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Series: Jonah
Service: Sun PM Worship
Type: Sermon
Speaker: Bill Sanchez
Summary Running from God The Prophet Jonah
đ Sermon Information
Course Title: Bible Study / Old Testament Prophets
Instructor: Bill Sanchez
Date: 2025-10-12 Sunday PM Worship
Chapter/Topic: Jonah (with background from 2 Kings 14)
đ§ Key Learnings
Jonahâs calling and initial refusal
Jonah is commanded by God to go to Nineveh and cry out against its wickedness (Jonah 1:1â2). Instead of obeying, Jonah flees toward Tarshishâthe opposite directionâattempting to escape Godâs command. His flight is deliberate, extensive (willing to go ~2,000 miles), and funded, showing strong intent to avoid obedience. This illustrates that people sometimes disobey God not from ignorance but from deliberate refusal when Godâs will conflicts with their preferences or prejudices.
Running from God leads downward and burdens others
Jonahâs flight results in literal and figurative descent: he goes âdownâ into the shipâs hold, is cast overboard during a storm, and is swallowed by a great fish. The storm aboard the ship demonstrates that one personâs sin becomes a burden on othersâthe crew suffers and nearly perishes because of Jonahâs disobedience. The principle taught: disobedience isolates and drags down the disobedient and those around them.
Godâs sovereignty and mercy in pursuit of the disobedient
Despite Jonahâs flight, God pursues and rescues himâappointing a fish to swallow him and later causing it to release him. Jonah prays from inside the fish, receives Godâs deliverance, and is recommissioned. God does not rescind His original command because Jonah ran; He reissues it, demonstrating that Godâs expectations remain consistent and His mercy persists even after failure.
Superficial obedience vs. genuine heart transformation
When Jonah finally goes to Nineveh, his obedience is minimal and grudgingâhe walks only part of the city and utters a short, stark proclamation (âForty days, and Nineveh shall be overthrownâ). That bare-minimum obedience precipitates a massive city-wide repentance, yet Jonah remains angry and resentful. The lesson: one can comply outwardly while remaining disobedient inwardly; God desires inward transformation (becoming like Him), not mere external conformity.
God desires all to repent; Jonahâs prejudice reveals a deeper heart issue
Jonah resents Godâs mercy toward Nineveh because he considers them unworthy. He prefers Godâs judgment to Godâs mercy for those he hates. Godâs responseâquestioning Jonah about his anger and teaching him through the plant/ worm episodeâexposes Jonahâs self-centeredness: Jonah values his own comfort and sense of justice more than Godâs compassion. The book shows that the true enemy often is ourselves: our prejudice, self-righteousness, and unwillingness to love as God loves.
Running to God means becoming like God and participating in His mission
The ultimate call is not merely to be rescued by God but to be remade into His likenessâloving the things God loves, showing mercy, and bringing others to Him. Jesus is presented as the greater counterpart: unlike Jonah, Jesus willingly went to people who did not deserve mercy, died and rose again, and called people to repentance. Running to God involves full commitment (not half-hearted) and actively bringing others into relationship with God.
âď¸ Key Concepts
Concept 1: Divine Commission and Human Response
Definition: A divine commission is Godâs directive to an individual to act on His behalf; human response can be obedient, reluctant, or rebellious.
Key Points:
Example / Analogy: Jonah leaving for Tarshish (running away from Godâs mission) ââ the speaker.
Concept 2: Consequences of Disobedience
Definition: Disobedience to Godâs commands brings personal and communal consequences that often worsen the situation.
Key Points:
Example / Analogy: The shiplightening efforts (throwing cargo) fail to save the ship because the true burden is Jonahâs sin â the speakerâs recounting of the passage.
Concept 3: External Compliance vs. Heart Obedience
Definition: External compliance is doing the minimum outward acts required; heart obedience is wholehearted alignment of desires and affections with God.
Key Points:
Example / Analogy: Jonahâs single short sermon that leads to city repentance, while Jonah remains bitter â the speaker.
Concept 4: Godâs Universal Compassion
Definition: Godâs compassion extends beyond national, ethnic, or personal boundariesâHe desires all to repent and be saved.
Key Points:
Example / Analogy: Nineveh repenting after Jonahâs proclamation and God sparing the city â the speaker.
Concept 5: Godâs Aim to Form His Image in Us
Definition: Beyond saving, Godâs objective is to conform believers to the image of His Sonâtransforming affections and actions.
Key Points:
Example / Analogy: Jonah should have learned mercy and become like God; Jesus willingly went to the undeserving â the speaker.
đ Q&A/Discussion
Question 1: Why did Jonah flee to Tarshish rather than obey God and go to Nineveh?
Answer 1: Jonah fled because he disagreed with Godâs planâhe resented the idea of offering mercy to Israelâs enemies (Nineveh/Assyria). His flight reveals personal prejudice and unwillingness to align his affections with Godâs compassion.
Question 2: Did God change His command after Jonah ran the first time?
Answer 2: No. God reissued the same command. Godâs expectations do not change because of human rebellion; His mercy pursues the person, but the commission remains.
Question 3: Why did the sailors react nobly toward Jonah?
Answer 3: The sailors displayed compassion and pietyâpraying to Jonahâs God and seeking to avoid innocent bloodâcontrasting with Jonahâs self-centeredness. Their reaction underscores that mercy and reverence can appear even among non-Israelites and highlights Jonahâs failure to match Godâs character.
Question 4: What is the significance of the plant and the worm in chapter 4?
Answer 4: God uses the plant and worm to teach Jonah about misplaced affectionsâJonah grieves a plant that benefited his comfort but is indifferent to the spiritual condition of an entire city. The episode exposes Jonahâs selfishness and demonstrates Godâs concern for people over Jonahâs comfort.
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Series: Jonah
Service: Sun PM Worship
Type: Sermon
Speaker: Bill Sanchez
Summary Running from God The Prophet Jonah
đ Sermon Information
Course Title: Bible Study / Old Testament Prophets
Instructor: Bill Sanchez
Date: 2025-10-12 Sunday PM Worship
Chapter/Topic: Jonah (with background from 2 Kings 14)
đ§ Key Learnings
Jonahâs calling and initial refusal
Jonah is commanded by God to go to Nineveh and cry out against its wickedness (Jonah 1:1â2). Instead of obeying, Jonah flees toward Tarshishâthe opposite directionâattempting to escape Godâs command. His flight is deliberate, extensive (willing to go ~2,000 miles), and funded, showing strong intent to avoid obedience. This illustrates that people sometimes disobey God not from ignorance but from deliberate refusal when Godâs will conflicts with their preferences or prejudices.
Running from God leads downward and burdens others
Jonahâs flight results in literal and figurative descent: he goes âdownâ into the shipâs hold, is cast overboard during a storm, and is swallowed by a great fish. The storm aboard the ship demonstrates that one personâs sin becomes a burden on othersâthe crew suffers and nearly perishes because of Jonahâs disobedience. The principle taught: disobedience isolates and drags down the disobedient and those around them.
Godâs sovereignty and mercy in pursuit of the disobedient
Despite Jonahâs flight, God pursues and rescues himâappointing a fish to swallow him and later causing it to release him. Jonah prays from inside the fish, receives Godâs deliverance, and is recommissioned. God does not rescind His original command because Jonah ran; He reissues it, demonstrating that Godâs expectations remain consistent and His mercy persists even after failure.
Superficial obedience vs. genuine heart transformation
When Jonah finally goes to Nineveh, his obedience is minimal and grudgingâhe walks only part of the city and utters a short, stark proclamation (âForty days, and Nineveh shall be overthrownâ). That bare-minimum obedience precipitates a massive city-wide repentance, yet Jonah remains angry and resentful. The lesson: one can comply outwardly while remaining disobedient inwardly; God desires inward transformation (becoming like Him), not mere external conformity.
God desires all to repent; Jonahâs prejudice reveals a deeper heart issue
Jonah resents Godâs mercy toward Nineveh because he considers them unworthy. He prefers Godâs judgment to Godâs mercy for those he hates. Godâs responseâquestioning Jonah about his anger and teaching him through the plant/ worm episodeâexposes Jonahâs self-centeredness: Jonah values his own comfort and sense of justice more than Godâs compassion. The book shows that the true enemy often is ourselves: our prejudice, self-righteousness, and unwillingness to love as God loves.
Running to God means becoming like God and participating in His mission
The ultimate call is not merely to be rescued by God but to be remade into His likenessâloving the things God loves, showing mercy, and bringing others to Him. Jesus is presented as the greater counterpart: unlike Jonah, Jesus willingly went to people who did not deserve mercy, died and rose again, and called people to repentance. Running to God involves full commitment (not half-hearted) and actively bringing others into relationship with God.
âď¸ Key Concepts
Concept 1: Divine Commission and Human Response
Definition: A divine commission is Godâs directive to an individual to act on His behalf; human response can be obedient, reluctant, or rebellious.
Key Points:
Example / Analogy: Jonah leaving for Tarshish (running away from Godâs mission) ââ the speaker.
Concept 2: Consequences of Disobedience
Definition: Disobedience to Godâs commands brings personal and communal consequences that often worsen the situation.
Key Points:
Example / Analogy: The shiplightening efforts (throwing cargo) fail to save the ship because the true burden is Jonahâs sin â the speakerâs recounting of the passage.
Concept 3: External Compliance vs. Heart Obedience
Definition: External compliance is doing the minimum outward acts required; heart obedience is wholehearted alignment of desires and affections with God.
Key Points:
Example / Analogy: Jonahâs single short sermon that leads to city repentance, while Jonah remains bitter â the speaker.
Concept 4: Godâs Universal Compassion
Definition: Godâs compassion extends beyond national, ethnic, or personal boundariesâHe desires all to repent and be saved.
Key Points:
Example / Analogy: Nineveh repenting after Jonahâs proclamation and God sparing the city â the speaker.
Concept 5: Godâs Aim to Form His Image in Us
Definition: Beyond saving, Godâs objective is to conform believers to the image of His Sonâtransforming affections and actions.
Key Points:
Example / Analogy: Jonah should have learned mercy and become like God; Jesus willingly went to the undeserving â the speaker.
đ Q&A/Discussion
Question 1: Why did Jonah flee to Tarshish rather than obey God and go to Nineveh?
Answer 1: Jonah fled because he disagreed with Godâs planâhe resented the idea of offering mercy to Israelâs enemies (Nineveh/Assyria). His flight reveals personal prejudice and unwillingness to align his affections with Godâs compassion.
Question 2: Did God change His command after Jonah ran the first time?
Answer 2: No. God reissued the same command. Godâs expectations do not change because of human rebellion; His mercy pursues the person, but the commission remains.
Question 3: Why did the sailors react nobly toward Jonah?
Answer 3: The sailors displayed compassion and pietyâpraying to Jonahâs God and seeking to avoid innocent bloodâcontrasting with Jonahâs self-centeredness. Their reaction underscores that mercy and reverence can appear even among non-Israelites and highlights Jonahâs failure to match Godâs character.
Question 4: What is the significance of the plant and the worm in chapter 4?
Answer 4: God uses the plant and worm to teach Jonah about misplaced affectionsâJonah grieves a plant that benefited his comfort but is indifferent to the spiritual condition of an entire city. The episode exposes Jonahâs selfishness and demonstrates Godâs concern for people over Jonahâs comfort.
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