Exploring My Strange Bible - Running From Your Life (Remastered)
Episode Date: December 5, 2025The Amazing Jonah E1 — Many of us know the story of Jonah as the prophet who gets swallowed by a whale. And while that is part of the story, it’s only a couple sentences in a longer narrative. So ...who is Jonah? Why did he flee from God and board a boat to Tarshish? And why is his story even in the Bible? In this first message of a five-part series, Tim lays the groundwork for exploring Jonah’s story and also ponders why Jonah runs from God’s vision for his life—a choice we all face at some level in our lives. This message was given on August 4, 2013, at Door of Hope Church in Portland, Oregon.REFERENCED RESOURCESIn the introduction, Tim references his professor, Dr. Ray Lubeck, who taught him to read the Bible as Hebrew literature. While it is not mentioned by name, Dr. Lubeck’s core work on the Bible as literature is Read the Bible for a Change: Understanding and Responding to God's Word.Check out Tim’s extensive collection of recommended books here.SHOW MUSIC“Nob Hill Instrumental” by DrexlerSHOW CREDITSProduction of today's episode is by Lindsey Ponder, producer, and Cooper Peltz, managing producer. Aaron Olsen edited and remastered today's episode. JB Witty does our show notes. Powered and distributed by Simplecast. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, everybody. I'm Tim Mackey, and this is my podcast, exploring my strange Bible.
I am a card-carrying Bible history and language nerd who thinks that Jesus of Nazareth is utterly amazing
and worth following with everything that you have.
On this podcast, I'm putting together the last 20 years worth of lectures and sermons where I've
been exploring the strange and wonderful story of the Bible and how it invites us into the mission
of Jesus and the journey of faith. And I hope this can all be helpful for you too. I also help
start this thing called The Bible Project. We make animated videos and podcasts and classes about
all kinds of topics in Bible and theology. You can find all those resources at Bibleproject.com.
With all that said, let's dive into the episode for this week.
We decided to launch this podcast with a five-part teaching series that I did back in 2013
in the Sunday gatherings at Door of Hope Church, where I was a pastor for many years.
And in this series, we explore the book of Jonah, which is one of the most fascinating, fascinating books of the Old Testament.
I've had going on a two-decade kind of obsession with understanding the brilliance of this book.
I was first introduced to the book of Jonah as a new Christian in my early 20s.
I had this class on reading biblical literature with an amazingly brilliant professor of Hebrew Bible named Ray Lubbock.
And he blew my mind teaching me to read the Bible as Hebrew literature.
So what this first message, Five, is going to do is actually just go through the first couple of verses of the book of Jonah, but then set up what kind of book is,
for us in the book of Jonah, and how if you've only been introduced to it through children's
literature or media, how unfortunate that is, because this is definitely not a children's story.
It's very complex and subversive and challenging. So this first message then is just setting you up
for reading a book that's as sophisticated as the book of Jonah. But I learned a ton in the process
of preparing for it, and I hope that it's helpful for you.
How many of you are familiar with the story of Jonah?
Show with hands here, I think it's important.
How many are familiar?
So the vast majority of us are familiar with the story of Jonah.
And this is a problem, I think.
This is actually a huge problem.
And one that we're going to have to overcome here in the next five weeks.
And it's a problem because if I would have asked a question,
how many of you have thoughtfully read through the book of Jonah in its entirety,
maybe even more than once, maybe even like read a study Bible or something like that?
comments on it and learned about the book of Jonah, and I did, I'm not going to ask that question.
It's okay, but if I did ask that question, far, far fewer hands would have raised.
So I'm guessing, actually, many of us have probably never actually thoroughly or thoughtfully
read through the book, but you know about it because of what?
Yeah, so exactly right.
So I call this the veggie tales factor, right?
You know what I'm saying?
The veggie tales factor.
And so honestly, when I said the book of Jonah, what came in?
And many of your minds was the talking cucumber, you know what I mean, the talking tomato or whatever.
And this is a challenge and a problem, I think, just in general, with, especially in the Old Testament, the stories of the Bible.
Because most of us, if we have encountered the stories of the Old Testament at all, it has not been through thoughtful reading of them.
They've been mediated to us through children's media.
And what happens in children's media is that most of these stories,
They get watered down, or they're simplified, and somehow they all of a sudden teach a bland, moral
truth, like be nice or something, be a nice person, you know? Suddenly every story in the Bible is about
that. And especially Jonah. Holy cow. For Jonah, it's a no-brainer. There is one element of this story
that every children's book fixates on, and what element is that? Is Jonah in the? Come on, the fish.
Come on, you know this. So just a random sampling of,
book covers, right, from Amazon.com. And so whether it's the 3D version, right, with the little
glasses over here, whether it's the sticker book version right here, I mean, just look at it.
There you go. What's the book of Jonah about? It's about a guy and a fish. There you go.
That's the veggie-tails factor that we have at work with us. And so, you guys, the fish appears
in two sentences in this entire story. The fish is not the thing. The fish is not the thing. The
Fish is not the thing. To make the fish the focus, or the main theme is to actually miss what this story is really, what the story is really about. So the book of Jonah is a part of the sacred scriptures. And the purpose of the scriptures is not to entertain children. The purpose of the scriptures is not to teach us about fish. The scripture's purpose is to reveal the character of God. It's to reveal Jesus to us. And his character and his purposes and what he's up to in the world.
what every book of the Bible is for to reveal God and reveal Jesus and his character and his
purposes to us. And so whatever the book of Jonah is about, it's doing that. And whatever I think
the book of Jonah is about that distracts from that, I'm probably like way on the wrong track
and need to get back. It's the veggie tales factor. And so the fact is the book of Jonah especially
is, I mean, it's great children's story, but to actually get what's going on in this book,
you have to be an adult, absolutely.
The book of Jonah is one of the most brilliantly told stories
in the entire Bible.
It's full of wit and irony and humor.
There is humor in the Bible, it really is, and sarcasm.
And what this book is really doing,
Jonah, as we're going to see,
he's a representative character in the story.
He represents the covenant people of God,
through whom God wants to do his work in the world.
And what this book does is that, by a...
Jonah's a horrible man, by the way.
Do you know this?
He's a horrible person.
Every chapter of the book just exposes what a horrible flawed person he is.
And by holding him up for ridicule, for shame, for critique,
what the storyteller is really doing,
many of you have seen this kind of a stock scene
in many, like, spy action movies where, like,
there's a dark alley or a warehouse,
the good guy is chasing the bad guy.
And then all of a sudden the good guy sees the,
the red laser beam sight on his chest.
You know what I'm saying?
You know that scene?
You could name ten movies
that have that scene in it right now.
So that's the book of Juna.
Because you're reading this story
and you're like, whoa, this is crazy in the sky,
he's crazy in the fish, and whoa this.
And then all of a sudden, if you're paying attention,
you realize, like, yeah, this is about me.
Like, this whole story is aimed at punching me in the gut right now.
This story is aimed at exposing the worst
tendencies that tend to form inside of God's covenant people, which is pride, hard-heartedness,
judgmentalism, tribalism, small-mindedness, and an inability to grow and change and let God's grace
actually surprised me and explode the boundaries of what I thought was possible in the world.
That's what the story is about.
And so it's one of those things where, you know, you think you're just reading this kind of
harmless tale or something, and then you realize someone's stocking you in the gut. That's the
book of Jonah. And so Surgeon General's warning, you know, this is probably going to hurt, five Sundays
in a row. It's going to hurt, but you're kind of used to that around door of hope. I think that's
kind of why a lot of you are here is because you like the pain. You like the pain. I don't know how
it's to say it. So think of these five weeks. It's kind of like a rescue mission. We're going to
rescue the book of Jonah from all of the layers of vegetation that have grown over it.
We're going to pull it out and try and understand what this story is really saying.
It's profound revelation of the character and purposes of God.
You guys with me?
All right.
So you're already open here.
And specifically today, reading any book of the Bible, but especially the book of Jonah,
it's kind of like I'm watching afternoon soap operas when you have not been watching
beforehand, and you're like, who are these people?
and why do I care about this?
And there's clearly all these stories
that have already been going.
You know what I'm saying here?
Some of you were ashamed to even admit
that you would watch soap operas.
So anyway, but that's kind of,
what's going on as we dive into Jonah.
There's all these back stories
that you're just supposed to know,
inform and help you grasp
what the author's trying to do to you.
He's trying to mess with you here.
But you need to grasp the backstories.
And so we're camping out in the first three verses this week
to set the playing field
and so we can pick up and just run in the Sundays that follow.
So, verse one, let's go for it.
Lightning speed.
The word of the Lord came to Jonah, son of Amitai.
Okay, let's stop.
Stop right here.
There are two things we got to pay attention to here.
First of all, the author just landed a big ball, an easy ball, slow ball,
softball, underhand, I don't know.
I'm trying to say he's made.
like surrounding as a bound, different metaphor altogether.
Following you about, with these first sentences here,
with this first sentence,
what kind of book am I reading, right?
We just opened up the book of John,
and what kind of book are we reading?
It's the first clue, right there.
So the word of the Lord comes to what kinds of people,
in the Bible, especially in Israel,
comes to prophets.
It's prophets.
So apparently this is a book of the...
And in the Bible, prophets doesn't mean fortune teller,
or something like that.
The prophets sometimes look into the future
and discern what God will be doing in line with his character and so on.
But for the most part, the most basic definition and role of prophets in the Bible
is to speak on God's behalf. They're just messengers.
To speak on God's behalf, give God's perspective on something.
And that's what a prophet is in the Bible. And so the Word of the Lord comes to prophets.
So turn the page to the next book of the Bible.
It'll just be one page for most of you.
This is another book of the prophets, Micah, and how does it begin?
It begins the exact same way.
The word of the Lord that came to Micah of Morochev during the reigns of all these kings,
Your Tham, Achaz Hiskiahou, kings of Judah, the vision you saw concerning Samaria and Judah.
Now here's what's interesting.
Here's what follows.
What follows in Micah is seven chapters that are a collection of Micah's words of his poetry,
his poetic prophecy, to Israel.
And this is how all the books of the prophets begin.
You read Isaiah or Obadiah or Ezekiel or Zechariah,
and they all begin with the words of this prophet,
where the word of the Lord came to,
or the vision that came from God that so when Isaiah saw,
this is how all the books of the prophets begin.
And so we turn back to the book of Jonah,
and we read the first sentence,
and we say, oh, the word of the Lord came to Jonah, son of Amitai.
Oh, I know what kind of book I'm about to start reading.
It's a book of prophecy.
And am I right?
I'm wrong
I'm wrong
the first sentence
throws you off
everything is wonky
in this book
and that's precisely
the point
the first sentence
throws you off
because you think
you're about
ready to read
a collection
of Jonah's
poetic prophecy
like every other
book of the prophets
but that's not
what you get
what you get
is a story
about this prophet
and I just want
you to stop
and think about that
God's word
takes many
different forms
in the scriptures
sometimes
God's word to his people is speaking directly through the prophet and through his words.
That's God's words to his people through Micah.
The book of Jonah is God's word to his people through a story about a prophet.
And so if you want to hear God's word, you have to read and reread and meditate and think about the message of this story.
Not about a fish, about the message of the whole story, including the chapter.
I have a children's book that I read to my son with grimace, clenched teeth or something.
It's the story of Jonah, and it completely leaves out Chapter 4.
It doesn't even mention the story that he gets angry at God in Chapter 4.
It's because, well, that's kind of, it's a little inappropriate for kids, get angry at God.
You know, I think so.
No, you've got to read the whole thing.
And what is the message of this whole book?
So what that raises is, okay, this is a story about a prophet.
What kind of story is this?
And so the Bible, it's like a small library, and there are many different books.
There are many different kinds of literature in these very different books.
There's different kinds of stories, different kinds of narrative, there's different kinds
of poetry, there's erotic love poetry, the song and songs, but then there's also prophetic
poetry, which is a different character.
You can read someone else's mail in the Bible, the letters of the New Testament, and there's
lots of narrative.
One third of the Bible is narrative, another third of it is poetry.
And you should not read all of those things the same way.
Whenever you open up the Bible,
the first question you should ask is,
what kind of literature am I reading right now?
And then how should that shape what I expect to get out of this?
And so that's a question we should ask,
is, okay, this is a story about a prophet,
but what kind of story is the author telling me?
Like, how can I honor God's word
and let it dictate what kind of story this is to me?
And so there's essentially, I have to go very quick here
because I don't just want to give a lecture
about the Book of Jonah.
But I do think it's helpful
because it's teaching us how to think
and how to read the Bible more intentionally.
There's two basic views
on what kind of story the book of Jonah is.
There's nothing else like Jonah in the Bible.
There's no other book about a prophet.
And not only that, there's no other book
that has this unique kind of storytelling style to it.
And so, you know, you read kind of teachers or commentators and this kind of thing across the whole spectrum, but even among kind of Orthodox Christian scholars, the Bible is God's Word, Jesus, God and human, that whole deal. So Orthodox Christian scholars, there's two views. You can just come across them in all of the commentaries. One is that the author has received a historical tradition about this guy named Jonah, son of Amatai. It's a real historical figure. And he's passing on to us this story as a
historical account of the things that happened in the life of Jonah, a brief revival in the
city of Nineveh, and so on. So that's one view, and it's a very common view. I think probably
most people haven't really even thought about it, and they might assume that. The second view,
again, also held by Orthodox Christian scholars, is that there's something more than meets the eye
to this book. It's that Jonah is a form of narrative parable, and that this is a parable based
off of a historical real figure,
as we're going to see here,
Jonah was a real figure based in history,
but the author does not intend us
to take the story as historical narrative,
but rather as a parable.
Similarly to the parable that Jesus told
in Luke chapter 16,
where he used a name character,
the rich man and Lazarus in that parable.
It's very clear it's a parables,
it's a collection of parables and so on,
has all the features of Jesus' parables.
But Jesus used a named figure,
most likely a figure that would have been familiar to his hearers or so on, a beggar named Lazarus,
but then puts that real character into a parable type setting.
So this is the two main views.
So here's the problem.
Here's the problem here.
And let's be very honest.
What has happened for the most part in the last couple hundred years, especially in many church circles,
is because the fish is the main thing, the choice between the two views all of a sudden
becomes a litmus test on whether or not you really believe in miracles or whether or not you
even believe a man could survive in a fish's stomach for three days. And if you take the view that
the book's a parable, then you don't believe in the possibility of miracles. You're sliding
towards theological liberalism and you're denying the truthfulness of the Bible. Okay, let's just
stop. Stop that. Stop. This is the wrong starting point altogether. The fish is not the thing.
What I want to do is humble myself before God's word, not tell it what I think it ought to be,
but let the author help me
what kind of story he's writing.
And so, then this is where the debate comes in,
because Jonah is a historical figure.
There's no doubt about that.
Jesus mentions Jonah,
and some people say,
well, because Jesus mentioned Jonah
and the people of Nineveh,
that's a claim that the book is historical.
If you go read those comments of Jesus in context, though,
he's not talking about what kind of book is,
or he's not appealing to the historicity of the book of Jonah.
He's doing what he always does with the Old Testament,
says that these are stories and figures that point forward to me.
He says that the book Jonah in the whale is a symbol or a type
of his coming death and burial here.
So Jesus' words don't resolve the issue for us.
You have to go to the Book of Jonah itself.
And so here's what's interesting.
No matter what view you hold,
and Book of Jonah is unique in history.
how it tells its story. It doesn't give any date. Other than Jonah, it doesn't give you any names.
It names one of the most important figures in the ancient world, who's the king of Deneva.
He's like the king of, he's the equivalent of the U.S. president in the world today. He was the
ruler of the biggest, baddest empire of the ancient world has ever known, and he has no name
in the story, which is very, very curious. Usually when biblical authors, like telling the stories
of David or Solomon, or like the four biographies of Jesus, in the New Testament,
They make the historical claim just out there.
They're telling you names and dates and other events going on in history and look.
Everything is keyed in to make that claim.
And the Book of Jonah is just different.
It has a different kind of style.
And what both camps agree on, whatever view you hold,
what both camps agree on is that the Book of Jonah is a beautiful piece of literary storytelling.
And so my lecture is kind of over now.
kind of over now. This is where I think you'll really be interested here, is that no matter
what view we hold, everybody agrees that the book of Jonah is a story that reads like two forms
of literature we have in our culture. And those two forms, literature. One is Saturday Night Live,
and the other one is comic books. So the storytelling style of this book is a form of satire.
You get familiar with that term? I don't know. So maybe. So just think Saturday Night Live.
So satire stories are where you take very known, known figures, popular figures, who are kind of stock generic characters.
So you take, in Saturday Night Live, you take political figures or celebrities, this kind of thing.
And you place them in extreme ridiculous stories that just highlight how flawed and screwed up these people are, right?
And they're just the butt of every joke.
And you're just watching and you go, oh, ridiculous.
These people are so ridiculous.
And satires are always aimed, not simply at telling you about some event that took place,
they're aimed at critiquing you the reader, but getting you to laugh while they're making
fun of you.
You know what I'm saying?
Let's Saturday Night Live.
They're making fun of American culture, which is you, but you're laughing while they're doing it,
and holding up these characters for ridicule.
And so that's exactly the Book of Jonah.
The Book of Jonah is all about stock generic characters.
So you have the prophet, the man of God, right, the religious prophet, and he is the one
who immediately runs away from God.
He's actually the most hard-hearted, hateful person in this entire story, right?
God has to physically, like, take him on the mission that he's going
and vomit him out of the fish, you know, to get him to do anything.
And then all Jonah does is he preaches a five-word in Hebrew,
a five-word sermon in Nineveh.
And it was very successful.
His sermon is very successful.
And he's so angry he wants to die.
And the book ends with him chewing God out for being too merciful,
and he would rather die than live with this God.
That's the man of God in the story, right?
And then you have the bad guys, right?
The heathen, pagan sailors in Chapter 1, and the big bad Nineveites,
and they're the most murderous, oppressive people the planet has ever known.
And they have paper-thin consciences, and they respond to God and repent immediately
and turn their hearts towards him.
Even the cows repent in Nineveh in Chapter 3.
So it's just, everything is just kind of extreme and crazy, and you're just like, whoa, this is the book of Jonah.
So that's Saturday Night Live.
is the generic kind of nobody behaves
according to their stereotype.
The other feature, and this is great,
and I'll point this out as we go along,
is that the book is just full
of what you could call comic book style.
Everything's over the top.
The word great or huge
in Hebrew is gadol.
And it occurs 15 times
in these short two pages.
Everything's huge in the Book of Jonah.
The storm is huge.
The ship is huge.
The fish is huge.
The city is huge.
The city is so huge,
it says it takes three days to walk through it,
which any ancient reader would be like,
oh, that's a good one, that's a good one, right?
Because it's like a 45-mile-wide city.
There's no city in the ancient world
that was 45 miles wide.
Nineveh was seven miles around,
and that was gigantic for its day,
but it's blowing everything out of proportion
because it was the most significant city on the planet at that time.
Jonah is hugely happy, he's hugely afraid.
He's like a manic, manic depressive.
He's a crazy person who needs to see his ancient therapist.
So, you guys get the feel here.
Just everything's crazy and extreme.
And this is exactly what the author is trying to do.
He's telling us a tale and wrapping us in, and we go,
oh, this is so, what a great, what incredible story, this is so, look at that guy, he's so stupid.
And then you finish the story and you're like, oh, that's me.
Dang it, you know, and you like want to run away, something like that.
That's the power of the book of Jonah.
So it's the ancient, it's the biblical Saturday Live comic book.
So that's all just kind of orient us.
And I think part of it too is we just don't expect this kind of thing in the Bible.
Therefore, we never find it.
It's kind of like to a person with a hammer in their hand, everything looks like a nail.
So just reverse that.
To a person who doesn't have a hammer in their hand, they never see any nails.
That doesn't.
I just did that on the spot.
That didn't really work.
But you kind of get my point, right?
If you don't think there's satire and humor and irony in the Bible,
of course you're never going to see it.
But once you do, all of a sudden, you realize,
dude, this, Jonah is a piece of dynamite
that is just being lobbed at God's people
in love, in love and compassion
to help wake us up to the worst tendencies
that have always tended to be going on
in the community of God's people.
That's the book of Jonah.
The word of the Lord came to Jonah,
son of Amitai.
Now you're supposed to laugh right there.
That's the laugh track.
So, Jonah's name means dove.
Jonah means dove.
Son of Amitai means son of faithfulness.
So doves, you know, images in the Bible of innocence, purity and so on.
The pure, innocent one, the son of faithfulness.
That's rich.
That's rich, right?
Because these are the most faithless character in the entire story.
the word of the Lord says go to the great city of Nineveh and preach against it because its wickedness has come up before me
so again there's a whole backstory here you're just supposed to know about Nineveh you're supposed to know about Jonah
because he appears one other time in the Old Testament and then all of a sudden you're like well oh this is this is rich
this is so great this is so this is so great for a number of different reasons Jonah he's the perfect
person to be the main character in this story.
I mean, it's absolutely brilliant that he's the main character here.
For a few different reasons.
Here's the one other time that Jonah is mentioned in the Bible,
in the Old Testament here.
It's in Second Kings 14.
And just to kind of give you a sweep of the story of Israel there,
Jonah comes kind of midway through the kingdom period.
After David, before the last book of the Old Testament,
he's right in there.
And here's the story here.
It's about Jeroboam 2.
It's about Jeroboam 2.
Now, Jeroboam 2, he was the son of Jehoash,
and he began to rule over Israel
in the 15th year of King Amaziah's reign in Judah.
Now Jeroboam reigned in Samaria 41 years.
That's a long term in office.
Yeah, 41 years.
And he did what was evil in Yahweh's side.
He refused to turn from the sins that Jeroboam,
son of Nabat, had led Israel to commit.
He also recovered the territories of Israel.
between Lavo Hamas and the Dead Sea,
just as Yahweh, the God of Israel,
had promised through Jonah,
son of Amitai, the prophet from Gath Heifer.
Now I'm guessing that most of us,
if we came across this paragraph in Kings,
you'd be like, okay, a guy with funny name,
bad guy, won a battle, now I'm moving on.
You know, oh, Jonah, that's interesting.
Okay, now I'm moving on, right?
I think that's how most of us would probably do.
So, no, really think about what's going on here.
Jeroboam 2. Good guy or bad guy? He's a really bad guy, right? He's named after Jeroboam I'm the first, who was the king who led the northern tribes to secede. He essentially started a civil war, a civil split between the tribes of Judah. And Jeroboam actually built two alternate temples as a rival to the temple of Yahweh in Jerusalem, and he put golden calves in them. That's what Jeroboan did. And this guy's named after him. And apparently he didn't, not only did he,
just like keep it up he he made it even worse he's a bad guy in the biblical imagination
he's a bad bad as they ever came jona prophesied favorably favor and victory for this apostate
faithless king hmm now granted we're told that it was a prophecy through yacht way that jeroboam
was able to gain through a battle all of these different territories up in the
the northern area, but in the later imagination, later biblical readers that would be reading
this would be like Jonah, yeah, he's that guy who prophesied favor over that really horrible
king. And not only that, in the book of Amos, chapter 7, Amos actually reverses this. He says,
the people of Israel have gotten so bad that Yahweh is going to let Assyria come and to wipe out
all of those same territories. Again, he's going to go back, go back because Israel was disobedient.
And so, readers of the Bible would view, again, if you know this backstory here,
when you hear Jonah's son of Amitai, Dove, Son of Faithfulness, you're like, hmm, yeah, I don't know about this guy.
I don't know about the sky.
He prophesied that Israel would increase its national territory.
That's what he's known for.
And now he's being asked to go preach a message to Israel's most hated enemies.
and we'll see why, why he runs in just a minute.
Now, Nineveh, good guys, bad guys.
They did do too much work here.
So Nineveh was the capital city of the ancient Assyrians,
and Assyria was the empire that came and wiped out ten of the tribes of Israel,
wiped them right off the mat.
They don't exist anymore because of Assyria.
They were the most brutal, oppressive, and violent of the ancient empires.
their general practice was to plunder a city
and skin alive all of the leaders of the city
in front of everybody before they deported them back to Assyria.
It's horrible, it's horrible.
And so God's depicted as this great king,
and he's surveying his realm, so to speak,
and the oppression and the injustice of Nineveh rises up before him,
and he is like, done, like, that's not going to continue.
And so he sends a messenger,
Dove, son of faithfulness.
how's the story going to go
but Jonah ran away
from the Lord
and he headed for Tarshish
he went down to Jopha
he found a ship bound for that port
that is for Tarshish
and after paying the fare his honest man
I suppose after all he went aboard
although in the children's book
for that I read to my son
he's hiding in a little basket
so it makes it look like he snuck on the ship
anyway so I just
It says here, he paid the fare. He paid the fare, and he went aboard the ship, and he sailed for Tarshish to do what?
It says, twice in verse three. What's Jonah's ultimate aim here?
To flee from the sentence right at the beginning and right at the end. This is this gold.
Now, again, another chuckle, oh, that's rich. That's a good one. That's a really good one.
I'm fully geeking out here tonight. So let me show you a map. So you can see the Assyrian Empire here.
And you can see Nineveh as what direction from Israel?
East. Where does Jonah go?
West. Now, not just west.
Tarshis is the equivalent in the Bible of what, like English, we say Timbuck, too.
No, literally, because it's the last port before you go through, what's that, the Straits of Gibraltar.
Is that what that is there? Yeah, the Straits of Gibraltar and out to the vast ocean.
That was the edge of the known world.
Jonah doesn't just flee. He actually flees as far as you can in the opposite direction, as was
humanly possible. That's the idea here. This guy, he's booking it to Tarshish. He's trying to get
not just like, he doesn't just go down to Egypt. That would be fine. He actually goes as far in
the opposite direction as you could possibly can. And we're supposed to be like, that's crazy. That's crazy.
What do you think he's doing? And he's a prophet for goodness sakes. Surely he's read Psalm 139
that Josh preached from last week, right? Can you do this? Can you flee from the Lord? Of course you
can't. I mean, he's a part of, he's a part of the Bible itself, clearly. He should have known
Psalm 139. There's something going on inside his heart and inside his mind that is just
scrambled his view of reality. And that's what we're going to camp out on in just a second
here. So everything is rich. Everything is crazy and upside down in this story. And what
it raises is the question is why. Jonah's the only prophet in the Bible who runs away from God.
He's this upstanding religious man of God, so we think, but yet,
he's actually running furthest from God than any other character in the story. Why? Why does
he do this? Why? And why do you think? I mean, Nineveh is in the habit of skinning people alive
when it conquers a city, and you're being asked to go march into the capital city of that empire
and preach against it. This would be like parachuting into Berlin or Munich during World War II
or something like that. It's like you just carry up the sign and say, down with Third Reich. You know,
don't you don't do that right so we think he's scared he's scared right god's asked him to do something
he's scared he doesn't want to do it but that's not that's not why that's not why he runs
look at chapter four this is this is again part of the brilliant storytelling of the book of jonah
chapter four verse one in chapter three he preached his five-word sermon the city the king and the cows repent
The fact that the Ninevites should find forgiveness and mercy, this all seemed very, very wrong.
He's angry at the success of his own preaching.
He became angry.
He prayed to the Lord.
You can imagine through gritted teeth here.
Isn't this what I said, Lord, when I was still back at home?
This is why I was so quick to flee to Tarshish.
I knew that you are a gracious.
and compassionate God, you're slow
to anger, you're abounding in love,
a God who relents from sending
calamity, now, Lord, take away
my life, it'd be better for me to die
than live.
Dove, son of faithfulness.
So what?
Okay, so clearly he needs to see an ancient
therapist, that's clear, after reading these
three verses here, but he tells you exactly
why he ran, right here.
He was not afraid. Why did he run?
He knew that somehow
Yahweh would find a way to bring his grace
and his mercy to these people through their repentance.
He just knew that somehow this was going to have a happy ending,
and he does not want a happy ending for his enemies.
And so here, this is really what's going on here,
is that Jonah has, he has a plan, he has a wonderful plan for his life.
That's what he has, right?
He has a vision of how his prophetic career is going to work out,
and it doesn't include this mission, right?
So he, especially as a prophet up in the Northern Kingdom,
to be the prophet that brings forgiveness and life and repentance
to the most hated enemies of your people.
Like, that's not going to go over great.
It's not a way to win friends and be popular parties or something.
So that's just not, it's going to make him suspect among his own people.
Of course, he doesn't want this to work out.
And so this is at the base of what this is really happening here inside of Jonas' heart.
knows perfectly well that Yahweh loves to show mercy. He knows somehow the Ninevites are going to
find mercy. That just does not fit into my vision of what my life is about. No thanks. And so he books
it to Tarshish. And so really how the book of Jonah begins is with a really profound just
exploration of the nature and the psychology of disobedience. It's really what this is about.
And I don't know what you, you know, if I say the word obey, obey, or obedience, I'm guessing that most of us don't have like really flowery positive associations coming to the top of our minds, right?
But essentially, like, obedience isn't a positive idea in our culture.
And that's because for the most part, I mean, we read this, the word of the Lord came to Jonah, go to the great city, and we go, oh, here's God commanding people again.
He sure loves to do that in the Bible, doesn't it?
So that's how many of us are vision of God is.
He's the power trip, whatever kind of volatile deity,
and just loves to kind of flick people around,
tell people what to do, better submit.
That's the vision that many of us have of God, our default mode.
And many of you have that for lots of different reasons,
primarily because many of you had moms and dads that were like that.
And those might be the same moms and dads that taught you about God.
And so, of course, you're going to project that back up onto the sky.
but the biblical vision of God is very different
and think about this command
God is commanding Jonah
to go preach to the city of Nineveh
there's so many ways the story could have gone you guys
God could do like what he did at Mount Sinai
could like move in in a big dark cloud
and lightning and yell down from a bullhorn
you know and I'm sure that would have been very effective
over Ninevehah you know like you know turn from your ways
and you know you're doing wrong this horrible stop it
something and I'm sure that would have
ineffective. But God almost never does that kind of thing in the Bible. What happened there at
Mount Sinai was very unique. The way that God works through almost all events throughout the
story of the Bible is what he called his people into being for in the first place. He chooses
to work through his people. It's the primary vehicle that God chooses to work through. It's through
people, his covenant people. And so what's actually happening here is Jonah is being invited
to step into a story that is much broader, that's more risky, it's way bigger than anything
he ever signed up for. That's basically what's happening here, right? Jonah has a vision.
Here's what my life is about. Here's what my prophetic career is about. Yeah, there's that whole
God thing, clearly calling me in that direction. I'm just not interested. And so at its root, what
this comes down to, the way to rethink what obedience means in the Bible, is that God has,
and we have competing visions of what life is about, of what the good life is, of what actually
constitutes true life as a human being. And you and I operate according to that vision.
It's just default. It's in there. And we behave in ways that make the most sense to us,
given our circumstances. That's just what we do. That's how we operate. And so Jesus comes into the
picture and he's like follow me and there's a whole bunch of things that you're doing that you think
is life but actually it's not life at all that's what's happening right here it's competing visions
of life and when and when god calls his people the first thing that we're confronted with
is am i going to settle for the path of life that i'm on and what i call life or am i going to
entertain this new invitation to lie and so you have this sad irony here right at the
of Jonah. It's the first expose
of this brokenness in God's
people is that it's very easy to
train ourselves through just being
in a church community or something that we're doing
pretty good and we're involved or whatever
doing whatever. And so we're
like, yeah, okay, just making progress here
or something. But then there's this clear
glaring area of our lives
where we know
we're being called to grow.
We're being called to change.
And somehow we just end up,
especially religious people, we
just like compartmentalize that off and be like, yeah, yeah, not really, not so much there,
Jesus, but I'll go to a Sunday gathering done. And won't you be happy with me then? I mean,
that's totally how we operate. And so here's this very religious man who, when it comes to it,
here's a core issue where his vision of his life is being challenged, and he's booking it to Tarshish.
And the sad irony is that he thinks he's running for his life. He thinks God's ruining
his party. And the tragedy is that he's actually running from life. I mean, look what he has
a chance to participate in, a movement of God's grace that is on a greater scope than anybody
had ever known, and he totally misses out on being a part of it and enjoying it, because he
won't give up his little vision of the good life. What an ancient, irrelevant story.
I have two sons.
One of them is named Roman.
He's two, and he's awesome.
And the other one is August, who you've been hearing some about,
and he's now a little over a month old.
And so right now, what we're working on
is this very basic thing, which is,
please stop and come here now, Roman.
If we could just make progress there,
I'd be very happy.
Very happy.
Because, you know, so we're walking around the neighborhood,
and I could tell the store 25 different times.
We're cruising on the side.
while going for a walk, and he really doesn't know how to walk.
He just runs.
He just runs everywhere.
And so he'll, like, see a dog or, like, a dump truck or a bike or something.
He's like, he's long ways off, and he's just on it, you know?
And so I turn him ahead five seconds, and then, like, he's halfway down the block, you know, that kind of thing.
And so I was talking with somebody about this.
Being a parent of toddlers is essentially, you feel like a rescue person every day.
Because you're saving them from mortal danger, like, ten times.
every single day. It's really kind of funny. And so he's cruising. And obviously there's
like busy streets. Division's a busy street for traffic and bike traffic and so on.
And so we've gotten to the point where we're making progress because I can, I'll say,
Roman, Roman, buddy, stop, stop and come back here. And we've gotten to the point where he will
slow down. He'll slow down and he'll look at me. And he knows. I mean, it's all right there.
He knows exactly what's going on. And so here's what's so hard, you guys.
and it's so crazy.
I have only goodwill for my son.
I love him more than anything.
I want him to go see that dog so badly.
All right?
But all he gets in that moment is,
dude, dad, you are crashing my party right now.
You know what I'm saying?
Like his view of the world,
he has a vision of his life
and where things need to go
and how it's going to work out,
and I'm ruining that, clearly,
clearly ruining that.
And so in his mind,
He's running for his life, for betterment, you know, for the good life,
because he wants to go see the dog.
What he cannot see is that he's actually running from his life.
If he runs across that street and there's a car, done, you know, I'm very aware of that.
And this is precisely the image of what's happening here in Jonah.
It's exactly the image of what's happening.
God wants Jonah to participate in this amazing, amazing event of his grace and mercy
coming to these people that you would never expect it.
And he's so fixated on his little deal,
he can't see that.
He's blind to it.
And so he thinks he's running for his life,
the sad realities he's running from his life.
And it seems to me this is the situation
every single one of us finds ourselves in every single day
when we face the decision of whether or not I'm going to follow Jesus.
And in a way, you know, this whole vision of obedience
and what's happening here, I mean, this is all summed up at the cross.
Because when Jesus calls us to follow him, he's calling us to see that he was the human being,
he was the faithful human being, the faithful covenant partner of God, human being that none of us
ever was, or ever fully will be, the side of his return.
And he lived for us in a way that I could never live.
and he died to absorb the cumulative weight of just the horrible stupid decisions that we make
when we run from life, when we run according to our vision of the good life.
And in his mercy and in his love, he conquered it by raising from the dead
so that he can offer us life and grace and forgiveness.
And so, like, what we did at baptism last week at the park.
When I come to Jesus, there's a death.
that takes place. And it's a death to your vision of the good life, but your vision of what
your life is about. You've got to let it die. And you've got to let it die in faith that what
Jesus is asking you to and inviting you into is a so much richer form of life that you could
ever imagine, which may not involve whatever, like big house and nice cars or something. No, that's
different. That's a different gospel, right? So what we're talking about is what Jesus called
abundant life, life that's so rooted in his love for me that I see he only has goodwill
for me. And that when he tells me to stop and turn around and come his way, he only has my best in
mind. And so this is a big room. And there might be some of us here, you know, we're on the
investigative side. We wouldn't self-identify as Christians or maybe you would. You're kind of seeking
or whatever, trying to figure this whole thing out.
And so, you know, for those of you, first of all, we're just stoked that you're here.
Thank you for being here.
And, you know, just to put it straight to you, that's really what's involved here.
Becoming a Christian involves letting my vision of what my life's about to let it die.
And it may be that I'll take a whole bunch of that up again on the other side,
but with a whole different perspective now, because it's not my little story that's at the center.
it's the fact that I am now a bit player in the story of Jesus
who's at work in the world and inviting me to become a part of it.
And so could it be that your vision of what your life is all about
is just too small.
And Jesus is inviting you to something different.
And for those of us who are here, the majority of us,
we'd self-identify as Christians.
I mean, this is every day.
And so for some of us, we might have patterns,
patterns of behavior that we need to stop.
patterns of thinking, of ways of acting,
and they don't lead to life, and we know it,
and we're scared to let go of that because that's what we know.
That's the only life we know.
And following Jesus is going to involve letting that die,
and who knows what your life is going to look like on the other side of it.
It's the choice you have. It's the choice you have.
For some of us, it might not be stopping behaviors,
it might be starting new behaviors that will invite us into life.
And so the reason why we did the prayer series over the summer
was to invite the whole church into a new phase of growth
through learning the language of prayer and so on.
That's a path of life.
And some of us, whatever, we run, we're lazy,
we don't want to do the work that's involved
with carving out times for solitude or quiet.
And so we just, it's not a part of our vision of the good life.
And so we're never going to get there.
And that's to our loss.
And so whatever form is,
of someone who's wrong with you. It's finally like spending less money on yourself and giving
more of it away. I don't know. Whatever that step is for you, it's a competition of views of life.
And so as we go into our time of worship, as we come towards the bread in the cup, I would just
encourage you to just hear this first of five punches in the cut from the book of Jonah.
For those of us who can be honest and self-aware enough to know that we're running,
There's some areas of your life
and you may be doing good.
I guarantee for all of us
there's some part of our life
where you're booking it to Tarshish.
And Jesus is not welcome there.
And if you want to experience life,
we have to let him go.
We have to stop running.
Hey, thanks for listening to this maiden voyage
of exploring my Strange Bible podcast.
We'll have the next episode up
very soon exploring more of the
of Jonah, and we're looking forward to that. So join us again next time.
