(e-mail: Rev. Carl
Haak)
March 3, 2002; No. 3087
Dear
radio friends,
We return today to the study of
the fascinating book of Jonah. Last time we
left Jonah in the belly of a fish, where he prayed to God from a place of darkness and
unimaginable stench. There God worked
repentance in the heart of His child. There
Jonah was given to cast himself upon God, confess his sin, and say that he yearned again
for Gods presence. There we saw that
Jonah also vowed a vow as a prophet: he would
go to Nineveh in obedience to the word and command of God.
Today I want to return to the
surface of the sea, which is now calm, back to the ship now resting easily on the water
and consider what we are told concerning the pagan sailors. I read in
Jonah 1:14-16,
Wherefore they cried unto the Lord, and said, We
beseech thee, O Lord, we beseech thee, let
us not perish for this mans life, and lay not upon us innocent blood: for thou, O Lord, has done as it pleased thee. So they took up Jonah, and cast him forth into the
sea: and the sea ceased from her raging. Then the men feared the Lord exceedingly, and offered a sacrifice unto the
Lord, and made vows.
When we considered chapter 1 and
looked at it from the point of view of God, who would not let go of Jonah, I suggested to
you that there was a sub-plot in the chapter, with these pagan sailors. The main theme of the book of Jonah is Gods
sovereign mercy, that is, that God will show mercy to whom He will show mercy through
Jesus Christ. The book has, of course, much
to teach us of Gods sovereign dealings with the disobedient man, Jonah, how God
arrested him in his disobedience, confronted him in his sin, brought him to acknowledge
his sin, and brought him to repentance.
Now, as we turn our attention to
these pagan sailors, we see a sub-plot tied with the very theme of the book itself
Gods sovereignty and mercy. God would
show mercy to the Ninevites out of His own eternal good pleasure. The carnal attitude of Israel in that day was
that Gods mercy somehow belonged to them. Therefore
Jonah, expressing that attitude, was unwilling to go to Nineveh lest God would show His
mercy toward people that he did not consider worthy of that mercy. So the book is to show Gods sovereign mercy.
Now, with these pagan sailors,
we see that, in spite of Gods disobedient prophet, God still is going to work
through His prophet. Through the witnessing
and preaching that Jonah did on a boat, God is going to work conversion in the heart of
pagan sailors, even as it pleased Him.
Now you ask me, at the outset,
what do you mean by conversion? Are you not
aware, you ask me, of much harmful and false teaching on the subject of conversion today? Do you know that many insist that all true
conversion must be made at a moment in ones life through a conscious decision to
accept Christ and that there is no possibility for any other type of true conversion? So, they say, conversion means that you must be
brought to a dramatic moment, perhaps even near death.
It must be a miraculous, memorable moment in your life. You ask me, is that what you intend to make of
these sailors? Perhaps you ask me further
the question: Conversion you mean, genuine? Do you say that these pagan sailors were genuinely
converted? Do we not all know of conversions,
so-called conversions, which were very short-lived, based only on emotions, and soon the
sinners were found back in their old ways?
My answer to that is this: Conversion, according to the Scriptures, is the
work of Gods grace in the heart of the born-again child of God a work through
His Spirit and Word and turning the sinner from the darkness of sin to the light of God. Conversion is to be given a genuine, Spirit-worked
reverence for God, so that we fear the Lord exceedingly.
Conversion is to live a new and thankful life before God. Conversion in the sense of what we read in
Acts 26:18:
To open their eyes, and to
turn them from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan unto God, that they might
receive forgiveness of sins, and inheritance among them which are sanctified by faith that
is in me. Or again,
I Thessalonians 1:9, 10,
For they themselves shew of us what manner of entering in we had unto you,
and how ye turned to God from idols to serve the living and true God; and to wait for his
Son from heaven, whom he raised from the dead, even Jesus, which delivered us from the
wrath to come. Conversion, according to
Scripture, is a daily turning to God from sin, to God from a wicked world, to God from the
devils temptations a daily work of God in the heart of His child to give him
sorrow for his sins and a turning to God in prayer, humility, trust, and service. Conversion is seen in a life of unqualified
obedience to God. Conversion is absolutely
necessary. It is not the work of mans
will, not something that we give to God but that He graciously works in the hearts
of His children. Conversion is an absolutely necessary work of God for, Jesus said in
Luke 13:5,
I tell you, Nay: but, except ye
repent, ye shall all likewise perish.
Conversion is a great work of
Gods power and grace. Conversion is the
bringing up into our consciousness of the life of Christ that God plants in our hearts, so
that we see the horror of our sin and we turn from that sin to God.
The narrative of these pagan
sailors begins with the picture of the sailors in the nakedness and folly of their
idolatry. As the storm struck the boat in
frenzied crying, they beseech their gods to deliver them.
They were in the darkness of their ignorance and unbelief and as far from God as
could be. And the narrative concludes with
this testimony, Then the men feared the Lord
exceedingly, and offered a sacrifice unto the Lord,
and made vows. It was the
opening of the eyes to turn them from darkness to light and from the power of Satan unto
God. All conversion is that great and
powerful work of God.
These men were converted in
their adult life out of a previous life of paganism.
Normally, God in the covenant of His grace works the work of conversion in
childhood. We preach and we teach the
Scriptures in the light of the glorious truth of the covenant of Gods grace, that
God is the God of believers and their children. Conversion
is that daily work of His grace, even from childhoods early days, so that I
personally do not remember the moment that I was converted.
I was taught and brought up by my parents to turn to the Lord. And the Holy Spirit made that instruction
effective in my life. Nevertheless,
conversion is a great work of God. God opens
our eyes to the horror of sin not once, but repeatedly and daily, so that we see the folly
of all else besides Him. He convicts us of
our helplessness and turns us to see Him in Christ as all of our life.
Now do not envy these sailors. They lived a previous life of shame. They worshiped gods of wood and stone. They gave their body over to every evil, to lust,
and to all types of greed and cursing and women in every port. Thank God if He has spared your life from such
shame and you have grown up in the covenant of God as a converted Christian, but do not
lose sight of the greatness of conversion. Conversion
is not a life adjustment. Conversion is not a
coating on the life of the paint of religion. But
conversion is the great change that only God can make from death to life, from darkness to
light, from Satan to God. Just because you
never bowed to an idol physically, just because you never lived the life of a pagan
sailor, do not think that Gods change made by grace in you, begun, perhaps in
infancy, was a little thing. It was a mighty
thing. It was a great thing, to Gods
glory. It was a work of Gods grace. True conversion is by Gods grace in the
heart through the Word of Christ.
God may use many different means
in connection with His Word. He used for the
sailors a stormy sea. He used for the sailors
spent strength. They had rowed hard to bring
their ship to land and they could not. They
were at the end of their efforts. Then God
used the words of Jonah. He was a disobedient
prophet, but nevertheless Jonah spoke the truth of God.
Through all of these things God converted. The
means that He used cannot accomplish this unless God comes and turns the heart and makes
those means effective. God used the storm;
God used the words of the prophet. But you
must see something in conversion which only God can give you to see. It is not a twenty-foot wave crashing down upon
your boat that is going to turn your heart to God in repentance. It is not the conscious realization that the idol
that you are bowing down to on the boat cannot save you, but if you hold on to it now, it
is going to take you down to the bottom. This
knowledge will not produce the grace of conversion.
Conversion is when God works in
your heart, through these means, to turn you from your sin unto Him. We read in
Acts 13:48,
As many as were
ordained to eternal life believed. We believe,
Acts 18:27,
that it is through grace.
God must work His work of grace.
We know that it is our nature to
push aside and forget moments of great stress and danger, even drowning, falling through
the ice. Perhaps you have fallen through the
ice and you thought you had found religion. Or,
perhaps, there are other emotional moments in your life.
But these things soon, for many, fade. The
dullness of sin returns, and a life of ease soon puts far from them the memory of these
former calamities. Hardness is all that we
would have before God. Perhaps you even pride
yourself that you are able to handle death. You
are able to enter into a funeral parlor and go through great distress and come back
unshaken. You are still your own
man. That is because of the hardness of
your heart. It is the grace of God which
brings conversion.
As I said, God used means. He used the storm.
He used even the very threat of death. These
men stood at the realization that they were going to die.
At that moment they realized that there was something more important than their own
lust. Their values shifted. God can use the fear of death as a blessing for
His people. Are you drunken with this life? Have you ever given much thought to your own
death, to eternity, to hell, to heaven? Do
you see that earthly things are dust and sand? Or
does your ease and your success and your plenty make you boast, no, make you like a beast,
like a cow? God used the threat of death. God showed the utter impotence of their idols. The sailors saw that their idols were totally
inadequate. Yes, God used all of these
things.
But, centrally, we must see that
God used the words of His disobedient prophet. The
narrative gives us a brief summary of what Jonah said to them. It suggests that Jonah said more to them. But we do learn of a few things that Jonah said. He said to them, first, that God is the God of
heaven. I am an Hebrew; and I fear the
Lord, the God of heaven (v. 9). He told them that there is one, true, eternal,
sovereign God who is the God of heaven. He is
not a God who has arisen from the earth out of the imaginations of men. Oh, no! He
is the God of heaven, exalted, infinite in power and majesty. He told them that this God made the sea and the
dry land. Unlike the gods you
made, said Jonah. You made them
by your hand. The true God is the Creator of
all things and holds the world in His hand. He
told them that man was accountable to God. We
know that because the sailors say, Lord, lay not upon us innocent blood, for thou
has done as it pleased thee. Jonah must
have been teaching them some very sound things. Jonah
must have told them that God takes men up in judgment and that man must answer to God. Jonah also had told them of the way to God, for he
told them that he had fled from the presence of God.
He said to them, Im disobedient. I
walked away from the fellowship of God. And
in those words he must have made plain to them that God, by grace, makes it possible for
sinners to come unto Him through Jesus Christ.
That is the message of the
gospel right now in this very day. In
America, in Canada, or wherever you are as you hear this message, this is the truth: There is one true God of heaven and earth who
exists in Himself, who ever was and ever shall be. He
is the great and the holy God. He is the
Creator who has made you and holds you in His hands.
He will judge you and you must answer to Him.
There is but one way to His presence: His
grace and His Son Jesus Christ.
The fruit of those words of
Jonah, by the grace of God, was the conversion of pagan sailors. It began in prayer.
They cried unto the Lord. They used
the name Lord, Jehovah, the God of the
covenant. They expressed the truth that God
is the almighty God, that God has done, they say, as it hath pleased Him. God rules, they say, in sovereign authority and
untouchable justice. They become very
earnest, We beseech thee. They
cry to God in prayer, in utter dependence upon the sovereign and holy God.
We are told that they feared the
Lord exceedingly. Now fear, in the
Scriptures, can be used in the sense of mere dread, terror.
But here it is not used in that sense. It
is used in the sense of reverence and awe of God. They
feared the Lord exceedingly. Their whole
being was caught up in reverence for God. They
knew their undoneness as sinners. They knew
the greatness of the holy God. The feared the
Lord exceedingly. Now notice, this is written
after the storm ceased. If we had read
that they feared the Lord exceedingly in the storm, that would not have impressed
us as much. They would have been scared out
of their wits. Perhaps they were like a
soldier in a fox hole who cries, Get me out of this, I dont want to die, God. Ill become a missionary. Then he is delivered and he turns to his buddy and
says, Boy, that was a close call. Lets
celebrate when we get some leave and well drink and gamble. But that is not what happened. After the storm had ceased, a new reverence grips
their hearts and they cry unto God in reverence and in thankfulness.
They sacrificed to the Lord, we
are told, and made their vows. They
sacrificed. What did they sacrifice? How could they do that after a storm upon a boat? We do not know.
We mind our own business. God tells us
that they sacrificed. But it does tell us
this, that they understood that the approach to God that He had revealed in the Old
Testament was in the way of sacrifice, of thanksgiving and praise. Even as we read in
Psalm 51,
Create in me a
clean heart, O God. The sacrifices of the
Lord are a broken spirit; a broken and a contrite heart, O Lord, thou wilt not
despise. And they made vows. That means that they made a solemn acknowledgment
of Gods claims upon them that they would serve and obey Him, that they would
dedicate themselves by His power and grace to His service, that they would live and die in
His fear, that they would now live with one consuming desire: Lord, what wilt Thou have me to do?
This was great grace.
In the conversion of these pagan
sailors God was underscoring the wickedness of Israels impenitence in the days of
Jonah. God was doing as He had told them,
that He would raise up a people who formerly did not know Him in order to provoke them to
jealousy who did, in their generations, know Him. What
was the state of Israel in Jonahs day? We
read in the Old Testament that they wearied of Jehovah, they turned to the very gods these
sailors dumped over into the sea. Is that not
something? The gods that these sailors
realize are stumps of wood and heave overboard were the very idols that Israel, the people
who had the priests and the temple and the sacrifices and the prophets and the promises,
was turning to.
We would say, where on earth
would you look for repentance and holiness? Would
you not look in Israel? No! Israel turns from God to testify of the horror,
the folly of it. God raises up pagans to know
and fear Him.
There is a word there to us. Do you have the Word of God? You have a sound church you attend. You know the truth.
You have been taught that truth as it is in Jesus Christ from your childhoods
early days. Does the zeal and love of
converts from paganism in Ghana, the Philippines, the Far East shame you? Does their zeal show you guilty of indifference? Does it show that your heart has been swallowed up
in the things of this earth? God calls you to
be to His praise. God calls you to a daily,
genuine conversion. Turn from your idols to
the living God! Do not worship pleasure; do
not worship money; do not worship lust, and honor, and fame the gods of the
heathen. Worship and serve God!
We must be filled with gratitude
for what God has done for us and we must see the greatness of His grace. Do you bless God for conversion that He has opened
your eyes, He has turned you from your folly, and He has given to you a hope which shall
never make you ashamed? Then, let us pray
today: Turn me, Lord, and I shall be
turned. For Thou art the Lord my God.
Let us pray.