Matthew Henry's Commentary on Jonah Chapter 3
In this chapter we have,
I. Jonah's mission renewed, and the command a second time given him to go preach
at Nineveh, ver. 1, 2.
II. Jonah's message to Nineveh faithfully delivered, by which its speedy
overthrow was threatened, ver. 3, 4.
III. The repentance, humiliation, and reformation of the Ninevites hereupon,
ver. 5-9. IV. God's gracious revocation of the sentence passed upon them, and
the preventing of the ruin threatened, ver. 10.
Jonah's Mission Renewed; The Prophet's Mission to Nineveh. (b. c. 840.) 1 And the word of the Lord came unto Jonah the second time, saying, 2 Arise, go
unto Nineveh, that great city, and preach unto it the preaching that I bid thee.
3 So Jonah arose, and went unto Nineveh, according to the word of the Lord. Now
Nineveh was an exceeding great city of three days' journey. 4 And Jonah began to
enter into the city a day's journey, and he cried, and said, Yet forty days, and
Nineveh shall be overthrown.
We have here a further evidence of the reconciliation between God and Jonah, and
that it was a thorough reconciliation, though the controversy between them had
run high.
I. Jonah's commission is renewed and readily obeyed.
1. By this it appears that God was perfectly reconciled to Jonah, that he
employed him again in his service; and the commission anew given him was an
evidence of the remission of his former disobedience. Among men, it has been
justly pleaded that the giving of a commission to a criminal convicted is
equivalent to a pardon, so it was to Jonah. The word of the Lord came unto Jonah
the second time (v. 1); for, 1. Jonah must be tried, whether he do indeed repent
of his former disobedience or no, and whether he have gotten the good designed
him both by his strange punishment and by his strange deliverance. He had
deserted his work and duty, and had been under arrest for it, had received a
sentence of death within himself; but, upon his submission, God had released
him, had given him his life, had given him his liberty; but it is upon his good
behaviour that he is released, and he must again be put upon the trial whether
he will follow the will of God or his own will. After he has been thrown into
the sea, and thrown out of it again, God comes and asks him, "Jonah, wilt thou
go to Nineveh now?" For when God judges he will overcome, he will gain his
point; he will bring the disobedient stubborn child to his foot at last. Note,
When God has afflicted us, and delivered us out of affliction, we must hear his
voice, saying to us, Now return to the duties which before you neglected, and
which by these providences you are called to. God now said, in effect, to Jonah,
as Christ said to the impotent man, when he had healed him, "Now go and sin no
more, lest a worse thing come unto thee (John v. 14), a worse thing than lying
three days and three nights in the whale's belly." God looks upon men, when he
has afflicted them and has delivered them out of their affliction, to see
whether they will mend of that fault, particularly, for which they were
corrected; and therefore in that thing we are concerned to see to it that we
receive not the grace of God in vain, neither in the correction nor in the
deliverance, for both are designed to be means of grace. (2.) Jonah shall be
trusted, in token of God's favour to him. God might justly have said concerning
Jonah, as we should concerning one that had cheated us and dealt treacherously
with us, that though we would not proceed to the rigour of the law against him,
nor ruin him, yet we would never again repose a confidence in him; justly might
the Spirit of prophecy, which Jonah had resisted and rebelled against, depart
from him, with a resolution never to return to him any more. One would have
expected that though his life was spared, yet he would be laid under a
disability and incapacity ever to serve the government again in the character of
a prophet. But, behold! the word of the Lord comes to him again, to show that
when God forgives he forgets, and whom he forgives he gives a new heart and a
new spirit to; he receives those into his family again, and restores them to
their former estate, that had been prodigal children and disobedient servants.
Note, God's making use of us is the best evidence of his being at peace with us.
Hereby it will appear that our sins are pardoned, and we have the good-will of
God towards us; does his good word come unto us, and do we experience his good
work in us! if so, we have reason to admire the riches of free grace and to own
our obligations to the Lord Jesus, who received gifts for men, yea, even for the
rebellious also, that the Lord God might dwell even among them, and employ them
in his word, Ps. lxviii. 18.
2. By this it appears that Jonah was well reconciled to God, that he was not
now, as he had been before, disobedient to the heavenly vision, did not flee
from the presence of the Lord, as he had done. He neither endeavored to avoid
hearing the command, nor did he decline obeying it; he made no objections, as he
had done, that the journey was long, the errand invidious, the delivery of it
perilous, and, if the threatened judgment did come, he should be reproached as a
false prophet, and the impenitence of his own nation would be upbraided, which
he had objected, ch. iv. 2. But now, without murmuring and disputing, Jonah
arose, and went unto Nineveh, according to the word of the Lord, v. 3.
See here,
(1.) The nature of repentance; it is the change of our mind and way, and a
return to our work and duty, from which we had turned aside; it is doing that
good which we had left undone.
(2.) The benefit of affliction; it reduces those to their place that had
deserted it. Jonah might truly say with David, "Before I was afflicted I went
astray, but now have I kept thy word; and therefore, though it was dreadful,
though it was painful to me, and for the present not joyous, but grievous, yet
it was good, very good, for me, that I was afflicted."
(3.) See the power of divine grace working with affliction, for otherwise
affliction of itself would rather drive men from God than bring them to him; but
God by his grace can turn the disobedient to the wisdom of the just, and make
those willing in the day of his power, freely willing to come under his yoke,
whose neck had been as an iron sinew.
(4.) See the duty of all those to whom the word of the Lord comes; they must in
all points conform themselves to it, and yield a cheerful faithful obedience to
the orders God gives them. Jonah arose, and did not sit still in sloth or
sullenness; he went directly to Nineveh, though it was a great way off, and a
place where, it is likely, he never was before; yet thither he took his journey,
according to the word of the Lord. God's servants must go where he sends them,
come when he calls them, and do what he bids them; whatever appears to be the
word of the Lord we must conscientiously do according to it.
II. Let us now see what was the command or commission given him, and what he did
in prosecution of it.
1. He was sent as a herald at arms, in the name of the God of heaven, to
proclaim war with Nineveh (v. 2): "Arise, go to Nineveh, that great city," that
metropolis, and preach unto it, preach against it, so the Chaldee. What is
against us is preached to us, that we may hear it and take warning; and what is
preached to us, if we do not give ear to it, and mix faith with it, will prove
to be against us. Jonah is sent to Nineveh, which was at this time the chief
city of the Gentile world, as an indication of God's gracious intentions in
process of time to make the light of divine revelation to shine in those dark
regions. God knew that if Sodom and Gomorrah, Tyre and Sidon, had had the means
of grace, they would have repented, and yet he denied them those means, Matt.
xi. 21, 23. He knew that if Nineveh had now the means of grace they would
repent, and he gave them those means, sent Jonah, though not to preach
repentance to them expressly (for we find not that he had that in his
commission), yet to preach them to repentance, for that was the happy effect of
what he had in commission. If God thus in dispensing his favours, in giving the
means of grace to some places and not to others, and the spirit of grace to some
persons and not to others, acts by prerogative and in a way of sovereignty, who
may say unto him, What doest thou? May he not do what he will with his own? He
is debtor to no man. Go, and preach (says God) the preaching that I bid thee.
That is,
(1.) "The preaching that I did bid thee when I first ordered thee to go thither
(ch. i. 2); go, and cry against it; denounce divine judgments against it; tell
the men of Nineveh that their wickedness has come up to God, and God's vengeance
is coming down upon them." This was the message Jonah was then very loth to
deliver, and therefore flew off and went to Tarshish; but, when he is brought to
it the second time, God does not at all alter the message, to gratify him, or
make it the more passable with him; no, he must now preach the very same that he
was then ordered to preach and would not. Note, The word of God is an
unalterable thing, and will not be made to bend to the humours either of its
preachers or of its hearers; it shall never comply with their humours and
fancies, but they must comply with its truths and laws. See Jer. xv. 19. Let
them return unto thee, but return not thou unto them. Or,
(2.) "The preaching that I shall bid thee when thou comest thither." This was an
encouragement to him in his undertaking, that God would go along with him, that
the Spirit of prophecy should abide upon him, and be ready to him, when he was
at Nineveh, to give him all the further instructions that were needed for him.
This intimated that he should hear from him again, which would be his great
support in this hazardous expedition; as, when God sent Abraham to offer up
Isaac, he gave him a similar intimation, by telling him he must do it upon one
of the mountains which he would afterwards direct him to. The steps of a good
man are ordered by the Lord; he leads his people step by step, and so he expects
they should follow him. Jonah must go with an implicit faith. Though he knows
whither he goes, he shall not know, till he come thither, what message he must
deliver, but, whatever it is, he must deliver it, be it pleasing or displeasing.
Thus God will keep us in a continual dependence upon himself, and the directions
of his word and providence. What he does, and what he will have us do, we know
not now, but we shall know hereafter. Admirals, sometimes, when they are sent
abroad, are not to open their commission till they have got so many leagues off
at sea; so Jonah must go to Nineveh, and, when he comes there, shall be told
what to say.
III. He faithfully and boldly delivered his errand.
When he came to Nineveh he found his diocese large; it was an exceedingly great
city of three days' journey (v. 3); a city great to God, so the Hebrew phrase
is, meaning no more than as we render it, exceedingly great; this honour that
language does to the great God that great things derive their denomination from
him. The greatness of Nineveh consisted chiefly in the extent of it; it was much
larger than Babylon, such a city, says Diodorus Siculus, as no man ever after
built. It was 150 furlongs long and 90 broad, and 480 in compass; the walls 100
feet high, and so thick that three chariots might go a-breast upon them; on them
were 1500 towers, each of them 200 feet high. It is here said to be of three
days' journey; for the compass of the walls, as some relate, was 480 furlongs,
which, allowing eight furlongs to a mile, makes sixty miles, which may well be
reckoned three days' journey for a footman, twenty miles a day. Or, walking
slowly and gravely as Jonah must when he went about preaching, it would take him
up at least three days to go through all the principal streets and lanes of the
city, to proclaim his message, that all might have notice of it. When he came
thither he lost no time; he did not come to look about him, but applied closely
to his work; and, when he began to enter into the city, he did not retire into
an inn, to refresh himself after his journey, but opened his commission
immediately, according to his instructions, and he cried, and said, Yet forty
days, and Nineveh shall be overthrown. This, no doubt, he had particular warrant
and direction to say; whether he enlarged upon this text, as is most probable,
showing them the controversy God had with them, and how provoking their
wickedness was, and what reason they had to expect destruction and give credit
to this warning, or whether he only repeated those words again and again, is not
certain, but this was the purport of his message.
1. He must tell them that this great city shall be overthrown; he meant, and
they understood him, that it should be overthrown, not by war, but by some
immediate stroke from heaven, either by an earthquake or by fire and brimstone
as Sodom was. The wickedness of cities ripens them for destruction, and their
wealth and greatness cannot protect them from destruction when the measure of
their iniquity is full and the measure of their vengeance has come. Great cities
are easily overthrown when the great God comes to reckon with them.
2. He must tell them that it shall shortly be overthrown, at the end of forty
days. It has a reprieve granted. So long God will wait to see if, upon this
alarm given, they will humble themselves and amend their doings, and so prevent
the ruin threatened. See how slow God is to wrath; though Nineveh's wickedness
cried for vengeance, yet it shall be spared for forty days, that it may have
space to repent and meet God in the way of his judgments. But he will wait no
longer; if in that time they turn not, they shall know that he has whet his
sword, and made it ready. Forty days is a long time for a righteous God to defer
his judgments, yet it is but a little time for an unrighteous people to repent
and reform in, and so turn away the judgments coming. The fixing of the day
thus, with all possible assurance, would help to convince them that it was a
message from God, for no man durst be so positive in fixing a time, however he
might prognosticate the thing itself; it would also startle them into
preparation for it. It may justly awaken secure sinners by a sincere conversion
to prevent their own ruin when they see they have but a little time to turn in.
And should it not awaken us to get ready for death, to consider that the thing
itself is certain, and the time fixed in the counsel of God, but that we are
kept in the dark and uncertainty about it in order that we may be always ready?
We cannot be so sure that we shall live forty days as Nineveh now was that it
should stand forty days; nay, I think it is more probable that we shall die
within thirty or forty days than we should live thirty or forty years; and so
many years in the day of our security we are apt to promise ourselves.
Nineveh's Repentance. (b. c. 840.) 5 So the people of Nineveh believed God, and proclaimed a fast, and put on
sackcloth, from the greatest of them even to the least of them. 6 For word came
unto the king of Nineveh, and he arose from his throne, and he laid his robe
from him, and covered him with sackcloth, and sat in ashes. 7 And he caused it
to be proclaimed and published through Nineveh by the decree of the king and his
nobles, saying, Let neither man nor beast, herd nor flock, taste any thing: let
them not feed, nor drink water: 8 But let man and beast be covered with
sackcloth, and cry mightily unto God: yea, let them turn every one from his evil
way, and from the violence that is in their hands. 9 Who can tell if God will
turn and repent, and turn away from his fierce anger, that we perish not? 10 And
God saw their works, that they turned from their evil way; and God repented of
the evil, that he had said that he would do unto them; and he did it not.
Here is
I. A wonder of divine grace in the repentance and reformation of Nineveh, upon
the warning given them of their destruction approaching.
Verily I say unto you, we have not found so great an instance of it, no, not in
Israel; and it will rise up in judgment against the men of the
gospel揚eneration, and condemn them; for the Ninevites repented at the preaching
of Jonas, but behold, a greater than Jonas is here, Matt. xii. 41. Nay, it did
condemn the impenitence and obstinacy of Israel at that time. God sent many
prophets to Israel, and those well known among them to be mighty in word and
deed; but to Nineveh he sent only one, and him a stranger, whose aspect was
mean, we may suppose, and his bodily presence weak, especially after the fatigue
of so long a journey; and yet they repented, but Israel repented not. Jonah
preached but one sermon, and we do not find that he gave them any sign or wonder
by the accomplishment of which his word might be confirmed; and yet they were
wrought upon, while Israel continued obstinate, whose prophets chose out words
wherewith to reason with them, and confirmed them by signs following. Jonah only
threatened wrath and ruin; we do not find that he gave them any calls to
repentance or directions how to repent, much less any encouragements to hope
that they should find mercy if they did repent, and yet they repented; but
Israel persisted in impenitence, though the prophets sent to them drew them with
cords of a man, and with bands of love, and assured them of great things which
God would do for them if they did repent and reform. Now let us see what was the
method of Nineveh's repentance, what were the steps and particular instances of
it.
1. They believed God; they gave credit to the word which Jonah spoke to them in
the name of God: they believed that though they had many that they called gods,
yet there was but one living and true God, the sovereign Lord of all,葉hat to
him they were accountable,葉hat they had sinned against him and had become
obnoxious to his justice,葉hat this notice sent them of ruin approaching came
from him, and consequently that the ruin itself would come from him at a time
prefixed if it were not prevented by a timely repentance,葉hat he is a merciful
God, and there might be some hopes of the turning away of the wrath threatened,
if they did turn away from the sins for which it was threatened. Note, Those
that come to God, that come back to him after they have revolted from him, must
believe, must believe that he is, that he is reconcilable, that he will be
theirs if they take the right course. And observe what great faith God can work
by very small, weak, and unlikely means; he can bring even Ninevites by a few
threatening words to be obedient to the faith. Some think the Ninevites heard,
from the mariners or others, or from Jonah himself, of his being cast into the
sea and delivered thence by miracle, and that this served for a confirmation of
his mission, and brought them the more readily to believe God speaking by him.
But of this we have no certainty. However, Christ's resurrection, typified by
that of Jonah's, served for the confirmation of his gospel, and contributed
abundantly to their great success who in his name preached repentance and
remission of sins to all nations, beginning at Jerusalem.
2. They brought word to the king of Nineveh, who, some think, was at this time
Sardanapalus, others Pul, king of Assyria. Jonah was not directed to go to him
first, in respect to his royal dignity; crowned heads, when guilty heads, are
before God upon a level with common heads, and therefore Jonah is not sent to
the court, but to the streets of Nineveh, to make his proclamation. However, an
account of his errand is brought to the king of Nineveh, not by way of
information against Jonah, as a disturber of public peace, that he might be
silenced and punished, which perhaps would have been done if he had cried thus
in the streets of Jerusalem, who killed God's prophets and stoned those that
were sent unto her. No; the account was brought him of it, not as of a crime,
but as a message from heaven, by some that were concerned for the public
welfare, and whose hearts trembled for it. Note, Those kings are happy who have
such about them as will give them notice of the things that belong to the
kingdom's peace, of the warnings both of the word and of the providence of God,
and of the tokens of God's displeasure which they are under; and those people
are happy who have such kings over them as will take notice of those things.
3. The king set them a good example of humiliation, v. 6. When he heard of the
word of God sent to him he rose from his throne, as Eglon the king of Moab, who,
when Ehud told him he had a message to him from God, rose up out of his seat.
The king of Nineveh rose from his throne, not only in reverence to a word from
God in general, but in fear of a word of wrath in particular, and in sorrow and
shame for sin, by which he and his people had become obnoxious to his wrath. He
rose from his royal throne, and laid aside his royal robe, the badge of his
imperial dignity, as an acknowledgment that, having not used his power as he
ought to have done for the restraining of violence and wrong, and the
maintaining of right, he had forfeited his throne and robe to the justice of
God, had rendered himself unworthy of the honour put upon him and the trust
reposed in him as a king, and that it was just with God to take his kingdom from
him. Even the king himself disdained not to put on the garb of a penitent, for
he covered himself with sackcloth, and sat in ashes, in token of his humiliation
for sin and his dread of divine vengeance. It well becomes the greatest of men
to abase themselves before the great God.
4. The people conformed to the example of the king, nay, it should seem, they
led the way, for they first began to put on sackcloth, from the greatest of them
even to the least of them, v. 5. The least of them, that had least to lose in
the overthrow of the city, did not think themselves unconcerned in the alarm;
and the greatest of them, that were accustomed to lie at ease and live in state,
did not think it below them to put on the marks of humiliation. The wearing of
sackcloth, especially to those who were used to fine linen, was a very uneasy
thing, and they would not have done it if they had not had a deep sense of their
sin and their danger by reason of sin, which hereby they designed to express.
Note, Those that would not be ruined must be humbled, those that would not
destroy their souls must afflict their souls; when God's judgments threaten us
we are concerned to humble ourselves under his mighty hand; and though bodily
exercise alone profits nothing, and man's spreading sackcloth and ashes under
him, if that be all, is but a jest (it is the heart that God looks at, Isa.
lviii. 5), yet on solemn days of humiliation, when God in his providence calls
to mourning and girding with sackcloth, we must by the outward expressions of
inward sorrow glorify God with our bodies, at least by laying aside their
ornaments.
5. A general fast was proclaimed and observed throughout that great city, v.
7-9. It was ordered by the decree of the king and his nobles; the whole
legislative power concurred in appointing it, and the whole body of the people
concurred in observing it, and in both these ways it became a national act, and
it was necessary that it should be so when it was to prevent a national ruin. We
have here the contents of this proclamation, and it is very observable. See
here,
(1.) What it is that is required by it.
[1.] That the fast (properly so called) be very strictly observed. On the day
appointed for this solemnity, let neither man or beast taste any thing; let them
not take the least refreshment, no, no so much as drink water; let them not
plead that they cannot fast so long without prejudice to their health, or that
they cannot bear it; let them try for once. What if they do feel it an
uneasiness, and feel from it for some time after? It is better to submit to that
than be wanting in any act or instance of that repentance which is necessary to
save a sinking city. Let them make themselves uneasy in body by putting on
sackcloth, as well as by fasting, to show how uneasy they are in mind, through
sorrow for sin and the fear of divine wrath. Even the beasts must do penance as
well as man, because they have been made subject to vanity as instruments of
man's sin, and that, either by their complaints or their silent pining for want
of meat, they might stir up their owners, and those that attended them, to the
expressions of sorrow and humiliation. Those cattle that were kept within doors
must not be fed and watered as usual, because no meat must be stirring on that
day. Things of that kind must be forgotten, and not minded. As when the psalmist
was intent upon the praises of God he called upon the inferior creatures to join
with him therein, so when the Ninevites were full of sorrow for sin, and dread
of God's judgments, they would have the inferior creatures concur with them in
the expressions of penitence. The beasts that used to be covered with rich and
fine trappings, which were the pride of their masters, and theirs too, must now
be covered with sackcloth; for the great men will (as becomes them) lay aside
their equipage.
[2.] With their fasting and mourning they must join prayer and supplication to
God; for the fasting is designed to fit the body for the service of the soul in
the duty of prayer, which is the main matter, and to which the other is but
preparatory or subservient. Let them cry mightily to God; let even the brute
creatures do it according to their capacity; let their cries and moans for want
of food be graciously construed as cries to God, as the cries of the young
ravens are (Job xxxviii. 41), and of the young lions, Ps. civ. 21. But
especially let the men, women, and children, cry to God; let them cry mightily
for the pardon of the sins which cry against them. It was time to cry to God
when there was but a step between them and ruin揺igh time to seek the Lord. In
prayer we must cry mightily, with a fixedness of thought, firmness of faith, and
fervour of pious and devout affections. By crying mightily we wrestle with God;
we take hold of him; and we are concerned to do so when he is not only departing
from us as a friend, but coming forth against us as an enemy. It therefore
concerns us in prayer to stir up all that is within us. Yet this is not all;
[3.] They must to their fasting and praying add reformation and amendment of
life: Let them turn every one from his evil way, the evil way he has chosen, the
evil way he is addicted to, and walks in, the evil way of his heart, and the
evil way of his conversation, and particularly from the violence that is in
their hands; let them restore what they had unjustly taken, and make reparation
for what wrong they have done, and let them not any more oppress those they have
power over nor defraud those they have dealings with; let the men in authority,
at the court-end of the town, turn from the violence that is in their hands, and
not decree unrighteous decrees, nor give wrong judgment upon appeals made to
them. Let the men of business, at the trading-end of the town, turn from the
violence in their hands, and use no unjust weights or measures, nor impose upon
the ignorance or necessity of those they trade with. Note, It is not enough to
fast for sin, but we must fast from sin, and, in order to the success of our
prayers, must no more regard iniquity in our hearts, Ps. lxvi. 18. This is the
only fast that God has chosen and will accept, Isa. lviii. 6; Zech. vii. 5, 9.
The work of a fast-day is not done with the day; no, then the hardest and most
needful part of the work begins, which is to turn from sin, and to live a new
life, and not return with the dog to his vomit.
(2.) Upon what inducement this fast is proclaimed and religiously observed (v.
9). Who can tell if God will turn and repent? Observe,
[1.] What it is that they hope for葉hat God will, upon their repenting and
turning, change his way towards them and revoke his sentence against them, that
he will turn from his fierce anger, which they own they deserve and yet humbly
and earnestly deprecate, and that thus their ruin will be prevented, and they
perish not. They cannot object against the equity of the judgment, they pretend
not to set it aside by appealing to a higher court, but hope in God himself,
that he will repent, and that his own mercy (to which they fly) shall rejoice
against judgment. They believe that God is justly angry with them, that, their
sin being very heinous, his anger is very fierce, and that, if he proceed
against them, there is no remedy, but they die, they perish, they all perish,
and are undone; for who knows the power of his anger? It is not therefore the
threatened overthrow that they pray for the prevention of, but the anger of God
that they pray for the turning away of. As when we pray for the favour of God we
pray for all good, so when we pray against the wrath of God we pray against all
evil.
[2.] What degree of hope they had of it: Who can tell if God will turn to us?
Jonah had not told them; they had not among them any other prophets to tell
them, so that they could not be so confident of finding mercy upon their
repentance as we may be, who have the promise and oath of God to depend upon,
and especially the merit and mediation of Christ to trust to, for pardon upon
repentance. Yet they had a general notion of the goodness of God's nature, his
mercy to man, and his being pleased with the repentance and conversion of
sinners; and from this they raised some hopes that he would spare them; they
dare not presume, but they will not despair. Note, Hope of mercy is the great
encouragement to repentance and reformation; and though there be but some
glimmerings of hope mixed with great fears arising from a sense of our own
sinfulness, and unworthiness, and long abuse of divine patience, yet they may
serve to quicken and engage our serious repentance and reformation. Let us
boldly cast ourselves at the footstool of free grace, resolving that if we
perish, we will perish there; yet who knows but God will look upon us with
compassion?
II. Here is a wonder of divine mercy in the sparing of these Ninevites upon
their repentance (v. 10):
God saw their works; he not only heard their good words, by which they professed
repentance, but saw their good works, by which they brought forth fruits meet
for repentance; he saw that they turned from their evil way, and that was the
thing he looked for and required. If he had not seen that, their fasting and
sackcloth would have been as nothing in his account. He saw there was among them
a general conviction of their sins and a general resolution not to return to
them, and that for some days they lived better, and there was a new face of
things upon the city; and this he was well pleased with. Note, God takes notice
of every instance of the reformation of sinners, even those instances that fall
not under the cognizance and observation of the world. He sees who turn from
their evil way and who do not, and meets those with favour that meet him in a
sincere conversion. When they repent of the evil of sin committed by them he
repents of the evil of judgment pronounced against them. Thus he spared Nineveh,
and did not the evil which he said he would do against it. Here were no
sacrifices offered to God, that we read of, to make atonement for sin, but the
sacrifice of God is a broken spirit; a broken and contrite heart, such as the
Ninevites now had, is what he will not despise; it is what he will give
countenance to and put honour upon.
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