The Prophet Jonah - by Richard E. Young
Chapter 3 - Nineveh Overturned
3:1 Now the word of Yahweh came to Jonah a second time saying:
3:2 "Get up! Go to Nineveh, the great city, and cry out to it the message I give you."
3:3 And Jonah got up and went to Nineveh according to the word of Yahweh. Now Nineveh, a city important to God, required three days to visit it.
Back to the Beginning
These versus parallel the first couple of versus of chapter one. After Jonah had gone through all that he had, he was confronted with the same instructions as before, with one slight change. In the beginning God asked Jonah to cry out "against" (aleyha) Nineveh.
Now Jonah was asked to cry out "to" (eleyha) Nineveh. A subtle change. Aleyha means "against" with a downward intimation. Eleyhameans "towards." The significance of this slight change in wording is not clear. Perhaps some change had occurred in Nineveh that warranted a slightly different message than was appropriate before Jonah set out on his escape.
Only Jonah Will Do
God was insistent upon using Jonah for this mission. None other would do. When Queen Esther resisted going to her husband, the Persian king, to intercede for the Jews, her uncle Mordecai told her,
"For if you remain silent at this time, relief and deliverance will arise for the Jews from another place and you and your father's house will perish. And who knows whether you have not attained royalty for such a time as this?" (Esther 4:14).
Further, God's plans are not even dependent upon human beings. When Jesus entered Jerusalem and was hailed with Messianic references, He told his critics that the stones themselves would announce Him if the people did not (Luke 19:40).
But when Jonah ran from his assignment God did not just write him off and call another to take his place. There were probably several other prophets God could have chosen and prepared who would have willingly preached to Nineveh. God could have prepared another prophet from before Creation just as He had done with the fish. But God insisted on Jonah.
Why would God insist on Jonah - one so out of sync with God's heart - for this mission?
Perhaps the reason lies in Jonah as a type for Israel. When the Apostle Paul gave his defense before the people in Jerusalem everyone listened to his testimony with interest until he said that the Lord had told him, "Go! For I will send you far away to the Gentiles" (Acts 22:21). With that statement the Jews immediately reacted with disgust and called for Paul's death (Acts 22:22).
Jonah represents the Jews who were disgusted that anyone would even suggest God would reach out to the Gentiles. They would ask: "doesn't God hate the Gentiles because of their idolatry, immorality, and disregard for God's Law?"
But doesn't a similar attitude exist within the Church? Some ask: "doesn't God hate materialists, homosexuals, and atheists?" But the Lord said, "I take no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but rather that the wicked turn from his way and live" (Ezekiel 33:11).
Jonah's mission to Ninveh was proof enough that God's love extended to all. Otherwise He would have destroyed them all without warning.
Nineveh - Important to God
Throughout Jonah Nineveh has been referred to as "the great city." Now the formula phrase is broken in 3:3 with Nineveh described as "great to God," a Hebrew idiom which means "very important."
The simple idiomatic understanding of the phrase makes 3:3 read: "Nineveh, a very important city, required three days to visit it." And on the surface level of the story this is the intended meaning. But as we have seen, every word requires examination in Jonah.
The non-idiomatic meaning must also be examined to see how it fits into the themes and underlying images of the book. Nineveh was quite literally "important to God." Proof consisted in the extensive measures the Lord employed to deliver His message and messenger to them. In this phrase we see how God viewed Nineveh.
They really were very important to Him. He loved them very much and wanted to avoid their destruction if at all possible. By extension, Nineveh stands for all men, and thus, all men are important to God.
3:4 Jonah proceeded into the city the first day and cried out to them: "In forty more days Nineveh will be overturned."
Bare Minimum
Though Nineveh required three days to properly visit it Jonah preached for only one day. In that one day he said only five (Hebrew) words to them [f]. Jonah did not even preface his message with a "thus says Yahweh" The Ninevites would not have known who Yahweh was anyway.
Nor did he endow his message with authority by proclaiming "the God of the heavens, creator of the sea and the dry ground says," which was the phrase he had used with the pagan sailors.
We cannot say for sure if Jonah gave a more elaborate sermon to the men. Many commentators suggest that Jonah must have preached a more extensive message or that his coming was announced days or weeks before he arrived.
But the sheer brevity of the proclamation exemplifies something about Jonah's preaching that the writer wanted to convey. It illustrates the bare minimum effort that Jonah performed.
Jonah did not have the disposition to "go the extra mile" - at least not for the Gentile Ninevites. Indeed, he did not go one iota beyond his obligation.
If any prior announcement of Jonah's arrival was given to Nineveh it likely came from the sailors or those who heard the sailors' story and not from Jonah himself.
However, God took this meager message and bare minimum effort and used it to awaken the Ninevite's consciences. The threat of judgement alone was enough to do this. Despite Jonah, salvation was all God's doing from beginning to end.
God employs us in His work, though He is not dependent upon our actions to save anyone. No one that the Father has called to Himself since before Creation will be lost.
However, if we neglect the mandate to go out into the world to preach the gospel then we are the losers.
The wicked servant in the parable of the talents (Matthew 25:14-30) exemplifies this principle. In that parable a master entrusted his wealth to his servants and then left on a long journey.
After the master returned to collect on his investment from his servants, one wicked servant told the master, "I knew you to be a hard man, reaping where you did not sow and gathering where you scattered no seed and I was afraid, and went away and hid your talent in the ground.
See, you have what is yours" (Matt 25:24-25). That servant had the impression that his master reaped where He did not sow. He figured that God's work would be done no matter what he did, so he thought he might as well shirk his duties.
But the master showed this servant that it did matter; the servant was the loser in the deal. If we neglect the Lord's command, the Lord's work still gets accomplished (see Isaiah 55:10-11), but we lose out.
Overturned in Forty Days
The term "forty days" evokes the image of the Flood of Noah. Although there are other references to "forty days" in the Bible, the intended image seems apparent as the Flood due to the undertone of imminent judgement and destruction.
This allusion is enhanced by the likening of Nineveh's sin to the sin of the world before the Flood (see the comments in Nineveh's Sin later in this chapter). But aside from this allusion to the Flood why did God delay forty days?
Wouldn't it have been less hassle for God to just destroy Nineveh outright and save Himself the trouble of sending a difficult character like Jonah to them? A hope for repentance embeds itself within the forty day time delay.
But more than that, a hope for repentance is contained within the word "overturned" (haphak) itself. Haphak fundamentally means "change."
It can mean change for the worse, as in "destroy" or it can mean to change for the better, as in "transform." God announced, through Jonah, that things would change in Nineveh - for better or worse.
Other Hebrew words, such as shachath, which strictly means to "ruin" or "destroy," could have been chosen if the only intended meaning was "destruction." But haphak contains a hope of repentance for Nineveh. It is as the prophet Jeremiah wrote:
7 "At one moment I might speak concerning a nation or concerning a kingdom to uproot, to pull down, or to destroy it;
8 if that nation against which I have spoken turns from its evil, I will relent concerning the calamity I planned to bring on it.
9 Or at another moment I might speak concerning a nation or concerning a kingdom to build up or to plant it; 10 if it does evil in My sight by not obeying My voice, then I will think better of the good with which I had promised to bless it." (Jeremiah 18:7-10).
3:5 Now the men of Nineveh trusted in God and cried out for everyone - from the greatest to the least - to fast in sackcloth
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Max length of posts means a cut is needed here: don't miss part 2 below...
Chapter 3 - Nineveh Overturned
3:1 Now the word of Yahweh came to Jonah a second time saying:
3:2 "Get up! Go to Nineveh, the great city, and cry out to it the message I give you."
3:3 And Jonah got up and went to Nineveh according to the word of Yahweh. Now Nineveh, a city important to God, required three days to visit it.
Back to the Beginning
These versus parallel the first couple of versus of chapter one. After Jonah had gone through all that he had, he was confronted with the same instructions as before, with one slight change. In the beginning God asked Jonah to cry out "against" (aleyha) Nineveh.
Now Jonah was asked to cry out "to" (eleyha) Nineveh. A subtle change. Aleyha means "against" with a downward intimation. Eleyhameans "towards." The significance of this slight change in wording is not clear. Perhaps some change had occurred in Nineveh that warranted a slightly different message than was appropriate before Jonah set out on his escape.
Only Jonah Will Do
God was insistent upon using Jonah for this mission. None other would do. When Queen Esther resisted going to her husband, the Persian king, to intercede for the Jews, her uncle Mordecai told her,
"For if you remain silent at this time, relief and deliverance will arise for the Jews from another place and you and your father's house will perish. And who knows whether you have not attained royalty for such a time as this?" (Esther 4:14).
Further, God's plans are not even dependent upon human beings. When Jesus entered Jerusalem and was hailed with Messianic references, He told his critics that the stones themselves would announce Him if the people did not (Luke 19:40).
But when Jonah ran from his assignment God did not just write him off and call another to take his place. There were probably several other prophets God could have chosen and prepared who would have willingly preached to Nineveh. God could have prepared another prophet from before Creation just as He had done with the fish. But God insisted on Jonah.
Why would God insist on Jonah - one so out of sync with God's heart - for this mission?
Perhaps the reason lies in Jonah as a type for Israel. When the Apostle Paul gave his defense before the people in Jerusalem everyone listened to his testimony with interest until he said that the Lord had told him, "Go! For I will send you far away to the Gentiles" (Acts 22:21). With that statement the Jews immediately reacted with disgust and called for Paul's death (Acts 22:22).
Jonah represents the Jews who were disgusted that anyone would even suggest God would reach out to the Gentiles. They would ask: "doesn't God hate the Gentiles because of their idolatry, immorality, and disregard for God's Law?"
But doesn't a similar attitude exist within the Church? Some ask: "doesn't God hate materialists, homosexuals, and atheists?" But the Lord said, "I take no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but rather that the wicked turn from his way and live" (Ezekiel 33:11).
Jonah's mission to Ninveh was proof enough that God's love extended to all. Otherwise He would have destroyed them all without warning.
Nineveh - Important to God
Throughout Jonah Nineveh has been referred to as "the great city." Now the formula phrase is broken in 3:3 with Nineveh described as "great to God," a Hebrew idiom which means "very important."
The simple idiomatic understanding of the phrase makes 3:3 read: "Nineveh, a very important city, required three days to visit it." And on the surface level of the story this is the intended meaning. But as we have seen, every word requires examination in Jonah.
The non-idiomatic meaning must also be examined to see how it fits into the themes and underlying images of the book. Nineveh was quite literally "important to God." Proof consisted in the extensive measures the Lord employed to deliver His message and messenger to them. In this phrase we see how God viewed Nineveh.
They really were very important to Him. He loved them very much and wanted to avoid their destruction if at all possible. By extension, Nineveh stands for all men, and thus, all men are important to God.
3:4 Jonah proceeded into the city the first day and cried out to them: "In forty more days Nineveh will be overturned."
Bare Minimum
Though Nineveh required three days to properly visit it Jonah preached for only one day. In that one day he said only five (Hebrew) words to them [f]. Jonah did not even preface his message with a "thus says Yahweh" The Ninevites would not have known who Yahweh was anyway.
Nor did he endow his message with authority by proclaiming "the God of the heavens, creator of the sea and the dry ground says," which was the phrase he had used with the pagan sailors.
We cannot say for sure if Jonah gave a more elaborate sermon to the men. Many commentators suggest that Jonah must have preached a more extensive message or that his coming was announced days or weeks before he arrived.
But the sheer brevity of the proclamation exemplifies something about Jonah's preaching that the writer wanted to convey. It illustrates the bare minimum effort that Jonah performed.
Jonah did not have the disposition to "go the extra mile" - at least not for the Gentile Ninevites. Indeed, he did not go one iota beyond his obligation.
If any prior announcement of Jonah's arrival was given to Nineveh it likely came from the sailors or those who heard the sailors' story and not from Jonah himself.
However, God took this meager message and bare minimum effort and used it to awaken the Ninevite's consciences. The threat of judgement alone was enough to do this. Despite Jonah, salvation was all God's doing from beginning to end.
God employs us in His work, though He is not dependent upon our actions to save anyone. No one that the Father has called to Himself since before Creation will be lost.
However, if we neglect the mandate to go out into the world to preach the gospel then we are the losers.
The wicked servant in the parable of the talents (Matthew 25:14-30) exemplifies this principle. In that parable a master entrusted his wealth to his servants and then left on a long journey.
After the master returned to collect on his investment from his servants, one wicked servant told the master, "I knew you to be a hard man, reaping where you did not sow and gathering where you scattered no seed and I was afraid, and went away and hid your talent in the ground.
See, you have what is yours" (Matt 25:24-25). That servant had the impression that his master reaped where He did not sow. He figured that God's work would be done no matter what he did, so he thought he might as well shirk his duties.
But the master showed this servant that it did matter; the servant was the loser in the deal. If we neglect the Lord's command, the Lord's work still gets accomplished (see Isaiah 55:10-11), but we lose out.
Overturned in Forty Days
The term "forty days" evokes the image of the Flood of Noah. Although there are other references to "forty days" in the Bible, the intended image seems apparent as the Flood due to the undertone of imminent judgement and destruction.
This allusion is enhanced by the likening of Nineveh's sin to the sin of the world before the Flood (see the comments in Nineveh's Sin later in this chapter). But aside from this allusion to the Flood why did God delay forty days?
Wouldn't it have been less hassle for God to just destroy Nineveh outright and save Himself the trouble of sending a difficult character like Jonah to them? A hope for repentance embeds itself within the forty day time delay.
But more than that, a hope for repentance is contained within the word "overturned" (haphak) itself. Haphak fundamentally means "change."
It can mean change for the worse, as in "destroy" or it can mean to change for the better, as in "transform." God announced, through Jonah, that things would change in Nineveh - for better or worse.
Other Hebrew words, such as shachath, which strictly means to "ruin" or "destroy," could have been chosen if the only intended meaning was "destruction." But haphak contains a hope of repentance for Nineveh. It is as the prophet Jeremiah wrote:
7 "At one moment I might speak concerning a nation or concerning a kingdom to uproot, to pull down, or to destroy it;
8 if that nation against which I have spoken turns from its evil, I will relent concerning the calamity I planned to bring on it.
9 Or at another moment I might speak concerning a nation or concerning a kingdom to build up or to plant it; 10 if it does evil in My sight by not obeying My voice, then I will think better of the good with which I had promised to bless it." (Jeremiah 18:7-10).
3:5 Now the men of Nineveh trusted in God and cried out for everyone - from the greatest to the least - to fast in sackcloth
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Max length of posts means a cut is needed here: don't miss part 2 below...