The Great Offense
Douglas A. Knight; Amy-Jill Levine: The Meaning of the Bible – What the Jewish Scriptures and Christian Old Testament Can Teach Us: ‘The fictional nature of the story of Jonah is indicated not only by the “great fish” that swallows the prophet and after three days vomits him up on dry land or by the exaggerated rhetoric (the word “great” occurs fourteen times), but also by the city’s surprising repentance: the entire population, and the cattle, repent after hearing a five-word (in Hebrew) sermon.’
Let’s face it there are many things in the Bible that offend our sensibilities and reason. But at the root of them all is an exposure of faith, or the lack thereof. Better yet, what is being exposed is what we truly trust. It’s one thing to believe, and quite another to trust it to be true. We flippantly state we believe God’s Word to be true but Jonah lays bare our heart. Is it simply a fictional story, a children’s fairy tale, or was Jonah a real-life individual? Did this event really occur?
Jesus thought so. Luke 11:32 The men of Nineveh will appear as witnesses at the judgment with this generation and will condemn it; for they repented at the preaching of Jonah, and behold, here is more than Jonah.
The Old Testament writer of the book 2 Kings thought Jonah existed: Jeroboam restored Israel’s border from the entrance of Hamath to the [Dead] Sea of the Arabah, according to the word of the Lord, the God of Israel, which He spoke through His servant Jonahson of Amittai, the prophet from Gath-hepher. (2 Kings 14:25)
Scripture is very clear regarding the connection between Jesus and the Word revealing the relationship we truly have with Him. The Word is the mirror of that relationship revealing what we value, love, and trust. Another obvious connection to the Word is that of the Holy Spirit. You can’t see Jesus apart from the Spirit, and the Word, nor can you truly grasp the message of the Word apart from the Spirit. What’s infinitely scarier is the fact that the Letter of the Law kills. In other words you can know the word but not know the WORD. To be so close and yet so far from eternal life.
Franklin Graham, recounts in an article in Charisma Magazine a struggle his father wrestled with Seventy-six years ago, a pivotal time in Billy Graham’s life. A young preacher friend had been questioning whether the Bible was truly and entirely the authoritative Word of God. The issues this preacher raised began to trouble Billy. Although he never doubted the truth of the Gospel, he wrestled over whether he could fully believe everything the Bible teaches. He even started wondering if his questions might cause him to give up preaching. He took his struggle with him when he traveled to San Bernardino, California, where he was scheduled to speak at Forest Home Conference Center, and then begin a citywide tent crusade in Los Angeles a few weeks later. Late one night at Forest Home, discouraged and unable to sleep because of the burden that filled his mind, he got up and went out into the moonlight for a walk. In the nearby woods he came upon a tree stump, and he opened his Bible and laid it on the stump. Then he poured out the agony of his heart to God. He knew the matter had to be resolved one way or the other. Finally he knelt in the shadows by the stump with the Bible open before him and prayed, “Father, I am going to accept this as Thy Word—by faith! I will believe this to be Your inspired Word.” At that moment, he later said, he felt the burden lift and sensed the freedom and power of the Holy Spirit in and around him.
If you are participating in the month of Elul’s emphasis upon seeking to connect to Jesus through confession, and repentance then you are manifesting what you truly believe about Jesus and His Word. Your seeking is a mirror of your faith, and trust OR a mirror of unbelief, and distrust. Do you need to settle the issue of the Word of God in your life? Do you need to confess your unbelief?
