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Jonah

Renewing Your Mind / R.C. Sproul
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September 26, 2025 12:01 am

Jonah

Renewing Your Mind / R.C. Sproul

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September 26, 2025 12:01 am

The story of Jonah is a powerful lesson in mercy and compassion, as the prophet is called to preach to the people of Nineveh, a city known for its wickedness. Despite Jonah's initial reluctance and rebellion, he eventually obeys God's command and preaches to the people, who repent and are spared from destruction. The story highlights God's gracious and compassionate nature, and serves as a reminder of the importance of obedience and faithfulness in serving God.

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when God exercises mercy. When you see God forgiving people, you cannot forgive. Are you not like Jah? Who had more compassion on a gourd, Than it did on a person. The story of Jonah might seem like a fun Sunday school lesson for children.

And although there are elements of the story that capture our attention even as adults, It is a story with significant lessons and warnings for you. And me. This is the Friday edition of Renewing Your Mind, and with great passion, today R. C. Sproll examines the life and lessons for us from the account of Jonah.

This message is from Dr. Sprohl's 13-part series, Great Men to Live By. And you can have lifetime digital access to this series, plus a hardcover copy of his book on Joseph, another great man to live by, when you donate before midnight tonight. at renewingyourmind.org. or by using the link in the podcast show notes.

Well, to help us understand mercy and compassion from the book of Jonah. Here's Duff to Sprawl. But in this session We're going to look briefly. At the prophet Jonah. Perhaps there's no prophet in the Old Testament whose work has engendered more debate and more controversy.

Then this prophet with his little book. with the story of being swallowed and delivered by the great fish, The story of the gourd that grows overnight and then is destroyed by the worm. Many have argued in the last hundred years or so that this book represents a clear example of mythology, the mythological intrusion into the sacred scriptures, indicating the kind of style of literature that is found in antiquity. in other mythical stories. Others have looked at it as being symbolic through and through.

and merely symbolic and not to be taken as a historical narrative.

Some have argued that it is an extended allegory. and so on. I'm not going to get into any great discussion tonight about that. It's just let you know where I'm coming from. I think.

That the basic motivation for dismissing the integrity of the Book of Jonah. Has come not through a literary analysis of the book, but rather the judgment is based on philosophical grounds that proceed from a naturalistic perspective that preclude going in any possibility of the miraculous. And if that judgment were to be given to this book in particular, it would, for consistency's sake, have to be applied throughout the scriptures indiscriminately. But from a strictly literary analysis, those who argue that the book was intended to be an epic poem or An allegory. or simply a parabolic symbolism.

Those who maintain it are very, very embarrassed by the fact that the literary structure of the book simply does not have the. indispensable characteristics of those genre. I take the book as history. Certainly, it includes a poetic structure in the middle of it, in the prayer. And that, of course, follows all of the characteristics of poetic literature.

But the rest of the book has a historical narrative, literary style to it. That's the way our Lord dealt with the book, and I think that we ought to do as well. But enough of that. Let's get on to the actual message of the book and the story that is recorded for us. We're told at the beginning that the word of the Lord came to Jonah the son of Amittai, saying, Arise.

Go to Nineveh. The great city, and cry against it, for their wickedness has come up before me. Here is the call to the prophet: Jonah, this time I'm not sending you. to Israel or to the temple in Jerusalem as I sent Jeremiah? Or as I will send Jeremiah, Jonah presumably predates Jeremiah.

I'm not sending you to my people. But I'm sending you on a most unusual mission for a prophet. I'm sending you to a pagan. place. To a Gentile city.

Through a bastion. of ungodliness. and I'm not sending you there with good news. I'm sending you there. Not on a mission of mercy.

but on a mission of judgment. I want you to cry against that city, for its wickedness has come up before me. But Jonah Rosa To flee. Totarshish. Remember The call of Isaiah.

trembling before the altar and there in the temple as he had the vision of Yahweh. Whom shall I send, and who will go for me? Saith the Lord. And Isaiah says, Here I am. Send me.

Jonah saying, There he is. Send Isaiah. I am going to to Joppa. I'm not going to Tarshis. He goes in the opposite direction.

I'm going to go as far away from that place as I can possibly go. He's not merely reluctant. He is positively rebellious. He refused steadfastly to carry out the mission that God has laid before him.

So he goes. and he finds his ship That was going to Tarshish. And we read he paid the fare. He didn't just hit your ride. He's willing to put his money where his mouth is.

If I have to take my life, say, if I have to play double or triple fare to get on this boat, I'm going. Or it's going, I'm going, just as long as it's not. Going. To Nineveh. Jonah did not want to.

Yeah, yeah, yeah. The Word of God. To a hostel. City. He did not want to proclaim the word of God.

when he knew it would be unpopular. And so rather than choose the option of the false prophet and merely continue to preach and keep his vocation going with falsehoods and flattery as the false prophets did, rather Jonah abandons the ministry altogether. And gets aboard ship. and sails away. As if he could flee.

From the presence of God. As if if he went into the uncharted dimensions of the sea, way from the ports of Israel, that somehow he could escape the hound of heaven. But the story tells us that that. was a vain hope. He paid the fare and went down into it to go with them to Tarshis from the presence of the Lord.

And the Lord hurled a great wind on the sea, and a great storm on the sea, so that the ship was about to break up. And the sailors became afraid. And every man cried to his God, and they threw the cargo which was in the ship into the sea to lighten it but Jonah had gone below to the hold of the ship, lain down, and fallen sound asleep. The home. world around him is perishing.

And this one who was anointed and called of God to be a prophet. is sleeping in. You've heard me use the expression many times, those of you that are regularly in attendance here. I say, you know, if there is no God, I'm going to sleep in tomorrow morning. I take my cue.

From Jonah There's no point to get exercised about anything. If God is not God, But Jone is asleep. And the captain approached him and said, How can you be sleeping? Get up, call your God perhaps your God will be concerned about us, so we will not perish. And then the men decide among themselves what can cause the fury of the seas to be behaving like this.

Certainly, there is somebody on board this ship. This contraband that was being carried on this smuggling vessel. Was so odious to the sea that the sea would not bear that cargo. I said somebody here. is causing them to cast lots, and the lot falls upon guess who?

Jonah. I said to him, Tell us on whose account has this calamity struck us? What is your occupation? Where do you come from? What's your country?

From what people are you? And he said. I am a Hebrew. And I fear the Lord God of heaven, who made the sea. and the dry land.

And now the other sailors become intensely frightened. And they said, how could you do this? for they knew he was fleeing from the presence of the Lord because he told them. I said, what can we do? assuage the sea.

And Jonah says Pycmia. And throw me into the sea.

Now it's not like they're cruising the Caribbean. And the sea is as glass, and the tropical sun is beating down. And you're standing outside in the fantail of the ship, and you're looking at this romantic, blissful ocean. And it's tempting in a situation like that to just dive into the sea as it appears as a deep blue lagoon. Oh, the ship is breaking to pieces, and the winds are beating and howling all about it.

And Jonas says, Throw me into the sea. One thing I'll say for John. He knew how to repent. On the one. Romeo.

Try to And as soon as he hits that water. Like Jesus on the Sea of Galilee. It becomes like glass. Except for the one who is now in the murky depths of the sea. And remember that in Israel, the most fearsome dimension of nature is.

The sea. In verse 17, we read: And the Lord appointed a great fish, doesn't say it's a whale, just a great fish. The Swallow Jonah. And Jonah was in the stomach of the fish three days and three nights. And Jonah prayed to the Lord his God from the stomach of the fish.

And I remember as I was writing a paper on this in seminary, a professor came in and told us how this is so ridiculous, obviously unhistorical, because the content of this prayer indicates a failure to understand the interior dimensions of a whale or any other great fish's belly. He said, look at this. Currents are engulfing me. Breakers and billows pass over me. Seaweed is wrapped around my head.

And this professor went up and said, Look, there's no seaweed in the belly of whales. And water isn't rushing back and forth over people. And here is Jonach describing his desolate, terrible condition inside the whale's belly when the description doesn't fit. The inside button. I miss the obvious.

Jonah is not praying to God for thanking him for rescuing him from inside the whale. The whale in this book is not an instrument of punishment. The whale is the instrument of redemption. The whale is appointed by God to rescue Jonah. From the sea Listen to his prayer of thanksgiving.

I called out of my distress to the Lord, and he answered me. I cried for help from the depth of Sheol. and thou didst hear my voice. for thou hadst cast me into the deep. into the heart of the seas, and the current engulfed me all thy breakers and billows passed over me.

And what's a description of what? His experience in the sea. And so I said, I've been expelled from thy sight. Nevertheless, I will look again toward thy holy temple. Water encompassed me to the very soul.

The great deep engulfed me. Weeds were wrapped around my head. I descended. to the roots of the mountain. You see the mountains rising up near the seacoast, and you have the idea that as a great tree where only a part of its substance is above ground, so those mountains that are on the seacoast over there, like Carmel and the other ones, have their roots that go deep fathoms.

Beneath the sea. He said, You sent me all the way down to the roots of the mountains, and the earth with its bars was around me forever. But thou, O Lord, hast brought up my life from the pit. While I was fainting away, while I was drowning. I remembered the Lord, and my prayer came to thee into thy holy temple.

Those who regard vain idols forsake their faithfulness, but I will sacrifice to thee with the voice of thanksgiving that which I have vowed, I will pay. Salvation is of the Lord. And then the LORD God commanded this fish, and it vomited Jonah out upon the dry land. This great fish was a lifeguard that rescued the man from the sea and pulled him into shore and spit him up. And so now the word of the Lord came to Jonah a second time.

Saying, Arise. Go to Nineveh, the great city, and proclaim to it the proclamation which I am going to tell you. And so Jonah went to Joppa, and bought another ticket. No, that's not what happened. He said, okay, Lord, I'll go.

So Jonah arose and went to Nineveh according to the word of the LORD.

Now Nineveh was an exceedingly great city, three days' walk. And Jonah began to go through the city one day's walk, and he cried out and said, Yet forty days, and Nineveh will be overthrown. I'll give them the message. Forty days and it's all over, Nineveh. You see the preachers walking up and down the streets of Pittsburgh or Chicago, New York?

You know, the end of the world is at hand. You can imagine how people would respond to that. Here's Jonah. He's preaching it. He's walking down the streets.

He's right in the middle of the city. 20 more days. The end is coming! Nobody laughed. What happened?

Much to the prophet's consternation. The people of Nineveh believed. In God. And they called a fast, and put on sackcloth, from the greatest to the least of them. And even when the word reached the king, he arose from his throne, laid aside his robe, covered himself with sackcloth, and sat on the ashes.

And he issued a proclamation and said in Nineveh. By the decree of the king, and by his nobles. Do not let man, beast, herd, or flock taste a thing. Do not let them eat or drink water, but both man and beast. Must be covered with sackcloth.

And let men call on God earnestly, that each may turn from his wicked way and from the violence which is in his hand. For who knows? Maybe. God Will turn and relent and withdraw his burning anger so that we shall not perish.

Now when God saw their deeds, That they repented. Then God relented concerning the calamity which he had declared he would bring upon them, and he did not do it. And Jonah cried out to God, Thank you, Lord. For your abundant mercy. That's not in there.

Is it? That's not what it said. Yeah. Jonah was greatly displeased, and he became angry. And he prayed to the Lord and said, Lord, was not this what I said while I was still in my own country?

You know the four unkindness words in the English language. I Hold You So Didn't I tell you God? I knew it. I knew it all along. You made me come down here and preach in this, but I knew you were going to do this.

Say. And in order to forestall this, I fled to Tarshis, for I knew that you are a gracious and compassionate God, slow to anger, abundant loving kindness, one who relents concerning calamity. Therefore, now, God, take my life, for death is no better to me than life. I've been praying down the street. Tell them everybody.

They had 40 days, it was all over, and now you're gonna. You're going to change the game player. And I'm going to look like an idiot. And the Lord said, Do you have a good reason to be angry? Interesting question, isn't it?

Anger in and of itself is not evil. But unjustifiable anger is he? And so Glad said, wait a minute now, look. What do I have to do with you? Threw you in the sea, bought you out of the sea, brought you down here, and now you're giving me fits again.

And you're angry, you're screaming at me, you want me to kill you?

Now tell me somethin', Jonah. Do you have A good reason. To be angry. Doesn't say what Jonah said. He went out of the city.

and sat on the east of it. Made a shelter for himself and sat under in the shade until he could see what would happen in the city. It's like. He took his marbles and he went home. Anyone over in the corner?

And he pouts, right? It's just sits there. Hmm.

So the Lord God appointed a gourd. And it grew up over Jonah to be a shade over his head. To deliver him from his discomfort. God is so kind. Jonah's sitting out there.

the sun's beating down on him. God miraculously causes this gourd to come up and give him shade. Jonah was extremely happy. His mood changes again. You know, half an hour before this, he was asking God to let him die.

Now he's delighting because he has some shade for his head. But God appointed a worm when dawn came the next day and it attacked the plant and it withered. It came about that when the sun came up, that God appointed a scorching east wind to Sirocco. And the sun beat down on Jonah's head so that he became faint. and begged with all of his soul to die.

Saying death is better to me than life. Then God said to Jonah, Do you have good reason to be angry about the plant? And Jonah said, yes. I have good reason to be angry even to death. Things were okay.

I even accepted you changing your mind. I came up here, I thought it through, I was working it through, I was getting my act together. and you gave me beautiful shade. To comfort me. That was neat.

And then a one came. I killed my gourd. Drove me out of my gourd. Right.

So he said. I've good reason to be angry.

Well the Lord God said, You had compassion. On the plant For which you did not work. You didn't sew it? You didn't cultivate it. And water it.

Then trim it. I created it. out of nothing. You gave no labor to it? And you had compassion on it?

You didn't cause it to grow. It came up overnight and it perished overnight. Should I not have compassion on Nineveh? The great city in which there are more than 120,000 persons who don't know the difference between their right hand and their left hand. As well as many.

What kind of a prophet are you? You have more compassion. I'm a vegetable. Than you have on a city full of dying human pain. When God exercises mercy.

When you stand up and you see Teebo. Clinging to the garments of Christ in heaven. People that you don't like. When you see God forgiving people, you cannot forgive. Are you not like John?

But more compassion. on an gourd. Then he did on a Person. God is saying, these are people. I created these people.

I have sustained her. I've nurtured them. I've ministered to them. For years and years and decades. And they have refused to come to me, but finally they have repented.

Have you no heart, John? It's one thing to preach the wrath of God against sin. It's another thing. to preach your own anger. That was Jonah's great mistake.

I believe that this is a true story. I believe that all happened just as the book says. And Jesus did too. And he warned the people in his own day, and he said, will not. The Men of Nineveh Rise up.

on the day of judgment. And speak to you, O Israel. For they believed by the preaching of the prophet Jonah and one. greater than Johann. It's here.

That was R. C. Sproll concluding our time on Renewing Your Mind in his series, Great Men to Live By. As he said at the end there, he believed Jonah to be a true story. And as you could hear from his seriousness and passion, an account of a story with true implications for how each of us are to live as Christians.

Stephen Nichols is back with us today to discuss the State of Theology survey. but I'll welcome him in just a moment. First, I want to remind you. that today is the final day of this week's Resource Offer.

So, if you'd like to add great men to live by to your library and receive a hardcover copy of Dr. Sprohl's book, Joseph, From Dreamer to Deliverer. Give a donation in support of Renewing Your Mind by calling us at 800-435-4343 or at renewingyourmind.org. We'll get the book in the mail for you, and we'll unlock the 13 messages in this series for you in the Ligonier app.

So that's a book and an extensive series on the Old Testament prophets to thank you for showing your support at renewingyourmind.org. or by using the link in the podcast show notes.

Dr. Nichols, welcome back again to Renewing Your Mind as we discuss the recently released results of Ligonier's 2025 State of Theology survey.

Well, we mentioned evangelicals yesterday. and we frequently, in the survey results, contrast evangelicals with the general US population.

So how is evangelical defined? Yeah, that is a great question because evangelical evangelicalism can be very elastic terms and people can fill them with a variety of meanings. What we did was we used this sort of standard form. Four-point definition of an evangelical. And the first statement has to do with scripture.

and that is, the Bible is the highest authority for what I believe.

So to be an evangelical, you need to affirm that. You also need to affirm Three more beliefs that get it to the heart of the word evangelical, the gospel.

So, the second one is: it is very important for me personally to encourage non-Christians to trust in Jesus Christ as their Savior. Need to affirm that. The third is, Jesus Christ's death on the cross is the only sacrifice that could remove the penalty of my sin. Affirm that. And then, lastly, only those who trust in Jesus Christ alone as their Savior receive God's free gift of eternal salvation.

So that's the litmus test to be an evangelical, affirming those four statements.

Well, if you didn't hear Chris Larson join us in the studio on Wednesday or Dr. Nichols yesterday discussing the results, I do encourage you to go back and listen wherever you get your podcasts. Dr. Nichols, that four statement standard. really makes these results even more shocking because the respondents have to strongly agree not just agree, but strongly agree with those statements.

And second, even though they strongly agree that the Bible is their highest authority, many still drift from what the Bible clearly teaches.

So what does that reveal about the church in the United States?

Well, it reveals some of what we were talking about yesterday. It reveals an intense biblical illiteracy. And again, when there is a vacuum, as we know, nature abhors a vacuum.

So into that vacuum will come some voice to influence. And that's typically cultural voices and what we see then is cultural accommodations.

So rather than having beliefs that are governed and guided and grounded upon God's word, they are beliefs that are influenced by culture and reflective of the sensibilities of the moment.

So, what is the answer to what seems like a very serious problem in the church? And is the answer in 2025 different? different from other times in the church or perhaps at the Reformation. Yeah. No, the answer is the same answer that even extends back to the first century, Nathan.

Here's Paul writing to Timothy, Second Timothy three, opening verses, paint a bleak picture of culture. And Paul even speaks of how that spills into the church.

So, if I were Timothy, I'd be paying attention right now on what is the solution to all that. And this really is the predicament we find ourselves in. There is chaos, upheaval, not only in the culture, but in the church. And this is what Paul says to Timothy. He says But as for you, continue in what you have learned, and firmly believed, knowing from whom you learned it, And how from childhood, and I love this expression, Nathan, you have been acquainted with the sacred writings.

The answer is the same answer in the first. 16th, twenty five. 21st century, we need to know God's Word and to apply ourselves to the study of God's Word. And helping people in their youth and their adult years be acquainted with the scriptures, to quote Paul, is what we seek to do here at Ligonier Ministries, Reformation Bible College. Absolutely.

Whether it's through growing in God's Word, our new curriculum, Always Ready, or as I said, Reformation Bible College. Yeah, this is in our DNA to teach God's Word. When RC started Ligonier, he wanted a place where people could find answers because they had hard questions and he knew the Bible. was that place. Yesterday we discussed some of the ways that this survey reveals we get ourselves wrong, getting our anthropology confused with what the Bible teaches.

How do these survey results show confusion about who God is?

Well, let's go to an aspect of who God is that is the Trinity and the doctrine of the Trinity, which is a place where evangelicals can get easily tripped up. And the survey reveals that that indeed happens. We had a statement in this survey that goes all the way back to the beginnings of the survey, the first year in 2014, and it is: the Holy Spirit is a force. but is not a personal being.

Now, more than half of evangelicals agree with that statement.

Now, when we look at another statement, we get contradictory information.

So we have a statement in there. It is an orthodox statement of the doctrine of the Trinity, and it is there is one true God in three persons: God the Father. God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit.

Well, 97% of evangelicals get that right. How can you be right on one moment and then be the exact opposite wrong in another moment? And I think it shows the inability to connect the dots. It shows the inability to sort of extend a basic theological statement onto sort of the next level of theological reflection. It shows, thankfully, for places like RBC, job security, that God has given the gift of teachers to the church.

And it shows the need to have teachers and resources produced by teachers to help us get these doctrines right. We're not talking about peripheral doctrines, we're talking about doctrines that are central. to historic Christian orthodoxy.

Well, I'd like to encourage you, the listener, to read the key findings and explore the results at thestateoftheology.com. Dr. Nichols, are there any other key findings that you would like to share with our listeners? Yeah, this one I think is just really troubling. The statement is God accepts the worship of all religions, including Christianity, Judaism, and Islam.

Evangelicals are knocking on the door of half and half. 47% affirm this. This is pure pluralism, is what this is. And here we have the word again, evangelical. At the center of it is the gospel.

And to believe that salvation is found in other religions and in the doctrines of other religions is a betrayal of the gospel. The Gospel is simple. It is By grace alone. through faith alone in Christ alone. Salvation is found in no other name.

Than in Jesus Christ. That is at the center, Nathan, of our identity. It's the center of our mission.

So if we are not proclaiming the true gospel, then we are proclaiming a false gospel.

Well, Dr. Nichols, thank you for being with us today to just briefly discuss the State of Theology survey. And I'd like to remind you as well, you can explore all of those results at thestateoftheology.com. What are the differences between Christianity and Islam? For some today, those distinctions have been obscured.

Next week, you'll hear an investigative series with R.C. Sproll that demonstrates how Christianity stands in stark contrast to the claims of Islam.

So be sure to join us beginning Monday. Kia on Renewing Your Mind.

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