An Angry Prophet
The Pouting Prophet
Introduction
If you have a young child, you've probably read the popular
children's book called Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good,
Very Bad Day by Judith Viorst. It's about a little boy whose day starts
out bad and goes downhill from there. He gets gum in his hair and gets
his sweater wet in the sink and he trips over his skateboard and doesn't
get a prize in his cereal box and that's all before breakfast! He
could tell right away that it was going to be a TERRIBLE, HORRIBLE, NO
GOOD, VERY BAD DAY. Then he goes to school and his teacher doesn't like
his drawing of an invisible castle, he doesn't get a dessert in his
lunch bag and his best friend doesn't want to be his best friend
anymore. And after school his mom buys him plain white sneakers instead
of the ones with red and blue racing stripes, his dentist finds a cavity
in his tooth, there are lima beans for dinner, and he gets soap in his
eyes when he takes his evening bath. In frustration, he finally says, "I
think I'll move to Australia." If you're like me you can relate to this
book because we all have had days like Alexander...days when people
treat us unfairly and nothing works out the way we want it to and by the
time we fight our way home through bumper to bumper traffic...we're
just plain mad. Well, chapter four of today's text begins with Jonah
thinking he has just experienced one of those days and Jonah was angry,
but not at things or even people. No, he was mad at God.
Sermon
If you are our guest this morning, you should know that this is the
final segment of a series of sermons on the life and ministry of the
prophet Jonah. When we last left Jonah he had just delivered God's
message to the Ninevites. They responded by repenting of their wicked
lifestyle and by putting their faith in God in what was the greatest
revival in the history of the world and if the story had ended here,
Jonah would have gone down in history as one of the world's greatest
prophets. I mean to preach and have hundreds of thousands turn to God is
no small accomplishment. But this account of the life and ministry of
Jonah the prophet DOESN'T stop here because this is not just a story
about God's love for the wicked Assyrians. It is also a story of His
grace-driven love for an angry, pouting prophet...a very immature Hebrew
preacher who thought he was having a TERRIBLE, HORRIBLE, NO GOOD, VERY
BAD day.
You know when you look back at the story from this perspective you
can see that in chapter one of this little book Jonah acted like the
prodigal son but here in the fourth chapter he is acting more like the
pouting elder brother. Jonah is not at all happy that the Ninevites have
repented and come home to God. So, the story is not over because God's
work was not complete. The Ninevites were doing fine at this point-but
not Jonah. He still needed work. You see, God is not satisfied with mere
compliance to His will...which is apparently what He got from Jonah in
chapter 3. What God wanted was for Jonah to value what He valued and God
knew this has not happened yet. Take your Bibles and you'll see what I
mean as we look at Jonah 4, verses 1-11.
1 - But Jonah was greatly displeased and became angry.
2 - He prayed to the Lord, O Lord, is this not what I said when I was still at home? That is why I was so quick to flee to Tarshish. I knew that You are a gracious and compassionate God, slow to anger and abounding in love, a God Who relents from sending calamity.
3 - Now, O Lord, take away my life, for it is better for me to die than to live.
4 - But the Lord replied, Have you any right to be angry?
5 - Jonah went out and sat down at a place east of the city. There he made himself a shelter, sat in its shade and waited to see what would happen to the city.
6 - Then the Lord God provided a vine and made it grow up over Jonah to give shade for his head and to ease his discomfort, and Jonah was very happy about the vine.
7 - But at dawn the next day God provided a worm, which chewed the vine so that it withered.
8 - When the sun rose, God provided a scorching east wind, and the sun blazed on Jonah's head so that he grew faint. He wanted to die, and said, It would be better for me to die than to live.
9 - But God said to Jonah, Do you have a right to be angry about the vine? I do, he said. I am angry enough to die.
10 - But the Lord said, You have been concerned about this vine, though you did not tend it or make it grow. It sprang up overnight and died overnight.
11 - But Niniveh has more than a hundred and twenty thousand people who cannot tell their right hand from their left, and many cattle as well. Should I not be concerned about that great city?
Could you feel Jonah's anger at the beginning of this chapter? He WAS
steamed...not at his enemies, the Ninevites, but at God Himself. And to
catch this you really need to back up and read the last verse of
chapter 3 and then the first verse of chapter 1. Listen to the way the
New Living Translation puts it, When God saw that the Ninevites had put a
stop to their evil ways, He had mercy on them and didn't carry out the
destruction He had threatened. This change of plans upset Jonah and he
became very angry. Well, Jonah then proceeded to prove that old
statement that says, Man is angriest when he is the most wrong because
he blew his top at God. He blamed Him for his own rebellious flight to
Tarshish. He even threw scripture in God's face quoting Exodus 34:6-7
but instead of using this familiar text to praise God, Jonah angrily
uses it to complain and accuse. He says in essence, I left home because I
knew You would do this, Lord! I knew that you were a gracious and
compassionate God, slow to get angry and filled with unfailing love. I
knew how easily You could cancel your plans for destroying these people!
Now, look closely at verse 4 which is God's GENTLE response to
Jonah's tantrum. If I were God, I would have said something like, You
want to see some fire and brimstone? Okay... here... enjoy! And I would
have hurled a few tons of the stuff down on his sassy-mouthed head! But,
thankfully, God is not that way. The Lord has a LONG FUSE where we are
concerned. By the way, the verse Jonah sarcastically quoted is something
Moses had written down some 500 years earlier when he was up on the top
of Mt. Sinai conferring with God. You may remember that the people had
thrown a party characterized by drunkenness and immorality.
These people whom God had just delivered from bondage in Egypt
expressed their thanks to their Heavenly Father by worshiping an idol of
a golden calf made from discarded jewelry. When God told Moses what was
going on Moses came down from the mountain and angrily shattered the
original copy of The Ten Commandments. Well God was ALSO angry and
wanted to destroy the people... but in answer to Moses' pleading on the
people's behalf, God reconsidered. He even promised to give Moses a new
copy of the Ten Commandments. God took him back to the top of Mount
Sinai, and before God began dictating these moral imperatives a second
time, Exodus 34 says that He passed in front of Moses proclaiming,
The Lord... the compassionate and gracious God, is slow to anger, abounding in love and faithfulness.
Now, like any parent, God DOES get angry. But He puts up with a great
deal before reaching His boiling point. He is PATIENT with us. He is soooo
patient with us. Why? Because he knew we were just mortals. He didn't
expect us to be more than we could be.
And God is patient with us for the same reason. As Psalm 103:14 says,
...He knows how we are formed, He remembers that we are but dust. As
our compassionate Creator, God understands our tenuous nature and
factors in our frailty when He weighs His responses to us...which is why
instead of a rebuke of fire and brimstone, God patiently asked Jonah a
question: Is it right for you to be angry? Now, the word here that God
uses for angry literally means to burn so what God really said, was,
Jonah, do you have any valid reason to be so HOT UNDER THE COLLAR? Well,
Jonah's only response at that point was to stomp off up into the hills
where he could have a clear view of the city of Nineveh. Understand,
this is the second time Jonah has fled his area of ministry. He fled to
Tarshish in chapter one rather than do what God wanted him to do and now
he head for the hills when he should have been helping the newly
repentant Ninevites to learn more about the God Who had so lovingly
spared their city.
When Jonah reached an elevation where he was high enough to see all
of Nineveh proper he built himself a little lean-to using some leafy
branches...something to shield himself from the severe desert heat,
which was pretty much a necessity because the average temperature in
that region was between 110 and 120 degrees Fahrenheit. In other words,
it was not a good place to allow yourself to get hot under the collar!
Well, Jonah got as comfortable as he could and then he proceeded to
sit there and look down on the Ninevites, thinking, Just watch God! They
are going to go back to their wicked ways...You'll see! You can never
trust a Ninevite. Once a Ninevite, always a Ninevite. I'm going to sit
here until they slip and then force You to admit that You were wrong
about these pagans! You'll see that I am justified in my anger at what
You have done! In other words Jonah trained his eyes on the Ninevites
when he should have been examining himself. Like many of us, he was
more concerned with the splinter in his neighbor's eye than he was about
the two by four in his own eye!
Well as the day dragged on the leaves on the branches of his shelter
dried up and began to fall off. And because of this Jonah began to get
very hot. Perhaps adding to his discomfort were the sounds of the
Ninevites in the city below continuing to mourn and pray to God in
repentance! At this point verse 6 says that God caused a vine to grow up
and provide shade for Jonah, to ease his discomfort. Now, the Hebrew
here literally says, to deliver him from his evil which means that even
this vine was just a tool in God's hands to free Jonah from his sinful
attitude.
Verse 6 also says that, Jonah was very happy about the appearance of
this vine. In fact it is the only time in the entire book that this
grumpy prophet is happy about anything. Maybe his mood improved so
because he thought this shady vine was an indication that God was coming
over to his side. But, God was not done. He interceded once more and
performed another miracle. This time instead of summoning a huge sea
creature, He called forth a tiny worm to eat the root of the vine,
causing it to wilt and ruin Jonah's shelter. Then He threw another storm
at Jonah. This time it is a desert windstorm known a Sirocco. Now,
when these winds blow in the temperature rises dramatically, and the
humidity drops quickly. It's like being inside a convection oven. The
Septuagint accurately translates this sudden wind as a scorcher. It is
almost as if God says, Okay, Jonah if you're so up on being hot under
the collar, here's a little help. Then, as Jonah's frustration builds,
God said, Do you have a right to be angry about the vine?
Jonah angrily retorted, Yes, I do...even angry enough to die!
At this point God has Jonah where He wants him. God has used this
vine and worm and wind as tools to show Jonah the absurdity of his
demeanor to help him understand his own confused heart...to help Jonah
realize that he is so full of self-pity that he has no pity left over
for the repentant Ninevites. Well, when the vine withered Jonah's temper
flared again and so God said in essence, You are angry about this plant
that is pretty much here today and gone tomorrow but Nineveh has more
than 120,000 children. If you can be concerned about something as
trivial as a plant, should I not be allowed to be concerned about
something as important as these people-not to mention their livestock?
Well, it is in an awkward silence like this that the book of Jonah
ends. God had the first word in this story and now He has the last word
as well. Jonah doesn't reply. He couldn't because like me and the other
ministers in Banasawadi, he was too busy taking his foot out of his mouth.
By now even he could now see how off base he has been. So, God got
through to old Jonah in the end. In fact I believe he wrote this
no-holes-barred autobiographical book and ended this way to show his
repentance. One of Michelangelo's paintings on the walls of the Sistine
Chapel is called The Prophets and the Apostles...because in it he
attempted to capture the faces of the great heroes of the Bible. Art
critics say that of all the faces Michelangelo illustrated in this work,
none had a more radiant countenance than Jonah. He painted old Jonah
this way because he was convinced that Jonah did see his sin and change.
Michelangelo believed that Jonah became a communicator of grace to his
own nation through writing his book and his continued preaching as a
prophet of God.
Now, if we were honest with ourselves here...I think we'd have to
admit that there is a little Jonah in all of us. So, as Jimmy Draper has
said, Our concern should not be whether a man can live inside a fish,
but whether the spirit of Jonah lives inside of us. You see, at one time
or other in our life each of us have rebelled against God just like
Jonah did. We have refused to do things God has told us to do. We have
done things He told us not to do. We have also had our own priorities
mixed up. Like Jonah we have frequently been more concerned about our
own physical comfort than about God's purposes. And, as Jonah did in
this last chapter, many of us have also willfully fanned the flames of
anger...even anger that is directed at God Himself. This is because
anger is possible in any relationship-even a relationship with our
Creator. In fact, the closer you are to someone-the more passionate you
feel about each other-the more likely you are to get mad at some point.
Maybe you are here today and have been mad at God due to the seeming
unfairness of life. Or maybe you have loved ones or friends....good,
God-serving people, who have suffered in life. Perhaps you had children
who have endured great pain or even died prematurely. Like Jonah, many
of us have at times had misplaced expectations of what God ought to do,
and when He didn't do what we thought He should, we got mad. So the
question is not, SHOULD we get mad at God? The question is, What should
we do with our anger? How should we handle it?
Now, the very idea of getting mad at God is enough to make some
people feel very uncomfortable. I think I am noticing several of you
shifting in your seat about now. Many of us feel that somehow it is not
right to be angry at God...the very idea seems blasphemous. Others are
afraid to admit their angry feelings because they are intimidated by
what they hear from some Christians. They're given the impression that
being angry toward God is the unforgivable sin.
They're told, Look, no matter what happens, just thank God and keep
praising Him and keep a smile on your face at all times, because God has
a wonderful plan for your life and He doesn't need you second guessing
it. In other words, if you don't feel like smiling at God-fake it.
Now...because of all this we have a problem. On the one hand, we have
the fact that at times in life many of us are angry at God and on the
other hand we have the fact that many people think it's totally
unacceptable to be angry at God. So what's the natural result? The
result is that people paper over their emotions. When they experience
anger because they feel like God's being unfair or silent or
unresponsive, they stuff that emotion down deep and paste a phony smile
on their face. And yet that just aggravates problem, because when you
bury your anger, you bury it ALIVE. It doesn't go away; inevitably, it
crawls out in other forms.
Think about it in terms of your relationship with your spouse. If
you're angry at something he or she did and you don't deal with the
anger, what happens? Communications stops, doesn't it? Because we don't
like talking to people we're mad at. We give them the silent
treatment-We withdraw. And, eventually if nothing is done we begin to
feel distant from our spouse. Well, the same is true in your
relationship with God. So ask yourself a very important question this
morning. Could the reason you have stopped praying and reading the Bible
or enjoying worship be due to your unexpressed anger at God over some
perceived injustice or unfairness? Maybe you secretly blame Him because
you married a man who said he was a Christian and he ended up to be
abusive or he walked out on you. Maybe you harbor a lingering resentment
because your parents divorced when you were a youngster or a loved one
suffered and died, and God didn't stop it. Maybe you've accused,
convicted, and sentenced God because you feel He has let you down at a
crucial time. Or maybe you've had a TERRIBLE, HORRIBLE, NO GOOD, VERY
BAD LIFE, and you blame God because you think if He really cared, He'd
do something about it.
Well, if that is true then listen. One thing we can learn from Jonah
is that it's okay to express our honest emotions to God, even when
we're angry. Actually, it can even be advisable. As theologian Dr.
Gilbert Bilezikian has said, God is a big boy. He can handle your anger.
It won't threaten Him or diminish Him or embarrass Him, and, really,
it won't even surprise Him, since as Psalm 44:21 says, He already knows
the secrets of our hearts. You see, when we're dealing with the pain
and confusion and frustration over the difficulties and seeming
unfairness of life, God understands. He knows we're people with messy
emotions who live in a messy world. I mean, He created us. He sent His
son to live among us. I'm not saying God deserves our anger. I'm not
saying He's done something wrong or is somehow at fault or that our
anger is justified. I'm just saying He understands our anger. He
understands when our pain causes us to be unreasonable and accusatory
and confused. And like a true friend, He wants us to bring it to Him
and talk it out. God is compassionate, not condemning. So we should feel
free to be honest in our relationship with Him even to the point of
being painfully honest.
The Bible records that this is what the heroes of the faith did.
Listen to the angry words of Moses in Exodus, chapter 5, verses 22 and
23: O Lord, why have You brought trouble upon these people? Is this why
You sent me? Ever since I went to Pharaoh to speak in Your name, he has
brought trouble upon these people, and You have not rescued Your people
at all! God's spokesman, Jeremiah, actually accused God of deceiving
him and said his life had become so unbearable that he wished he had
never been born. And King David didn't shy away from venting his
frustration toward God either. Listen to the way Psalm 13 begins: How
long, O Lord? Will You forget me forever? How long will You hide Your
face from me? How long must I wrestle with my thoughts and every day
have sorrow in my heart? How long will my enemy triumph over me? Look on
me and answer, O Lord my God!
Do you see? These men were honest. They expressed their real feelings
to God instead of pasting on a superficial smile. And guess what? God
didn't destroy them for it! On the contrary, He included their angry
words in the Bible for us to read and gain confidence that we, too, will
find God compassionate and gracious, slow to anger, and abounding in
lovingkindness. - even when we're venting our anger at Him. Well, back
to my question. What should we do when, like Jonah, we are mad at God?
Lee Strobel (to whom I am deeply indebted for this portion on being
angry at God) suggests three things:
1. First of all, PRAY IT THROUGH.
This is a difficult step to take because as I said a moment ago when
we're mad at someone, our natural inclination is to pull back and avoid
talking to them. Like Jonah, when we are angry with God we give Him the
silent treatment. And yet that just makes matters worse because we're
cutting ourselves off from the very God who can comfort us in the pain
and confusion that sparked our anger in the first place. So, as Mark
Mittelberg says, If you don't feel like praying, talk to God about it.
In other words, go to God and say, I don't feel like talking to You, and
here's why... and then finish the sentence. Or say, God, I feel mad at
You right now, and here's the problem... and keep on going. When you
pray forget formality; forget the thees and thous. Forget complete
sentences. Forget trite phrases and cliches. Forget the phoniness. And,
if you need to, forget trying to hold back the tears. Just be brutally
honest. If you can't pray...write God a letter but tell God how you
feel! You see, anger towards God causes us to slip into sin when we try
to hide it from Him. God isn't afraid of your honesty. He can heal your
heart but only if you speak truthfully. Remember honesty breeds
intimacy. It deepens and strengthens a relationship. After you've
honestly and openly worked through your anger or disagreement with your
spouse don't you feel closer? One man who had been a Christian for 17
years, said he got mad at God because of the deep sadness he felt over a
personal loss. Listen to his words:
I was driving somewhere and pounded my fist on the steering wheel and dash of my car and yelled at God for forcing me to give up what I had lost. I cried and I grieved. It was only after that...that I was able to talk to God in a more controlled manner.
Now, as you PRAY IT THROUGH, don't make Jonah's mistake. I mean he
vented his anger at God but for him prayer was a one-way conversation.
He didn't stop to listen for God's reply...You see in listening to God
you discover that when you pour out your raw feelings He doesn't strike
you down but instead He extends His compassion to you. You come to see
that God is on your side. He isn't watching from afar in a callous and
disinterested way. If you listen, God will remind you that He has
already made the choice to voluntarily join us in our pain through the
suffering and death of His Son on our behalf. As one author said: In
Christ, God suffered alone, utterly and completely alone, so that you
and I would never have to suffer alone.
After this time of honest prayer, that kind of realization begins to
take root again. In fact, remember a few minutes ago when I read King
David's anger and anguish at the beginning of the 13th Psalm? After he
got that off his chest, he finished that psalm by saying: I trust in
Your unfailing love; my heart rejoices in Your salvation. I will sing to
the Lord, for He has been good to me. You see, David needed to process
his anger first before he was then ready to reacquaint himself with
God's love for him and the same is true for us. So first, pray it
through, and, second,
2. ...THINK IT THROUGH.
By that, I mean spend some time to think through what's behind your
anger toward God. I believe Jonah did this after God asked him that last
question and, as he thought through all that had happened he realized
how selfish and foolish he was being...that he had been trying to
control God like some cosmic genie. He saw that the plant's purpose was
to teach him that his priorities were all mixed up. Jonah saw how
gentle God had been with him and how steadfast His love had been in
spite of his childish behavior.
And when we are angry with God we need to do the same thing. We need
to stop reacting emotionally long enough to rationally process what is
happening. You know many people who stop and think realize that they're
mad at God because they believe He broke a promise-when the truth is God
never really made that promise in the first place. For example God has
never promised that following Him would always be a pleasant problem
free journey. In fact, Jesus came right out and said in John 16:33 : In
this world you will have trouble.
So pray it through, think it through, and, finally,
3. TALK IT THROUGH.
Don't be like Jonah and go off alone by yourself. Get with other
Christians, especially those who have endured tough times and walked the
same road of anger and confusion that you are on. I think this is one
reason Hebrews 10:25 says we must NOT forsake, meeting together, as some
are in the habit of doing, but [must] encourage one another... Meeting
together has tremendous benefits as many of the Sunday Bible classes
here at Potter's Home International has discovered. For example, our single Adult class
is made up of men and women who have had a lot of tough times in life...enough
to make anyone feel angry at God...but they come together to encourage
and help one another....to study God's Word remind each other of His
promises. I believe they have found that there is great healing in
talking with others who have suffered the same pain you have. Friends,
that's what Christian community is all about.
Well, when you feel angry at God and you pray it through, think it
through and talk it through, you get past the stage where your hand is
balled into a fist toward God and it gradually opens up to an
outstretched hand reaching out for His help. When this happens He pours
His courage and peace into your life.
As I listened to God, I
realized prideful it was for me to expect a pain-free life. As I thought
through all that had happened throughout my life...as I talked about
this with Sue and others..I came to see that God was faithful to me. He
had put at my disposal His limitless strength to enable me to deal with
stress. I learned that as Paul said, God's power is perfected in
weakness. ...that my goal as a pastor should not be to achieve
self-sufficiency but God-sufficiency. In addition to all this
understanding God gave me great doctors to take care of my physical
problems...But best of all He gave me Himself. He hovered around me
like a devoted parent helping me to learn how to cope. Through that
experience I have come to see that it is better to endure storms in life
WITH Christ than to sail calm waters without Him.
Invitation
Now, life is full of things that can cause us to feel frustrated and
the wonderful news of the Gospel is that God stands ready to tenderly
equip us to deal with these tough times. All we have to do is ask and
this morning you may need to do just that. You may even want to come to
the altar here and pray and be honest with God. God may be leading you
to join our church so that you can have other Christians to help you
understand and bear life's burdens. If you are here today and are not a
Christian then you have been coping life all on your own...if that is
true then I encourage you to commit today to becoming a follower of
Jesus. Repent of your sin and ask Him to come into your heart and life. I
encourage you to make any of these decisions public by walking an aisle
now and sharing them with me as we stand now and sing.
--
The Rev. Lenin Kumar
The Potter's Home International Church
The Christian Living
Theology Character Fire


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