
My hope is that this series will offer my readers a chance to consider the names, characteristics and descriptions of our God in the Word.
The remaining Names of God in this series might be considered descriptors, or characteristics of the Lord. We have reviewed the three primary Names of God, along with nineteen compound Names of God in our previous posts. As we venture through these descriptors of our God, I hope we will recognize all the many characteristics of our God that we tend to take for granted.
The Word is truly rich with descriptions of the Living God, and this effort of searching in the Word was quite illuminating. He truly is the ultimate subject of the Word, and His revelation of self-descriptions, or the accolades offered Him by His priests, prophets, kings apostles and faithful truly is a blessing.
May the Name of the Lord be praised, and by thinking on His name, may you have a blessed day.
| 264 |
| Greater than Jonah |
| Matthew 12:41 The men of Nineveh will rise up at the judgment with this generation and condemn it, for they repented at the preaching of Jonah, and behold, something greater than Jonah is here. |
| I confess. I am a numbers geek. I love numbers. I even have a favorite number. I work with numbers and the relationships they have with each other, with all of creation, with our relationships with each other, with how we understand/decipher complex ideas using scribbles on a page. In my day to day work life, I compare answers using numerical formulas to determine a best solution. Sometimes the best solution is for the answer to be the least of the two results. As in the capital cost of laying timber ties when compared with steel or concrete. Remember – I am a civil (some would say – a polite) engineer specializing in rail terminal design. Other times, when I calculate a return on an investment, I am looking for the greater number. All of this to introduce the topic of “greater than”. For the next few passages in our list of names of God, we are introduced names that include this term. To be “greater than” is a term of comparison, and relates to that which is better, bigger, costlier, or simply greater. When it comes to the names of God, it retains it’s comparative value in the description, but I beg to suggest it is a term that the authors use to bring God down to our level. By that I mean, I can compare someone to Jonah, or Solomon, or Abraham, but to try to grapple with understanding the Eternal Omnipotent, Omnipresent, Omniscient God – well that just isn’t happening in this ol’ fool’s head. Remember – I am a numbers guy – logical, practical and limited. Very limited. And our God fully stoops to our level to describe Himself in terms we can somewhat understand, but I fear does not do Him justice! That is the God we serve, for He provides us teaching that may seem to minimize His greatness in order for us to comprehend Who we are trying to relate to. For this passage, Jesus states that something greater than Jonah was present. Now when we hear the name Jonah, I think of a rebellious prophet that defied the call of God, emperiled a boatload of sailors, made a whale sick, and scared a city with his ghostly appearance. (He had been in the acid of a whale/fish’s belly for an extended time – He was a bleached out fella!) Oh – and he was instrumental in bringing about the largest revival in Old Testament history, and that with a bunch of dirty, sinful, awful gentiles. So when Jesus speaks of being greater than Jonah, what might His focus be? I recall He spoke of Jonah as a sign of the resurrection, but that is not this text. This text’s context is the repenting of the City of Ninevah, that bunch of dirty, sinful, awful gentiles. He spoke of Jonah as the one who produced the greatest repentance recorded in the Old Testament, and that was in the gentile world. He spoke of Jonah as the one who called out Jonah 3:4 … “Yet forty days, and Nineveh shall be overthrown!” The people believed and repented. If Jesus is greater than Jonah, and He is, then why didn’t those whom Jesus preached to repent? What is going on here? As I read the Word, I see over and over again that Jesus had the world in mind. He was after the other sheep. He was looking for “all y’all” to join the family. He was also describing the incredibly hard heart of those who opposed Him at the time of His appearing. A highly religious people, who took offence at the One who came offering a direct connection to the Father. It may seem poetic justice that 40 years after the preaching of Jesus, the city of Jerusalem was thrown down. 40 years for the religious folk to repent, get right with a loving and patient God and escape the trap of a dead religion. He didn’t supply only 40 days as Jonah had! He is greater than Jonah, in His message, His patience, His desire for the lost, His effect on the nations. Jonah only impacted one nation, and if I understand when Nahum preached – about 100 years later – the revival of Jonah may have lasted only one generation. Jesus revival is eternal, for His resurrection is an eternal resurrection, the life granted through this resurrection is an everlasting life, and His nation, His blood bought people, have continued on throughout the ages. Matthew 16:18 … I will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it. Yes this is a slam dunk – He really is greater than Jonah in everyway! |
I would love to hear of your favorite name, characteristic or description of the Living God. Please leave me a comment, and I will include it in the list!
Thanks again for coming to visit. I hope you found something of interest in this post and would appreciate a comment, to begin a discussion. If you know someone this blog may bless (or challenge), send them a link, so they may join us in our discussion.
Come join us at Considering the Bible












