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Text -- Jonah 1:1 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
Jonah Tries to Run from the Lord
1:1 The Lord said to Jonah son of Amittai,
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Amittai father of Jonah the prophet from Gath-Hepher
 · Jonah a son of Amittai; the prophet God sent to Nineveh,the prophet who was swallowed by the great fish; son of Amittai


Dictionary Themes and Topics: SHIPS AND BOATS | Prophets | Nineveh | Missions | Minister | Jonah | Disobedience to God | Amittai | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
JFB , Clarke , Calvin , Defender , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , Maclaren , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable , Guzik

Other
Critics Ask , Evidence

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

JFB: Jon 1:1 - -- Meaning in Hebrew, "dove." Compare Gen 8:8-9, where the dove in vain seeks rest after flying from Noah and the ark: so Jonah. GROTIUS not so well expl...

Meaning in Hebrew, "dove." Compare Gen 8:8-9, where the dove in vain seeks rest after flying from Noah and the ark: so Jonah. GROTIUS not so well explains it, "one sprung from Greece" or Ionia, where there were prophets called Amythaonidæ.

JFB: Jon 1:1 - -- Hebrew for "truth," "truth-telling"; appropriate to a prophet.

Hebrew for "truth," "truth-telling"; appropriate to a prophet.

Clarke: Jon 1:1 - -- Now the word of the Lord came unto Jonah - All that is certainly known about this prophet has already been laid before the reader. He was of Gath-he...

Now the word of the Lord came unto Jonah - All that is certainly known about this prophet has already been laid before the reader. He was of Gath-hepher, in the tribe of Zebulun, in lower Galilee, Jos 19:13; and he prophesied in the reigns of Jeroboam the Second, and Joash, kings of Israel. Jeroboam came to the throne eight hundred and twenty-three years before the Christian era, and reigned in Samaria forty-one years, 2Ki 14:23-25. As a prophet, it is likely that he had but this one mission.

Calvin: Jon 1:1 - -- As I have before observed, Jonah seems here indirectly to intimate, 9 that he had been previously called to the office of a teacher; for it is the sa...

As I have before observed, Jonah seems here indirectly to intimate, 9 that he had been previously called to the office of a teacher; for it is the same as though he had said, that he framed this history as a part of his ordinary function. The word of God then was not for the first time communicated to Jonah, when he was sent to Nineveh; but it pleased God, when he was already a Prophet, to employ him among other nations. It might have been then, that he was sent to Nineveh, that the Lord, being wearied with the obstinacy of his own people, might afford an example of pious docility on the part of a heathen and uncircumcised nation, in order to render the Israelites more inexcusable. They made a profession of true religion, they boasted that they were a holy people; circumcision was also to them a symbol and a pledge of God’s covenant; yet they despised all the Prophets, so that their teaching among them was wholly useless. It is then probable that this Prophet was taken away from them, that the Ninevites by their example might increase the sin of Israel, for in three days they turned to God, after Jonah had preached to them: but among the Israelites and their kindred he had, during a long time, effected nothing, when yet his authority had been sufficiently ratified, and thus, as we have already said, in their favor: for Jonah had predicted, that the kingdom of Israel would as yet stand; and however much they deserved to perish, yet the Lord fulfilled what he had promised by the mouth at his servant. They ought then to have embraced his doctrine, not only because it was divine, but especially because the Lord had been pleased to show his love to them.

I do not indeed doubt, but that the ingratitude of the people was in this manner arraigned, since the Ninevites repented at the preaching of Jonah, and that for a short time, while the Israelites ever hardened themselves in their obstinacy. And hence some have refinedly expounded that passage in Mat 12:39, ‘This perverse generation seeketh a sign, and a sign shall not be given to it, except the sign of Jonah the Prophet,’ as though this intimated, that the Gospel was to be preached to the Gentiles, inasmuch as Jonah was taken away from his own nation, and was given as a teacher to foreign and heathen nations. They therefore suppose, that we are to understand this as a prophecy respecting the future call of the Gentiles, as though Christ had said, that he would hereafter go to the Gentiles, after having found the wickedness of the chosen people past recovery. But as Christ expressly applies this comparison, we ought not to draw his words here and there. 10 He indeed confines the similitude to one particular thing, that is, “As Jonah had been three days in the whale’s bowels, so also he would be three days in the bowels of the earth;” as though he had said, that in this he would be like to Jonah, for he would be a Prophet brought to life again. And this was said designedly by Christ, because he saw that he was despised by the Jews, and that his labors were in vain: “Since ye now hear me not, and regard me as nothing, know that I shall be hereafter a new Prophet, even after my resurrection; so at length I shall begin to speak more effectually both to the Jews and to the Gentiles, as Jonah converted Nineveh, after having returned again to life.” This then is the simple meaning of the passage. Hence Jonah was not a type of Christ, because he was sent away unto the Gentiles, but because he returned to life again, after having for some time exercised his office as a Prophet among the people of Israel. They then who say that his going forth was a token of the call of the Gentiles, adduce indeed what is plausible, but it seems to be supported by no solid reason; for it was in fact an extraordinary thing. God, then, had not as yet openly showed what he would do at the coming of Christ. When Naaman the Syrian was converted to the faith, (2Kg 5:15) and a few others, God changed nothing in his ordinary proceedings: for there ever existed the special call of the race of Abraham, and religion was ever confined within the ancient limits; and it remained ever true, that God had not done to other nations as he had to the Jews, for he had revealed to them his judgments, (Psa 147:20.) It was therefore God’s will that the adoption of the race of Abraham should continue unaltered to the conning of Christ, so that the Jews might excel all other nations, and differ from them through a gratuitous privilege, as the holy and elect people of God.

Those who adopt the contrary opinion say, that the Ninevites were converted to the Lord without circumcision. This is true; but I know not whether that was a true and legitimate conversion, which is hereafter mentioned; and of this, the Lord being willing, I shall again speak more fully: but it seems more probable, that they were induced by the reproofs and threatening of the Prophet, suppliantly to deprecate the impending wrath of God: hence God once forgave them; what took place afterwards does not clearly appear. It is certainly not probable that the whole city was converted to the Lord: for soon after that city became exceedingly hostile both to the Israelites and the Jews; and the Church of God was by the Ninevites continually harassed with slaughters. Since it was so, there is certainly no reason to think, that they had really and from the heart repented. But I put off a full discussion of this subject until we come to another passage. Let us go on now with our text.

Defender: Jon 1:1 - -- Jonah was not a mythical person, as many critics have alleged, but a real prophet, who prophesied in Israel during the reign of Jeroboam II (2Ki 14:23...

Jonah was not a mythical person, as many critics have alleged, but a real prophet, who prophesied in Israel during the reign of Jeroboam II (2Ki 14:23, 2Ki 14:25)."

TSK: Jon 1:1 - -- Jonah : 2Ki 14:25; Mat 12:39, Mat 16:4; Luk 11:29, Luk 11:30,Luk 11:32, Jonas

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Jon 1:1 - -- Now the word of the Lord - , literally, "And, ..."This is the way in which the several inspired writers of the Old Testament mark that what it ...

Now the word of the Lord - , literally, "And, ..."This is the way in which the several inspired writers of the Old Testament mark that what it was given them to write was united onto those sacred books which God had given to others to write, and it formed with them one continuous whole. The word, "And,"implies this. It would do so in any language, and it does so in Hebrew as much as in any other. As neither we, nor any other people, would, without any meaning, use the word, And, so neither did the Hebrews. It joins the four first books of Moses together; it carries on the history through Joshua, Judges, the Books of Samuel and of the Kings. After the captivity, Ezra and Nehemiah begin again where the histories before left off; the break of the captivity is bridged over; and Ezra, going back in mind to the history of God’ s people before the captivity, resumes the history, as if it had been of yesterday, "And in the first year of Cyrus."It joins in the story of the Book of Ruth before the captivity, and that of Esther afterward. At times, even prophets employ it, in using the narrative form of themselves, as Ezekiel, "and it was in the thirtieth year, in the fourth month, in the fifth day of the month, and I was in the captivity by the river of Chebar, the heavens opened and I saw."If a prophet or historian wishes to detach his prophecy or his history, he does so; as Ezra probably began the Book of Chronicles anew from Adam, or as Daniel makes his prophecy a whole by itself. But then it is the more obvious that a Hebrew prophet or historian, when he does begin with the word, "And,"has an object in so beginning; he uses an universal word of all languages in its uniform meaning in all language, to join things together.

And yet more precisely; this form, "and the word of the Lord came to - saying,"occurs over and over again, stringing together the pearls of great price of God’ s revelations, and uniting this new revelation to all those which had preceded it. The word, "And,"then joins on histories with histories, revelations with revelations, uniting in one the histories of God’ s works and words, and blending the books of Holy Scripture into one divine book.

But the form of words must have suggested to the Jews another thought, which is part of our thankfulness and of our being Act 11:18, "then to the Gentiles also hath God given repentance unto life."The words are the self-same familiar words with which some fresh revelation of God’ s will to His people had so often been announced. Now they are prefixed to God’ s message to the pagan, and so as to join on that message to all the other messages to Israel. Would then God deal thenceforth with the pagan as with the Jews? Would they have their prophets? Would they be included in the one family of God? The mission of Jonah in itself was an earnest that they would, for God. Who does nothing fitfully or capriciously, in that He had begun, gave an earnest that He would carry on what He had begun. And so thereafter, the great prophets, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, were prophets to the nations also; Daniel was a prophet among them, to them as well as to their captives.

But the mission of Jonah might, so far, have been something exceptional. The enrolling his book, as an integral part of the Scriptures, joining on that prophecy to the other prophecies to Israel, was an earnest that they were to be parts of one system. But then it would be significant also, that the records of God’ s prophecies to the Jews, all embodied the accounts of their impenitence. Here is inserted among them an account of God’ s revelation to the pagan, and their repentance. "So many prophets had been sent, so many miracles performed, so often had captivity been foreannounced to them for the multitude of their sins. and they never repented. Not for the reign of one king did they cease from the worship of the calves; not one of the kings of the ten tribes departed from the sins of Jeroboam? Elijah, sent in the Word and Spirit of the Lord, had done many miracles, yet obtained no abandonment of the calves. His miracles effected this only, that the people knew that Baal was no god, and cried out, "the Lord He is the God."Elisha his disciple followed him, who asked for a double portion of the Spirit of Elijah, that he might work more miracles, to bring back the people.

He died, and, after his death as before it, the worship of the calves continued in Israel. The Lord marveled and was weary of Israel, knowing that if He sent to the pagan they would bear, as he saith to Ezekiel. To make trial of this, Jonah was chosen, of whom it is recorded in the Book of Kings that he prophesied the restoration of the border of Israel. When then he begins by saying, "And the word of the Lord came to Jonah,"prefixing the word "And,"he refers us back to those former things, in this meaning. The children have not hearkened to what the Lord commanded, sending to them by His servants the prophets, but have hardened their necks and given themselves up to do evil before the Lord and provoke Him to anger; "and"therefore "the word of the Lord came to Jonah, saying, Arise and go to Nineveh that great city, and preach unto her,"that so Israel may be shewn, in comparison with the pagan, to be the more guilty, when the Ninevites should repent, the children of Israel persevered in unrepentance."

Jonah the son of Amittai - Both names occur here only in the Old Testament, Jonah signifies "Dove,"Amittai, "the truth of God."Some of the names of the Hebrew prophets so suit in with their times, that they must either have been given them propheticly, or assumed by themselves, as a sort of watchword, analogous to the prophetic names, given to the sons of Hosea and Isaiah. Such were the names of Elijah and Elisha, "The Lord is my God,""my God is salvation."Such too seems to be that of Jonah. The "dove"is everywhere the symbol of "mourning love."The side of his character which Jonah records is that of his defect, his want of trust in God, and so his unloving zeal against those, who were to be the instruments of God against his people. His name perhaps preserves that character by which he willed to be known among his people, one who moaned or mourned over them.

Poole: Jon 1:1 - -- OUR prophet owns himself by both his father’ s name and by his country; of this latter no great doubt is raised, though it appear not whether he...

OUR prophet owns himself by both his father’ s name and by his country; of this latter no great doubt is raised, though it appear not whether he was born in Gath-hepher, or whether it was the place of his abode when he was called to go envoy to the great city Nineveh; of the former, some do inquire whether it be an assumed name; and carry in it the character of some grace or virtue which was eminently in the man, or whether it were the proper name of the person. Amittai, in the Hebrew, denotes truth, veracity, or faith, with the pronoun possessive of the first person, My truth. Though Jonah, a dove by name, denounce dreadful things against Nineveh, yet he doth it as God’ s prophet, and God tells us by Jonah’ s pen; he is the son of his truth. Whether Obadiah were his father, and had this significant name Amittai given him for his owning the truth of God, and his true prophets, in the times of Ahab’ s apostacy; and whether his mother were that widow, whose son Elijah did raise from the dead; and whether he were the person sent by Elijah to anoint Jehu, Elisha, and Hazael, as the Jewish writers affirm; is of no certain demonstrability, and if demonstrated would be of no great moment or use to us. It is clear that (though this be the only book left under his name) he was employed as a prophet in Israel before he was sent into Assyria; for, 2Ki 14:25 , he prophesied the future prosperous successes of Jeroboam the Second, enlarging and establishing the borders of Israel; yet is it not certain to us, whether he appeared a prophet before Jeroboam’ s time, or in the beginning of his reign. Not far from this time we are sure we may date his lime, and range him among the first of the prophets who have left their entire volumes behind them. By this also we may guess who was the king of Assyria, who gave such a rare example of repentance to all succeeding monarchs: it admits a dispute, whether it was Sardanapalus or Belesus, otherwise Pul-belochus, and Pul in Scripture history; if the time do not best suit to the latter (as I think it may) rather than to the former, yet I am sure the unparalleled retiredness of Sardanapalus, reported in history, seems to me a reason why it must be some monarch that, more like a gallant man, lived more free, open, and of easy access, that the news might, as it is suggested it did, come to his hearing in the first day: such temper, it is like, Pul-belochus was of. Whoever was the king, Jonah little expected the success he did find; he thought so great a king and city would not mind him, or else would deride or punish him; or else if they believed him, then they would repent, God would spare them, and Jonah would be cried out on as a false prophet; upon this he declines the embassy, and till God taught him his duty in little ease he will not do it. When a miracle hath set him on his work, and succeeds it, he grows passionate, and will die; God spares and pardons him as well as Nineveh, (which yet falls to sin, and falls under the ruin foretold by Nahum,) and so leaves him a type of Christ’ s burial and resurrection, and an instance how far a good man may sometimes be from his duty and that great passions may be in a prophet.

JONAH CHAPTER 1

Jonah, sent by God to Nineveh, fleeth to Tarshish, Jon 1:1-3 : he is overtaken by a tempest, and discovered, Jon 1:4-10 , thrown into the sea, Jon 1:11-16 , and swallowed by a fish, Jon 1:17 .

Now , Heb. And .

The word of the Lord which is a usual description of prophecy; what God had to speak against Nineveh, be here does reveal to Jonah, with command that he publish it to those concerned in it.

Came unto to, or, was with,

Jonah called Jonas, Luk 11:30 , which signifieth a dove; he was of Gath-hepher, a town of Zebulun, 2Ki 14:25 , but no more is added, by which I conjecture it was some obscure place, to which Jonah gave more light than it could to him.

Amittai of what rank he was appears not.

Gill: Jon 1:1 - -- Now the word of the Lord came unto Jonah the son of Amittai,.... Or, "and the word of the Lord was" l; not that this is to be considered as connected ...

Now the word of the Lord came unto Jonah the son of Amittai,.... Or, "and the word of the Lord was" l; not that this is to be considered as connected with something the prophet had on his mind and in his thoughts when he began to write this book; or as a part detached from a prophecy not now extant; for it is no unusual thing with the Hebrews to begin books after this manner, especially historical ones, of which kind this chiefly is, as the books of Ruth, First and Second Samuel, and Esther; besides, the ו, "vau", is here not copulative, but conversive; doing its office by changing the future tense into the past; which otherwise must have been rendered, "the word of the Lord shall be", or "shall come"; which would not only give another, but a wrong sense. "The word of the Lord" often signifies a prophecy from the Lord; and so the Targum, renders it,

"the word of prophecy from the Lord;''

and it may be so interpreted, since Jonah, under a spirit of prophecy, foretold that Nineveh should be destroyed within forty days; though the phrase here rather signifies the order and command of the Lord to the prophet to do as is expressed in Jon 1:2; whose name was Jonah "the son of Amittai"; of whom see the introduction to this book. Who his father Amittai was is not known: if the rule of the Jews would hold good, that when a prophet mentions his own name, and the name of his father, he is a prophet, the son of a prophet, then Amittai was one; but this is not to be depended on. The Syriac version calls him the son of Mathai, or Matthew; though the Arabians have a notion that Mathai is his mother's name; and observe that none are called after their mothers but Jonas and Jesus Christ: but the right name is Amittai, and signifies "my truth"; and to be sons of truth is an agreeable character of the prophets and ministers of the word, who should be given to truth, possessed of it, and publish it:

saying; as follows:

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Jon 1:1 Heb “The word of the Lord was to Jonah…saying….” The infinitive לֵאמֹר (le’mor, R...

Geneva Bible: Jon 1:1 Now the word of the LORD came ( a ) unto Jonah the son of Amittai, saying, The Argument - When Jonah had long prophesied in Israel and had little pro...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Jon 1:1-17 - --1 Jonah, sent to Nineveh, flees to Tarshish.4 He is bewrayed by a tempest;11 thrown into the sea;17 and swallowed by a fish.

Maclaren: Jon 1:1-17 - --Guilty Silence And Its Reward Now the word of the Lord came unto Jonah the son of Amittai, saying, 2. Arise, go to Nineveh, that great city, and cry ...

MHCC: Jon 1:1-3 - --It is sad to think how much sin is committed in great cities. Their wickedness, as that of Nineveh, is a bold and open affront to God. Jonah must go a...

Matthew Henry: Jon 1:1-3 - -- Observe, 1. The honour God put upon Jonah, in giving him a commission to go and prophesy against Nineveh. Jonah signifies a dove, a proper name ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Jon 1:1-2 - -- The narrative commences with ויהי , as Ruth (Rth 1:1), 1 Samuel (1Sa 1:1), and others do. This was the standing formula with which historical e...

Constable: Oba 1:2--Jon 1:3 - --B. The Breaching of Edom's Defenses vv. 2-4 Verses 2-9 contain three sections, which the phrase "declares the Lord" marks off (vv. 4, 8). v. 2 Yahweh ...

Constable: Oba 1:5--Jon 1:6 - --C. The Plundering of Edom's Treasures vv. 5-7 vv. 5-6 Thieves robbed houses and grape pickers stripped vineyards, yet both left a little behind that t...

Constable: Oba 1:8--Jon 1:8 - --D. The Destruction of Edom's Leadership vv. 8-9 "Obadiah's discussion nicely interweaves the themes of divine intervention and human instrumentality."...

Constable: Oba 1:11--Jon 1:13 - --B. The Explanation of the Charge vv. 11-14 v. 11 God cited one specific instance of Edom's violence against her brother, but as I explained in the int...

Constable: Oba 1:15--Jon 1:17 - --A. The Judgment of Edom and the Nations vv. 15-18 References to the work and word of the Lord frame this section. Obadiah announced that a reversal of...

Constable: Oba 1:19--Jon 2:3 - --B. The Occupation of Edom by Israel vv. 19-21 This pericope (section of text), as the former one, also has a framing phrase: "the mountain of Esau" (v...

Constable: Jon 1:1--2:10 - --I. The disobedience of the prophet chs. 1--2 The first half of this prophecy records Jonah's attempt to flee fro...

Constable: Jon 1:1-3 - --A. Jonah's attempt to flee from God 1:1-3 The story opens with God commissioning His prophet and Jonah rebelling against His will. 1:1 The book and ve...

Guzik: Jon 1:1-17 - --Jonah 1 - Jonah Runs from God A. Jonah's attempted escape. 1. (1-2) God's call to Jonah. Now the word of the LORD came to Jonah the son of Amittai...

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Commentary -- Other

Critics Ask: Jon 1:1 JONAH 1:1 —Is the Book of Jonah fact or fiction? PROBLEM: Traditional Bible scholarship has held that the Book of Jonah records events that act...

Evidence: Jon 1:1 If you want to run from God, the devil will always provide the transportation. DR JERRY VINES

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Jonah (Book Introduction) JONAH was the son of Amittai, of Gath-hepher in Zebulun (called Gittah-hepher in Jos 19:10-13), so that he belonged to the kingdom of the ten tribes, ...

JFB: Jonah (Outline) JONAH'S COMMISSION TO NINEVEH, FLIGHT, PUNISHMENT, AND PRESERVATION BY MIRACLE. (Jon. 1:1-17) JONAH'S PRAYER OF FAITH AND DELIVERANCE. (Jon 2:1-10) J...

TSK: Jonah 1 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Jon 1:1, Jonah, sent to Nineveh, flees to Tarshish; Jon 1:4, He is bewrayed by a tempest; Jon 1:11, thrown into the sea; Jon 1:17, and sw...

MHCC: Jonah (Book Introduction) Jonah was a native of Galilee, 2Ki 14:25. His miraculous deliverance from out of the fish, rendered him a type of our blessed Lord, who mentions it, s...

MHCC: Jonah 1 (Chapter Introduction) (Jon 1:1-3) Jonah, sent to Nineveh, flees to Tarshish. (Jon 1:4-7) He is stayed by a tempest. (Jon 1:8-12) His discourse with the mariners. (Jon 1:...

Matthew Henry: Jonah (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Book of Jonah This book of Jonah, though it be placed here in the midst of the prophetical books of...

Matthew Henry: Jonah 1 (Chapter Introduction) In this chapter we have, I. A command given to Jonah to preach at Nineveh (Jon 1:1, Jon 1:2). II. Jonah's disobedience to that command (Jon 1:3)....

Constable: Jonah (Book Introduction) Introduction Background Jonah is the fifth of the Minor Prophets (the Book of the Twel...

Constable: Jonah (Outline) Outline I. The disobedience of the prophet chs. 1-2 A. Jonah's attempt to flee from God 1:1-...

Constable: Jonah Jonah Bibliography Allen, Leslie C. The Books of Joel, Obadiah, Jonah and Micah. New International Commentary o...

Haydock: Jonah (Book Introduction) THE PROPHECY OF JONAS. INTRODUCTION. Jonas prophesied in the reign of Jeroboam II, as we learn from 4 Kings xiv. 25., to whom also he foreto...

Gill: Jonah (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JONAH This book, in the Hebrew copies, is called "Sepher Jonah", the Book of Jonah; by the Vulgate Latin version "the Prophecy of J...

Gill: Jonah 1 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JONAH 1 This chapter gives an account of the call and mission of Jonah to go to Nineveh, and prophesy there, and the reason of it, ...

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