Tuesday 31 March 2009

Bitesize Jonah (28)

Cattle were involved in Nineveh's repentance (3v7-8) and God's saving of the city (4v11).

As I am still unclear exactly as to the significance of this I asked the good folk of Pelsall Evangelical Church for their help. The result of that are these two main ideas:

a) the cattle were part of the wickedness of the city (ritually involved in idolatry?) and thus the public act of repentance included them.

b) this is all part of the big picture of salvation as God saves the cosmos (cf. Romans 8v19-21) and not just isolated individuals. {Animals enjoy blessings of salvation in Scripture (e.g. Noah's Ark!, Isaiah 65v25) and suffer the curses of judgement too (plagues in Egypt)}

Pete Jackson makes a few more helpful points here and here:

God wants to save people. Wonderfully, mind-blowingly, graciously true. But he also wants to save the cultures and civilisations that people build. Even the moo-cows.

Calvin says about 3v8-9:

But it seems strange, and even ridiculous, that the king should bid animals, as well as men, to make a confession of repentance; for penitence is a change in man, when he returns to God after having been alienated from him: this cannot comport with the character of brute animals. Then the king of Nineveh acted foolishly and contrary to all reason in connecting animals with men when he spoke of repentance.

But, in answer to this, we must bear in mind what I have before said — that destruction had been denounced, not only on men, but also on the whole city, even on the buildings: for as God created the whole world for the sake of men, so also his wrath, when excited against men, includes the beasts, and trees, and every thing in heaven and on earth.

But the question is not yet solved; for though God may punish animals on account of men’s sins, yet neither oxen nor sheep can pacify the wrath of God. To this I answer — that this was done for the sake of men: for it would have been ridiculous in the king to prohibit food and drink to animals, except he had a regard to men themselves. But his object was to set before the Ninevites, as in a mirror or picture, what they deserved. The same was done under the law; for, whenever they slew victims, they were reminded of their own sins; for it ought to have come to their minds, that the sheep or any other animal sacrificed was innocent, and that it stood at the altar in his stead who had sinned. They therefore saw in the ox, or the lamb, or the goat, a striking emblem of their own condemnation. So also the Ninevites, when they constrained the oxen, the asses and other animals, to fast, were reminded of what grievous and severe punishment they were worthy: inasmuch as innocent animals suffered punishment together with them. We hence see that no expiation was sought for by the king, when he enjoined a fast on brute animals, but that, on the contrary, men were roused by such means seriously to acknowledge the wrath of God, and to entertain greater fear, that they might be more truly humbled before him, and be displeased with themselves, and be thus more disposed and better prepared and moulded to seek pardon.

and about 4v11:


God then shows here to Jonah that he had been carried away by his own merciless zeal. Though his zeal, as it has been said, arose from a good principle, yet Jonah was influenced by a feeling far too vehement. This God proved, by sparing so many infants hitherto innocent. And to infants he adds the brute animals. Oxen were certainly superior to shrubs. If Jonah justly grieved for one withering shrub, it was far more deplorable and cruel for so many innocent animals to perish. We hence see how apposite are all the parts of this similitude, to make Jonah to loathe his folly, and to be ashamed of it; for he had attempted to frustrate the secret purpose of God, and in a manner to overrule it by his own will, so that the Ninevites might not be spared, who yet labored by true repentance to anticipate the divine judgment.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Tim,

Great Blog. Will be preaching Jonah here in July, so your thoughts are very helpful.

Cattle are to be stoned in Exod 21:32 if they gore humans.

In Christ,

Ro

Unknown said...

Ro,

mmm...thanks....that got me looking at Exodus and (opposite page in my bible!!) 23v4: 'If you come across your enemy's ox or donkey wandering off, be sure to take it back to him'

Jonah being a prophet clearly knows his Exodus (!) (Jonah 4:2 cf. Exod 34:6-7). But in the end it turns out he is far being in tune with his God - the God of the Exodus!

He was happy for a whole city/culture - men and animals to wander off to their destruction - yet got really put out when his little garden comfort was destroyed.

Makes me wonder about what makes me really happy and what makes me really mad. mmmmm.....

Big contrast with Jesus' attitude to Jerusalem too.

Yours

Tim

PS Neil Jeffers makes a point about animals and the sabbath on Pete Jackson's blog. Makes me realise there is more to see here than I can as yet see!

PPS How does all this relate to the 'will my dog be in heaven?' question?!

Anonymous said...

Tim,

You are right about Jonah's character.

My dog in heaven? Maybe not, but dogs in the new creation -yes!

Also a link to Gen 1. If Adam has dominion over animals, then king of Ninevah is right that animals under his dominion should repent as well.

By the way, in the LXX, Jonah is followed by Nahum, which makes the point that the next generation of Ninevites returned to their normal paganism. Implications for us perhaps... revival doesn't mean the next generation will be godly.

Love to you all,

Ro.