
Jonah 2 The Prayer From The
Depths And The God Who Saves Fulfilled Introduction † Jonah 2 shows us a man who ran from God, now
brought to the lowest place imaginable, crying out from inside the
fish. Jonah 2:1 Then Jonah prayed to the LORD his God from the stomach of the
fish, † Jonah didn't pray when he was running, he
prayed when he was broken, that shows God uses pressure to bring
repentance. (Psalm 119:67) Jonah 2:2 and he said, I called out of my distress to the LORD, And He
answered me. I cried for help from the depth of Sheol, You heard my
voice. † Jonah describes his situation as Sheol, the
realm of the dead, showing he saw this as a death experience. (Psalm
18:5) Jonah 2:3 For You had cast me into the deep, Into the heart of the seas, And
the current engulfed me. All Your breakers and billows passed over
me. † Jonah recognizes God was behind the storm,
not just circumstances, God was disciplining him. (Hebrews 12:6) Jonah 2:4 So I said, I have been expelled from Your sight. Nevertheless I
will look again toward Your holy temple. † Jonah felt cut off, just like Israel in
exile, yet he still looked toward the temple, showing hope in
restoration. (1 Kings 8:38-39) Jonah 2:5 Water encompassed me to the point of death. The great deep
engulfed me, Weeds were wrapped around my head. † This is burial language, Jonah is describing
being as good as dead. (Psalm 69:1-2) Jonah 2:6 I descended to the roots of the mountains. The earth with its bars
was around me forever, But You have brought up my life from the pit,
LORD my God. † The bars of the earth picture imprisonment in
death, total confinement. (Psalm 107:10) Jonah 2:7 While I was fainting away, I remembered the LORD, And my prayer
came to You, Into Your holy temple. † At the lowest point, Jonah remembered God,
showing repentance begins with turning back mentally and spiritually.
(Luke 15:17) Jonah 2:8 Those who are followers of worthless idols Turn away from their
faithfulness, † Jonah contrasts himself with idolaters,
though he had acted like one by fleeing. (Jeremiah 2:13) Jonah 2:9 But as for me, I will sacrifice to You With the voice of
thanksgiving. That which I have vowed I will pay. Salvation is from
the LORD. † Jonah commits to obedience, showing true
repentance produces action. (Ecclesiastes 5:4) Jonah 2:10 Then the LORD commanded the fish, and it vomited Jonah up onto the
dry land. † God controls creation, even the fish obeys
Him. (Psalm 148:7-8) Historical References † Josephus records how Jonah's ministry was
known among the prophets of Israel, showing his historical reality.
(Antiquities 9.10.2) How it applies to us today † We can't run from God, He'll pursue us until
we turn back. (Psalm 139:7-10) Q & A Appendix Q: Was Jonah actually dead in the fish? Q: Why did God use a fish? Q: What does this have to do with Jesus? Q: Was Jonah truly repentant? Q: How does this connect to fulfillment? † This is the fulfilled perspective we proclaim at
Fulfilled Prophecies † Source Index † Jonah 2
By Dan Maines
† This isn't just about Jonah, it's
about Israel, and ultimately about all who try to flee from God's
calling.
† From the fulfilled perspective,
this chapter points forward to Christ's death, burial, and
resurrection, and the deliverance that came before the fall of
Jerusalem in AD 70.
† The phrase his
God shows covenant relationship wasn't lost, even in rebellion, God
still claimed him. (Hosea 2:23)
† This
mirrors Israel, who often only turned back to God when under
judgment. (Judges 10:10)
† This directly points to Christ, who
entered death and was heard by the Father. (Acts 2:24)
†
God hearing him shows covenant faithfulness, even when Jonah failed.
(Psalm 34:17)
†
The language echoes judgment imagery used against Israel. (Psalm
42:7)
† This also foreshadows Christ bearing
the waves of judgment on behalf of His people. (Isaiah 53:4)
† This points
forward to Christ as the true temple, where access to God is
restored. (John 2:19-21)
† Even in judgment,
faith remained, that's the turning point. (Lamentations 3:22-23)
† The
weeds wrapping his head shows complete entrapment, no human escape.
(Job 7:12)
† This parallels Christ in the
grave, fully given over to death. (Matthew 12:40)
†
Yet God brought him up, showing resurrection power. (Psalm 30:3)
†
This is a direct type of Christ rising from the grave. (Acts 2:31)
† Prayer reaching the temple
shows God hears even from the depths. (Psalm 102:19-20)
†
This reinforces that distance doesn't block access, rebellion does,
but repentance restores it. (Isaiah 59:1-2)
†
Idolatry always leads to abandoning God's mercy. (Psalm 31:6)
†
Israel's history proves this over and over. (2 Kings 17:15)
†
Salvation is from the LORD is the central truth of the entire book.
(Isaiah 43:11)
† This ultimately points to
Christ, through whom salvation was fulfilled. (Luke 2:30)
† Jonah's deliverance is
a resurrection picture, coming out of death to life. (Romans 6:4)
†
This is exactly what Jesus pointed to as the sign of Jonah. (Matthew
12:40)
† Justin Martyr
connected Jonah's three days to Christ's resurrection as a fulfilled
sign. (Dialogue with Trypho 107)
† Tertullian
affirmed Jonah as a type of Christ's burial and rising. (On the
Resurrection of the Flesh 58)
† God uses
hardship to bring us to repentance, not to destroy us. (Hebrews
12:10-11)
† Even when we've failed, we still
have access to Him when we turn back. (1 John 1:9)
†
Salvation has always been from the LORD, not from us. (Ephesians
2:8-9)
† Just like Jonah, we've been brought
from death to life through Christ's fulfilled work. (Colossians 2:12)
A:
He describes it as Sheol and death, which points to a death-like
state and typology fulfilled in Christ. (Jonah 2:2, Matthew 12:40)
A:
To demonstrate His total control over creation and to create a
prophetic sign of resurrection. (Jonah 1:17, Psalm 104:25)
A:
Jesus said Jonah was a sign of His death and resurrection. (Matthew
12:40)
A:
Yes, his prayer and later obedience show a real turning back to God.
(Jonah 2:9, Jonah 3:3)
A:
The pattern of death and deliverance was fulfilled in Christ,
bringing full salvation before AD 70. (Luke 24:46-47)
© Fulfilled Prophecies - Dan
Maines.
† Josephus
Antiquities 9.10.2, Justin Martyr Dialogue with Trypho 107,
Tertullian On the Resurrection of the Flesh 58
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