daily Broadcast

Into the Storm, Part 1

From the series You Were Made for More

Are you running from God? Have you ever stopped to consider that the difficulties and adversities you’re facing right now might have something to do with it? In this program, we’ll pick up in our new series “You Were Made for More”. Guest teacher Ryan Ingram continues studying the book of Jonah, and shares how God can calm the storms of our lives.

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Message Transcript

We left off Jonah running away from his calling, running away. God calls him to Nineveh, he heads the opposite direction, heads down south to a port city called Joppa. And in Joppa, he pays a fare, hops on a ship towards Tarshish, which is just basically the farthest away from he can get from Nineveh. And this is where we pick up the story.

And the title of the sermon today is Into the Storm. Would you say that to your neighbor? Into the Storm. Jonah is running away from, that was good over there, by the way, running away from God, and he runs directly into a storm.

And we often think the storms of life are actually knocking us off course, don’t we? It’s just kind of like, hey, that’s actually knocked me off course from the more that I am made for. And I want you to just maybe think about this. What if, what if God actually wants to use the storm in your life to redirect the course of your life?

What if the storm isn’t so much to knock you off course, but God, in His sovereignty wants to allow a storm perhaps in your life to redirect the course of your life? We certainly find that here in the story of Jonah.

If you’ve got it, would you open your Bibles to Jonah chapter 1? We pick it up in verse 4. It says, “Then the Lord sent,” or literally, “…hurled a great wind on the sea, and such a violent storm arose that the ship threatened to break up. All the sailors were afraid and each cried out to their own god. And they threw cargo,” literally the world hurled, “…cargo into the sea to lighten the ship.”

Jonah is headed in the wrong direction and God sends a storm to redirect him. And you know what’s interesting is the storm hits and what do the sailors do? They cry out each to their own god. Why? Because when you have smooth sailing, you’re not so much crying out or focused on God. Isn’t it true? That’s just our human condition. But all of a sudden a storm hits and they’re like, “Okay, we’ve got to do whatever it takes to survive and we are going to each cry out to our own god.”

Now, everyone is doing their part to survive the storm, everyone is focused on: How do we just get through this? Except one person. Jonah. It says, the text says, “But Jonah had gone below deck,” can you imagine this moment? Think about if you’re the sailors how you would feel. Everyone is crying out in desperation, it’s a life-threatening moment. The ship is being beaten and battered on every side. The wind is blowing; you cannot hold course. But Jonah went below deck like he’s on a cruise, chilling.

“But he went below deck, where he lay down and fell into a deep sleep.” Because when you’re running from God, you begin to go on a downward spiral and you start to only care about yourself.

“The captain went to him and said, ‘How can you sleep? Get up and call on your god!’” We are all doing our part, Jonah. “Maybe he will take notice of us and we will not perish.” Notice “we” – the captain is going, hey, it’s not just about you, it’s all of us. And Jonah doesn’t want to call on his God. He’s running from his God. He’s trying to flee from the presence of his God. And he is faced in a moment where even people who don’t believe in his God are asking him to call on his God.

At some point, you’ve just got wonder, at what point does it take for God to get a hold of your attention? Like, how much needs to come into your life? What storm, what outside voice, what circumstance that you finally go, Okay, God, I think I’m paying attention and noticing what You’re doing here. Now, it’s so amazing.

The sailors notice and see that, man, we need God in some way to respond. And Jonah, and this is what happens, it’s what happens to us. His heart is hard. Jonah didn’t care so much about his own life. And what’s even worse is he didn’t even care about the sailor’s life. And he just went below deck. Sleep it off. Hard hearted.

See, I think there are some that perhaps over the season and your relationship with God and maybe you have been running from Him or drifted from Him and you have allowed your heart to get hard. And what happens is we stop caring for people around us.

We become isolated, we just care about ourselves, we just begin to focus on me. I don’t want to call out to my God. I’m just going to go below deck and sleep it off.

You know, I had a mentor once, he was kind of explaining to me, “Ryan, I notice that in my heart when I care deeply about things I shouldn’t care about, that there’s something going on in my heart that’s not right. If I really, really care that somebody cut me off in traffic, when I overreact to something, especially things, events, sporting events. When I get so consumed by that, there should be a light going off that something is not right in here.”

And then he said this, “When I don’t care deeply about things I should care about -” when I don’t care deeply about my relationship with God, when I don’t care deeply about other people and how they are doing, when I don’t care deeply about the major things of life, and for some, maybe walking in this morning, you didn’t have this realization until this moment that maybe there are some things in your heart and what you’re going through and what God brought you here is just to have that heart check moment. Oh. I’m headed down below deck and I don’t want to go there. I have been saying I’m sleeping it off, but I’m actually running from God and I didn’t realize it. The text goes on and says, “Then the sailors said to each other, ‘Come, let us cast lots to find out who is responsible for this calamity.’”

Now, in the ancient day, everything natural was connected to the supernatural. Everything physical was connected or had a spiritual cause. And so, when they saw this great storm, they attribute it to some deity that needs to be appeased. And the way they would discern kind of how or who was responsible for it, they would just cast lots and let the gods decide. It was a common way of deciding. And so, they cast these lots, “And the lot fell on Jonah.

So they asked him, ‘Tell us, who is responsible for making all this trouble? What kind of work do you do? Where do you come from? What is your country? From what people are you?’” And all these questions are designed to get around: Who is Jonah’s God that has power over the sea? “And he answered them, ‘I am a Hebrew; I worship the Lord,’” or Yahweh, His covenant name, God, Elohim, the Creator, “‘…the Maker of the sea and the dry land.’ Now, this terrified the sailors. They asked, ‘What have you done?’ For they knew he was running away from the Lord, because he had already told them.”

“Wait a second, your God created the sea and so you decided to take a cruise?

It doesn’t make sense to us, you’re running from Him, and now we are in the middle of the sea,” which by the way, in the ancient day, the sea was the place of deep and utter fear, uncontrollable chaos. And so, there’s this already built-in sense of fear that surrounding the uncontrollable waves and wind of the sea, and he’s going, “Yeah, my God, He created the land, He created the sea, He created all of that.”

And they are going, “What in the world have you done?”

“The sea was getting rougher and rougher. So they asked him, ‘What should we do to you to make the sea calm down?’”

“‘Hurl me into the sea,’ he replied, ‘and it will become calm. I know that it’s my fault that this great storm has come upon you.’”

And he doesn’t even care that he’s put these sailors at great harm. How lame. I mean, think about it. He could have said, option maybe number one, “How do we calm this? Turn back towards Joppa. Let’s turn the ship around.” I’m pretty confident, a heart that is repentant, turn around, headed back in the right direction, I think God would have calmed the storm that way. He so didn’t want to go that way. Option one wasn’t an option.

Option two, this would have been actually, I guess, a much kinder option. “I’ll hurl myself off the boat.” Can you imagine that he put the weight of his life in the sailors’ hands? They’re like, “Wait a second, we don’t want to be responsible for you.” He was so cowardly in this moment. He’s like, “If you hurl me, then this will happen. But, you know, good luck for you.”

And notice the sailors showed compassion for Jonah where he had none for them. They hear this and they didn’t go, “Okay.” I think here’s how I would have been, let’s be honest. “Okay, so, you serve the God of the sea and the land. You are running from Him, you put us all in harm’s way, you went below deck and you slept it off, yeah, throwing you overboard sounds like a good idea. Throwing you overboard sounds exactly like the right idea. I don’t even care. You brought it onto your own head.” And notice the compassion. “Instead the men did their best to row back to land.”

Like, they showed him compassion that he didn’t even show them. “But they could not, for the sea grew even wilder than before. Then they cried out to the Lord, ‘Please, Lord, don’t let us die for taking this man’s life.’” Now they are no longer even concerned about the storm, but the consequences of what they are going to have to do to Jonah.

“Then they took Jonah and hurled him overboard, and the raging sea grew calm. At this the men greatly feared the Lord Yahweh, and they offered a sacrifice to the Lord and made vows to Him.”

Isn’t it amazing how God works? You have these sailors that are caught in someone else’s storm in the middle of it, they are not God-fearing, they are not walking with the Yahweh, and yet, through this storm, through Jonah’s disobedience, in His sovereignty, revival breaks out on the ship. And the sailors come to know the one true God and how He orchestrates and how He works, even in the midst of disasters in other people’s mistakes.

And so, it says, “Now, the Lord provided a huge fish,” and this is where we most famously know Jonah and the whale, “to swallow Jonah, and Jonah was in the belly of the fish for three days and three nights.” The Lord provided. The Lord sent.

Sometimes I think we can easily dismiss the book of Jonah as like, “Well, could somebody really survive that?” And certainly, there have been historical times where people have survived being swallowed by a fish or a whale type deal. You can go look that up.

But even more than that, if all the miracles, and especially if Jesus rose from the dead, him surviving three days in the belly of a fish is not that big of a deal. But what I think is interesting about this, like, who would have thought that would be God’s provision? You know?

One, I think it’s pretty funny of God, kind of hilarious. “Well, you’re not going to head the right direction, you’re not even going to ask the ship to go the other way? Well, I’m going to get you inside a big ol’ fish and he’s going to swim you in the right direction.” Huh.

But here’s what is incredible. Think about this. God’s provision wasn’t what Jonah expected. And I wonder for many of us, how God’s provision and how He is showing up in your life and how He is working isn’t what you expected. It isn’t necessarily what you wanted. It definitely is what you needed. But because He didn’t show up in the way you wanted, you feel disillusioned by God. You feel like, God, I prayed for this and You showed up here, but I can’t even get my eyes on this because I’m so focused on You showing up in the way that I want You to.

So, how do we shift to the more we are made for? Well, especially in the midst of the storm. God uses storms in our life to shift us back to the more we are made for. God uses storms. Now, it doesn’t mean that He causes storms. Certainly, we are going to talk about that, because He hurled a storm onto Jonah and He did cause that. So, we are going to wrestle with that. But He uses storms to shift us back to the more we are made for.

See, God is not often the source of our storm or our pain, and yet, God will not waste your pain. In His sovereignty, He will say, “In the midst of a broken, fallen, tragic world, still I can turn and use that painful moment and bring about good results.