Colorado is ranked near the top of the list of healthiest places to live. There are several reason for this ranking. People in CO tend to eat a healthier diet. They are also more active. Hiking, mountain climbing, biking, and running are activities that seem to top the list of outdoor fun.
It is interesting to note that while sociologists spend a great deal of time ranking the physical health of a community, they seldom do any work ranking the emotional or spiritual health of a community.
While Coloradans are hard at work running to get their bodies in shape, one wonders if they spend as much time exercising their souls to be as healthy spiritually and emotionally as they are physically. It IS possible for the soul to run: however, what many find themselves doing is running their souls AWAY from the very Person who can help them be spiritually and emotionally healthy.
Charles Stone wrote a great essay highlighting 7 insights he gleaned from a person who is notorious for running . . . running AWAY that is.
1. Running from God may indicate bitterness or unforgiveness toward another.
Jonah ran from God because he hated Israel’s archenemy, the Assyrians where Nineveh was located. He couldn’t stomach their receiving forgiveness from God.
2. You can run from God but you can’t hide from him.
Jonah thought he’d get as far away from Israel as possible by taking a boat and fleeing 2500 miles in the opposite direction to Spain. But, even though Jonah knew that God was all knowing, he still tried to hide on a trip in a boat.
3. God never gives up on you.
When Jonah bought a one way ticket to Spain, God could have written him off and chosen someone else to preach to the Ninevites. He didn’t. He pursed Jonah.
4. God allows the storms of life for our benefit.
God sent the storm not to punish Jonah, but as an intervention. Jonah needed to be saved from himself and the storm (and the fish that swallowed him) were God’s tools for Jonah’s benefit.
5. When you run, others often get hurt.
When Jonah was on the boat, the boat and every innocent sailor was in danger of losing his own life because of Jonah’s disobedience. Although we may think we can sin and nobody else get hurt, inevitably somebody else gets hurt. We never truly disobey God in isolation.
6. The longer you run from God, the worse the storm will get.
As the storm arose, the men cast lots, an ancient way to divine God’s will, to determine who was causing the ‘gods’ to get angry and cause the storm. The lots fell to Jonah as the source. He could have repented then but didn’t. The storm got worse and worse. Often when we run from God, we dig a deeper and deeper hole.
7. Your sin can never outstrip God’s grace.
Although not every time we sin does God still offer us the same opportunities, in this case God kept pursuing Jonah. He sent the storm and a big fish. And Jonah survived them both. The rest of the book describes many other examples when God extended grace to Jonah. We can never sin, disobey, and run from God so far that his grace can’t forgive and restore, if we are willing.
To Whom are you running?
