For
those of us who didn’t first learn about Jonah in Sunday School, the story
seems scientifically impossible and a proof point that the Bible contains
preposterous accounts, if not downright inaccuracies.
For
those of us who did first learn the story of Jonah in Sunday School, we leave
the scientific debate to others. (I don’t embrace creationism versus evolution
arguments, either.) Hearing the story as a young child, all I can say is that
it made sense, a truth easily grasped by children and often far better than learned adults.
It’s
not about the fish.
The
story of Jonah is about many things, and to focus on the fish is to miss all of
them. It’s about faith, obedience, understanding the culture and world one
lives within, understanding how God works in that world, repentance, and having
expectations confounded or confirmed.
Jonah
is an individual whose life gets played out in a much larger context. And it’s
a geopolitical story, the story of the capital city of a brutal empire being brought
to its knees.
And,
as Andy Stanley points out in The
Grace of God, it is a perplexing story of God’s grace. Perplexing, in
that the Assyrians deserved anything but grace. What they did deserve was
destruction for their brutality and the evil they committed upon the surrounding
nations and peoples (they were the ones who conquered the northern kingdom of
Israel, whose people disappeared into history).
And
yet, the fish notwithstanding, Jonah makes his way to Nineveh, and preaches
repentance for three days (the same number of days he was inside the fish; and
likely the same number of days in his “anger at God” period at the end of the
story). The city listens to his preaching, repents, and is spared God’s wrath,
much to Jonah’s chagrin. He knew this would happen, because he knew God as a
God of grace.
And
it made him angry.
I
identify with the Assyrians. I did nothing to deserve God’s grace. Nothing.
Just the opposite, in fact. And I was grateful for it.
And
I identify with Jonah. Don’t all those people today who deny and ridicule the
very notion of God, the people think his church is filled with stupid yahoos,
the people who murder and destroy and tear at the very fabric of our society, the
people who are trying to force an anti-Christian underpinning on everything in
the culture, well, surely they deserve to get theirs, right?
Perhaps.
Perhaps not. Perhaps they will hear the call to repentance; perhaps Christians
will articulate a call to repentance. Perhaps God will spare them too. The story
of Jonah is also the story opf how anyone, no matter how evil, can repent and
be forgiven.
Yes,
the story of Jonah is a story of God’s Grace.
Led
by Jason Stayszen and Sarah Salter, we’ve been discussing The Grace of God by Andy Stanley. To see more posts on this
chapter, “Puzzled by Grace,” please visit Sarah at Living Between the Lines.
Photograph by Sally Pesavento via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
6 comments:
It is all about God's grace . . . And, I do pray that repentance and revival will sweep through our suffering nation.
Beautifully written, Glynn!
Well done bro'
Thanks, Glynn. Love how God can use our work for good even when we drag our feet!
So many times during this book and our discussions, I remember the title to Brennan Manning's autobiography, All Is Grace. This story fits in that so well. Grace is abounding and evident when we look. The problem so many of us have is that we've set up this "if you don't stop, God is going to get you" narrative that we refuse to show grace and compassion. We don't want them to repent because we don't want to be embarrassed that all our pronouncements and judgments didn't happen. We've got a lot to about His grace! I want to live there--receiving and giving. Thanks Glynn.
I love that you point out it's not about the fish at all. Too often the world (and the church)gets caught up on a small detail and misses the bigger picture of what God wants to say to us (Jason's post talks about that).
I'm so glad I can't earn grace!
I do get angry at injustice...and just wish God would take care of you it, you know in a OT kind of righteous way.
But he's patient. And so should I be
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