Verses 1-3
Jonah 4:1-3. But it — The divine
forbearance in sparing Nineveh;
displeased Jonah exceedingly —
“Seeing that what he had
foretold against the Ninevites
did not happen, he was afraid
lest he should pass for a false
prophet and a deceiver, his
ministry be despised, and his
person exposed to the violence
of the Ninevites. He was
therefore very peevish and
impatient, and he vents his
complaints in the following
verse.” And he prayed unto the
Lord — He uttered expostulations
and complaints in his prayer to
God, wherein he pleaded an
excuse for his former
disobedience to God’s commands.
O Lord, was not this my saying —
Did I not think of this, and
suppose that it would be the
case, that thy pardon would
contradict my preaching?
Therefore I fled before unto
Tarshish — Namely, to avoid
coming upon this message, for I
knew that thou art a gracious
God — I knew by the declarations
thou madest to Moses, (Exodus
34:6,) and by several instances
of thy mercy, that thou dost not
always execute the punishments
thou threatenest against
sinners; being moved by thy
essential goodness and
mercifulness to spare them.
Therefore now, O Lord, take, I
beseech thee, my life from me —
“I cannot survive the confusion
of seeing my prediction vain and
to no effect; I cannot bear to
live under the imputation of
being a false prophet.” For it
is better for me to die than to
live — We may learn from this,
that Jonah was naturally a man
of a hasty, impatient temper;
for he here shows himself to
have been exceedingly vexed
without any just cause. For it
does not appear that the
Ninevites would have despised
him, or looked upon him as a
false prophet, though the city
was not destroyed; because their
having recourse to fasting,
humiliation, and turning from
their evil ways, was in order to
avert the wrath of God, that he
might repent and turn from his
fierce anger, and they perish
not; see Jonah 3:9; and
therefore they would, in all
probability, have attributed the
city’s preservation to this
their humiliation and
repentance, and have still
looked upon Jonah as one that
was divinely commissioned. So
that he was indeed moved to
these passionate expressions and
exclamations purely by his own
hasty disposition, and not from
any just cause given him.
Verses 4-9
Jonah 4:4-9. Doest thou well to
be angry? — What a mild reproof
was this from God, for such a
passionate behaviour as Jonah
manifested! Here the prophet
experienced that Jehovah was a
gracious God, merciful, and slow
to anger. Here we learn by the
highest example, that of God
himself, how mild and gentle we
ought to be if we would be like
him, even to those who carry
themselves toward us in the most
unreasonable and unjustifiable
manner. So Jonah went out of the
city — The words should rather
have been rendered, Now Jonah
had gone out of the city: for
the particulars related in the
foregoing verses took place
after his departing out of the
city, and sitting somewhere in
view of it, expecting some
extraordinary judgment to come
upon it; but being disappointed,
he broke out into that
expostulation with God already
mentioned. We may observe, in
this book, several instances of
facts related first, and then
the manner how these facts were
brought about explained
afterward. And sat on the east
side of the city — Probably in a
place where he could best see
the city; and there made him a
booth — A little cot, or shed of
twigs. Or, a shelter, as Bishop
Newcome translates the word,
observing, that it signifies
both an artificial cover, such
as a tent, or booth, and also a
natural one, as Job 38:40;
Jeremiah 25:38, where it is used
of the covert of a lion. The LXX.
render it σκηνη, a tent; and the
Vulgate, umbraculum, a little
shed. And the Lord prepared a
gourd — This is supposed to be
spoken of a shrub growing in
Palestine, bearing broad and
very thick leaves, so that it
affords a great shade. Bochart,
Hiller, and Celsius say, that
the ricinus, or palma- christi,
is here meant; a supposition
which is favoured by its height,
which is that of the olive, the
largeness of its leaves, which
are like those of the vine, and
the quickness of its growth: see
Pliny, Nat. Hist., lib. 15. cap.
7. Whatever kind of plant it was
that shaded Jonah, we may justly
attribute a miraculous growth to
it. Indeed the relation in the
text evidently supposes that,
saying that God made it to come
up over Jonah: that it might be
a shadow, &c., to deliver him
from his grief — That is, from
the inconvenience which he felt
from the heat. So Jonah was
exceeding glad of the gourd — As
vehement in his joy now as in
his grief before. His passions
were strong, and easily moved by
trifling events, whether of an
agreeable or disagreeable
nature. We are not told that
Jonah saw the hand of God in
this plant’s rising up so
suddenly to shelter him, or that
he was thankful to God for it.
But God prepared — That is,
sent, or excited, a worm — By
the same power which caused the
gourd suddenly to spring up and
spread itself. And it smote the
gourd — Early next morning it
bit the root, so that the whole
gourd withered. And when the sun
did arise — That is, when it was
got to some height; for the
day-break is spoken of before,
and this seems to signify some
space of time after that:
besides, the sun’s being
described as beating on the head
of Jonah, shows that an advance
in the day is here intended; God
prepared a vehement east wind —
The winds in the hot countries,
when they blow from the sandy
deserts, are oftentimes more
suffocating than the heat of the
sun, and they make the sun-beams
give a more intense heat. The
sun beat upon the head of Jonah
that he fainted — Was
overpowered by the heat, and
ready to faint. And wished
himself to die — As he had done
before; and said, It is better
for me to die than to live — But
Jonah must be made more wise,
humble, and compassionate too,
before it will be better for him
to die than to live. And before
God hath done with him, he will
teach him to value his own life
more, and to be more tender of
the lives of others. And God
said, Doest thou well to be
angry for the gourd? — For an
insignificant, short-lived
plant? God adds this
circumstance to the question
before proposed, that Jonah
might be his own judge, and at
once condemn his own passions,
justify God’s patience and
mercy, and acquiesce with
satisfaction in God’s merciful
dealings with the inhabitants of
Nineveh. And he said, I do well
to be angry — When a similar
question was asked before, he
was silent; but now he is out of
all patience, and quarrels
openly and rudely with God, who
had spared Nineveh, which Jonah
thought ought to have been
consumed as Sodom, or as the old
world was. Even unto death — I
have just cause to be angry,
even to that degree as to wish
myself dead. The prophet here
records his own sin, without
concealing any circumstance of
it, as Moses and other holy
writers have done.
Verse 10
Jonah 4:10. Then said the Lord —
Jonah having thus showed his
love and pity for the gourd, God
proceeds to judge him out of his
own mouth; Thou hast had pity on
the gourd, &c. — Thou deplorest
the loss of the gourd, and
thinkest it a severe misfortune
to thee, and hard that thou
shouldest be deprived of it,
though it was not made by thee,
came up without any labour of
thine, and was by its nature of
a short duration: — if this is
the case with thee in regard to
a mean, short-lived plant, think
how unjustly thou judgest, when
thou condemnest my mercy toward
the Ninevites! How much more
severe would it have been to
have destroyed a whole city, in
the ruin of which many innocent
creatures, as children and brute
animals, must necessarily have
been involved; and, what is
still more awful, many immortal
beings have been plunged into
everlasting misery! If thou
supposest I ought to have spared
or preserved the gourd, because
it shaded thee from the heat;
think how much more my essential
goodness and kindness toward my
creatures, the work of my hands,
must incline me to spare them
whenever it can be done any way
consistently with my justice or
the laws of my government.
Verse 11
Jonah 4:11. And should not I —
The God of infinite compassion;
spare Nineveh, that great city?
— Wouldest thou have me to be
less merciful to such a large
and populous city as Nineveh,
than thou art to a shrub? Surely
the lives of so many thousand
men, to say nothing of their
immortal souls, are much more
valuable than the life of a
single contemptible plant.
Wherein (in which city) are more
than six-score thousand persons
that cannot discern, &c. — That
is, infants, who have no
knowledge between good and evil,
as it is expressed Deuteronomy
1:39. If we compute these as a
fifth part of the inhabitants of
Nineveh, the whole sum will
amount to six hundred thousand
persons, which are as few as can
well be supposed to have
inhabited a city of such large
dimensions. And also much cattle
— Besides men, women, and
children in Nineveh, there are
many other of my creatures that
are not sinful, and my tender
mercies are, and shall be, over
all my works. If thou wouldest
be their destroyer, yet I will
be their saviour. Go, Jonah,
rest thyself content, and be
thankful that the goodness which
spared Nineveh hath spared thee,
in this thy inexcusable
frowardness, peevishness, and
impatience. I will be to
repenting Nineveh what I am to
thee, a God gracious and
merciful, slow to anger and of
great kindness, and I will turn
from the evil which thou and
they deserve. This reasoning
seems to have silenced Jonah’s
complaints, and made him
sensible of his fault in
repining at God’s mercy. It has
been observed, that the book of
Jonah ends as abruptly as it
begins. It begins with a
conjunction copulative, And the
word came unto Jonah, &c., which
has made some commentators think
that it was but an appendix to
some of his other writings: and
it ends without giving us any
manner of account, either of
what became of the Ninevites, or
of Jonah himself after this
expedition. It is likely,
indeed, from the compassionate
expressions which God makes use
of toward the Ninevites, that
for this time he reversed their
doom; and it is not improbable
that Jonah, when he had executed
his commission, and been
satisfied by God concerning his
merciful procedure, returned
into Judea. We may presume,
however, that the repentance of
the Ninevites was of no long
continuance; for, not many years
after, we find the Prophet Nahum
foretelling the total
destruction of that city. See
Calmet and Bishop Newton. |