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Pagan Piety Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 9, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: We see here an example of how God can use evil to bring forth good. Jonah disobeyed and did the opposite of God's will, and yet there was no loss, for by his act of evil he was led providentially to bring the knowledge of the true God to these men.
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Total depravity is not the concept that man is as bad as
he can be, for we all know that there are many degrees of
evil among the lost, and this holds true even among the
saved. Some redeemed people are less sinful than others,
and some lost people are less sinful than others. Total
depravity, when rightly understood, means that there is no
part of man that has escaped the taint of sin. He is spoiled in
every faculty. In body, soul, and mind he has fallen, and
there is nothing left of purity that can be used in any way to
merit salvation. It does not mean that he is worthless, for he
is still of such great value to God that He would send His
Son to die for His redemption.
If you looked at used cars and saw one with a poor body,
worn tires, and cracked glass, but with a good motor, you
might say there is some merit in it that makes it worthy of
being purchased. It might be the other way around, and the
motor is bad, but the body and tires may be very good. But
a car that would fit the total depravity category has a poor
motor, rusted body, worn tires, broken windows, clouded
mirror, leaky tank, and some defeat in every part. In other
words, there is nothing about it that compels you to admit
that it merits escape from the junkyard. If it is kept and
restored, it is only by grace. What would ever lead one to
restore it? It would be because of the original nature and
value of the car. It could be of great value again if restored.
This the idea behind God's salvation plan for man.
Man has no claim on God's mercy. There is nothing about
him that makes him worthy of a place in God's presence. If
he ever gets there, it is only by God's grace. Man was once
perfect and in fellowship with God, and if he is redeemed he
can be restored to that original value and relationship. This
means that man at his best is still evil and lost, but it does
not mean that he is no good. On the contrary, he is still the
most valuable creature in the world. He is valuable enough
for God to make a way for him to be restored. He is still the
only creature made in the image of God. He is like a Rolls
Royce, or some other unique model. By its very uniqueness
it opens the hope of being worth it to put labor into its
restoration. What is once was it can be again, and that
becomes a motivation to restore it.
The point I am getting at is that we must avoid carrying
the concept of depravity to the point of absurdity and
belittling the whole plan of God to redeem man. It was not
an arbitrary act on the part of God to save men. He had
planned to do so even before man fell because He knew that
man had the capacity to be like His Son. Even in his
depraved state he can do what is good in the eyes of God.
Jesus said to His disciples, "If you then, being evil, know
how to give good gifts to your children, how much more
should your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to them
who ask Him?" If man who is evil can still do good, how
much more can God, who alone is untouched by all sin. The
book of Jonah is a clear revelation that just as good men can
do evil, so evil men can do good. Let's look at this beginning
with verse 13.
Verse 13. Jonah has been found guilty of sin against God,
and of endangering the lives of everyone on the ship. Men of
greater culture would have quickly agreed with his request
to be thrown into the sea, but to our surprise these men who
were so fearful are now willing to risk their lives for the sake
of Jonah. Jonah must have felt quit small, for here were
Gentile dogs, who were not a part of the covenant of God
with Israel, and yet they would do for him more than he
would ever consider doing for them. Even God's command
could not bring him to bother with Gentiles, and now he sees
Gentiles risking everything for his skin.
We don't want to get carried away to another extreme,
so we must recognize this as a unique situation. Without a
doubt the vast majority of pagans would have thrown him
over just for the sport of it. The story is trying to convey,
not that all pagans are just great guys after all, but that men