“But Jonah rose up to flee unto Tarshish from the presence of the Lord, and went down to Joppa.” - Jonah 1:3
Instead
of going to Nineveh to preach the Word, as God bade him, Jonah disliked
the work, and went down to Joppa to escape from it. There are occasions
when God’s servants shrink from duty. But what is the consequence? What
did Jonah lose by his conduct? He lost the presence and comfortable
enjoyment of God’s love. When we serve our Lord Jesus as believers
should do, our God is with us; and though we have the whole world
against us, if we have God with us, what does it matter? But the moment
we start back, and seek our own inventions, we are at sea without a
pilot. Then may we bitterly lament and groan out, “O my God, where hast
thou gone? How could I have been so foolish as to shun thy service, and
in this way to lose all the bright shinings of thy face? This is a price
too high. Let me return to my allegiance, that I may rejoice in thy
presence.” In the next place, Jonah lost all peace of mind. Sin soon
destroys a believer’s comfort. It is the poisonous upas tree, from whose
leaves distil deadly drops which destroy the life of joy and peace.
Jonah lost everything upon which he might have drawn for comfort in any
other case. He could not plead the promise of divine protection, for he
was not in God’s ways; he could not say, “Lord, I meet with these
difficulties in the discharge of my duty, therefore help me through
them.” He was reaping his own deeds; he was filled with his own ways.
Christian, do not play the Jonah, unless you wish to have all the waves
and the billows rolling over your head. You will find in the long run
that it is far harder to shun the work and will of God than to at once
yield yourself to it. Jonah lost his time, for he had to go to Nineveh
after all. It is hard to contend with God; let us yield ourselves at
once.
-Charles Spurgeon's Evening Meditation
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