Is there anyone that you think is beyond God’s reach? Perhaps you think their heart is too hard, or they are too far away from God. And yet the Bible is full of stories about God changing the heart of men and women who were opposed to him. The Ninevites were certainly that type of people. They were cruel, wicked and rebellious. And yet, there response to Jonah’s message is clear: “The Ninevites believed God.” (Jonah 3:5) One of the most wicked people in history turned to the Lord in faith. They didn’t just believe Jonah. They believed God. They believed that Jonah’s words were from the Lord.
You think that Jonah being swallowed by a great fish and spit back on dry land is the miracle of the Bible. The real miracle is that Nineveh turned to the living God. In our day, this would be like hearing that Howard Stern is now a Christian talk show host talking about sexual purity. This would be like the hardest person you know turning their life to Jesus.
The Ninevites put on sackcloth and they fasted. These were postures of repentance and humility. It was a physical way of saying, “God we are sorry. We have been going in the wrong direction and we need you.” Sackcloth was a really itchy, uncomfortable material made out of goat’s hair. It must have been made of goat’s hair as a symbol to represent how “baaaaad” they had been. Okay, that was a bad joke. The horrible material was a picture though of how uncomfortable they were in their sin. They couldn’t bear it any longer.
The king of Nineveh lead the way: “When the news reached the king of Nineveh, he rose from his throne, took off his royal robes and covered himself with sackcloth and sat down in the dust.” He stepped off his place of royalty and removed his royal robes because he understood his absolute spiritual poverty. He realized his royal robes could not cover up his true spiritual poverty. So he rose from his throne. The throne represents the seat of the one who is in charge. This was a highly symbolic move. It was a way of saying, “I am no longer in charge. I surrender to you.” The King was surrendering his right to rule and acknowledging God’s right to rule instead.
The King called a complete fast – no eating or drinking. Not only did the people fast, but the animals fasted as well. Do you know how loud a heard of cattle would get if they had not been fed or given drink all day? The King wanted his people to feel the hunger and pain of their condition before God. He knew they were spiritually depraved, and he was starved for God’s grace and intervention. He knew they needed to get in touch with their true spiritual poverty before God.
I get this king. He was taking responsibility as a leader and aching for his own personal condition and that of his people. There are times I feel it in my own heart. I look at my own life and the lives of other Christians at times and see how far we can really be from God. We go to church, sing the songs, and listen to the sermons, but do our lives really bear the fruit of Christ. I see that many Christians party like the world, compromise their views on sex and morality, live materialistic lives, and indulge in all kinds of inappropriate entertainment. At times I become pained in my heart. Are we really becoming true followers of Jesus? Do we care about others? Do we love Jesus more than ourselves? Or are we way too comfortable in our sin? Maybe it is time to get up off the throne and let God have his way. And that’s the Word.

