Exodus 1:1 The Midwives QA Supplied

The Midwives

With Questions and Proposed Answers

 

Background and Printed Text: Exodus 1:1-21

 

Exodus 1:1 And these are the names of the children of Israel coming Egyptward with He-Will-Heel [Jacob]. They came, a man and His house: 2They-Saw-A-Son [Reuben], Hearkening [Shimon], My-Joined-[One] [Levi] and He-Confessed-Yehovah [Judah], 3There-Is-A-Wage [Issachar], They-Shall-Cohabit [Zebulun] and Son-Of-Right [Benjamin], 4Adjudicator [Dan] and My-Wrestling [Naphtali], Troop [Gad] and Happy [Asher]. 5And he was, every being exiting from the thigh of He-Will-Heel [Jacob]: seventy being(s). And He-Will-Gather [Joseph] was in Egypt.

 

6And He-Will-Gather [Joseph] died, and all his brethren, and all that generation.

 

7And the children of Israel were fruitful. And they swarmed. And they multiplied. And they became very very strong! And the land filled them!

 

8And a new king arose over Egypt who didn’t know He-Will-Gather [Joseph]. 9And he said unto his people, “Behold, the people of the children of Israel is multiple and stronger than we are! 10Come-on! We shall wisely-deal to him lest he will multiply. And he shall be, when they shall happen a war, and he will be gathered—even he—upon our enemies! And he will fight into us! And he will ascend from the land!” 11And they set princes of slave-labour over him in order to humiliate him via their burdens.

 

And he built cities of warehouses to Pharaoh: Pithom and Raamses. 12And whenever they will humiliate him, established, he will multiply. And established, he will spread! And they were cut-off from the faces of the children of Israel! 13And the Egyptians slave-drove the children of Israel via crushing. 14And they embittered their lives via hard slavery: via mortar and via bricks and via every slavery in the field with all their slavery that they slaved via them, via crushing.

 

15And the king of Egypt said to the Hebrew midwives (the one whose name is Pretty [Shifrah] and the second whose name is Groan [Puah])─ 16and he said, “When ye child the Hebrews [fem.], and ye shall see upon the stones. If he is a son, and ye shall kill him! And if he is a daughter, and he shall live.”

 

17And the midwives feared the Gods. And they did not, just as the king of Egypt spoke unto them. And they caused-the-children-to-live.

 

18And the king of Egypt called to the midwives. And he said to them, “Why did ye this speech, and have caused-the-children-to-live?” 19And the midwives said unto Pharaoh, “Because the Hebrews [fem.] are not as women of the Egyptians [fem.]. For they are alive there! Before the midwife will come unto them, and they childed!”

 

20And Elohim good-did to the midwives. And the people multiplied. And they strengthened very-much! 21And he was. For the midwives feared the Gods. And He made houses to them.

 

 

 

I. The Scene (verses 1-5)

 

The text starts with an overview of the children of Israel who arrived in Egypt. A list is given of the sons.

 

A total of seventy folks who came out of Jacob’s thigh came to Egypt. Joseph was already there.

 

 

 

Questions

 

1. How many of Jacob’s children went to Egypt? They all did!

 

2. Verse 5 states that these all came out of Jacob’s thigh. What does coming out of his thigh mean, and why did the Bible give this piece of information? The thigh of a man is where his groin is located, and thus his penis and testicles. The sperm from the testicles are what fertilize the egg in a woman so that she becomes pregnant. Thus, every person who was born to Jacob came out of his thigh!

 

This tells the careful reader that seventy persons (including children and grandchildren, and perhaps even some great grandchildren) were directly from Jacob! They didn’t include the persons that Shimon and Levi captured when they slaughtered the Hivites in Genesis 34.

 

 

 

II. The Change of Scene (verse 6)

 

Verse 6 is a short scene change. Joseph died, along with all that generation.

 

Questions

 

1. What is so important about telling readers that Joseph and all his brethren died? This sets the scene for what will happen next. The folks who remembered what things were like under Joseph all died. Those alive had just heard the stories.

 

2. The text states that Joseph and all his brethren died, “and all that generation.” Why did Yehovah need to mention that all that generation died? Wasn’t that obvious? A Biblical generation is not what most folks think it is. A generation has to do with an administration—that is, with what kind of government is ruling a people. It isn’t referring to a family and having children. Folks mistakenly think that once a baby is born, that baby is the new generation. The Bible sees generations in a totally different way. A generation can last forty or even more than one hundred years! If the style of government leadership remains the same, the generation is the same. If it changes, a new generation will now develop. You may have heard of the World War II generation or the Viet Nam generation. This is using generation in the way that the Bible uses it.

 

 

 

III. The Multiplication (verse 7)

 

The children of Israel were fruitful—they were productive. They swarmed in groups, and they multiplied, having many children. They also became physically and mentally very strong. The land filled them—they had plenty to eat—and they filled the land with a great population.

 

Questions

 

1. What does being fruitful really mean in the Bible? A person is fruitful if the person does good works—that is, if the person does what is morally right toward another person or ethically right in business and social things. Morality is all about right and wrong, righteousness and sin. Only a God/god can declare something as morally right or wrong. Ethics has to do with the right way to treat entire groups of folks in business and in dealings with them. When one group cheats another group, the cheating group is not practicing proper ethics. That will lead to violence.

 

If a person does what is right in the eyes of Yehovah toward another person, that person is doing a good work, and is therefore being fruitful to Yehovah. If a person sins, that person is doing a bad or an evil work.

 

The Israelis did right toward each other, and they prospered because of this. (When folks are violent toward each other, the societies in which they live become poor and unfruitful, with corruption taking all the good work that they do.)

 

Every person is compared to a tree. If a tree produces good fruit, that is a good tree. If a tree produces bad fruit, that is a bad tree. The same is true of every person. Are you producing good fruit?

 

2. What does “they swarmed” mean? This means that they began to congregate in groups because of the number of them and for business and social reasons. Thus, they were everywhere in some of the Egyptian markets, having things to sell. They also had social occasions like weddings where they gathered in large groups.

 

3. What does “they multiplied” mean? That means that they had many babies!

 

4. What is significant about their becoming very very strong? They will become a threat to the Egyptians, and they will be able to live well under harsh conditions. They will also become good fighters.

 

5. The text states, “And the land filled them!” What does this mean? Most (probably all) translators thought that this really meant that the land was filled with them—that their population became so big, that they were everywhere. Actually, they weren’t everywhere; they lived only in a few locations. Instead, the land provided food for them, and they had enough to eat. The land filled them so that they were not hungry. They did fill their cities, but that isn’t what the Hebrew text described.

 

 

 

IV. New King; New Fear (verses 8-11)

 

The new king was the new Pharaoh over Egypt. He didn’t know Joseph.

 

He told his people of Egypt, “Behold, the people of the children of Israel is multiple and stronger than we are! Come-on! We shall wisely-deal to [with] him lest he will multiply. And he shall be, when they shall happen a war, and he will be gathered—even he—upon our enemies! And he will fight into us! And he will ascend from the land!” They set princes over the Jewish slave labour pools in order to humiliate Israel by means of the burdens put on Israel.

 

Questions

 

1. What is important about there being a new king (pharaoh) who didn’t know Joseph? The previous pharaohs who knew Joseph was kind to the Israelis because of how Joseph saved Egypt from starvation. The new pharaoh didn’t know Joseph personally, and he didn’t know much about what Joseph was supposed to have done. Therefore, he didn’t feel the need to treat the Israelis as special. He instead saw them in a very different way.

 

2. Why did this new king talk to his people about the Israelis? The Egyptians began to become very nervous about the Israelis: they were multiplying and becoming very strong to the point that the Egyptians felt threatened by them. These are exactly the same reasons why many Southerners (in the United States) passed laws and humiliated the Black slaves who had been kidnapped from Africa. Just as the Israelis, the Black slaves had many children and became very strong—far stronger than the non-Black populations in the South. Folks who fear other folks because of superiorities tend to mistreat them, humiliate them, threaten them and even kill some of them to try to prove to themselves that they are superior (when they are in fact far inferior in the very ways they fear). Those who are wise know that every group has its strengths and weaknesses, and they trade with groups that have strengths in which they themselves have weakness.

 

The new king reacted in a typical racist manner.

 

3. What did the king and the Egyptians fear that the Israelis might do using their numbers and strength? They feared that the Israelis would turn on the Egyptians in a war, and join the battle on the side of the enemies! Then, they feared that the Israelis would ascend from the land of Egypt! The Israelis had become Egypt’s economy. If Israel left Egypt, the Egyptians would have to start doing their own work!

 

4. Was the fear of the Egyptians regarding the Israelis in war a reasonable fear? No, it wasn’t a reasonable fear. The Israelis would have fought on the side of Egypt in any war; the Israelis didn’t desire to be taken captive to a foreign land. They were doing well in Egypt.

 

The pharaoh and his people were becoming paranoid—that is, they were becoming fearful of the Israelis as if the Israelis desired to do them harm. Racism and paranoia always go together.

 

5. The pharaoh said, “Come-on! We shall wisely-deal to him lest he will multiply.” Wasn’t the people of Israel already multiplying? This pharaoh feared more multiplication. He thought he could stop it.

 

6. What was the official Egyptian answer to controlling the population growth and the strengthening of the Israelis? It was to make the Israelis into slaves, and to put them under slavemasters so that they would be humiliated. The Egyptians thought this would cause the Israelis to despair so much that they would stop having so many children, and they would be weakened.

 

 

 

V. Building Projects (verses 11-14)

 

Israel built two cities that held warehouses for Egypt: Pithom and Raamses.

 

Whenever the Egyptian slave captains humiliated Israel, Israel multiplied—had more children. Israel spread throughout Egypt. Finally, the Egyptians had to go through Jewish groups and faces to visit other Egyptians!

 

The Egyptians used crushing means to slave-drive the Israelis to work harder and harder. They made their lives bitter by the hardness of their slavery: by means of mortal and bricks and every type of labour in the field. They used crushing force to tell them what to do and where to go.

 

Questions

 

1. Who is he in, “And he built cities of warehouses to Pharaoh: Pithom and Raamses”? He is Israel! Israel built those two very famous cities in Egypt!

 

2. The text states, “And whenever they will humiliate him, established, he will multiply.” Why did Israel multiply under humiliation? This generally occurs for any group and population when it is being mistreated. Members of that group tend to look for ways to find pleasure. One of the obvious ways to find pleasure is to have sex, and babies are born. Had the Egyptians realized this, they would not have done the very actions that certainly will increase Israel’s population! (Incidentally, the same thing happens during a war: those populations involved in the war tend to have a large increase in child births.)

 

3. Why did Israel spread under humiliation? A group that is being mistreated will try to find safe places to be to avoid the humiliation, if possible. Thus, the group will spread out. The more a large group is mistreated, the more members of that group will run and seek refuge elsewhere.

 

4. Who is they in, “And they were cut-off from the faces of the children of Israel,” and what was occurring? They are the Egyptians. There were so many Israelis, now, that the Egyptians were surrounded by Israelis. The group of Egyptians was cut into small groups by the large number of the Israelis. This made the Egyptians even more paranoid. Wherever they would go, Israelis were there, and the Israelis were stronger and tougher than the Egyptians. The Egyptians developed a fear of the Israelis and a desire to not be isolated from other Egyptians by the Israelis. This same fear occurs today by folks who feel surrounded by groups that they don’t know and of whom they are afraid. It is one of the main reasons why racism becomes very strong.

 

5. What was the response to this fear of the Egyptians? The response was this: “The Egyptians slave-drove the children of Israel via crushing.” This was the same response that many Southern slave-owners had to the increasing populations of African slaves kidnapped and brought to the United States. This continued in the United States after the Civil War.

 

6. What does embittered mean? It means to make bitter; to cause resentment; to remove joy and pleasure. The Egyptians were doing exactly the wrong thing.

 

7. What is mortar? It is what holds bricks and stones together. It can be like cement (as is used to make concrete) where it is liquid, first, then dries to become a very hard substance, or it can be like tar where it is a sticky and very thick liquid that acts like a solid after it is applied, but in any case it holds bricks and stones in place.

 

8. How are bricks made? They are made in several ways. Take straw and mud. Mix them together thoroughly. Heat the mixture in an oven at 500 degrees for an hour. See what you get when it cools. (They actually heat it above this.) The moisture goes out of the mud, and the straw and the mud connect together to form a very hard brick when it is done right. Mud alone is brittle if heated; it won’t support anything. Straw alone is weak; it won’t hold. Put the two together in this way, however, and a very, very hard substance results. It can be almost as hard as stone!

 

9. Who made these bricks? The Israelis made the bricks! Making many bricks is no fun! It is hot, dirty work, and after doing this for days, it makes life seem very bad.

 

10. What did the Israelis have to do that was included in “every slavery in the field”? They had to tend all the crops, including getting water to the crops by irrigating them. Irrigating isn’t so hard today, since there are electric pumps that can bring the water through pipes to the crops. Back then, there were no electric pumps, and pipes were very rare and hard to make. The water had to be hand-lifted if the fields were not below the water source, and the work was very hard and continuous.

 

There were many other field chores that the Israelis were forced to do. The Israelis had come as shepherds and cattlemen. Being forced to work in the fields was not what they were used to doing. Now, they had to do all the hardest work for the Egyptians, or get beaten.

 

11. What does via crushing mean? This is the Hebrew word that describes under much pressure. They were forced to work. If they didn’t work fast enough or hard enough, they were beaten and terribly mistreated.

 

 

 

VI. Abortion (verses 15-17)

 

The king of Egypt had a very modern idea for birth control. He spoke to the two heads of the Hebrew midwives (who birthed the babies)—to Pretty and to Groan, “When ye child the Hebrews, and ye shall see the gender of the baby upon the birthing stones. If he is a son, and ye shall kill him! And if he is a daughter, and he shall live.”

 

The midwives feared the Gods—Elohim—the Gods of Avraham, Isaac and Jacob. They did exactly what the king of Egypt didn’t speak unto them to do! They made certain that the children lived.

 

Questions

 

1. Why do you suppose that one girl baby had been named Pretty and another Groan at this time? (You will obtain various answers, of course. I propose that the one named Pretty was such a pretty baby. I propose that the one named Groan described how her parents felt about the harsh slavery.)

 

2. Why did the king call just two women of the midwives? The king was used to speaking to representatives—to individuals whom he could hold responsible for what he ordered. Had he called all the midwives into the palace, the number would have been large, and he would have feared an uprising. He wanted to cause fear in the Israelis and in his slaves; he didn’t want to be the one who feared.

 

These two women were viewed as being like rulers over all the midwives; whatever the king said, they were responsible to get the speech out to all the other midwives and to made certain that the king’s orders were followed.

 

3. What are the stones in, “ye shall see upon the stones”? They are the birthing stools or birthing areas that women used when bringing out children in childbirth. I cannot tell if the stones were large and shaped or if they were pebbles so that the child could be placed on a softer surface while being cleaned from the afterbirth. The king knew how childbirth was accomplished, and he knew that stones were where they would birth the babies.

 

4. The king said, “If he is a son, and ye shall kill him!” What was he commanding the midwives to do? He was commanding them to put the little boy babies to death when they came out. This is exactly the same as modern abortion. The idea is to take a baby that would live, given time and what it needs, and to kill the baby for whatever reason.

 

5. Is abortion wrong? Is abortion murder? Explain well. The answer to this question depends on the god/gods in which a person believes. Whenever any question includes right and wrong, this always becomes a question of the god/gods of the person doing the answering.

 

Many folks believe in gods that find no fault with all abortions. Those gods see abortion as a convenience for mothers. Folks who believe in those gods are not doing any wrong by having an abortion.

 

Other folks believe in gods that make distinctions on the basis of how the pregnancy took place. If the girl was raped, abortion is fine to those gods. If the girl wasn’t raped, and if she is old enough to carry the baby without danger to her, those gods don’t permit an abortion.

 

Still other folks believe in gods who see all abortions as being murder, and those who do the abortions as murderers.

 

There are other possibilities just as there are other gods.

 

The God of the Bible also teaches regarding these things. When Rebecca became pregnant, she went to ask Yehovah about it because the pregnancy wasn’t normal; there was much activity inside her. Yehovah told her,

 

Genesis 25:23 “Two races are in thy belly. And two folks will be separated from thine internals.”

 

So, Yehovah called the little ones races and folks—that is, large groups of persons before they were born.

 

When women put their unborn children to death for no other reason than their own convenience, this shows that they are idolaters—believing in idols—in false gods. Anyone who believes in the Gods of Avraham, Isaac and Jacob has no right to condemn or judge idolaters; that is Yehovah’s business, not his/her business, even if the idolaters are in his/her own family.

 

If a teenager or younger girl is too young to safely birth a child, and she becomes pregnant, aborting the child is wise; it isn’t wrong.

 

If parents force a teenager who becomes pregnant to abort her child, and she could safely have the child, and would have taken care of the child, working for its benefit, that is the idolatry of the parents. They are doing that for their own convenience even if the girl was raped. This isn’t the same as cleaning her out right after the rape occurred; such a cleaning out is fine. Whenever parents force a daughter to abort later in pregnancy when the daughter would carry the child with joy (and a little help), they are doing damage to her and to their relationship with her instead of considering her and whatever her faith is (or isn’t). Parents who truly love their children will consider their children in these matters, and will seek what is the highest, best interest of their children without regard to themselves. Of course, such love isn’t so common. Most folks think of themselves and their convenience; most folks are idolaters.

 

The men and boys who get girls pregnant are just as responsible for the pregnancy as the girls, and are often more responsible. If the Bible is Truth, they will be held responsible for all that they do and don’t do.

 

If you are ever asked if abortion is murder, remember that it depends upon the god/gods in which a person believes. Saints in the Bible valued human lives; they didn’t see them as inconveniences to be destroyed. They were out to save lives, not to destroy them. The image of God is on them.

 

6. Why does the text state, “and if he is a daughter…”? That he refers to the human child in a generic way—that is, as a human, not as a girl or boy. We would say, “and if it is a daughter.” But that doesn’t make more sense; the child isn’t an it!

 

7. Why did the king desire for them to keep the girl babies alive? He wanted the girls to grow up and provide more wives for the Egyptians! Many Israeli girls were pretty.

 

8. Verse 17 states, “And the midwives feared the Gods.” What does this mean, and what did they do that showed this? The fear the Gods (that is, the Gods of Avraham, Isaac and Jacob) includes the following:

 

  • It is to be aware that Yehovah (the Gods) will judge each person for what he/she has done and said in life. That awareness will cause a person to be very careful about what he or she does and says.
  • It is to know that Yehovah watches what each person says and does, and sometimes takes action for or against that person. (Some folks take this the wrong way, and think that God is punishing them for something they did or didn’t do when in truth they are just having the normal difficulties of life that have nothing to do with what they did or didn’t do.) Yehovah is very patient, and doesn’t usually respond right away to what folks do. He usually gives folks much time to begin to do right.
  • It is to know that Yehovah has all power, and He sees and knows what is happening. He sometimes takes action for a person using His power to bring things about. (That is why making a request to Him can be very good.)
  • It is to know that forgiveness is with Him. (That cannot be used as an excuse to do wrong!)
  • It is to refuse to do wrong even when the sometimes painful consequences of doing right seem very great. It is better to face God having done right than to face God having done wrong. Doing right sometimes is very expensive and painful, and doing wrong sometimes feels very good. A person who fears Yehovah knows that the good feelings that come with doing wrong will be much later followed by terrible pain that will last forever as a consequence of the sin (if the person doesn’t quit doing the sin and turn to doing right before God).

The midwives feared Yehovah much more than they feared what the king could or would do to them. The king was temporary, and life was temporary, but Yehovah is forever, and everlasting life (or death) is forever. Thus, the midwives did what was right in the eyes of Yehovah instead of what the king commanded them.

 

9. What does “And they did not, just as the king of Egypt spoke unto them” mean? This means that they did exactly what the king told them not to do: they saved the boy children alive.

 

10. How did they cause the children to live? They did what they could be aid the boy children in birth, and they nurtured them rather than killing them.

 

 

 

VII. The Excuse (verses 18-19)

 

The king of Egypt called the midwives. He said to them, “Why did ye this speech, and have caused-the-children-to-live?” The midwives responded unto Pharaoh, “Because the Hebrews are not as women of the Egyptians. For they are alive there! Before the midwife will come unto them, and they childed!”

 

Questions

 

1. Why did the king ask, “Why did ye this speech, and have caused-the-children-to-live?” Didn’t he know the answer? He knew the answer. He wanted to put fear into them. He was very angry, and he wanted them to know that he was very angry.

 

2. What does “Because the Hebrews [fem.] are not as women of the Egyptians. For they are alive there!” mean, and who are they in, “For they are alive there”? The Hebrew women are much tougher than the Egyptian women. They refer to the boy babies. They are alive there, indicating that the tough Israeli women already have living baby boys that they birthed without the midwives being present.

 

3. The midwives said, “Before the midwife will come unto them, and they childed!” Is this the truth? No! The midwives lied to the king. Midwives won’t be late for births if they can help it. What they said was a lie.

 

4. If what the midwives said was a lie, was that sin? No! It was an act of righteousness! (See how Elohim responds to see whether it is sin or not.) They lied to save the lives of innocent ones from the hands of guilty ones. That is always right to do before Yehovah!

 

5. At some time, you will probably hear a discussion like this: “When does life begin? Does it begin at conception, or at birth?” If you do, what is the right answer? The right answer is this: life does not begin at conception, and it does not begin at birth. It begins at Adam. The sperm and the egg that form the human embryo (the little baby immediately after fertilization) were already alive! Human life began with Adam, and that is the only right answer.

 

Yehovah places the soul (including the personality) of the little one after conception—after the egg and sperm connect to begin to form the human embryo, the littlest stage of the baby. Life is already there, however.

 

 

 

VIII. Yehovah’s Response (verses 20-21)

 

Elohim did good to the midwives. The people of Israel multiplied. They continued to grow even stronger. What happened next was because the midwives feared the Gods: Yehovah made houses to them!

 

Questions

 

1. In what ways did Elohim do good to the midwives? The text only mentions one way: He made houses to them. He did other things for them besides this. He made certain that the midwives were able to continue being midwives, and He provided for them so that they prospered. The king could have had them arrested and tortured or killed. Instead, the midwives did very well, and the people of Israel multiplied.

 

2. Did Yehovah want the Israelis to multiply in Egypt? Yes! That is why He sent them there!

 

3. Why did the Israelis become so strong (“they strengthened very much!”)? The very hard work built their muscles and their minds! Instead of hurting them, it did them much good!

 

4. What does “And he was” mean? This means that the event about to be described took place: the event was.

 

5. Why does the text again mention, “the midwives feared the Gods”? If something is mentioned twice in the Bible, it is very important! These women continued to fear the Elohim, and they continued to only do right. Israel prospered into a great race because of them!

 

6. What does “He made houses to them” mean? I can only take this in two different ways:

 

  • Yehovah built them houses in which to live; they came and found those pre-built houses waiting for them to occupy them.
  • Yehovah gave these woman households with many children of their own so that these women became mothers, grandmothers, great grandmothers, etc. with many offspring.

I don’t assume that Yehovah pre-built physical houses for them in which to live; I am certain that he gave these women many offspring who were a great delight to these women who risked their lives for Yehovah’s people Israel!

 

Exodus 1:1 The Midwives

The Midwives

 

Background and Printed Text: Exodus 1:1-21

 

Exodus 1:1 And these are the names of the children of Israel coming Egyptward with He-Will-Heel [Jacob]. They came, a man and His house: 2They-Saw-A-Son [Reuben], Hearkening [Shimon], My-Joined-[One] [Levi] and He-Confessed-Yehovah [Judah], 3There-Is-A-Wage [Issachar], They-Shall-Cohabit [Zebulun] and Son-Of-Right [Benjamin], 4Adjudicator [Dan] and My-Wrestling [Naphtali], Troop [Gad] and Happy [Asher]. 5And he was, every being exiting from the thigh of He-Will-Heel [Jacob]: seventy being(s). And He-Will-Gather [Joseph] was in Egypt.

 

6And He-Will-Gather [Joseph] died, and all his brethren, and all that generation.

 

7And the children of Israel were fruitful. And they swarmed. And they multiplied. And they became very very strong! And the land filled them!

 

8And a new king arose over Egypt who didn’t know He-Will-Gather [Joseph]. 9And he said unto his people, “Behold, the people of the children of Israel is multiple and stronger than we are! 10Come-on! We shall wisely-deal to him lest he will multiply. And he shall be, when they shall happen a war, and he will be gathered—even he—upon our enemies! And he will fight into us! And he will ascend from the land!” 11And they set princes of slave-labour over him in order to humiliate him via their burdens.

 

And he built cities of warehouses to Pharaoh: Pithom and Raamses. 12And whenever they will humiliate him, established, he will multiply. And established, he will spread! And they were cut-off from the faces of the children of Israel! 13And the Egyptians slave-drove the children of Israel via crushing. 14And they embittered their lives via hard slavery: via mortar and via bricks and via every slavery in the field with all their slavery that they slaved via them, via crushing.

 

15And the king of Egypt said to the Hebrew midwives (the one whose name is Pretty [Shifrah] and the second whose name is Groan [Puah])─ 16and he said, “When ye child the Hebrews [fem.], and ye shall see upon the stones. If he is a son, and ye shall kill him! And if he is a daughter, and he shall live.”

 

17And the midwives feared the Gods. And they did not, just as the king of Egypt spoke unto them. And they caused-the-children-to-live.

 

18And the king of Egypt called to the midwives. And he said to them, “Why did ye this speech, and have caused-the-children-to-live?” 19And the midwives said unto Pharaoh, “Because the Hebrews [fem.] are not as women of the Egyptians [fem.]. For they are alive there! Before the midwife will come unto them, and they childed!”

 

20And Elohim good-did to the midwives. And the people multiplied. And they strengthened very-much! 21And he was. For the midwives feared the Gods. And He made houses to them.

 

 

 

I. The Scene (verses 1-5)

 

The text starts with an overview of the children of Israel who arrived in Egypt. A list is given of the sons.

 

A total of seventy folks who came out of Jacob’s thigh came to Egypt. Joseph was already there.

 

Questions

 

1. How many of Jacob’s children went to Egypt?

 

2. Verse 5 states that these all came out of Jacob’s thigh. What does coming out of his thigh mean, and why did the Bible give this piece of information?

 

 

 

II. The Change of Scene (verse 6)

 

Verse 6 is a short scene change. Joseph died, along with all that generation.

 

Questions

 

1. What is so important about telling readers that Joseph and all his brethren died?

 

2. The text states that Joseph and all his brethren died, “and all that generation.” Why did Yehovah need to mention that all that generation died? Wasn’t that obvious?

 

 

 

III. The Multiplication (verse 7)

 

The children of Israel were fruitful—they were productive. They swarmed in groups, and they multiplied, having many children. They also became physically and mentally very strong. The land filled them—they had plenty to eat—and they filled the land with a great population.

 

Questions

 

1. What does being fruitful really mean in the Bible?

 

2. What does “they swarmed” mean?

 

3. What does “they multiplied” mean?

 

4. What is significant about their becoming very very strong?

 

5. The text states, “And the land filled them!” What does this mean?

 

 

 

IV. New King; New Fear (verses 8-11)

 

The new king was the new Pharaoh over Egypt. He didn’t know Joseph.

 

He told his people of Egypt, “Behold, the people of the children of Israel is multiple and stronger than we are! Come-on! We shall wisely-deal to [with] him lest he will multiply. And he shall be, when they shall happen a war, and he will be gathered—even he—upon our enemies! And he will fight into us! And he will ascend from the land!” They set princes over the Jewish slave labour pools in order to humiliate Israel by means of the burdens put on Israel.

 

Questions

 

1. What is important about there being a new king (pharaoh) who didn’t know Joseph?

 

2. Why did this new king talk to his people about the Israelis?

 

3. What did the king and the Egyptians fear that the Israelis might do using their numbers and strength?

 

4. Was the fear of the Egyptians regarding the Israelis in war a reasonable fear?

 

5. The pharaoh said, “Come-on! We shall wisely-deal to him lest he will multiply.” Wasn’t the people of Israel already multiplying?

 

6. What was the official Egyptian answer to controlling the population growth and the strengthening of the Israelis?

 

 

 

V. Building Projects (verses 11-14)

 

Israel built two cities that held warehouses for Egypt: Pithom and Raamses.

 

Whenever the Egyptian slave captains humiliated Israel, Israel multiplied—had more children. Israel spread throughout Egypt. Finally, the Egyptians had to go through Jewish groups and faces to visit other Egyptians!

 

The Egyptians used crushing means to slave-drive the Israelis to work harder and harder. They made their lives bitter by the hardness of their slavery: by means of mortal and bricks and every type of labour in the field. They used crushing force to tell them what to do and where to go.

 

Questions

 

1. Who is he in, “And he built cities of warehouses to Pharaoh: Pithom and Raamses”?

 

2. The text states, “And whenever they will humiliate him, established, he will multiply.” Why did Israel multiply under humiliation?

 

3. Why did Israel spread under humiliation?

 

4. Who is they in, “And they were cut-off from the faces of the children of Israel,” and what was occurring?

 

5. What was the response to this fear of the Egyptians?

 

6. What does embittered mean?

 

7. What is mortar?

 

8. How are bricks made?

 

9. Who made these bricks?

 

10. What did the Israelis have to do that was included in “every slavery in the field”?

 

11. What does via crushing mean?

 

 

 

VI. Abortion (verses 15-17)

 

The king of Egypt had a very modern idea for birth control. He spoke to the two heads of the Hebrew midwives (who birthed the babies)—to Pretty and to Groan, “When ye child the Hebrews, and ye shall see the gender of the baby upon the birthing stones. If he is a son, and ye shall kill him! And if he is a daughter, and he shall live.”

 

The midwives feared the Gods—Elohim—the Gods of Avraham, Isaac and Jacob. They did exactly what the king of Egypt didn’t speak unto them to do! They made certain that the children lived.

 

Questions

 

1. Why do you suppose that one girl baby had been named Pretty and another Groan at this time?

 

2. Why did the king call just two women of the midwives?

 

3. What are the stones in, “ye shall see upon the stones”?

 

4. The king said, “If he is a son, and ye shall kill him!” What was he commanding the midwives to do?

 

5. Is abortion wrong? Is abortion murder? Explain well.

 

6. Why does the text state, “and if he is a daughter…”?

 

7. Why did the king desire for them to keep the girl babies alive?

 

8. Verse 17 states, “And the midwives feared the Gods.” What does this mean, and what did they do that showed this?

 

9. What does “And they did not, just as the king of Egypt spoke unto them” mean?

 

10. How did they cause the children to live?

 

 

 

VII. The Excuse (verses 18-19)

 

The king of Egypt called the midwives. He said to them, “Why did ye this speech, and have caused-the-children-to-live?” The midwives responded unto Pharaoh, “Because the Hebrews are not as women of the Egyptians. For they are alive there! Before the midwife will come unto them, and they childed!”

 

Questions

 

1. Why did the king ask, “Why did ye this speech, and have caused-the-children-to-live?” Didn’t he know the answer?

 

2. What does “Because the Hebrews [fem.] are not as women of the Egyptians. For they are alive there!” mean, and who are they in, “For they are alive there”?

 

3. The midwives said, “Before the midwife will come unto them, and they childed!” Is this the truth?

 

4. If what the midwives said was a lie, was that sin?

 

5. At some time, you will probably hear a discussion like this: “When does life begin? Does it begin at conception, or at birth?” If you do, what is the right answer?

 

 

 

VIII. Yehovah’s Response (verses 20-21)

 

Elohim did good to the midwives. The people of Israel multiplied. They continued to grow even stronger. What happened next was because the midwives feared the Gods: Yehovah made houses to them!

 

Questions

 

1. In what ways did Elohim do good to the midwives?

 

2. Did Yehovah want the Israelis to multiply in Egypt?

 

3. Why did the Israelis become so strong (“they strengthened very much!”)?

 

4. What does “And he was” mean?

 

5. Why does the text again mention, “the midwives feared the Gods”?

 

6. What does “He made houses to them” mean?

 

Jonah QA Supplied

Jonah Chapter 1

 

And the speech of Yehovah was unto Dove [Yonah] son of My-Two-Truths [Amee-tai] to say, 2 “Arise! Walk unto Neen-vay the big city! And call upon her that their bad ascended to my faces!” 3And Dove [Yonah] arose to flee to Tarsheesh from the faces of Yehovah!

 

And he descended to Yaffo. And he found a ship. She went to Tarsheesh. And he gave her wage. And he descended into her to come with them to Tarsheesh from the faces of Yehovah.

 

4And Yehovah threw a big wind unto the sea! And a big storm was in the sea! And the ship thought to be broken! 5And the saltees feared! And they screamed, a man unto his gods! And they threw the utensils that are in the ship unto the sea to lighten from upon them. And Dove [Yonah] descended unto the thighs of the wainscoting. And lay down. And he slept.

 

6And the great-one of the company approached unto him. And he said to him, “What is to thee, sleeper? Arise! Call unto thy gods! Perhaps the gods will gleam to us, and we will not perish!”

 

7And they said, a man unto his neighbour, “Go-ye! And we have thrown-down lots. And we have known on account of whom this bad is to us!” And they threw-down lots. And the lot fell upon Dove [Yonah].

 

8And they said unto him, “Tell to us, na, via what—for whom this bad is to us. What is thine errand? And from where wilt thou come? What is thy land? And where from this—a people—art thou?” 9And he said unto them, “I am Hebrew. And I fear Yehovah Gods of the heavens Who made the sea and the dry!” 10And the men feared a big fear!

 

And they said unto him, “What is this thou hast done?” For the men knew that he fled from the faces of Yehovah, because he told to them. 11And they said unto him, “What will we do to thee, and the sea has calmed from upon us?” For the sea is walking and tempestuous. 12And he said unto them, “Lift ye me, and throw me unto the sea. And the sea has calmed from upon you. For I know that this big tempest is upon you on account of me!”

 

13And the men dug to return unto the dry. And they were not able. For the sea is walking and tempestuous upon them. 14And they called unto Yehovah! And they said, “Oh, Yehovah! We, na, will not perish via the being of this man! And do not give innocent blood upon us! For Thou, Yehovah, Thou hast done just as Thou hast desired!”

 

15And they lifted Dove [Yonah]. And they threw him unto the sea. And the sea stood from his rage! 16And the men feared Yehovah a big fear! And they sacrificed a sacrifice to Yehovah. And they vowed vows.

 

 

 

I. Walking Orders (verses 1-3)

 

Yehovah told Yonah the son of Ameetai to arise and walk unto the big city of Nineveh. He must loudly call upon the city that the bad of its citizens ascended to Yehovah’s faces. Upon hearing this, Yonah arose to flee to Tarshish which is in the opposite direction! He desired to get away from the faces of Yehovah.

 

Questions

 

1. What does Yonah mean? It means dove, referring to the very gentle bird.

 

2. If Ameetai means My two truths, to what would these truths refer? Yehovah only has one Truth. I don’t know what the parents of Yonah’s father were thinking when they named him My Two Truths. If the dotting of the Hebrew language is wrong, and his name was really Ameetee, which would mean My Truth, that would make more sense, and it would be spelled the same. Then, Yonah would be Dove, son of My Truth. That would describe a gentle person who is a son of Messiah, Who is the Truth.

 

3. How far was Nineveh from Israel? It was and is about 750 miles!

 

4. Why did Yehovah desire Yonah to walk to the big city of Nineveh instead of riding? The text doesn’t tell why. I propose that Yonah stayed as a guest of folks on the way, and could speak to guests as a prophet of Yehovah. Walking would mean more stops and more opportunities.

 

5. How long would a journey of this distance take by foot if a person can walk 25 miles in a day, staying as a guest at each stop for one day? 25 goes into 750 30 times. If Yonah stayed one day as a guest at each place that he stopped, it would double the time to 60 days: two full months!

 

6. Why was the size of Nineveh so unusual back then? Large cities require services that were just not easily done. For examples,

 

  • There must be a regular and good food supply for folks living in the densely populated parts of the city, since folks there won’t be able to grow all their own food.
  • There must be a good way to transport the food to the inhabitants.
  • There must be good sewage systems, or else folks will begin to get sick.
  • Water supplies must be kept separate from the sewage systems, or else folks will die.
  • There must be good law enforcement with a very strong leader (like a king), or else violence and lawlessness will grow rapidly. Good law enforcement usually means that folks know each other (so that they will know if a stranger comes who might rob people and do violence).
  • There must be a uniform view of religion and cultures, or else anger will rise as folks disagree, and violence will result.

There are many other requirements that would have made a very large city impossible in most parts of the world. The Nineveh region must have been very fertile, giving excellent crops in order to support such a large city.

 

7. To what does bad refer in, “And call upon her that their bad ascended to my faces”? It refers to harm, destruction, the results of violence, the results of mistreatment of others, etc. The word never refers directly to sin, but instead to what sin produces: ruin.

 

8. Why did Yehovah say that their bad ascended to His faces? What does that mean? This describes bad as if it is like smoke that ascends. It comes up into Yehovah’s faces, getting into His eyes and into His nostrils, and it greatly angers Him.

 

9. Why did Yonah arise to flee to Tarshish, which is in the opposite direction? What did he have against obeying Yehovah? Yonah was a prophet. As a prophet, he knew the speeches of Yehovah against Israel and Israel’s sins. He knew that Nineveh would later attack Israel, and Yehovah would give victory to Nineveh. He knew that the Ninevite warriors were very cruel, because he had heard of how the Ninevite warriors enjoyed being cruel to those they captured. He knew that doing anything to save Nineveh from destruction would be being a traitor against Israel! It would be like saving Nazi Germany from destruction knowing what the Nazis would do to the Jews! Thus, Yonah had no intention of obeying these orders. He would much rather die than help the worst enemies of Israel.

 

10. Why does the text read, “And Yonah arose to flee to Tarshish from the faces of Yehovah” instead of “And Yonah arose to flee to Tarshish from Yehovah”? Yehovah must have appeared to Yonah. Yonah desired to get away from Yehovah and His faces. The only way he figured to do this was to leave Israel and become part of other peoples.

 

11. Where is Tarshish? I don’t know the exact location. Some have proposed that it was in Spain! That would be in the opposite direction from Nineveh!

 

 

 

II. Going on a Cruise (verse 3)

 

Yonah went down to Yaffo in Israel. He found and boarded a ship going to Tarshish; he paid the passenger fare. He went below deck to travel with them to Tarshish from the faces of Yehovah.

 

Questions

 

1. Where is Yaffo? Find Joppa on the seacoast in the map below (Copyright Access Foundation, Zaine Ridling, Ph.D. Editor):

 

Find Yaffo

 

It is called Yaffo in Hebrew.

 

2. What does Yaffo mean? It means beautiful. It is really a pretty place with orange groves. (Yaffo oranges are sometimes available in our grocery stores!)

 

3. What does “and he gave her wage” mean? This means that he paid the fare for the voyage.

 

4. Who is her in, “And he descended into her”? She is the ship!

 

5. Identify them in, “…to come with them to Tarshish…”: They are the sailors.

 

6. Did Yonah really think that he could escape from the faces of Yehovah? Yonah was willing to bet the price of the voyage to find out!

 

III. The Violent Storm (verses 4-5)

 

Yehovah threw a big wind unto the sea! That was a terrific storm. Those in the ship thought it would be broken. The saltees (sailors) feared. Each saltee screamed to his own gods.

 

They then started throwing items overboard in order to lighten the ship.

 

Yonah went down into the hold of the ship, into the wainscoting. He lay down and went to sleep!

 

Questions

 

1. Why did Yehovah throw a big wind unto the sea? Yehovah’s purpose was to stop the ship from progressing to Tarshish as long as Yonah was onboard.

 

2. Why did He add a big storm? Yehovah also desired to cause the sailors much fear. Storms were among their worst fears, since many sailors before them had died in storms.

 

3. Whenever there are big winds and storms at sea, does Yehovah cause them? Yehovah rarely does this type of action. Big winds and storms can be part of natural weather cycles and seasons. There are angels who are in charge of the four great winds on the planet who also can affect the winds:

 

Revelation 7:1 And after these things I saw four angels standing on the four corners of the earth, holding the four winds of the earth so that the wind will not blow on the earth nor on the sea nor on any tree.

 

These angels only can act in unusual ways when they have commands or permission to do so.

 

4. What does “the ship thought to be broken” mean? This means that the crew of the ship thought that the ship would be destroyed by the waves tearing the ship into pieces.

 

5. What is a saltee? This is a sailor who sails the oceans. Since the oceans are salt water, the sailors were called saltees.

 

6. How many different gods did the sailors use? Each sailor had his own god or gods, though some sailors would use the same gods. They felt that they needed their gods in times of distress and great danger. A few sailors might have been without gods, but when the crisis of death by drowning seemed very possible, even godless sailors usually called out to the gods.

 

7. Why did the sailors scream? Were they that easily made frightened? They were screaming, but not out of fear as in a scary movie; they were screaming because of the roaring of the winds and the waves! They could not be heard without screaming! Thus, they screamed to their gods, hoping their gods would hear and hearken to them.

 

8. What are utensils? They are pieces of equipment. The sailors threw utensils (that they were transporting) into the sea to lighten the ship so that it might remain afloat.

 

9. What is wainscoting? It is like paneling. It is wood that makes rooms more comfortable and practical. In a ship, it would be the wood paneling that covers the ribs, walls and support beams in the hull of the ship so that the hold area (the lower area) can be used for storing goods in a practical way.

 

10. What are the thighs of the wainscoting? I propose that these thighs are where the ribs of the hull are located. If this is correct, Yonah went behind the wainscoting (paneling) to areas where he could be out of the way, and perhaps not be found.

 

11. Why did Yonah descend unto the thighs of the wainscoting to lie down and to sleep? Yonah was depressed! Folks who are depressed are often very tired or sleepy. He knew what he was doing, and he knew he was the cause of the problems. He didn’t want to face the problems with the sailors. He just wanted to sleep.

 

12. How could he sleep though this motion and danger? As I proposed above, he was depressed. That made sleep come easily to him.

 

 

 

IV. Join Us in Prayer! (verse 6)

 

The captain over the sailors approached Yonah. He said to him, “What is to thee, sleeper? Arise! Call unto thy gods! Perhaps the gods will gleam at us, and we will not perish!”

 

Questions

 

1. Who is the great one of the company? He is the captain of the ship, since the company is the one to whom the rest are tied (as with a rope), and since he is also the great one of the rope. (The Hebrew word khevel can mean a cord or rope, and can also mean a band or company where band refers to a group held together by some purpose.)

 

2. How did the great one of the company find Yonah? He went looking for this passenger who disappeared during the storm! The captain was responsible to not lose anyone on the ship if at all possible. Also, he wanted Yonah to also call unto his gods!

 

3. What gods did the captain think that Yonah had? He thought Yonah had gods just like the sailors and he had: personal gods. (Be wary of the god/gods of anyone who has a personal god, because that god/those gods will be an idol/idols.)

 

4. What does “gleam to us” mean? This means to shine light to us—give recognize us and give us the reason for this. It is like what one does who knows someone else is in the dark, and turns on a flashlight (torch) for the person.

 

5. If the gods will gleam on them, according to the captain, what will happen? They will not perish.

 

V. Lots of Dice (verse 7)

 

Each man on board spoke to others about throwing dice to find out who is responsible for this bad situation. They did so; the dice indicated that Yonah was responsible.

 

Questions

 

1. What are lots in the Bible? They are dice—they are used to figure out the will of the gods/Gods (the false gods or the real and living Gods Yehovah).

 

2. Where lots good indicators of the will of the gods or of Yehovah?

 

Proverbs 16:33 He casts the lot into a bosom. And all his justice is from Yehovah!

 

This text refers to a person during the Tribulation. Yehovah has often guided the lot before this time. For example, the apostles (missionaries) of Yehovah used it to determine who would replace Judas Iscariot after he committed suicide:

 

Acts 1:26 And they gave forth their lots; and the lot fell upon Matthias; and he was numbered with the eleven apostles.

 

Yehovah commanded Moshe to divide the Land of Israel by lot when the Israelis finally went into the land:

 

Numbers 26:55 And the land shall be divided by lot.

 

Those who used false gods also used the lot to determine the will of the gods, and Yehovah sometimes guided those lots so that Yehovah’s desire would be done by idolaters. (This will occur in this text we are considering.)

 

3. The sailors seemed certain that they could determine who was responsible for “this bad” being to them by casing lots. Were they right to be so certain? They were idolaters, and they were superstitious. Yet, they were right in this case, since Yehovah would make certain that the lot pointed out the right person! This will show the careful reader that Yehovah sometimes uses tools of paganism (tools of beliefs in false gods) to guide pagan idolaters to do Yehovah’s will!

 

4. How could they throw down lots when the winds were tossing the ship so hard, that it was about to be broken in pieces? They went to a place where the lots wouldn’t be lost or washed overboard, like down in the ship’s hold, and they threw them there.

 

5. By what process did they use the dice to determine that Yonah was the one? I don’t know. The Bible doesn’t tell what the process was. (If the Bible had shown the process, folks would read this text and would copy the process to find the supposed will of God for their own lives! That would be just like how many use the rest of the Bible for the same purpose, and this is also idolatry! The Bible’s purpose isn’t to teach idolatry, but rather Truth.)

 

 

 

VI. The Interrogation and Fear (verses 8-10)

 

The men said to Yonah, “Tell to us, na, via what—for whom this bad is to us? What is thine errand? And from where wilt thou come? What is thy land? And where from this—a people—art thou?” His response was, “I am Hebrew. And I fear Yehovah Gods of the heavens Who made the sea and the dry!” This caused the men to greatly fear.

 

Questions

 

1. What does na mean in Hebrew? It is a little word (classified in grammar as a particle—a word that only has one form) that indicates that the speaker is speaking without anger. These men were shouting very loud because of the winds and the terrible noise. They didn’t want Yonah to think that they were angry with him, so they used the word na.

 

2. Why does the sentence, “Tell to us, na, via what—for whom this bad is to us” seem so broken up? It is broken up because the men were speaking very fast, and they had to have all the information right away! Several of them were speaking at the same time! They were firing questions at Yonah!

 

3. What did they mean by, “Tell to us, na, via what…”? They were speaking of the bad (the bad situation), and by whose hand or by what reason this bad was coming against them and the ship.

 

4. What did they mean by, “Tell to us for whom this bad is to us”? They desired to know who was responsible for this terrible situation.

 

5. What did they mean by, “What is thine errand?” They meant something like this: “Where are you going, and for what purpose are you going there?”

 

6. What did they mean by, “And from where wilt thou come? What is thy land?” They figured that they could learn much by finding out the land from which this passenger (Yonah) had come. A land tends to have its own set of gods!

 

7. What did they mean by, “And where from this—a people—art thou?” This refers to the people, not the land. (I can tell because the word people is masculine singular, the word land is feminine singular, and the word this is masculine singular. It must refer to something that is masculine singular; people is masculine singular.) They were asking Yonah the location of the people from which he came. They figured they could learn why the gods are so angry with Yonah if they knew this information.

 

8. Which of their questions did Yonah answer when he said, “I am a Hebrew”? He was answering the questions about the people from which he came and the land from which he came.

 

9. What does being a Hebrew mean? It means that the person is from Avraham, Isaac and Jacob (though it originally meant that the person was from one of Avraham’s ancestors named Ever). Folks knew what a Hebrew was in the days of Yonah. It was like saying, “I am a Jew” or “I am an Israeli.”

 

10. Which of their questions was Yonah answering when he said, “And I fear Yehovah Gods of the heavens Who made the sea and the dry”? He was indirectly answering, “Tell to us, na, via what—for whom this bad is to us.” 

 

11. Why did the men fear a big fear when they heard Yonah’s answer? Yonah told them more than just which God he feared. The text next states, “For the men knew that he fled from the faces of Yehovah, because he told to them.” That was the information that caused them to greatly fear! (A reader must sometimes read ahead to get answers to questions!)

 

 

 

VII. The Solution (verses 10-12)

 

Now the men wanted to know what Yonah had done to bring this wrath on them all. Yonah had told them that he fled from the faces of Yehovah. They therefore asked the question, “What will we do to thee, and the sea has calmed from upon us?” The sea kept on walking—with huge waves—and was tempestuous—very violent.

 

Yonah gave them the steps: “Lift ye me, and throw me unto the sea. And the sea has calmed from upon you. For I know that this big tempest is upon you on account of me!”

 

Questions

 

1. What did they mean by, “What is this thou hast done?” They wanted to know if Yonah understood what he was causing: that he was causing all the sailors to be killed because he ran from the faces of Yehovah! Yonah was getting them all killed because of this!

 

2. Why did Yonah tell the men that he fled from the faces of Yehovah? He had no reason to hide this information, and he had no reason to lie. He knew he was endangering them all, and Yonah feared Yehovah. Therefore, he told the truth to these innocent idolaters.

 

3. What were they asking Yonah when they asked, “What will we do to thee, and the sea has calmed from upon us?” They were asking Yonah to tell them what to do to Yonah in order to stop the fury of this Yehovah the Gods of the heavens Who made the sea and the dry! They were asking Yonah for the solution to the problem that Yonah had caused!

 

4. What does “For the sea is walking and tempestuous” mean? The sea is walking means that the waves are tall and very active, moving in a particular direction. The sea is tempestuous means that it is dangerously active from storms and winds.

 

5. Who said, “For the sea is walking and tempestuous”? I didn’t put this into the quotes because I couldn’t tell whether the Spirit of God, Who is the narrator, was saying this, or whether the sailors were saying this. I just know that it is true.

 

6. Why did Yonah say, “Lift ye me, and throw me unto the sea. And the sea has calmed from upon you”? Was he trying to get himself killed? Yonah did not mind dying (rather than doing the errand that Yehovah assigned to him), and he didn’t want the sailors to die. They were trying very hard to keep themselves and him alive. He therefore candidly (openly) told them the solution to the problem.

 

7. How did Yonah know that this would calm the sea? Yonah was a prophet! He knew very well that Yehovah was doing all this on account of him, and he also had the very words of Yehovah regarding this situation. He said, “For I know that this big tempest is upon you on account of me!”

 

8. Why would Yehovah sink a ship, kill all the crew, and cause great loss of the items being shipped just because one person isn’t doing what He wants? Is this fair? First, Yehovah almost never deals in fairness! If He had been fair, humans would have been destroyed long ago! Instead, He often deals in mercy, and He always deals with Grace—that is, with the greatest zeal to do the very best for those who do right, and to bring bad upon those who insist on doing wrong after giving them time to turn. Never view the actions of God from the angle of fairness. Yehovah is far better than that.

 

Yehovah hasn’t sunk the ship yet, and He hasn’t killed all the crew. The great loss of items being shipped can always occur from a storm at sea, and that price will be very small compared to the good results that will soon occur in this true story. Yehovah will sometimes change entire governments just for the sake and benefit of one person. He does good.

 

 

 

VIII. The Attempt and the Plea (verses 13-14)

 

The men dug with their oars, pulling as hard as they could to get to dry land. They could not. The Ship didn’t move toward land. The sea walked with huge waves, and the violent winds kept them out at sea.

 

The men then called to Yehovah. The started with, “Oh, Yehovah! We, na, will not perish via the being of this man!” They didn’t want to die because of what Yonah had done.

 

They then said, “And do not give innocent blood upon us!” They didn’t want to be held responsible for killing Yonah.

 

They reminded Yehovah, “For Thou, Yehovah, Thou hast done just as Thou hast desired!”

 

Questions

 

1. What did they dig? Rowing very hard is like digging into the waters!

 

2. What does “to return unto the dry” mean? The dry refers to the dry land. They were trying to get to shore!

 

3. Why weren’t they able (to return to shore)? Yehovah made certain that the winds blew the ship from the land and kept them in danger in order for them to be forced to do what they must do next.

 

4. Why does the text repeat, “For the sea is walking and tempestuous upon them”? Whenever the Bible repeats something, it tells the reader that this was very important. The sea is fighting against them by walking its waves in the opposite direction from land and in its attacks against the ship! The sea is obeying Yehovah.

 

5. Why did the sailors call to Yehovah? Didn’t they still have their own gods? Their own gods weren’t working. The Gods of Yonah, Yehovah, was the cause! (Gods is pluralbecause Yehovah is the God of the sea, the God of the land, the God of … In other words, He is all the true Gods in one!) Calling out to Yehovah made sense.

 

6. What did the sailors mean by, “Oh, Yehovah! We, na, will not perish via the being of this man”? This is the wording for the request in Hebrew. We might say, “Oh Yehovah, don’t let us perish because of the life of this man,” or, “Don’t kill us because this man did wrong,” but the sailors showed much more respect in their answer. “We will not perish” is a request. “…via the being of this man” isn’t accusing Yonah, but it is pointing out him and his physical being as the cause of the problem.

 

7. What did they mean by, “And do not give innocent blood upon us”? We wouldn’t use the word give in this way; we might say, “And don’t hold us responsible for killing an innocent man.” They knew they had to kill Yonah by throwing him overboard; yet, they knew that this was a very wrong act. If they didn’t do it, however, all would die. It was a terrible dilemma for these sailors. They were asking to not be held accountable for what they were about to do.

 

8. What where they saying when they said, “For Thou, Yehovah, Thou hast done just as Thou hast desired”? They were saying that Yehovah did exactly what He wanted to do, and throwing Yonah overboard was His will, not their will.

 

 

 

IX. Man Overboard! (verses 15-16)

 

The sailors lifted Yonah, and they threw him unto the sea! The sea immediately stopped raging! The waters became calm.

 

The men feared Yehovah with a very big fear. They sacrificed a sacrifice to Yehovah on the ship, and they vowed vows to Yehovah.

 

Questions

 

1. What does “And the sea stood from his rage” mean? That means that the sea stopped being angry, and became calm.

 

2. Was the sea truly enraged? The sea was obeying orders from Yehovah! Yehovah had told the winds and the sea to attack that ship! The sea was like an angry dog being told to attack. Once Yonah was thrown overboard, the sea’s work was finished.

 

3. Does the sea really think and act like a person? If the sea can obey, it can be like a person! Lands can make decisions and do things; that is why the location, Mount Zion, and Yehovah speak together (see Isaiah 49:14—“And Zion said, ‘Yehovah has forsaken me, and my Lord hath forgotten me!’”). If lands can, the sea can also! Yehovah has made these so that they interact with the creatures in them, and they interact with man. The very soil outside is alive, and you can work it and beautify it. (The soil likes that.)

 

4. Why did the men fear Yehovah with a big fear? The immediate calming of the sea was more frightening than the storm! They now knew that Yehovah truly is the God of the sea in a way that they had never seen any of their own gods perform! Who is this God who can control the sea with such power?

 

5. How did they do a sacrifice to Yehovah when they were onboard the ship? The deck was quite wet, and the men knew how to safely cook an animal on the ship. They slaughtered a lamb, a goat, or some animal that was on the ship and being transported with them, and they did a sacrifice right there on the deck!

 

6. What is the purpose of doing a sacrifice? A sacrifice is always a picture of something else. It isn’t about the animal; it is showing something and giving something to a god or to God. The animal represents someone or a group that is far more important than the animal, and eating the animal is identifying with that more important person or group.

 

The text doesn’t tell me why they did a sacrifice to Yehovah. I can suspect that it was a sacrifice for their own sins. The vows (next) give more information.

 

7. What did they vow, and why did they vow? The text doesn’t say what they individually vowed, but each sailor made his own vows to Yehovah. They each connected themselves to Yehovah by their vows.

 

8. What is a vow? It is much more than a promise in this way: it asks for a god or God to watch and see that the vow will be done. If the person doesn’t do the vow, the person is asking the god or God to judge the person guilty for lying to the god or to God! Thus, a vow involves a god or the True God in the promise.

 

9. Does this mean that the sailors became fearers of Yehovah, including obtaining salvation from their sins and getting everlasting life? The sailors whose faith didn’t fail over time indeed did become saved, and do have everlasting life! When I mentioned above that throwing items overboard was a small price to pay for what happened next, I am referring to the salvation of some of these men (if not all of them). Yonah ran the other way, and the result was the salvation of at least some of these sailors!

 

 

Jonah Chapter 2

1And Yehovah measured a big fish to swallow Dove [Yonah]. And Dove [Yonah] was in the internals of the fish three days and three nights.

 

2And Dove [Yonah] rolled-himself unto Yehovah his Gods from the internals of the fish. 3And he said, “I called unto Yehovah from tribulation to me! And He answered/humbled me! I screamed from the belly of Sheol! Thou didst hearken-to my voice!

 

4 “Thou didst sling me submerged into the heart of the seas. And a river will surround me! All thy breakers and thy waves crossed-over upon me. 5And I, I said I’ve been forced-out from straight-in-front-of Thine eyes! But I will accrue to look unto the Temple of Thy Holy-One!

 

6 “Waters encircled me unto a being! The deep will surround me! A reed was wrapped to my head. 7I descended the land with her bars to the cuttings of the mountains for my sake to Hider. And Thou hast made-my-lives-ascend from destruction, Yehovah my Gods, 8when my being fainted upon me. I remembered Yehovah! And my rolling came unto Thee—unto the Temple of Thy Holy-One!

 

9 “Guards of breaths of vanity shall forsake their grace!

 

10 “And I, I will sacrifice to Thee via the voice of confession! I will make peace what I vowed!”

 

“Her Salvation is to Yehovah!”

 

11And Yehovah said to the fish, and he vomited Dove [Yonah] unto the dry.

 

 

 

I. Kosher Fish (verse 1)

 

Yehovah measured a big fish (so that Yonah would fit) to swallow Yonah. Yonah was inside this fish three days and three nights.

 

Questions

 

1. Why did Yehovah have to measure the big fish? The fish could not be a whale; whales don’t swallow large objects. Some whales are filter feeds, meaning that they feed on the smallest plants and animals in the ocean by swallowing ocean water, and their system filters the small plants and animals for digestion. In order for a fish to swallow a human, the fish must be of a variety of sea creatures that swallows large fish whole. One type of fish that can grow very large in the right environment is a goldfish! There are other fish that can become very large. Yehovah chose one of the fish that swallows food whole, and He made certain that it measured the right size to swallow Yonah.

 

2. What is significant about his being in the fish three days and three nights? That will be the same length of time that Yeshua will be in Sheol, in the heart of the earth after He is crucified:

 

Matthew 12:40 For as Yonah was in the fish’s belly three days and three nights, so shall the Son of man be in the heart of the earth three days and three nights.

 

 

 

II. Prophetic Prayer (verses 2-3)

 

Yonah rolled himself (giving details as he prayed) unto Yehovah his Gods from inside the fish.

 

He said, “I called unto Yehovah from tribulation to me!” He was in the Tribulation.

 

“And He answered/humbled me!” Yehovah responded by both answering and humbling him.

 

“I screamed from the belly of Sheol!” He was in Sheol, and thus was dead.

 

“Thou didst hearken-to my voice!” Thus, whatever he asked was granted.

 

Questions

 

1. Was Yonah alive in the internals of the fish, or was he dead? This verse describes that he “rolled himself” (in prayer) from the internals of the fish. That was where he was located. I have previously figured that he drowned, was swallowed, and went to Sheol until he was resurrected, but I cannot prove this from the text. I also know that Yehovah easily has the power to keep Yonah alive inside the fish’s belly even though there is no air to breathe there (a fish’s belly is filled with water). Yonah was quite awake, since he rolled himself to Yehovah his Gods. One person told me that she (Angela) believed that Yonah was alive in the fish’s belly; I now agree with her.

 

2. What did Yonah mean by, “I called unto Yehovah from tribulation to me”? Was Yonah being put into tribulation (trouble)? Everything Yonah will say in this prayer has nothing to do with Yonah himself. He is a prophet, and he is prophesying about things to come! He is speaking for another. I propose that he is speaking for Mount Zion, a small hill in Jerusalem (in Israel) that will later become a very large mountain.

 

Mount Zion will experience the terrible seven years of Tribulation many centuries from now, and immediately before Yeshua arrives at Mount Zion to reign for ten centuries. Yonah is telling the prayer that Mount Zion will pray, rolling it out to Yehovah at that time.

 

3. What does “And He answered/humbled me” mean, and what will occur? The first part, “He answered me,” means that Yehovah will respond to the speaker (to Mount Zion), and will do what the speaker asks. The second part, “He humbled me,” is what will be necessary before Yehovah will do what the speaker says.

 

The reason I put “answered/humbled” is because Yehovah, Who designed the Hebrew language, made sure that the very same verb that means to answer also means to humble or to humiliate. Many texts in the Bible use this verb. Of all the texts in the Bible that use this verb, prophetic texts that use it very often make perfect sense whether the reader reads answer or humble. Yehovah will do both!

 

The word humble means to know one’s rank (in terms of others) and one’s responsibilities to and for others, and lives that way. The difference between humble and humiliate in English is whether the actions are voluntary or are forced. A person who is humiliated is supposedly shown his/her low rank and great responsibilities to another by force. The Hebrew language makes no distinction between the two, and the reader must know which is which by reading the text and figuring it out.

 

Yehovah will humiliate Mount Zion at the beginning of the Tribulation because she will be part of Jerusalem, and the city will be in sin. He will humble Mount Zion (Mount Zion will voluntarily realize her real rank and responsibilities before Yehovah and to others) later, and will do what she can to save Israelis.

 

4. What is so important about humility? Only a humble person can be given everlasting Salvation. Yehovah has blocked all others from Salvation. Those who will not look carefully at their own ranks before God and men, and their own responsibilities before God and men, will not receive everlasting Salvation!

 

5. Yonah said, “I screamed from the belly of Sheol.” Where is Sheol, and was Yonah there? Sheol is in the very heart of planet earth: in its very center. Many scientists think that the core of the planet is extremely hot liquid rock. They are wrong if the Bible is Truth. It is a chamber where those who died are housed. It used to have two chambers separated by a great gulf of space: one chamber for Saints and one chamber for non-saints. (Now, Saints go to the heavens.)

 

Sheol is a location, and it is also the name of the demonic angel (who has a feminine gender) who is responsible to take care of those in Sheol.

 

If Yonah was there, he was dead. I propose that Yonah is prophesying and speaking for another: for Mount Zion. Enemies will change the flow of water under her, and she will sink as a giant sinkhole, going down toward Sheol. She will call from the belly of Sheol (which will have been greatly enlarged at this time to be a significant part of the inner part of the earth). (Psalm 69 describes these events in detail.)

 

Thus, I propose that Yonah himself was not there.

 

6. Yonah said, “I screamed from the belly of Sheol! Thou didst hearken-to my voice!” What did Yehovah do? Yehovah will raise Mount Zion up to a very great mountain using water pressure. She will have a top alone that is 50 miles by 50 miles! Her sides will be much larger! Jerusalem will be on her north side.

 

 

 

III. The Sub-Marine (verses 4-5)

 

“Thou didst sling me submerged into the heart of the seas.” He was slung underwater, and was submerged into the heart of the seas (plural).

 

“And a river will surround me!” He will be surrounded by some river!

 

“All thy breakers and thy waves crossed-over upon me.” Not just a few breakers and wavers, but all Yehovah’s breakers and waves crossed over upon him.

 

“”And I, I said I’ve been forced-out from straight-in-front-of Thine eyes!” He figured that Yehovah shoved him out of His sight; Yehovah did not desire to see him.

 

“But I will accrue to look unto the Temple of Thy Holy-One!” He knows that he will look unto the Temple of Yehovah’s Holy One (the Holy One of Israel).

 

Questions

 

1. Was Yonah slung into the heart of the seas by Yehovah? No, he wasn’t. The sailors slung him, and they did that because Yonah told them to do it. If this describes what Mount Zion will experience, however, enemies will use the very waters that Yehovah has stored under Mount Zion to unhinge the sides of Mount Zion so that she will sink. Because Yehovah brings the Tribulation and gives men knowledge to know how to sink her, Mount Zion will see that this sinking is the hand of Yehovah. All the seas together have a heart that is underground: a huge supply of water much, much greater than the waters that we see above ground are there.

 

2. What does “Thou didst sling me submerged into the heart of the seas” describe? First, the word for seas is plural. There are many seas in this world. Those that are connected to the underground (subterranean) seas together have a heart: a middle part deep in the planet.

 

The speaker states that he was slung submerged into the heart (the very middle) of the seas, indicating that this took place deep underground in the huge center of earth’s seas that are connected.

 

3. What does “And a river will surround me” describe? This will be the reason why Mount Zion will sink. It will no longer be connected to land on its sides, so that it will fall into the subterranean heart of connected seas. Thus, a river of water will flow around Mount Zion’s location; that river will isolate Mount Zion from the surrounding land. Mount Zion will be like a cork that is too small falling into a bottle and surrounded by liquid, but the liquid will be moving.

 

4. What will occur for “All thy breakers and thy waves crossed-over upon me” to happen? While breakers and waves don’t seem to be part of underground seas, Mount Zion will be underground and in an underground sea, lower than all waves and breakers of the seas that are above ground.

 

5. What does “And I, I said I’ve been forced-out from straight-in-front-of Thine eyes” mean? Mount Zion will be describing what she observes: she will be forced out from the position of being right in front of Yehovah’s eyes, with Yehovah’s eyes being located in the Temple in Israel. This forcing out will be done by the forces of the False Prophet of the Assyrian (the False Prophet of the Antichrist). This Assyrian world ruler (the Antichrist) will have a false prophet as his right-hand man. This false prophet will be very violent against anyone who doesn’t support the Assyrian. This False Prophet will figure out a way to sink Mount Zion using water—by rerouting water under Mount Zion’s supports. Mount Zion will then sink into the water, and far deeper down Mount Zion will be in mud (in mire). This sinking will force her out from straight in front of the Temple in Jerusalem, and thus from straight in front of Yehovah’s eyes.

 

6. What does accrue mean? It means to grow by addition; to increase.

 

7. Explain “I will accrue to look unto the Temple of Thy Holy One”: This describes Mount Zion’s increasing by Yehovah’s using water pressure to raise her and to increase her! She will grow into a huge mountain! She will then be able to look unto the Temple of Yehovah’s Holy One (the Messiah) because that Temple will be on her north side!

 

 

 

IV. More Death; More Resurrection (verses 6-8)

 

“Waters encircled me unto a being!” Those waters are there to take away his life, and he cannot escape from them.

 

“A reed was wrapped to my head.” That reed is a water plant by the shore.

 

“I descended the land with her bars to the cuttings of the mountains for my sake to Hider.” He went down the land; she hemmed him in on both sides forcing him to go through the mountain passes that were cut out by erosion. This was for his sake as he went to Hider—to the God Who hides Himself, to the period of time that isn’t recorded in the Bible.

 

“And Thou hast made-my-lives-ascend from destruction, Yehovah my Gods, when my being fainted concerning me.” Yehovah his Gods caused him to escape alive from destruction just when his being, his life fainted on top of him.

 

“I remembered Yehovah!” He remembered this God, this Hope.

 

“And my rolling came unto Thee—unto the Temple of Thy Holy-One!” His detailed prayer came unto Yehovah—until the Temple of Yehovah’s Holy One of Israel.

 

Questions

 

1. What does “Waters encircled me unto a being” mean? The being of a person is the person’s physical body, the person’s soul (who the person really is), and the person’s spirit (that part of the person that gives life to the physical body). If waters encircled Mount Zion unto a being, that means that her physical body (the soil, rocks and organic matter that makes the mountain), her soul (that contains her personality and character) and her spirit (which is what gives her life, and thus the ability to speak, think and respond to her environment) are all surrounded by waters. She is in mortal danger: she will soon end up being a drowned, dead mountain.

 

2. What deep will surround her? The great underground seas will surround her.

 

3. What reed was wrapped to her head? I propose that the flow of waters that were used to sink her sank her so far, that waters from seas above flowed into where she was, taking reed plants with their flow. She must sink very low for the top of her to have a reed wrapped to her head.

 

4. What does “I descended the land with her bars” mean? The land has bars—barriers made of great rocks that keep the land above from joining with the land beneath, so that there are huge rooms for water. Some of those huge caves include stalactites and stalactites that have joined, looking like oddly shaped prison bars. Mount Zion sank, seeing these caves on the way down.

 

5. What are the cuttings of the mountains? They are places where the mountains have cut huge openings as they are forced upward. (Many mountains grow upward over time. If they didn’t, they would all be eroded—that is, worn, flat by now.)

 

6. Why was this descending for the speaker’s sake? All this occurred on account of the speaker, Mount Zion. The enemies that did this targeted Mount Zion in order to stop Messiah Yeshua from coming. As long as Mount Zion is gone, the promises of Yeshua’s coming cannot be fulfilled, since He will come to Mount Zion, not to sinkhole Zion!

 

Isaiah 59:20 The Redeemer shall come to Zion!

 

7. What does to Hider mean? The timeline of the Bible is like this:

 

Hider

 

All things that occur to Hider occur until the planet ends.

 

8. What does the speaker mean by, “I descended the land with her bars to the cuttings of the mountains for my sake to Hider”? The speaker is saying that she went down the land with the land’s stone pillars like prison bars on all sides, coming down until she reached the places where the mountains that are being pushed up are cutting into the rock. All this was done to Mount Zion on account of Mount Zion’s importance in the plan of God and Messiah’s return. The enemies did this so that Mount Zion would be gone until this earth ends. That way, Messiah could never come.

 

9. What occurred next, described by, “And Thou hast made-my-lives-ascend from destruction, Yehovah my Gods”? Yehovah caused Mount Zion to ascend (to go up) and to bring Mount Zion back to life and from this successful destruction!

 

10. Why is lives plural? All living creatures have more than one life. You did; you had a life in your mother’s womb; you had another life once you were born; you had yet another life as a toddler, and another as a walking, young child. The same things are true regarding Mount Zion. She will go through different stages of life. All those stages of life are part of her lives; Yehovah made her lives ascend from destruction.

 

11. What does Yehovah mean? It means, He will be; He is; He was.

 

12. Why is Gods plural? Yehovah is all the Gods! He is all the Gods that are real Gods. He is the God of the ocean; He is the God of the land; He is the God of nature; He is the God of the sky; He is the God of Truth; He is the God of …

 

13. The speaker continued, “And Thou hast made-my-lives-ascend from destruction, Yehovah my Gods, when my being fainted upon me.” What occurs if the being faints upon the speaker? If the being is made of the body, soul and spirit, the body faints, and it falls. The soul faints, and the person or mountain passes out. The spirit faints; the person or mountain loses hope.

 

14. The speaker then said, “I remembered Yehovah!” What is so significant about this? Remembering Yehovah brings hope back to the speaker! This remembering includes what Yehovah has done, how He keeps His promises and vows, that He is good; that He is never taken by surprise!

 

15. What is this rolling that come unto Yehovah? It is giving details of what is occurring in order to ask for assistance. It is a form of prayer known as supplication (which is not exactly begging, but is asking urgently for help).

 

16. What is this Temple? It is a place in which Yehovah lives. Every part of its construction, contents, and what occurs in it tells a true story of what will happen during the Tribulation. It is like a prophetic building, but the way it is made and the way it runs are what prophesy of things to come!

 

17. Who is this Holy One? He is fully the Holy One of Israel: the owned One of Israel. He is Israel’s God; He is Messiah Yeshua.

 

18. What occurred if the speaker’s rolling came unto Yehovah and until the Temple of Yehovah’s Holy One? When it comes unto Yehovah, He will respond to the urgent request, and He will help the speaker (Mount Zion)! When it comes unto the Temple, those who make up the Temple will respond, and will help the speaker. Those who make up the Temple include all of the following:

 

  • The Jewish Saints living during the Tribulation
  • The non-Jewish Saints living during the Tribulation
  • Jewish non-saints living during the Tribulation who help save the lives of Jews (and non-Jews)
  • non-Jewish non-saints living during the Tribulation who help save the lives of Jews (and non-Jews)

Thus, Yehovah and the above groups will help the Israelis (and non-Israelis) who desire to find refuge on Mount Zion.

 

 

 

V. Damned Lifeguards (verse 9)

 

“Guards of breaths of vanity shall forsake their grace!” Those who try to save their own lives will reject the Grace of God.

 

Questions

 

1. What are breaths of vanity? Breaths refer to inhaling and exhaling air to stay alive. Breaths of vanity refer to the same thing, except those breaths will be for nothing! This goes along with the following texts:

 

Matthew 10:39 He that has found his life shall lose it. And he who has lost his life on account of me (Salvation) shall find it.

 

Matthew 16:25 For whoever shall desire to save his life shall lose it. And whoever shall lose his life on account of me (Salvation) shall find it.

 

Luke 17:33 Whoever shall seek to save his life shall lose it. And whoever shall lose it shall preserve it.

 

John 12:25 He who loves his life shall lose it. And he who hates his life in this world shall keep it to everlasting life.

 

During the Tribulation, trying to keep oneself alive will certainly lead to the person’s own death! Doing what one can to help keep others alive will be the way to keep oneself alive! Those who guard their own lives will lose their own lives. Worse than that, they will forsake their grace (see the next question).

 

2. What does grace and “shall forsake their grace” mean? The word grace as used in the Bible means having a fervent (very strong), ardent (burning) zeal (a very great personal interest in something and how it turns out) by which a person is motivated to take action. An example of this is what Yeshua did. He had a very strong and burning personal interest in providing for humans being rescued from sin and slavery to sin, and being rescued to righteousness. He therefore took action, and gave Himself as a sin sacrifice!

 

If folks forsake their grace, they are forsaking Yeshua’s sacrifice for them; they are instead choosing to be everlastingly sent to the permanent Lake of Fire and Burning Sulfur where they will be tormented without any ending or rest from it. All who guard their own lives to keep themselves alive during the Tribulation will forsake their grace, and will go to the Lake of Fire and Sulfur.

 

3. What must a person do that is the opposite of guarding his/her own breaths of vanity? The same four texts above give the answer:

 

Matthew 10:39 He who has lost his life on account of me (Salvation) shall find it.

 

Matthew 16:25 Whoever shall lose his life on account of me (Salvation) shall find it.

 

Luke 17:33 Whoever shall lose it shall preserve it.

 

John 12:25 He who hates his life in this world shall keep it to everlasting life.

 

In other words, being a hero/heroine by saving the lives of others will be the opposite of guiding breaths of vanity.

 

 

 

VI. Sacrifice, Confession and Peace (verse 10)

 

“And I, I will sacrifice to Thee via the voice of confession!” He will once again do sacrifice to Yehovah, but this time via confessing!

 

“I will make peace what I vowed!” He will keep his vows by doing what he said in the vow.

 

“Her Salvation is to Yehovah!” Yehovah is the one who owns and is responsible for his being’s Salvation!

 

Questions

 

1. Why is ‘I’ mentioned twice? The speaker is very certain that she will be the one who will do the sacrifice of confession!

 

2. What is confession? It is admitting that something is true (if it is true) or false (if it is false), and it is giving credit where credit is due.

 

3. What is the voice of confession? It is what occurs when one confesses (admits) something out loud—especially something that the person previously would not confess (admit).

 

4. Why is this voice of confession some kind of sacrifice? A sacrifice often involves a death (whether voluntary or not) for the sake of another. Mount Zion will offer her own life to Yehovah/Yeshua by confessing Yeshua (Salvation) and by saving the lives of those who took refuge in her caves during the Tribulation and during the time when the enemies will sink her into the heart of the seas. She will also do the voice of confession when she has been brought up from the dead!

 

5. What does “I will make peace what I vowed” mean? This means that she will do exactly what she vowed. She will make peace by keeping her vow(s).

 

6. Who is her in, “Her Salvation is to Yehovah”? This is Mount Zion’s Salvation!

 

7. What does “Her Salvation is to Yehovah” mean? It means that Mount Zion’s Salvation belongs to Yehovah. No one else will be able to provide Salvation for her.

 

8. Who said, “Her Salvation is to Yehovah”? Yonah himself said this!

 

 

 

VII. Fish Puke (verse 11)

 

Yehovah said something to the fish. The fish responded by vomiting Yonah toward the dry land.

 

Questions

 

1. What did Yehovah say to the fish? I don’t know! Whatever it was, the fish was finally able to get rid of this meal that was never digested!

 

2. Where did the fish vomit Yonah? He vomited him toward the dry land on some shore—very likely in the eastern part of the Mediterranean Sea (where these things took place).

 

3. What did Yonah smell like? Yonah smelled very bad! Fish puke is extremely strong and very bad! It makes the very best perfumes! (Man learned centuries ago how to take the worst-smelling things and turn them into the best-smelling things!)

 

4. What did Yonah do once he was vomited on the shore? I can only guess that he went to wash himself and his clothing.

 

 

Jonah Chapter 3

1And the speech of Yehovah was unto Dove [Yonah] a second time to say, 2 “Arise! Walk unto Neenvey the big city! And call unto her the calling that I spoke unto thee!”

 

3And Dove [Yonah] arose. And he walked unto Neenvey according to the speech of Yehovah.

 

And Neenvey was a big city to Elohim, three days’ walk.

 

4And Dove [Yonah] began to come into the city a one-day walk. And he called. And he said, “Forty days more, and Neenvey is flipped-over!” 5And the men of Neenvey believed in Elohim!

 

And they called a shutting! And they put-on sacks from their big and unto their little.

 

6And the speech struck unto the king of Neenvey. And he arose from his chair. And he crossed-over his splendour from upon him. And he covered sack. And he sat upon the ash. 7And he screamed! And he said in Neenvey from the taste of the king and his big-ones to say, “The man and the beast, the herd and the flock shall not taste anything! They shall not pasture, and they shall not drink water! 8And the man and the beast covered themselves sacks! And they called unto Elohim via a grip! And they turned, a man, from his bad way and from the violence that is in their palms! 9Who will know? The Elohim will turn and console, and He will turn from the heat of His nose. And we will not perish!”

 

10And the Elohim saw their works—that they turned from their bad way. And the Elohim was consoled concerning the bad that He spoke to do to them. And He did not.

 

 

 

I. Walking Orders Again(verse 1-2)

 

Yehovah’s speech came to Yonah a second time. He told him to arise and to walk unto the big city of Nineveh, and to shout unto her what Yehovah told him previously to call.

 

Questions

 

1. Why didn’t Yehovah tell Yonah off for disobeying and wasting time? Yehovah knew exactly why Yonah had done what he had done when he fled. The time for action was now; Yehovah discussed Yonah’s views later.

 

2. What was the original calling that Yehovah had commanded Yonah? It was that their bad ascended to Yehovah’s faces.

 

 

 

II. Travel Nineveh (verse 3)

 

Yonah arose from the shore. He walked unto Nineveh just as Yehovah spoke to him.

 

Questions

 

1. Why did Yonah arise and walk this time? I don’t think that he found being in a fish’s stomach for three days, being in the dark and completely surrounded by water without any air, but still alive and awake, any fun. This time, he decided that he would walk as he was told. What he did once he got there had yet to be decided.

 

2. How far was Nineveh? It was at least 750 miles!

 

3. How long was the walk? I previously proposed that it would have taken two months if he stayed two nights and one day at each place he stopped. It was pointed out to me that he would have rested on Shabbat (on the Sabbath); that would have increased the walk time by another two weeks!

 

 

 

III. The Big City (verse 3)

 

Elohim Himself saw Nineveh as a big city. It took three days to walk through it!

 

Questions

 

1. How many miles is a three-day walk? If a person can walk twenty miles a day, stopping for water and to eat, the city was 60 miles across! This is a very large city!

 

2. What kind of a city can be this big? What is it called? Those kinds of cities are now called city-states. They are cities, but they act as if they are a state—like a country of their own. They have their own armies and their own kings.

 

3. What is important about this being a big city to Elohim? It is a city that He is about to destroy because of the bad occurring in it; and yet, it is a city that He desires to save from destruction. It is therefore a ‘big deal.’

 

 

 

IV. Doomsday Announcement (verses 4-5)

 

Yonah just began to come into the city; he walked into it a distance that one can walk in a full day. He shouted the message of Yehovah: “Forty days more, and Neenvey is flipped-over!” The inhabitants of Nineveh believed in Elohim!

 

Questions

 

1. How many miles is a one-day walk? It is about twenty miles.

 

2. What did Yonah call? He called, “Forty days more, and Neenvey is flipped-over!”

 

3. What had Yehovah told him to call? He had told him to call, “Your bad ascended to Yehovah’s faces!”

 

4. Did Yonah disobey Yehovah’s command again? The Bible gives no indication that Yonah did wrong. What Yonah said had to either be prophecy or a lie. How would Yonah know that the city had only forty days before being destroyed? Yehovah must have told him this. Therefore, Yonah prophesied Truth. The text doesn’t tell whether or not Yonah said anything else. He could have said more. It does tell that he included, “Forty days more, and Nineveh is flipped over!” I previously assumed that this is all he called, but that isn’t the right way to read the Bible. Unless the Bible states that this is all he called, assuming that it is all he called is wrong.

 

5. Did Yonah give them any hope? Did he tell them that they could repent? I propose that he did not. I propose that Yonah could not give them hope; he would have been a traitor to Israel, had he done that. You see, Yonah was a prophet. He knew that Israel was also sinning against Yehovah. He knew that Israel would not repent. He knew that Nineveh would attack Israel, and would win. Therefore, it was against Yonah’s ethics to aid an enemy by telling that enemy how to be saved from Yehovah’s wrath. Yonah very much desired Yehovah to judge and destroy Nineveh for Israel’s sake. The Ninevites were cruel fighters. Yonah loved the Israelis. They were his family. Knowing that he had helped these cruel, vicious fighters against Israel was more than Yonah could bear. This is why he sought death instead of going straight to Nineveh. Now that he had gone, he could not give them hope. He could only tell them of their destruction, and he could only hope that Yehovah would destroy them. Telling them that they could repent would be giving them hope, and would be aiding an enemy.

 

6. Who are the folks today who are the offspring of the Ninevites? They are the Iraqis!

 

7. The text states, “And the men of Niveveh believed in Elohim.” What caused them to believe in Elohim? Was Elohim their God? Elohim was not their God. They had numerous other gods in whom they believed.

 

The text gives no reason why they believed in Elohim after Yonah said what he said. They knew that Yonah was from Israel. They should have only had contempt for him, but strangely, the countries around Israel tended to honour the Israeli prophets. That didn’t mean that they did what the prophets said, but they tended to treat them well. In this case, the Ninevites believed the message that this Jewish prophet brought, and they believed in the Gods of Israel.

 

8. Why is this event so important in the Bible? The Iraqis are a very wild people. They tend toward violence, and they are mean to folks they capture. They enjoy torturing folks whom they consider enemies. The same was true in the days of Yonah. They were very hard to rule; they had to be ruled with force and fear. If all the folks in Nineveh can turn to Elohim at one time, so can Israel! Israel will turn, but many centuries from our time! Until then, Israel will nearly always be doing what Yehovah sees as wrong even when the Israelis think they are doing right. At our present time, the Israelis have so many different opinions and live in so many different ways, that they are totally not unified. Very few believe in the God of the Bible. Most don’t believe in any god. (Yet, anyone who takes a stand against Israel is taking a stand against Yehovah!)

 

This event is so important because if Iraqis can turn to Elohim, the Israelis can also turn.

 

9. Was does believe mean in the Bible? Belief is the certainty of things expected to occur or not occur (based on the promise of another who is very trustworthy), being totally convinced of things that haven’t yet been seen or realized. This certainty is because the one who believes knows that the one who promised will keep his/her word.

 

Very young children believe their parents and caretakers. Their parents and caretakers carry them in their arms, and young children are not afraid of falling. Since belief and faith are exactly the same thing, a parent who takes care of a child is called a ‘Faither’ in Hebrew. The Hebrew word for faith is emunah. The masculine form of this word is amen (where we get the word amen). A man who takes care of a child is called an omen, and a woman is called an omenet. They both mean ‘faither’—one who promotes faith in another person!

 

 

 

V. Sackcloth and Closing Time (verse 5)

 

The people of Nineveh called for a closing of the mouth! This included no food intake! They put on sackcloth from the highest ranking persons to the lowest, from the biggest person to the littlest.

 

Questions

 

1. What is a shutting? It is a closing of the mouth. This is normally viewed as a fast—a refusal to eat. It is more than this; it can be the refusal to speak complaints, and the closing of business as usual. Everything shut down in Nineveh; it wasn’t just a time of fasting from food.

 

2. What are these sacks? They are gunny sack materials, like what would be used to carry potatoes or larger amounts of rice. The materials were very coarse against the skin. They put them on as if they were clothing.

 

3. Why did they put on this sackcloth? That was a demonstration of humility and mourning before the gods/Gods and others. Anyone putting this on was portraying the lowest rank besides being naked and covered with mud! (Going naked would not normally have been right to do.)

 

4. Did they put sacks on their little babies? Yes! That way, the little babies would weep! They hoped that Elohim would hear the babies!

 

 

 

VI. The Royal Response (verses 6-9)

 

The king finally heard the message, and it struck him hard. He got up from his chair (throne) and changed his gorgeous garments, putting on sackcloth. He sat down in ash. And he screamed!

 

He gave commands according to the normal way that commands are given: “The man and the beast, the herd and the flock shall not taste anything!” He gave more details: “They shall not pasture, and they shall not drink water!” Thus, the animals had to be restricted from all food and all water.

 

“And the man and the beast covered themselves sacks!” Every man and every animal had to be covered with sackcloth in the entire land!

 

“And they called unto Elohim via a grip!” They must call unto Elohim without ceasing, gripping (holding on) to continue with this call!

 

“And they returned, a man, from his bad way and from the violence that is in their palms!” Every person must turn from the bad and from the violence that is in the very palms of their hands—over which they have control!

 

“Who will know? The Elohim will return and console, and He will return from the heat of His nose. And we will not perish!” There isn’t any certainty, but perhaps the Gods will turn and bring consolation instead of devastation! Perhaps He will turn from the great heat of His nose (anger). Perhaps the inhabitants of Nineveh will not perish!

 

Questions

 

1. What does “the speech struck unto the king” mean? This means that what Yonah said greatly affected the king! It hit him hard! His conscience was greatly affected.

 

2. Why did he arise from his chair? He couldn’t just sit there; he had to do something. (His chair is his throne.) He took action.

 

3. What does “And he crossed-over his splendour from upon him. And he covered sack” mean? This means that he took off his beautiful robes that he wore, and put on sackcloth just like the rest of the citizens did. His beautiful robes crossed over from being worn by him to being placed somewhere else. He wrapped himself in gunny sack material.

 

4. What does “he sat upon the ash” mean? Where did he get the ash? He probably got the ash from a fireplace or from a kitchen stove where wood is burned. He placed ashes under himself and sat upon them.

 

5. What would sitting on ash do, and what did this picture? Sitting on ashes will make a person very dirty. It will get on the hands, and eventually can get on one’s face. It pictures the opposite of beauty, bringing a person much closer to the soil. It pictures the opposite of being clean, bringing a person to being very dirty and soiled in appearance. It is a reminder that humans are made of soil. Since ashes are also the weakest of all materials that humans can handle, it is a reminder of what humans themselves will become once they return to the ground. The king did this so that Elohim would see that he humbled himself.

 

6. Why did the king scream? The text doesn’t say. He realized that he and all his citizens were about to die. He was terribly frightened.

 

7. What does “he said in Nineveh from the taste of the king and his big-ones to say” mean? The taste of the king was his preferred way of communicating his orders and his will. It is like in the expression, “She has good taste.” The taste of his big ones (his generals) was the same as the king’s taste. They communicated their orders in the way they normally did this.

 

8. Why did they command man and beast to not taste anything? The king and his generals wanted every person in the city to call out to Elohim. They wanted the children and babies to cry so that Elohim would hear them. They wanted the animals to make noise from hunger so that Elohim would also hear them. This command to not taste was the same as the command to not eat, but it went further! Not even the flavour of food was to be tried!

 

9. Why did he command them all to not drink water? This was the for same reason; it put both man and animals in the position to call out to Elohim and to make noise from the terrible discomfort of no water. They lived in a hot land. Going without water was torture!

 

10. The text states, “And the man and the beast covered themselves sacks.” How did the animals manage to cover themselves? Why did they do this? The animals didn’t. The humans covered themselves, their children, and their babies with this sacking material. They then covered the animals with it. They did this in order to show humility, and in order to cause animals and humans to weep and to call to Elohim.

 

11. What does “via a grip” mean? This means that they held on to call, to weep and to shout to Elohim without letting go and giving up.

 

12. From what bad way did they turn? Many of the folks in Nineveh had been doing things that would harm others and profit themselves. They were destroying other persons, were being cruel to others, and were sinning, causing bad things to occur by sin. They quit doing these things.

 

13. What does “violence that is in their palms” mean? The palms of the hands are what folks use to grip things. This is a ‘childism’ in the Bible—something that makes sense when viewed from the angle of a child. Think if a child who is about two years old. The child finds a ball. The child then throws the ball in the house; it hits and breaks a glass item that is on a shelf. This is a child’s form of violence against the glass item; it was in the palm of the child’s hand, and thus was in the power of the child’s hand. Adults can do the same thing. They have the power to do violence against others who cannot defend themselves against the violence. That violence is in their power—it is in the palms of their hands!

 

14. What does “Who will know? The Elohim will turn…” mean? What we might say is this: “Who knows if God will do something different!” They hoped that Elohim would not destroy them with the city. They all now feared being targeted for death.

 

15. Why did they take this threat so seriously? The Ninevites knew that they were doing wrong. They also knew that Yehovah had destroyed Sodom, Gomorrah, Admah and Zeboim in a previous century. Those citizens had not believed the warnings. These folks did believe it, and they were afraid! 

 

16. The text states, “Who will know? The Elohim will turn and console.” What does this last part mean, and what is consolation? Consolation is diminishing the pain and hurt after a great loss. We might say, “Who knows if God will do something else, and will lessen the suffering that we are suffering over our coming deaths and slaughter.” Those in Nineveh made certain that everyone was suffering from the sackcloth, the hunger and the thirst. If Elohim consoles, He will remove the threat that is causing the great pain of fear—the panic.

 

17. What is “the heat of His nose”? The word heat indicates anger. When a person becomes very angry, that person also becomes hot. It is like in this expression: “He was really hot!” meaning that he was very angry.

 

The nose is where the heat comes out—like in a fire-breathing dragon! It is like what an angry bull shows on a cold day, with steam coming out of his nose.

 

When folks become angry, their noses are what show the heat. Nostrils flare—that is, they widen out.

 

18. What would be required in order for the citizens of Nineveh to not perish? The following must occur:

 

  • Elohim must turn from His plans to destroy the city
  • Elohim must console the city’s inhabitants (including the animals)
  • Elohim must turn from the heat of His nose

Then the citizens of Nineveh and their animals won’t be in danger.

 

 

 

VII. Seeing and Not Doing (verse 10)

 

Elohim saw their works! He saw that they turned from doing the bad things they had been doing. And Elohim was consoled about the bad that He had spoken that He would do to them. He didn’t do it.

 

Questions

 

1. What did Elohim see that was important to Him? He saw their works. The rest of what they did wasn’t anywhere as important as their works. The religious actions they did were not important. They works were that they turned from their bad (destructive) way.

 

2. What does “the Elohim was consoled concerning the bad that He spoke to do to them” mean? The great heat of Elohim’s anger was assuaged (greatly diminished, lessened, brought to a much smaller amount, and soothed), and the grief that Elohim had over His plans to destroy them was turned away from Him. He was both full of grief over what He had to do to them and He was angry at them for bringing that wrath from Him. Now, He was consoled; He did not have to slaughter them, and His anger was much lower.

 

3. The last statement is, “And He did not.” He did not what? He did not destroy them.

 

Jonah Chapter 4

 

1And he-was-bad unto Dove [Yonah]: a big bad! And heat was to him! 2And he rolled himself unto Yehovah. And he said, “Ah, Yehovah! Isn’t this my speech unto my being upon my soil? Therefore I anticipated to flee to Tarshish! For I knew that Thou art a Mighty-[One] of favour and wombing, long of noses and multiple of Grace and consolation concerning the bad! 3And now, Yehovah, take, na, my being from me! For my death is better than my life!”

 

4And Yehovah said, “Is the heat good for thee?”

 

5And Dove [Yonah] exited from the city. And he sat from the east to the city. And he made a Succah there for himself. And he sat under her in the shadow until he will see what will be in the city.

 

6And Yehovah Elohim measured a Kikayon-plant. And he ascended from above to Dove [Yonah] to be a shadow upon his head, to rescue him from his bad. And Dove [Yonah] rejoiced a big rejoicing concerning the Kikayon-plant.

 

7And the Elohim measured a worm at the ascending of the dawn for the next day. And she smote the Kikayon. And he withered. 8And he was as the sunrising of the sun. And Elohim measured a cutting, east wind. And the sun attacked upon the head of Dove [Yonah]. And he made-himself-wilt. And he asked his being to die. And he said, “My death is better than my life!”

 

9And Elohim said unto Dove [Yonah], “Is the heat good for thee concerning the Kikayon-plant?” And he said, “The heat is good for me unto death!” 10And Yehovah said, “Thou, thou didst have pity upon the Kikayon in which thou didst not labour and did not make big, that was the son of a night. And he perished the son of a night. 11And I, I will not pity over the big city Neenveh in whom there are many more than 120,000 of Adam who did not know between his right to his left, and multiplied cattle?”

 

 

 

I. Frustrated to Death (verses 1-3)

 

Yehovah’s decision to turn from the destruction of Nineveh was a very bad decision to Yonah. He prayed a detailed prayer to express this. He said, “Ah, Yehovah! Isn’t this my speech unto my being upon my soil?” This is what Yonah told Yehovah while he was still in the Land of Israel.

 

“Therefore I anticipated to flee to Tarshish!” This is why he fled to Tarshish; he knew in advance that this would occur!

 

“For I knew that Thou art a Mighty-[One] of favour and wombing…” Yonah knew that this is the type of a Mighty One Yehovah is: He is quick to show favour and to womb—that is, to take one who needs help and consolation, and bring that one to His womb, as in His lap, to console him/her.

 

“…long of noses…” He doesn’t anger very quickly; He waits a long time to respond in great anger.

 

“…and multiple of Grace and consolation concerning the bad!” He many times over will demonstrate a very strong zeal on behalf of a person or group to do that person or group much good, and to be consoled Himself concerning the bad He would have done if the person or group hadn’t turned.

 

“And now, Yehovah, take, na, my being from me! For my death is better than my life!” He wants Yehovah to cause him to die. His death is better than his continuing to live under these circumstances.

 

Questions

 

1. What was such a big bad to Yonah? Yehovah’s decision to not destroy Nineveh was a big bad: a very destructive and harmful decision on Yehovah’s part.

 

2. What did Yonah view it this way? Yonah knew that Nineveh will later attack Israel, and will slaughter thousands. Had Yehovah only destroyed Nineveh, Israel would have been safer.

 

3. What does “And he rolled himself unto Yehovah” mean? This means that he gave the details of his situation and his view in prayer.

 

4. What does “Ah, Yehovah! Isn’t this my speech unto my being upon my soil” mean? This is more like, “Oh, Yehovah, this is exactly what I said would happen while I was still at home!” This is exactly why Yonah didn’t want to come.

 

5. What did he mean by, “Therefore I anticipated to flee to Tarshish”? To anticipate is to see, look forward to, or figure something before it occurs. Because Yonah knew the outcome—that Yehovah wouldn’t destroy Nineveh, he fled to Tarshish. He didn’t want to be part of Yehovah’s saving Nineveh.

 

6. What does “I knew that Thou art a Mighty One of favour” mean? This means that Yehovah is very strong, and He uses His strength to favour folks and groups (who will do good and who will turn from doing bad to doing good).

 

7. What does “I knew that Thou art a Mighty One of wombing” mean? This means that Yehovah is very strong to take persons or groups who do right and seek consolation from Him, and to console them, as if they were a child who needs to be held very closely and very tightly against the womb—the area where a baby grows. A man and a woman both have an area of the body that the Bible considers the womb area even though only a woman has a womb that can grow a baby.

 

8. What does “long on noses” mean? Since the nose is what shows anger, being long on noses means that it takes Yehovah a long time before He becomes so angry that He will destroy. He doesn’t become quickly angry in most cases. He gives evil folks and evil groups much time to turn before He finally attacks and destroys them.

 

9. What does “multiple of Grace” mean? This means that He shows His zeal to benefit persons or groups in many ways and at many times if those persons or groups determine to do right instead of doing wrong.

 

10. What does “multiple of consolation” mean? This means that Yehovah will do and give what in necessary in many ways and at many times so that persons or groups can stop grieving and to return to normal life with joy (if they will turn to do right).

 

11. Explain “concerning the bad” in, “For I knew that Thou art a Mighty-[One] of favour and wombing, long of noses and multiple of Grace and consolation concerning the bad”: Yehovah’s strong desires and actions are not to carry out the bad He has determined if folks and groups will only turn to right. He will prove so strong to favour, to womb, to not quickly anger and destroy, to show strong zeal on behalf of these repentant folks, and to console them even after threatening them with terrible destruction (if they will only turn from the destruction that they were doing by sinning against Yehovah).

 

12. Why does Yonah desire Yehovah to take his being from him now? Yonah now will be viewed as the prophet who saved Nineveh, and who therefore destroyed Israel, one of Nineveh’s soon targets in a war! He wants to die.

 

13. Is Yonah right when he says, “my death is better than my life”? He feels that way, of course, but Yehovah doesn’t feel that way. Yonah isn’t right; he has important future assignments that will benefit Israel.

 

14. Do you love your own people as much as Yonah loved his? (Each person will have to answer this question.)

 

 

 

II. The Heated Question (verse 4)

 

Yehovah asked Yonah one question: “Is the heat good for thee?” Does Yonah benefit himself by being furious?

 

Questions

 

1. What does heat mean? It means anger. Yonah is very angry with Yehovah.

 

2. Answer the question: Is anger good (beneficial) for Yonah? It won’t benefit him, because Yehovah won’t turn from the good He is doing toward Nineveh.

 

 

 

III. Camouflage (verse 5)

 

Yonah went out of the city. He found a place east of the city where he could watch. He constructed a Succah (camouflage) for himself so that he would be hidden under its shadow in order to watch and see what will happen in the city.

 

Questions

 

1. Why did Yonah exit the city? He went out just in case Yehovah would destroy it. If He did that, Yonah didn’t want to be in the city. His desire to die was only because Yehovah wasn’t destroying the city. Had Yehovah destroyed it, Yonah would have celebrated!

 

2. Why did he choose to sit to watch the city on its eastern side? I propose that the view of the city was much better there—that there was a place that was high up where he could see the entire city.

 

3. What is a Succah? The root of the word means camouflage. This is used in order to blend in with the surrounding environment in order to not be easily seen. This way, others who might pass by won’t notice that a person is there. The succah can be part of the person’s dress, or it can be external to the person so that the person can be under it (her).

 

4. Why did Yonah make a Succah? I can only guess. I am thinking that he did not desire to be approached by folks from Nineveh during this time, since they might want to come to ask the will of Yehovah from Yonah. He wanted to watch the city without being bothered by anyone who might come to him for any reason, including offering him hospitality, after the three days.

 

5. What produced the shadow under which he sat, and why did he want to sit under a shadow? His camouflage produced part or all of the shadow. (There may have been a tree or a large bush that produced more.) The time of year was very hot, and the sunlight was bright and strong.

 

6. What does “until he will see what will be in the city” mean? What was he waiting to see? He was waiting to see if the city will be destroyed, or if it will continue as normal.

 

 

 

IV. Kikayon (verse 6)

 

Now, Yehovah Elohim measured (fitted for size) a plant called in Hebrew Kikayon. The plant must have had very large leaves, since it would provide perfect shade. This plant grew extremely rapidly above Yonah giving Yonah shadow overhead, and to rescue Yonah from his bad (his harm) from the sun. Yonah greatly rejoiced over this Kikayon plant.

 

Questions

 

1. What is a Kikayon plant? I was not able to find what this was! It is a vine with wide leaves. A squash plant has such leaves. It grows rapidly.

 

2. Why did Yehovah measure this plant? He determined that it would be a certain size so that it will do its function very well.

 

3. Who ascended above Yonah? The Kikayon plant did.

 

4. What service did the Kikayon plant do? It made a shadow upon Yonah’s head, and it rescued him from his bad.

 

5. What does “to rescue him from his bad” mean? His bad has to do with his feelings and his attitude, as well as the harm that the intense sunlight could do to him while he waited to see if Yehovah will do anything to the city.

 

If he is rescued from his bad, that means that those things that can harm him won’t be able to harm him. The Kikayon plant brought him joy and relief from the sun.

 

6. Why was Yonah so happy about the Kikayon plant? It served him well, and kept him from being harmed from the sun; it also provided some cooling. (Plants do that when they have water; they can act as air conditioners out in a field! I found that being under a fig tree was like being under an air conditioner!)

 

 

 

V. Worm and Wind (verses 7-8)

 

The Elohim next measured a worm as the dawn ascended for the next day. The worm destroyed the Kikayon, and the plant withered.

 

As the sun rose the next day, Elohim next measured a cutting east wind. The sun beat down on Yonah’s head, and Yonah made himself wilt!

 

He again asked his being to die. He said, “My death is better than my life!”

 

Questions

 

1. How fast had the Kikayon plant grown?? It had grown in one day! That is impossible unless Yehovah causes it to occur.

 

2. Why did Elohim need to measure a worm? That worm had to be big enough to do the work that He gave it to do! That took a big worm to work that fast!

 

3. What did the worm do? It smote (killed) the Kikayon plant!

 

4. What happened to that large plant? It withered, since the worm destroyed the water flow by eating through the plant. (Try this: Find a vine that no one planted and that is in a wild area. Cut it at the ground level. See how long it takes the plant to wither.)

 

5. Who was at the sunrising of the sun? What is being described took place right at sunrise.

 

6. Why did Elohim measure a cutting, east wind, and what is that? A cutting, east wind is a wind from the east that is very strong and (in this case) very warm. It makes it hard to breathe.

 

Elohim did this in order to speed up the withering of the plant.

 

7. What did the sun do on this day? The sun really beat down (“attacked”) upon Yonah’s head.

 

8. What did Yonah do in response? He made himself wilt as if he were a plant! He didn’t move from his place, but just stayed there in order to die of dehydration!

 

9. What does “he asked his being to die” mean? This means that he requested his own body and soul to die!

 

10. Why did he say, “My death is better than my life”? He felt so bad that he had participated in aiding an enemy of Israel!

 

11. Why did Elohim do this—give him a plant that made him glad, then intentionally send a worm, a terrible wind, and the heat of the sun to destroy the plant and to beat down on Yonah’s head? He used these things to instruct Yonah. (The instruction explanation comes later.)

 

12. Was Yonah right when he said, “My death is better than my life”? He wasn’t right, but that was the way he felt. He was experiencing self-pity mixed with good loyalty toward Israel.

 

 

 

VI. Having Pity (verses 9-11)

 

Elohim said to Yonah, “Is the heat good for thee concerning the Kikayon-plant?” That heat is anger. Yonah replied, “The heat is good for me unto death!” Yonah was angry! Yehovah continued, “Thou, thou didst have pity upon the Kikayon in which thou didst not labour and did not make big, that was the son of a night. And he perished the son of a night.” Yehovah then compared Yonah and the Kikayon to Yehovah and some of the folks of Nineveh: “And I, I will not pity over the big city Nineveh in whom there are many more than 120,000 of Adam who did not know between his right to his left, and multiplied cattle?”

 

Questions

 

1. What did Elohim mean by, “Is the heat good for thee concerning the Kikayon-plant?” The heat is the anger. Elohim is asking Yonah if the anger over the death of the Kikayon plant is good for him.

 

2. Yonah stated, “The heat is good for me unto death!” Was he right? He wasn’t right. He cared so much for the plant, that he wants to die? That is self-pity and bitterness. He is furious at Elohim, and he isn’t letting go (at this time).

 

3. What did Elohim mean by, “in which thou didst not labour and did not make big”? Yonah did not do anything to plant or help grow the Kikayon plant.

 

4. What does “that was the son of a night” mean? This means that the plant lasted just one night!

 

5. Why did Yonah pity the plant? It had been alive, and it had served Yonah so well. Its death by a worm was cruel, in Yonah’s mind.

 

6. What does “And he perished the son of a night” mean? This means that it only took one night to completely shrivel it up in death.

 

7. What does “120,000 of Adam” mean? This means that there are 120,000 humans; they all go back to Adam.

 

8. What does “who did not know between his right to his left” mean? Most folks that we know will know the difference between their right and their left hands, and will know the right and the left directions. The following are humans who will not know the difference:

 

  • Babies
  • The elderly whose minds have slipped
  • The severely mentally retarded
  • Those who are totally insane without any moments when they can think straight

The population of the city was so large, that there were 120,000 folks in the above categories!

 

9. According to verse 11, according to Elohim, what did Yonah desire Him to do or to not do? Yonah desired that Elohim would show no pity on the big city even though it contained that many folks who didn’t even know the difference between a left and right direction and hand. Yonah also desired that Elohim would show no pity on the big city’s cattle.

 

10. What does this last part show about Elohim? It shows that Elohim will show pity on those who truly know nothing, and those who fear Him must join with Him in showing pity in the same manner.

 

Those residents of Nineveh had turned from their bad (destruction). Elohim showed them all pity because they turned. He will do the same thing for Israel when Israel finally turns from its bad!

 

 

 

Jonah

Jonah Chapter 1

 

And the speech of Yehovah was unto Dove [Yonah] son of My-Two-Truths [Amee-tai] to say, 2 “Arise! Walk unto Neen-vay the big city! And call upon her that their bad ascended to my faces!” 3And Dove [Yonah] arose to flee to Tarsheesh from the faces of Yehovah!

 

And he descended to Yaffo. And he found a ship. She went to Tarsheesh. And he gave her wage. And he descended into her to come with them to Tarsheesh from the faces of Yehovah.

 

4And Yehovah threw a big wind unto the sea! And a big storm was in the sea! And the ship thought to be broken! 5And the saltees feared! And they screamed, a man unto his gods! And they threw the utensils that are in the ship unto the sea to lighten from upon them. And Dove [Yonah] descended unto the thighs of the wainscoting. And lay down. And he slept.

 

6And the great-one of the company approached unto him. And he said to him, “What is to thee, sleeper? Arise! Call unto thy gods! Perhaps the gods will gleam to us, and we will not perish!”

 

7And they said, a man unto his neighbour, “Go-ye! And we have thrown-down lots. And we have known on account of whom this bad is to us!” And they threw-down lots. And the lot fell upon Dove [Yonah].

 

8And they said unto him, “Tell to us, na, via what—for whom this bad is to us. What is thine errand? And from where wilt thou come? What is thy land? And where from this—a people—art thou?” 9And he said unto them, “I am Hebrew. And I fear Yehovah Gods of the heavens Who made the sea and the dry!” 10And the men feared a big fear!

 

And they said unto him, “What is this thou hast done?” For the men knew that he fled from the faces of Yehovah, because he told to them. 11And they said unto him, “What will we do to thee, and the sea has calmed from upon us?” For the sea is walking and tempestuous. 12And he said unto them, “Lift ye me, and throw me unto the sea. And the sea has calmed from upon you. For I know that this big tempest is upon you on account of me!”

 

13And the men dug to return unto the dry. And they were not able. For the sea is walking and tempestuous upon them. 14And they called unto Yehovah! And they said, “Oh, Yehovah! We, na, will not perish via the being of this man! And do not give innocent blood upon us! For Thou, Yehovah, Thou hast done just as Thou hast desired!”

 

15And they lifted Dove [Yonah]. And they threw him unto the sea. And the sea stood from his rage! 16And the men feared Yehovah a big fear! And they sacrificed a sacrifice to Yehovah. And they vowed vows.

 

 

 

I. Walking Orders (verses 1-3)

 

Yehovah told Yonah the son of Ameetai to arise and walk unto the big city of Nineveh. He must loudly call upon the city that the bad of its citizens ascended to Yehovah’s faces. Upon hearing this, Yonah arose to flee to Tarshish which is in the opposite direction! He desired to get away from the faces of Yehovah.

 

Questions

 

1. What does Yonah mean?

 

2. If Ameetai means My two truths, to what would these truths refer?

 

3. How far was Nineveh from Israel?

 

4. Why did Yehovah desire Yonah to walk to the big city of Nineveh instead of riding?

 

5. How long would a journey of this distance take by foot if a person can walk 25 miles in a day, staying as a guest at each stop for one day?

 

6. Why was the size of Nineveh so unusual back then?

 

7. To what does bad refer in, “And call upon her that their bad ascended to my faces”?

 

8. Why did Yehovah say that their bad ascended to His faces? What does that mean?

 

9. Why did Yonah arise to flee to Tarshish, which is in the opposite direction? What did he have against obeying Yehovah?

 

10. Why does the text read, “And Yonah arose to flee to Tarshish from the faces of Yehovah” instead of “And Yonah arose to flee to Tarshish from Yehovah”?

 

11. Where is Tarshish?

 

 

 

II. Going on a Cruise (verse 3)

 

Yonah went down to Yaffo in Israel. He found and boarded a ship going to Tarshish; he paid the passenger fare. He went below deck to travel with them to Tarshish from the faces of Yehovah.

 

Questions

 

1. Where is Yaffo?

 

2. What does Yaffo mean?

 

3. What does “and he gave her wage” mean?

 

4. Who is her in, “And he descended into her”?

 

5. Identify them in, “…to come with them to Tarshish…”:

 

6. Did Yonah really think that he could escape from the faces of Yehovah?

 

 

 

III. The Violent Storm (verses 4-5)

 

Yehovah threw a big wind unto the sea! That was a terrific storm. Those in the ship thought it would be broken. The saltees (sailors) feared. Each saltee screamed to his own gods.

 

They then started throwing items overboard in order to lighten the ship.

 

Yonah went down into the hold of the ship, into the wainscoting. He lay down and went to sleep!

 

Questions

 

1. Why did Yehovah throw a big wind unto the sea?

 

2. Why did He add a big storm?

 

3. Whenever there are big winds and storms at sea, does Yehovah cause them?

 

4. What does “the ship thought to be broken” mean?

 

5. What is a saltee?

 

6. How many different gods did the sailors use?

 

7. Why did the sailors scream? Were they that easily made frightened?

 

8. What are utensils?

 

9. What is wainscoting?

 

10. What are the thighs of the wainscoting?

 

11. Why did Yonah descend unto the thighs of the wainscoting to lay down and to sleep?

 

12. How could he sleep though this motion and danger?

 

 

 

IV. Join Us in Prayer! (verse 6)

 

The captain over the sailors approached Yonah. He said to him, “What is to thee, sleeper? Arise! Call unto thy gods! Perhaps the gods will gleam at us, and we will not perish!”

 

Questions

 

1. Who is the great one of the company?

 

2. How did the great one of the company find Yonah?

 

3. What gods did the captain think that Yonah had?

 

4. What does “gleam to us” mean?

 

5. If the gods will gleam on them, according to the captain, what will happen?

 

 

 

V. Lots of Dice (verse 7)

 

Each man on board spoke to others about throwing dice to find out who is responsible for this bad situation. They did so; the dice indicated that Yonah was responsible.

 

Questions

 

1. What are lots in the Bible?

 

2. Where lots good indicators of the will of the gods or of Yehovah?

 

3. The sailors seemed certain that they could determine who was responsible for “this bad” being to them by casing lots. Were they right to be so certain?

 

4. How could they throw down lots when the winds were tossing the ship so hard, that it was about to be broken in pieces?

 

5. By what process did they use the dice to determine that Yonah was the one?

 

 

 

VI. The Interrogation and Fear (verses 8-10)

 

The men said to Yonah, “Tell to us, na, via what—for whom this bad is to us? What is thine errand? And from where wilt thou come? What is thy land? And where from this—a people—art thou?” His response was, “I am Hebrew. And I fear Yehovah Gods of the heavens Who made the sea and the dry!” This caused the men to greatly fear.

 

Questions

 

1. What does na mean in Hebrew?

 

2. Why does the sentence, “Tell to us, na, via what—for whom this bad is to us” seem so broken up?

 

3. What did they mean by, “Tell to us, na, via what…”?

 

4. What did they mean by, “Tell to us for whom this bad is to us”?

 

5. What did they mean by, “What is thine errand?”

 

6. What did they mean by, “And from where wilt thou come? What is thy land?”

 

7. What did they mean by, “And where from this—a people—art thou?”

 

8. Which of their questions did Yonah answer when he said, “I am a Hebrew”?

 

9. What does being a Hebrew mean?

 

10. Which of their questions was Yonah answering when he said, “And I fear Yehovah Gods of the heavens Who made the sea and the dry”?

 

11. Why did the men fear a big fear when they heard Yonah’s answer?

 

 

 

VII. The Solution (verses 10-12)

 

Now the men wanted to know what Yonah had done to bring this wrath on them all. Yonah had told them that he fled from the faces of Yehovah. They therefore asked the question, “What will we do to thee, and the sea has calmed from upon us?” The sea kept on walking—with huge waves—and was tempestuous—very violent.

 

Yonah gave them the steps: “Lift ye me, and throw me unto the sea. And the sea has calmed from upon you. For I know that this big tempest is upon you on account of me!”

 

Questions

 

1. What did they mean by, “What is this thou hast done?”

 

2. Why did Yonah tell the men that he fled from the faces of Yehovah?

 

3. What were they asking Yonah when they asked, “What will we do to thee, and the sea has calmed from upon us?”

 

4. What does “For the sea is walking and tempestuous” mean?

 

5. Who said, “For the sea is walking and tempestuous”?

 

6. Why did Yonah say, “Lift ye me, and throw me unto the sea. And the sea has calmed from upon you”? Was he trying to get himself killed?

 

7. How did Yonah know that this would calm the sea?

 

8. Why would Yehovah sink a ship, kill all the crew, and cause great loss of the items being shipped just because one person isn’t doing what He wants? Is this fair?

 

 

 

VIII. The Attempt and the Plea (verses 13-14)

 

The men dug with their oars, pulling as hard as they could to get to dry land. They could not. The Ship didn’t move toward land. The sea walked with huge waves, and the violent winds kept them out at sea.

 

The men then called to Yehovah. The started with, “Oh, Yehovah! We, na, will not perish via the being of this man!” They didn’t want to die because of what Yonah had done.

 

They then said, “And do not give innocent blood upon us!” They didn’t want to be held responsible for killing Yonah.

 

They reminded Yehovah, “For Thou, Yehovah, Thou hast done just as Thou hast desired!”

 

Questions

 

1. What did they dig?

 

2. What does “to return unto the dry” mean?

 

3. Why weren’t they able (to return to shore)?

 

4. Why does the text repeat, “For the sea is walking and tempestuous upon them”?

 

5. Why did the sailors call to Yehovah? Didn’t they still have their own gods?

 

6. What did the sailors mean by, “Oh, Yehovah! We, na, will not perish via the being of this man”?

 

7. What did they mean by, “And do not give innocent blood upon us”?

 

8. What where they saying when they said, “For Thou, Yehovah, Thou hast done just as Thou hast desired”?

 

 

 

IX. Man Overboard! (verses 15-16)

 

The sailors lifted Yonah, and they threw him unto the sea! The sea immediately stopped raging! The waters became calm.

 

The men feared Yehovah with a very big fear. They sacrificed a sacrifice to Yehovah on the ship, and they vowed vows to Yehovah.

 

Questions

 

1. What does “And the sea stood from his rage” mean?

 

2. Was the sea truly enraged?

 

3. Does the sea really think and act like a person?

 

4. Why did the men fear Yehovah with a big fear?

 

5. How did they do a sacrifice to Yehovah when they were onboard the ship?

 

6. What is the purpose of doing a sacrifice?

 

7. What did they vow, and why did they vow?

 

8. What is a vow?

 

9. Does this mean that the sailors became fearers of Yehovah, including obtaining salvation from their sins and getting everlasting life?

 

Jonah Chapter 2

 

1And Yehovah measured a big fish to swallow Dove [Yonah]. And Dove [Yonah] was in the internals of the fish three days and three nights.

 

2And Dove [Yonah] rolled-himself unto Yehovah his Gods from the internals of the fish. 3And he said, “I called unto Yehovah from tribulation to me! And He answered/humbled me! I screamed from the belly of Sheol! Thou didst hearken-to my voice!

 

4 “Thou didst sling me submerged into the heart of the seas. And a river will surround me! All thy breakers and thy waves crossed-over upon me. 5And I, I said I’ve been forced-out from straight-in-front-of Thine eyes! But I will accrue to look unto the Temple of Thy Holy-One!

 

6 “Waters encircled me unto a being! The deep will surround me! A reed was wrapped to my head. 7I descended the land with her bars to the cuttings of the mountains for my sake to Hider. And Thou hast made-my-lives-ascend from destruction, Yehovah my Gods, 8when my being fainted upon me. I remembered Yehovah! And my rolling came unto Thee—unto the Temple of Thy Holy-One!

 

9 “Guards of breaths of vanity shall forsake their grace!

 

10 “And I, I will sacrifice to Thee via the voice of confession! I will make peace what I vowed!”

 

“Her Salvation is to Yehovah!”

 

11And Yehovah said to the fish, and he vomited Dove [Yonah] unto the dry.

 

 

 

I. Kosher Fish (verse 1)

 

Yehovah measured a big fish (so that Yonah would fit) to swallow Yonah. Yonah was inside this fish three days and three nights.

 

Questions

 

1. Why did Yehovah have to measure the big fish?

 

2. What is significant about his being in the fish three days and three nights?

 

 

 

II. Prophetic Prayer (verses 2-3)

 

Yonah rolled himself (giving details as he prayed) unto Yehovah his Gods from inside the fish.

 

He said, “I called unto Yehovah from tribulation to me!” He was in the Tribulation.

 

“And He answered/humbled me!” Yehovah responded by both answering and humbling him.

 

“I screamed from the belly of Sheol!” He was in Sheol, and thus was dead.

 

“Thou didst hearken-to my voice!” Thus, whatever he asked was granted.

 

Questions

 

1. Was Yonah alive in the internals of the fish, or was he dead?

 

2. What did Yonah mean by, “I called unto Yehovah from tribulation to me”? Was Yonah being put into tribulation (trouble)?

 

3. What does “And He answered/humbled me” mean, and what will occur?

 

4. What is so important about humility?

 

5. Yonah said, “I screamed from the belly of Sheol.” Where is Sheol, and was Yonah there?

 

6. Yonah said, “I screamed from the belly of Sheol! Thou didst hearken-to my voice!” What did Yehovah do?

 

 

 

III. The Sub-Marine (verses 4-5)

 

“Thou didst sling me submerged into the heart of the seas.” He was slung underwater, and was submerged into the heart of the seas (plural).

 

“And a river will surround me!” He will be surrounded by some river!

 

“All thy breakers and thy waves crossed-over upon me.” Not just a few breakers and wavers, but all Yehovah’s breakers and waves crossed over upon him.

 

“”And I, I said I’ve been forced-out from straight-in-front-of Thine eyes!” He figured that Yehovah shoved him out of His sight; Yehovah did not desire to see him.

 

“But I will accrue to look unto the Temple of Thy Holy-One!” He knows that he will look unto the Temple of Yehovah’s Holy One (the Holy One of Israel).

 

Questions

 

1. Was Yonah slung into the heart of the seas by Yehovah?

 

2. What does “Thou didst sling me submerged into the heart of the seas” describe?

 

3. What does “And a river will surround me” describe?

 

4. What will occur for “All thy breakers and thy waves crossed-over upon me” to happen?

 

5. What does “And I, I said I’ve been forced-out from straight-in-front-of Thine eyes” mean?

 

6. What does accrue mean?

 

7. Explain “I will accrue to look unto the Temple of Thy Holy One”:

 

 

 

IV. More Death; More Resurrection (verses 6-8)

 

“Waters encircled me unto a being!” Those waters are there to take away his life, and he cannot escape from them.

 

“A reed was wrapped to my head.” That reed is a water plant by the shore.

 

“I descended the land with her bars to the cuttings of the mountains for my sake to Hider.” He went down the land; she hemmed him in on both sides forcing him to go through the mountain passes that were cut out by erosion. This was for his sake as he went to Hider—to the God Who hides Himself, to the period of time that isn’t recorded in the Bible.

 

“And Thou hast made-my-lives-ascend from destruction, Yehovah my Gods, when my being fainted concerning me.” Yehovah his Gods caused him to escape alive from destruction just when his being, his life fainted on top of him.

 

“I remembered Yehovah!” He remembered this God, this Hope.

 

“And my rolling came unto Thee—unto the Temple of Thy Holy-One!” His detailed prayer came unto Yehovah—until the Temple of Yehovah’s Holy One of Israel.

 

Questions

 

1. What does “Waters encircled me unto a being” mean?

 

2. What deep will surround her?

 

3. What reed was wrapped to her head?

 

4. What does “I descended the land with her bars” mean?

 

5. What are the cuttings of the mountains?

 

6. Why was this descending for the speaker’s sake?

 

7. What does to Hider mean?

 

8. What does the speaker mean by, “I descended the land with her bars to the cuttings of the mountains for my sake to Hider”?

 

9. What occurred next, described by, “And Thou hast made-my-lives-ascend from destruction, Yehovah my Gods”?

 

10. Why is lives plural?

 

11. What does Yehovah mean?

 

12. Why is Gods plural?

 

13. The speaker continued, “And Thou hast made-my-lives-ascend from destruction, Yehovah my Gods, when my being fainted upon me.” What occurs if the being faints upon the speaker?

 

14. The speaker then said, “I remembered Yehovah!” What is so significant about this?

 

15. What is this rolling that come unto Yehovah?

 

16. What is this Temple?

 

17. Who is this Holy One?

 

18. What occurred if the speaker’s rolling came unto Yehovah and until the Temple of Yehovah’s Holy One?

 

 

 

V. Damned Lifeguards (verse 9)

 

“Guards of breaths of vanity shall forsake their grace!” Those who try to save their own lives will reject the Grace of God.

 

Questions

 

1. What are breaths of vanity?

 

2. What does grace and “shall forsake their grace” mean?

 

3. What must a person do that is the opposite of guarding his/her own breaths of vanity?

 

 

 

VI. Sacrifice, Confession and Peace (verse 10)

 

“And I, I will sacrifice to Thee via the voice of confession!” He will once again do sacrifice to Yehovah, but this time via confessing!

 

“I will make peace what I vowed!” He will keep his vows by doing what he said in the vow.

 

“Her Salvation is to Yehovah!” Yehovah is the one who owns and is responsible for his being’s Salvation!

 

Questions

 

1. Why is ‘I’ mentioned twice?

 

2. What is confession?

 

3. What is the voice of confession?

 

4. Why is this voice of confession some kind of sacrifice?

 

5. What does “I will make peace what I vowed” mean?

 

6. Who is her in, “Her Salvation is to Yehovah”?

 

7. What does “Her Salvation is to Yehovah” mean?

 

8. Who said, “Her Salvation is to Yehovah”?

 

 

 

VII. Fish Puke (verse 11)

 

Yehovah said something to the fish. The fish responded by vomiting Yonah toward the dry land.

 

Questions

 

1. What did Yehovah say to the fish?

 

2. Where did the fish vomit Yonah?

 

3. What did Yonah smell like?

 

4. What did Yonah do once he was vomited on the shore?

 

 

 

Jonah Chapter 3

1And the speech of Yehovah was unto Dove [Yonah] a second time to say, 2 “Arise! Walk unto Neenvey the big city! And call unto her the calling that I spoke unto thee!”

 

3And Dove [Yonah] arose. And he walked unto Neenvey according to the speech of Yehovah.

 

And Neenvey was a big city to Elohim, three days’ walk.

 

4And Dove [Yonah] began to come into the city a one-day walk. And he called. And he said, “Forty days more, and Neenvey is flipped-over!” 5And the men of Neenvey believed in Elohim!

 

And they called a shutting! And they put-on sacks from their big and unto their little.

 

6And the speech struck unto the king of Neenvey. And he arose from his chair. And he crossed-over his splendour from upon him. And he covered sack. And he sat upon the ash. 7And he screamed! And he said in Neenvey from the taste of the king and his big-ones to say, “The man and the beast, the herd and the flock shall not taste anything! They shall not pasture, and they shall not drink water! 8And the man and the beast covered themselves sacks! And they called unto Elohim via a grip! And they turned, a man, from his bad way and from the violence that is in their palms! 9Who will know? The Elohim will turn and console, and He will turn from the heat of His nose. And we will not perish!”

 

10And the Elohim saw their works—that they turned from their bad way. And the Elohim was consoled concerning the bad that He spoke to do to them. And He did not.

 

 

 

I. Walking Orders Again(verse 1-2)

 

Yehovah’s speech came to Yonah a second time. He told him to arise and to walk unto the big city of Nineveh, and to shout unto her what Yehovah told him previously to call.

 

Questions

 

1. Why didn’t Yehovah tell Yonah off for disobeying and wasting time?

 

2. What was the original calling that Yehovah had commanded Yonah?

 

 

 

II. Travel Nineveh (verse 3)

 

Yonah arose from the shore. He walked unto Nineveh just as Yehovah spoke to him.

 

Questions

 

1. Why did Yonah arise and walk this time?

 

2. How far was Nineveh?

 

3. How long was the walk?

 

 

 

III. The Big City (verse 3)

 

Elohim Himself saw Nineveh as a big city. It took three days to walk through it!

 

Questions

 

1. How many miles is a three-day walk?

 

2. What kind of a city can be this big? What is it called?

 

3. What is important about this being a big city to Elohim?

 

 

 

IV. Doomsday Announcement (verses 4-5)

 

Yonah just began to come into the city; he walked into it a distance that one can walk in a full day. He shouted the message of Yehovah: “Forty days more, and Neenvey is flipped-over!” The inhabitants of Nineveh believed in Elohim!

 

Questions

 

1. How many miles is a one-day walk?

 

2. What did Yonah call?

 

3. What had Yehovah told him to call?

 

4. Did Yonah disobey Yehovah’s command again?

 

5. Did Yonah give them any hope? Did he tell them that they could repent?

 

6. Who are the folks today who are the offspring of the Ninevites?

 

7. The text states, “And the men of Niveveh believed in Elohim.” What caused them to believe in Elohim? Was Elohim their God?

 

8. Why is this event so important in the Bible?

 

9. Was does believe mean in the Bible?

 

V. Sackcloth and Closing Time (verse 5)

 

The people of Nineveh called for a closing of the mouth! This included no food intake! They put on sackcloth from the highest ranking persons to the lowest, from the biggest person to the littlest.

 

Questions

 

1. What is a shutting?

 

2. What are these sacks?

 

3. Why did they put on this sackcloth?

 

4. Did they put sacks on their little babies?

 

 

 

VI. The Royal Response (verses 6-9)

 

The king finally heard the message, and it struck him hard. He got up from his chair (throne) and changed his gorgeous garments, putting on sackcloth. He sat down in ash. And he screamed!

 

He gave commands according to the normal way that commands are given: “The man and the beast, the herd and the flock shall not taste anything!” He gave more details: “They shall not pasture, and they shall not drink water!” Thus, the animals had to be restricted from all food and all water.

 

“And the man and the beast covered themselves sacks!” Every man and every animal had to be covered with sackcloth in the entire land!

 

“And they called unto Elohim via a grip!” They must call unto Elohim without ceasing, gripping (holding on) to continue with this call!

 

“And they returned, a man, from his bad way and from the violence that is in their palms!” Every person must turn from the bad and from the violence that is in the very palms of their hands—over which they have control!

 

“Who will know? The Elohim will return and console, and He will return from the heat of His nose. And we will not perish!” There isn’t any certainty, but perhaps the Gods will turn and bring consolation instead of devastation! Perhaps He will turn from the great heat of His nose (anger). Perhaps the inhabitants of Nineveh will not perish!

 

Questions

 

1. What does “the speech struck unto the king” mean?

 

2. Why did he arise from his chair?

 

3. What does “And he crossed-over his splendour from upon him. And he covered sack” mean?

 

4. What does “he sat upon the ash” mean? Where did he get the ash?

 

5. What would sitting on ash do, and what did this picture?

 

6. Why did the king scream?

 

7. What does “he said in Nineveh from the taste of the king and his big-ones to say” mean?

 

8. Why did they command man and beast to not taste anything?

 

9. Why did he command them all to not drink water?

 

10. The text states, “And the man and the beast covered themselves sacks.” How did the animals manage to cover themselves? Why did they do this?

 

11. What does “via a grip” mean?

 

12. From what bad way did they turn?

 

13. What does “violence that is in their palms” mean?

 

14. What does “Who will know? The Elohim will turn…” mean?

 

15. Why did they take this threat so seriously?

 

16. The text states, “Who will know? The Elohim will turn and console.” What does this last part mean, and what is consolation?

 

17. What is “the heat of His nose”?

 

18. What would be required in order for the citizens of Nineveh to not perish?

 

 

 

VII. Seeing and Not Doing (verse 10)

 

Elohim saw their works! He saw that they turned from doing the bad things they had been doing. And Elohim was consoled about the bad that He had spoken that He would do to them. He didn’t do it.

 

Questions

 

1. What did Elohim see that was important to Him?

 

2. What does “the Elohim was consoled concerning the bad that He spoke to do to them” mean?

 

3. The last statement is, “And He did not.” He did not what?

 

 

Jonah Chapter 4

1And he-was-bad unto Dove [Yonah]: a big bad! And heat was to him! 2And he rolled himself unto Yehovah. And he said, “Ah, Yehovah! Isn’t this my speech unto my being upon my soil? Therefore I anticipated to flee to Tarshish! For I knew that Thou art a Mighty-[One] of favour and wombing, long of noses and multiple of Grace and consolation concerning the bad! 3And now, Yehovah, take, na, my being from me! For my death is better than my life!”

 

4And Yehovah said, “Is the heat good for thee?”

 

5And Dove [Yonah] exited from the city. And he sat from the east to the city. And he made a Succah there for himself. And he sat under her in the shadow until he will see what will be in the city.

 

6And Yehovah Elohim measured a Kikayon-plant. And he ascended from above to Dove [Yonah] to be a shadow upon his head, to rescue him from his bad. And Dove [Yonah] rejoiced a big rejoicing concerning the Kikayon-plant.

 

7And the Elohim measured a worm at the ascending of the dawn for the next day. And she smote the Kikayon. And he withered. 8And he was as the sunrising of the sun. And Elohim measured a cutting, east wind. And the sun attacked upon the head of Dove [Yonah]. And he made-himself-wilt. And he asked his being to die. And he said, “My death is better than my life!”

 

9And Elohim said unto Dove [Yonah], “Is the heat good for thee concerning the Kikayon-plant?” And he said, “The heat is good for me unto death!” 10And Yehovah said, “Thou, thou didst have pity upon the Kikayon in which thou didst not labour and did not make big, that was the son of a night. And he perished the son of a night. 11And I, I will not pity over the big city Neenveh in whom there are many more than 120,000 of Adam who did not know between his right to his left, and multiplied cattle?”

 

 

 

I. Frustrated to Death (verses 1-3)

 

Yehovah’s decision to turn from the destruction of Nineveh was a very bad decision to Yonah. He prayed a detailed prayer to express this. He said, “Ah, Yehovah! Isn’t this my speech unto my being upon my soil?” This is what Yonah told Yehovah while he was still in the Land of Israel.

 

“Therefore I anticipated to flee to Tarshish!” This is why he fled to Tarshish; he knew in advance that this would occur!

 

“For I knew that Thou art a Mighty-[One] of favour and wombing…” Yonah knew that this is the type of a Mighty One Yehovah is: He is quick to show favour and to womb—that is, to take one who needs help and consolation, and bring that one to His womb, as in His lap, to console him/her.

 

“…long of noses…” He doesn’t anger very quickly; He waits a long time to respond in great anger.

 

“…and multiple of Grace and consolation concerning the bad!” He many times over will demonstrate a very strong zeal on behalf of a person or group to do that person or group much good, and to be consoled Himself concerning the bad He would have done if the person or group hadn’t turned.

 

“And now, Yehovah, take, na, my being from me! For my death is better than my life!” He wants Yehovah to cause him to die. His death is better than his continuing to live under these circumstances.

 

Questions

 

1. What was such a big bad to Yonah?

 

2. What did Yonah view it this way?

 

3. What does “And he rolled himself unto Yehovah” mean?

 

4. What does “Ah, Yehovah! Isn’t this my speech unto my being upon my soil” mean?

 

5. What did he mean by, “Therefore I anticipated to flee to Tarshish”?

 

6. What does “I knew that Thou art a Mighty One of favour” mean?

 

7. What does “I knew that Thou art a Mighty One of wombing” mean?

 

8. What does “long on noses” mean?

 

9. What does “multiple of Grace” mean?

 

10. What does “multiple of consolation” mean?

 

11. Explain “concerning the bad” in, “For I knew that Thou art a Mighty-[One] of favour and wombing, long of noses and multiple of Grace and consolation concerning the bad”:

 

12. Why does Yonah desire Yehovah to take his being from him now?

 

13. Is Yonah right when he says, “my death is better than my life”?

 

14. Do you love your own people as much as Yonah loved his?

 

 

 

II. The Heated Question (verse 4)

 

Yehovah asked Yonah one question: “Is the heat good for thee?” Does Yonah benefit himself by being furious?

 

Questions

 

1. What does heat mean?

 

2. Answer the question: Is anger good (beneficial) for Yonah?

 

 

 

III. Camouflage (verse 5)

 

Yonah went out of the city. He found a place east of the city where he could watch. He constructed a Succah (camouflage) for himself so that he would be hidden under its shadow in order to watch and see what will happen in the city.

 

Questions

 

1. Why did Yonah exit the city?

 

2. Why did he choose to sit to watch the city on its eastern side?

 

3. What is a Succah?

 

4. Why did Yonah make a Succah?

 

5. What produced the shadow under which he sat, and why did he want to sit under a shadow?

 

6. What does “until he will see what will be in the city” mean? What was he waiting to see?

 

 

 

IV. Kikayon (verse 6)

 

Now, Yehovah Elohim measured (fitted for size) a plant called in Hebrew Kikayon. The plant must have had very large leaves, since it would provide perfect shade. This plant grew extremely rapidly above Yonah giving Yonah shadow overhead, and to rescue Yonah from his bad (his harm) from the sun. Yonah greatly rejoiced over this Kikayon plant.

 

Questions

 

1. What is a Kikayon plant?

 

2. Why did Yehovah measure this plant?

 

3. Who ascended above Yonah?

 

4. What service did the Kikayon plant do?

 

5. What does “to rescue him from his bad” mean?

 

6. Why was Yonah so happy about the Kikayon plant?

 

V. Worm and Wind (verses 7-8)

 

The Elohim next measured a worm as the dawn ascended for the next day. The worm destroyed the Kikayon, and the plant withered.

 

As the sun rose the next day, Elohim next measured a cutting east wind. The sun beat down on Yonah’s head, and Yonah made himself wilt!

 

He again asked his being to die. He said, “My death is better than my life!”

 

Questions

 

1. How fast had the Kikayon plant grown??

 

2. Why did Elohim need to measure a worm?

 

3. What did the worm do?

 

4. What happened to that large plant?

 

5. Who was at the sunrising of the sun?

 

6. Why did Elohim measure a cutting, east wind, and what is that?

 

7. What did the sun do on this day?

 

8. What did Yonah do in response?

 

9. What does “he asked his being to die” mean?

 

10. Why did he say, “My death is better than my life”?

 

11. Why did Elohim do this—give him a plant that made him glad, then intentionally send a worm, a terrible wind, and the heat of the sun to destroy the plant and to beat down on Yonah’s head?

 

12. Was Yonah right when he said, “My death is better than my life”?

 

 

 

VI. Having Pity (verses 9-11)

 

Elohim said to Yonah, “Is the heat good for thee concerning the Kikayon-plant?” That heat is anger. Yonah replied, “The heat is good for me unto death!” Yonah was angry! Yehovah continued, “Thou, thou didst have pity upon the Kikayon in which thou didst not labour and did not make big, that was the son of a night. And he perished the son of a night.” Yehovah then compared Yonah and the Kikayon to Yehovah and some of the folks of Nineveh: “And I, I will not pity over the big city Nineveh in whom there are many more than 120,000 of Adam who did not know between his right to his left, and multiplied cattle?”

 

Questions

 

1. What did Elohim mean by, “Is the heat good for thee concerning the Kikayon-plant?”

 

2. Yonah stated, “The heat is good for me unto death!” Was he right?

 

3. What did Elohim mean by, “in which thou didst not labour and did not make big”?

 

4. What does “that was the son of a night” mean?

 

5. Why did Yonah pity the plant?

 

6. What does “And he perished the son of a night” mean?

 

7. What does “120,000 of Adam” mean?

 

8. What does “who did not know between his right to his left” mean?

 

9. According to verse 11, according to Elohim, what did Yonah desire Him to do or to not do?

 

10. What does this last part show about Elohim?

 

Predestination

Predestination Discussions

 Prepared with Lynn and Martha Rowe

 

What does predestination mean (as it is used in the Bible)?

The following are all the texts where some form of predestination is found in the Bible:

 

Romans 8:29 Because whom He foreknew, He also predestinated conformed to the image of His Son for Him to be the firstborn among many brethren. 30And He also called these whom He predestinated. And He also justified these whom He called. whom And He also glorified these He justified.

 

Acts 4:23 And [Peter and John] having been let go, they came to their own [company]. And they reported whatever the chief priests and the elders said to them. 24And they lifted up a voice to God with one accord, having heard. And they said, “Master, Thou art the God Who made the heavens and the land and the sea, and all that are in them, 25Who said by the mouth of David Thy servant, ‘Why have races raged? And folks will meditate emptiness! 26Kings of land shall position themselves. And rulers ‘secreted’ unified concerning Yehovah and concerning His Messiah!’ 27For of a truth, both Herod and Pontius Pilate, with the races and peoples of Israel, were gathered together against Thy holy servant Yeshua, whom Thou didst anoint 28to do whatever Thy hand and Thy counsel predestined to come to pass. 29And now, Yehovah, look upon their threatenings, and give to Thy slaves to speak Thy speech with all boldness 30in that Thou stretchest out Thy hand for servicing, and signs and wonders take place through the name of Thy holy slave Yeshua.” 31And they having prayed, the place in which they were assembled was shaken. And they were all filled with the Spirit of the Holy [One]. And they spoke the speech of God with boldness.

 

1 Corinthians 2:7 But rather, we speak the hidden Wisdom of God in a mystery that God predetermined before the ages for our glory…

 

Ephesians 1:3 Blessed is the God and Father of our Lord Messiah Yeshua Who blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenlies with Messiah 4just as He chose us in Him before the foundation of the world for us to be holy and blameless before Him in love, 5having predestinated us for ‘sonshipment’ through Messiah Yeshua to Himself, according to the good pleasure of His will 6to the praise of the glory of His grace in which He made us objects of grace in the Beloved 7in whom we have redemption through His blood—the remission of offences—according to the riches of His grace.

 

Ephesians 1:11 …in Him in whom we also obtained an inheritance, being predestinated according to the purpose of Him who works all things according to the counsel of His will…

 

The lexicographic entry is as follows:

 

4309 , pro-or-id’-zo: from 4253 and 3724

 

1) to predetermine, decide beforehand

 

2) in the NT of God decreeing from eternity

 

3) to foreordain, appoint beforehand

 

As a reader can see, the Greek comes from a prefix and a main root (4253 and 3724). The prefix has the following entry:

 

4253 , pro: a primary preposition: 1) before

 

The main root has the following entry:

 

3724 , hor-id’-zo:

 

1) to define

 

2) to mark out the boundaries or limits (of any place or thing) 1b to determine, appoint

 

3 that which has been determined, acc. to appointment, decree

 

4) to ordain, determine, appoint

 

Putting these together, we have before + determine, appoint. This shows a predetermination or a pre-appointing.

 

The problem with the English word predestination is that it has the connotation of destiny, as if the direction of the person is fixed and unchangeable. The texts above refer to particular goals that have been appointed by God, and will certainly occur.

 

The reader must examine each text in order to see what these goals are.

 

Romans 8:29 Because whom He foreknew, He also predestinated conformed to the image of His Son for Him to be the firstborn among many brethren. 30And He also called these whom He predestinated. And He also justified these whom He called. whom And He also glorified these He justified.

 

This text shows that Saints were predestinated (better, predetermined or pre-appointed; I will use preordained) to a particular goal: that of being conformed to the image of His Son. This text does not indicate that unsaved folks were predetermined to be Saints. Understand the difference! He already foreknew them. (He states, “I never knew you,” to some of the damned to show that He never foreknew them in this way.) Again, His purpose for the Saints in this text is that they will be conformed to the image of His Son.

 

Then, verse 30 shows that those whom He foreknew and who were preordained conformed to the image of His Son were also called, justified, and then glorified. Again, this preordination is not unto Salvation, but unto conformation! They are already the Saved (the Saints) from the previous verse.

 

The next text is the following:

 

Acts 4:23 And [Peter and John] having been let go, they came to their own [company]. And they reported whatever the chief priests and the elders said to them. 24And they lifted up a voice to God with one accord, having heard. And they said, “Master, Thou art the God Who made the heavens and the land and the sea, and all that are in them, 25Who said by the mouth of David Thy servant, ‘Why have races raged? And folks will meditate emptiness! 26Kings of land shall position themselves. And rulers ‘secreted’ unified concerning Yehovah and concerning His Messiah!’ 27For of a truth, both Herod and Pontius Pilate, with the races and peoples of Israel, were gathered together against Thy holy servant Yeshua, whom Thou didst anoint 28to do whatever Thy hand and Thy counsel predestined to come to pass. 29And now, Yehovah, look upon their threatenings, and give to Thy slaves to speak Thy speech with all boldness 30in that Thou stretchest out Thy hand for servicing, and signs and wonders take place through the name of Thy holy slave Yeshua.” 31And they having prayed, the place in which they were assembled was shaken. And they were all filled with the Spirit of the Holy [One]. And they spoke the speech of God with boldness.

 

It shows that Yehovah the Father sent and anointed Yeshua, using His power (His hand) to bring to pass what Yehovah’s counsel predetermined. It also isn’t a text showing predestination to Salvation.

 

The following text is next:

 

1 Corinthians 2:7 But rather, we speak the hidden Wisdom of God in a mystery that God predetermined before the ages for our glory…

 

The mystery was predetermined, and not salvation.

 

Now, consider the next text:

 

Ephesians 1:3 Blessed is the God and Father of our Lord Messiah Yeshua Who blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenlies with Messiah 4just as He chose us in Him before the foundation of the world for us to be holy and blameless before Him in love, 5having predestinated us for ‘sonshipment’ through Messiah Yeshua to Himself, according to the good pleasure of His will 6to the praise of the glory of His grace in which He made us objects of grace in the Beloved 7in whom we have redemption through His blood—the remission of offences—according to the riches of His grace.

 

Verse 4 shows that these folks were chosen. Verse 5 shows that they were predestinated (preordained) for ‘sonshipment’ (a coined word indicating that a person who formerly was not a genetic son has been turned into a son contrary to nature; it is much more than adoption).

 

Us in this text refers to a group. But what group? The following verses identity this group:

 

Ephesians 1:12 …for us who have previously trusted in the Messiah to be to the praise of His glory 13in Whom also ye, having heard the speech of the Truth—the glad tidings of your salvation—in Whom also ye, having believed, were sealed with the Spirit the Holy [One] of promise, 14Who is the earnest of our inheritance, to the redemption of the Acquired Possession, to praise of His glory.

 

Who previously trusted in the Messiah? This group identified as us is in contrast to another group identified with the pronoun ye in verse 13. Since ye must refer to the Ephesian Saints, us must refer to the Israelis. Messiah is the earnest of the inheritance of the Israelis. When the Acquired Possession (Israel) is redeemed, the glory of the Messiah will receive praise.

 

Thus, in Ephesians 1:5, the Israelis are predestinated for ‘sonshipment’—to become children of God.

 

This entire group of Israelis was preordained. In verse 6, members of this group are made objects of grace in the Beloved. (Verse 6 shows Salvation; verse 5 shows the placement of these folks as sons/daughters to Yehovah through Messiah Yeshua.)

 

The purpose of verse 5 required verse 6 to occur first. They had to be made objects of Grace in the Beloved in order for them to fulfill their status of being made sons/daughters to Yehovah. Again, this does not show preordination to Salvation, but to a relationship: ‘sonshipment’ to Himself—to Yehovah.

 

Verse 7 indicates that this we (same as us), the Israelis, have redemption through Messiah’s blood. They also have forgiveness of offences. Nothing in this text indicates that Yehovah preordained them to redemption or forgiveness. Yet, it is evident that the preordination of verse 5 rested upon their being redeemed and forgiven.

 

The last text is the following:

 

Ephesians 1:11 …in Him in whom we also obtained an inheritance, being predestinated according to the purpose of Him who works all things according to the counsel of His will…

 

This text does not even state the reason for the predestination (‘preordination’). It only shows that this preordination is according to Yehovah’s purpose (singular).

 

Thus, Biblical predestination is preordination by which a group (the Israelis) is made conformed to Messiah, and that group will fulfill a certain purpose that He has (Ephesians 1:11).

 

What does predestination mean (as it is commonly used today)?

It commonly and erroneously means the act of God by which He determines who will and who will not be saved. This includes teachings that God’s decisions on this are unchangeable and fixed before a person is born. Thus, in this teaching, its proponents hold that a person who is predestinated to Salvation cannot and will not be unsaved, and a person who is predestinated to damnation cannot and will not be saved no matter how much each desires to have another ending.

 

Can we know whom God has predestined?

Yes.

 

1 Peter 1:1 Peter, apostle of Messiah Yeshua: to elect sojourners of the dispersion of Pontus, of Galatia, of Cappadocia, of Asia and Bithynia 2according to the foreknowledge of God the Father by sanctification of the Spirit unto obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Messiah Yeshua. Grace to you, and peace be multiplied.

 

We can know that Yehovah has already elected (chosen) these Israeli persons in the texts above, because through these writers, the Spirit of God stated that these folks are elect according to the foreknowledge of God. They are not only the same group of Israelis who will be the fulfillment of the other texts (since those future Israelis will live during the Tribulation). These Israelis who lived in the past and who died in the past are also elect, and are thus preordained. God wasn’t taken by surprise.

 

The question arises regarding knowing whether folks around us are predestined.

 

If we can know that a person is born of God, we will automatically know that this person is pre-known and elected (chosen). So, the question becomes, “Can we know, with certainty, who is born of God right now in our present location and time?” The following text indirectly answers the question:

 

2 Corinthians 6:14 Be ye not unequally yoked together with unbelievers.

 

This indirectly instructs that it is fine to be equally yoked with believers. This, in turn, indirectly instructs that one can know who is and who isn’t a believer.

 

This yoking is of a contractual nature, whether business or social, by which one person is linked in reputation and responsibility to another.

 

Thus, the Bible indicates that one can know with certainty who is and who is not a believer. The step from being a believer to being born of God has to do with whether the faith is permanent or temporary. The following text directly refers to temporary faith (temporary belief):

 

Luke 8:13 And those upon the rock are those who receive the speech with joy when they hear. And these who believe for a time don’t have a root, and fall away in time of trial.

 

Establishing who has temporary faith and permanent faith is a matter of observation and patience. Those with temporary faith will not last.

 

So, the Bible doesn’t directly refer to a miscellaneous individual being predestined, though it does refer to a group being predestined. It does speak of individuals who were preordained to particular tasks (good or bad), however, including John the Baptist and Judas Iscariot. It also speaks of all Saints as elect according to foreknowledge.

 

Can a person who has been predestined (predetermined, referring to a Saint) know that he/she has been predestined (predetermined)?

If one can recognize those who are not, one should be able to recognize his/her own status. A vanity occurs at this point, however. Rarely does a person look carefully ‘in the mirror’ to establish his or her own faith. The Scripture commands a group to do this:

 

2 Corinthians 13:5 Test ye yourselves—if ye are in the faith! Prove yourselves! Or, don’t ye recognize yourselves—that Messiah Yeshua is in you [in the group consisting of you], unless ye are rejected?

 

Apart from the danger of vanity, a person can know for sure:

 

1 John 2:3 And we know that we have known Him by this: if we keep His commandments.

 

1 John 3:18 My little children, we shall not love in speech or with language, but work and Truth. 19And we know that we are of the Truth by this. And we shall persuade our hearts before Him.

 

1 John 4:12 No one has seen God at any time. If we shall love one another, God abides in us, and His love is perfected in us. 13We know that we abide in Him and He in us by this, because he has given from His spirit to us.

 

1 John 5:13 I wrote these things to you who believe on the name of the Son of God so that ye will know that ye have everlasting life, and so that ye will believe on the name of the Son of God.

 

1 John 5:19 We know that we are from God.

 

These texts show certainty, and include self-evaluation.

 

All who hold a view that is ‘hyper-Calvinistic’ believe that whatever God foreknows, He causes. Thus, they hold God responsible for all things that happen since He knows all things! This is a violent and evil theology that cannot describe the Biblical God, but instead describes an evil deity more akin to what certain ‘earth tribes’ have followed.

 

How do we know what God causes or does not cause?

(1) Yehovah causes what He claims He causes and what He prophesies that He will cause. The Bible has many examples of acts for which Yehovah Himself takes credit. If Yehovah has predetermined something and has communicated that directly or through a prophet, a dreamer, etc., He is the cause.

 

Many (including insurance companies) claim that natural disasters are ‘acts of God.’ Unless He takes credit for it, this is a form of blasphemy, since whatever Yehovah does is beneficial, constructive, or selectively destructive to save more lives, destroying only what is necessary to stop a gross violation that will spread. A tornado that destroys homes of evildoers and doers of good alike is no act of the Biblical God.

 

Yehovah instituted weather, lightning, clouds, wind, storms, temperatures, rain, etc. This does not mean that He has set a particular storm into action (unless He claims to have done so). Yehovah always gives warnings before He does something:

 

Amos 3:7 For my Lords Yehovah will not do a speech but-rather He exposed His secret unto His slaves the prophets!

 

Consider the greater context:

 

Amos 3:3 Will two walk unified without having-been-appointed? 4Will a lion roar in a forest, and torn is not to  him? Will a young-lion give his voice from his habitation without capturing? 5Will a bird fall upon a snare of the land, and a trap is not to her? Will a snare ascend from the soil, and capturing, he will not capture?—6if a shofar will blast in a city, and a people will not tremble?—if bad will be in a city, and Yehovah did not do? 7For my Lords Yehovah will not do a speech but-rather He exposed His secret unto His slaves the prophets! 8A lion roared! Who will not fear? My Lords Yehovah spoke! Who will not prophesy?

 

What about the Holocaust? Did Yehovah give warnings of this catastrophic event? Yes, He did. He gave the following sources of information at least five years in advance:

 

  • The Bible itself that spoke of the continuing cycle of destruction from Yehovah against the Israelis as long as they are refusing to even consider the Torah. He gave how their enemies would destroy them in cycles throughout history.

     

    Isaiah 6:13  But yet in it shall be a tenth, and it shall return, and shall be eaten: as a teil tree, and as an oak, whose substance is in them, when they cast their leaves: so the holy seed shall be the substance thereof.

     

    This strangely translated text gives the cyclical nature of Yehovah’s destructions. The following is a literal rendering of this verse:

     

    Isaiah 6:12 And Yehovah will distance the adam. And He will multiply the desertion in the midst of the Land. 13And yet, in her is her wealths. And she shall return. And she shall be for burning as a terebinth [tree]. And the holy seed is her trunk, as an oak that the trunk is in them when shooting-forth!

     

    This text describes a tree growing tall, then being cut. The top is used for firewood. The trunk then sets out new shoots that grow, finally becoming a large tree. That tree is then cut, the top being used for firewood. The cycle continues. This is how Yehovah has determined that Israel will both continue and will suffer holocausts throughout her history.

     

  • Another source of warning before the Holocaust came from Israel’s enemies. They told the Jews that they would kill them, given the opportunity, and they told them to leave.
  • Traveling rabbis provided another source. They told Jews in the small communities that they needed to leave, because their enemies would kill them.
  • Friends, non-Jewish folks who knew that they were in the greatest danger, and they needed to leave, provided another source.

Thus, with these four sources of warnings, and with folks willing to help them leave, the majority stayed under the belief that things could not possibly become that bad. When the enemies came to destroy, the majority of Jews stood still while they were slaughtered—not only because of the shock, but because they knew they had no place to run, and they had no hope. They had refused all warnings. Israel will experience the cycle of holocausts throughout history to come until the greatest holocaust, the Tribulation. The end of sin in Israel will finally occur at that time.

 

Do humans have ‘free will’?

No. Humans have limitations and responsibilities. If they had free will, they could freely will anything, and could accomplish whatever they freely willed. Freely willing something while knowing that failure will be the result isn’t truly freely willing anything. For example, if I were to will to fly like a bird, another could say, “You have free will, because you will to fly like a bird without any restrictions on your willing to do that!” My response would be that my wishful thinking cannot be the same as free will. Anytime one wills what the person cannot accomplish, that cannot be considered an act of free will, but rather of desires that won’t occur. Free will must necessarily mean that what is willed certainly shall be accomplished. (Will includes both the desire to do or accomplish something and the possibility of its being done and accomplished.)

 

The following are dictionary (Mirriam-Webster) acceptations of free that pertain to our topic:

 

1. Not subject to the control or domination of another.

 

2. Not determined by anything beyond its own nature or being : choosing or capable of choosing for itself : determined by the choice of the actor or performer.

 

3. Not bound, confined, or detained by force.

 

For will, the following acceptations are pertinent:

 

1. A choice or determination of one having authority or power.

 

2. The power of control over one’s own actions or emotions.

 

The dictionary also gives acceptations for free will as an entity:

 

1. Voluntary choice or decision.

 

2. Freedom of humans to make choices that are not determined by prior causes or by divine intervention.

 

All these things show one flaw as far as humans having a ‘free will’: Humans are not self-existent, and all they have and can do has been provided to them from another source. Thus, prior causes always are part of decisions that must be made. Yehovah also divinely intervenes when He desires to do so, removing some of the supposed freedom.

 

Free will is commonly characterized as a human’s freedom to ‘accept the Lord’ or ‘reject the Lord.’ This formula contains several errors. One error is that a human’s accepting God is important rather than the opposite: whether one is accepted in the Beloved, or not. Our acceptance of God is a total vanity. His acceptance of anyone of us is Salvation, and is a demonstration of His Grace. The second error is that a person has freedom to believe, as if faith were in the possession of every person. Faith is not an entitlement; it is a command. One cannot exercise what one does not possess. Faith is possessed by no person at birth; it comes about only by one means mentioned in the following text:

 

Romans 10:17 Faith is by hearkening, and hearkening is by the speech of God.

 

Put in its proper order of events, first comes the speech of God in some form (including the Bible). After this comes hearkening—that is, doing what the speech says and listening to its message. Only then can faith form.

 

The terms faith and belief are exactly the same in Biblical usage.

 

Freedom of will discussions are not usually about obtaining Salvation, however. They are usually about whether a person has the freedom to make a particular decision in a particular circumstance, whether that decision has already been made, and whether the person truly didn’t have an option, but was being coerced. This, then, is not an issue of spirituality, but one of options in life. If the Bible does not indicate that God is causing a particular choice, and if God has not communicated that He is causing a particular choice, assuming that He is the cause may be blasphemy, and is certainly an accusation without warrant. He does cause the lots to fall certain ways, as some texts will show:

 

Numbers 34:13 And Moses commanded the children of Israel, saying, “This is the land that ye shall inherit by lot that Yehovah commanded to give unto the nine tribes, and to the half tribe.”

 

Proverbs 16:33 The lot is cast in the bosom, but the whole disposing thereof is of Yehovah.

 

Jonah 1:7 And they said everyone to his fellow, “Come! And we shall cast lots so that we will know for whose cause this evil is upon us!” So they cast lots. And the lot fell upon Jonah.

 

It is evident (to me) in this last text that Yehovah made sure that the lot fell to Jonah. I have found no proof that all lots are controlled by Yehovah. I have no doubt that some have been and will be controlled by Yehovah. Determinism is not part of Biblical faith.

 

Determinism is defined (Mirriam Webster) in the following way: A theory or doctrine that acts of the will, occurrences in nature, or social or psychological phenomena are causally determined by preceding events or natural laws.

 

If one considers Yehovah the ‘Natural Law’, this definition would become, “A theory or doctrine that acts of the will, occurrences in nature, or social or psychological phenomena are causally determined by Yehovah.” Thus, Yehovah would be causing an act of the will in every person. This removes all responsibility from humans. This is not Biblical.

 

Folks have limited choices. Their choices are always limited. (One cannot say ‘limited freedom’ since those two are oxymoronic in nature.) Within the limits one has, one can make choices.

 

Sin occurs when a person steals an option that is not given as a choice. It is a violation of what a deity has defined as righteousness. Biblical sin occurs when a person steals an option that Yehovah never gave. Thus the person has violated a command. A person may say, “It was my choice,” but actually not doing that sin was a command of Yehovah, and He never gave a choice to do other than what was commanded.

 

A lot (usage of dice) was used to find information or to determine who would do what. Thus, the sailors on the ship that Jonah took to flee from Yehovah’s assignment used the lot to figure that Jonah was the responsible party for the storm’s intransigence.

 

Does God Control All Things?

If Yehovah controls all things, He is responsible for sin. If He is responsible for sin, He is a liar.

 

Yehovah does not control all things, but sovereignly intercedes when He desires to do so to make sure that all His plans have been and will be perfectly fulfilled.

 

The sovereignty of God necessarily includes His ability to not be the cause of all things. If He must be the cause of all things, He is a slave, not a sovereign Being.

 

Sovereignty includes having all power and authority at one’s disposal so that one can make sure plans work exactly as desired. This does not necessitate using that power and authority all the time and in every situation in order to cause every detail to happen.

 

Foreknowledge is knowing something in advance of its occurrence.

 

Foreknowledge and sovereignty are not related. Just because Yehovah knows does not mean Yehovah causes.