Two Minority Reports from the Hebrew Bible, VII : The Inescapable Presence of God

Ruth and Jonah Sermon Series

July 9, 2023 • William A. Evertsberg • Jonah 2

Someone here is feeling the first gentle but later insistent urgings of God to Gospel duty. Someone here is being called by God to preach or practice Truth in the face of falsehood. Someone here is caught between what she wants to do and what God needs her to do. Someone here faces a choice between a comfortable and a meaningful life. Someone here stands at the crossroads of Broad Street and Narrow Way. Someone here doesn’t know whether to sail west to friendly Tarshish or hike east to wicked Nineveh. 


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We know that reverence is one of the things that is saving our lives right now. We know what makes us flourish. We know what’s good for us. We know what we need, because every day as we scroll through our media, we encounter a swollen, grotesque, vainglorious ego scowling out at us from the screen, reverencing nothing and respecting no one, and we know instinctively that that is exactly what we don’t want to be.   It’s ironic: to live large, to live up to the towering stature of our full humanity, we remind ourselves now and then that we are in fact small, contingent, unnecessary creatures, living only by the grace of that Crafty Wizard who threw a hundred billion galaxies across vast eons of emptiness.   And so now and then we pause from our daily round to hear something like George Frideric Handel’s "Dettingen Te Deum", a staggering paeon to the matchless majesty of God Godself, the “luminous deep being a lofty light,” as Dante puts.#_ftn1 #_ftnref1Dante Alighieri, Comedy, Paradiso, Canto XXXIII, ll. 115ff.