Jonah 3:3-5
Context3:3 So Jonah went immediately to Nineveh, as the Lord had said. (Now Nineveh was an enormous city 1 – it required three days to walk through it!) 2 3:4 When Jonah began to enter the city one day’s walk, he announced, “At the end of forty days, 3 Nineveh will be overthrown!” 4
3:5 The people 5 of Nineveh believed in God, 6 and they declared a fast and put on sackcloth, from the greatest to the least of them. 7
![Drag to resize](images/t_arrow.gif)
![Drag to resize](images/d_arrow.gif)
[3:3] 1 tn Heb “was a great city to God/gods.” The greatness of Nineveh has been mentioned already in 1:2 and 3:2. What is being added now? Does the term לֵאלֹהִים (le’lohim, “to God/gods”) (1) refer to the
[3:3] 2 tn Heb “a three-day walk.” The term “required” is supplied in the translation for the sake of smoothness and clarity.
[3:4] 3 tn Heb “Yet forty days and Nineveh will be overthrown!” The adverbial use of עוֹד (’od, “yet”) denotes limited temporal continuation (BDB 728 s.v. עוֹד 1.a; Gen 29:7; Isa 10:32). Tg. Jonah 3:4 rendered it as “at the end of [forty days, Nineveh will be overthrown].”
[3:4] 4 tn Heb “be overturned.” The Niphal נֶהְפָּכֶת (nehpakhet, “be overturned”) refers to a city being overthrown and destroyed (BDB 246 s.v. הָפַךְ 2.d). The related Qal form refers to the destruction of a city by military conquest (Judg 7:3; 2 Sam 10:3; 2 Kgs 21:13; Amos 4:11) or divine intervention as in the case of Sodom and Gomorrah (Gen 19:21, 25, 29; Deut 29:22; Jer 20:16; Lam 4:6; BDB 245 s.v. 1.b). The participle form used here depicts an imminent future action (see IBHS 627-28 §37.6f) which is specified as only “forty days” away.
[3:5] 5 tn Heb “men.” The term is used generically here for “people” (so KJV, ASV, and many other English versions); cf. NIV “the Ninevites.”
[3:5] 6 sn The people of Nineveh believed in God…. Verse 5 provides a summary of the response in Nineveh; the people of all ranks believed and gave evidence of contrition by fasting and wearing sackcloth (2 Sam 12:16, 19-23; 1 Kgs 21:27-29; Neh 9:1-2). Then vv. 6-9 provide specific details, focusing on the king’s reaction. The Ninevites’ response parallels the response of the pagan sailors in 1:6 and 13-16.
[3:5] 7 tn Heb “from the greatest of them to the least of them.”