CARING FOR A GOURD
Jonah 4:5-11
Prayer
Nineveh was the capitol of
Assyria.
Cruelty, cult worship,
idolatry and immorality abounded.
The people of Nineveh would
cut off the nose of their enemies;
Slice off their ears;
Chop off their hands and
feet.
They would skin their victims
alive;
Impale them on stakes.
They would punch a hole
through a person's tongue;
Put a leather thong through
it;
And lead that person around
like an animal.
They would take a man out
into the desert;
And bury him up to his neck
in sand.
They were so feared that
entire villages were known to commit suicide rather
than to be captured by them.
Jonah did not like them.
He wanted God to destroy
them.
It's even reasonable to
assume that he wanted God to cast them into hell.
And he was totally unprepared
for what God wanted him to do.
“Arise, go to Nineveh, that
great city, and cry against it; far their wickedness
is come up before me” (Jonah
1:2).
Jonah could not believe his
ears.
This was a calling he would
not accept.
How many of us are like that?
How many of us “love our
enemies?”
“Bless them that curse us?”
“Do good to them that hate
us?”
“Pray for them that
despitefully use us and persecute us” (Matt. 5:44)?
How many of us really care
what happens to the lost in our community?
How many of us can blame
Jonah because he did not want to witness to these
people?
We know we should witness to
people.
But we make excuses.
“I'm too busy.”
“I don't know what to say.”
“That doesn't work anymore.”
“People don't want to be
bothered.”
We are like Jonah.
He was a religious man;
A prophet of God.
But lie was actually refusing
to do the will of God.
He had sin in his life.
But instead of looking at his
sin.
He was looking at the sin of
the people of Nineveh.
We do the same thing.
We have sin in our lives.
But we are looking at the sin
of others.
Look at Daniel.
He witnessed to people who
threatened to throw him into a lions den.
Look at Shadrach, Meshech and
Abednego.
They witnessed to people who
threatened to throw them into a fiery furnace.
Look at Peter, James and
John.
They witnessed to people who
ordered them to stop.
Look at Paul.
He witnessed to people who
threatened to kill him.
Someone said, “Paul must have
had a sunstroke.”
And someone else said, “God
give us more people who have had a
sunstroke.”
Anyway, Jonah seemed to think
that if he ran away, God might get fed up
with the people of Nineveh;
That God might get impatient
and destroy them. So Jonah ran.
He boarded a ship to Tarshish;
And set sail.
But strange things happened.
1st---The Lord
sent out a great wind into the sea;
A mighty wind.
Giant waves rolled.
They white capped.
They tossed the ship.
The crew was terrified.
They began to pray.
But they made a mistake.
They prayed to the wrong god.
If we are going to pray, we
have to pray to the right God;
The God who can help us;
The God who sent this storm.
No other god can overrule
Him.
So the crew prayed.
But their prayers failed.
Then, they began to lighten
the ship.
They cleared off the deck.
Then, a crew member went down
into the hold to clear that out.
And what a surprise!
There was Jonah fast asleep.
The crew member went and got
the captain.
“Wake up, man.”
“Start praying.”
“Call upon thy God.”
Listen to this.
While the lost were praying
to the wrong god, God's man was sound asleep;
Refusing to witness;
Refusing to do what God
wanted him to do.
Who is the villain in this
story?
Is it the crew who prayed to
the wrong god?
Or, Jonah who didn't pray at
all?
This is bad.
But, I suspect that many of
us are just like Jonah.
A storm is brewing all around
us.
Drugs, gambling and
pornography are right outside our door.
Wickedness is growing more
extreme every day.
Terrorism has reached our
shores.
Courts are striking down
Christian privileges.
Our nation is sliding into a
cesspool of sin.
We need to witness and pray
like never before.
But we have closed our
spiritual eyes.
We are like Samson who went
to sleep on Delilah's lap.
She cut his hair.
He lost his power.
We are not witnessing and
praying.
The Church is becoming weaker
and weaker.
Anyway, the crew decided to
cast lots to determine who had offended the
gods “and the lot fell on
Jonah.”
Who are you?
Where are you from?
What have you done?
“I am a Hebrew.”
“And I fear the Lord, the God
of heaven, which hath made the sea and the dry
land.”
“I'm running from Him.”
And when the crew heard that
he was running from God, they were afraid.
Jonah said, “Throw me
overboard and the sea will become calm again.”
“Nevertheless, the men rowed
hard to bring the ship to land.”
1st---Notice, that
these men who didn't know God cared more about Jonah
than he cared about the
people of Nineveh.
They didn't know God.
But they didn't want anything
bad to happen to Jonah.
They were willing to risk
their lives to save him.
This should not surprise us.
The world is full of good
people who aren't Christians;
Good people who will break
their back for someone in need;
Good people who will even do
more for us than some in the Church.
But these good people are
lost.
And we don't care enough to
witness to them.
We are like Judas Iscariot.
He was called to serve Jesus.
But he abandoned his calling
for thirty pieces of silver.
We are called to take the
gospel into our community.
But we have abandoned our
calling for pleasure and work.
2nd---Notice, that
the crew could not out maneuver God.
“For the sea wrought and was
tempestuous against them.”
The harder they rowed, the
greater the storm raged.
If God is for us, who can be
against us?
But if God is against us, who
can help us?
We cannot fool God.
We cannot hide from God.
We cannot run from God.
The crew could not get the
ship to shore.
They had a choice.
Throw Jonah overboard or
perish with him.
So they threw him overboard.
But God had a great fish
waiting.
And the fish swallowed Jonah
in one gulp.
Let me say here that some
call this a parable; an allegory; a legend.
They doubt that this
happened.
Keep two things in mind:
One, Jesus treated this story
as a real event.
He used Jonah's predicament
in the belly of a whale as a sign of His own time
in the grave.
Two, the sperm whale is the
only whale with a throat large enough to swallow
a man.
Sperm whales live in the
Mediterranean Sea off the coasts of Israel.
And history records an actual
case of a man surviving three days in the belly
of a whale in the fifteen
hundreds.
Anyway, at this point, Jonah
was a dead man except for one thing (pause).
God still cared about the
people of Nineveh.
God still wanted Jonah to
witness to them.
This should cause us to ask
ourselves:
Why is God allowing me to
live?
Am I doing what God wants me
to do?
Am I a factor in changing my
community for Christ?
Is God prolonging my life
because He wants me to witness to someone?
If we are not serving God, we
are of no value to God.
Our value to God is not
determined by what we CAN do.
It is determined by what we
ARE doing.
Anyway, a great whale got
Jonah.
That is when this prayerless
servant of God finally began to pray.
Are we like that?
Do we only pray when things
are going bad?
Notice something else:
There was Jonah;
Far out to sea;
Deep under water;
In the belly of a whale;
But God still knew where he
was.
God could still hear him.
And God answered his prayer.
The whale “vomited out Jonah
upon the dry land.”
Then the Word of the Lord
came unto Jonah a second time.
“Arise, go unto Nineveh, that
great city, and preach unto it.”
And this time Jonah knew he
had better not rebel.
The only running he did was
straight toward Nineveh.
It's sad to say.
But it took a terrible
experience to get Jonah to witness to these people.
Is that what its going to
take for us?
Is it going to take a
terrible experience to get us to witness?
Notice what happened.
The people of Nineveh heard
the Word.
They repented of their sins.
And these heathens who cut
off people's limbs,
Who skinned people alive;
Who punched holes in people's
tongues to lead them around like animals;
These incredibly wicked
people changed their ways.
And God spared them.
No matter what we've done,
No matter how bad we've been,
If we will hear the Word,
believe it;
Receive it;
Repent of our sins;
And confess Christ;
We will be saved.
The important thing is not
how we start out.
It's how we wind up.
God loves us.
He's in the saving business.
If that was not so, He would
have destroyed Jonah, Nineveh and US.
Now---if the story had ended
here, we would have a happy ending;
A success story.
But it doesn’t end here.
God wants us to take a second
look at Jonah.
When Jonah learned that God
was not going to destroy the Ninevites, he was
unhappy.
He went to the outskirts of
Nineveh.
He sat down on a hill where
he could overlook the city.
He thought that God might
change His mind.
He wanted to see the Ninevites
get what was coming to them.
He wanted to see God wipe
them out.
A farmer cared for his sheep
in the mountains.
It had not rained in months.
He was running out of grass.
He could see bunches of grass
growing out of the cracks in the side of the
cliffs.
He tried to climb up to them.
But he could not.
He hired a climber.
But it was too dangerous.
The farmer said, “The grass
is precious.”
“We have to get it.”
They lowered a rope over the
cliffs.
And picked several bundles of
grass.
Shouldn't we care that much
about the souls of people?
Aren't they precious?
They are difficult to reach,
But aren't they worth the
effort?
We go to extremes to do other
things.
Why can't we go to extremes
to witness?
Anyway, Jonah didn't care
about the Ninevites.
So God prepared three more
things to teach him a lesson.
1st---While Jonah
sat out there on that hill overlooking the city,
God caused a gourd to grow up
to shade him from the hot sun.
That gourd made Jonah very
happy.
God finally did something he
liked.
He looked on that gourd with
compassion.
It shaded him from the hot
sun.
And Jonah thought that his
new found, God-given shade just might mean that
God was pleased with him
after all.
2nd---God caused a
little worm to come along.
And that little worm ate a
hole into the stalk of Jonah's precious gourd.
It withered and died.
Jonah lost his shade.
The object of his comfort
which God so quickly gave was just as quickly
taken away.
3rd---God caused
the sun to bear down.
And a vehement east wind to
blow.
The sun got hotter and
hotter,
The wind got dryer and dryer,
Jonah suffered.
He felt faint.
He wanted to die.
That is when the Lord said, “Thou
hast had pity on the gourd for which thou
hast not labored, neither madest
it grow;”
“Which came up in a night and
perished in a night.”
“And should not I spare
Nineveh that great city?”
Hey, Jonah!
You cared about a gourd;
A plant;
A temporary thing;
Something that's here today
and gone tomorrow.
But people are more important
than plants.
Souls live forever.
Tom and Rick raised cattle on
adjoining farms.
The fence between their farms
got pushed down.
Tom's cattle got out.
They trampled down some of
Rick's crop.
Rick got angry.
He rounded up Tom's cattle.
But he refused to give them
back until Tom paid for the damage.
Tom apologized.
He repaired the fence.
He paid for the damage.
He took his cattle home.
A few days later, the fence
got pushed down again.
But it was Rick's cattle that
got out this time.
His cattle trampled down some
of Tom's crop.
The shoe was on the other
foot.
Tom had a chance to get even.
He rounded up Rick's cattle.
But he didn't lock them up.
He took them home.
He turned them over to Rick.
Rick was embarrassed.
“Tell me what the damages are
so I can pay you and get it over with,” he
said.
Tom replied, “You don’t owe
me anything.”
“We're neighbors.”
“And I would rather lose some
of my crop than to lose your friendship.”
That night, there was a knock
on Tom's door.
Rick was returning the money
he had received a few days earlier.
“Please take it back,” he
said.
“You have something that I
don't have.”
“But I want to try to get it.”
“And maybe returning this
money will help me get started.”
How many of us care more
about grass and flowers than we care about
people?
How many of us care more
about ballgames and hunting than we care about
people?
These are our gourds.
They come in a night and they
go in a night.
But let's remember something.
God took Jonah's gourd away
in just one morning.
And He can take our gourds
away just as fast.
We are in a struggle to do
right.
Sin has damaged our mind; our
emotions; our feelings.
Sin has affected our ability
to make right decisions.
We rightly perceive ourselves
as the "OBJECTS" of God's love.
But we wrongly ignore the
fact that we are the "MEANS" through which God
loves others.
He wants us to pray and
witness.
He called us to do this;
Called us to be ambassadors
for Christ.
Some might be in Church
today, if we witnessed to them.
But we are standing around.
And waiting on them to come
on their own.
The Scriptures tell us to let
our lights shine.
Some of us have lamps that
are lit.
But we need to clean off our
globes.
And it should not be what we
think or feel about it.
It should be what God's Word
says about it.
Today, I am urging you to
make an effort to get the inactive back to Church;
To reach out to others in the
community.
We need them.
They need us.
If just a few of us could get
just one person a year, it would make a
significant difference in
this Church.
But if none of us get any,
the Church will eventually die out.