In July, 1938, eleven years following the first-ever transatlantic
solo flight of Charles Lindbergh, Doug Corrigan flew his makeshift aircraft
from the West Coast of the United States to New York. That was not news. That feat had been done many times before, but Lindbergh’s
former mechanic made a name for himself immediately after that would live forever in
aviation infamy.
Shortly after landing, Corrigan filed a transatlantic flight
plan that was denied based on the ragtag condition of his plane. He was allowed, however, to return to California. So, Corrigan aimed his aircraft westward, took
off, did a 180-degree turn and disappeared into the clouds over the Atlantic.
Upon his arrival in Belfast, Ireland, 28 hours later, he
asked, “Where am I?” and claimed to have gotten lost. The name “Wrong Way” Corrigan was applied and
has stuck throughout history, with experts split over whether his misadventure
had been truly an accident or an act of rebellion against authority.
With Jonah, it was much clearer.
“’Arise, go to
Ninevah, that great city, and cry out against it; for their wickedness has come
up before me.’ But Jonah arose to flee to Tarshish from the presence of the
Lord….” Jonah 1:2, 3a
God gave him a three-part assignment:
1) arise,
2) go to
Ninevah, and
3) preach the need for repentance from their sin.
Well, Jonah did the easy first step. He did arise. One-for-three hitting of a baseball for 15-20 years may punch
a professional ballplayer's ticket to the Hall of Fame, but it is not so good in free-throw
shooting. Or obedience. As any good
parent instinctively knows, and the rest of us learn, partial obedience is
disobedience.
Jonah didn’t need maps and a compass like Corrigan. He
didn’t need concordances and commentaries to discover what God was saying. Instead of heeding the clear and direct
command of God, Jonah willfully took the wrong decision, catching a ship bound
for Tarshish, a city 2500 miles west across the length of the Mediterranean Sea on the
Iberian peninsula, to get away from the presence of the Lord. (Pretty sure He was there, too.)
I would like to suggest that Jonah was not running merely
from the presence of God but from His will. Had God been content to let Jonah
lie around watching movies and playing games, with occasional trips to the mall
just to hang out, I think Jonah would not have been in such a hurry to get away
from Him. However, God had higher,
nobler things in mind for Jonah. He
selected Jonah to save a city.
Think back to September 11, 2001. If you had been chosen, say, a week to ten days beforehand, as the person who absolutely could prevent the attacks of that day
by simply going to Boston (from whence the four flights originated) and warning
of the coming disaster, would you have done it? Would you have gone there and
spoken, knowing that thousands of lives would be saved?
Jonah was given the chance to save a city of 120,000
people from sure destruction resulting from their moral implosion. That would be a city today greater than Ann
Arbor or Lansing, about the same population as Cedar Rapids, Iowa, or Topeka, Kansas—but he
bailed. Temporarily.
What does God have in store for your life? What is there—and
you may not know yet—that He has for you to do, but you would rather follow
your own path than His? How many lives
may be affected tomorrow or next year or over the next decade by your decisions
today? How will yours?
Don’t become known as “Wrong Way (fill-in-the-blank)” . Fly to, not from,
God and His will for your life.
1 comment:
Very well said and an interesting read. I appreciate the challenge you gave at the end as well.
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