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Jonah and the Large Fish
From Timeless Themes by Gowdy, Moore, and Skwire
GOD SAID TO JONAH, "Go at once to the great city of
Nineveh and cry out against it; for their wickedness has come up before
me." Jonah knew that if he gave the people of Nineveh God's warning,
they would beg for forgiveness. Jonah was also sure that they would be
forgiven, since God was a merciful God. Jonah didn't like the Ninevites
and didn't want them to be forgiven, so he took a ship to Tarshish, a
town in the opposite direction from Nineveh, and the one farthest away.
While that ship was sailing to Tarshish, a terrible storm came up. The
sailors were very afraid, and they threw all their cargo into the sea
to lighten the ship in the water. Jonah, meanwhile, was fast asleep below
deck.
The captain woke Jonah and begged him to call upon his God to keep them
from dying. Then the sailors questioned him. "Where do you come from?
Why are you here? When they found out that he was running away from his
God, they cried, "What is this you have done? What shall we do to
you, that the sea may quiet down for us?"
Jonah answered, "Pick me up and throw me into the sea; then the sea
will quiet down for you; for I know it is because of me that this great
storm has come upon you."
Still they tried to get back to land, but the storm got worse. Finally,
they realized that they would have to throw Jonah into the sea if the
rest of them were to be saved. So they picked Jonah up and threw him into
the sea. The sea stopped its raging, and the sailors were certain that
God had caused the storm.
God then provided a large fish to swallow Jonah; and Jonah was in the
belly of the fish for three nights and three days. Then Jonah prayed to
God for deliverance; God spoke to the fish, and it spewed Jonah out upon
the dry land.
Again, God told Jonah to go to Nineveh, and this time Jonah went. The
people of Nineveh listened to Jonah, and they begged God to forgive them.
God heard their cries and was full of mercy for the Ninevites, just as
Jonah knew God would be. Therefore they were forgiven. This made Jonah
angry, but God finally convinced him that the people of Nineveh were worth
saving.
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