the genre - The
opening line, vayehi, "and it happened," appears only in Jonah among
the twelve prophets and is a term used that signals the genre of story or narrative and
thus, probably not historical reality.
arise, go, call -The second time a Gods word comes to Jonah,
replicating the imperatives, arise, go, call of the divine speech in chapter one. But
here, this second word functions more than mere replication; it stresses divine authority
over Jonah. The power struggle between God and Jonah continues. [1]
a remarkable repentance - The proclamation of Jonah to Ninevites uses
the language that had been used of Sodom and Gomorrah ("overthrown;" Gen.
19:24-25); not only that, but we dont even have a certified word from God, and no
sins are enumerated. Just out of the blue Jonah announces the citys overthrow. On
the other hand, notice how surprising the Ninevites are: they begin a city-wide humble
campaign through fasting and get proactive about cleaning up Gotham city. All of this
repentance in half-hope that God will avert overthrowing them. "Who knows?" they
wonder. [2]
Did you ever have that an experience of
being in a huge, strange city in the world and wondering about its street population and
their future?
- What do we learn about God in this passage?
- When has someone given you another chance? Ever have that experience in your
relationship with God?
- What circumstances would you consider "fasting" or demonstrating your sense of
repentance?
Please refer the DPS homily for this week.
______________________________________________________
[1] New Interpreters Bible VII (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1996), page 510.
[2] James Limburg, Interpretation Series: Hosea-Micah (Atlanta: John Knox Press),
page 151.
|