Sunday, September 24, 2023


 When God is Too Good - A Sermon based on Jonah 3.10-4.11 and Matthew 20. 1-16.      preached at First Presbyterian Church, Clark Summit, PA on Sunday, September 24, 2023

       During a TED Radio Hour talk, Dr. Frans de Waal, a psychologist and primatologist showed clips of several experiments demonstrating that animals are capable of empathy, cooperation, and fairness. In one, a pair of monkeys sat in side-by-side cages. Their task was to hand a scientist a rock in order to receive a treat. Monkey #1 hands over its rock and receives a cucumber.  Monkey #2 gives its rock and receives a much preferred grape.  Anticipating a better treat, monkey #1 hands over another rock but receives another cucumber. It promptly throws it out of the cage and violently shakes the door in protest. It was grumbling for a grape![i]  Whether we’re talking about being handed one denarii after working all day in a vineyard, or receiving a cucumber in exchange for a rock, fairness is a big deal!

            That slighted monkey and the workers at the back of the line in the parable have some-thing in common with the older brother in the Parable of the Prodigal Son. They share outrage at what they perceive to be unfairness, a condition that leads to resentment.

            Noting “how easily we can relate to the grumbling of the laborers who assumed…they would be paid more,” one observer points out that “such dangerous assumptions can pop up in our closest relationships, our work settings, our congregations, and our national thinking.”[ii] “There is a saying,” she adds, ‘Assumptions are planned resentments,’ warning, “Whenever we assume anything, we set ourselves up for possible disappointment or even worse, we set the other person up as the object of object of our disappointment, anger or resentment.”[iii]

            The assumption of the grumbling laborers is made possible by the added unfairness of making those who worked the longest wait the longest to receive their wages. The scene calls to mind not only the assumptions we make based on seniority, but also our inability to appreciate the blessings that have come our way.

            In our Call to Worship today we have already spoken words that pop up in scripture no less than ten times.  Most of the time, they let us know God will not be as hard on us as we deserve.  One version of this phrase appears in the Book of Joel.  Surprisingly, Joel’s creedal words show up in the Book of Jonah on the lips of the king of Nineveh when he responds to the reluctant prophet’s call for repentance. Quoting Joel, the king decreed:

Return to the Lord, your God,
for he is gracious and merciful,
slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love,
and relents from punishing.
Who knows whether he will not turn and relent
and leave a blessing behind him?”[iv]

            Psalm 100 paints the picture of our gracious and merciful God using some other words that are familiar:
“The Lord is good; his steadfast love endures forever,
and his faithfulness to all generations.”[v]

            That was the problem as far as Jonah was concerned: God is good and gracious and merciful. That too, was the rub that chafed at the workers in the vineyard who had been at it since sun up when at sundown the last were paid first and treated as equals.

            It is one thing for God to be gracious and merciful to me.  It is another if God is merciful and gracious to somebody else. When I have given God a reason to be angry, that slowness is greatly appre-ciated; when someone else does something worthy of divine wrath the delay is unbearable. When I am the undeserved beneficiary of God’s steadfast, covenantal love, it is cause for celebration.  When some-one else is the recipient of amazing grace, the sound is not always so sweet!

            Just ask the laborers in the vineyard…or Jonah. But here is the kicker: both the full day laborers, and Jonah himself, in their indignation over God’s goodness, fail to recognize, appreciate, or express gratitude for having been recipients of the same benevolence they grouse about.  All of the laborers, from the first to the last, had received the means to purchase their “daily bread.”  Jonah had been saved from drowning. He was heard when he uttered a cry for help, and given a second chance to do what God called him to do.

           How very human of them not to notice!
           How very gracious of God to persist in loving them anyway!
           How very challenging to us as we continue to learn to recognize, celebrate, and share the blessings bestowed on us and others by the One who is gracious and merciful, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love.

            From beginning to end, the story of Jonah is told with wit and humor. The cast of char-acters defy stereotypes: There’s a prophet who says “hell no, I won’t go.”  There are seasoned, salty sailors, who hit their knees to pray in the face of a storm while the man of God sleeps below deck. The residents of a foreign city listen to the half-hearted proclamation of an alien who shows up in their streets pro-claiming impending doom. There’s a king who takes note of what his people are doing and follows their lead and then leads their following by humbling himself before the Lord. There are even creatures put to work by God: a fish that swallows and spits-up on command; a plant that sprouts up overnight; a worm whose hunger contributes to the lesson God is trying to teach.

            Last, but not least, we are drawn into the picture as those who are asked along with Jonah the questions God put to him.  “Is it right for you to be angry?” and “Should I not be concerned about Nineveh?”

            Add the two questions Jesus poses on the lips of the vineyard owner in the parable: “Am I not allowed to do what I choose with what belongs to me?  Or are you envious because I am generous?”[vi]

            Put all those questions together and a larger question looms: “Are we, or are we not, willing to let God be God?” The Book of Jonah ends without the final question being answered by the sad, sun-burned servant of God.  The parable of the workers also leaves the questions about letting God do God as God pleases, unanswered.

            Most people are familiar with the first part of the Jonah story which we didn’t read today. Here is how Frederick Buechner summarized it:

            “Within a few minutes of swallowing the prophet Jo-nah, the whale suffered a severe attack of acid indigestion and it’s not hard to see why.  Jonah had a disposition that was enough to curdle milk.”

            Buechner continues: “When God ordered him to go to Nineveh and tell them there to shape up and get saved, the expression on Jonah’s face was that of a man who had just gotten a whiff of septic-tank trouble.  In the first place, the Ninevites were foreigners…  In the second place… nothing would have pleased him more than to see them get what they had coming to them.”[vii]

            You know the next part. Instead of heading to Nineveh, Jonah books passage on the Medi-terranean Cruise Line, and while the others waved good-bye from the rail, he went down below deck and took a nap.  Soon a storm sent by God descends. It’s a category seven storm. Normally brave sailors cry out to the various gods they worship.  The captain, having done a headcount realizes that Jonah is missing. He goes below, finds him sleeping and urges him to get upstairs and send an S-O-S to God.

            The sailors resort to superstition casting lots to reveal which of them is responsible for the weather’s fury.  Jonah is singled out.  After he explains who he is, where he is supposed to be and what he was told to do, the others are really scared. But when he suggests throwing him over-board, they refuse because they, more than he, now fear the God who “made the sea and the dry land.”  

            Despite their reluctance and their double efforts to row the boat ashore where they hoped to sing “alleluia!”—the storm grew worse.  Finally, after praying, asking Jonah’s God not to hold his impend-ing death against them, they toss him over the rail. The storm ceased. The sailors took notice, offered a sacrifice to Jonah’s God. Even when he wasn’t trying to, Jonah was re-sponsible for turning hearts to God.

            Meanwhile, Jonah, “sinking deep in sin far from the peaceful shore,”[viii] gets swallowed by a large fish, who put up with its pesky passenger for three days before spewing him onto the beach. In belly of the beast, Jonah, had plenty of time to reconsider how he might respond, should God be foolish enough to ask again that he go to Nineveh and urge them to turn from their evil ways.

            Jonah is given a second chance. This time he heads in the right direction.  Nineveh is a big city, three days walk across.  Jonah slowly goes a third of the way, and makes one unenthusiastic declaration: “Forty days more, and Nineveh will be over-thrown.”

            The people of Nineveh heard what he had to say.  They took him seriously. They proclaimed a fast, and everyone, the movers and shakers and the everyday people, put on garments of mourning.

            James Limburg spotlights how remarkable this grass roots groundswell of repentance was. Not only did they believe God, announce a fast, and humble themselves before God, they “did something to clean up the terrorism and violence in their city.  This was not the action of just a few, but involved everyone, including the animals!”[ix] Noting how the king follows the lead of his people, he said:        “The king’s behavior is exemplary. He humbles himself by divesting himself of his symbols of author-ity… and by putting on sackcloth and sitting in ashes. He calls for an all-inclusive fast extending even to the animals and admonishes all to turn from their evil and violent ways.”[x]

            Limburg goes on to describe how “the king realizes that conducting a fast does not guarantee that the Lord will act favorably.”[xi] All he can do is rely on a quote from the prophet, Joel, and ask, “Who knows?” hoping God will relent and change his mind. (3.9)  “…The king did not pre-sume to control God.  His is no mechanistic religion, expecting that repentance automatically guarantees rescue.  The king is humble before God and concerned for his people.”[xii]

That leads me to add this: Like the captain of the ship earlier, Nineveh’s king shows himself to be a worthy shepherd of the flock entrusted to his care. Wouldn’t it be nice if leaders in our time did the same!

            Seeing the Ninevites respond in appropriate ways pleased God. Jonah, however, was ticked off. He let loose a barrage aimed directly at God, explaining why he took that boat ride the first time he was sent to Nineveh.  Three nights in the belly of the fish may have convinced Jonah to do as he was told, but that did not mean he agreed with the mission.

            In one of the greatest “I told you so” tirades of all time, Jonah fires off a Tweet to God: “Is not this what I said while I was still in my own country?  That is why I fled to Tarshish at the beginning; for I knew that you are a gracious God and merciful, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love, and ready to relent from punishing. And now, O Lord, please take my life from me, for it is better for me to die than to live.” (4.2-5)

            God sends a short and sweet response containing a simple question for Jonah to contem-plate: “Is it right for you to be angry?”

            After all, Jonah was the beneficiary of God’s grace and mercy. One of the very human things about Jonah is the way his stubborn insistence that the Ninevites get what was coming to them blinds him to the ways God had not punished him for his failure to do what God asked.

            Todd Hobbie counts up all that Jonah seems to have missed.  He writes: “It never seemed to cross Jonah’s mind that, though he had directly disobeyed God’s command, God had pursued him with persistent love.  At least the Ninevites had ignorance of God as an excuse. Unlike Jonah, they repented, as soon as the message he brought from God was clear.

            “It never seemed to cross Jonah’s mind that if God were unforgiving, God would have let him drown in the storm.  It never seemed to cross his mind that the pagans on the ship, in their attempts to save him from harm at all costs, were much more like God than he was.”

            Finally, Hobbie concludes: “It never seemed to cross Jonah’s mind that even the fish was more obedient to God than he was. At least the fish, when commanded by God to vomit up Jonah, did what it was told.”[xiii]

            “Is it right for you to be angry?” God asked Jonah. The prophet persisted in thinking he was right.  Phyllis Trible notes that “The divine questions put to Jonah asks about the value or benefit of anger…The text does not engage in ‘should’ talk. Jonah is not told that he should be or should not be angry. Instead, he is invited to reflect on the meaning or value of anger.”[xiv]

            Tribble adds: “A reader may hear in the divine questions the implied answer that anger is not good for Jonah, but the answer does not forbid Jonah to be angry. The responsibility for the emotion and its consequences resides with Jonah. When he defiantly holds fast to anger, insisting it is good for him ‘unto death,’ he mouths profound truth. Anger leads to destruction. If it is repressed or suppressed, it ‘burns’ the one who contains it; if it is expressed, it ‘burns those to whom it is directed.  Although anger is an inevitable part of the human condition, the divine questioning offers the opportunity to work it through and to work through it.”[xv]

            The final scene of the Book of Jonah lifts up that opportunity for Jonah to do that work. Like a petulant child he stormed off when God asked about his anger. With the sudden appearance of a Castor Oil plant to offer him shade which pleases him no end…and the plant’s just as sudden demise thanks to a very hungry worm, God reveals the volatility of both joy and anger.  God used what Jonah feels to help him understand what God felt about the people of Nineveh and all their animals.

            Whether Jonah got it or not is never revealed. Whether we get it or not is what matters.  When God appears to be too good, forgiving those we deem unforgiveable or disbursing blessings to those we don’t think have earned them, we have the same choice: fan the flames of our anger, or celebrate God’s grace and mercy to us and to all.

[i] www.npr.org/2014/08/15/338936897/do-animals-have-morals
[ii] Charlotte Dudley Cleghorn, Feasting on the Word, Year A, Vol. 4, (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 2011), p. 94
[iii] ibid.
[iv] Joel 2. 13
[v] Psalm 100. 5
[vi] Mt. 20. 15-16
[vii] Frederick Buechner, Beyond Words, Daily Readings in the ABC’s of Faith, (New York, HarperOne, 2004) p. 196-7
[viii] James Rowe, Howard E. Smith, Hymn: “Love Lifted Me,” verse 1
[ix] James Limburg, Hosea-Micah – Interpretation – A Bible Commentary for Teaching and Preaching, (Atlanta, GA: John Knox Press, 1988), p. 151
[x] ibid., p. 150
[xi] ibid.
[xii] ibid., p. 151-2
[xiii] Todd M. Hobbie,. Feasting on the Word, Year A, Vol. 4, (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 2011), p 76
[xiv] Phyllis Trible, The New Interpreter’s Bible, Vol. VII, (Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press, 1996), p. 524
[xv] ibid.






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