Why did Nineveh repent when Jonah gave them the prophesy?

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Why did Nineveh repent when Jonah gave them the prophesy? Who was the King? Why did Assyrians listen to a Hebrew Prophet? In Jonah, Chapter 3, Versus 4-9 the people repent and hope God will not chastise them. Who did the people of Nineveh worship as God?
 
HOMILY THEME: REPENTANCE MOVES GOD.

October 9, 2017 M

HOMILY FOR THE TWENTY-SEVENTH WEEK IN ORDINARY TIME YEAR A.

HOMILY THEME: REPENTANCE MOVES GOD.

BY: Fr. Evaristus Abu

HOMILY:
“And the people of Nineveh believed God; they proclaimed a fast, and everyone, great and small, put on sackcloth.” Jonah 3:5.

To repent is to acknowledge my sinfulness before God, to be truly sorry for them and to ask forgiveness from God. Repentance begins from the heart and finds expression in physical actions such as FASTING, SELF-DENIAL or SELF- HUMILIATION which is symbolized by the wearing of sackcloth. It is actually punishing myself.

The action of the people of Nineveh in our modern day and time would translate into being able to bring myself before a priest to confess my sins. Like the people of Nineveh, I would have to punish myself, fast from my personal pride, deny myself and mention my sins to Jesus who is represented in the person of the priest.

Virtually all the spiritual masters and saints recommend regular confession at least once a week. In other words, I don’t need to wait for Jonah to warn me before I repent. If I really want to live above sin, then I must take advantage of weekly confession. If I put off confession for more than a week or longer, the weaker I become spiritually.

The more I repent of a particular sin, the more I confess it, the less likely I commit it. At times, I become too ashamed of confessing a sin that I just flee completely each time I am faced with the temptation to commit that same sin. This is why confession is good.

If I just sit in my room and beg God to forgive me without actually humiliating myself by confessing it to a priest, I might as well be deceiving myself.

“When God saw what they did, how they turned from their evil ways, God changed his mind about the calamity that he had said he would bring upon them; and he did not do it.” Jonah 3:10.

Repentance moves God. The more I repent and leave my sins behind, the brighter my future will be. I would be saving myself from a lot of calamity by repenting constantly and living a truly holy life.
 
It is possible that the story of Jonah was more a parable than a history lesson
 
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