By
James L. Ferrell
An excerpt from The Peacegiver, published by Deseret Book.
Exhausted,
and amazed by what he had just witnessed, Rick was more
confused than ever as to why he was there. “What is this
about, Grandpa?” he asked again. “What is the point? What
do you want me to learn?”
“Do
you know the rest of Jonah’s story, Ricky?”
“Sure,
he gets swallowed by a big fish and after three days the
fish spits him onto dry land, and then he goes to Nineveh
and preaches after all, and the people repent and are preserved.
I get it. I know the story. But I don’t see what it has
to do with me.”
“That’s
why we’re here, Ricky—so you will see.”
The
winds and waves had suddenly calmed, and the men ascended
the ladder en masse. Rick and his grandfather followed them
up. Once on deck, they surveyed the scene. The mast had
been snapped off only a foot or two above the deck and the
sail lost to the sea. Except for a few lonely pieces, the
wicker fence had been almost entirely ripped away. But the
twilight sky above was clear, and the water lay still as
glass. The men dropped to their knees and offered prayers
of thanksgiving.
Rick
followed his grandfather to the bow and looked out across
the now tranquil Mediterranean.
“Do
you suppose that you’ve ever fled to Tarshish, Ricky?” his
grandfather asked after a minute or two.
“Run
from the Lord, you mean? No, I don’t think so.”
“No?”
Grandpa asked, raising his eyebrows in Rick’s direction.
“Let’s think about what it means to flee to Tarshish.”
Great,
here we go again, thought Rick. More Socrates.
“Yes,
I suppose so, my boy,” Grandpa said with a brief chuckle.
“Let’s think about what we have just witnessed. Why did
Jonah flee to Tarshish?”
“For
the reason I just said, to run from the Lord.”
“That’s
what he was doing, fair enough, Ricky, but why? Why was
he running from the Lord?”
“Because
he didn’t want to go to Nineveh, I suppose.”
“Yes,
but why?”
“I
don’t know, Grandpa! I guess he just didn’t want to go.
Maybe he didn’t like them.”
“You’re
right on both counts,” Grandpa responded, ignoring Rick’s
agitation. “He didn’t want to go, and he didn’t like the
Ninevites. And the reason he didn’t is because of what they
had done to his people, and what they were yet to do.”
“What
do you mean?”
“In
Jonah’s day, Nineveh was a major city within the Assyrian
empire—soon to become its capital. The Assyrians were a
brutal, war-mongering people, feared by all around them—including,
I might add, the Phoenicians, like the sailors on this ship,
who were required to pay tribute to Assyria in order to
maintain their sovereignty.
“By
this time in history, the Assyrian empire included almost
all of present-day Iraq and Syria, and much of present-day
Jordan and Turkey. For a time they even controlled Egypt.
The Assyrians had been raiding the borders of the northern
kingdom of Israel for years, collecting tribute from them
as well. And Jonah knew from the words of fellow prophets
that the Assyrians would soon destroy the northern kingdom
and lead his people into captivity,35 which happened in
721 b.c.”
Grandpa
paused for a moment, looking out to sea. “So how could Jonah
work to save them?” he finally asked. “Why would the Lord
even ask him to? That is what Jonah was stumbling over,
Ricky. In his mind, Nineveh didn’t deserve to be saved.
And he, one of the aggrieved and mistreated, didn’t deserve
to be required to help them.”
Rick
remembered his grandfather’s earlier comment about Rick
feeling he deserved better from Carol. “So you think I’m
like Jonah, then, is that it, Grandpa? You’re saying that
I’m upset because I think I deserve better than I’m getting,
and in that respect I’m like Jonah.”
His
grandfather didn’t say anything.
“Well,
maybe I am then. But you know what? I can’t blame Jonah,
to tell you the truth, now that I know what he was facing.
Who could blame him for not wanting to go to Nineveh? For
not wanting to help the very people who soon would wipe
out his own people without a second thought? So maybe I
am like Jonah. That doesn’t seem so bad to me, under the
circumstances. It beats being Nineveh, I’d say.”
“Actually,
Ricky, that’s who you are.”
“Who?”
“Nineveh.”
“I’m
Nineveh?”
“Yes.
And so, by the way, is Jonah. That’s why we’re here. And
why Jonah is somewhere in there,” he said, nodding toward
the sea.