Here's an excerpt from my upcoming book called Who Knows? Jonah, Katrina and Other Tales of Hope.
The Old Switcheroo
The Old Switcheroo
And yet, this is a comedy.
“Yet
forty days and Nineveh shall be overthrown.” This is one of the shortest
and most effective sermons in the history of preaching. But who wrote this little
sermon? In the other biblical prophets, we hear many of the precise words the
LORD wants the prophet to speak. Here, we are not so sure. Is this little
sermon Jonah’s personal and original composition?
The message is a simple
declaration of doom. It contains no description of remedial action. It offers
no hope of reprieve. The verb is in the passive voice and specifies no actor.
It may sound like much of the bureaucrat-speak that fills our modern political
discourse. “Mistakes were made,” or “Shots were fired.” The message is designed
to fail. And it has precisely the opposite
effect that Jonah intended.
Jonah seems to be unaware of the
LORD’s whimsical qualities. The word for “overthrown” can refer to destruction
and demise. It more often refers to change or alteration or even
transformation! This verb, writes Philip Cary, which is also applied to Sodom
and Gomorrah in Genesis, “can also—unfortunately for Jonah—mean conversion and
being turned into something new.”[1]
Cary lingers on this ambiguity in
his commentary. Who is fooling whom at this point? Does Jonah already know the
LORD’s intention to spare Nineveh? He later protests that he did know about
this in advance. So, Cary suggests, it may be that Jonah manipulates the LORD’s
message to have the most lethal implications and the least chance of success.
Or is it that the LORD gives this bit of prophetic double entendre to the
unsuspecting prophet who then feels used and cheated later?
Or do we witness both things at
once, as Cary suggests. “There is room to wonder whether, in the very content
of the message,” Cary writes, “Jonah was trying to pull a fast one on the
LORD—and whether what actually happened was that the LORD pulled a fast one on
Jonah.”[2]
The “old switcheroo” is a staple of comedy in all times and places. Is that
what we witness in God’s word through Jonah to Nineveh? I think it is precisely
what we experience here.
This goes a long way in
explaining Jonah’s furious indignation in chapter four. The LORD has fooled him
and left him in embarrassed rage. Is the LORD intentionally cruel to the cranky
curmudgeon? I don’t think so. Instead, I would suggest that this comeuppance is
the last best hope for Jonah’s heart. Perhaps the LORD has drawn the prophet
into what Marcia Reynolds calls “The Discomfort Zone.”
Reynolds reminds us the brain
science that demonstrates how much of our lives we spend on “autopilot,” that
is, engaged in automatic and unreflective mental processes. We think we are in
charge of our thinking most of the time. In fact, most of the time we are
walking through the well-worn ruts that make up the majority of our life
scripts. We leave those ruts only with a tremendous expenditure of energy and
no small amount of whining and complaining.
“To help people think differently,”
she writes, “you have to disturb the automatic processing.”[3] By
this she means that we have to put people in unfamiliar places and positions.
This will never make anyone particularly happy. The Discomfort Zone is that
place where our life maps are called into question, where we experience
disorientation, where we have to re-evaluate our settled assumptions and
beliefs. “This is best done,” she continues, ‘by challenging the beliefs that
created the frames, and surfacing the underlying fears, needs, and desires that
are keeping the constructs in place.”[4]
Barbara Green amplifies this
point in an article in the theological journal, Word and World.
Jonah is closer to a
parable than to an event that happened; it reads better in the wisdom genre
than as history. It is a narrative of experience offered within the story to a
character and then from the whole story to readers. Its genre provides narrative
experiences constructed and offered so as to jolt us out of old certainties and
into fresh appraisals of problems.[5]
“To jolt us out of old
certainties and into fresh appraisals of problems”—can you think of a better
way to describe what is happening to Jonah in our little comedy? I cannot. From
the moment of the LORD’s first call, nothing has been nailed down for Jonah.
His cherished worldview has been called radically into question. Worse yet, the
questioning happens through comedy. The audience is being disarmed as they
laugh along with the writer. We are never more vulnerable to suggestions of
change than when we are having a good laugh together.
Nineveh isn’t the only community
in danger of being “overthrown.”
[1]
Philip Cary, Jonah, Kindle Location,
2776.
[2]
Philip Cary, Jonah, Kindle Location,
2353.
[3]
Marcia Reynolds, The Discomfort Zone: How
Leaders Turn Difficult Conversations into Breakthroughs, page 3.
[4]
Marcia Reynolds, The Discomfort Zone,
page 3.
[5]
Barbara Green, “Beyond messages: how meaning emerges from our reading of
Jonah,” in Word & World 27 no 2
Spr 2007, p 149-156.
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