THE REFORMED WITNESS HOUR"God's Rebuke of a Pouting Prophet"Rev. Carl Haak(e-mail: Rev. Carl
Haak) |
Dear radio friends,
In our broadcast last Sunday, we saw Jonah's response to
God's sovereign mercy. God has shown
sovereign mercy to His children in Nineveh. And
we learned that Jonah's response to that was that it displeased Jonah exceedingly and he
was very angry.
Today we want to see the Lord's dealings with His prophet. We will look, then, at God's rebuke of a pouting prophet. Our text will be
Jonah 4:6-11.
What must strike into our hearts as we come to
these words of God is the amazing mercy of God toward Jonah. God maintains covenant friendship with Jonah. In His faithfulness, He takes the initiative and
once again goes to restore the man of God to repentance and spiritual sanity. God will put his feet back into the path of
obedience, even though Jonah again willfully has wandered from that path. Therein we see the blessed gospel to ourselves.
When God comes to rebuke His pouting prophet, we see in the narrative that God uses
the means of questions (vv. 4, 9, and 11) which He places before Jonah. God's questions are some of the strongest means to
arrest us in our sinful-self rebellion. God
does not always come to us in our anger, in our sin, with thunder and lightning. Sometimes He comes to us in the silent night or in
a lonely booth, as was the case with Jonah. He
comes to us in the quiet, when all the fires are burning within our hearts. And He comes to us with a question calculated to
derail us from our unholy anger and to trigger some sober, spiritual thinking. God often does this. With Adam and Eve, "Where art thou,
Adam?" With Elijah, "What doest
thou here, Elijah?" With the disciples,
"Why are ye so troubled?"
God comes first, in verse 4, to Jonah as he has made his booth and is looking over
the city of Nineveh, a city that has been brought to repentance by the sovereign grace of
God. God comes to His prophet, who is sitting
in his booth, with a probing question: "Doest
thou well to be angry?" Literally,
"Is thy anger a righteous thing?" That
was a very well-framed question. A
well-framed question from life can have tremendous influence on a distraught spirit. When all of your reasoning seems to be ineffectual
and all of your words seem to go nowhere, a question may be like the reins pulled on a
galloping horse - bringing us up short. So
God with Jonah.
God's questions are some of the strongest means
to arrest us in our sinful-self rebellion.
God comes to Jonah and does not debate with Jonah whether or not he is angry. But He asks him the question, "Do you think
you have the right to be angry? Do you have
the right to be angry with how I will dispense My mercy?"
Is this true of you, today? Does God
speak to you in this way? Are you in a
state contrary to the will of God? You are
angry, resentful, bitter against another person. You
are upset with the way the will of God has been seen in your life. You will not begin to get untangled from that
spirit of resentment and anger until God puts some probing questions in your heart. What is the root of this resentment? Do you think you have the right to be this way, to
be angry? What is the root of your jealousy
against another? What is the root of your
suspicion against So-and-so? This attitude of
animosity and friction, this attitude within you which is so contrary to My word, do you
have the right to that attitude?
It seems that when you and I are carried away in some carnal, sinful attitude, we
appear almost powerless before it until God stops us, and all alone He asks us a simple
question: "Do you have the right to feel
the way you do in My presence?"
But then God continued. We read that
God prepared a gourd which grew up quickly. In
verse 6, "And the Lord God prepared a
gourd, and made it to come up over Jonah, that it might be a shadow over his head, to
deliver him from his grief. So Jonah was
exceeding glad of the gourd." God
prepared a quick-growing plant. And it grew
even faster - it came up over night. Evidently
it was a plant in the squash family with big fan-shaped leaves which could shade Jonah's
head. There was mercy in that. Jonah had no business being out in that booth. He had made himself look silly in his pouting and
sulking over what God had done. And the booth
was inadequate to shield him from the sun. So
God provides shade. And Jonah, we read, was
glad. He was delighted because of the gourd. That is the very first time in the book of Jonah
that we read that Jonah is glad about something. He
is very happy about it - just like you are on a hot day when someone gives you a cold
drink. Your soul rejoices. Not only does it feel good as you drink it down,
but you are glad, you are refreshed in your spirit. Jonah
was glad.
"But then God prepared a worm when the morning rose the next day, and it smote
the gourd that it withered." This was
some type of cut-worm. Its path was directed
by the Lord God and it was given a voracious appetite.
In one day the gourd was withered. This
is like a zucchini in the summer - great big fan leaves.
But just one little cut-worm at the root and in less than an hour that great plant
is bowed over and shriveled.
And to add, from Jonah's perspective, insult to injury, God sent a sultry east wind
and made the sun beat down on Jonah's head. We
read, "And it came to pass, when the sun did arise, that God prepared a vehement east
wind; and the sun beat upon the head of Jonah, that he fainted, and wished in himself to
die, and said, It is better for me to die than to live." Not only did he lose his shade, but a hot wind
came. And Jonah was given, then, intense
physical annoyance, to such a point that he whispers under his breath, "I wish I were
dead." Jonah is brought, then, to a
place where his misery outside of him, his physical misery, matches his misery within. He is the prophet who went out to pout because
God's ways displeased him - to sulk. He had
first been glad over a gourd that gave him physical relief.
Now he is plunged down to despair and he would rather die than live.
Then God comes with another question: "Doest
thou well to be angry for the gourd?" The
idea is this: Jonah, you so quickly and so
intensely developed a love for that gourd. So
vehemently, Jonah, did you value it because it brought you pleasure and relief. And now you cannot bear the lack of it. Are you justified in this? Were you so attached to the gourd, which brought
you a little comfort, and now so vexed and so anguished and so angry in its loss?
Jonah answered the Lord. He said,
"I do well to be angry, even unto death." Yes,
I believe my anger is justified. I wanted
that gourd. It was at least something that
brought me a little cheer. Jonah had been
sitting there grumbling against God, pouting over what God had done, not doing what he had
wanted. At least he had that little gourd,
which provided him some pleasure. Now that is
gone, too. Yes! I have a right to be angry! I have a right to be angry over big things,
God's will to choose out of Nineveh His church. And
I have the right to be angry over little things, the dying of a plant that I
happened to like.
Does that sound familiar to you? Are
you angry with God, unhappy with major things, believing that He is doing all wrong? Then do you get angry over the least little thing
that upsets you and takes away your pleasure - a broken shoe-lace, the child who gummed up
your computer, the wife who broke off the side-mirror of your car on the garage door, a
curling iron that burns you? You can get
angry over everything!
So Jonah, is this the way it is, that whatever pleases you, you believe ought to be
left in place? And whatever does not please
you, whether it is big or small, you believe has no right ever to happen? Is that the case, Jonah? Do you have the right to be angry that way? And his answer was "Yes, I do well to be
angry, even unto death."
Now, having gotten it out of him, the Lord corrects him. And He does so again in the form of a question. "Then said the Lord, Thou hast had pity on
the gourd, for the which thou hast not laboured, neither madest it grow; which came up in
a night, and perished in a night: and should
not I spare Nineveh, that great city, wherein are more than six score thousand (120,000)
persons that cannot discern between their right hand and their left hand; and also much
cattle?"
What is God saying? He is leaving
Jonah with a question to answer. Jonah, your
affection so readily became all wound up with a gourd, with a plant, something you
welcomed and loved and you found pleasure in. You
did not make it. It was brief-lived. But you had your affections twined around it
because it pleased your fancy. Now, may not
I, out of My eternal grace, raise up a people out of wicked Nineveh, the workmanship of My
own hands, save them, and for their sakes spare the city?
Will you keep Me from My pleasure, Jonah? Jonah,
answer that question. It is time to get down
off that high horse you have been riding. You
have shown a regard for a plant, a gourd. Now
think of your relationship to that plant. You
did not make it. You did not sustain it. You did not labor for it. You did not make if grow. You responded with the whole of your personality
to that gourd. So attached were you to the
gourd that when it was taken away from you, you were angry unto death. You had pity for the gourd. It brought you delight because it sheltered you. And now that it is gone, you think that you have
the right to be angry.
Now, Jonah, I am God. I have willed,
says Jehovah to him, in mercy to fashion a body
in Jesus Christ out of the dunghill of human depravity, wretched sinners. And some of those sinners are people you do not
like. Some of them were in Nineveh. There were more than a hundred and twenty thousand
little children there who are now under the influence of believing parents. And not only that, if that does not get your heart
- it should! - there are also much cattle there. Plants
are wonderful creatures. But cattle are even
greater works of My hand. Jonah, you showed
more pity for a plant because it served you, than you show zeal and love for Me in the
accomplishment of My saving purposes. Is that
right, Jonah? Doest thou well to be angry?
I am not surprised that the book of Jonah ends right there. How can you answer that except in sobs of
repentance? There is where I believe Jonah
was found after verse 11, with Peter. The
Bible draws a veil. But Jonah has been
confronted by his God, with his narrow, sinful heart, and his self-serving, selfish,
sinful will. Jonah has been shown that he puts
his desires, his wants, his opinions, his comforts, his
pleasures before God. That is what he did. And without any further dialogue, with no excuses
and no response, the book ends.
But I believe that we hear Jonah's sobs of repentance. For he saw how far his heart could be from God.
Jonah did not want God to have mercy on whom He will have mercy. He did not want God's pleasure to be done. He did not want what pleased God. He wanted what pleased himself. But God says to Jonah, and to you and me, "I
am God. And I will not only show you your
pride, but I will make you desire, with all your heart, that My pleasure be done."
The application is, first of all, that we must see God's determination that we
acquiesce, that we submit to His will. It was
God's will to draw out of Nineveh His people. So
He sent Jonah there and made Jonah's preaching effective.
And He spared Nineveh. He rejoiced
over His mercy to bring out of darkness His own elect in Jesus Christ. For Jonah to go and preach in Nineveh certainly
took much courage. But God is saying,
"Jonah, it's not just courage that I want. I
want you to rejoice in that in which I rejoice. I
want My pleasure to be your pleasure. You
will be brought to the point where you rejoice when you see My pleasure done - whether
that pleasure is something agreeable to you or not, whether My will cuts against your will
or not. I call you to submit and to will My
will."
Jonah is being taught to delight himself in the Lord his God.
Now where are you today in all of this? Is
there anything in which you, like Jonah, are unreconciled to the will of a sovereign God? And when He questions you tenderly: "Doest thou well to be angry?" do you
walk off and pout? Beware. God's will, as it comes to you in His Word and as
it comes to you in the ordering of your life, is very dear to Him. It may be unwelcome to you, but it comes according
to the counsel of His own will and according to His own good pleasure. In the child
of God's life, nothing happens by chance, but by the good pleasure of God. And God says, "Not only must you say
that, but My will must be precious to you. You
must embrace it. Your pleasure must be My
pleasure."
God may teach you these truths in a very practical way, as Jonah and his gourd. God may send into your life a lovely, serviceable,
pleasant gourd - something that shields the sun from your head and gives you relief - a
husband, a wife, a child, health, possessions and a home, job, friends and family, the
esteem of other, success and skills. And your
heart will seek to intertwine with your gourd. Your
gourd will bring you joy. It will take away
the weariness of this life and be welcomed by you. That
child, that wife, that husband, that job, that friend - are you more glad for your gourd
than for God? God planted it. God watered it.
And God may take it from you - in order to write the truth of these words on your
heart: "Though my flesh and my heart
faileth, God is the strength of my heart and my portion forever." Do you put something higher than God? Do you put your own will and your own pleasure
higher than God?
Now behold the mercies and compassion of God.
The essence of holiness in our life is to be like God. We see in Jonah, and in ourselves, the wickedness
of being unlike our God. We can be so
distant from God in our thoughts, our hearts, our emotions.
God had purposed to show mercy to Nineveh. And
we can show ourselves to be so contrary and so far from what God desires.
Yet God shows mercy to Jonah and He brings Jonah to repentance. God is telling us that when we receive His mercy,
that will also make us merciful. Compassion
received makes one compassionate to the undeserving.
Do you say to your enemies, "They upset me.
They said bad things about me. They
deserve the anger of God." Or do you
say, "Lord, honor Thy name, judge those who rise up against Thee, but give me, for
Thy sake, to have compassion on my enemies and to pray for those who despitefully use me. Send forth the gospel trumpet, Lord. Gather Thy church from all nations to the glory of
Thy name. Gather Thy church from among those
whom my flesh would count as enemies, and make me compassionate toward my brothers and
sisters. May the largeness of Thy mercy
toward me, who am by nature narrow-hearted, make me compassionate. Open my corroded spiritual arteries by Thy mercy
and give me pity and mercy toward those in Thy kingdom who have offended me and sinned
against me and conduct themselves in a way that is irksome to me."
God's mercy makes us merciful.
We leave Jonah, now. Next week we will have one more message on him, the Lord's words spoken about Jonah in
Matthew 12.
But, for now, we leave Jonah. We will meet him one day in heaven. May Jonah be a reminder to you and to me of one
great truth: Those who receive God's mercy
will show mercy. Those who receive mercy
from God will now find one thing most delightful: that
God's good pleasure is always done.
Let us pray.
Last modified: 25-Jun-2002