only forty days more and Nineveh
is going to be destroyed.’ Upon hearing that, all the people of Nineveh
believed the Lord. … And the king of Nineveh proclaimed that all the
people and even all the animals should fast and put on sackcloth and sit in
ashes of repentance. And the king demanded that the people give up their evil
ways. Said he: ‘Who knows? Maybe God will change his mind and relent
so that we won’t perish.’ And God saw their sorrow for their sins
and God saved them."
So far as we know, the Ninevites did not become monotheistic Yahwists, but
remained polytheistic, syncretistic pantheists. But they did respond to Jonah’s
preaching with repentance – the way the Lord wanted Israel to respond,
the way he wanted Jonah to respond, the way he wants us to respond.
But sadly, the good news of the repentance and deliverance of Nineveh is
taken to be bad news by Jonah. He still refused to "get it." The
Hebrew is very clear: Jonah interpreted the Lord’s great mercy to Nineveh
as great evil. The very thing Jonah had feared would happen has happened.
The Lord has granted deliverance for his enemy. But Jonah has learned nothing
from his own deliverance to help him empathize with theirs. So he does what
we all do when we see good things happening to bad people. He gets jealous.
He feels sorry for himself. He goes into a rage. He pouts. He stews in self-righteousness.
"Jonah ranted and whined at the Lord: ‘I knew this would happen.
This is exactly what I predicted. This is why I fled from You. I knew You’re
like this – too compassionate, too slow to anger and too ready to show
mercy to sinners. Well, I can’t take this! I can’t stand it! I
won’t stand for it! I can’t live with this! Not this! Take my
life! Leave me alone!’"
What hysterics! What hypocrisy! Doesn’t he see the irony? When we
behave this way, do we see the irony? So graced himself, yet so graceless.
So graced ourselves, yet so graceless. Saved by the Lord’s mercy, he
demands that mercy be withheld from others? Do we know people like Jonah?
We do if we know ourselves. We insist on mercy for ourselves. We demand revenge
on others. We can’t stand it when good things happen to people we can’t
stand. We smack our lips when bad things happen to those we’d like to
smack across the lips. Our friends do it. Our foes do it. The Right does it.
The Left does it. We all do it. And it’s the Lord’s grace that
let’s us know we do it.
In His mercy, the Lord simply asks: "What right do you have to be angry
over My mercy?" It’s a thought-provoking question the narrator
redirects to us.
And Jesus would one day echo this as the landlord’s words to whining
workers in a parable of the Kingdom of God: "Don’t I have the right
to do what I want with what is mine? Or are you jealous because I am generous?"
[Matt 20:15]
But Jonah ignores the question because there is no possible rebuttal to
its sound reasoning. Jonah keeps resisting and so he refuses to grant the
Lord’s point.
Instead, there, overlooking the city, Jonah keeps his watch, hoping that
Nineveh will get what she deserves. But she’s already received what
she didn’t deserve – the Lord’s amazing grace – just
like Jonah received. Not content with that, Jonah sits and waits and watches
for "the fire next time." But it’s going to be a long wait,
for the answer has already been given. And it’s now getting hotter and
hotter for Jonah himself, there in the noonday sun. So he puts up a flimsy
little lean-to to shield himself. But his pitiful fabrication is poor protection
– from the broiling sun and from his own boiling self-righteousness.
"So the Lord provided a big vine to grow up over Jonah to protect him
from the oppressive heat. And Jonah loved the vine."
Again, as with the provision of the big fish, the Lord’s sovereign
mercy is sent to Jonah in the provision of a large leafy vine of cool rationalization.
Now maybe he’ll be a bit more comfortable in his selfish little vigil
of vengeance. As we can be, he’s more concerned over his own personal
comforts than over the welfare of thousands. He might even mistake the vine
for something more than the Lord’s compassion over a pathetically self-preoccupied
prophet. Like we can, he might mistake it for the Lord’s approval of
his self-centeredness.
"But at dawn, the Lord provided a worm to attack the vine and the vine
withered and died. Next, the Lord provided a scorching east wind that whipped
up the heat of the day. And Jonah wanted to die."
As with the provision of the big fish and the big vine, the Lord’s
sovereign mercy is sent yet again to Jonah. This time, the mercy comes in
the forms of a ravishing worm and the suffocating scirocco. In one way or
another, in gifts wanted and unwanted, the Lord in his mercy was committed
to bring Jonah to his senses. But Jonah would rather die than love enemies
beloved of the Lord. Instead of admitting the evil of his demand that Nineveh
be damned, Jonah just went on trying to rationalize, insisting that he had
every right to be furious – especially now that his precious vine had
withered and died.
"The Lord replied: ‘You are concerned about a vine that cost
you nothing, that you did not cause to grow, that sprouted overnight and perished
overnight. And am I not to be concerned for the welfare of Nineveh, that great
city, in which there are more than 120,000 people who cannot tell their right
hand from their left – to say nothing of the animals?’"
The Lord has the last word. He reduces Jonah’s offenses to the least
offensive of all – his self-centered anger over the loss of the vine.
The Lord thereby shows His great mercy to Jonah, yet once again. And the Lord
contrasts Jonah’s concern over a lost vine against the Lord’s
concern over 120,000 lost souls.
And then, in almost an afterthought of poignancy, the Lord mentions His
concern for the welfare of the animals of Nineveh. If Jonah cannot identify
with the people of Nineveh, perhaps at least, he can identify with the dumb
animals – for just like Jonah, the animals are oblivious to the grace
they receive from the Lord.
Are we just like them – the ignorant animals and the indifferent Jonah?
Jeremiah was another depressed prophet. But his depression was due to his
fellow Jews’ resistance and opposition to his preaching judgment from
God against them. They were exiled in the same land to which Jonah had been
sent. And they were to receive the same message as Jonah had received for
the Ninevites. It’s the same message that’s sent to us. "Seek
the welfare of the city where I have sent you into exile, and pray to the
Lord on its behalf, for in its welfare you will find your welfare." [Jeremiah
29:7]
Jonah somehow thought of God’s grace as a zero-sum game. He had the
notion that he’d lose if Nineveh were won. But that’s not how
grace works. The more grace we pass on, the more grace we possess –
for that is what it is to be possessed by Grace Himself.
Yale theologian Miroslav Volf survived his Croatian homeland horrors. He
reminds us that "As Christians, we must develop a will to embrace and
be reconciled with our enemy." He says that "This will to embrace
is absolutely unconditional. There is no imaginable deed that should take
a person outside our will to embrace him, because there is no imaginable deed
that can take a person out of God’s will to embrace humanity –
which is what," he says, "is inscribed in big letters in the narrative
of the Cross of Christ."
The sign of a Jonah is resistance to the wideness of God’s love for
life together. The sign of Jonah, to which Jesus alluded, is resurrection
into the wideness of God’s love for life together – forever. The
more we’re rid of resistance to God’s love for others, the more
we’re fit for resurrection into God’s love with others, now and
forevermore.
No. Jonah’s not just for talking veggies, tchotchkes and bubble bath.
Jonah’s not just for juveniles. Jonah’s a jolt of "Get real!"
We’re all under the judgment of mercy and so to be outraged over God’s
grace to others, including outsiders, is outrageous indeed. That’s the
point of the story. As Paul wrote to Christians in Rome: "God has imprisoned
all in disobedience so that He may be merciful to all." [Romans 11:32]
This is the Good News we’re called to share with all: "Turn around!
God hates your evil because God loves you!"
But do we wish to share that message with those we don’t love? Well
God loves them anyway – in spite of our resistance to this fact of His
grace. So we’d better get used to that.
It really would be so much easier to love them if we dropped our self-righteousness
and rested in Christ’s righteousness, if we gratefully acknowledged
that we and they, together, are the Lord’s beloved enemies.
So as He did with Jonah, He’s kept calling on us to share with them
all, His judgment of mercy. We have another chance to do that today. Perhaps
we’ll have another chance, tomorrow. Who knows? His call is this: Give
them My love. Give them My love. Give them our love. back to top
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