Return to Me: 40 Prophetic Teachings about Unfaithfulness, Punishment, and Hope from the Minor Prophets: Dear Theophilus Bible Study Series, #4
By Peter DeHaan
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About this ebook
If you've ever found the minor prophets confusing or irrelevant, then this devotional Bible study is for you.
The minor prophets may not seem like they have much to offer our modern world. But as you reflect on their themes of hope, faithfulness, and forgiveness, you'll discover they point us to a message of turning from old ways and moving forward in faith and obedience.
In Return to Me, you'll study all of the minor prophets, including Hosea, Joel, Amos, Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk, Zephaniah, Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi. You'll uncover how God's purpose reveals his plan over history and points us toward the One who gives us eternal hope: Jesus Christ.
In Return to Me, you'll receive:
- 40 days of devotionals covering all twelve prophets
- Inspiring biblical lessons to wake up your faith
- Hope and inspiration to discover how the prophets' words apply to you today
Enjoy a flexible format that won't overwhelm. Perfect for individuals or groups.
Return to Me is an ideal forty-day devotional Bible resource for women, men, and couples. Written by seasoned Bible teacher and author, Peter DeHaan, each day's message is a short, yet thought-provoking reading perfect for your quiet time. It includes a challenging application question and additional Bible passages to enhance your study.
Immerse yourself in the discovery of key themes from the minor prophets, no matter where you are on your spiritual journey. God's invitation to return to him is for you.
Get Return to Me today and be refreshed by its relevant themes of forgiveness, faith, and hope.
[This book was first published as Dear Theophilus, Minor Prophets.]
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Return to Me - Peter DeHaan
Who Are the Minor Prophets?
A large portion of the Old Testament contains books of prophecy. Bible scholars divide these prophetic books into two categories. They call one group the Major Prophets, which includes the writings of Isaiah, Jeremiah (who also wrote Lamentations), Ezekiel, and Daniel.
The other category is the Minor Prophets, which we’ll cover in this book. They are:
1. Hosea
2. Joel
3. Amos
4. Obadiah
5. Jonah
6. Micah
7. Nahum
8. Habakkuk
9. Zephaniah
10. Haggai
11. Zechariah
12. Malachi
This makes a total of twelve so-called Minor Prophets. The label minor is unfortunate because it leads many people to believe that their works and messages aren’t as important as the Major Prophets. This isn’t true. They’re called minor because the books they wrote are shorter.
I, for one, like shorter books. It might be that you do too. The writings of these twelve prophets are quick to read and easier to digest.
We’ll cover all twelve in Return to Me. However, we won’t address them in the order they appear in the Bible. Instead, we’ll place them in chronological order (the best we can). This will give us some needed context and help us with continuity.
For many of these twelve prophets, the Bible lets us know the period of their ministries by mentioning the kings who ruled at that time, along with other useful hints. For other prophets, the Bible gives us no indication of when they prophesied. For these we place them in order based on Bible scholars’ interpretations of nonbiblical historical documents. Several of the prophets in the following list have overlapping timelines, being contemporaries of one another and prophesying in the same era.
Here are the twelve Minor Prophets placed in rough chronological order. Key events and other notable biblical figures appear in parentheses to help us round out the timeline.
The nations of Israel and Judah in the Promised Land.
Jonah
Amos
Hosea
Micah
(Isaiah, major prophet)
Assyria conquers Israel and deports many people. Only Judah remains.
Nahum
Zephaniah
(Jeremiah, major prophet)
Habakkuk
Obadiah
Babylon conquers Judah and deports many people.
(Daniel, major prophet)
(Ezekiel, major prophet)
King Cyrus of Persia allows the people exiled from Judah to return and rebuild Jerusalem and the temple.
Haggai
(Zerubbabel, governor of Judah)
(Ezra, priest and teacher)
Zechariah
(Esther, made queen by King Xerxes of Persia and Media)
(Nehemiah, governor of Judah)
Joel
Malachi
With this timeline in mind, let’s begin. It’s sure to be an exciting journey.
If others give us an unfair label, like the Minor Prophets, how can we rise above it to best serve God?
[Discover more about another label in Judges 6:15 and the outcome in Judges 8:28.]
Jonah
Of the twelve prophets we’ll cover, Jonah is the best known. He runs from God and spends a three-day time-out in the belly of a large fish. The Bible doesn’t call it a whale—though it could have been one. It’s simply a large fish.
Another notable fact about Jonah’s book is that it is mostly a historical narrative and contains only the briefest of prophecies. Of all the prophets, Jonah is the least interested in sharing his message and the most successful.
Here is an overview of Jonah:
Known As: Jonah son of Amittai
Location: Gath Hepher (in Israel)
Occupation: prophet
Addresses: the people of Nineveh
Old Testament Mentions: 2 Kings 14:25
New Testament Mentions: Matthew 12:39–41, Matthew 16:4, and Luke 11:29–32
New Testament Quotations: none
Homonymous Mentions: One other man named Jonah is in Matthew 16:17.
1: Jonah’s Confession
Jonah 1–2
He answered, I am a Hebrew and I worship the Lord, the God of heaven, who made the sea and the dry land.
Jonah 1:9
The story of Jonah is familiar to many people. God tells Jonah to go to Nineveh and deliver a harsh message to the people there. Jonah doesn’t. He ignores God, jumps on a boat, and heads in the opposite direction from Nineveh. He wants to get as far away as possible from what God wants him to do.
God brews up a storm, buffeting the ship carrying Jonah. The sailors do all they can to keep their boat afloat, including pleading for protection from their gods, while an oblivious Jonah sleeps through everything. When the storm grows fierce, they wake Jonah and confront him. He confesses. He admits he’s running from God, the God he worships, the God who created both land and sea.
Now the sailors really freak out.
Though Jonah says the only solution is to toss him into the deep, as a living sacrifice of sorts to the sea, the sailors redouble their efforts, so they won’t be guilty of their passenger’s death. But eventually they give up, asking God not to hold them accountable for Jonah’s murder. They throw him into the sea, and the waves calm. They are safe and presume Jonah is dead.
God has other plans.
A huge fish swallows Jonah. He spends three days lodged in the fish’s belly. From there he prays. He calls upon God, and God listens. Jonah wraps up his prayer praising God and with another confession. He affirms that salvation comes from God.
Then God has the fish deposit Jonah on dry land. This isn’t a smooth exit. It’s a violent expulsion. The fish vomits and Jonah ejects.
There are similarities between Jonah and Jesus, but we must take care not to carry the comparison too far—for it will lead us astray. Jonah offers himself as a sacrifice to save the lives of the men on the ship. As good as dead, he spends three days in the belly of the fish. Then he emerges from his effective tomb when the fish deposits him on dry land.
In much grander fashion, Jesus later offers himself as a sacrifice to save the lives of everyone. He dies so that we may live. After spending three days in his tomb, he rises from the dead, proving that he has mastery over death.
In a simple way, this part of Jonah’s life foreshadows what Jesus will do for all humanity. Jonah at first ran from his responsibility, but Jesus never wavered. Thank you, Jesus.
Are we running from God as Jonah first did, or are we embracing God through what Jesus did?
[Discover more about Jesus’s sacrifice in Matthew 12:40 and Mark 8:31.]
2: Worst Sermon Ever
Jonah 3
Jonah obeyed the word of the Lord and went to Nineveh.
Jonah 3:3
In underwater solitude, Jonah spends the next three nights and days inside the belly of a great fish. He has plenty of time to think about his situation. When the fish ejects him onto the shore, God speaks to Jonah a second time. Go to Nineveh. And once you arrive, I will give you a message for the people.
This time Jonah obeys.
After what he endured for his first round of disobedience, I’m sure he doesn’t want to encounter another incident of God trying to get his attention and offering correction. It seems less risky to say yes than to say no.
We don’t know if Jonah repeats verbatim what God tells him to or if he paraphrases it a bit to fit his attitude. But what he says is both succinct and blunt. In forty days Nineveh is going down.
This phrase stands as