The Book of Jonah - God's Mercy for All
May 7, 2026

Jonah Devotional: God’s Mercy, Grace for Our Enemies, and the Challenge of Compassion

"But Jonah was greatly displeased and became angry. He prayed to the Lord, 'O Lord, is this not what I said when I was still at home? That is why I tried to forestall by fleeing to Tarshish. I knew that you are a gracious and compassionate God, slow to anger and abounding in love, a God who relents from sending calamity.'" – Jonah 4:1-2


The Book of Jonah is one of the most well-known stories in the Bible, often remembered for Jonah’s dramatic journey inside the belly of a great fish. However, the book's core message is not about Jonah's time in the fish but about God's surprising mercy and grace.

Jonah, a prophet, was called by God to go to the city of Nineveh, a wicked city, and call its people to repentance. However, Jonah didn’t want to obey. He tried to run away from God, eventually finding himself in the belly of a fish. After Jonah repents and follows God’s command, the people of Nineveh listen, turn from their evil ways, and God shows them mercy.


In Jonah 4:1-2, Jonah expresses his frustration, revealing that he knew God would show mercy to the people of Nineveh. He was angry because he thought they deserved punishment, not grace. This moment highlights a key truth: God’s grace extends beyond what we might think is fair. God’s mercy is not limited to a certain group of people but is available to all who turn to God in repentance.



The story of Jonah, just like the older brother in Jesus’ parable of the Prodigal Son, teaches us about the power of God's compassion and the frustration we often feel when God is gracious to someone other than us.  We may sometimes feel that certain people don’t deserve God’s grace, but God’s love is extended to all, even to those we may consider enemies.


By Unknown June 15, 2026
This devotional series explores key moments in church history, divided into thematic and historical sections with several parts. It is a long and winding story that began on Pentecost and continues to be written by us and by the Holy Spirit today. SECTION 1 – The Church of the Holy Spirit The church began with breath.  A violent wind filled an upper room and scattered ordinary people into the world with extraordinary news. From that first Pentecost morning, the Spirit has been the church’s constant companion, guiding, correcting, and surprising us through twenty centuries of imperfect faithfulness. The devotions in this section explore pivotal moments when the Spirit moved through imperfect people to shape the church’s story. From Paul’s dramatic conversion to the Council of Jerusalem’s radical inclusion, we see the same God who breathed life into the first disciples still breathing life into us today. We are part of this continuing story; inheritors of a wind that refuses to be contained. Nate Preisinger Bethany Lutheran Church Sent with SubsplashUnsubscribe from all emails
By Unknown June 14, 2026
Click to watch video Today is the Third Sunday after PentecostWe encourage you to join in for worship at Bethany this weekend either in person or through our livestream.   For an additional devotional reflection, we invite you to watch this reflection from Pastors Gary and Nate on the Feast Day of Peter and Paul last year.Peter the humble fisherman. Paul the privileged Roman citizen. Two wildly different origin stories, yet both were rescued, transformed, and called by God to lead the early Church. Pastors Nate Preisinger and Gary Sandberg reflect on the shared feast day of Saints Peter and Paul and what their lives teach us about grace, redemption, and purpose. Through shame and denial, pride and persecution, God rescued Peter and Paul, not just for their own sake, but for the sake of the Gospel. And that same story of rescue continues today. In baptism, in forgiveness, in community, we are rescued too. 365 Daily Devotional Bethany Lutheran Church Sent with SubsplashUnsubscribe from all emails
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