Jonah 4 // Ignite

Lean In // 5 minutes

What was a close encounter with a creature where you lived to tell the tale?

Leader Note: The question is designed to be fun although there may be some scary encounter stories!  Use the question to transition to the story of Jonah.

Look Down // 10 minutes

Read Jonah 4

Story Note: In the first three chapters, we learn how Jonah was sent by God to warn the people of Nineveh that God was going to judge them.  Rather than go, Jonah chose to flee in the opposite direction, because the Assyrians were cruel and wicked.  Jonah boarded a ship that was bound for the city of Tarshish when a great storm came in a time of the year that the storms do not happen.  The sailors finally agreed at Jonah’s request to throw him overboard, and when they did a great fish, prepared by God, swallowed Jonah.  After a period of three days and three nights, Jonah repented and obeyed the Lord.  Then, Jonah came to the land of the Assyrians and pronounced God’s judgment upon Nineveh, and as a result the people of Nineveh repented at the preaching of Jonah and God spared the city.  This is where we pick up chapter 4…

What do learn about Jonah?

Sample answers could include:

  • He becomes angry that God did not destroy the Ninevites
  • Jonah would rather have died than be a part of God reconciling Nineveh
  • Jonah’s anger and bitterness clouded his vision

What do you learn about God’s nature?

Sample answers could include:

  • God was patient with both Nineveh and Jonah
  • God’s desire is to extend mercy rather than destruction
  • God is gracious, compassionate, slow to anger, and abounding in love (v. 2)
  • God has great concern for the lost and wicked

Commentary: Jonah had good reason to disobey and run from God’s command.  The Ninevites were cruel and wicked and caused much pain and difficulty for Jonah and his people.  However, as the passage tells us, Jonah was resistant not because the Ninevites were cruel and wicked, but because he knew God is a God of grace, compassion, slow to anger, abounding in love, and relents from sending destruction.  This context is important to understanding Jonah’s motive for withholding grace and compassion from the Ninevites.   

Look Out // 10 minutes

Where have you seen compassion extended to others?  What does it look like?

Where have you seen compassion withheld?  What keeps people from extending it?

Leader Note: In Israel’s story, God had extended compassion toward them, which included Jonah, but then Jonah was not as willing to extend it to the Ninevites.  Help guide group members to specific examples and stories of where they have seen compassion extended and withheld.   

Look In // 20 minutes

Who are the Ninevites in your life?

Leader note: In Jonah’s story, the Ninevites were people that caused hurt and pain for Jonah and his people.  So, who are the people that have caused hurt and pain in our lives?  As the leader, it will be helpful to have some examples and stories from your own life to help your group identify these people and places in their own lives.

What could it look like to extend compassion to them?

Leader note: Help group members find one or two tangible things they could do to move toward extending compassion.  It could be as simple as saying a prayer or even initiating a conversation.  The goal is to move toward an actionable step.

Live It Out // 5 minutes

Who might be impacted by extending grace to the difficult people and places in your life?

Key Verse: I knew that you are a gracious and compassionate God, slow to anger and abounding in love, a God who relents from sending calamity. – Jonah 4:2

Key Thought: 

Click here for Life Group Serve Opportunities

Learn More About Flow Questions: Check out Kenton Beshore’s book Ask in the Irvine Campus Bookstore for more on the Flow Question model.

2 Corinthians 12:7-10 // Maps And Paths: You Make The Call Wk 3

Lean In // 5 minutes

What are the characteristics of a good resume? What are the types of characteristics read at an Eulogy and how do they differ?

Leader Note: Lead your group to see the difference between self-earned/driven achievements and the character traits, such as loving and self-giving which have more lasting impact.

Look Down // 10 minutes

Read 2 Corinthians 12:7-10

What do you learn about this difficult thing Paul faced?

Sample answers may include…

  • Paul asked three times for it to be taken away
  • The “weakness” led him to depend on God
  • He was given or gifted “a thorn in his flesh”
  • Christ’s power is made perfect in his weakness
  • Christ’s grace is sufficient for Paul
  • Paul’s weakness and Christ’s power are connected
  • He found purpose in the “thorn” or difficulty and a promise of grace and power in Christ

Commentary: There has been a lot of debate about the “thorn in the flesh” Paul references.  There are some commentators who think it was epilepsy while others thought it could have been depression or debilitating headaches or even a degenerative eye disease.  Also, the phrase “messenger of Satan” is unclear.  Commentators are not unified on whether Paul is making a theological statement or using the phrase as a figure of speech.  Although some of these things are unclear, what we do know is that Paul’s thorn was incredibly difficult and debilitating for him…and it didn’t go away: “Three times I pleaded with The Lord…” (v. 8).  With all that being said, Paul considered and understood his thorn as a gift where Christ’s power was made perfect and His grace was sufficient.

Look Out // 10 minutes

What are some of the “thorns” or difficulties you see people facing today?

Sample answers may include:

  • Health related issues
  • Difficulties at work
  • Financial pressures—student loans, debts, mortgages, etc.
  • Relational stress—marriage, kids, or dating

How have you seen people respond to their difficulty?

Leader Note: Just like The Apostle Paul, we all face “thorns” or difficulties in our lives and they range from seasonal to permanent.  As you lead your group, help them to identify the different hardships that people face in our world and their response to it.

Look In // 15 minutes

Where are you experiencing a “thorn” in your life?

What would it look like to receive it as a gift where Christ’s power and grace is made perfect in and through you?

Commentary: The Apostle Paul was a man of great faith that God used in incredible ways and even he faced a painfully debilitating “thorn” in his flesh.  Also, he asked God to take it away three times but God said, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.”  Even though Paul faced this difficulty, he found purpose and a promise of Christ’s grace and power.

Leader Note: A question we often want to know is why?  Why did this happen to me?  And, then we can jump to the conclusion that we did something wrong or that God is upset with us.    As you lead your group through these questions, be sensitive to the difficulties they face and the questions they may ask, while also reminding them that God is at work.  For when we are weak, then Christ (and us) are made strong. 

Live It Out // 5 minutes

What if we received our difficulty as an opportunity for Christ’s grace and power to be known?  How would it impact our world?

PRAY: Although we can receive our difficulty as an opportunity for Christ to work, it doesn’t mean that we don’t pray for the situations that we face.  Pray for God’s will to be done on earth as it is in heaven.  From the things your group identified as “thorns”, pray that God would heal, provide, deliver, etc.  And, pray that your group would experience God’s grace and power in the face of the difficulty. 

Key Verse(s): But he said to me, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.” – 2 Corinthians 12:9

Life Group Connect Event Sign-Ups: Tuesday, Sept. 23, 6:30-8p, Upper Room

Click here for Life Group Serve Opportunities

Learn More About Flow Questions: Check out Kenton Beshore’s book Ask in the Irvine Campus Bookstore for more on the Flow Question model.