This is interesting and sheds light on the story of Jonah.
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: O.Addison Gethers 
  To: Deaf-blind inspirational life groups ; Christian bible study groups 
  Sent: Thursday, August 06, 2009 8:28 AM
  Subject: {dbilg} devotional from Sharon Sanderson Aug.6


  Thursday                                                                      
                                                                                
       
  August 6, 2009

  TRUST AND OBEY

  The LORD spoke his word to Jonah, son of Amittai. He said, "Leave at once for 
the important city, Nineveh. Announce to the people that I can no longer 
overlook
  the wicked things they have done."
  Jonah immediately tried to run away from the LORD by going to Tarshish. He 
went to Joppa and found a ship going to Tarshish. He paid for the trip and went
  on board. He wanted to go to Tarshish to get away from the LORD.
  Jonah 1:1-3

  Jonah must have enjoyed great popularity, especially as life in Israel had 
been bleak before Jeroboam's vigorous rule. No doubt the prophet felt a great
  deal of personal satisfaction as well, as he watched his fellow countrymen 
begin to prosper in accord with the word of the Lord which he had been 
privileged
  to deliver.

  God's command that Jonah go to preach against Nineveh, however, was something 
else again! Assyria had been, and still was, a threat to Israel's very 
existence!
  Jonah wanted no part of a ministry to that particular bunch of foreigners! 
All Jonah wanted to do was to keep on preaching his positive message of 
prosperity
  in his homeland.

  Jonah's patriotic motivation, which is further explained in chapter 4, was so 
great that he determined to flee God's presence. It is at this point that
  Jonah's story begins. There is no indication that God explained the purpose 
of Jonah's mission to him, but chapter 4 indicates Jonah suspected. There Jonah
  said, "I knew that you are a merciful and compassionate God, patient, and 
always ready to forgive and to reconsider your threats of destruction." (4:2).
  Jonah suspected that if he went to Nineveh the city might repent of "its 
wickedness," and God would withhold the threatened destruction.

  Jonah's explanation helps us understand the exact nature of the prophet's 
flight. He did not run from God because he failed to understand the Lord's 
purposes,
  but because he did understand them! Jonah simply didn't like those purposes. 
God doesn't ask us to agree with what He plans. All He asks is that we 
acknowledge
  that He knows best - and trust and obey.

  When the city was not destroyed, Jonah was upset and angry. Like many of us, 
Jonah thought God should behave as he wanted Him to. More was involved in 
Jonah's
  case, but isn't such a reaction all too typical?

  We have it all figured out, and are sure that God should solve one problem 
this way, and another that. When He doesn't do it our way, we sulk or become
  angry. What we should do in such a case is thank God that He didn't do it our 
way! Our notion of how things should be is limited by our lack of knowledge
  - and often by our lack of caring. God not only knows what is best, He loves 
always. Thanking God even when His decisions do not reflect our first choice
  is a sign of spiritual maturity - and common sense.

  Every once in a while I run across the notion that unless a Christian is 
really in close fellowship with the Lord, God can't use him or her to bless 
others.
  Actually, that's not true, as the story of Jonah illustrates. Jonah was just 
about as far out of fellowship as a believer can get - running away from God
  - when that terrific storm hit his ship and frightened all aboard. And then 
look what happened. Jonah admitted he was responsible for the storm, got the
  sailors to throw him overboard, the storm stopped - and the sailors, 
convinced by all this of the power of Jonah's God, "greatly feared the Lord, 
and they
  offered a sacrifice to the Lord and made vows to Him." God used a disobedient 
Jonah to introduce Himself to a shipload of pagan sailors! And the pagan
  sailors believed.

  Father, I thank You so much for this incredible book.I look forward to - the 
rest of the story! 

  O. Addison Gethers
  e-mail address 
  [email protected]
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