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Text -- Jonah 4:2-11 (NET)

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4:2 He prayed to the Lord and said, “Oh, Lord, this is just what I thought would happen when I was in my own country. This is what I tried to prevent by attempting to escape to Tarshish!– because I knew that you are gracious and compassionate, slow to anger and abounding in mercy, and one who relents concerning threatened judgment. 4:3 So now, Lord, kill me instead, because I would rather die than live!” 4:4 The Lord said, “Are you really so very angry?” 4:5 Jonah left the city and sat down east of it. He made a shelter for himself there and sat down under it in the shade to see what would happen to the city. 4:6 The Lord God appointed a little plant and caused it to grow up over Jonah to be a shade over his head to rescue him from his misery. Now Jonah was very delighted about the little plant. 4:7 So God sent a worm at dawn the next day, and it attacked the little plant so that it dried up. 4:8 When the sun began to shine, God sent a hot east wind. So the sun beat down on Jonah’s head, and he grew faint. So he despaired of life, and said, “I would rather die than live!” 4:9 God said to Jonah, “Are you really so very angry about the little plant?” And he said, “I am as angry as I could possibly be!” 4:10 The Lord said, “You were upset about this little plant, something for which you have not worked nor did you do anything to make it grow. It grew up overnight and died the next day. 4:11 Should I not be even more concerned about Nineveh, this enormous city? There are more than one hundred twenty thousand people in it who do not know right from wrong, as well as many animals!”
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Jonah a son of Amittai; the prophet God sent to Nineveh,the prophet who was swallowed by the great fish; son of Amittai
 · Nineveh a town located on the left bank of the Tigris River in northeastern Mesopotamia (Iraq).,the capital city of Assyria
 · Tarshish son of Javan son of Japheth son of Noah,son of Bilhan, great grandson of Benjamin son of Israel,one of the seven princes of Persia under Ahasuerus,a region known for its ports friendly to the ships of Israel,A ship built strong and equiped for long range trading.


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Gourd | Jonah | Complaint | Presumption | God | Anger | Nineveh | Despondency | Tarshish | Life | Miracles | Worm | Death | Parables | Wind | Sunstroke | Blessing | Booth | WRATH, (ANGER) | Animals | more
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Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Jon 4:2 Jonah is precisely correct in his listing of the Lord’s attributes. See Exod 34:6-7; Num 14:18-19; 2 Chr 30:9; Neh 9:17, 31-32; Pss 86:3-8, 15; ...

NET Notes: Jon 4:3 Heb “better my death than my life.”

NET Notes: Jon 4:4 Heb “Does it burn to you?” The verb חָרָה (kharah, “to burn”) functions figuratively here (hypoc...

NET Notes: Jon 4:5 Apparently Jonah hoped that he might have persuaded the Lord to “change his mind” again (see 3:8-10) and to judge Nineveh after all.

NET Notes: Jon 4:6 Heb “he rejoiced with great joy.” The cognate accusative construction repeats the verb and noun of the consonantal root שׂ...

NET Notes: Jon 4:7 Or “appointed.” The verb מָנָה (manah) in the Piel stem means “to send, to appoint” (Ps 61:8; Jo...

NET Notes: Jon 4:8 Jonah repeats his assessment, found also in 4:3.

NET Notes: Jon 4:9 Heb “unto death.” The phrase עַד־מָוֶת (’ad-mavet, “unto death”) i...

NET Notes: Jon 4:10 Heb “which was a son of a night and perished [as] a son of a night.”

NET Notes: Jon 4:11 Heb “and many animals.”

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