Living God's Way
The story of Jonah confronts us with an uncomfortable truth: we can know God deeply, serve Him faithfully, and still resist His call when it challenges our comfort or contradicts our prejudices. This message unpacks the tension between obedience and disobedience, revealing how Jonah—a prophet who knew God's character intimately—ran in the opposite direction when commanded to bring mercy to Nineveh, Israel's brutal enemy. We discover that Jonah's problem wasn't confusion about God's command; it was his inability to see God's goodness extending to people he deemed unworthy. The powerful question emerges: where are we choosing control over trust? What commands are we resisting because we don't see the benefit? The transformative insight here is that our disobedience doesn't just affect us—it costs others the opportunity to experience God's mercy. When we do things God's way, even uncomfortable things, we participate in results that transform entire cities. But when we cherry-pick which parts of God's mission we'll embrace, we shouldn't be surprised when we get human results instead of divine ones. This message challenges us to examine whether we're obeying God externally while resisting Him internally, and whether we've made God's grace selective rather than universal.
