Overview – Sefer Yonah/0
Overview – Sefer Yonah
Structure of the Book
Sefer Yonah is a neatly structured book, dividing into two halves which are to some extent symmetrical in content, as illustrated in the Table in the pane to the right.
- Chapters 1-2 detail Yonah's flight from his mission and its consequences, while Chapters 3-4 detail his fulfillment of his mission and its aftermath.
- Each unit opens with Hashem's call and the prophet's disobedience or compliance.
- This is followed by a description of people in danger of destruction whose ensuing actions and cries to God lead to their salvation.
- Both units end with a focus on the prophet Yonah who prays (in one case for salvation, and in the other for death) and is answered with miraculous messages.
For further discussion of the book's structure, see Structure – Sefer Yonah.
Historical Background
Sefer Yonah itself does not provide enough information to allow the reader to place it within a larger historical framework.1 However, many commentators2 associate Yonah with the Yonah b. Amitai mentioned in Melakhim II 14:25 who prophesied during the reign of Yerovam II. If so, Yonah prophesied at a time when Assyria was one of the strongest powers in the Ancient Near East. Within just a few decades after Yerovam's death, Assyria exiles Israel and decimates Judah. Sefer Yonah, though, makes no mention of any of this. It never even draws a connection between Nineveh and Assyria, suggesting that these facts are perhaps not crucial for a proper understanding of the book's main messages..
Themes
Repentance
Much of the book of Yonah touches in some way on the themes of second chances, repentance, and return to God. Each of the main characters embark on a process of change, though their degree of success is debatable:
- The Sailors – The boatmen are presented in a positive light and as undeserving of death,3 implying that they have no need to repent. Their experiences at sea, nonetheless, cause them to undergo a transition, and they progressively move closer to recognition of Hashem as the chapter advances. This is highlighted by the usage of the guiding word "ירא" in verses 5, 10 and 15. At first the sailors' fear leads them to pray to their foreign gods. By the end of the chapter, they instead "fear Hashem exceedingly" (וַיִּירְאוּ הָאֲנָשִׁים יִרְאָה גְדוֹלָה אֶת י״י ). Explore the usage of the root the Tanakh Lab