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Philip Schnackenberg explores the story of Jonah, emphasizing how God uses the journey—not just the outcome—to shape Jonah’s character and faith. The sermon highlights Jonah’s disobedience, repentance, and eventual reluctant obedience, drawing parallels to our own spiritual growth and the importance of trusting God’s process.
- [00:00] Introduces Jonah as a prophet called to warn Nineveh, a wicked city, but Jonah flees.
- [00:26] Jonah boards a ship to escape God, but a storm arises, revealing his disobedience.
- [02:00] Sailers cast lots, identify Jonah as the cause, and reluctantly throw him overboard after he confesses.
- [03:43] Jonah is swallowed by a fish, prays for deliverance, and acknowledges God’s sovereignty.
- [07:17] After three days, the fish vomits Jonah onto dry land, and God recommissions him.
- [08:02] Jonah preaches a short message in Nineveh, and the entire city repents, surprising Jonah.
- [09:25] Jonah angrily protests God’s mercy toward Nineveh, revealing his self-righteousness.
- [10:42] God teaches Jonah compassion through a plant, worm, and scorching wind, contrasting Jonah’s care for the plant with God’s care for Nineveh.
- [13:36] Key takeaways:
- God prioritizes the process (e.g., Jonah’s growth) over the outcome (Nineveh’s repentance).
- We must adopt an eternal perspective, like Romans 8:5–9 (living by the Spirit, not the flesh).
- Suffering produces endurance and character (Romans 5:3–4; James 1:2–4).
- Avoid hypocrisy: God sees all, and integrity matters even when no one is watching.
- Reject self-righteousness; extend mercy as God does.
- Glorify God in all things, not just outcomes.
Scripture References
- Jonah 1–4
- Romans 8:5–9
- Romans 5:3–4
- James 1:2–4
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