The Wisdom of God
Jonah 3:10-4:4
Introduction: Have you ever started watching a movie with someone, who
within the first five minutes, starts asking questions about how it ends? It
happened when we had a certain visitor... The movie started, and then the
questions started! In most cases the writers, if they are doing their job well,
are telling the story in an intentional way, it builds the drama, the tension
mounts, and the resolution comes near the end. Do you turn to the end of a book
before starting to read it? …Jonah may be a story that shocks us by ending in a
most unexpected way… Actually, many children’s lessons leave out chapter 4, but
to a certain degree I think it is the point of the whole story. We’ve called
our Jonah series “Jonah: The Prodigal Prophet,” borrowing the title of Tim
Keller’s little commentary. Keller used that title to draw a parallel between
Jonah, and the parable of the prodigal son. And though the story of Jonah begins
with the prophet looking like the younger son who takes his inheritance and
then abandons his father, the point of the parable, and the point of Jonah, is
really the story of the elder son, who is jealous and angry at the father
receiving his younger brother back so graciously. When I taught this chapter to
the AWANA Sparks, the “big idea” was, “God cares about you, and God cares
about me, God cares about other people, and so should we!” That’s
pretty much the point of chapter 4, class dismissed! Well, maybe the point is a
bit deeper, the application even wider. So we will take two weeks to look at
the chapter. The real question for us in the first four verses, the bottom line
so to speak, is do we trust the mind and wisdom of God? Will we seek His will
above our own? That brings us to…
The BIG Idea: God is good, and He does all things well. We can trust Him,
even when we don’t understand. First, in the last verse of chapter 3, remember…
The Context: The people repent, and God relents (3:10)!
10 When God saw what they did, how they turned from
their evil way, God relented of the disaster that he had said he would do to
them, and he did not do it.
Jonah finally relented and brought
God’s message to the Ninevites, announcing God’s impending judgement: Yet
forty days and Nineveh will be overthrown! The boldness of a Jewish prophet
going into the Assyrian capital and preaching such a message had to be
shocking! I don’t think that alone could
evoke such a response from such a violent and wicked people. There may have
been more of a back story that we’ll never know, providences of God that He
used to soften the hearts of the Ninevites. One researcher suggested that in
recent times there had been an earthquake, a plague, a drought, and then a
solar eclipse! Was God trying to get their attention? The point is that by
whatever means, God broke through, and broke the prideful and sinful hearts of
the Ninevites, leading them to faith and repentance. What we do know is that they
believed the word of the Lord, and they turned from their wicked ways. In
response, God turned from the disaster that he was going to bring on the city. Acts
such as God’s judgment of Sodom and Gomorrah and His sending of the flood on
the earth in the days of Noah, were harbingers of God’s future judgement of
unrepentant humanity. But, at least for this generation, Nineveh repented and
escaped the judgment of God.
Ok then,
God’s prophet brought God’s word, and the people believed and repented, and
everyone lived happily ever after, right? That may be where some children’s
lessons stop in telling Jonah’s story, but God gave us chapter 4. And as you
read the entire Book of Jonah, it seems this is really the point. God was
indeed interested in the Ninevites, just as he was interested in the Phoenician
sailors caught in the storm with Jonah. But he was also working on Jonah’s
heart… and on ours. That is the Big Idea… Like Jonah needed to learn, we
need to be convinced that God is good, and He does all things well… We
can trust Him, even when we don’t understand.
I. We need to remember that when we would get angry
with God …and are even tempted to question
the wisdom of God (4:1). “But it
displeased Jonah exceedingly, and he was angry.”
The language in v.1 is an intentional
play on words. We can miss it in the English translation. The ESV does get the
sense of the opening phrase of the chapter, “But it displeased Jonah
exceedingly…” What we miss in English, is the Hebrew phrase uses the word “ra-ah”,
which is used to describe the “evil” from which the Ninevites had turned, and
the disaster from which God had relented. The wording is, “It was ra-ah
to Jonah, a big ra-ah.” Let’s look a bit into the use of that word
in the Old Testament. But first let’s set it against the backdrop of God’s
evaluation of the original creation. In Genesis 1:10, 12, 18, 21, 25, and 31,
at each step in the creation process, God saw that it was good [tov].
This was life before the Fall, the “good life,” the way life should be! God
gave humans one simple law, a tree in the midst of the Garden, the tree of the
knowledge of “good” [tov] and “evil” [ra]. And you know the rest
of that story! Humans sin, the creation is cursed, and the “good life”
is disrupted.
By Noah’s time,
we read in Genesis 6:5, “The LORD saw that the wickedness of man was great
in the earth, and that every intention of the thoughts of his heart was only
evil [ra-ah] continually.” God brought judgment on the
earth, but Noah found grace in the eyes of God. At the other end of
Genesis, Joseph’s brothers fear for their lives before him, knowing the evil
they had done, and he says “…you meant evil against me, but God meant
it for good, to bring it about that many people should be kept alive…”
(Gen 50:20).
So “evil,”
on the part of man, is disruption in God’s good creation, something contrary to
the “good” he originally created. Now back to Jonah, and let’s think
about what has happened in the story. The Ninevites turned from their evil
way (3:10). And now Jonah judges God’s relenting from destroying them as “an
exceeding great evil” [it was ra-ah to Jonah, a great ra-ah]
from his perspective (4:1). Yes, as the English Bibles translate, it
displeased him exceedingly. Anger is essentially saying forcefully, “I
disagree with that! That is not right!” Jonah is angry, “hot,” and he is angry
with God! He is calling good evil! The words of Paul come to mind, “Who
are you O man to talk back to God?!” I heard a news report recently that
the fastest growing church in the world is in a country you might not expect:
Iran! It is persecuted, it is underground, but it is growing. God is doing
that. Do we pray for Iran’s destruction, or for revival and souls to be
saved?
Like Jonah
needed to learn, we need to be convinced that God is good, and He does all
things well… And that we can trust Him, even when we don’t understand.
II. We need to remember that when we are tempted to judge
others: …and fail
to see our own desperate need of grace (2). “And he prayed to the LORD and said, "O LORD, is not this
what I said when I was yet in my country? That is why I made haste to flee to
Tarshish; for I knew that you are a gracious God and merciful, slow to anger
and abounding in steadfast love, and relenting from disaster.”
Finally, only for
the second time in the book, we see Jonah praying (the last time was from the
fish’s belly!). The sailors on the boat
had cried out to the God of Jonah. The captain had asked Jonah to pray,
but as far as we know he didn’t. The king of Nineveh calls on everyone in the
city to cry out mightily to God. Finally, in chapter 4, for the
second time, we see Jonah praying. This will be good, right? Not so much,
but at least Jonah is praying now, talking to God instead of running
from Him. As he begins, we see a hint as to the debate that happened when God first
called Jonah to go to Nineveh (whether to himself, in his own mind, or with
God!) and some insight into why Jonah fled toward Tarshish. He knew God’s
character, and he suspected that this mission would evoke a response from the
Ninevites. He didn’t want any part of that!
“Is this not
what I said when I was yet in my country?” When God called Jonah to go to
Nineveh and announce their impending destruction, he knew what that meant. Why
warn the Ninevites? Why cry out against them? Why not just drop fire from
heaven and be done with them? Implied in the announcement of judgment is a call
to repentance! And Jonah knew that God’s character was such that he would
respond with mercy if they repented. Think about Jonah’s experience. Why did
Jonah run? He tells us…
That
is why I made haste to flee to Tarshish; for I knew that you are a gracious God and
merciful, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love, and relenting from
disaster.
He had experienced God’s mercy firsthand, and he was grateful
for it. Jonah in fact quotes from Scripture God’s own words to Moses when He
revealed himself on the mountain in Exodus 34:6…
6 The LORD passed
before him and proclaimed, "The LORD, the LORD, a God merciful and
gracious, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness…
So, Jonah had some good theology, but it broke down in
terms of application. Right doctrine should result in right living. But
Jonah did not yet understand that God was interested in people from every race
and nation. When God called Jonah to go to that great city, Nineveh,
he first tried to run from God. God hurled a great wind toward the boat
on the sea. He wasn’t going to let Jonah get away. When Jonah was thrown into
the sea, just about to drown, he remembered the LORD, and God sent along
a great fish to bring him back to dry ground. And God called him to
go a second time.
Jonah knew
about the mercy of God, he had experienced His grace. He wanted it in his
life, and in the life of his nation, but not for these pagan
Assyrians! So, the first time he was called, he ran. This time he went, and he
proclaimed God’s message, but not with the heart God had for those people. It
seems Jonah is like the stubborn child, who refuses to sit down at the dinner
table. Finally, he gives in, but crosses his arms and says, “I am sitting
down, but I am still standing on the inside!” Jonah did not agree with what
God was doing – he hated the Assyrians so much he didn’t want God to show them
mercy! He seemed to forget his own rebellion, and how much he needed God’s
mercy and grace in his own life. He didn’t understand, it seems, the evil of
his own nation. Could it be that God’s mercy on Nineveh was also a call to
Israel to repent? Like Jonah needed to learn, we need to be convinced that God
is good, and He does all things well… And that we can trust Him, even when we
don’t understand.
III. We need to remember that when we get self-righteous: …and put ourselves
in the place of God (3). “Therefore
now, O LORD, please take my life from me, for it is better for me to die than
to live."
Think about what
Jonah is saying to God: Your actions, God, are so repulsive, so
unacceptable, I don’t want even to be alive to see it! Jonah is essentially
saying your actions are not good, this is not the way life should be. I would
rather be dead! Let’s think first about what this is not. Jonah’s anger is not like
the laments of the psalmist that we see so frequently…
How
long, O LORD? Will you forget me forever? How long will you hide your face from
me? (Psalm 13:1).
We see times like that when the
psalmist expresses his pain and confusion to God. Something doesn’t seem right
in the world, it might be enemies, or famine or sickness. Life the way it
should be seems to be disrupted and the psalmist cries out for help and
deliverance. Feeling abandoned or lost is not the same as questioning the
goodness of God. It is not calling good evil, or evil good. And that is
essentially what Jonah is doing in our text here in Jonah 4:3. He is saying
that God’s actions are not good, not righteous, not acceptable! He is essentially
saying, “I know better than you what should happen here, and if you are not
going to do it, just kill me now!”
Before we get
too hard on Jonah, let’s be honest about something. Even though we might not
say this to God as boldly as Jonah did, if we choose to sin, if we make a
decision and take an action that we know to be contrary to God’s will,
we are doing the same thing. We are saying to God, “I know You don’t
want me to have this, you don’t want me to do this, you don’t want me to see
this, but I know this will make me happy, this will fulfill something in
my life better than you can Lord. So, I am going to do it. Don’t I have a right
to be happy?” The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately
wicked, who can know it? Recall God’s warning to Cain in Genesis 4:7,
before the first murder, “If you do well, will you not be accepted? And if you do not do well, sin is
crouching at the door. Its desire is for you, but you must rule over it.” Jonah, now is the time
to flee from the evil welling up in your own heart, and run back to God! Like Jonah needed to learn, we need
to be convinced, that God is good and that He does all things well… And that we
can trust Him, even when we don’t understand.
IV. We need to remember that when God holds up His Word as a
mirror: …and we
are exposed (4)! “And the LORD said, ‘Do you do well to be angry?’"
The gentle, patient, dealing of God
with the prodigal prophet! (OK, a storm and a great fish maybe weren’t so
gentle, but it was merciful, and it was what Jonah needed at the
time!). Here, Jonah has had a
self-righteous, judgmental, temper-tantrum, and God responds gently, with a
simple question, which He’ll need to repeat in a few verses, “Do you do well
to be angry?” A simple question, an invitation to think, to meditate, to
consider what Jonah is saying and feeling, to bring those thoughts captive to
Christ. (We'll pick up with this verse next week).
What is God saying to me in this passage? Are you convinced that God is good,
and that He does all things well? We can trust Him, even when we don’t
understand. He is good, all the time. His way is always best.
What would God have me to do in response to
this passage? Some applications…
1. I am
all for patriotism, but when nationalism becomes a religion, we can get in
trouble. Jonah wanted God’s grace and mercy for Israel, but not for the
Assyrians. Listen: The whole world is God’s world, and world evangelization is
God’s work. A remnant from every tribe and nation will gather around His throne
one day – and that is something to celebrate and be a part of, now! You might
think, wait a minute, we support missions. But even today I hear it argued, why
should we send missionaries overseas if we have needs right here in America?
Well, we’ll always have needs in America. Why go? Because Jesus told us to. He
said, “Go, make disciples of every nation…” He said, “…you will be my
witnesses, even to the ends of the earth.” That’s God’s plan, and it should
be good enough for us!
2. God’s grace
toward Nineveh should have been a reminder to Israel that they too needed to
repent of their wicked ways and take God at His Word. The period of the divided kingdom was marked by
a series of wicked kings in the northern kingdom, their sin ultimately led to
God using the Assyrians to defeat them in 722 BC.
3. We can
avoid falling into Jonah’s error by keeping the Gospel at the forefront of our
life. Remember that we were spiritually dead sinners, separated from God,
destined for wrath, and unable to do anything to save ourselves, yet God, who
is rich in mercy, because of His great love with which He loved us, made us
alive, by grace we have been saved (c.f. Eph 2:1-5). By His doing we are in
Christ. What mercy! What grace! How can we not pray for God’s mercy to be
extended to others? Why would we not be available to be used of God to be
agents of the message of grace, to be His ambassadors?
4. The
key to knowing the mind of Christ is to allow His word to dwell richly within
us, to receive it, as the Ninevites received Jonah’s message, as the Word of God.
Pray as you read, that the Spirt of God would open your heart and mind to the
will of God. I listen each morning as part of my devotional time to Daily
Dose of Hebrew… currently it is going through the Hebrew text of Psalm 119
one verse at a time… It is all about God’s Word to us… His Word is a lamp to
our feet, a light to our path… God has spoken! Let’s hear His Word, Let’s
trust Him and obey Him. Let’s delight in the will of God. AMEN.
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