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The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy by Timothy J. Keller
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The Prodigal Prophet Quotes Showing 1-30 of 59
“Unless Jonah can see his own sin, and see himself as living wholly by the mercy of God, he will never understand how God can be merciful to evil people and still be just and faithful.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“When Christian believers care more for their own interests and security than for the good and salvation of other races and ethnicities, they are sinning like Jonah. If they value the economic and military flourishing of their country over the good of the human race and the furtherance of God’s work in the world, they are sinning like Jonah. Their identity is more rooted in their race and nationality than in being saved sinners and children of God.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“In literature, plays, and cinema, substitutionary sacrifice is always the most riveting and moving plot point. In the movie The Last of the Mohicans, British major Duncan Heyward asks his Indian captors if he might die in the flames so that Cora, whom he loves, and Nathaniel can go free. When, as he is being dragged away, Duncan cries, “My compliments, sir! Take her and get out!” we are electrified by his unflinching willingness to die to save others, one of whom has been his rival. He dies with his arms bound and stretched out, as if he were on a cross. In Ernest Gordon’s memoir of being a prisoner of the Japanese during World War II, he recounts how at the end of a day of forced labor the guards counted the shovels, and one was apparently missing. A furious guard threatened the British POWs that unless the guilty person confessed, he would kill them all. He cocked his gun to start shooting them one by one. At that moment, one prisoner stepped forward calmly and said, “I did it.” He stood quietly at attention, and “he did not open his mouth” (Isaiah 53: 7) as he was beaten to death. When they all got back to the camp and counted the shovels again, it turned out that they were all there. The man had sacrificed himself to save them all. In the first Harry Potter novel, the evil Lord Voldemort can’t touch Harry without being burned. Later Dumbledore explains it to him. “Your mother died to save you. . . . Love as powerful [as that] . . . leaves its own mark. . . . [T]o have been loved so deeply . . . will give us some protection forever.” Why do these stories move us? It’s because we know from the mundane corners of life to the most dramatic that all life-changing love is substitutionary sacrifice. We know that anybody who has ever done anything that really made a difference in our lives made a sacrifice, stepped in and gave something or paid something or bore something so we would not have to.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“Shallow Christian identities explain why professing Christians can be racists and greedy materialists, addicted to beauty and pleasure, or filled with anxiety and prone to overwork. All this comes because it is not Christ’s love but the world’s power, approval, comfort, and control that are the real roots of our self-identity.”
Timothy J. Keller, Rediscovering Jonah: The Secret of God's Mercy
“Common grace means that nonbelievers often act more righteously than believers despite their lack of faith; whereas believers, filled with remaining sin, often act far worse than their right belief in God would lead us to expect. All this means Christians should be humble and respectful toward those who do not share their faith.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“The doctrine of common grace is the teaching that God bestows gifts of wisdom, moral insight, goodness, and beauty across humanity, regardless of race or religious belief.”
Timothy J. Keller, Rediscovering Jonah: The Secret of God's Mercy
“Whenever we keep a promise or a vow to someone despite the cost, whenever we forgive someone whom we could pay back, whenever we stay close to a suffering person whose troubles are draining to her and all those around her, we are loving according to the pattern of substitutionary sacrifice. Our loss, whether of money, time, or energy, is their gain. We decrease that they may increase. Yet in such love we are not diminished, but we become stronger, wiser, happier, and deeper. That’s the pattern of true love, not a so-called love that uses others to meet our needs for self-realization. We should not be surprised, then, that when God came into the world in Jesus Christ, he loved us like this. Indeed, we can imagine that the reason that this pattern of love is so transformative in human life is because we are created in God’s image, and this is how he loves.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“What makes a person a Christian is not our love for God, which is always imperfect, but God’s love for us.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“God’s grace becomes wondrous, endlessly consoling, beautiful, and humbling only when we fully believe, grasp, and remind ourselves of all three of these background truths—that we deserve nothing but condemnation, that we are utterly incapable of saving ourselves, and that God has saved us, despite our sin, at infinite cost to himself.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“A God who substitutes himself for us and suffers so that we may go free is a God you can trust.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“Sin always hardens the conscience, locks you in the prison of your own defensiveness and rationalizations, and eats you up slowly from the inside.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“Grace abolishes fear of failure, which may have been part of Jonah’s problem. So many of our deepest longings to succeed are really just ways to be for ourselves what Christ should be for us. Really we are saying, “If I achieve this, then I am acceptable!” But when we stop trying to steal self-acceptance from other sources, we lose our fear. We become fearless without becoming defiant.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“Whatever you live for actually owns you. You do not really control yourself. Whatever you live for and love the most controls you.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“Christians can never be first of all Asians or Americans, Russians or Tutsis, and then Christians. … When they respond to the call of the gospel they put one foot outside their culture while the other remains firmly planted in it. [Christianity] is not flight from one’s original culture, but a new way of living within it because of the new vision of peace and joy in Christ.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“When you indulge yourself in bitter thought, it feels so satisfying to fantasize about payback. But slowly and surely it will enlarge your capacity for self-pity, erode your ability to trust and enjoy relationships, and generally drain the happiness out of your daily life. Sin always the conscience, locks you in the prison of your own defensiveness and rationalizations, and eats you up slowly from the inside.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“Why was God sending a deluge of disappointments? "Tis in this way," the Lord replied, in essence: "I am ANSWERING your prayers for grace and faith. I am only trying to liberate you from the things that enslave you, drive you, and control you. Do you not see that if you loved me supremely, more than anything else, you'd be truly free? Find your all in me.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“The usual place to learn the greatest secrets of God’s grace is at the bottom.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“When Christian believers care more for their own interests and security than for the good and salvation of other races and ethnicities, they are sinning like Jonah. If they value the economic and military flourishing of their country over the good of the human race and the furtherance of God’s work in the world, they are sinning like Jonah.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“God varies his strategies too, and continually extends mercy to us in new ways, even though we neither understand nor deserve it.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“Even if we accept responsibility for wrongdoing, we believe “we can fix this.” The most common way we try to do that is to apply the technology of morality. We believe that with hard work and/or fastidious religious observance, we can repair our relationship with God and even put him in a position where he “can’t say ‘no’ to us.”7”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“Jesus is the prophet Jonah should have been. Yet, of course, he is infinitely more than that. Jesus did not merely weep for us; he died for us. Jonah went outside the city, hoping to witness its condemnation, but Jesus Christ went outside the city to die on a cross to accomplish its salvation.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“The classic Old Testament example of these two ways to run from God is right here in the book of Jonah. Jonah takes turns acting as both the “younger brother” and the “older brother.” In the first two chapters of the book, Jonah disobeys and runs away from the Lord and yet ultimately repents and asks for God’s grace, just as the younger brother leaves home but returns repentant. In the last two chapters, however, Jonah obeys God’s command to go and preach to Nineveh. In both cases, however, he’s trying to get control of the agenda.11 When God accepts the repentance of the Ninevites, just like the older brother in Luke 15, Jonah bristles with self-righteous anger at God’s graciousness and mercy to sinners.12 And that is the problem facing Jonah, namely, the mystery of God’s mercy. It is a theological problem, but it is at the same time a heart problem. Unless Jonah can see his own sin, and see himself as living wholly by the mercy of God, he will never understand how God can be merciful to evil people and still be just and faithful. The story of Jonah, with all its twists and turns, is about how God takes Jonah, sometimes by the hand, other times by the scruff of the neck, to show him these things.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“Flannery O’Connor describes one of her fictional characters, Hazel Motes, as knowing that “the way to avoid Jesus was to avoid sin.”10 We think that if we are religiously observant, virtuous, and good, then we’ve paid our dues, as it were. Now God can’t just ask anything of us—he owes us. He is obligated to answer our prayers and bless us. This is not moving toward him in grateful joy, glad surrender, and love, but is instead a way of controlling God and, as a result, keeping him at arm’s length.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“When the Captain finds the sleeping prophet he says, "Arise, call...!" ( Hebrew qum lek, verse 6), the same words God used when calling Jonah to arise, go, and call Nineveh to repentance. But as Jonah rubs his eyes there is a Gentile mariner with God's very words in his mouth. What is this? God sent his prophet to point the pagans toward himself. Yet now it is the pagans pointing the prophet toward God.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“When the Captain finds the sleeping prophet he
says, "Arise, call...!" ( Hebrew qum lek, verse 6), the
same words God used when calling Jonah to arise, go,
and call Nineveh to repentance. But as Jonah rubs his
eyes there is a Gentile mariner with God's very words
in his mouth. What is this? God sent his prophet to
point the pagans toward himself. Yet now it is the
pagans pointing the prophet toward God.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“In literature, plays, and cinema, substitutionary sacrifice is always the most riveting and moving plot point.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“In the Bible, writes biblical scholar John Stott, “agape love means self-sacrifice in the service of others.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“Here we see God’s righteousness and love working together. He is both too holy and too loving to either destroy Jonah or to allow Jonah to remain as he is, and God is also too holy and too loving to allow us to remain as we are.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“If you love someone, you must and will get angry if something threatens to destroy him or her.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy
“There are many people who have no idea what they should be living for, or the meaning of their lives, nor have they any guide to tell right from wrong. God looks down at people in that kind of spiritual fog, that spiritual stupidity, and he doesn’t say, “You idiots.”
Timothy J. Keller, The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God's Mercy

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