Alone In The Dark (Chapter 2) cover art

Alone In The Dark (Chapter 2)

Alone In The Dark (Chapter 2)

Listen for free

View show details

Was the great fish God’s judgment or His rescue?

In Jonah 2:1-10, Jonah prays from inside the belly of a great fish. In this study, Dr. Toby Holt asks whether that fish was God’s punishment — or His surprising means of rescue.

Having fled from God and been thrown into the sea, Jonah should have drowned. Instead, God sends a great fish to swallow him — not to destroy him, but to save him. Dr. Holt explains that God sometimes uses dreadful circumstances to bring a stubborn heart to repentance. From the darkness, Jonah remembers the Lord, turns from worthless idols, and declares the great truth at the heart of the book: “Salvation is of the LORD.”

Questions this study answers:

1. Was the fish judgment or mercy? It was mercy. The fish was God’s means of rescuing Jonah from drowning and bringing him to repentance.

2. Why does God sometimes allow hard circumstances? To turn stubborn hearts back to Himself. Dr. Holt describes the fish as God’s loving way of getting Jonah’s attention.

3. What does “Salvation is of the LORD” mean? It means rescue comes from God alone, not from ourselves or our idols. That truth is the turning point of Jonah’s whole story.

“But I will sacrifice to You with the voice of thanksgiving; I will pay what I have vowed. Salvation is of the LORD.” — Jonah 2:9 (NKJV)

Speaker: Dr. Toby Holt is the President of New Geneva Theological Seminary, a Reformed seminary in Colorado Springs. He is known for clear, down-to-earth Bible teaching, and his sermons have been downloaded more than 1.9 million times on SermonAudio.

Listen and go deeper: This sermon is part of the Jonah Explained study from New Geneva Theological Seminary. Find more verse-by-verse teaching across the Bible at newgeneva.org. To support this teaching ministry, visit newgeneva.org/give.

adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
No reviews yet