Jonah 1:1b
"...He went down to Joppa and found a ship going to Tarshish. He paid the fare and went down into it to go with them to Tarshish from the Lord’s presence."
Jonah runs off to Joppa before fleeing to the ends of the earth. He runs away from God's call. Away from his will really. Interestingly, Joppa, now part of modern Tel Aviv, is the same city where The Apostle Peter is visited by a vision of a sheet-like movie screen or something of that sort. And Peter resists God's calling and will as well. Both were resisting bringing the word of God to the gentiles. With Jonah God just wants him to deliver a message to the gentiles, a warning about his coming wrath. With Peter God wants the message of his Son Jesus, his message of forgiveness and redemption, to be shared with the gentile people. And Peter gets wrapped up in purity laws and other fundamental principles that segregate him and other Jews from living and sharing anything from God with the non Jewish people.
Jonah is confronted by the Lord and he's told to go to Nineveh to deliver God's message. That gentile city was wicked and needed to be told that the Lord was against it. Jonah was troubled by the call. It seems that he didn't want to bring a warning to the wicked people of Nineveh. Likely because he feared they'd heed the warning a repent. And he didn't want that. He wanted them to be punished for their many crimes against humanity. Jonah was suddenly confronted with the reality that his God is merciful, and frankly he didn't like it. So he tries to escape him. He runs off to Joppa and boards a boat to Spain. Ironically the boat is owned and operated by pagan Cannanite men. Pagan men who feverishly pray to their many pagan gods before finally praying to Jonah's one true God as they toss him overboard to calm the storm.
So as disciples go, what have we to say about Jonah or Peter for that matter?
In a sense, Jonah is told to take up his cross and go. "Arise, go to Nineveh", get up and go Jonah, the wickedness of that city is so great that it's even reached the heavens. And so Jonah's called to witness against their great wickedness. And God expects immediate results from his vessel, “Arise quickly; apply thyself to the business with speed and courage, and the resolution that becomes a prophet; arise, and go to Nineveh.” Jonah and the other prophets were accustomed to preaching to the choir. They prophesied in the temples and streets of Israel to Jews who knew the one true God. Oh sure they were wicked but they at least had some contextual understanding of the God of Jacob. But now God wants Jonah, and Peter as well, to go outside the church. And not on some mission trip where they're going to build homes for the unfortunate, or feed the poor and homeless people who don't know God. He sends them to the wickedly violent and powerful pagan gentile people of the known world in their age. Jonah is called to go into their great and wealthy city to accuse them of their crimes and pronounce God's coming judgment upon them.
WOW...imagine that mission trip these days.
Imagine the church planning committee meeting where they discuss that idea for the next outreach program. "Let's go into Washington D.C. and warn them that God is going to judge them all for their many crimes." I'm pretty sure that no one is going to be on board with that. They'll all run off to Spain to dig a well or build a bunk bed for orphans before they decide to make that kind of prophetic mission trip. And probably rightly so. That's why the prophets tend to do what they do alone.
Truth is, God doesn't hold a committee meeting when he sends his disciples. He calls the disciples alone. And maybe that disciple can convince others to join him, but first God calls the disciple who hears with spiritual hearing and sees with spiritual eyes. And he equips that disciple to do what needs to be done. He gives him or her a word and mission, and a desire to make disciples for Christ. In Jonah's case the word was there, the mission was there, but the desire was not. And so God needed to better equip Jonah for the task ahead. Jonah needed an object lesson and God calls up a storm to swallow him up so he can have some alone time with Jonah. Jonah was stuck, like so many, in this idea that God's grace and mercy is for the people of God only. He was guilty of being a navel gazer and he was haunted by God's Spirit. He foresaw that the Ninevites would repent, and God would forgive them, and he hated that spiritual insight. He resisted the truth and held instead to his own human will.
Jonah was not being a disciple, he was being disobedient. He wanted things to be like they've always been done. Have you ever been part of a church like that?
What was his sin?
He rebelled against God's calling. He turned away from God, the opposite of repentance. And he was chased around the known world until he learned repentance.
I believe what happened was he ultimately learned that anyone can be guilty of disobeying the Lord. Anybody can be out of God's will. And he learned that God will go to extreme measures to catch that person and restore them to righteousness. And from that low place, that place of the dead and lost, Jonah learned that God's word must go out to every nation throughout the whole world. Jonah didn't discover the idea of coexistence among the religious people. Jonah didn't learn that God comes in many forms and cultures. Jonah learned that all of God's creation must be brought back into the remembrance and obedience of the One true Lord and God.
I'm sure Jonah wished he was like the prophet Isaiah who brought the wonderful words of God to his own people, surly Jonah would have repeated the prophets words...
Isaiah 50:5
"The Lord God has opened my ear, and I was not rebellious; I did not turn back."
...but the disciple does not get to choose his or her calling. God determines the call. And God will have it the way he wants it. He'll wait 40 years for the disciple to come up to his mountain and he'll tell him his name. He'll chase the disciple to a mountain cave to whisper his word to him. He'll come in a dream to his blessed daughter and make her blessed among all women. He'll imprison his disciples to share the gospel with gentile prison guards. Time after time God has to struggle with his disciples to get them into his will, to get them to submit to his holiness.
My conclusion:
If your church of Christ's disciples are comfortable in their mission? If they are consuming, having it their way, not going outside the sanctuary doors with God's message, they're probably in disobedience.
How long will it take for them to come around?
40 years?
A lifetime?
What we learn from the prophets and the apostles example is that the thing that slows the response of the disciples is the lack of spiritual eyes and ears. The harder it is to understand and accept the word of God, the harder it will be to accomplish his will. Ultimately God will get the result he wants, even if he has to spit the church out of his mouth, or as in Jonah's case spit them out of the great fish. That great fish is the lukewarm church.
The Bible says that God is holy holy holy.
It doesn't say that God is just just just, or mercy mercy mercy, or compassion compassion compassion, or wrath wrath wrath.
It says God is holy holy holy. And as such when God calls you better confirm and respond rightly to his holy command. If not, get ready for the chase.