The Ordination of a Prodigal

Feb 05, 2012 By: Pastor Joseph LoSardo Series: Jonah Scripture: Jonah 1:1-3
While Webster’s dictionary defines the word, ‘prodigal,’ as recklessly extravagant and lavish, we have come to most readily associate the word “prodigal” with Jesus’ Parable of the Prodigal Son in Luke 15. Today, the term has come to describe the proverbial prodigal child, who runs away from home, in the end to return. In this way, we can consider Jonah a prodigal prophet. The word of the LORD came to Jonah. It came with clarity and heavy responsibility. God called him to “arise and go to Nineveh,” and “cry out against it.” The prophet unquestionably heard the call, but he responded by arising, and instead of going to Nineveh, fleeing to Tarshish from the presence of the LORD. What could Jonah mean when he tells us that he was fleeing, “from the presence of the LORD?” Surely he knew what David did (Ps 139:1-12) that God was omnipresent, and it is impossible to go anywhere away from His presence. What Jonah meant by this was that his flight was from God’s will and calling; he was fleeing from where prayer revealed would be his place of service. At a great expense, Jonah endeavored to go as far as he could in the opposite direction of God’s revealed calling, thinking that he might be able to push the haunting voice of God to the back of His mind. But he would soon learn that even if he should make his bed in hell, God is there (Ps 139:8)! As Martin Luther commented, “Not only the ship, but the whole world becomes too small for Jonah … He finds no nook or corner in all creation, not even in hell, where he might crawl in.” There is never a place of safety away from God’s presence, where we may be left in ‘superficial peace.’