Add parallel Print Page Options

约拿违命

耶和华的话临到亚米太的儿子约拿,说: “起来!到尼尼微大城去,警告其中的居民,因为他们的恶行已经达到我面前。” 可是约拿却起来,要逃往他施去,躲避耶和华;他下到约帕,找到了一只要开往他施去的船;他给了钱,就上船(“上船”原文作“下船”),要和他们同往他施去,离开耶和华。

海起大风

但是耶和华在海上忽然刮起大风,于是海中狂风大作,船几乎要破裂了。 水手都很惧怕,各人向自己的神大声呼求;他们为了减轻船的重量,就把船上的东西拋在海里,可是约拿却下了船舱,躺着熟睡了。 船长走到他面前,对他说:“你怎么啦!睡得那么熟?快起来,求告你的 神吧!或者 神会记念我们,使我们不至于丧命!”

约拿受罚

水手就彼此说:“来吧!让我们抽签,好知道这场灾祸临到我们,是因谁的缘故。”于是他们抽签,结果抽中了约拿。 他们就对约拿说:“请告诉我们,这场灾祸临到我们,是因谁的缘故?你是作甚么的?你从哪里来?你是哪一国的人?哪一族的人?” 他回答说:“我是希伯来人,我敬畏耶和华天上的 神,就是那创造海洋和陆地的。”

10 众人就大大惧怕,对他说:“你为甚么这样作呢?(“你为甚么这样作呢?”或译:“你作的是甚么呢?”)”那些人知道他躲避耶和华,原来约拿告诉了他们。 11 因为海浪越来越汹涌,他们又对他说:“我们该怎样处置你,才能叫海浪平静呢?” 12 他回答说:“你们把我抬起来,投在海里,海浪就会平静,因为我知道,这场大风暴临到你们,是为了我的缘故。” 13 那些人虽然破浪挣扎,要把船靠岸,却是不能,因为海浪不断汹涌扑来。 14 他们就呼求耶和华,说:“耶和华啊!我们恳求你,不要因这人叫我们丧命;不要把无辜人的血归在我们身上,因为你耶和华是照自己所喜悦的行事。”

15 于是他们把约拿抬起来,投在海里,怒涛就平息了。 16 那些人就大大敬畏耶和华,向他献祭和许愿。

17 耶和华却安排了一条大鱼,把约拿吞下。约拿就在鱼腹中三日三夜。(本节在《马索拉文本》为2:1)

Jonah’s Disobedience

Now the word of the Lord came to [a]Jonah the son of Amittai, saying, “Go to [b]Nineveh, that great city, and proclaim [judgment] against it, for their wickedness has come up before Me.”(A) But Jonah ran away to Tarshish to escape from the presence of the Lord [and his duty as His prophet]. He went down to [c]Joppa and found a ship going to [d]Tarshish [the most remote of the Phoenician trading cities]. So he paid the fare and went down into the ship to go with them to Tarshish away from the presence of the Lord.(B)

But the Lord hurled a great wind toward the sea, and there was a violent tempest on the sea so that the ship was about to break up.(C) Then the sailors were afraid, and each man cried out to his god; and to lighten the ship [and diminish the danger] they threw the ship’s cargo into the sea. But Jonah had gone below into the hold of the ship and had lain down and was sound asleep. So the captain came up to him and said, “How can you stay asleep? Get up! Call on your god! Perhaps your god will give a thought to us so that we will not perish.”

And they said to another, “Come, [e]let us cast lots, so we may learn who is to blame for this disaster.” So they cast lots and the lot fell on Jonah. Then they said to him, “Now tell us! [f]Who is to blame for this disaster? What is your occupation? Where do you come from? What is your country?” So he said to them, “I am a Hebrew, and I [reverently] fear and worship the Lord, the God of heaven, [g]who made the sea and the dry land.”

10 Then the men became extremely frightened and said to him, “How could you do this?” For the men knew that he was running from the presence of the Lord, [h]because he had told them. 11 Then they said to him, “What should we do to you, so that the sea will become calm for us?”—for the sea was becoming more and more violent. 12 Jonah said to them, “Pick me up and throw me into the sea. Then the sea will become calm for you, for I know that it is because of me that this great storm has come upon you.” 13 Nevertheless, the men rowed hard [breaking through the waves] to return to land, but they could not, because the sea became even more violent [surging higher] against them. 14 Then they called on the Lord and said, “Please, O Lord, do not let us perish because of taking this man’s life, and do not make us accountable for innocent blood; for You, O Lord, have done as You pleased.”

15 So they picked up Jonah and threw him into the sea, and the sea stopped its raging. 16 Then the men greatly feared the Lord, and they offered a sacrifice to the Lord and made vows.

17 Now the Lord had prepared (appointed, destined) a great [i]fish to swallow Jonah. And Jonah was in the stomach of the fish [j]three days and three nights.(D)

Footnotes

  1. Jonah 1:1 Jonah, the only prophet known to attempt to run away from a divinely appointed mission, lived during the time when Jeroboam II ruled Israel (the ten tribes of the Northern Kingdom). He was from the town of Gath-Hepher in Galilee.
  2. Jonah 1:2 The city of Nineveh was the magnificent capital of the Assyrian Empire. The great palace of Sennacherib was without rival and contained seventy or more rooms. The city was home to more than 120,000 residents (at least twice the size of Babylon) and had no less than fifteen gates in the wall surrounding the city. During this period of time it was probably the largest city in the known world. Built near the juncture of the Tigris River and its tributary the Khoser, it was served by an elaborate water system of eighteen canals. Nineveh had many suburbs, three are mentioned along with Nineveh in Gen 10:11, 12. Nineveh’s extensive ruins are located near the modern city of Mosul, Iraq.
  3. Jonah 1:3 The natural harbor of the city of Joppa (modern Jaffa, Israel) has been in use since the Bronze Age. It was the port of entry for the cedars of Lebanon for Solomon’s temple (2 Chr 2:16), and again for the second temple of Jerusalem (Ezra 3:7). It is located just south of Tel Aviv.
  4. Jonah 1:3 Possibly Tartessos in southwest Spain.
  5. Jonah 1:7 To these sailors, who undoubtedly believed in their own pagan gods, the casting of lots was a way to allow the gods to express themselves since only they could control how a lot fell. In this case, it is possible that God intervened to identify Jonah as the guilty party.
  6. Jonah 1:8 The questions asked indicate that the sailors were afraid of Jonah even before he confessed his worship of the Lord (v 9). The lot had already confirmed that he was responsible, but instead of acting on that they gave him the option of blaming someone else. The other questions are typical of what one would ask any stranger.
  7. Jonah 1:9 This was an important addition to Jonah’s description of God, because most people who believed in pagan gods had different deities for different regions of the created world, and often they also worshiped deities of their own localities. Jonah was affirming that there is only one true God.
  8. Jonah 1:10 Jonah probably had informed them when he first boarded (cf v 3) but they may not have taken him seriously, or perhaps they were just indifferent to his reason for the voyage. Now that they were in mortal danger, they believed him.
  9. Jonah 1:17 The ancient Hebrew term “fish” did not make a distinction between fish and marine mammals. There are no marine creatures known today which would be capable of swallowing a man, either because of their anatomy or because of their observed behavior. It is possible that the creature that swallowed Jonah has long since been extinct, or even that it was uniquely created by God for this one purpose.
  10. Jonah 1:17 Jesus cited Jonah’s experience as a sign of His resurrection (Matt 12:40).