ANIMALS IN THE BOOK OF JONAH
“And should I not be
concerned about Nineveh, that great city, in which there are more than a
hundred and twenty thousand persons who do not know their right hand from their
left, and also many animals?”
~ Jonah
4:11
I’ve been wanting to write about the Book of Jonah for
some time now, and it is fitting that I am finally able to do so during the
season of Lent. Jonah’s story is
deceptively simple, and with its action and adventure and animals and (some
would say) fanciful elements, it is a favorite for teaching children. Once we begin to dig into the story, however,
we find that it is a profound story of faith, repentance, forgiveness, and the
limitless nature of God’s love and care for all that He has made. No wonder it is a staple of Jewish services
on Yom Kipper, the Day of Atonement, perhaps the holiest day of the Jewish year.
Most of us remember the “whale” (which is never called
a whale in scripture, but is identified in scripture as a “great fish”), but the
Book of Jonah, not unlike the city of Nineveh, is filled with many animals. (For brevity, this post assumes familiarity
with the story. The book is only four chapters
long, however, and is worth re-reading. ) The great fish is provided by God to save
Jonah; the fish returns Jonah to the dry land in faithful response to the word
of God (in contrast to Jonah’s unfaithful response to God’s call); the animals
in the city of Nineveh participate in the fast and wear sackcloth; they are
called upon by the king to cry mightily to God and to turn from their ways; a
worm follows God’s instructions to remove Jonah’s shady vine, and the animals
of the city are expressly identified as creatures of God’s concern in the closing
words of the book.
The story of Jonah is impossible without the
animals. They move the action; from
scene to scene the animals are there, doing God’s work, crying out to the Lord,
receiving His mercy. They also
underscore some of the central themes of the book, including faith, repentance,
and the all-encompassing love of God. They
deserve, but rarely receive, our thoughtful attention.
One of the central themes of the Book of Jonah is that
God’s mercy and compassion cannot be confined.
God loves people – and nations – we don’t want Him to love. Jonah did not want to go Nineveh to preach
because Jonah did not want God to forgive the city (various reasons for this
have been suggested by the commentaries).
This story teaches us we cannot control God’s forgiveness to suit our
own purposes and we cannot box God’s love in to our families, our tribe, our nation – or our species. The animals
are right there with the pagans, repenting and being forgiven and receiving
mercy. Jonah may not want the human
inhabitants to receive that mercy, in part perhaps because their repentance would
reflect poorly on Israel’s lack of
repentance.[1] We
may not want to notice or talk about God’s compassion for the cattle and other
animals in the city in part because it reflects poorly on our own lack of
compassion for the same kinds of animals.
But God’s compassion extends further than ours, even to our enemies and
our animals.
Another lesson
is that God is in relationship with the animals. He appoints the animals to tasks and they
fulfill them; He speaks to the animals and they obey. Michael J. Gilmore, in Eden’s Other Residents, looks at places in scripture where humans,
God, and animals interact. Of the Jonah
story, he says that God uses the fish, not only to save Jonah from the sea, but
as the place where Jonah could at last come to terms with God’s word: “In
effect, God ‘speaks’ to his human prophet through the fish and the consequences
are enormous. God speaks to Nineveh’s
many residents, animals among them, in consequence of this triadic
encounter. We often refer to Jonah as a
reluctant prophet, but perhaps we ought to shift our emphasis and acknowledge
the great fish as a willing and obedient one” (p. 7).
Yet another lesson
is that God cares about what happens to animals, and he cares when they suffer
due to our bad behavior. Even more
traditional commentaries (that is, those not specifically focused on animal
theology) must acknowledge that this story requires us to take seriously God’s
care and concern for animals, although they seem to do so reluctantly, in a context that
suggests the animals are merely automatons, responding without choice to God’s
call, or are included in the story to achieve human ends, or are provided as
much for comic relief as for any other purpose.
Phyllis
Tribble, for example, in her explication of the Book of Jonah in The New Interpreter’s Bible Commentary, Vol.
V, states, “Yahweh controls the fish” (p. 647). The text, however, suggests something
different. The scripture says that God
“provided” a fish to swallow Jonah and that “the Lord spoke to the fish, and it
spewed Jonah out upon the dry land” (1:17, 2:10). While the first may suggest a passive
relationship, the second suggests a relationship of call and response. Tribble does go on to address the “ecology”
of Jonah in some detail, and there acknowledges that the king of Nineveh, who
includes the animals in the call to repentance, treats the animals “on a par
with human beings. The intent is not
ridicule, but respect, not parody, but pathos. Nineveh cares for its animals”
(p. 647). Addressing the final passage
of the book, she says, “in issues of life and death, the animals of Nineveh
matter alongside the people. On this
strong ecological note, the book ends” (p. 648). It is not clear whether Tribble believes the
animals matter simply because they are part of an ecosystem or whether she
recognizes them as sentient beings who matter in and of themselves. But she does acknowledge, and even
emphasize, the value of these creatures to God.
Ancient Nineveh |
The New Oxford
Annotated Bible clearly groups the fish with the wind, the sea, and the plant
in addressing the “ecology” of the Book of Jonah, noting that all these
elements are “obedient agents of God’s purpose” (p. 1322 Hebrew Bible). Because the animals are lumped with
non-sentient parts of creation, presumably the suggestion is that they
passively obedient, not active agents.
The notes also suggest that the inclusion of the animals in the city’s
repentance is “intentionally humorous,” but acknowledges that this part of the
story “makes a serious point: Mercy is not restricted to God’s human creations”
(p. 1324 Hebrew Bible).
Some Jewish
commentaries suggest the animals are included only because of impact on
humans. The animals were to fast so as
to cause their owners more grief and the royal animals were to wear sackcloth
because it would bring greater humility to the king. The
Twelve Prophets: Jonah, p. 126. But,
others acknowledge the animals as valuable in themselves: “Harav David Feinstein points out that God’s compassion extends to
all His creatures. As God said in
silencing the angels who wished to sing His praises after the Egyptians drowned
in the Sea of Reeds: ‘My handiwork is drowning in the sea and you presume to
sing praise?” (The Twelve Prophets:
Jonah, p. 141), and speaking of the animals in the city who were spared:
“Certainly they were innocent and
deserving of compassion” (p. 143).
The Book of
Jonah has a great deal to teach us about obedience to God’s call, trust in God’s
word, repentance, second chances, and the all-encompassing breadth of God’s
love. Let us, in this Lenten season,
reflect on what Jonah teaches us about the love of God for his creatures, the
animals, and let us learn from the inhabitants of Nineveh the meaning of repentance. Then, let us use these lessons to repent for our lack of compassion and our failure to value God's other creatures as He does.
[1] See The Twelve Prophets: Jonah,
A New Translation With Commentary Anthologized From Talmudic, Midrashic, and
Rabbinic Sources,
Rabbis Nosson Scherman/Meir Zlotowitz, General Editors. Artscroll Tenach Series. Mesorah Publications, Ltd., 1994.
3 comments:
Great post, Lois, thank you. I like the connection you have made with Lent and the Book of Jonah. Very insightful!
oopps, Kathy Dunn posted the above message!
Thank you, Kathy! Jonah is a book well worth studying. I didn't really make the Lenten connection until I was reading the Jewish commentaries, but then it seemed central to understanding the lessons of this scripture. I'm glad you enjoyed the post!
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