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Jonah
The fifth of the Minor Prophets. The name is usually taken to mean dove
,
but in view of the complaining words of the Prophet (Jonah, iv), it is not
unlikely that the name is derived from the root Yanah = to mourn, with the
signification dolens or complaining
. This interpretation goes back to St.
Jerome (Comm. on Jonah, iv, 1). Apart from the book traditionally ascribed to
him, Jonah is mentioned only once in the Old Testament, IV Kings, xiv, 25, where
it is stated that the restoration by Jeroboam II (see Jeroboam) of the borders
of Israel against the incursions of foreign invaders was a fulfillment of the
word of the Lord the God of Israel, which he spoke by his servant Jonah the son
of Amathi, the prophet, who was of Geth, which is in Opher
. This last is but a
paraphrastic rendering of the name Gath-Hepher, a town in the territory of
Zabulon (Josephus, Antiq.
, XIX, xiii), which was probably the birthplace of
the Prophet, and where his grave was still pointed out in the time of St. Jerome.
Mention is made of Jonah in Matt., xii, 39 sqq., and in xvi, 4, and likewise in
the parallel passages of Luke (xi, 29, 30, 32), but these references add nothing
to the information contained in the Old Testament data. According to an ancient
tradition mentioned by St. Jerome (Comm., in Jonah, Prol., P.L., XXV, 118), and
which is found in Pseudo-Epiphanius (De Vitis Prophetarum, xvi, P.L., XLIII,
407), Jonah was the son of the widow of Sarephta whose resuscitation by the
Prophet Elias is narrated in III Kings, xvii, but this legend seems to have no
other foundation than the phonetic resemblance between the proper name Amathi,
father of the Prophet, and the Hebrew word Emeth, truth
, applied to the word
of God through Elias by the widow of Sarephta (III Kings, xvii, 24).
The chief interest in the Prophet Jonah centres around two remarkable
incidents narrated in the book which bears his name. In the opening verse it is
stated that the word of the Lord came to Jonah the son of Amathi, saying: Arise
and go to Ninive, the great city, and preach in it: for the wickedness thereof
is come up before me.
But the Prophet, instead of obeying the Divine command,
rose up to flee into Tharsis from the face of the Lord
that he might escape
the task assigned to him. He boards a ship bound for that port, but a violent
storm overtakes him, and on his admission that he is the cause of it, he is cast
overboard. He is swallowed by a great fish providentially prepared for the
purpose, and after a three day's sojourn in the belly of the monster, during
which time he composes a hymn of thanksgiving, he is cast upon dry land. After
this episode he again receives the command to preach in Ninive, and the account
of his second journey is scarcely less marvellous than that of the first. He
proceeds to Ninive and enters after a day's journey
into it, foretelling its
destruction in forty days. A general repentance is immediately commanded by the
authorities, in view of which God relents and spares the wicked city. Jonah,
angry and disappointed, wishes for death. He expostulates with the Lord, and
declares that it was in anticipation of this result that on the former occasion
he had wished to flee to Tharsis. He withdraws from Ninive and, under a booth
which he has erected, he awaits the destiny of the city. In this abode he enjoys
for a time the refreshing shade of a gourd which the Lord prepares for him.
Shortly, however, the gourd is stricken by a worm and the Prophet is exposed to
the burning rays of the sun, whereupon he again murmurs and wishes to die. Then
the Lord rebukes him for his selfish grief over the withering of a gourd, while
still desiring that God should not be touched by the repentance of a city in
which there are more than a hundred and twenty thousand persons that know not
how to distinguish between their right hand and their left, and many beasts.
Apart from the hymn ascribed to Jonah (ii, 2-11) the contents of the book are
prose.
HISTORICITY
Catholics have always looked upon the Book of Jonah as a fact-narrative. In
the works of some recent Catholic writers there is a leaning to regard the book
as fiction. Only Simon and Jahn, among prominent Catholic scholars, have clearly
denied the historicity of Jonah; and the orthodoxy of these two critics may no
longer be defended: Providentissimus Deus
implicitly condemned the ideas of
both in the matter of inspiration, and the Congregation of the Index expressly
condemned the Introduction
of the latter.
Reasons for the traditional acceptance of the historicity of Jonah:
I. Jewish Tradition According to the Septuagint text of the Book of Tobias (xiv, 4), the words of Jonah in regard to the destruction of Ninive are accepted as facts; the same reading is found in the Aramaic text and one Hebrew manuscript. The apocryphal III Mach., vi, 8, lists the saving of Jonah in the belly of the fish along with the other wonders of Old Testament history. Josephus (Ant. Jud., IX, 2) clearly deems the story of Jonah to be historical.
II. The Authority of Our Lord
This reason is deemed by Catholics to remove all doubt as to the fact of the
story of Jonah. The Jews asked a sign
- a miracle to prove the Messiahship of
Jesus. He made answer that no sign
would be given them other than the sign of
Jonah the Prophet. For as the Jonah was in the whale's belly three days and
three nights: so shall the Son of man be in the heart of the earth three days
and three nights. The men of Ninive shall rise in judgment with this generation
and shall condemn it: because they did penance at the preaching of Jonah. And
behold a greater than Jonah here
(Matt., xii, 40-1; xvi, 4; Luke, xi, 29-32).
The Jews asked for a real miracle; Christ would have deceived them had He
presented a mere fancy. He argues clearly that just as Jonah was in the whale's
belly three days and three nights even so He will be in the heart of the earth
three days and three nights. If, then, the stay of Jonah in the belly of the
fish be only a fiction, the stay of Christ's body in the heart of the earth is
only a fiction. If the men of Ninive will really not rise in judgment, neither
will the Jews really rise. Christ contrasts fact with fact, not fancy with fancy,
nor fancy with fact. It would be very strange, indeed, were He to say that He
was greater than a fancy-formed man. It would be little less strange were he to
berate the Jews for their real lack of penance by rating this lack in contrast
with the penance of Ninive which never existed at all. The whole force of these
striking contrasts is lost, if we admit that the story of Jonah is not
fact-narrative. Finally, Christ makes no distinction between the story of the
Queen of Sheba and that of Jonah (see Matt., xii, 42). He sets the very same
historical value upon the Book of Jonah as upon the Third Book of Kings. Such is
the very strongest argument that Catholics offer for the firm stand they take
upon the ground of the fact-narrative of the story of Jonah.
III. The Authority of the Fathers
Not a single Father has ever been cited in favor of the opinion that Jonah is a fancy-tale and no fact-narrative at all. To the Fathers Jonah was a fact and a type of the Messias, just such a one as Christ presented to the Jews. Saints Jerome, Cyril, and Theophilus explain in detail the type-meaning of the facts of the Book of Jonah. St. Cyril even forestalls the objections of the Rationalists of today: Jonah flees his ministry, bewails God's mercy to the Ninivites, and in other ways shows a spirit that ill becomes a Prophet and an historical type of Christ. Cyril admits that in all this Jonah failed and is not a type of Christ, but does not admit that these failures of Jonah prove the story of his doings to have been a mere fiction.
To the Rationalist and to the advanced Protestant Biblical scholar these arguments are of no worth whatsoever. They find error not only in Jewish and Christian tradition but in Christ Himself. They admit that Christ took the story of Jonah as a fact-narrative, and make answer that Christ erred; He was a child of His time and represents to us the ideas and errors of His time. The arguments of those who accept the inerrancy of Christ and deny the historicity of Jonah are not conclusive.
- Christ spoke according to the ideas of the people, and had no purpose in telling them that Jonah was really not swallowed by the fish. We ask: Did Christ speak of the Queen of Sheba as a fact? If so, then He spoke of Jonah as a fact - unless there be some proof to the contrary.
- Were the book historical in its narrative, certain details would not be omitted, for instance, the place where the Prophet was vomited forth by the sea-monster, the particular sins of which the Ninivites were guilty, the particular kind of calamity by which the city was to be destroyed, the name of the Assyrian king under whom these events took place and who turned to the true God with such marvellous humility and repentance.
We answer, these objections prove that the book is not an historical account done according to later canons of historical criticism; they do not prove that the book is no history at all. The facts narrated are such as suited the purpose of the sacred writer. He told a story of glory unto the God of Israel and of downfall to the gods of Ninive. It is likely that the incidents took place during the period of Assyrian decadence, i.e., the reign of either Asurdanil or Asurnirar (770-745 B.C.). A pest had ravaged the land from 765 till 759 B.C. Internal strife added to the dismay caused by the deadly disease. The king's power was set at naught. Such a king might seem too little known to be mentioned. The Pharaoh of Mosaic times is not deemed to have been a fiction merely because his name is not given.
Jewish tradition assumed that the Prophet Jonah was the author of the book
bearing his name, and the same has been generally maintained by the Christian
writers who defend the historical character of the narrative. But it may be
remarked that nowhere does the book itself claim to have been written by the
Prophet (who is supposed to have lived in the eighth century B.C.), and most
modern scholars, for various reasons, assign the date of the composition to a
much later epoch, probably the fifth century B.C. As in the case of other Old
Testament personages, many legends, mostly fantastic and devoid of critical
value, grew up around the name Jonah. They may be found in the Jewish
Encyclopedia
.
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