Chapter XLVIII.
The remarkable faith of
the Ninevites is related to have been manifested about these times.
That town, founded of old by Assure, the son of Sem, was the capital of
the kingdom of the Assyrians. It was then full of a multitude of
inhabitants, sustaining one hundred and twenty thousand men, and
abounding in wickedness, as is usually the case among a vast concourse
of people. God, moved by their sinfulness, commanded the prophet Jonah
to go from Judæa, and denounce destruction upon the city, as Sodom
and Gomorrah had of old been consumed by fire from heaven. But the
prophet declined that office of preaching, not out of contumacy, but
from foresight, which enabled him to behold God reconciled through the
repentance of the people; and he embarked on board a ship which was
bound for Tharsus, in a very different direction. But, after they had
gone forth into the deep, the sailors, constrained by the violence of
the sea, inquired by means of the lot who was the cause of that
suffering. And when the lot fell upon Jonah, he was cast into the sea,
to be, as it were, a sacrifice for stilling the tempest, and he was
seized and swallowed by a whale—a monster of the deep. Cast out
three days afterwards on the shores of the324324
Ninevites, he preached as he had been commanded, namely that the city
would be destroyed in three325325 days, as a
punishment for the sins of the people. The voice of the prophet was
listened to, not in a hypocritical fashion, as at Sodom of old; and
immediately by the order, and after the example, of the king, the whole
people, and even those infants newly born, are commanded to abstain
from meat and drink: the very beasts of burden in the place, and
animals of different kinds, being forced by hunger and thirst,
presented an appearance of those who lamented along with the human
inhabitants. In this way, the threatened evil was averted. To Jonah,
complaining to God, that his words had not been fulfilled, it was
answered that pardon could never be denied to the
penitent.