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Introduction 1 2 3 4 Obadiah Micah
Jonah 1
Complete Concise
In this chapter we have, I. A command given to Jonah to preach
at Nineveh (v. 1, 2). II. Jonah's disobedience to that command (v. 3). III.
The pursuit and arrest of him for that disobedience by a storm, in which he was
asleep (v. 4-6). IV. The discovery of him, and his disobedience, to be the cause
of the storm (v. 7-10). V. The casting of him into the sea, for the stilling
of the storm (v. 11-16). VI. The miraculous preservation of his life there in
the belly of a fish (v. 17), which was his reservation for further services.
Verses 1-3
Observe, 1. The honour God put upon Jonah, in giving him a
commission to go and prophesy against Nineveh.
Jonah signifies
a dove,
a proper name for all God's prophets, all his people, who ought to be
harmless
as doves, and to
mourn as doves for the sins and calamities of the
land. His father's name was
AmittaiMy truth; for God's prophets
should be sons of truth. To him
the word of the Lord cameto him it was
(so the word signifies), for God's word is a real thing; men's words are but
wind, but God's words are substance. He has been before acquainted with the
word
of the Lord, and knew his voice from that of a stranger; the orders now
given him were,
Arise, go to Nineveh, that great city, v. 2. Nineveh was
at this time the metropolis of the Assyrian monarchy, an eminent city (Gen.
10:11),
a great city, that great city, forty-eight miles in compass (some
make it much more), great in the number of the inhabitants, as appears by the
multitude of infants in it (ch. 4:11), great in wealth (there was no end of its
store, Nah. 2:9), great in power and dominion; it was the city that for some
time
ruled over the kings of the earth. But great cities, as well as
great men, are under God's government and judgment. Nineveh was a great city,
and yet a heathen city, without the knowledge and worship of the true God. How
many great cities and great nations are there that
sit in darkness and
in
the valley of the shadow of death! This great city was a wicked city:
Their
wickedness has come up before me (their
malice, so some read it);
their
wickedness was presumptuous, and they sinned with
a high hand. It is
sad to think what a great deal of sin is committed in great cities, where there
are many sinners, who are not only all sinners, but making one another sin.
Their
wickedness has come up, that is, it has come to a high degree, to the
highest pitch; the
measure of it is
full to the brim;
their
wickedness has come up, as that of Sodom, Gen. 18:20, 21. It has come up
before
meto my face (so the word is); it is a bold and open affront to God; it
is sinning against him,
in his sight; therefore Jonah must
cry against
it; he must witness against their great wickedness, and must warn them of
the destruction that was coming upon them for it. God is coming forth against
it, and he sends Jonah before, to proclaim war, and to sound an alarm.
Cry
aloud, spare not. He must not whisper his message in a corner, but publish
it in the streets of Nineveh;
he that hath ears let him hear what God has
to say by his prophet against that wicked city. When the cry of sin comes up to
God the cry of vengeance comes out against the sinner. He must
go to Nineveh,
and cry there upon the spot against the wickedness of it. Other prophets were
ordered to send messages to the neighbouring nations, and the prophecy of Nahum
is particularly
the burden of Nineveh; but Jonah must go and carry the
message himself:
"Arise quickly; apply thyself to the business with
speed and courage, and the resolution that becomes a prophet;
arise, and go
to Nineveh." Those that go on God's errands must rise and go, must
stir themselves to the work cut out for them. The prophets were sent first to
the
lost sheep of the house of Israel, yet not to them only; they had the
children's bread, but Nineveh eats of the crumbs. 2. The dishonour Jonah did
to God in refusing to obey his orders, and to go on the errand on which he was
sent (v. 3):
But Jonah, instead of rising to go to Nineveh,
rose up to
flee to Tarshish, to
the sea, not bound for any port, but desirous to
get away
from the presence of the Lord; and, if he might but do that, he
card not whither he went, not as if he thought he could go any where from under
the eye of God's inspection, but from his special presence, from the spirit of
prophecy, which, when it put him upon this work, he thought himself haunted
with, and coveted to get out of the hearing of. Some think Jonah went upon the
opinion of some of the Jews that the spirit of prophecy was confined to the land
of Israel (which in Ezekiel and Daniel was effectually proved to be a mistake),
and therefore he hoped he should get clear of it if he could but get out of the
borders of that land. (1.) Jonah would not go to Nineveh to cry against it
either because it was a long and dangerous journey thither, and in a road he
knew not, or because he was afraid it would be as much as his life was worth to
deliver such an ungrateful message to that great and potent city. He
consulted
with flesh and blood, and declined the embassy because he could not go with
safety, or because he was jealous for the prerogatives of his country, and not
willing that any other nation should share in the honour of divine revelation;
he feared it would be the beginning of the removal of the kingdom of God from
the Jews to another nation, that would bring forth more of the fruits of it. He
owns himself (ch. 4:2) that the reason of his aversion to this journey was
because he foresaw that the Ninevites would repent, and God would forgive them
and take them into favour, which would be a slur upon the people of Israel, who
had been so long a peculiar people to God. (2.) He therefore went to Tarshish,
to Tarsus in Cilicia (so some), probably because he had friends and relations
there, with whom he hoped for some time to sojourn. He went to Joppa, a famous
seaport in the land of Israel, in quest of a ship bound for Tarshish, and there
he found one. Providence seemed to favour his design, and give him an
opportunity to escape. We may be out of the way of duty and yet may meet with a
favourable gale. The ready way is not always the right way. He found the ship
just ready to weigh anchor perhaps, and to set sail for Tarshish, and so he lost
no time. Or, perhaps, he went to Tarshish because he found the ship going
thither; otherwise all places were alike to him. He did not think himself out of
his way, the way he would go, provided he was not in his way, the way he should
go. So he
paid the fare thereof; for he did not regard the charge, so he
could but gain his point, and get to a distance
from the presence of the
Lord. He went
with them, with the mariners, with the passengers, with
the merchants, whoever they were that were going to Tarshish. Jonah, forgetting
his dignity as well as his duty, herded with them, and
went down into the
ship to go
with them to Tarshish. See what the best of men are when God
leaves them to themselves, and what need we have, when the
word of the Lord
comes to us, to have the
Spirit of the Lord come along with the word, to
bring every thought within us into obedience to it. The prophet Isaiah owns that
therefore he was not
rebellious, neither
turned away back,
because God not only spoke to him, but
opened his ear, Isa. 50:5. Let us
learn hence to
cease from man, and not to be too confident either of
ourselves or others in a time of trial; but
let him that thinks he stands
take heed lest he fall.
Verses 4-10
When Jonah was set on ship-board, and under sail for Tarshish,
he thought himself safe enough; but here we find him pursued and overtaken,
discovered and convicted as a deserter from God, as one that had
run his
colours.
I. God sends a pursuer after him,
a mighty tempest in the
sea, v. 4. God has the
winds in his treasure (Ps. 135:7), and out of
these treasures God
sent forth, he
cast forth (so the word is),
with force and violence,
a great wind into the sea; even
stormy winds
fulfil his word, and are often the messengers of his wrath; he
gathers
the winds in his fist (Prov. 30:4), where he holds them, and whence he
squeezes them when he pleases; for though, as to us, the
wind blows where it
listeth, yet not as to God, but where he directs. The effect of this wind as
a mighty tempest; for when the winds rise the waves rise. Note, Sin
brings storms and tempests into the soul, into the family, into churches and
nations; it is a disquieting disturbing thing. The tempest prevailed to such a
degree that
the ship was likely to be broken; the mariners expected no
other;
that ship (so some read it), that and no other. Other ships were
upon the same sea at the same time, yet, it should seem, that ship in which
Jonah was was tossed more than any other and was more in danger. This wind was
sent after Jonah, to fetch him back again to God and to his duty; and it is a
great mercy to be reclaimed and called home when we go astray, though it be by a
tempest.
II. The ship's crew were alarmed by this mighty tempest, but
Jonah only, the person concerned, was unconcerned, v. 5. The mariners were
affected with their danger, though it was not with them that God has this
controversy. 1. They were
afraid; though, their business leading them to
be very much conversant with dangers of this kind, they used to make light of
them, yet now the oldest and stoutest of them began to tremble, being
apprehensive that there was something more than ordinary in this tempest, so
suddenly did it rise, so strongly did it rage. Note, God can strike a terror
upon the most daring, and make even
great men and chief captains call for
shelter from rocks and mountains. 2. They
cried every man unto his god;
this was the effect of their fear. Many will not be brought to prayer till they
are frightened to it; he that would learn to pray, let him go to sea.
Lord,
in trouble they have visited thee. Every man of them prayed; they were not
some praying and others reviling, but every man engaged; as the danger was
general, so was the address to heaven; there was not one praying for them all,
but every one for himself. They cried
every man to his god, the god of
his country or city, or his own tutelar deity; it is a testimony against atheism
that every man had a god, and had the belief of a God; but it is an instance of
the folly of paganism that they had gods many, every man the god he had a fancy
for, whereas there can be but one God, there needs to be no more. But, though
they had lost that dictate of the light of nature that there is but
one God,
they still were governed by that direction of the law of nature that God is to
be prayed to (
Should not a people seek under their God? Isa. 8:19), and
that he is especially to be prayed to when we are in distress and danger.
Call
upon me in the time of trouble. Is any afflicted? Is any frightened?
Let
him pray. 3. Their prayers for deliverance were seconded with endeavours,
and, having called upon their gods to help them, they did what they could to
help themselves; for that is the rule,
Help thyself and God will help thee.
They
cast forth the wares that were in the ship into the sea, to lighten it
of them, as Paul's mariners in a like case cast forth even the
tackling
of the ship, and the
wheat, Acts 27:18, 19, 38. They were making a
trading voyage, as it should seem, and were laden with many goods and much
merchandise, by which they hoped to get gain; but now they are content to suffer
loss by throwing them overboard. to save their lives. See how powerful the
natural love of life is.
Skin for skin, and
all that a man has, will
he give for it. And shall we not put a like value upon the spiritual life,
the life of the soul, reckoning that the gain of all the world cannot
countervail the loss of the soul? See the vanity of worldly wealth, and the
uncertainty of its continuance with us. Riches make themselves wings and fly
away; nay, and the case may be such that we may be under a necessity of making
wings for them, and driving them away, as here, when they could not be
kept
for the owners thereof but to their hurt, so that they themselves are glad
to be rid of them, and sink that which otherwise would sink them, though they
have no prospect of ever recovering it. Oh that men would be thus wise for their
souls, and would be willing to part with that wealth, pleasure, and honour which
they cannot keep without
making shipwreck of faith and a good conscience
and ruining their souls for ever! Those that thus quit their temporal interests
for the securing of their spiritual welfare will be unspeakable gainers at last;
for what they lose upon those terms they shall find again to life eternal. But
where is Jonah all this while? One would have expected gone down into his cabin,
nay, into
the hold, between the sides of the ship, and there he lies, and
is
fast asleep; neither the noise without, for the sense of guilt within,
awoke him. Perhaps for some time before he had avoiding sleeping, for fear of
God's speaking to him again in a dream; and now that he imagined himself out
of the reach of that danger, he slept so much the more soundly. Note, Sin is of
a stupifying nature, and we are concerned to
take heed lest at any time our
hearts be hardened by the deceitfulness of it. It is the policy of Satan,
when by his temptations he has drawn men from God and their duty, to rock them
asleep in carnal security, that they may not be sensible of their misery and
danger. It concerns us all to
watch therefore.
III. The master of the ship called Jonah up to his prayers, v.
6. The
ship-master came to him, and bade him for shame get up, both to
pray
for life and to
prepare for death; he gave him, 1. A just and
necessary chiding:
What meanest thou, O sleeper? Here we commend the
ship-master, who gave him this reproof; for, though he was a stranger to him, he
was, for the present, as one of his family; and whoever has a precious soul we
must help, as we can, to
save it from death. We pity Jonah, who needed
this reproof; as a prophet of the Lord, if he had been in his place, he might
have been reproving the king of Nineveh, but, being out of the way of his duty,
he does himself lie open to the reproofs of a sorry ship-master. See how men by
their sin and folly diminish themselves and make themselves mean. Yet we must
admire God's goodness in sending him this seasonable reproof, for it was the
first step towards his recovery, as the crowing of the cock was to Peter. Note,
Those that sleep in a storm may well be asked what they mean. 2. A pertinent
word of advice:
"Arise, call upon thy God; we are here crying every
man to his god, why dost not thou get up and cry to thine? Art not thou equally
concerned with the rest both in the danger dreaded and in the deliverance
desired?" Note, The devotions of others should quicken ours; and those who
hope to share in a common mercy ought in all reason to contribute their quota
towards the prayers and supplications that are made for it. In times of public
distress, if we have any interest at the throne of grace, we ought to improve it
for the public good. And the servants of God themselves have sometimes need to
be called and stirred up to this part of their duty. 3. A good reason for this
advice:
If so be that God will think upon us, that we perish not. It
should seem, the many gods they called upon were considered by them only as
mediators between them and the supreme God, and intercessors for them with him;
for the ship-master speaks of one God still, from whom he expected relief. To
engage prayer, he suggested that the danger was very great and imminent:
"We are all likely to
perish; there is but a step between us and
death, and that just ready to be stepped." Yet he suggested that there was
some hope remaining that their destruction might be prevented and they might
not
perish. While there is still life there is hope, and while there is hope
there is room for prayer. He suggested also that it was God only that could
effect their deliverance, and it must come from his power and his pity. "If
he
think upon us, and act for us, we may yet be saved." And
therefore to him we must look, and in him we must put our trust, when the danger
is ever so imminent.
IV. Jonah is found out to be the cause of the storm.
1. The mariners observed so much peculiar and uncommon either in
the storm itself or in their own distress by it that they concluded it was a
messenger of divine justice sent to arrest some one of those that were in that
ship, as having been guilty of some enormous crime, judging as the barbarous
people (Acts 28:4),
"no doubt one of us is a murderer, or guilty of
sacrilege, or perjury, or the like, who is thus
pursued by the
vengeance
of the sea, and it is for his sake that we all suffer." Even the light
of nature teaches that in extraordinary judgments the wrath of God is revealed
from heaven against some extraordinary sins and sinners. Whatever evil is upon
us at any time we must conclude
there is a cause for it; there is evil
done by us, or else this evil would not be upon us; there is a ground for God's
controversy.
2. They determined to refer it to the lot which of them was the
criminal that had occasioned this storm:
Let us cast lots, that we may know
for whose cause the evil is upon us. None of them suspected himself, or
said,
Is it I, Lord;
is it I? But they suspected one another, and
would find out the man. Note, It is a desirable thing, when any evil is upon us,
to know for what cause it is upon us, that what is amiss may be amended, and,
the grievance being redressed, the grief may be removed. In order to this we
must look up to heaven, and pray, Lord,
show me wherefore thou contendest
with me; that which I see not teach thou me. These mariners desired to know
the person that was the dead weight in their ship, the accursed thing, that that
one man might
die for the people and that the whole ship
might not be
lost; this was not only expedient, but highly just. In order to this they
cast lots, by which they appealed to the judgment of God, to whom
all hearts
are open, and from whom no secret is hid, agreeing to acquiesce in his
discovery and determination, and to take that for true which the lot spoke; for
they knew by the light of nature, what the scripture tells us, that
the lot
is cast into the lap, but the whole disposal thereof is of the Lord. Even
the heathen looked upon the casting of lots to be a sacred thing, to be done
with seriousness and solemnity, and not to be made a sport of. It is a shame for
Christians if they have not a like reverence for an appeal to Providence.
3. The
lot fell upon Jonah, who could have saved them
this trouble if he would but have told them what his own conscience told him,
Thou
are the man; but as is usual with criminals, he never confesses till he
finds he cannot help it, till
the lot falls upon him. We may suppose
there were those in the ship who, upon other accounts, were greater sinners than
Jonah, and yet he is the man that the tempest pursues and that the lot pitches
upon; for it is his own child, his own servant, that the parent, that the
master, corrects, if they do amiss; others that offend he leaves to the law. The
storm is sent after Jonah, because God has work for him to do, and it is sent to
fetch him back to it. Note, God has many ways of bringing to light concealed
sins and sinners, and making manifest that folly which was thought to be hidden
from the eyes of all living. God's right hand will find out all his servants
that desert him, as well as all his enemies that have designs against him; yea,
though they flee to the uttermost parts of the sea, or go down to the sides of
the ship.
4. Jonah is hereupon brought under examination before the master
and mariners. He was a stranger; none of them could say that they knew the
prisoner, or had any thing to lay to his charge, and therefore they must extort
a confession from him and judge him
out of his own mouth; and for this
there needed no rack, the shipwreck they were in danger of was sufficient to
frighten him, so as to make him tell the truth. Though it was discovered by the
lot that he was the person for whose sake they were thus damaged and exposed,
yet they did not fly outrageously upon him, as one would fear they might have
done, but calmly and mildly enquired into his case. There is a compassion due to
offenders when they are discovered and convicted. They give him no hard words,
but,
"Tell us, we pray thee, what is the matter?" Two things
they enquire of him:(1.) Whether he would himself own that he was the person
for whose sake the storm was sent, as the lot had intimated:
"Tell us
for whose cause this evil is upon us; is it indeed for thy cause, and, if
so,
for what cause? What is this offence for which thou art thus
prosecuted?" Perhaps the gravity and decency of Jonah's aspect and
behaviour made them suspect that the lot had missed its man, had missed its
mark, and therefore they would not trust it, unless he would himself own his
guilt; they therefore begged of him that he would satisfy them in this matter.
Note, Those that would find out the cause of their troubles must not only begin,
but pursue the enquiry, must descend to particulars and
accomplish a diligent
search. (2.) What his character was, both as to his calling and as to his
country. [1.] They enquire concerning his calling:
What is thy occupation?
This was a proper question to be put to a vagrant. Perhaps they suspected his
calling to be such as might bring this trouble upon them: "Art thou a
diviner, a sorcerer, a student in the black art? Hast thou been conjuring for
this wind? Or what business are thou now going on? It is like Balaam's, to
curse any of God's people, and is this wind send to stop thee?" [2.] They
enquire concerning his country. One asked,
Whence comest thou? Another,
not having patience to stay for an answer to that, asked,
What is thy
country? A third to the same purport,
"Of what people art thou?
Art thou of the Chaldeans," that were noted for divination, "or of the
Arabians," that were noted for stealing? They wished to know of what
country he was, that, knowing who was the god of his country, they might guess
whether he was one that could do them any kindness in this storm.
5. In answer to these interrogatories Jonah makes a full
discovery. (1.) Did they enquire concerning his country? He tells them he is
a
Hebrew (v. 9), not only of the nation of Israel, but of their religion,
which they received from their fathers. He is a Hebrew, and therefore is the
more ashamed to own that he is a criminal; for the sins of Hebrews, that make
such a profession of religion and enjoy such privileges, are greater than the
sins of others, and more exceedingly sinful. (2.) Did they enquire concerning
his calling
What is thy occupation? In answer to that he gives an
account of his religion, for that was his calling, that was his occupation, that
was it that he made a business of:
"I fear the Lord Jehovah; that is
the God I worship, the God I pray to, even
the God of heaven, the
sovereign Lord of all, that has
made the sea and the dry land and has
command of both." Not the god of one particular country, which they
enquired after, and such as the gods were that they had been every man calling
upon, but
the God of the whole earth, who, having made both the sea and
the dry land, makes what work he pleases in both and makes what use he pleases
of both. This he mentions, not only as condemning himself for his folly, in
fleeing from the presence of this God, but as designing to bring these mariners
from the worship and service of their many gods to the knowledge and obedience
of the one only living and true God. When we are among those that are strangers
to us we should do what we can to bring them acquainted with God, by being ready
upon all occasions to own our relation to him and our reverence for him. (3.)
Did they enquire concerning his crime, for which he is now persecuted? He owns
that he
fled from the presence of the Lord, that he was here running away
from his duty, and the storm was sent to fetch him back. We have reason to think
that he told them this with sorrow and shame, justifying God and condemning
himself and intimating to the mariners what a great God Jehovah is, who could
send such a messenger as this tempest was after a runagate servant.
6. We are told what impression this made upon the mariners:
The
men were exceedingly afraid, and justly, for they perceived, (1.) That God
was angry, even that God that made
the sea and the dry land. This tempest
comes from the hand of an offended justice, and therefore they have reason to
fear it will go hard with them. Judgments inflicted for some particular sin have
a peculiar weight and terror in them. (2.) That God was angry with one that
feared and worshipped him, only for once running from his work in particular
instance; this made them afraid for themselves. "If a prophet of the Lord
be thus severely punished for one offence, what will become of us that have been
guilty of so many, and great, and heinous offences?" If
the righteous be
thus
scarcely saved, and for a single act of disobedience thus closely
pursued,
where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear? 1 Pt. 4:17, 18.
They said to him,
"Why hast thou done this? If thou fearest the God
that
made the sea and the dry land, why wast thou such a fool as to think
thou couldst flee from his presence? What an absurd unaccountable thing is it!"
Thus he was reproved, as Abraham by Abimelech (Gen. 20:16); for if the
professors of religion do a wrong thing they must expect to hear of it from
those that make no such profession.
"Why hast thou done this to us?"
(so it may be taken) "Why has thou involved us in the prosecution?"
Note, Those that commit a willful sin know not how far the mischievous
consequences of it may reach, nor what mischief may be done by it.
Verses 11-17
It is plain that Jonah is the man for whose sake this evil is
upon them, but the discovery of him to be so was not sufficient to answer the
demands of this tempest; they had found him out, but something more was to be
done, for still
the sea wrought and was tempestuous (v. 11), and again
(v. 13), it
grew more and more tempestuous (so the margin reads it); for
if we discover sin to be the cause of our troubles, and do not forsake it, we do
but make bad worse. Therefore they went on with the prosecution.
I. They enquired of Jonah himself what he thought they must do
with him (v. 11):
What shall we do unto thee, that the sea may be calm to us?
They perceived that Jonah is a prophet of the Lord, and therefore will not do
any thing, no, not in his own case, without consulting him. He appears to be a
delinquent, but he appears also to be a penitent, and therefore they will not
insult over him, nor offer him any rudeness. Note, We ought to act with great
tenderness towards those that are overtaken in a fault and are brought into
distress by it. They would not
cast him into the sea if he could think of
any other expedient by which to
save the ship. Or, perhaps, thus they
would show how plain the case was, that there was no remedy but he must be
thrown overboard; let him be his own judge as he had been his own accuser, and
he himself will say so. Note, When sin has raised a storm, and laid us under the
tokens of God's displeasure, we are concerned to enquire what we shall do that
the sea may be calm; and what shall we do? We must pray and believe, when we are
in a storm, and study to answer the end for which it was sent, and then the
storm shall become a calm. But especially we must consider what is to be done to
the sin that raised the storm; that must be discovered, and penitently
confessed; that must be detested, disclaimed, and utterly forsaken. What have I
to do any more with it? Crucify it, crucify it, for this evil it has done.
II. Jonah reads his own doom (v. 12):
Take me up, and cast me
forth into the sea. He would not himself leap into the sea, but he put
himself into their hands, to cast him into the sea, and assured them that then
the
sea would be calm, and not otherwise. He proposed this, in tenderness
to the mariners, that the might no suffer for his sake.
"Let thy hand be
upon me" (says David, 1 Chr. 21:17), "who am guilty; let me die
for me own sin, but let not the innocent suffer for it." This is the
language of true penitents, who earnestly desire that none but themselves may
ever smart, or fare the worse, for their sins and follies. He proposed it
likewise in submission to the will of God, who sent this tempest in pursuit of
him; and
therefore judged himself to be cast into the sea, because to
that he plainly saw God judging him, that he might not be
judged of the Lord
to eternal misery. Note, Those who are truly humbled for sin will cheerfully
submit to the will of God, even in a sentence of death itself. If Jonah sees
this to be the punishment of his iniquity, he accepts it, he subjects himself to
it, and justifies God in it. No matter though the
flesh be
destroyed,
no matter how it is destroyed, so that the
spirit may be
but saved in
the day of the Lord Jesus, 1 Co. 5:5. The reason he gives is,
For I know
that for my sake this great tempest is upon you. See how ready Jonah is to
take all the guilt upon himself, and to look upon all the trouble as theirs:
"It is purely for my sake, who have sinned, that this tempest is upon you;
therefore cast me forth into the sea; for," 1. "I deserve it. I have
wickedly departed from my God, and it is upon my account that he is angry with
you. Surely I am unworthy to breathe in that air which for my sake has been
hurried with winds, to live in that ship which for my sake has been thus tossed.
Cast me into the sea after the wares which for my sake you have thrown into it.
Drowning is too good for me; a single death is punishment too little for such a
complicated offence." 2. "Therefore there is no way of having the sea
calm. If it is I that have raised the storm, it is not casting the wares into
the sea that will lay it again; no, you must cast me thither." When
conscience is awakened, and a storm raised there, nothing will turn it into a
calm but parting with the sin that occasioned the disturbance, and abandoning
that. It is not parting with our money that will pacify conscience; no, it is
the Jonah that be thrown overboard. Jonah is herein a type of Christ, that he
gives
his life a ransom for many; but with this material difference, that the
storm Jonah gave himself up to still was of his own raising, but that storm
which Christ gave himself up to still was of our raising. Yet, as Jonah
delivered himself up to be cast into a raging sea that it might be calm, so did
our Lord Jesus, when he died that we might live.
III. The poor mariners did what they could to save themselves
from the necessity of throwing Jonah into the sea, but all in vain (v. 13):
They
rowed hard to bring the ship to the land, that, if they must part with
Jonah, they might set him safely on shore;
but they could not. All their
pains were to no purpose;
for the sea wrought harder than they could, and
was tempestuous against them, so that they could by no means
make the
land. If they thought sometimes that they had gained their point, they were
quickly thrown off to sea again. Still their ship was overladen; their
lightening it of the wares made it never the lighter as long as Jonah was in it.
And, besides, they rowed against wind and tide, the wind of God's vengeance,
the tide of his counsels; and it is in vain to contend with God, in vain to
think of saving ourselves any other way than by destroying our sins. By this it
appears that these mariners were very loth to execute Jonah's sentence upon
himself, though they knew it was for his sake that this tempest was upon them.
They were thus very backward to it partly from a dread of bringing upon
themselves the guilt of blood, and partly from a compassion they could not but
have for poor Jonah, as a good man, as a man in distress, and as a man of
sincerity. Note, The more sinners humble and abase themselves, judge and condemn
themselves, the more likely they are to find pity both with God and man. The
more forward Jonah was to say,
Cast me into the sea, the more backward
they were to do it.
IV. When they found it necessary to cast Jonah into the sea they
first prayed to God that the guilt of his blood might not lie upon them, nor be
laid to their charge, v. 14. When they found it in vain to row hard they quitted
their oars and went to their prayers:
Wherefore they cried unto the Lord,
unto
Jehovah, the true and living God, and no more to the
gods many.
and
lords many, that the had
cried to, v. 5. They prayed to the
God
of Israel, being now convinced, by the providences of God concerning Jonah
and the information he had given them, that he is God
alone. Having
determined to cast Jonah into the sea, they first enter a protestation in the
court of heaven that they do not do it willingly, much less maliciously, or with
any design to be revenged upon him because it was for his sake that this tempest
was upon them. No;
his god forgive him, as
they do! But they are
forced to do it
se defendendoin self-defence, having no other way to
save their own lives; and they do it as ministers of justice, both God and
himself having sentenced him to
so great a death. They
therefore
present a humble petition to the God whom Jonah feared, that they might not
perish
for his life. See, 1. What a fear they had of contracting the guilt of
blood, especially the blood of one that feared God, and worshipped him, and had
fellowship with him, as they perceived Jonah had, though in a single instance he
had been faulty. Natural conscience cannot but have a dread of blood-guiltiness,
and make men very earnest in prayer, as David was, to be delivered from it, Ps.
51:14. So they were here:
We beseech thee, O Lord! we beseech thee, lay not
upon us innocent blood. They are now as earnest in praying to be saved from
the peril of sin as they were before in praying to be saved from the peril of
the sea, especially because Jonah appeared to them to be no ordinary person, but
a very good man, a man of God, a worshipper of the great Creator of heaven and
earth, upon which account even these rude mariners conceived a veneration for
him, and trembled at the thought of taking away his life. Innocent blood is
precious, but saints' blood, prophets' blood, is much more precious, and so
those will find to their cost that any way bring themselves under the guilt of
it. The mariners saw Jonah pursued by divine vengeance, and yet could not
without horror think of being his executioners. Though his God has a controversy
with him, yet, think they,
Let not our hand be upon him. The Israelites
were at this time killing the prophets for doing their duty (witness Jezebel's
late persecution), and were prodigal of their lives, which is aggravated by the
tenderness these heathens had for one whom they perceived to be a prophet,
though he was now out of the way of his duty. 2. What a fear they had of
incurring the wrath of God; they were jealous lest he should be angry if they
should be the death of Jonah, for he had said,
Touch not my anointed, and do
my prophets no harm; it is at your peril if you do. "Lord," say
they,
"let us not perish for this man's life. Let it not be such a
fatal dilemma to us. We see we must perish if we spare his life; Oh let us not
perish for taking away his life." And their plea is good:
"For
thou, O Lord! hast done as it pleased thee; thou had laid us under a
necessity of doing it; the wind that pursued him, the lot that discovered him,
were both under thy direction, which we are herein governed by; we are but the
instruments of Providence, and it is sorely against our will that we do it; but
we must say,
The will of the Lord be done." Note, When we are
manifestly led by Providence to do things contrary to our own inclinations, and
quite beyond our own intentions, it will be some satisfaction to us to be able
to say,
Thou, O Lord! has done as it pleased thee. And, if God please
himself, we ought to be satisfied though he do not please us.
V. Having deprecated the guilt they dreaded, they proceeded to
execution (v. 15):
They took up Jonah, and
cast him forth into the
sea. They cast him out of their ship, out of their company, and cast him
into the sea, a raging stormy sea, that cried, "Give, give; surrender the
traitor, or expect no peace." We may well think what confusion and
amazement poor Jonah was in when he saw himself ready to be hurried into the
presence of that God as a Judge whose presence as a Master he was now fleeing
from. Note, Those know not what ruin they run upon that run away from God.
Woe
unto them! for they have fled from me. When sin is the Jonah that raises the
storm, that must thus be cast forth into the sea; we must abandon it, and be the
death of it, must drown that which otherwise will
drown us in destruction and
perdition. And if we thus by a thorough repentance and reformation cast our
sins forth into the sea, never to recall them or return to them again, God will
by pardoning mercy subdue our iniquities, and
cast them into the depths of
the sea too, Mic. 7:19.
VI. The throwing of Jonah into the sea immediately put an end to
the storm. The sea has what she came for, and therefore rests contended; she
ceases
from her raging. It is an instance of the sovereign power of God that he can
soon turn the storm into a calm, and of the equity of his government that when
the end of an affliction is answered and attained the affliction shall
immediately be removed. He will not contend for ever, will not contend any
longer till we submit ourselves and give up the cause. If we turn from our sins,
he will soon turn from his anger.
VII. The mariners were hereby more confirmed in their belief
that Jonah's God was the only true God (v. 16):
Then the men feared the
Lord with a great fear, were possessed with a deep veneration for the God of
Israel, and came to a resolution that they would worship him only for the
future; for
there is no other God that can destroy, that
can deliver,
after this sort. When they saw the power of God in raising and laying the
tempest, when they saw his justice upon Jonah his own servant, and when they saw
his goodness to them in saving them from the brink of ruin,
then they feared
the Lord, Jer. 5:22. As an evidence of their fear of him, they
offered
sacrifice to him when they came ashore again in the land of Israel, and for
the present made vows that they would do so, in thankfulness for their
deliverance, and to make atonement for their souls. Or, perhaps, they had
something yet on board which might be for a sacrifice to God immediately. Or it
may be meant of the spiritual sacrifices of prayer and praise, with which God is
better pleased than with that of an ox or bullock that has horns and hoofs. See
Ps. 107:2, etc. We must make vows, not only when we are in the pursuit of mercy,
but, which is much more generous, when we have received mercy, as those that are
still studying what we shall render.
VIII. Jonah's life, after all, is saved by a miracle, and we
shall hear of him again for all this. In the midst of judgment God
remembers
mercy. Jonah shall be worse frightened than hurt, not so much punished for
his sin as reduced to his duty. Though he flees from the presence of the Lord,
and seems to fall into his avenging hands, yet God has more work for him to do,
and therefore has
prepared a great fish to swallow up Jonah (v. 17),
a
whale our Saviour calls it (Mt. 12:40), one of the largest sorts of whales,
that have wider throats than others, in the belly of which has sometimes been
found the dead body of a man in armour. Particular notice is taken, in the
history of creation, of God's
creating great whales (Gen. 1:21) and the
leviathan in the waters
made to play therein, Ps. 104:26. But God
finds work for this leviathan, has
prepared him, has
numbered him
(so the word is), has appointed him to be Jonah's receiver and deliverer.
Note, God has command of all the creatures, and can make any of them serve his
designs of mercy to his people, even the fishes of the sea, that are most from
under man's cognizance, even the great whales, that are altogether from under
man's government. This fish was prepared, lay ready under water close by the
ship, that he might keep Jonah from sinking to the bottom, and save him alive,
though he deserved to die. Let us
stand still and see this salvation of the
Lord, and admire his power, that he could thus save a drowning man, and his
pity, that he would thus save one that was running from him and had offended
him. It was of the Lord's mercies that Jonah was not now consumed. The fish
swallowed up Jonah, not to devour him, but to protect him.
Out of the eater
comes forth meat; for Jonah was alive and well
in the belly of the fish
three days and three nights, not consumed by the heat of the animal, nor
suffocated for want of air. It is granted that to nature this was impossible,
but not to the God of nature, with whom all things are possible. Jonah by this
miraculous preservation was designed to be made, 1. A monument of divine mercy,
for the encouragement of those that have sinned, and gone away from God, to
return and repent. 2. A successful preacher to Nineveh; and this miracle wrought
for his deliverance, if the tidings of it reached Nineveh, would contribute to
his success. 3. An illustrious type of Christ, who was buried and rose again
according to the scriptures (1 Co. 15:4), according to this scripture, for,
as
Jonah was three days and three nights in the whale's belly, so was the Son of
man three days and three nights in the heart of the earth, Mt. 12:40. Jonah's
burial was a figure of Christ's. God prepared Jonah's grave, so he did
Christ's, when it was long before ordained that he should
make his grave
with the rich, Isa. 53:9. Was Jonah's grave a strange one, a new one? So
was Christ's, one in which never man before was laid. Was Jonah there the best
part of three days and three nights? So was Christ; but both in order to their
rising again for the bringing of the doctrine of repentance to the Gentile
world.
Come, see the place where the Lord lay.
Chapter 1:
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| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
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| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 Obadiah Micah
Genesis
Exodus
Leviticus
Numbers
Deuteronomy
Joshua
Judges
Ruth
1 Samuel
2 Samuel
1 Kings
2 Kings
1 Chronicles
2 Chronicles
Ezra
Nehemiah
Esther
Job
Psalm
Proverbs
Ecclesiastes
Song of Solomon
Isaiah
Jeremiah
Lamentations
Ezekiel
Daniel
Hosea
Joel
Amos
Obadiah
Jonah
Micah
Nahum
Habakkuk
Zephaniah
Haggai
Zechariah
Malachi
Matthew
Mark
Luke
John
Acts
Romans
1 Corinthians
2 Corinthians
Galatians
Ephesians
Philippians
Colossians
1 Thessalonians
2 Thessalonians
1 Timothy
2 Timothy
Titus
Philemon
Hebrews
James
1 Peter
2 Peter
1 John
2 John
3 John
Jude
Revelation
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