Jonah in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
jo'-na (yonah, "dove"; 'Ionas):
(1) According to 2 Ki 14:25, Jonah, the son of Amittai, of
Gath-hepher, a prophet and servant of Yahweh, predicted the
restoration of the land of Israel to its ancient boundaries
through the efforts of Jeroboam II. The prophet lived and
labored either in the early part of the reign of Jeroboam
(790-750 BC), or during the preceding generation. He may
with great probability be placed at 800-780 BC. His early
ministry must have made him popular in Israel; for he
prophesied of victory and expansion of territory. His native
village of Gath-hepher was located in the territory of
Zebulun (Josh 19:13).
(2) According to the book bearing his name, Jonah the son of
Amittai received a command to preach to Nineveh; but he fled
in the opposite direction to escape from the task of
proclaiming Yahweh's message to the great heathen city; was
arrested by a storm, and at his own request was hurled into
the sea, where he was swallowed by a great fish, remaining
alive in the belly of the fish for three days. When on his
release from the body of the fish the command to go to
Nineveh was renewed, Jonah obeyed and announced the
overthrow of the wicked city. When the men of Nineveh
repented at the preaching of the prophet, God repented of
the evil He had threatened to bring upon them. Jonah was
grieved that the oppressing city should be spared, and
waited in the vicinity to see what would be the final
outcome. An intense patriot, Jonah wished for the
destruction of the people that threatened to swallow up
Israel. He thought that Yahweh was too merciful to the
heathen oppressors. By the lesson of the gourd he was taught
the value of the heathen in the sight of Yahweh.
It is the fashion now in scholarly circles to treat the Book
of Jonah as fiction. The story is said to be an allegory or
a parable or a symbolic narrative. Why then did the author
fasten upon a true and worthy prophet of Yahweh the stigma
of rebellion and narrowness? On theory that the narrative is
an allegory, J. Kennedy well says that "the man who wrote it
was guilty of a gratuitous insult to the memory of a
prophet, and could not have been inspired by the prophet's
Master thus to dishonor a faithful servant."
(3) our Lord referred on two different occasions to the sign
of Jonah the prophet (Mt 12:38-41; Lk 11:29-32; Mt 16:4). He
speaks of Jonah's experience in the belly of the fish as
parallel with His own approaching entombment for three days,
and cites the repentance of the Ninevites as a rebuke to the
unbelieving men of his own generation. Our Lord thus speaks
both of the physical miracle of the preservation of Jonah in
the body of the fish and of the moral miracle of the
repentance of the Ninevites, and without the slightest hint
that He regarded the story as an allegory.
John Richard Sampey
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