Now the word of the LORD came to Jonah the Son of
Amittai, saying, “Arise, go to Nineveh, that great city, and call out against
it, for their evil has come up before me.” But Jonah rose to flee to Tarshish from
the presence of the LORD. He went down to Joppa and found a ship going to Tarshish.
So he paid the fare and went on board, to go with them to Tarshish, away from
the presence of the LORD. – Jonah 1:1-16, English Standard Version
Many of us learn the hard way. We will only obey after we
have learned a bitter lesson just like Jonah. He had to learn that disobedience
to God brings God’s disaster. I am pretty sure you don’t want to learn that
lesson the Jonah way. So what do you need to know and do to avoid such a
situation in your life? Jonah 1:1-16 shows us four ways how we can avert such a disaster and over the course of the week I will be discussing them. For this
post though, the first thing to know is that God’s purpose for your life is
non-negotiable and you disobey it at our own peril.
Jonah (Hebrew - “dove”) the son of Amittai (Hebrew - “faithfulness”) is a tried and tested prophet of Jehovah, God’s covenant name revealed to Israel through Moses and usually translated LORD in many English versions. He prophesied in the prosperous years of King Jeroboam II (2 Kings 14:23-28). Jehovah sends him to Nineveh, some 850 miles on the eastern bank of the Tigris, with a mission to warn the city of God’s impending judgment because of its evil. But he decides to head the opposite direction, to Tarshish.
Now, to understand properly what’s going on with Jonah, we need to remember that God’s
purpose is to restore His creation after it “fell” because of Adam’s and Eve’s
disobedience in the Garden of Eden (Genesis 3). Satan had lied to them through
the serpent that if they disobeyed God’s instruction not to eat the fruit of
the forbidden tree, they would be just like God (Genesis 3:5). Talk about ego! Anyways,
with their disobedience they shut themselves off from God’s blessing and
brought curses upon their lives and the whole of creation (Genesis 3:15-19)
that the world has had to deal with ever since. But God, gracious and merciful as He is, was not done with
humanity. In the midst of the curses, God proclaimed the first good news of
humanity’s restoration when He said that the Seed of the woman would crush the
head of the serpent (Satan) and so set in motion a chain of events that would
lead to the fulfillment of His restorative purpose (Genesis 3:15b). Throughout the Bible, God chose people with whom He has worked with to bring
to fruition His on-going plan of salvation. People like Abraham to who he
promised myriads of descendants, a land, and to be a blessing to the nations of
the world (Genesis 12:1-3). The last promise is also what Jonah’s mission was
about: to preach to Nineveh – one of the nations of the world – that God was
going to judge this great city because of their evil. Ultimately, this last
promise would climax in the sending of “His only begotten Son so that whosoever believes in Him should not perish but have eternal life” (John 3:16). So when
Jonah decides that he is not going to go east to Nineveh but to the furthest
western city that was thought to be the end of the world, Tarshish, he has set
himself against God’s very purpose of redeeming humanity and creation to
Himself.
Now before you rail accusations against Jonah that he is a traitor
and a false prophet, look first at the log in your eye. More than Jonah, you
have a very clear mission of what God wants to do in the earth. In fact, you
have John 3:16 memorized from childhood. You know the many that surround you
that live lives characterized by evil. These are the contemporary Ninevites whose evil
has come before God and are in danger of a worse judgement at the Second Coming
of Jesus Christ when comes to judge the living and the dead (2 Timothy 4:1). You too, believer
in Jesus Christ and partner with Him in the salvation of the nations, are in
the same, if not worse (because of the greater revelation of God’s purpose in the New Testament)
situation as Jonah when you go the opposite direction of not sharing the Good
News of Jesus with those destined for God’s wrath.
Many of us are mature enough to know the areas of service
that God has called us to. No, it’s not just within the four walls of the
church. It’s also in those classrooms, offices, clinics, marketplaces, etc that
God has sent us to. If we are not sharing and living the Good News of God’s kingdom
in the spheres of influence He has sent us to, we too have ran off to
Tarshish and are in danger of God’s disaster coming on us just like Jonah. Sounds
scary? It is.
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