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Tuesday, June 30, 2015
Jonah I- Down, Down, Down
Jonah I-
1:1-17
Sermon Notes
Down,
Down, Down
June 28,
2015
Lynchburg,
Virginia
EXHORDIUM
We come now to the great
little book of Jonah. This book is most
excellent for many reasons.
It must be read in faith with the
authority of the Scriptures in mind. We take this story as a literal rendering
of the story of a prophet of Israel. He lived under the rule of Jeroboam II in
Israel and Uzziah in Judah around 760 BC. He was from the Philistine city of
Gath, the same city of Goliath.
He lived in time of rising opposition
to Israel. They had enemies on every side. Syria, to the north, was a problem
but the large rising power was Assyria, to the North and East. The Assyrians
were raising an empire centered in a mighty city, Nineveh.
The editor to Calvin’s Commentaries
quotes ancient sources in stating the following about Nineveh.
“It must then have been in circuit about 60 miles. Its walls
are reported to have been 100 feet high — 33 yards and 1 foot, and so broad
that three chariots might run abreast, and adorned by 1,500 towers, the height
of which were 200 feet. From the circumstance of having in it 120,000 not
knowing the right hand from the left, supposed to be infants, some think that
its population must have been above two million. It was situated on the river Tigris
on the eastern side, not far from the present Mosul.”
“In building this city, as reported by Bochart, there were
no less than 140 myriads of men for eight years. A myriad being ten thousand,
the number must have been one million, four hundred thousand. Such a city none
has ever built since, was the declaration of Diodorus: and there has not
probably on record an account of such a city. That it had large gardens, and
even fields, within its walls, there can be no doubt.”
Assyria was the dominant imperial empire around
and after the destruction of Samaria in 722 BC. Jonah is prophesying before
Israel is defeated and Samaria is destroyed. Jonah’s resistance to God is in
light of the threat of Assyria.
Perhaps Jonah could have embraced preaching to
Nineveh with the hope that their obedience would result in Israel being saved
from destruction. However, that is not what he thinks, nor what happens. They
do repent and this gives some reprieve to the immediate destruction of Israel
but the writing was on the wall.
The Assyrian conquest finally comes in
the days of Isaiah. Tiglath-pelezer III conquered the Northern Kingdom and
relocated the leading men of Israel.
His successor, Sargon II, finally conquered the
capital city of Samaria and deported the citizens. He repopulated the remaining remnant of the
capital city of Samaria with Assyrians.
Thus, the inhabitants became known as Samaritans.
EXEGESIS
Jonah 1:1
Now the word of the LORD came unto Jonah the son of Amittai, saying,
2 Arise, go to Nineveh,
that great city, and cry against it; for their wickedness is come up before
me.
The
Lord said to rise up and go, but Jonah went down. He continues to go down until he is in the depths
of Sheol.
Jonah’s response is very
interesting. God told Jonah to go cry
against Nineveh because their wickedness is come before Him. The message God
gave Jonah, “Yet 40 days and I will destroy this city,” speaks of God’s destruction
of Nineveh. Jonah would have rejoiced at that. But Jonah seems to know that
God’s intention is exactly the opposite of what he tells Jonah.
He told Jonah to cry against and
proclaim destruction. But His intention was for Nineveh to repent and be saved.
If they had not repented, the destruction would have come. But they did repent
and they were saved.
This message rings true for all
individuals and nations who’s wickedness rises up to God. Preachers are to cry
out against wickedness.
“There is a day of reckoning!. Turn now
or face a holy God!”
This is not a message of hate. This is
not a message of judgment. This is not a message of spite. This is not a
message of self-righteousness. It is, in fact, a message of mercy. If
destruction is imminent, who would not call out to you in distress?
If a bridge is out and continuing in
the same course meant certain death, a car coming up the road who failed to
wave you down and warn you of the danger would be complicit in your death.
Would it be judgmental if they frantically yelled at you to stop and turn
around before it was too late!
This is the job of the preacher. Jonah
should have been glad to see Nineveh repent. He was in a bad way.
3 But Jonah rose up to flee unto Tarshish
from the presence of the LORD, and went down to Joppa; and he found a ship
going to Tarshish: so he paid the fare thereof, and went down into it, to go
with them unto Tarshish from the presence of the LORD.
The Lord told Jonah to rise up and go to Nineveh
but Jonah rose up and went to Joppa.
This is the exact opposite direction he should have gone. Joppa was
southwest from Galilee. Nineveh was to the northeast. Jonah was opposed to the command of God. Furthermore, he sought a boat at Joppa to
sail north to Tarshish, which is the same place that the apostle Paul is
from. It is interesting that Paul also
resisted the will of God and was forcibly brought to his knees.
The
Hebrew words translated “from the presence of the Lord”, is literally “from the
face of Yahweh”.
Jonah
went to great detail in his rebellion.
It is one thing to make a sudden lapse of judgment as Peter did when he
told the Lord not to go up to Jerusalem.
The Lord rebuked Peter and he quickly came to his senses. Jonah is not like that. He is very deliberate in his actions. Peter may have had Jesus’s interests at heart
when he resisted Him. He knew Jesus would be threatened at Jerusalem.
Not so with Jonah. Jonah knows that he will be
threatened at Nineveh along with all the Jews who are soon to be subjects of
Assyria. Jonah knows what God is telling Him and he is opposed to God’s will in
the matter. He has a set a course that he is determined to follow. He wants to flee from the presence of the
Lord. He doesn’t merely get angry and
say or do something rash. He goes to
Joppa and inquires about the boats sailing for Tarshish. He finds one, agrees on a price, pays the
fare, and continues his downward flight.
Furthermore, he throws his lot in with pagans
who do not love the face of Yahweh. He is among those who have no love for the
God of Israel. He willingly goes with
them. Perhaps he thinks God will leave
him alone. But God has called him to a
particular task and pursues Jonah in his rebellion and escape.
Jonah
1:4 But the LORD sent out a great
wind into the sea, and there was a mighty tempest in the sea, so that the ship
was like to be broken. 5 Then the mariners were
afraid, and cried every man unto his god, and cast forth the wares that were
in the ship into the sea, to lighten it of them. But Jonah was gone down into the sides of
the ship; and he lay, and was fast asleep.
The
Lord cast onto the sea a wind. He threw
it at Jonah. This verse is alive with
illustrations. The elements are not
impersonal. God throws His breath into
the sea and blows up a storm. The ship
is thinking about being broken. This is
very good literature and not at all mechanistic. The world does not work based upon natural
law as many have erroneously assumed.
Science cannot describe such storms.
It is a pleasure to live here in Lynchburg where the meteorologists have
such a difficult time with the weather. They make forecasts and then hedge
their bets with all sorts of qualifiers.
They don’t know how much truth they utter when the say “This storm has a
mind of its own.” It really does.
The mariners were afraid of the storm.
But Jonah was indifferent. He had thought to escape from the face of
Yahweh and was unconcerned about this storm.
He was cast into a deep sleep.
His sleep was perhaps brought on by God Himself. Jonah thought to escape from God but God was
not only in control of the tempest but was also in control of the sleep of
Jonah. Jonah was stupefied with
sleep. Radam. This is the same word for sleep used to
describe the sleep that God caused to fall on Adam when he took a rib from him
to form Eve.
6 So the shipmaster
came to him, and said unto him, What meanest thou, O sleeper? arise, call upon
thy God, if so be that God will think upon us, that we perish not.
The
storm is starting to make believers of these saltmen. God is in the storm.
7 And they said every
one to his fellow, Come, and let us cast lots, that we may know for whose cause
this evil is upon us. So they cast lots, and the lot fell upon Jonah.
8 Then
said they unto him, Tell us, we pray thee, for whose cause this evil is
upon us; What is thine occupation? and whence comest thou? what is
thy country? and of what people art thou?
The
men perceive that Jonah has something to do with the storm. They cast lots to
be sure and the lot speaks true. The fault is Jonah’s but the storm as attacked
all of them.
9 And he said unto
them, I am an Hebrew; and I fear the LORD, the God of heaven, which hath
made the sea and the dry land.
Jonah
gives testimony to the one true God. This is interesting since Jonah is still
in rebellion against God. This might be the turning point where he realizes
that his actions are harmful to other men.
10 Then were the men
exceedingly afraid, and said unto him, Why hast thou done this? For the men
knew that he fled from the presence of the LORD, because he had told them. Jonah 1:11 Then said they
unto him, What shall we do unto thee, that the sea may be calm unto us? for the
sea wrought, and was tempestuous. 12 And he said unto them,
Take me up, and cast me forth into the sea; so shall the sea be calm unto you:
for I know that for my sake this great tempest is upon you. 13 Nevertheless the men rowed hard to bring it
to the land; but they could not: for the sea wrought, and was tempestuous
against them.
The
men react better than Jonah. They fear the Lord and will not harm Jonah. All
these man try to save Jonah but God is out to get him. The sea worked against
them in a great tempest.
14 Wherefore they cried
unto the LORD, and said, We beseech thee, O LORD, we beseech thee, let us not
perish for this man’s life, and lay not upon us innocent blood: for thou, O
LORD, hast done as it pleased thee. 15 So they took up Jonah, and cast him forth into the
sea: and the sea ceased from her raging.
The men had previously cried out in fear and
anguish. Perhaps they had cried out to the wind or to their own gods. But now
they cry out to the Lord, the one true God who made heaven and earth, the sea
and all that in them is.
They realize even before Jonah does, that they
cannot thwart the will of God. They tried rowing hard against God and it did
not work. They give in to Him. This is more than Jonah has done at this point.
The God of the sea wants Jonah and the men deliver him up. And when they do,
the sea is satisfied and grows calm.
16 Then the men feared
the LORD exceedingly, and offered a sacrifice unto the LORD, and made
vows.
These men are now great God feared, offering
sacrifice to God and taking vows to serve Him.
If you are a Christian, even your rebellion will
bring glory to God. God will not tolerate turncoats. There is a day of
reckoning. Whether you crash and burn or crash and are resurrected, God will
glorify Himself in your story. This should be both frightening and comforting
at the same time.
17 Now the LORD had
prepared a great fish to swallow up
Jonah. And Jonah was in
the belly of the fish three days and three nights.
Jonah was down but not down enough. He had to go
lower still. It is interesting that God is sending Jonah to Nineveh, a great
pagan city and a threat to Israel. On the way, Jonah mingles with a bunch of
pagan sailors. These were no doubt very rough men. Old salts. In the process,
God shows Jonah that these men respond better than he does.
A stormy sea and a miraculous calming bring them
to submission to the Lord. But not Jonah. He must needs go lower still. Down,
down, down.
Jonah spent three days and nights in the belly
of the fish. Afterwards,
EXHORTATION
Don’t go down-When once you start to refuse the presence of
the Lord, you have already started down.
As you continue to refuse the presence of the Lord, the decline will
increase. You will keep going down, like
Jonah. But if you are God’s, He will
pursue you in your course.
No Right Way Off the
Path
Many make unwise decisions not being
able to discern which way to go. They
make excuses simply because opportunity was placed before them. But when you have already entered into a
cycle of disobedience, those opportunities may only be opportunities for more
disobedience. If you are running from
the face of God, then any friendly face looks better than His. Don’t be deceived by the foolishness of your
own heart. God has given us very clear
direction in His Word. If your present
circumstance runs into conflict with what God has already revealed, then you
cannot claim to be in the right place or to have some private revelation of the
Lord’s will for your life. Getting back
may be difficult. Perhaps the Lord must
send a fish to eat you up. But if you
are faithful, if you cry out to him from your hell, He will rescue and restore
you. However, if you continue in your
own delusions, you will perish without mercy in the depths of the sea.
Like a child who runs from his father, the only
safe place is to face God and not run from Him.
He is dangerous. You better keep
your eye on Him. If you become His
enemy, you are in great danger. If you
become His friend, you are in great security.
But you must see His face. A
child has only to see a twinge of a smile, a kind gesture of the hands from
father, and those terrors that the world is coming apart disappear.
How can you ever expect to know God’s will for
your life considering your vocation and location if you will not be obedient to
what He has already revealed? It is
likely that like Jonah, you can find a ship sailing to Tarshish. The Lord is perfectly willing for you to sail
on a direct course with Him. He may give
you a fair voyage only to bring a tempest upon you. This is not very complicated.
The Lord Feeds Us
When Jonah’s mates threw him
overboard and the sea was calmed, they feared exceedingly and offered a
sacrifice unto the Lord and made vows.
The fear of the Lord in acts of
Providence is a powerful force. It often has the effect of bringing us to our
knees and causing us to submit to the authority of the Lord, offering our service
in deeds and vows.
But consider what God has done. Instead
of demanding our sacrifice and our vows, He was the sacrifice. He made the
vows.
Jesus gave Himself to calm the storm.
Jesus promised to never leave us or forsake us. Jesus sent His Spirit to dwell
with us always. Jesus prepared a sacrificial meal for us to proclaim peace to
us and to nurture us in the strength of the Lord. It is all gloriously
backwards. We can never do for Him what He has so amazingly done for us.
All that
is left is to be full of awe and gratitude. Come and welcome.
Table Prayer
Our Father, who is a God like You, that pardons
iniquity, and passes by the transgressions of Your people? You do not stay
angry for long because You delight in
mercy. We thank You that You have turned again to have compassion upon us. You
have subdued our iniquities and have cast all our sins into the depths of the
sea. You have fulfilled your promise that You swore to our fathers in the days
of old, truth to Jacob and
mercy to Abraham and peace to Your people in Jesus, here at the Table of the
Lord. We thank you, O Lord, our God. Amen.
Thanksgiving Prayer
Based on Micah 4:1-2
Our Father, we thank You that in these last days it
has come to pass that the
mountain of the house of the LORD has been established in the top of the
mountains, and exalted above the hills and people now flow unto it. And many
nations shall come, and say, Come, and let us go up to the mountain of the
LORD, and to the house of the God whose Son is Jesus; and He will teach us of
His ways, and we will walk in His paths: for the law has gone forth out of
Zion, and the word of the LORD from Jerusalem, to Judea, Samaria and the
uttermost parts of the Earth. We give You thanks, O Lord. Amen.
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