Rebellion Meets Grace — the Story of the Prophet Jonahনমুনা
Saved to make others jealous
Centuries before Jonah’s time, when the Israelites were about to enter the land that God had promised them, the Lord said something striking about His relationship with the Israelites. God knew that they were “a perverse generation, children in whom is no faithfulness”. He told them clearly that their disobedience and stubbornness would lead to judgment. God would hide His face from them because of their provocations. But then there is verse 21, where the Lord explains what He will do when the Israelites won’t listen: He won’t just leave them forever, but He will “make them jealous” like a husband who sees that his wife is dating another man. I think the story about the Ninevites is an example of that ‘strategy’.
The Israelites had a special covenant relationship with God, but they had left Him and served idols instead. God had punished them, He had blessed them, He had announced their downfall… but they did not turn back to Him. Now He was gracious towards their worst enemy. God said, as it were, “Look how good I am, and remember that I offered you the same! Come back!” Would that make the Israelites jealous, and make them long for God’s renewed blessing for them too? Would this make Jonah burst out in praise, because the Lord is so good for sinful people?
How do you respond when God gives his mercy and blessings to people you (for whatever reason) don’t like at all?
Scripture
About this Plan
The book of Jonah is a special Bible book. It is about a prophet who does not want to obey his commission. Jonah knows that God is gracious to people who don’t deserve it, and he does not want God to show mercy to his enemies. This reading plan follows the story about Jonah’s rebellion and God’s undeserved mercy, and searches how these themes are relevant to our lives too.
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