Read & Study the Bible Online - Bible Portal

Jonah 2:7 - Homiletics

Remembering the Lord.

The circumstances in which Jonah was placed were such as give very peculiar value and interest to this declaration. And it appears that this act of recollection was the turning point in his experience; for hitherto his troubles had increased, whilst henceforth his prospects began to brighten.

I. THE OCCASION OF THIS REMEMBRANCE .

1 . External adversity may have prompted him to a kind of remembrance which in his prosperity he had not cultivated.

2 . Mental exhaustion and distress caused him to realize his helplessness, and the vanity of expecting human aid. When his "soul fainted within" him, then he called to mind the God whom he had disobeyed.

II. THE CHARACTER OF THIS REMEMBRANCE .

1 . Jonah, no doubt, remembered God's commands and his own rebellion.

2 . He must also have remembered the revelation of Divine mercy which had been vouchsafed him. And whilst the former recollection must have awakened penitence, this may well have shed into his soul a ray of hope.

III. THE FRUIT OF THIS REMEMBRANCE .

1 . It prompted to prayer: They who forget God will not call upon God; but they who remember his promises may well lift up their hearts to him.

2 . It was thus the means of securing the Divine regard and the Divine deliverance. God heard the prophet's cry, though uttered from the ocean's depths, and when he heard, he came to the rescue of his servant, "The Lord is mindful of his own." We may for a time forget his faithfulness, but when we call to mind his nearness and his grace, he remembers us even in our low estate.

Be the first to react on this!

Scroll to Top

Group of Brands