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The story of Jonah was a favorite of mine growing up, but the love story between God and His people becomes more evident as I grow older. You and I, along with all humans throughout history, are trapped in the sinful tendency to flee, like Jonah, from the will of the Creator. However, it is the tendency of God to come after each of us, taking our place in death and carrying us into His abundant grace.
When Jonah chooses his direction instead of the Lord’s, we find him tossed into an angry sea -- only to be saved by grace in the belly of a huge fish. He calls to the Lord
“deep in the realm of the dead” and God brings him out of the pit and onto dry land (Jonah 2:1). By chapter 3, God uses Jonah to bring about a radical change in the hearts of Ninevites. A violent people group once threatened with destruction would now experience God’s compassion -- yet we find our title character angry at the breadth of God’s grace, claiming
“it is better for me to die than to live” (Jonah 4:3).
Five years ago, we were captivated by news coverage of the Thai soccer team and coach trapped in a cave. The day they were found alive turned into a complex rescue mission for the lost. As we watched the news, our hearts became invested in the well-being of people we did not know. We prayed around dinner tables and televisions for the lives of those trapped in the dark. Some of the brightest minds began providing the resources to bring those boys out alive
from the depths and into the light. Eventually they were saved from the belly of the earth and from certain death; and someone died in the process of the rescue. Can you imagine those boys ever forgetting the grace of that experience? Yet, in our humanity, we often do forget.
When recipients of such rich, life-altering grace, are saved from the realm of the dead, our response to those around us should change. Like Jonah and the Ninevites, we were rescued from the pit of death. Now free, God sends us as part of His mission to save others from the same pit from which we were rescued. When we become indignant at the sins of those around us, we are blind to our own shortcomings. We were extended grace. We were rescued. The only logical thing is to extend the grace we freely receive. Not only does that follow logic, but it is also what our Rescuer has commanded us to do.
“Go and do likewise.” (Luke 10:37)
By Bethany Taylor
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