I was in a small church yesterday, http://www.therootscommunity.com/ and the pastor, Jesse Carbo and assistant pastor, Paul Podraza, were talking about Jonah (from the Old Testament story) in the bible. Go read the story! But here I will give you the short of it and some history that you will not read (in the bible) without some research.
Jonah was a servant of God, a prophet. And one day God told Jonah to do something that Jonah absolutely did not want to do. God told Jonah to go to the Ninevites, (an enemy of Israel whose home base was in Iraq), and warn them that unless they repented (God blessed Israel and put a curse on anyone that cursed Israel and a blessing on any nation that blessed Israel - Psalm 37:22 says, "those the Lord blesses will inherit the land, but those he curses will be cut off." And God's promise to Abraham, the single old man that God promised to make a strong nation called Israel out of was, "I will bless those who bless you, and I will curse him who curses you: and in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed.") God was going to destroy Nineveh, and Jonah wanted Him to. Jonah wanted God to nuke them all. But God, who is and always has been a loving God, and full of mercy, was sending His servant to talk to them and cause them to repent and pray and seek Him, the true God. Jonah didn't want to go. He would rather have died than go, and decided instead to head for Spain and in the absolute opposite direction away from Nineveh. But you can't outrun (or out think) God. Jonah hired a boat and got in it and sailed away. But shortly after they sailed, God sent a fierce storm that threatened the boat and all the sailors on it. All the sailers were trying to figure out what they could do to save themselves and were just going crazy and praying to their various gods and they found Jonah sleeping down in the hold. The sailors didn't know what was going on, but Jonah did (when they woke him up) and he told them that it was God doing this and that if they threw him overboard, they would be fine. They didn't want to do that and be guilty of murder, but eventually, seeing no other way, they did it. And Jonah figured that he won. He didn't have to kill himself to get away from God. But God had other plans. God, according to the bible, had prepared a "great fish." It could have been a whale, but it says a great fish. And Jonah lived inside that fish for 3 days while the fish traveled to (you guessed it) Nineveh. Now a fish has to be pretty big to swallow a man and allow him to live inside of it without drowning and I personally believe it was huge. (But, of course knowing God has no limitations, it could have been a minnow, except that it would not have impressed the Ninevites who just happened to be worshippers of the fish god, Dagon.) So God has this huge fish beach himself near Nineveh and puke out Jonah. Unimpressive to the prophet, but very impressive to anyone from Nineveh who saw it. And apparently, they did. So when Jonah went into the city to tell them to repent and seek after the true God, Jehovah, they all repented, including all the rulers. That really upset Jonah. He wanted them to die, and instead, all of Nineveh listened to him, and in sackcloth and ashes, declared that they were nothing apart from God, and they repented and God forgave them and let them live.
And Jonah went up on a high mountain and sulked. He told God, "I knew you were going to do that. That's why I didn't want to come." And he just sat and stewed in his own juices and got hotter and hotter and the sun beat down on him. And overnight, God caused a huge gourd plant to grow up beside him and shade him. And Jonah was happy for the plant, until God caused it to wither and die. And then, Jonah got really mad at God. Because now this was a personal affront. And the bible says God talked to Noah (Noah didn't have God's words in writing as we do) and God asked Jonah why he was so upset about the gourd? He didn't plant it or have anything to do with growing it, so why should he have such strong feelings for it when he didn't even create it? God was explaing to Jonah through an analogy why He, God, had such strong feelings of mercy toward the Ninevites whom He had created and which had come under God's curse. God loved the Ninevites as He loves all people, and the bible says someday "Every knee will bow and every tongue will confess that Jesus Christ is LORD to the glory of the Father." God would rather bless than curse and He always goes to great lengths to do so. But curses do come, as it did in Sodom and Gomorrah. According to the bible account, God would have spared that nation, also, but for 10 righteous individuals. Only one righteous family escaped. A man called Lot and his wife and two daughters. And Lot's wife didn't make it all the way out, either. Check out the story in Genesis 13. Check out this Google site: http://www.accuracyingenesis.com/sodom.html#appendix
Let me say here that unless God reveals Himself to a person or family or city or nation, there is no coming to Him. I mean, you would not be able to invite yourself to meet with the president of the United States, so how could you possibly, unbidden, invite yourself to meet with the Creator of all life? God will arrange it or it won't happen. But God has promised that for anyone that really and truly wants to meet Him, He will show up. Jeremiah 29:13 says, "And you shall seek me, and find me, when you shall search for me with all your heart."
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