MEANING: “Dove”
AUTHOR: Unknown
TIME WRITTEN: Uncertain
POSITION IN THE BIBLE:
- 32nd Book in the Bible
- 32nd Book in the Old Testament
- 10th of 17 Prophetic Books (Isaiah to Malachi)
- 5th of 12 Minor Prophets (Hosea to Malachi)
- Followed by 34 books
CHAPTERS: 4
VERSES: 48
WORDS: 1,321
OBSERVATIONS ABOUT JONAH:
- Jonah was a prophet from Gath-Hepher, a village located about three miles north of Nazareth in lower Galilee, which is now known as Mashad.
- The Pharisees in John 5:52 were incorrect when they claimed that no prophet had arisen from Galilee.
- Jesus compared Himself to Jonah (Matthew 12:39-41), making Jonah unique among the prophets.
- Jonah’s story symbolically parallels the death, burial, and resurrection of Christ.
- Unlike other Old Testament books, Jonah focuses solely on a Gentile nation, Nineveh.
- Nineveh was a dominant world empire from approximately 900 to 60 B.C.
- From Jonah’s home, Assyria was to the northeast, Joppa to the southwest, and Tarshish (Spain) to the west.
- Jonah is the only Old Testament prophet whose ministry occurred entirely on foreign soil.
- Jonah was a contemporary of Jeroboam II of Israel (782-753 B.C.).
- The Book of Jonah is structured into four chapters:
- Chapter 1: Jonah flees from God
- Chapter 2: Jonah turns to God
- Chapter 3: Jonah follows God
- Chapter 4: Jonah anticipates God’s actions
- Nineveh’s willingness to repent might have been influenced by a plague in 765 B.C., a solar eclipse in 763 B.C., and another plague in 759 B.C.
- The repentance of Nineveh likely occurred during the reign of Ashurdan III (773-755 B.C.). Following their repentance, Nineveh remained a major city for another 150 years before being overthrown by the Babylonians in 612 B.C.


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