Immerse: Bible Reading Experience - NLT Daily Bible In A Year

Jonah: Understanding a Reluctant Prophet

Welcome to Immerse: the daily Bible reading experience. On day 283, we explore the Book of Jonah. Unlike typical prophetic books, Jonah focuses on the prophet himself and not his oracles. This account is likely written after the return from exile and presents a message to God’s people of that era. Jonah is tasked with announcing God’s judgment on Nineveh, the Assyrian capital known for its wickedness. Jonah’s struggle with God’s command stems from his fear that Nineveh might repent and be spared, which indeed happens. The narrative tells of Jonah’s futile attempt to flee from God, his subsequent ordeal at sea, and his reluctant obedience to God’s second command. The Ninevites’ repentance and God’s mercy serve as a central theme, highlighting God's broader vision for all nations, not just Israel. Through a series of mirrored events, including Jonah’s thanksgiving Psalm, this story illustrates God’s desire for all creation’s redemption, preparing readers for the Bible’s overarching narrative of salvation.

00:00 Introduction to the Book of Jonah
01:01 Jonah's Mission and Struggle
01:59 Jonah's Journey and God's Intervention
02:23 Jonah's Message to Nineveh
02:32 Nineveh's Repentance and God's Mercy
03:00 Jonah's Discontent and God's Lesson
03:17 The Literary Structure and Symbolism of Jonah
04:26 Jonah's Story and Israel's Future
04:55 Jonah's Attempt to Escape
05:25 Jonah's Ordeal at Sea
07:57 Jonah's Prayer and Deliverance
09:27 Jonah's Second Chance
09:56 Nineveh's Repentance and God's Compassion
11:02 Jonah's Anger and God's Response
13:17 Conclusion and Reflection

Buy Immerse: Prophets Now!
Volume 4 
Immerse: Prophets is the fourth of six volumes of the Immerse: The Bible Reading Experience program. Prophets presents the First Testament prophets in groupings that represent four historical periods, beginning with the prophets who spoke before the fall of Israel’s northern kingdom (Jonah, Amos, Hosea, Micah, Isaiah), then before the fall of the southern kingdom (Zephaniah, Nahum, Habakkuk), around the time of Jerusalem’s destruction (Jeremiah, Obadiah, Ezekiel), and after the return from exile (Haggai, Zechariah, Joel, Malachi).

4 Questions to get your conversations started:
1. What stood out to you this week?
2. Was there anything confusing or troubling?
3. Did anything make you think differently about God?
4. How might this change the way we live?

QUICK START GUIDE
3 ways to get the most out of your experience
  1. Use Immerse: Beginnings instead of your regular chapter and verse Bible. This special reader’s edition restores the Bible to its natural simplicity and beauty by removing chapter and verse numbers and other historical additions. Letters look like letters, songs look like songs, and the original literary structures are visible in each book.
  2. Commit to making this a community experience. Immerse is designed for groups to encounter large portions of the Bible together
    for 8 weeks–more like a book club, less like a Bible study. By meeting every week in small groups and discussing what you read in open,
    honest conversations, you and your community can come together to be transformed through an authentic experience with the Scriptures.
  3. Aim to understand the big story. Read through “The Stories and the Story” (p. 483) to see how the books of the Bible work together to tell God’s story of his creation’s restoration. As you read through Immerse: Beginnings, rather than ask, “How do I fit God into my busy life?” begin asking, “How can I join in God’s great plan by living out my part in his story?”

What is Immerse: Bible Reading Experience - NLT Daily Bible In A Year?

Take a breath, find your place, and read deeply. Discover the joy of reading God’s word with the Immerse New Living Translation (NLT) Bible.

This daily Bible podcast will take you through the Bible in a year following the Immerse Bible Reading Experience. So grab your family and small group and go through the Bible in a year together with Immerse. Each of the 6 volumes is available online or at your favorite Christian bookstore.

Nancy: Welcome to immerse: the
daily bible reading experience.

day 200 and 83

immersed in Jonah.

Jonah was a prophet, but the Book
of Jonah is not a book of prophecy.

Instead, it is a book
about the prophet himself.

Unlike the other books in this volume,
it doesn't present a collection

of Oracles that Jonah spoke.

Rather, with great literary skill,
it tells a story about him and it

appears to do so from a later vantage
point, not like the messages of

other prophets, which were recorded
during or just after their lifetimes.

According to Samuel Kings, the
prophet Jonah lived in the Northern

kingdom of Israel during the reign
of JE Boland second, that is in the

first half of the eighth century bc.

It is hard to be certain, but there
is evidence that the Book of Jonah may

have been written after the return from
exile in order to bring a particular

message to God's people in that day.

In the story, Jonah is sent to announce
God's message to the city of Nineveh, the

capital of the powerful Assyrian Empire.

God is going to destroy Nineveh
because of its wickedness, but Jonah

has a problem with this assignment
and he tries to run from God.

What's the problem?

He is afraid that Israel's enemies,
the Assyrians, will actually repent

of their wrongdoing and that God
will not punish them after all.

As Jonah says later in the story,
I knew that you are a merciful and

compassionate God, slow to get angry
and filled with unfailing love.

You are eager to turn back
from destroying people.

Jonah's description is
exactly the language.

God used to describe himself to
Moses after he rescued Israel

at the time of the Exodus.

But Jonah believes God's compassion
should only be for Israel.

He doesn't share God's concern for
the other nations of the world.

So through an unusual series of events,
God gets Jonah back on his mission.

Jonah is thrown overboard during a
storm at sea, swallowed by a great

fish, and then spit out on the land.

Ironically, Jonah sings a song thanking
God for rescuing him from great personal

danger while he's trying to make sure
God doesn't rescue the people of Nineveh.

Jonah finally gets to Nineveh and
delivers a one sentence warning to them.

40 days from now, Nineveh
will be destroyed.

And sure enough, as Jonah feared, the King
of Nineveh responds by telling his people,

everyone must pray earnestly to God.

They must turn from their evil
ways and stop all their violence.

Who can tell?

Perhaps even yet, God will
change his mind and hold back his

fierce anger from destroying us.

The people of Nineveh do repent
and the Lord does indeed relent

his grace triumphing over judgment.

Jonah protests unhappily that his
enemies are spared, and that he saw this

coming all along in the closing scene.

Jonah struggles with God's mercy while
God defends his greater interest in

creating and preserving life in the world.

The literary structure of Jonah
shows that this short story has

been built with artistry and care.

Its two main narrative parts are
separated by a Psalm of Thanksgiving,

which is set right in the middle.

Both narrative sections begin with God
commanding Jonah to go to the great city

of Nineveh and deliver God's message.

The two parts of the story also
mirror each other through the

repetition of key Hebrew terms
at the beginning, middle and end.

Jonah's experiences also seem to
mirror the experiences of the nation

of Israel, his leaving the land
being swallowed by a great fish.

Being deposited back on the land
appear to symbolize Israel's exile

and return the challenge that Jonah
faces to accept that God might

have good purposes for the nations.

The Israelites see as their
enemies is also a challenge

for the return exiles is Jonah.

The only one God wants to save
from chaos and destruction

are Psalms of Thanksgiving.

For God's great hacks of
rescue, Only for Israel to sing.

Reading the book of Jonah at the end of
all the prophetic books helps prepare

us for where Israel's story is going.

The Bible's narrative is moving toward
the time when God's larger vision to bring

his salvation to all the earth, including
people, great cities, and even the animals

will be realized in a new creation.

The prophet Jonah.

The Lord gave this message
to Jonah, son of a midi.

Get up and go to the
great city of Nineveh.

Announce my judgment against it because
I have seen how wicked its people are.

But Jonah got up and went in the opposite
direction to get away from the Lord.

He went down to the Port of Jaa where
he found a ship leaving for Tarshish.

He bought a ticket and went on
board hoping to escape from the

Lord by sailing to Tarshish.

But the Lord hurled a powerful wind
over the sea, causing a violent

storm that threatened to break the
ship apart, fearing for their lives.

The desperate sailors shouted to
their gods for help and through the

cargo overboard to lighten the ship.

But all this time, Jonah was
sound asleep down in the hold.

So the captain went down after him.

How can you sleep at a time like this?

He shouted, get up and pray to your God.

Maybe he will pay attention
to us and spare our lives.

Then the crew cast lots to see
which of them had offended the

gods and calls the terrible storm.

When they did this, the lots
identified Jonah as the culprit.

Why has this awful storm come down on us?

They demand it.

Who are you?

What is your line of work?

What country are you from?

What is your nationality?

Jonah answered, I am a Hebrew and I
worship the Lord, the God of heaven,

who made the sea and the land.

The sailors were terrified when they
heard this for he had already told

them he was running away from the Lord.

Oh, why did you do it?

They groaned, and since the storm
was getting worse all the time,

they asked him, what should we
do to you to stop this storm?

Throw me into the sea, Jonah said,
and it will become calm again.

I know that this terrible
storm is all my fault.

Instead, the sailors rode even
harder to get the ship to the land.

But the stormy sea was too violent
for them and they couldn't make it.

Then they cried out to the Lord.

Jonah's God, oh Lord, they plead it.

Don't make us die for this man's sin and
don't hold us responsible for his death.

Oh Lord, you have sent this storm
upon him for your own good reasons.

Then the sailors picked Jonah up
and threw him into the raging sea,

and the storm stopped at once.

The sailors were all struck by the
Lord's great power, and they offered

him a sacrifice and vowed to serve him.

Now, the Lord had arranged for
a great fish to swallow Jonah,

and Jonah was inside the fish
for three days and three nights.

Then Jonah prayed to the Lord
his God, from inside the fish.

He said, I cried out to the Lord in
my great trouble and he answered me.

I called to you from the land of
the dead, and Lord, you heard me.

You threw me into the ocean depths and
I sank down to the heart of the sea.

The mighty waters engulfed me.

I was buried beneath your
wild and stormy waves.

Then I said, oh Lord, you have driven
me from your presence, yet I will look

once more toward your holy temple.

I sank beneath the waves and
the waters closed over me.

Seaweed wrapped itself around my head.

I sank down to the very
roots of the mountains.

I was imprisoned in the earth
whose gates lock shut forever.

You, oh Lord, my God snatched
me from the jaws of death.

As my life was slipping away, I
remembered the Lord and my earnest

prayer went out to you in your holy
temple, those who worship false Gods

turn their backs on all God's mercies.

But I will offer sacrifices to
you with songs of praise, and

I will fulfill all my vows.

For my salvation comes
from the Lord alone.

Then the Lord ordered the fish
to spit Jonah out onto the beach.

Then the Lord spoke to
Jonah a second time.

Get up and go to the great city of Nineveh
and deliver the message I have given you.

This time, Jonah obeyed the Lord's command
and went to Nineveh, a city so large

that it took three days to see it all.

On the day, Jonah entered the city,
he shouted to the crowds, 40 days

from now, Nineveh will be destroyed.

The people of Nineveh believed
God's message and from

the greatest to the least.

They declared a fast and put
on burlap to show their sorrow.

When the King of Nineveh heard what
Jonah was saying, he stepped down from

his throne and took off his royal robes.

He dressed himself in burlap
and sat on a heap of ashes.

Then the king and his nobles sent
this decree throughout the city.

No one, not even the animals
from your herds and flocks may

eat or drink anything at all.

People in animals alike must wear
garments of mourning, and everyone

must pray earnestly to God.

They must turn from their evil
ways and stop all their violence.

Who can tell?

Perhaps even yet, God will
change his mind and hold back his

fierce anger from destroying us.

When God saw what they had done and how
they had put a stop to their evil ways.

He changed his mind and did
not carry out the destruction.

He had threatened

this change of plans greatly upset
Jonah, and he became very angry, so

he complained to the Lord about it.

Didn't I say before I left
home that you would do this?

Lord, that is why I ran away to Tarshish.

I knew that you are a merciful and
compassionate God, slow to get angry

and filled with unfailing love.

You are eager to turn back
from destroying people.

Just kill me now, Lord.

I'd rather be dead than alive if
what I predicted will not happen.

The Lord replied, is it right
for you to be angry about this?

Then Jonah went out to the east side
of the city and made a shelter to

sit under as he waited to see what
would happen to the city and the Lord.

God arranged for a leafy plant
to grow there, and soon it spread

its broad leaves over Jonah's
head, shading him from the sun.

This eased his discomfort, and Jonah
was very grateful for the plant.

But God also arranged for a worm.

The next morning at dawn, the worm
ate through the stem of the plant

so that it withered away, and as
the sun grew hot, God arranged for a

scorching east wind to blow on Jonah.

The sun beat down on his head until
he grew faint and wished to die.

Death is certainly better
than living like this.

He exclaimed.

Then God said to Jonah.

Is it right for you to be
angry because the plant died?

Yes.

Jonah retort it even angry enough to die.

Then the Lord said, you feel
sorry about the plant, though

you did nothing to put it there.

It came quickly and died quickly.

But Nineveh has more than 120,000
people living in spiritual darkness.

Not to mention all the animals.

Shouldn't I feel sorry
for such a great city?

This concludes today's
Immerse reading experience.

Thank you for joining us.

I.