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Few biblical stories reveal grace more vividly than the plant God provides in Jonah 4—it grows overnight, dies overnight, and exposes the heart of a prophet who loves receiving grace but resents seeing it given to others. And when we place Jonah’s plant alongside Paul’s thorn, Isaiah’s lament, Jesus’ crown of thorns, and Augustine’s reflections on grace and the free will, a fuller picture emerges. God’s grace is unearned, often unnoticed, extended to believers and unbelievers alike, and delivered through both the faithful and the faithless. And sometimes, the same God who gives shade also allows thorns; God’s way of keeping our faith awake and reaching toward Him, drawing us back into the daily practice of faith that is lived and real.
By Shore HealingFew biblical stories reveal grace more vividly than the plant God provides in Jonah 4—it grows overnight, dies overnight, and exposes the heart of a prophet who loves receiving grace but resents seeing it given to others. And when we place Jonah’s plant alongside Paul’s thorn, Isaiah’s lament, Jesus’ crown of thorns, and Augustine’s reflections on grace and the free will, a fuller picture emerges. God’s grace is unearned, often unnoticed, extended to believers and unbelievers alike, and delivered through both the faithful and the faithless. And sometimes, the same God who gives shade also allows thorns; God’s way of keeping our faith awake and reaching toward Him, drawing us back into the daily practice of faith that is lived and real.