Jonah
Sermon 5 – Have You A Hard Heart To The Sinner?
You can watch the video of this sermon here.
Introduction
So, we
finally come to our final chapter of Jonah. Last week we looked at how much God
had great compassion and great care for the people of Nineveh, the Assyrians.
We saw how much he pitied them, how much he cared about warning them. In fact,
we noted that if you really care for someone, if you really have compassion for
someone then you will warn them if you seen danger clearly coming. You will not
be able to help yourself.
This is
because love is not just a feeling, it is a motivating force. If you truly have
love for someone or something, it will motivate you to act on their or its
behalf. Love is a driving force. Love is sometimes, even often, seen in what
you say, but it is more often seen in what you do on behalf of the one you
love. All these people saying they love their non-Christian friend or just
their friends in general and seeing destructive behaviours and not seeking to
warn them are not being loving, they are being selfish. They care more about
approval than doing the right thing, the actual loving thing.
Jonah did
not care about the Ninevehites, but God did, and God wanted him to. So,
although Jonah’s ministry was a success, God is not done with Jonah, and he is
not done with working in us through this little book. Jonah chapter 4 gives us
some insight into the heart of this man of God, and what was wrong with it, and
it is something which can settle into all of our hearts if we are not careful
and on guard. Jonah’s heart is hard, and because of this, he is in serious error.
This is true of anyone whose heart is hard. The making of a man or woman of God
is not just how strongly we proclaim the word of God, though this is important,
it is how accurately we reflect God’s own heart, so let’s see what God has to
say about this today, and asks ourselves this question: have we hard hearts
towards the sinner?
Jonah’s
Disappointment (Jonah 4:1-4) – Last week we mentioned what the reaction of the angels is to
one sinner turning to God in repentance. When one sinner repents the angels are
filled with joy. Jesus tells us in Luke 15:7, “Just so, I tell you, there
will be more joy in heaven over one sinner who repents than over ninety-nine
righteous persons who need no repentance.” If you were to preach at a
revival meeting and a 120 people came forward, how excited would you be? Very.
If 1200 people came forward, you would believe that the hand of the Lord God
was on you in a mighty way. If 12,000 people came forward, you are now speaking
about Billy Graham style numbers when he preached in football stadiums. If
120,000 people came forward for repentance and salvation after your message for
repentance, you would be celebrated as the greatest man of God in a generation.
You’d be tempted to pride, not because of any other reason than to think how
amazing this would be, what an event. How did Jonah feel? Well, he tells us,
“1 But it displeased Jonah exceedingly, and he was
angry. 2 And he prayed to the Lord and said, “O Lord, is not this what I said
when I was yet in my country? That is why I made haste to flee to Tarshish; for
I knew that you are a gracious God and merciful, slow to anger and abounding in
steadfast love, and relenting from disaster. 3 Therefore now, O Lord, please
take my life from me, for it is better for me to die than to live.” 4 And the
Lord said, “Do you do well to be angry?”
Jonah is
angry at God.
Have you
ever been angry at God? I have. Most of us have at some time in our lives, and
in our mind when we are angry at God it is always for good reasons. Jonah here
is very angry at God, “But it displeased Jonah exceedingly, and he was
angry.” So why was he angry?
Because God
did not do what he considered to be right,
“2 And he prayed to the Lord and said, “O Lord, is not
this what I said when I was yet in my country? That is why I made haste to flee
to Tarshish; for I knew that you are a gracious God and merciful, slow to anger
and abounding in steadfast love, and relenting from disaster. 3 Therefore now,
O Lord, please take my life from me, for it is better for me to die than to
live.”
Jonah shows
us with this statement that he understood the Scriptures and God himself better
than most Christians, and most other people as well.
Many people have
the wrong view of the Old Testament. They try to distinguish between the God of
the Old Testament and the God of the New Testament. I actually heard an atheist
youtuber make this distinction just this week. People like this, and this
includes a lot of Christians, see the God of the Old Testament as the wrathful
and vengeful God, and the God of the New Testament as the meek and humble and
compassionate God. This view makes two errors:
- It incorrectly states that there are different God’s between the Testaments. There are not. There is one God of the Bible, our God, 3 in 1.
- It incorrectly states that God does not display wrath in the New Testament or grace and mercy in the Old Testament. But you will find mercy and grace on pretty much every page of the Bible including the Old Testament.
What Jonah’s
says here comes straight from God’s description of himself in Exodus 34:6-7,
“6 The Lord passed before him and proclaimed, “The
Lord, the Lord, a God merciful and gracious, slow to anger, and abounding in
steadfast love and faithfulness, 7 keeping steadfast love for thousands,
forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, but who will by no means clear
the guilty, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children and the
children's children, to the third and the fourth generation.”
Jonah’s
problem here is not that he does not understand God and his word, he absolutely
does. He just does not agree with how God is applying it. You could show him 20
verses saying that God is merciful towards the sinner, and he would not care,
he knows this, but it is irrelevant.
Why is it
irrelevant? Because you can’t let the wicked people of Nineveh be forgiven. The
Assyrians must be punished. This is clearly Jonah’s view.
Jonah’s
problem is not that he has bad theology, because he doesn’t he understands God
and he understand God’s heart for the lost. His issue here is that he is just
acting irrationally because he is emotionally triggered. You can tell this by
what he did way back in chapter one: he ran from God. This was irrational for
many reasons, but especially for this reason, Jonah’s own Psalm shows that he
was very familiar with the Psalms of David, he knew the theology of the Psalms,
so he would have known that this passage was in the Psalms, Psalm 139:7-12,
“7 Where shall I go from your Spirit? Or where shall I
flee from your presence? 8 If I ascend to heaven, you are there! If I make my
bed in Sheol, you are there! 9 If I take the wings of the morning and dwell in
the uttermost parts of the sea, 10 even there your hand shall lead me, and your
right hand shall hold me. 11 If I say, “Surely the darkness shall cover me, and
the light about me be night,” 12 even the darkness is not dark to you; the
night is bright as the day, for darkness is as light with you.”
Jonah knew
that he could not run from God. He was not a heathen. The pagans believed that
their gods had regional powers. A deity might be tied to a tree, or a mountain,
or a valley, or a temple of some kind. This is how the pagans thought. Orthodox
Bible believing Israelites knew that God was the creator of the whole world.
Jonah shows this, when he says, “And he said to them, “I am a Hebrew, and
I fear the Lord, the God of heaven, who made the sea and the dry land”
(Jonah 1:9).
You know
what Jonah is saying when he tells them this? That he knows he is not acting
rationally. He knows he is being silly. He is effectively saying, “I am trying
to run from the God, who cannot be run from.” He’s putting his hand up to
confess his foolishness has created this situation for these sailors.
Jonah might
have been acting foolish, but he is not a fool, he is just a fallen person like
you or I. And we can act all irrationally or strange when we are confronted
with a truth that we do not like, one that we may even be disgusted at. Jonah
was disgusted at the thought that the Ninevehites might get a chance to repent.
He did not want this to happen.
“O Lord, is not this what I said when I was yet in my
country? That is why I made haste to flee to Tarshish; for I knew that you are
a gracious God and merciful, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love, and
relenting from disaster. 3 Therefore now, O Lord, please take my life from me,
for it is better for me to die than to live.”
Jonah simply
did not want the Ninevehites to be forgiven. Jonah did not want them to have a
chance to be saved. But why? There are several likely reasons:
- Some have argued that the Israelites at this stage of their history were exclusionary in their views about Salvation, they wanted to hog it all for themselves and to keep the message of God’s grace from the pagan Gentiles. This is possible, maybe even partly true, though not the likely reason.
- Some have argued that Jonah was afraid of what Nineveh could do to Israel, and in fact, would do to Israel, and Jonah wanted them destroyed before they destroyed his own people. This is much more likely, but not the full picture.
- Both of these positions make out Jonah to be a bit of a bad guy, like he is just barracking for his team, and focusing on the other team’s faults and willing to overlook over his own people’s sin.
- I think the correct answer is far more simple: Jonah was a good man, a righteous man, and as a prophet of God he knew that the people of Nineveh deserved to be judged, which is indicated by his speaking about God “relenting from disaster”. He was angry, because a guilty people were being set free. He was angry, because his sense of justice was being overridden by the mercy and grace of God.
The
Ninevehites really did deserve judgement.
The
Ninevehites Were Proud – Nineveh deserved judgement. The reputation of Nineveh was pretty well
known in the ancient world. The Assyrians were quick to make it well known.
They were led by people who ruled like Mafia bosses, they wanted people to fear
even thinking about crossing them. I spoke last week and a few weeks ago about
the Assyrians and their carvings, showing all the cruelty and horror they
inflicted on their crushed enemies. But one thing I did not note was this:
those carvings also show how much pride the Ninevehites took in their cruelty
and violence.
Why do we
put picture frames, and beloved books, and beautiful paintings around our
homes? It fills us with a sense of pride. This can be positive, like being
proud of your family. But it can also be negative like “pride of possessions”.
The Assyrians were proud of their conquests and their victories. Every empire
is. We read in Zephaniah 2:15, “15 This is the exultant city that lived
securely, that said in her heart, “I am, and there is no one else.” What a
desolation she has become, a lair for wild beasts! Everyone who passes by her hisses
and shakes his fist.”
What does
the statement, “I am” mean? The Assyrians thought they were gods. Assyria had
become proud of its evil, confident of its victories, empowered in its
exaltation of its own glory. They worshipped themselves.
Every empire
becomes like this just before it starts to fall and decline. It becomes proud,
arrogant, boastful, overconfident. This overconfidence is part of what leads to
its fall.
The reason
this causes an empire to fall is because pride causes people, leaders and nations,
to trust in their own abilities and strengths, as Ezekiel notes about the heart
of the Assyrians, Ezekiel 31:10, “10 Therefore thus says the Lord God:
Because it towered high and set its top among the clouds, and its heart was
proud of its height,…”
I show you
this to highlight an important point. Jonah was not wrong in thinking that
Nineveh deserved judgement from God. He was not off the mark at all. He was
right to have his sense of justice triggered.
The
Ninevehites were proud, they were arrogant, they were violent. Jonah would have
known their evil, he would have known their pride, their lust for war and
violence. He was not some long haired hippy progressive preacher who thought
everyone was equal and the Ninevehites were just misunderstood but passionate
people.
Jonah was a
righteous man of God, who knew his Scriptures well, and knew the guilt of the
Ninevehites well too. Though he could not have known Nahum, Jonah in some way
probably wished he had a message like Nahum’s. Let’s see what Nahum said.
Jonah
Wished He Was Nahum – By saying Jonah wished he was Nahum, I do not mean that he literally
wished he was this different prophet, just that I think he wished that he could
preach what Nahum preached, look at this, Nahum 1:1-5,
“1 An oracle concerning Nineveh. The book of the
vision of Nahum of Elkosh. 2 The Lord is a jealous and avenging God; the Lord
is avenging and wrathful; the Lord takes vengeance on his adversaries and keeps
wrath for his enemies. 3 The Lord is slow to anger and great in power, and the
Lord will by no means clear the guilty. His way is in whirlwind and storm, and
the clouds are the dust of his feet. 4 He rebukes the sea and makes it dry; he
dries up all the rivers; Bashan and Carmel wither; the bloom of Lebanon
withers. 5 The mountains quake before him; the hills melt; the earth heaves
before him, the world and all who dwell in it.”
Wow what a
passage.
My Bible
titles this part, God’s Wrath Against Nineveh. I remember I once asked a
youth group Bible study if they knew God could feel this way, they were like
all wide eyed and said, “No.” But this is the classic “OId Testament” God that many
other people think of.
Nahum gets
to preach the fire and brimstone. He is starting off in full wrath and presenting
God as a fierce warrior who is angry at his enemies, ready to strike them and
come down with the hammer of judgement. As he makes clear.
Nineveh is
going to cop it: Nahum 2:8-12 –
“8 Nineveh is like a pool whose waters run away.
“Halt! Halt!” they cry, but none turns back. 9 Plunder the silver, plunder the
gold! There is no end of the treasure or of the wealth of all precious things.
10 Desolate! Desolation and ruin! Hearts melt and knees tremble; anguish is in
all loins; all faces grow pale! 11 Where is the lions' den, the feeding place
of the young lions, where the lion and lioness went, where his cubs were, with
none to disturb? 12 The lion tore enough for his cubs and strangled prey for
his lionesses; he filled his caves with prey and his dens with torn flesh. 13
Behold, I am against you, declares the Lord of hosts, and I will burn your
chariots in smoke, and the sword shall devour your young lions. I will cut off
your prey from the earth, and the voice of your messengers shall no longer be
heard.”
Just this
week I watched one of my favourite old movies again, The Ghost and The
Darkness, which is based on the true story of two man eating lions who
attack people who are trying to build a bridge. Have you ever seen lions
attack? I have not in real life and I know the movie dramatizes it, but it has
to be a terrifying experience to be attacked by a lion. It’s a great movie,
even more so for being based on a true story.
Nahum
compares the Assyrian warriors to lions in how they tore at their prey, “The
lion tore enough for his cubs and strangled prey for his lionesses.” He
even refers to the images of violence in their palaces, “he filled his
caves with prey and his dens with torn flesh.” They did this in part
literally through loot and trophies and metaphorically with paintings and
carvings.
And God is
going to destroy them because of this: “13 Behold, I am against you,
declares the Lord of hosts, and I will burn your chariots in smoke, and the
sword shall devour your young lions. I will cut off your prey from the earth,
and the voice of your messengers shall no longer be heard.”
It is clear
in Jonah’s response to God, that he wished he got to preach a message like
Nahum. A message filled with God’s wrath and justice against the sinful nation
of Assyria, filled with warnings of destruction and predictions of disaster.
And what is fascinating is in a sense he did get to do this. Jonah’s message is
very simple: Nineveh you are about to be overtaken, Jonah 3:4, “Jonah
began to go into the city, going a day's journey. And he called out, “Yet forty
days, and Nineveh shall be overthrown!”
We see
Jonah’s message as a doom and gloom message, but it’s also an offer from God,
and the Ninevehites saw that. And it is clear that Jonah saw an offering of
grace in it too, because Nineveh was overthrown. His prophecy came true. It was
not overthrown in the sense of destroyed it was overthrown in the sense that
the people turned their worlds upside down, or really ride side up, and trusted
in God.
Nahum got to
decree the destruction of Nineveh, this is what Jonah wanted. He wanted to say,
Nahum 3:1, “3 Woe to the bloody city, all full of lies and plunder— no
end to the prey!”
I can relate
to Jonah, can’t you? When you see the wicked prospering in their evil. When you
see wicked rulers not only getting away with oppression but getting praised for
it. When you see corruption being lifted up and those who call out the
corruption being attacked. When you see those who crush other people’s lives,
who attack the innocent, who lie, cheat and steal, getting richly rewarded, not
just getting away with it, but being celebrated by the masses. It makes you
angry. It makes you want to preach like Nahum.
Jonah was
probably a better man than most of us, or all of us here. I have to admit, I probably
would have felt just as he felt. It is likely many of you would have to. How
could you not?
I have a
strong sense of justice, what is right, what is equitable, what is just. Many
of you here do to. That sense of justice has been seriously aggrieved by evil
done in our nation over the last few years. Some of you may have personal
grievances, or other issues with injustice in our land.
If you
understand the Bible how can you not feel like Jonah and think: that sinner
needs to be punished, that evil doer needs to feel the wrath of God, that
wicked person needs to judged!!!? How can you not feel this way at times?
The truth is,
in many ways Jonah feels like the tragic hero in this story…except for one
thing. He had forgotten how much compassion God has for his creation. So, God
has to teach him again.
But What
About The Plant?
(vv.5-11) – What God does here is quite interesting. God gives Jonah the
simplest thing to care about, and let’s see what happens,
“5 Jonah went out of the city and sat to the east of
the city and made a booth for himself there. He sat under it in the shade, till
he should see what would become of the city. 6 Now the Lord God appointed a
plant and made it come up over Jonah, that it might be a shade over his head,
to save him from his discomfort. So Jonah was exceedingly glad because of the
plant. 7 But when dawn came up the next day, God appointed a worm that attacked
the plant, so that it withered. 8 When the sun rose, God appointed a scorching
east wind, and the sun beat down on the head of Jonah so that he was faint. And
he asked that he might die and said, “It is better for me to die than to live.”
9 But God said to Jonah, “Do you do well to be angry for the plant?” And he
said, “Yes, I do well to be angry, angry enough to die.” 10 And the Lord said,
“You pity the plant, for which you did not labor, nor did you make it grow,
which came into being in a night and perished in a night. 11 And should not I
pity Nineveh, that great city, in which there are more than 120,000 persons who
do not know their right hand from their left, and also much cattle?”
God appoints
a plant for Jonah to be his shelter, then he appoints a worm to kill the plant,
then God appoints a scorching east wind and the hot sun to beat down on Jonah.
God brings this all on Jonah to teach him a lesson and what is that lesson?
Well, we see
that Jonah get’s attached to the plant, and then strangely has compassion for
the plant, “9 But God said to Jonah, “Do you do well to be angry for the
plant?” And he said, “Yes, I do well to be angry, angry enough to die.”…”.
This might seem strange, but this is what we human beings are like. People get
attached to all kinds of things; their car, their pets, some people treat their
pets just like kids, they call them fur babies and buy them the choicest foods,
people get attached to places and all sorts of stuff.
This
attachment is in human nature. Some people take it too far of course, but most
people have it to some degree or another. This tendency to care for lesser
order beings, animals and plants is in our nature. It is in our nature for a
good reason, because it is in God’s nature too. Think about it. We are far more
separated from God in worthiness, than a dog is to us. Or to put it another
way, a dog is far closer to us in similarity, than we are to God. He is so far
above us. But he cares, anyway.
God’s lesson
for Jonah here is very simple:
“…10 And the Lord said, “You pity the plant, for which
you did not labor, nor did you make it grow, which came into being in a night
and perished in a night. 11 And should not I pity Nineveh, that great city, in
which there are more than 120,000 persons who do not know their right hand from
their left, and also much cattle?”
Jonah is
devastated that God would wipe out the plant, but he does not have the same
care for the Ninevehites. His hypocrisy here might seem strange, but it is very
human. We humans are good at being inconsistent, it is almost a human
specialty, it is what makes us unpredictable and unique.
Jonah’s
reaction is very easy to understand, when you recognize that he is stubbornly
seeking to remain angry at God, for not doing what he felt was just. In his
view God judged the Ninevehites too lightly, and the plant to harshly. He
believed God was not doing the right and just thing.
Jonah
intellectually understood the grace and mercy of God, but it had not truly sunk
into his own heart, to give him the same forgiveness for the sinner that God
had. But the truth is, that if God gave people always what they deserved, then
Jonah, the pagan mariners and the Ninevehites would have all been equally wiped
out.
God’s final
statement to Jonah is so important, because it helps us finish where we need to
be. You see, we never find out Jonah’s response, whether he
actually softened his heart and humbled himself fully before God. We never get
a definite answer. But we don’t need it, because Jonah’s response is not
important. God’s answer to him is what is important. “11 And should not I
pity Nineveh, that great city, in which there are more than 120,000 persons who
do not know their right hand from their left, and also much cattle?” In
other words, God’s answer is: “And should I not pity the poor lost sinner?”
“Who
do not know their right hand from their left” – don’t gloss over this statement,
because I think it is the whole point of the book of Nineveh. God cares for the
lost sinner for this simple reason: they often do know not what they do.
Don’t get me
wrong, I am not saying they are not responsible. Because they are. What I am
saying is this: the don’t know any other way. Often the sinner is trapped in
the consequences of their bad decisions and sin, and they don’t know how to get
out of this. This is why we should feel pity for them. Because we are the light
of the world, and we are the ones who can show them the ultimate light of the
world, Jesus.
Application
– So how do we apply
this?
- Firstly, ask yourself this, are you willing to even share the message of salvation with your enemies?
- Secondly, how would you respond if the worst people you could think of repented? Would you celebrate their change of heart or mourn like Jonah?
- Thirdly, do you pity those who do not know their right hand from their left, or do you simply shun them?
- Fourthly, do you truly understand just how powerful the grace of God is, and just how new a person it can make of the redeemed sinner?
Conclusion - Jonah had a hard heart towards the sinner. I think he must
have eventually come around, because he was such a mighty man of God. But this
just shows us that no matter who the person is, we can sometimes fall into bad
ways of thinking about sin, the sinner and the mercy of God. Pray that when we
do, God warns us, like he does Jonah, so that we never face the danger of
misunderstanding the grace of God. Let’s pray.
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