Jonah in Smiths Bible Dictionary
(dove), the fifth of the minor prophets, was the son of
Amittai, and a native of Gath-hepher. 2Ki 14:25 He
flourished in or before the reign of Jeroboam II., about
B.C. 820. Having already, as it seems, prophesied to Israel,
he was sent to Nineveh. The time was one of political
revival in Israel; but ere long the Assyrians were to be
employed by God as a scourge upon them. The prophet shrank
from a commission which he felt sure would result, Jon 4:2
in the sparing of a hostile city. He attempted therefore to
escape to Tarshish. The providence of God, however, watched
over him, first in a storm, and then in his being swallowed
by a large fish (a sea monster, probably the white shark)
for the space of three days and three nights. [On this
subject see article WHALE] After his deliverance, Jonah
executed his commission; and the king, "believing him to be
a minister form the supreme deity of the nation," and having
heard of his miraculous deliverance, ordered a general fast,
and averted the threatened judgment. But the prophet, not
from personal but national feelings, grudged the mercy shown
to a heathen nation. He was therefore taught by the
significant lesson of the "gourd," whose growth and decay
brought the truth at once home to him, that he was sent to
testify by deed, as other prophets would afterward testify
by word, the capacity of Gentiles for salvation, and the
design of God to make them partakers of it. This was "the
sign of the prophet Jonas."
Lu 11:29,30 But the resurrection of Christ itself
was also shadowed forth in the history of the prophet. Mt
12:39,41; 16:4 The mission of Jonah was highly symbolical.
The facts contained a concealed prophecy. The old tradition
made the burial-place of Jonah to be Gath-hepher; the modern
tradition places it at Nebi-Yunus, opposite Mosul.
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