Irenaeus, Tertullian, Methodius, and Jerome: how do you answer the question?
“Long-suffering therefore was God, when man became a defaulter, as foreseeing that victory which should be granted to him through the Word. For, when strength was made perfect in weakness, it showed the kindness and transcendent power of God. For as He patiently suffered Jonah to be swallowed by the whale, not that he should be swallowed up and perish altogether, but that, having been cast out again, he might be the more subject to God, and might glorify Him the more who had conferred upon him such an unhoped-for deliverance, and might bring the Ninevites to a lasting repentance, so that they should be convened to the Lord, who would deliver them from death, having been struck with awe by that portent which had been wrought in Jonah’s case, as the Scripture says of them, ‘And they returned each from his evil way, and the unrighteousness which was in their hands, saying, Who knoweth if God will repent, and turn away His anger from us, and we shall not perish?’” (Irenaeus,
, Bk 3, Ch 20, 1Adversus Haereses).
“For if He were the son of Joseph, how could He be greater than Solomon, of greater than Jonah, or greater than David, when He was generated from the same seed, and was a descendant of these men?” (
Ibid., Bk 3, Ch 21, 8).
“If, however, any one imagine it impossible that men should survive for such a length of time, and that Elias was not caught up in the flesh, but that his flesh was consumed in the fiery chariot, let him consider that Jonah, when he had been cast into the deep, and swallowed down into the whale’s belly, was by the command of God again thrown out safe upon the land. …] Neither the nature of any created thing, therefore, nor the weakness of the flesh, can prevail against the will of God. For God is not subject to created things, but created things to God; and all things yield obedience to His will. Wherefore also the Lord declares, ‘The things which are impossible with men, are possible with God.’ …] and [as it might also appear impossible] that from the whale’s belly and from the fiery furnace men issued forth unhurt, yet they nevertheless did so, led forth as it were by the hand of God, for the purpose of declaring His power” (
Ibid., Bk 5, Ch 5, 2).
“Nay, this very long-suffering of the Creator will tend to the condemnation of Marcion; that patience, (I mean,) which waits for the sinner’s repentance rather than his death, which prefers mercy to sacrifice, averting from the Ninevites the ruin which had been already denounced against them. …] Then, you will say, if you excuse the evil under name of justice, on the ground that He had justly determined destruction against the people of Nineveh, He must even on this argument be blameworthy, for having repented of an act of justice, which surely should not be repented of. Certainly not, my reply is; God will never repent of an act of justice” (Tertullian,
Against Marcion, Bk 2, Ch 17; 24).
And in showing Marcion how God has acted mercifully in history – not in man’s imagination, but in history – Tertullian also says that in “Jonah you find the signal act of His mercy, which He showed to the praying Ninevites” (
Ibid., Bk 5, Ch 11).
“
The history of Jonah contains a great mystery. …] As, then, Jonah spent three days and as many nights in the whale’s belly, and was delivered up sound again, so shall we all, who have passed through the three stages of our present life on earth— I mean the beginning, the middle, and the end, of which all this present time consists— rise again” (Methodius,
From the Book of the Resurrection, 1-2).
“Have you no fear, then, lest the Saviour may say to you: ‘Are you angry, Paula, that your daughter has become my daughter? …] Jonah, that headstrong prophet, once fled from me, yet in the depths of the sea he was still mine’” (Jerome,
Letter 39, 3).