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The Book of Jonah is a book in the Bible Old Testament and Jewish Tanakh.
The book gives an account of the prophet Jonah and the well-known story in which God tells Jonah to prophesy to the people of Nineveh to persuade it to repent or face destruction. Jonah attempts to run the other direction, is thrown from a ship in a storm, swallowed by a giant fish, and transported to Nineveh. He decides to take the hint and preaches to the city. The population is so moved by the warning that there is a general call to fasting and repentance which satisfies God enough to spare the city from destruction. Jonah is angered by God's mercy until God rebukes him about the need for him to show mercy.
This book professes to give an account of what actually took place in the experience of the prophet. Some scholars interpret the book as a parable or allegory about God's mercy for all people, and not as a history. Many others see it as actual historical fact.
It is traditionally believed that the book was written by Jonah himself. It gives an account of
Nineveh was spared after Jonah's mission for more than a century.
The story also in appears in the Qur'an, wherein Jonah is called Yunus (see Similarities between the Bible and the Qur'an).
An interesting note of trivia is that Jonah is the only book in the Bible that does not mention wine.
To escape God’s command, he boarded a boat on its way across the Mediteranean to Spain, on the other side of the known world.
A storm threatened to destroy the vessel, when Jonah instructed the others on board to throw him overboard as a way to save them from sinking. Reluctantly, they took his advice and threw him into the sea, thereby saving their lives.
Note that there is no mention of a whale, but a “great fish” (Hebrew “dag gadol”).
When the people of Ninevah repented inresponse to Jonah’s prophecy, God “had compassion and did not bring upon them the destruction he had threatened” (3:10).
Jonah complained to God that he had always known that God would forgive the people when they repented. Jonah had wanted them destroyed, and was so upset that he wanted to die.