Jonah 3:1 says, And the word of the LORD came unto Jonah the second time, saying, God never gave up on Jonah. He still was speaking to Him. We need to realize that God will always do all He can to protect us and when He delivers us from problems in this world, even those we create, we need to listen for His word to us. We are saved and delivered for a purpose, and that is to serve God faithfully. Verse two adds, Arise, go into Nineveh, that great city, and preach unto it the preaching that I bid thee. God still had the same purpose for Jonah. He was still to go into Nineveh and preach the preaching that God gave him. All we today can do is proclaim the message that God gives us. Jonah still had the same specific calling that he had before. We today may run so long that God uses someone else to do what He had called us to do. He would not have destroyed Nineveh without His message going out to them. He will not destroy people today without His word going out to them. If I run from God's call to go witness for several years, He would be a cruel God to just let those that I should have witnessed to die without hearing about His salvation plan. Jonah was being sent to Nineveh not just for those of Nineveh, but so that he might grow in faith as well. When we are sent to witness, and obey, we grow in our relationship to God, and to those around us. We are taught compassion for them. Verse three continues, So Jonah arose, and went unto Nineveh, according to the word of the LORD. Now Nineveh was an exceeding great city of three days’ journey. Jonah was through running from God and was now going to his mission field. Jonah was one man, going to a very large city, that God had said was so evil He was going to destroy it. When we look at the world today, does the task of reaching the lost seem overwhelming in this evil world? We may ask what just one person can do, but we need to realize that as God's followers, it is what God can do through one person doing His will that is important. It is not based on our ability, but on God's. God did not send an army to Nineveh, but only Jonah, empowered by God's word.
Tuesday, January 31, 2017
Jonah 2:6
Jonah 2:6 says, I went down to the bottoms of the mountains; the earth with her bars was about me for ever: yet hast thou brought up my life from corruption, O LORD my God. Jonah was in about as hopeless a situation as a person could be. He felt the whole world was bearing down on him. Still, even in his situation, he said his Lord and His God had brought him up from corruption. When we find ourselves in a seemingly hopeless situation in this world, do we acknowledge that God has already delivered us from corruption, no matter the outcome. Remember, Jonah was still in the belly of the whale at this time. We, as followers of Christ, need to realize that we are everlasting delivered already and to thank God for that daily. Verse seven adds, When my soul fainted within me I remembered the LORD: and my prayer came in unto thee, into thine holy temple. Jonah could in no way rely on his own ability to save himself, so he prayed to God. We can never save ourselves today, but if we are followers of Christ, we have already come to understand that. If we aren't, until we come to understand that, then nothing else matters. As followers of Christ, if we are out of His will, then we need to turn to Him again, and hopefully we will do it before we are brought as low as Jonah was. Remember, he was still one of God's chosen people. Verse eight continues, They that observe lying vanities forsake their own mercy. If we believe that there is any way we can save ourselves, then we are believing lying vanities. There are those today who claim they do not need God's forgiveness but rely on their own ability to forgive and thereby save themselves, but in so doing, they cut themselves off from the mercy of God. Verse nine states, But I will sacrifice unto thee with the voice of thanksgiving; I will pay that that I have vowed. Salvation is of the LORD. Jonah acknowledged that salvation was only from the Lord. He would sacrifice to God with thanksgiving and do what he had vowed to do. We today need to acknowledge that Christ is the only way to salvation and serve Him with thanksgiving. Verse ten adds, And the LORD spake unto the fish, and it vomited out Jonah upon the dry land. Jonah's prayers were answered, and he was returned to dry ground. He still had the same mission. We today, when we are restored to God, still have the mission of proclaiming His word.
Monday, January 30, 2017
Jonh 2:3
In Jonah 2:3, Jonah continued, For thou hadst cast me into the deep, in the midst of the seas; and the floods compassed me about: all thy billows and thy waves passed over me. From this statement, we can almost say Jonah was blaming God for his predicament. He knew that the sailors weren't responsible. Jonah acknowledged that God was still in control. Even as he ran, even in the belly of the whale, He knew that God was working in his life. Through all his misfortunes, God had not given up on him. We today can take courage from the fact that no matter how bad things may seem in life, if we are truly followers of God, He will never forsake us. That even includes when we are not following His will. Verse four adds, Then I said, I am cast out of thy sight; yet I will look again toward thy holy temple. Jonah, in one of the most hopeless places I can think of, still had hope in God. Anytime we are out of the sight of God, that is out of His will, we may see a situation as nearly hopeless, but we need to realize that God is with us. Even if we are firmly in God's will and the world seems determined to destroy us, we need to remember that God is with us. We need to look to God through it all. Verse five says, The waters compassed me about, even to the soul: the depth closed me round about, the weeds were wrapped about my head. I think we sometimes think of Jonah going straight from the ship to the being swallowed by the whale, but he says he was deep in the water with weeds wrapped around his head before the whale swallowed him. We may not immediately be rescued when we have trouble in this world, but we are assured that God will make a way. We never need to live life as though we are defeated. God is with us if we are His followers.
Sunday, January 29, 2017
Jonah 2:1
Jonah 2:1 says, Then Jonah prayed unto the LORD his God out of the fish’s belly. After three days and three nights in the belly of the whale, Jonah decide to call on God. I am not sure how long we may choose to rebel against God, but I do know that when we do, we will suffer spiritually until we call out to Him again. God was saving Jonah during this time. Had God decided to give up on Jonah, He could have simply let him drown. Jonah was stubborn about being willing to do God's will. Hopefully, we as His followers will not be the same way today, but if we are running from God's will, we can be certain that He will not be out to destroy us, but to protect us until we call to Him again. Verse two adds, And said, I cried by reason of mine affliction unto the LORD, and he heard me; out of the belly of hell cried I, and thou heardest my voice. Jonah finally realized that his only hope was to ask God for help. Jonah may not have been concerned with the people of Nineveh, nor with the sailors that he put in danger, but he was finally concerned with his own life. He discovered that he had not outrun God. We today can be certain, even if we don't want God around, when we call out to Him earnestly, He will hear. Until we are obedient to God in our own lives, we cannot be effective in reaching the lost world. Jonah said he cried out of the belly of hell. No matter how plush things may be, when we are running from the will of God, we are spiritually in hell. We may not literally be in the belly of a whale, but if we are not with God spiritually, there is only one other place to be. There are not multiple places to reside spiritually, only heaven or bell. If we are out of God's will, we cannot think that where we are isn't too bad. Though our ultimate destination is still heaven, if we are out of His will today we are choosing to live in a spiritual hell.
Saturday, January 28, 2017
Jonah 1:17
Jonah 1:17 says, 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 hadn't gotten very far in his attempt to run from God. God was already preparing for his rescue. I always heard that Jonah was swallowed by a whale when I was growing up, and some people now say it wasn't a whale, but a great fish created by God just to rescue Jonah. Still, in Matthew 12:40, Jesus calls it a whale, so that will do for me. God can and does use ordinary things and ordinary people every day to bring people to salvation. If we are running from His will, He is going to call us back and be at work to make a way for us to return. It may not be an easy way in the eyes of the world, but it will be a way back. I know all we have to do is repent, and we will be restored, but our attempt to run may have brought about consequences, and God will be at work to help us through those. Jonah was not in the sea because God wanted him there, but God was still at work in Jonah's life to save him. Jonah had been asleep in the ship, and I wonder what he did for three days in the belly of the whale. If we are running from God, I don't believe we can run farther than this. Jonah had plenty of time to consider his actions. We today may have to be brought very low to quit running from God, but as His followers, we need to realize that He will always be with us. As Christians, we must remember that wherever we go, the Holy Spirit goes with us. Even if we were to find ourselves feeling as hopeless as Jonah must have felt, God is with us forever. After we accept Christ as Savior, not following God's will for our lives when He calls us to a specific task does not mean we are no longer His. Jonah was still God's chosen spokesman to go to Nineveh, and God was still at work to get him there.
Friday, January 27, 2017
Jonah 1:15
Jonah 1:15 says, So they took up Jonah, and cast him forth into the sea: and the sea ceased from her raging. The sailors finally did what Jonah had told them to do, and the sea calmed. Jonah was a spokesman for God, even if a reluctant one. When the sailors did what Jonah, a spokesman of God told them to do, the storm passed. If we, as God's people today, humble ourselves and obey God, we may never know the full extent of the effect it has on those around us. Jonah and the sailors saw the effect immediately. Verse sixteen adds, Then the men feared the LORD exceedingly, and offered a sacrifice unto the LORD, and made vows. Jonah did not go to witness to those sailors, but the storm and his testimony as to his reason for running followed by the calming of the sea led them to believe in the God. God may work through us, even if we are disobedient to Him, to reach others if they know we are His followers. I am not sure how Jonah felt. The sea was now calm, but he was no longer in the ship. Regardless, he had to know God was still there. One thing we can be sure of is that wherever we go, God is there. Jonah may have been attempting to desert God, but God had not deserted him. We can never outrun God, no matter how hard or how often we try. Once we accept Christ as our Savior, we are His forever. Life may get stormy when we are not following God's will, but He will never desert Him. Jonah felt that what he wanted was more important than what God wanted, and we may at times feel the same way. Jonah found that life out of the will of God was dangerous, and the same is true for us today.
Thursday, January 26, 2017
Jonah 1:13
Jonah 1:13 says, Nevertheless the men rowed hard to bring it to the land; but they could not: for the sea wrought, and was tempestuous against them. Even though Jonah had brought the trouble to them, they were trying very hard to save him. Jonah still had not agreed to do what God had called him to do. He was willing to die running from God before going to Nineveh. We need to pray that we never become so full of hatred that we would rather die than to witness to certain people. Jonah, one of God's people, would die rather than witness, while those of the world, the sailors, were still risking their own lives to rescue him. That is a sad situation, and it cannot be successful spiritually. Lost people today may think they have a way to save others spiritually, but no matter how hard they try, they will never be successful. If we, the followers of Christ, do not reach the lost of the world with His message, it is not going to happen. We need to ensure that we reach out to everyone with God's love, or like Jonah, if we are running from God, we will start to be dependent on the world and put them in danger. If we do not reach them with the only way to salvation, which is through Christ, then we definitely put them in spiritual danger. I believe had Jonah simply accepted God's call at this point the ship could have gotten him safely ashore. Verse fourteen says, 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. The sailors called out to God. They may still have not claimed Him as their God, though it seems they likely did, but they recognized Him as the One Who could save them. They didn't demand but pleaded with Him for Jonah's sake and that they not be held accountable for his death. When the lost people of the world start to be more concerned for our wellbeing than we are for theirs, then there is something wrong with our obedience to God. We are to reach the lost and not look for their destruction, even if they hate us. We are called to God's standard and not the world's standard.
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