Good Morning All!
Jonah 1:3; “But Jonah rose to flee to
Tarshish from the presence of the Lord. He went down to Joppa and found a
ship going to Tarshish.”
I have always liked to read the book of
Jonah. It is only four chapters, but we get introduced to some intriguing
characters and events. The book ends with one of the most interesting endings. It
asks a question and gives no answer. It is as if God wants you to answer it. But
here we have something different. The prophet, the author of the book, is given
a command by God. Everywhere else in the Old Testament; the prophets answer the
call of God. Some are less than excited but they do as God instructs. But not
Jonah; he hightails it and runs as far as he can.
We know the rest of the story. Jonah ran. God
stopped him with a big fish. After that it was history. Jonah did go to Nineveh.
He preached; they repented; he hated it and was mad at God for it.
This is an interesting verse because I
think most people at one moment or another try to run from God. It may not be a
full fledge run to Tarshish, but it might be hiding in the closet. It might be
that we are just trying to avoid God which is really sad. God is the One that
we should never run from.
We run because we are afraid. Think when
you tried to run or hide from your parents, or a teacher or maybe even the
police. We run because we fear
punishment. We run because we fear the consequences. We run because the devil
and our sinful nature tell us to. We run, for all the wrong reasons, away from
God. We run because the devil tells us that God will not and cannot love us. We
are deceived by those lies and we run. We run to Tarshish or Timbuktu or to a
closet. We listen to the lies.
Yet God comes after us. He never stops
finding us. Sometimes this is very scary, but it should be comforting. The
devil is the one who brings us pain; God brings us comfort. But we run because
of our fear when it is God who calms our fear. We need to stand and have faith.
God gives us the forgiveness of sins. It is already done, done on the cross on
Calvary. We do not need to run; God wants us to be his children and to give us
the comfort and consolation of his incredible grace.
Do not be like Jonah, who sought to run
from God. Rather we need to cling to his promise, cling to his guarantee of
forgiveness. Instead of running to Tarshish,
we should run to God.
Dearest Father, too often we run from you
instead of to you. Forgive us when we try and run. Keep us in your saving arms
and defend us from the evil of the devil and his ways. Give your comfort to
those who need it the most. In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen.
God’s Peace,
Pastor Bret
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