A Study of Book of Jonah
Sermon # 5
The Worlds Greatest Revival
Jonah 3:3-10
Yet we often tempted to believe that it sad
moral and spiritual state of our people that is the reason why we are not having revival. But I want you to consider the possibility that it
is such conditions that are the cause of revival; not the prevention. That in fact
every great revival was preceded by times of darkness, declension and depravity.
D.M. Panton wrote, It is a
foolish blunder to suppose that any age can be too evil for revival. I do
believe that revival is possible. Furthermore, I am convinced that our evil age is a case
for revival and the reason we need revival.
The prophet Isaiah predicted a time when darkness shall cover the earth, and gross darkness the people
(Isa. 60:2). When you study the subject of revival you will find that the days
and times preceding any great revival that has occurred in history were days and times of gross darkness.
R.B. Jones said, Each
revival comes in a time characterized by confusion, politically and morally; by the spread
of sacerdotalism; by social lawlessness and chaotic homelife; by worldliness in the
churches and skepticism in the pulpits.
Dr. A W. Tozer recommended the following formula for
personal revival.
· Get thoroughly dissatisfied with yourself. Complacency is the deadly
enemy of spiritual progress. The contented soul is a stagnant soul.
· Set your face like a flint toward sweeping
transformation of your life.
Timid experiments are tagged for failure before they start. We must throw our whole soul
into our desire for God.
· Put yourself in the way of blessing. Its
· Do a thorough job of repenting. Hasty repentance means a shallow spiritual experience. Let godly sorrow do her healing work. It is our wretched habit of tolerating sin that keeps us in our half-dead condition.
Make restitution whenever
possible. If you owe a debt, pay it. If you have quarreled with anyone, go as far as you
can to achieve reconciliation. As fully as possible, make the crooked straight.
· Bring your life into accord with the
Sermon on the Mount and such other New Testament Scriptures as are designed to
instruct in the way of righteousness. An honest man with an open Bible and a pad and
pencil is sure to find out whats wrong with him quickly.
· Be serious-minded. There must be a
· Deliberately narrow your interests.
Too many projects use up time and energy without bringing us nearer to God. The mansions
of the heart will become larger when the doors are thrown open to Christ and closed
against the world and sin.
· Begin to witness. Find something to do for God, and your fellow man. Make yourself available. Do anything you are asked to do. Learn to obey.
Have faith in God. Begin to
expect. Look up toward the throne. All heaven is on your side. God will not disappoint
you.
Revival is possible if the conditions are
met. Revival is always costly. It requires much of us, but the results are well worth it.
Lets look at this revival in Nineveh.
In verse three Jonah for the second
time refers to the city of Nineveh as a great city (1:2, 3:2) So Jonah arose and went to Nineveh, according to the word of the
LORD. Now Nineveh was an exceedingly great city, a three-day journey in extent. Nineveh
is a great city because of its size and its significance.
Nineveh was located in
modern day Iraq, not very far from present day Bagadad. It was a city surrounded by
massive walls 100 feet high and 50 feet thick. It stretched approximately 30 miles along
the Tigris River having a breadth of 10 miles. The Biblical description of being a
three-day journey in extent meant that it would take at least three days to walk and
through and see the principal sights of the city. The combined population of the area must
have been between 600,000 and a million people at the time Jonah arrived in Nineveh.
The remainder of chapter three is the
record of the greatest revival in the history of the world. In verse four we read, And Jonah began to enter the city on the first day's walk. Then he
cried out and said, "Yet forty days, and Nineveh shall be overthrown!" As
we said in the last lesson in the English Bible Jonahs message is only eight words,
and in the Hebrew it is even shorter only five. This seems hardly impressive. And yet as
we will see it has tremendous results. Why is that?
Tonight I want us to
notice the Four Steps To Revival
The First Step on the road to Revival -
There Must Be Faithful
Preaching and Faithful Hearing of Gods Word. According to verse four,
Jonah began to enter the city on the first day's walk. Then
he cried out and said, "Yet forty days, and Nineveh shall be overthrown!"
It was not a lengthy message!
It was not a
intellectual message! It was not an eloquent message! BUT it was Gods message!
The First Step on the road to Revival was the Faithful
Preaching and Faithful Hearing of Gods Word and
The Second Step on
the Road to Revival is a Belief In God
(v. 5)
So
the people of Nineveh believed God proclaimed a fast, and put on sackcloth, from the
greatest to the least of them.
Notice that Jonah does say the people
believed his preaching; he says they believed God. The word believed
here is the same word used in Genesis 15:6 [Abraham] believed
in the Lord and He accounted it to him for righteousness. This isnt
just believing what is said; it is trusting the God who has spoken. The people believed
that Jonahs message was from God, and they took it seriously. Hebrews 11:6
says that without faith it is impossible to please God.
So They believed God and they responded!
The Third Step on
the Road to Revival In Nineveh was Action Upon
That Belief (vv. 6-10)
Then
word came to the king of Nineveh; and he arose from his throne and laid aside his robe,
covered himself with sackcloth and sat in ashes. (7) And he caused it to be proclaimed and
published throughout Nineveh by the decree of the king and his nobles, saying, Let neither
man nor beast, herd nor flock, taste anything; do not let them eat, or drink water.
This revival seems to
have begun from the bottom up rather than being imposed from the top down. The people we
are told believed in God. They called a fast and put on sackcloth (3:5). The response was
unanimous from the lowest to the upper classes. By the time the word reached the Kind the
citys repentance was already well under way. But because the King also believed he
made very effort to see that there was complete compliance to the city-wide repentance.
The Fourth Step on
the Road to Revival In Nineveh was a Turning
Away From Know Sin.
There is some
confusion as to what constitutes repentance. Some think that being sorry for their sin is
repentance but it is not. That is remorse. Remorse can lead to repentance but is it not
repentance. In the Bible the rich young ruler went away sorrowful but he did not repent.
Others think that repentance is the same as regret, wishing that our sin had never
happened. Many more people regret their sin that ever really repent of it. Pontius Pilate
regretted his decision concerning Jesus. But did he ever repent? Some think repentance is
the same as resolve; they decide that they are going to do better in the future. And
although that may lead to reform it is not repentance. Repentance is a change of mind
which results in a change of heart which results in a change of action. What we plainly
see in the life of the Ninevites.
In verse eight
the King plainly stated But let man and beast be covered
with sackcloth, and cry mightily to God; yes, let every one turn from his evil
way and from the
violence that is in his hands.
It would seem that apparently there is no need to
for the people to be told what their wicked ways were! I wonder if in our own nation if we
received word of God impending judgment and believed it, it even unbelievers would have
little difficulty determining wheat it is we are doing which is offensive to God, that is,
that which is sin!
The king offers the
possibility of hope and Gods compassion in verse nine. Who can tell if God will turn and relent, and turn away from His fierce
anger, so that we may not perish? He does not know for certain. He says, Who can tell if perhaps God will turn relent It is
an expression of humility!
Verse ten gives
us the conclusion of the matter, Then God saw their works,
that they turned from their evil way; and God relented from the disaster that He had said
He would bring upon them, and He did not do it.
The repentance of Nineveh seems unbelievable. When in the history of the world has such a spontaneous, thorough and complete reversal of a violent and arrogant people ever been recorded? In fact Jonah himself finds their repentance not only unbelievable but extremely frustrating. The point however is not the greatness of the Ninevehs faith or of their repentance but of the extravagance of Gods love that he would go to such lengths to save them.