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|  Pope Shenouda III Jonah        When God described   Nineveh as being the great  city, He was not considering its ignorance and sin but He was looking with  great joy at its profound repentance.   Nineveh was quick in responding to God's  word.  When Lot warned the Sodomites of the Lord's  hot displeasure, they scorned him, and "to his sons-in-law he seemed to  be joking" (Gen. 19:14), whereas the   Ninevites listened with utter  seriousness to   Jonah and responded quickly to his word, despite the respite  of forty days which could have been taken for slackness and slothfulness.  The word of the Lord was fast, bearing life, efficacious and sharper than a  double-edged sword.  In their immediate response, the   Ninevites  were much greater than the Jews who were contemporary to Christ the Lord,  the incomparably greater than   Jonah.  Those Jews saw the Lord's numerous miracles and beheld His infinite  spirituality, yet they did not believe and repent. The Lord reproved them by  the  Ninevites (Matt.  12:14).   The word of the Lord was prolific. It yielded  an abundance of amazing fruits.   The first fruit of the   Ninevites was faith:  "So the people of   Nineveh believed God."  The second fruit was the unfeigned contrition  of heart; humiliating themselves before the Lord. Thus they put on sackcloth  "From the greatest to the least of them". And sackcloth is a rough material  made of goats' hair; a sign of affliction, abstinence and rejection of  worldly pleasures. Even the king of    Nineveh himself took off his royal robe  and covered himself with sackcloth, arose from his throne and sat in ashes.   The Lord looked at that debased city and  smelt a pleasing aroma; for  "the sacrifices of God are a broken spirit, a broken and a contrite heart-  these, O God, You will not despise" (Ps. 51:17). Truly how wonderful is this unique spectacle! A whole city is seen  contrite in dust and ashes, debased in sackcloth, from the king to the  infant. Even the livestock were covered with sackcloth!  The word of God also yielded fasting and  prayer.  The city proclaimed a general fast for all.  People abstained from eating and drinking, and even the beasts, herds and  flocks did not eat or drink. People did not want to be occupied with feeding  their flocks so that they could spare their time for worship and  supplication to God. Thus they mingled their fasting with prayer and cried  "mightily to God".   The most important fruit of the   Ninevites was  repentance.  Repentance led them to faith because sin was  an obstacle between them and God,  The fruit of their repentance was their humiliation, fasting, wearing sackcloth and crying out to God. Their repentance was a sincere repentance in every meaning of the word: serious and from the heart, in which everyone turned 'from his evil way and from the violence that was in his hands."  By this repentance they deserved God's mercy.  He pardoned and forgave them, received them  and joined them to His own. In this respect the Holy Bible says: "Then  God saw their works, that they turned from their evil way and God relented  from the disaster that He had said He would bring upon them, and He did not  do it" (Jon. 3:10).   The Holy Bible did not say: "When the Lord  saw their fasting, prayer and affliction", but said: "Then God saw their  works, that they turned from their evil way". Therefore repentance was the  reason for God's mercy on them. Their fasting, prayer and humiliation were  but fruits of repentance. I  would like here to pause for a while at a verse said of the repentance of    Nineveh, that is: "It repented at  the preaching of Jonah".  What Was  Jonah's Preaching? | 
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