Awake, O Sleeper!
In this sermon on Jonah 1:4–6, we continue the journey through Jonah by watching what happens when a prophet runs from God. Jonah thinks distance will solve the problem. He heads in the opposite direction, goes down into the ship, and tries to escape the Lord’s call through silence and sleep. But Jonah learns quickly what every believer eventually learns: you cannot outrun God’s presence, and you cannot bury a divine calling under comfort. The passage opens with a sharp reminder that shifts the whole story—“But the Lord…”. The storm is not random. It is not bad luck. It is God Himself hurling a great wind upon the sea.
The sermon emphasizes something many of us forget when life gets hard: storms can be God’s kindness. The ship is threatened, the sailors panic, and the sea turns violent—but the preacher insists this is not God being cruel. This is Yahweh, the covenant Lord, interrupting Jonah’s rebellion with providence. In other words, the storm is not mainly punishment; it is pursuit. Jonah wanted to disappear. God refuses to let him. And that truth lands close to home: we often sing about God’s goodness “running after” us, but we usually imagine blessing and ease. Jonah forces us to expand our theology—sometimes God’s goodness runs after us through adversity.
Then the contrast becomes uncomfortable: the sailors are terrified and praying, while Jonah is below deck, “fast asleep.” The sermon treats Jonah’s sleep as more than physical tiredness. It is spiritual avoidance—the sleep of indifference, the kind of sleep we choose when we don’t want to face what God is saying. Jonah isn’t cursing God. He’s doing something worse in a quiet way: acting like none of this matters. But God still moves toward him. And in a striking irony, God uses a pagan captain to preach Jonah’s own message back to him: “Arise… call out to your God.” Jonah needed to be awakened, even if that awakening came through outsiders and uncomfortable pressure.
Finally, the sermon turns to Christ with a powerful comparison. Jonah slept in disobedience; Jesus also slept in a storm, but in perfect obedience and trust (Mark 4:35–41). Jonah’s presence brings danger to the ship; Jesus’ presence brings peace to the storm. Jonah needs to be chased down by mercy; Jesus is mercy in the flesh, stepping into the chaos to save His people. And that’s where the sermon lands: what we ultimately need is not just a wake-up call, not just better behavior, not just “trying harder.” We need a Savior in the boat. If God is sending storms to wake you up, the goal is not shame—it is rescue, repentance, and renewed obedience in the strength of Christ.
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