Blog
Dear Trailhead family,
Once upon a time, a man lived in a far-off country. Let’s call him Man.
His life was comfortable, if not exactly great.
“Not too shabby,” was how Man would reply when his neighbors asked him how it was going. He had food, he had a home. He had inside jokes with a few of the merchants he interacted with daily, he had a cordial relationship with the local baristas and they knew his order by heart. (Nothing too fancy for our mysterious Man, a 16oz Americano with an extra shot). But to say he was liked or revered would be taking it too far.
Man had a matching 401(k), was responsible with his finances, wore sensible outfits and his daily ride was a second-hand car with low miles and a single previous owner. But Man dreamed of more.
Man’s job was ok most of the time. Even though Man’s work wasn’t always up to his boss’s standards, he was given second and third chances to make things right. Somehow, he kept his job even though co-workers surely wondered why he was not let go years ago.
And here’s the thing about Man, he suffered from a common malady- he liked, no, he needed, to be in charge. Man needed to be the captain of his own ship, deciding his own destiny, answering to nothing bigger than himself.
(Even as I write this, I’m not sure if our Man is the protagonist or antagonist of our story.)
And so Man lived. A mildly frustrated young Man on the path to becoming a crotchety, angry old Man.
And then one day Man got his big break. To no credit of his own, his boss chose him for a very important assignment. He was to travel to a remote region and introduce this new market to the work of his firm.
This was a career-defining assignment.
So with his overnight bag packed and his ticket in hand, Man set off.
In the completely opposite direction.
The official account (which omits all the speculation that my imagination fills in) states it this way,
“The Lord gave this message to Jonah son of Amittai: “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 Joppa, 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.” (Jonah 1:1-3)
Jonah was a prophet of God who wanted away from God.
But maybe that is not fair.
Jonah was a prophet of God who wanted away from God when God’s plans were different than his own.
It was great being a prophet when no propheting was required.
And this is where I begin to resent Jonah, for in his failure, I can see my own.
It would seem to me, based on reading scripture and spending time in prayer, that following Jesus requires radical self-denial.
I have been prompted, in small ways and big, to “Get up and go to the great city of Nineveh,” and instead I ignored the command.
Why?
Simply because Ninevah requires something of me that I am not willing to give.
And there is always a Tarshish.
Tarshish looks nice from afar. In Tarshish, the hope is that I can be a prophet without the annoying responsibility of prophesying.
In Tarshish, I hope to live happily ever after.
In Tarshish, I can be a prophet beholden only to myself.
But Tarshish is a mirage. A lie. It does not exist.
As the psalmist exclaims (laments?) “Where can I go from your Spirit? Where can I flee from your presence? If I go up to the heavens, you are there; if I make my bed in the depths, you are there.” (Psalm 139)
To follow Jesus means that I am in the presence of God. I chose this; I was not forced. To follow Jesus, to be in the presence of God means that at any moment, God can make demands upon my life. And He will.
Sometimes I joyfully reply “Yes!” and find myself headed to Nineveh, and sometimes I’m standing at a ticket booth in Joppa, furtively looking over my shoulder, longing for Tarshish.
And sometimes, in an angry fit of obedience, I go to Nineveh and do the God thing and I fail just as much as when I’m fleeing to Tarshish.
Eugene Peterson in his powerful little book, Under the Unpredictable Plant, writes “The first movement of the story shows Jonah disobedient; the second shows him obedient. Both times Jonah fails. We never see a successful Jonah. He never gets it right.”
The pagan city repents but the man of God cannot.
Dear God, may that not be true of us.
“Blessed are the merciful, for they will be shown mercy.”
Grace and peace be upon you,
Grant