Have you ever felt as though things are just too much for you, that you are in a situation you see no way of getting out of?
Do you look at problems in our world today and wonder how they can ever be solved?
All this, and more, is in the story of Jonah (Prophet Yunus, peace be upon him).
Story of Jonah
The mission of Prophet Yunus is a timeless story that tells us there is a way out, if only we have faith.
Almighty Allah called Yunus to preach to the people of Nineveh. Nineveh was a great city, the capital of Assyria, and it had become a very wicked place.
Yunus went to the people there and told them to give up their bad ways and to turn, instead, to Allah. But they wouldn’t listen to him and so Yunus left them, calling down Allah’s wrath on them.
His preaching failed, so he stormed off. This is the first very human touch in the story of Yunus. Even though he was a prophet, Yunus was still a man and he stormed off out of the city when he didn’t get what he wanted.
Having left the city behind, Jonah boards a ship. He has had enough of preaching Allah’s message and he sets sail far away from the scene of his failure.
Once at sea, though, a storm grows up and the crew are terrified. These pagan sailors feel that the gods of the sea must be displeased with them, so they draw lots to throw one man overboard to calm the storm.
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Jonah draws the short straw, not once but three times, and the terrified crew throw him overboard to protect themselves and their ship.
Once in the water, something extraordinary happens. Allah sends a great fish, some describe it as a whale, to swallow Yunus whole.
Once in its belly, Jonah descends to the bottom of the sea, filled with total despair. How can he possibly survive this disaster? What way out of his situation could there possibly be?
He is engulfed by darkness: the darkness of the deep; the darkness of the creature’s stomach; and, worst of all, the darkness of despair.
Even though he was a religious man, called to be a prophet, he experiences doubt and despair, and it is when he is in the depths of despair that things change for him.
In the Holy Quran, we read that Yunus “cried through the darkness.” He realized that Almighty Allah, not he, was in control of things. He cries out, “there is no god but you,” and asks for help. In asking for help, his prayer is heard.
Just as Allah had used it to save Yunus from the storm and from drowning in the sea, so He also uses it to bring Yunus safely to land again. And there is more.
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Yunus is feeling sick and sore as he lies on the sand in the scorching heat, still not knowing what will become of him. Allah takes even more care of him and causes a plant to grow up over him and to cover Yunus with its shade.
Once he has recovered from his ordeal and his skin has stopped smarting from the acids in the creatures stomach, he decides to return to Nineveh, his travels over, and to see what has become of the city and its people.
When he arrives there, to his great surprise he sees that the city and its people have not been destroyed, but have all turned to Allah. His message had got through to them.
Perhaps when they saw the terrible storm as it grew up in the distance, they saw in it an image of what would happen to them if they did not repent. Who knows why they turned back to Allah, but they did. Yunus, then, after all his adventures, is finally content that his mission has been accomplished.
There is so much that the story of Jonah can teach us.
First of all, read it yourself in the Quran. You will find it in the following places: 4:163; 6:86; 10:98; 21:87; 37:139-148; and 68:48-50.
Ponder over the meaning of the words and listen to what they say to you. The story of Jonah is timeless. It is for the whole world and it is for each one of us.
Allah is in Control
Nineveh, for example, the great city and the capital of a great empire, doesn’t even exist anymore. Scholars say it lies in Iraq on the other side of the river from the city of Mosul, but its temples and monuments have gone. All worldly power will go the same way.
Even today’s superpowers, who behave as though they are Allah, and believe that everyone just obey them, will one day wither and fade and, like all great empires before them, cease to exist.
Remember, Allah is in control, not this country or that. Allah will decide the course of events.
Trust Allah
Another lesson from the story of Jonah is that we never know the effect our deeds will have on others.
What we must never do, though, is to think that we are in control or that it is we who call others to Islam. Allah is in control and He, alone, calls others to Himself. We shouldn’t get down-hearted or angry when our efforts seem to fail.
Yunus called down Allah’s wrath on the people of Nineveh. Some might feel tempted to take it upon themselves to punish the evil-doers in our world, but this is not the way of Islam.
Muslims trust in Allah. In His own time and in His own way, He will punish those who do evil, just as He will reward the righteous:
No soul knows what comfort is kept hidden for them, as a reward for their deeds. (Quran 32:17)
Allah uses all things to work out His plan. In the story of Prophet Yunus, He not only uses Yunus, but He uses the sailors and the whale and the plant, to do His will. So we should never presume to know the will of Allah, nor to make decisions on His behalf.
Finally, if you have ever felt as though you are in the belly of the whale, surrounded by darkness and with no way out, do what Prophet Yunus did. “He cried through the darkness” and admitted that there is no god but Allah and that only Allah can save.
Never give up. Trust Allah. He can use us and all situations to do great things beyond our wildest imagination. It is by Allah’s Will that we are Muslim.
Just as “his Lord chose him and made him of the righteous,” so we, too, like Prophet Yunus can respond to the call of Almighty Allah and make a difference in our world.
(From Discovering Islam archive)