Our God of Wind, Storms, Fish, Insects, and Plants

By

This post is based on the Grace Commentary on Jonah. Make sure you sign up for the email newsletter to get a free digital copy of this commentary when it is released.


Jonah wormWhether or not a person believes that God sends storms, one thing that all agree on is that God can use storms to accomplish His will. And it is not just storms. At numerous places in Scripture, and especially in the book of Jonah, God uses a whole host of created elements to carry out His divine will. He sends wind and a storm. He sends a great fish. He sends scorching heat. He sends a plant, and a worm to kill that plant. And they all respond immediately and willingly.

But the one thing in the book which God tries to send which does not go willingly is a man: Jonah. Jonah eventually goes, but only grudgingly.

Does God send wind, waves, insects, and fish to help direct us toward His will? Such a view might make you look upon the daily “annoyances” of life a little differently. But can we really believe that the bug which just splattered on our windshield is somehow there because God told it to fly into the path of our car? If not, then how can we tell which natural elements were sent by God, and which are simply the results of a natural chain of events? Is there a difference?

A Question of Free Will

Does it come down a question of free will or is all divinely ordained? Both sides of the debate claim Jonah as defense of their views:

The one who believes in free will says, “See? Jonah has free will. God told him to go to Nineveh, but he went the other direction.”

“Yes,” counters the one who believes God divinely ordains everything. “But Jonah ended up going to Nineveh, didn’t he? God’s will cannot be stopped. All of creation is used by God to bring Jonah into obedience to God’s divine decree.”

Both sides make decent arguments, and at various times in my life, I have believed both. But as with most theological debates that have two polar opposite views, the truth most likely falls somewhere in the middle.

The Middle Ground

free willI believe that while God can control all things, down the tiniest detail such as the flight pattern of a gnat, He usually does not. His creation is good, and usually functions fairly well on its own. Sin has messed things up substantially, and so God has to intervene to keep things on track.

What track is that?

The ultimate track and goal toward which God is working, and toward which we are all headed: that heaven and earth will be reconciled to each other and that Jesus Christ will rule and reign over all creation forever and ever. This is the goal, the destination, the vision toward which we run. It is set in stone. It is irrevocable. It is certain.

But how we get there is another story. God has given creation great freedom. And while we can use that freedom to rebel against God and go against His will, God, in His infinite wisdom and power, can use whatever means necessary to keep the universe headed in the proper direction. Sometimes He may send a great storm to turn us around, while other times it may be a little worm.


This post is based on the Grace Commentary on Jonah. Make sure you sign up for the email newsletter to get a free digital copy of this commentary when it is released.


The newsletter includes a weekly blog digest
and the monthly newsletter with exclusive news and offers. This month's offer is a
free copy of my eBook
The Skeleton Church.


How Frequently Do You Want to Receive Blog Posts?
Daily Blog Posts
Weekly Post Summary
BOTH Daily Posts AND Weekly Summary

  • Sam

    Ah, if all is divinely ordained, then the people who are trying to prove that we’re all playing out a preprogrammed computer program must be correct. I suppose then we only need to discuss if the programmer was an advanced ancient civilization or a “something” (a supreme being of some sort or a device).

    Apparently God can send storms, but we’re being extremely presumptuous if and when we decide we know why he sent a certain storm. After Sandy I read dozens of explanations from self-appointed spokespersons for God. The odd thing was, God told them all sorts of things. The “reasons” were all over the map.

    The Bible may give us some apparent explanation in the case of Jonah, but unfortunately we just don’t know when it comes to current events. Did God send that bug to smash on my window? Did God send Sandy? Why did he do it? We may know how it affected us personally, but beyond that we’re just guessing.

    • http://www.tillhecomes.org/ Jeremy Myers

      Sam,

      I really struggled with writing this post, and am not happy with it even now.

      Like you, I do not believe God “sends” storms, fish, worms, etc. But apparently, sometimes He does…

      You are absolutely right that if we try to say that God sends Hurricane Sandy… or the Sandy Hook Elementary shooter… we are even on the edge of maligning God.

      • Sam
        • http://www.tillhecomes.org/ Jeremy Myers

          You are right. That was a good article.

        • Missy

          Very, very true on both accounts: 1) Prayer will not stop school shootings and 2) Access to guns correlates to 100% of gun violence. The problem….our morals today, with overload on sex, videos, computers and violence, we are warping young minds, and old minds alike. That’s the problem. We aren’t raising our children to know, love and fear our God. God had been sending in warriors to fight since the beginning of time . There was a purpose and it was God ordained. If it wasn’t a God ordained battle, then they lost the fight. So I don’t believe it’s the guns…I believe it’s our DIS-belief and not rearing our children to be strong leaders. We are beginning to see the effects of a non-believing nation. God won’t be at fault for crushing the US, we will, unfortunately, crush ourselves.

          • Sam

            Yes, the way we raise our children often isn’t working. They’re not seeing Jesus in us, and they’re not seeing Jesus acting through us. They are being told how to think, who to vote for and how to vote on specific issues. But we’re not modeling the love of Jesus for them. We’re modeling political activism and proper thinking.

  • kbswan1

    Jeremy, good post.

    The way I see things (and it is just an analogy to help me cope.. and I am not saying it is the only way to think) … life is like playing a chess match with God himself. He gives me the freedom to make decisions to move my pieces anywhere I want among the board, and God moves his pieces too. But in the end if God wants my pawn on a certain square on the board at a certain time he will move his pieces against my moves to get my pawn right where he needs it to be.

    later.. Swanny

    • http://www.tillhecomes.org/ Jeremy Myers

      Yes, that is a good analogy. Another I have heard is that we are on a cruise across the ocean with God as the captain. He is going to get us to port, but during the voyage, we can pretty much do anything on board we want within the bounds of the ship.

  • Pingback: God is Guilty | Till He Comes