In the midst of a violent tempest, the terrified mariners interrogate their mysterious passenger to discover the cause of the storm. Brother Gideon Levytam explores Jonah’s bold confession, “I am a Hebrew” (Ani Ivri), and his admission that he is fleeing from the Creator of the sea and the dry land. Knowing the storm is God’s righteous discipline, Jonah tells the sailors that he must be cast into the raging waters so that they might live. When they do so, the sea is immediately calmed, and these pagan men are brought to fear the God of Israel, offer sacrifices, and make vows to Jehovah. Yet the story does not end in the depths of the sea. The Lord prepares a great fish (dag gadol) to swallow the prophet, and Jonah remains in its belly for three days and three nights. Brother Gideon connects this remarkable event to its ultimate prophetic fulfillment in Yeshua the Messiah. As Jonah was cast into the deep and became the means of deliverance for others, so the Messiah spoke of this as the sign of His own death, burial, and resurrection—bringing salvation to a perishing world.

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