The Pharisees and Sadducees came to Jesus and tested him by asking him to show them a sign [“miracle”] from heaven.2 He replied, “When evening comes, you say, ‘It will be fair weather, for the sky is red,’ 3 and in the morning, ‘Today it will be stormy, for the sky is red and overcast.’ You know how to interpret the appearance of the sky, but you cannot interpret the signs [forecasts] of the times.[a]4 A wicked and adulterous generation looks for a sign [miracle], but none will be given it except the sign [past reflection] of Jonah.” Jesus then left them and went away. (Matthew 16:1-4).
Jesus is messing with the Pharisees in this lecture from the Gospel According to Matthew. They ask for a “sign,” meaning “miracle.” He says they wouldn’t know a sign, meaning “forecast,” if it they saw one. Then he gives them the “sign of Jonah” which means a “reflection” on a past event, giving it new meaning.
What did he want us to understand by “the sign of Jonah”? It must be important, because Jesus said it was his only sign: 4 A wicked and adulterous generation looks for a sign, but none will be given it except the sign of Jonah.” Jesus then left them and went away (Matthew 16:4).
Matthew, the Gospel writer, theorized that —the three days Jonah spent in the whale [technically a “sea monster] symbolized the three days Jesus would spend in the earth after his crucifixion. That would be a forecast of an event to come. That seems a little simplistic to me, like a college student struggling to find symbols in a poem. As we have all learned by now, symbolism is in the eye of the beholder.
In this case “signs” are not ” miracles,” because Jesus refuses to perform one for their entertainment. What if signs are indications of something in the past as witnessed in the present, something we might have missed the first time we read about them? A “reflection of things past.” What if the “sign of Jonah” is Jesus’s commentary on diversity, equality and inclusion?
Both Matthew and the writer of the Gospel of Luke offered this other interpretation: Jesus was shaming the Pharisees for not realizing that Jesus himself was a sign of God’s message in the present. Jesus was telling the Pharisees, rather cryptically, that, despite their status as the people chosen by God (the Israelites), they had missed the most important sign God had sent: the love of diversity, equality and inclusion. Stay with me now.
Obviously Jesus knew nothing of DEI, but he knew a lot about love, and he interpreted the story of Jonah to show God’s love for all nations. What did Jesus say in his first sermon?
The Spirit of the Lord is on me, because he has anointed me to proclaim good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners and recovery of sight for the blind, to set the oppressed free (Luke 4:18).
Understandable that the Pharisees did not get this. After all, they were enslaved by the most powerful of pagan nations, the Romans. The Romans were the cruel adversaries of their Chosen nation.
You may remember that Jonah tried to run from his responsibility to preach to a pagan city. This is the part where Jonah gets swallowed by a whale and, after three days, “spewed out” (literally) from his holding tank to do his job and preach to the Ninevites. The Ninevites were famous for their cruelty and, definitely not “chosen” of God. Like the Romans, right?
The book of Jonah says that, beside being a city of cruel pagans, Nineveh was huge: Now Nineveh was a very large city; it took three days to go through it (Jonah 3:3). Some commentators think this was an exaggeration, because what city is that big? But the point is 4 Jonah began by going a day’s journey into the city, proclaiming, “Forty more days and Nineveh will be overthrown.” 5 The Ninevites believed God. A fast was proclaimed, and all of them, from the greatest to the least, put on sackcloth.(Jonah 3:3). Mass conversion of the most evil city of Assyria!
Clearly one of the most successful evangelical rallies in recorded history. Yet Jonah was not hoping that the pagans would be converted. When he found out that he was supposed to preach to the Ninevites, he had run away. He was prevented by a perfect storm and thrown overboard to appease the furious God. The sea calmed and along came a whale, etc.
To me, this is the funny part. In Jonah, Chapter 4, Jonah admits his real reason for running. He was familiar with the Torah. The Book of Exodus said: “you are a gracious God and merciful, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love, and ready to relent from punishing.” (Exodus 34:6-7). He was appalled that God was “gracious, merciful, and slow to anger.”
A rather strange attitude for the most successful evangelist in history! Jonah says,”Now, Lord, take away my life, for it is better for me to die than to live.” Jonah was so revolted by the Ninevites that he preferred to die rather than live to see God’s mercy on such an evil city. Some prophet! This is why I call him “the prophet who couldn’t shoot straight.”
This is the crux of Jonah’s problem: tribal anger at the heathen, the “unclean,” and the assumption that God would judge them. He could not live with God’s mercy to pagans. As he finally explains, that was his original reason for taking a ship to the end of the known earth (Jonah 4: 1-2): prejudice and resentment.
Back to Jesus’s commentary on the “sign of Jonah.” As he often does, Jesus connects the Hebrew Bible to his contemporary predicament: “The people of Nineveh will rise up at the judgment with this generation and condemn it, because they repented at the proclamation of Jonah and see, something greater than Jonah is here” (Matthew 12:41-42).
Jesus sides with the Ninevites in this story, not the Hebrew prophet. God continues to be “gracious and merciful, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love, and ready to relent from punishing.” God shows his love of diversity, equality and inclusion through Jesus. God included , along with the “Chosen people,” the pagan city with the worst reputation. God asserted the diversity and equality of the worst of the worst: because they repented at the proclamation of Jonah and see, says Jesus, meaning himself: something greater than Jonah is here” (Matthew 12:41-42).
This is not what an exceptional people want to hear: the pagans are now forgiven just like us. Everyone receives God’s favor. This is a long trip to DEI, but there is no question that the Book of Jonah was talking about the most despised group in biblical history. That God would have mercy on them with his DEI. “The sign of Jonah” is saying “mercy,”and so should we.
Are we going to die on this battlefield of exclusion like Jonah? Or accept the equal mercy of God on the diverse people of the world?