Jonah – Week 1: You Can’t Outrun God This week we begin our series in the book of Jonah—not a children’s fish tale, but a gritty, emotional story about a faithful God and a fleeing prophet. Jonah receives a word from the Lord… and runs the opposite direction. His rebellion, resistance, and reluctant obedience force us to examine our own hearts. What do we do when God’s call makes us uncomfortable? When He extends grace to people we don’t think deserve it?
Title: You Can’t Outrun God
Text: Jonah 1:1–3
Big Idea: Jonah’s story isn’t just about a fish—it’s about a faithful God chasing a rebellious heart.
I. The Book No One Expected — A Prophet Who Refuses to Prophesy
Jonah is the only prophetic book centered on the prophet's disobedience, not his message.
He receives a clear word from God… and immediately runs in the opposite direction.
Jonah is raw, emotional, and deeply human. He’s not the hero—we’re not meant to “be like Jonah.”
Tension: What do you do when God’s Word leads you somewhere you don’t want to go?
II. Jonah Isn’t Just a Story — It’s a Mirror
Jonah’s actions reflect our own struggles with obedience, resentment, and control.
He obeys—eventually—but his heart is not aligned with God’s.
Even after a city-wide revival, Jonah is angry. He doesn’t want them to be forgiven.
This book confronts the reader with key questions:
What if God’s grace makes you uncomfortable?
What if His calling disrupts your comfort?
Is it possible to do the will of God without the heart of God?
III. Themes That Will Challenge Us (Series-Wide)
God’s mercy is scandalous – He loves people we’d rather avoid.
Obedience isn’t about convenience – Delayed obedience is still disobedience.
God relentlessly pursues us – Not with wrath, but with grace.
Emotional health matters – You can’t separate spiritual maturity from emotional honesty.
The journey of Jonah challenges the inner life, not just outer behavior.
Final Takeaway:
You may run—but God pursues.
Not with punishment, but with mercy.
Not to crush you, but to restore you.
The question isn’t “Will God speak?”
It’s: Will you run, or will you respond?