Nothing is Hidden from
God (or, “The Fallacy of off-the-Grid
Christians”)
Jonah 1:7-10
Introduction: It is good to be gathered as the church in a single service once again. Still, we are thankful for the technology that has been so essential over this past year. We have been live streaming our services for a while now. Our church has a FaceBook page and a website where we can post information. We’ve been able during the pandemic to have prayer meeting and Bible study on Zoom. Technology is and has been a blessing, but it is no substitute for being together. Truly, technology can be addicting. We are always connected. Some people use Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, and the like to let you know what they are thinking or doing minute-by-minute. My life is really not that interesting! Most of you have smart phones, right? Like some of you, when I was young, Maxwell Smart was talking into his shoe phone, and Captain Kirk’s communicator was basically a flip phone! Our phones back then were still rotary phones, with wires! Once you left the house, you were offline!
Occasionally these days someone will
“take a break” from social media. I had a pastor friend who a couple of times,
during Lent, went off of Facebook. That’s a choice. Some of you have cancelled
your accounts for a time. But what about when you are traveling in a remote
area, or spending days “off the grid” with no cell service, that can seem a
little weird, you feel disconnected, right?
What
about your connection with God? Can you hear me now? In our passage, Jonah was trying to go “off-the-grid.” His problem was not that he couldn’t connect with God, but rather
that he didn’t want to… He wanted to get so far away from God and the
mission He was calling him to, that God would need to send someone else to
bring His warning to Nineveh (or better still, just judge them and get it over with!). Did Jonah forget Psalm
139, “Where can I hide from his presence?” God is omnipresent, and
omniscient. Nothing is hidden from Him. That included Jonah and his rebellion,
and it includes our sin.
The BIG Idea: God knows us, and He will expose our hidden sin, causing us to face
the truth about ourselves, mercifully calling us to repentance.
The context
(6): “Arise… call out to your God…” It seems the only one not
praying on that ship, in that storm, was Jonah, the prophet of God! Why? He was
closing his heart, his mind, and his ears to the Lord. He had turned away from the one true God. How could he
ask God’s help when he willfully turned his back on God?
6 So the
captain came and said to him, "What do you mean, you sleeper? Arise, call
out to your god! Perhaps the god will give a thought to us, that we may not
perish."
Jonah was running from God. He was not in a praying
state of mind! Had he repented and asked passage back to the coast, would
the storm have relented? We don’t know, but that seems likely. But Jonah was
not ready to repent, or to even talk to the Lord. Have you gone through times
in your spiritual journey when you found prayer increasingly difficult? Were
there times when you, consciously or subconsciously, “cut the cord” and went
“off the grid” spiritually speaking? Maybe staying away from church? Missing
reading the Bible? Avoiding people or situations that might lead to spiritual
discussions? I don’t know all the details of your story, but I know this: if
you tried it, God didn’t let you go. He pursued you, like what one poet called
“the hound of heaven,” He would not let you get away. And here you are, by
grace!
I want to notice another detail here.
Jonah is silent, withdrawn from the living God. These men are crying out to
their impotent idols, desperate for rescue. Notice that captain’s justification
for urging Jonah to pray to his God, “Perhaps the god will give a thought to
us, that we may not perish.” If you read ahead in Jonah, we see an
almost identical statement on the lips of the king of Nineveh… “Who knows?
God may turn and relent and turn from his fierce anger, so that we may not
perish.” The pagan captain and the pagan king are willing to cry out
for mercy to the God of Jonah! Still, the prophet is silent. He doesn’t
reflect the character of his God, who “…is not willing that any should
perish, but that all should come to repentance.” (2 Pet 3:9). He doesn’t
show the heart of God who “…so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten
Son, so that whoever believes in Him should not perish, but have eternal life…”
(John 3:16). Thank God, the prophet greater than
Jonah came in the fulness of time, speaking the truth, and fulfilling all
righteousness. Willingly, He took on Himself the guilt of all who would
believe. Jonah thought his sin was hidden. But God will expose our hidden sin,
causing us to face the truth about ourselves, while He mercifully calls us to
repentance.
I. How do we know what God expects of us? We need revelation. Remember how this book began, "The Word of the Lord came to Jonah..." For us "revelation" means not
casting lots, but the Word illumined by the Spirit (7). And they said to one another, "Come, let us cast
lots, that we may know on whose account this evil has come upon us." So
they cast lots, and the lot fell on Jonah.
Casting
lots doesn’t seem like a very spiritual activity! But Jonah, the prophet of
God, waylaid by his own sin, was initially silent before the sailors… These men had no word from God. It seems
Jonah had no response to the captain’s appeal in v.6. So, they did what they
knew, maybe “the gods” would reveal to them through lots who was the cause to
their perilous situation. It was clear that this was no typical storm at sea. It
had come on them so quickly and with such ferocity that they could only think
there was a supernatural force behind it. The ship was about to break up, they
had to try what they knew.
“So they cast lots, and the lot fell on
Jonah…” Jonah was exposed as the reason for the storm! Casting lots may seem like a strange way to
find truth in a situation like this. The use of “lots” to discern the will of
God is not unheard of in the Bible. A couple of examples from Scripture…
Numbers 26:55-56 “…But the land shall be
divided by lot. According to the names of the tribes of their fathers they
shall inherit. 56 Their
inheritance shall be divided according to lot between the larger and the
smaller." (cf. Josh 18:6-10).
Joshua 7:14 “In the morning therefore you shall be
brought near by your tribes. And the tribe that the LORD takes by lot
shall come near by clans. And the clan that the LORD takes shall come near by
households. And the household that the LORD takes shall come near man by man.” And
so, the the lot fell on Achan, and his sin was exposed!
Proverbs 16:33 “The lot is cast into the lap, but its every decision is from
the LORD.”
Acts 1:26 “And
they cast lots for them, and the lot fell on Matthias, and he was numbered
with the eleven apostles.”
What is noteworthy, is that after the pouring
out of the Spirit on the believers on the day of Pentecost (Acts 2), there are
no more examples in the Bible of lots as a means of seeking God’s will. Why?
First,
Christ commissioned the Apostles as His authorized representatives and
spokesmen in the foundational period of the church. They brought the Word of
Christ to the early church, and in their teaching which is preserved in the Bible, along with the Old Testament Scriptures, we have the Word of God written.
Secondly,
the Holy Spirit himself abides in every believer. And so, we are led by
the Spirit, guided and empowered by Him, and when necessary convicted by Him. And
God has given us a community of which we are a part, brothers and sisters who
also are filled with the Spirit. So, we can make decisions based first
on the objective truth of the Word, guided by the counsel of fellow
believers, and checked by the inward prompting of the Spirit. When those
three align we can know that we’re on track. No need for lots!
By the
way, it starts with being in the Word. Do you have a regular program for
reading the Bible? I like the idea of giving a regular, daily time to
Bible reading and prayer. For me that is in the morning. Whatever works for
you. Prayer goes with Bible reading like air goes with life. Jonah isn’t
praying yet, even though the storm is raging around him. Remember the song, “Oh,
what peace we often forfeit, Oh, what needless pain we bear, all because we do
not carry everything to God in prayer!” Don’t let sin keep you from
praying. Let it drive you to Him, knowing that “if we confess our sins,
He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all
unrighteousness” (I Jn 1:9). After all, we can’t hide, if you are a
believer know that God will expose your hidden sin, causing you to face
the truth about yourself, mercifully calling you to repentance.
II. How do we know the truth about who God is? (8-9). Then they said to him, "Tell us on whose
account this evil has come upon us. What is your occupation? And where do you
come from? What is your country? And of what people are you?" And he said to them, "I am a Hebrew, and
I fear the LORD, the God of heaven, who made the sea and the dry
land."
The men question Jonah, seeking an
explanation (8). They pepper him with a series of questions about his identity,
motivated by a search for something that would give them a clue about what to
do to be saved. Jonah never answers their first question, about his work. He
never says he is a prophet. He was taking a sabbatical, taking a break from his
calling. I am not trying to be harsh, but think about this, have you ever
decided to “take a break” from church or from involvement in church? We are
thankful for the Bible teaching available online and over the air. Those things
are great. But the Bible clearly says that we are not to forsake the
assembling of ourselves together (Heb 10:25). God has designed the church as
His means of building up His people in the faith. We need each other!
God has gifted us and called us to build each other up, to provoke one another
to love and good works, and all the more as we see the Day drawing near!
Jonah answers in part. He doesn’t call
himself a prophet, but at least he admits to being a descendant of Abraham. He begins, “I am a Hebrew…” Jonah,
even in this moment of crisis, puts his race, his ethnicity, before his
confession of faith. Don’t misunderstand me. I am proud to be an American.
I have lived in another country. I recognize the many privileges we have here,
and I am thankful for our freedoms. But first, I am a Christ-follower, by
God’s grace, a child of the King! Our defining identity is not nationality or
race. We are all one race, the human race, children of Adam. And If we know
God, most crucially, we are His children.
Jonah does
say “…I fear the Lord [Yahweh]…”
He says it, but he had already admitted to these men that He was running from
the presence of the Lord! Jonah, you fear the Lord? Really Jonah? Your practice does not
reflect that profession! There are moments when that will be true in our lives,
when our walk does not live up to our talk. When I first came to
faith, I was the only believer in my family. My siblings, and my parents, and the
people I worked with, they were all ready to let me know when my choices didn’t
measure up! “Is that how a Christian acts?” I heard that more than a few
times, and I earned that rebuke! We are His witnesses. The question is,
will we be a good witness or a poor one?
Jonah refers
to God as, “…the Lord, the
God of heaven, who made the sea and the land…” That is the God who
Jonah should have believed, and feared, as he had professed to fear Him. But
he was trying to flee rather than obey! God wouldn’t let him go. Nor will
he let you go. He loves you too much. God will expose our hidden sin, causing
us to face the truth about ourselves, mercifully calling us to repentance.
III. What can we do about the problem of sin? Our sin will impact our lives, and often the lives of
others (10). “Then the men were exceedingly afraid and said to him,
"What is this that you have done!" For the men knew that he was
fleeing from the presence of the LORD, because he had told them.”
Jonah
claimed to fear the Lord, but his actions seemed to contradict that. These
sailors, hearing that Jonah was running from the Creator God, the very God he
claimed to fear, were “exceedingly afraid,” literally, they “feared
a great fear.” We don’t know how much these sailors knew about the God of
the Jews. This was happening early in the period of the divided Kingdom, Israel
in the north and Judah in the south. They had certainly heard that these people
had some relationship with the God of David and Solomon, and perhaps they even
knew the story of God having brought these people out of Egyptian bondage
through the Red Sea. They surely knew what they were seeing with their own
eyes, Jonah was running away from this God, the God of the Jews who made the
sea and the dry land, and now this God had brought a tremendous storm out of
nowhere, a storm that threatened to break up the ship and drown them all!
In their fear they ask Jonah, “What is
this that you have done?!” (cf. Gen 3:13; 12:18; 26:10). Does that
question sound familiar? It is used elsewhere of a pagan rebuking a follower
of God for doing something that put them in danger of offending the God of the
Hebrews. For example, Abraham (Abram) in Genesis 12, fearing for his own life, he told a half truth, failing
to mention that Sarah was his wife… and she was taken into the house of Pharoah...
14
When Abram entered Egypt, the Egyptians saw that the woman was very
beautiful. 15 And when the
princes of Pharaoh saw her, they praised her to Pharaoh. And the woman was
taken into Pharaoh's house. 16
And for her sake he dealt well with Abram...
17 But the LORD afflicted Pharaoh and his house with great
plagues because of Sarai, Abram's wife. 18
So Pharaoh called Abram and said, "What is this you have done to me?
Why did you not tell me that she was your wife?
There is that question again, just as the sailors
asked Jonah, so Pharaoh questions Abram, essentially rebuking the man of God. Well,
like father like son, because we have almost an exact repeat of that story in
the life of Isaac, in Genesis 26:6-10…
…Isaac settled in Gerar. 7
When the men of the place asked him about his wife, he said, "She is my
sister," for he feared to say, "My wife," thinking, "lest
the men of the place should kill me because of Rebekah," because she was
attractive in appearance. 8
When he had been there a long time, Abimelech king of the Philistines looked
out of a window and saw Isaac laughing with Rebekah his wife. 9 So Abimelech called Isaac and
said, "Behold, she is your wife. How then could you say, 'She is my
sister'?" Isaac said to him, "Because I thought, 'Lest I die because
of her.'" 10 Abimelech
said, "What is this you have done to us? One of the people might
easily have lain with your wife, and you would have brought guilt upon
us."
You have put us in jeopardy of offending your God! How
could you do such a thing? How sad to
see such situations when believers, those who know the truth and who have a
relationship with the true God, act in such a way that they evoke a rebuke from
the world! In many of these cases, as in the case of Jonah and the Phoenician
sailors, not only the mortal life, but the immortal souls of the pagans were at
risk. Instead of living a life of witness and testimony to the truth, the man
of God was silent about who God is and what He expects of us. We have been entrusted with the
Word of Life!
By the way,
that same question comes up earlier in the Bible, in Genesis 3:13, in the midst
of confronting Adam and Eve for their disobedience, God asks the woman, “What
is this that you have done?” Then again in chapter 4, using almost the same
phrase, God asks Cain in Genesis 4:10, “What have you done?” The first
sin, in the Garden of Eden, brought death. The first son, Cain, committed
murder. The question to Jonah echoes these earlier scenes, and reminds us
that we live in a fallen world, and that all humans have a sin problem.
Whether it is a distorted view of God, or outright rebellion and refusal to
acknowledge His rightful rule over us, we need God to rescue us from our
sin. One writer said, “…He [God] wants to do for us what He did for the
lot-throwing idol worshippers on the ship with [Jonah]: He wants to break down our
idols and teach us to rely solely on the grace of God in Christ…” (Jonah,
Eric Redmond).
What is God saying to me in this passage? God will expose our hidden sin, causing us to face
the truth about ourselves, mercifully calling us to repentance.
What would God have me to do in response to this
passage? Have we,
like Jonah, been trying to hide ourselves, or our sins, from God? He knows our every
thought, word, and deed. After Jonah’s sin is exposed, he offers to be thrown
into the sea so the sailors can be saved. But he would offer himself not for
their sin, but for his own. 800 years later or so, a greater prophet came, and
took our sins, drinking the cup of wrath against sin, offering Himself, so
that we could drink the cup of blessing. What love! How could we deny Him? Why
would we flee from His presence? Still, we do, every time we choose our will
over His, we choose to sin. Let’s bow before Him, confessing our sins, and
receive the cleansing from unrighteousness that He offers (I Jn 1:9). You don’t
have to bear the weight anymore. Jesus said come to me all you who labor and
are heavy laden, and I will give you rest! He is God, and He is good. Trust
Him, entrust yourself to Him. He knows you, and He is waiting. Amen.
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