Have you ever found yourself waiting for someone to get what they deserve? Maybe it’s that difficult coworker, the neighbor who wronged you, or even a nation whose actions seem unforgivable. We’ve all been there—secretly hoping karma catches up, justice gets served, or consequences finally arrive.
But what happens when God extends mercy instead? And more importantly, what does our reaction to that mercy reveal about the condition of our own hearts?
The Plant We Care About More Than People
There’s something deeply unsettling about caring more for our comfort than for souls. Yet this is exactly where many of us find ourselves. We’ll get upset about minor inconveniences—a dead houseplant, a parking spot taken, a plan that falls through—while remaining indifferent to the spiritual condition of those around us.
The book of Jonah ends with a haunting question that God poses to his reluctant prophet: “Should I not pity Nineveh, that great city in which there are more than 120,000 persons who do not know their right hand from their left?”
Jonah had just witnessed an entire city repent. Brutal people—known for their violence and cruelty—turned from their evil ways and cried out to God. And God, in his abundant mercy, relented from the disaster he had pronounced. This should have been cause for celebration. Instead, Jonah was furious.
Why? Because Jonah knew something about God that he didn’t like: God is “gracious and merciful, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love and relenting from disaster.” Jonah didn’t want Nineveh forgiven. He wanted them destroyed.
The Mercy We Forget We Received
Here’s the uncomfortable truth: Jonah had forgotten that the same mercy extended to Nineveh had already been extended to him.
When Jonah fled from God’s call and boarded a ship heading in the opposite direction, God didn’t strike him down. When the storm came and Jonah was thrown into the sea, God didn’t let him drown. When he was swallowed by a great fish, God provided a way of escape. At every turn, God showed Jonah mercy he hadn’t earned.
The same is true for all of us. The Bible declares that “the wages of sin is death”—not just physical death, but eternal separation from God. Every single one of us has earned that judgment. We are Nineveh. We are the brutal ones whose actions have warranted divine wrath.
Yet God extended mercy. He didn’t just send a prophet; he sent his Son. Jesus stepped into the gap and took the punishment we deserved. He satisfied the wrath of an angry God on our behalf. That’s grace—receiving something we could never earn. That’s mercy—not receiving the judgment we absolutely deserve.
When Our Hearts Are Out of Sync
After Jonah delivered his message and Nineveh repented, he didn’t go home. Instead, he went outside the city, built himself a shelter, and sat down to watch. He was waiting—hoping—that God might still destroy them.
Sometimes we need to do what God calls us to do and then go home. Sometimes we need to mind our own business instead of camping out, waiting for someone else’s downfall.
Jonah’s makeshift shelter was so inadequate that God had to appoint a plant to provide proper shade. Even in Jonah’s wrong-hearted perspective, God was gracious. He provided comfort Jonah didn’t deserve while Jonah sat hoping others wouldn’t receive the mercy they didn’t deserve either.
Then God appointed a worm to eat the plant, and a scorching wind to beat down on Jonah’s head. Twice, Jonah asked God to let him die. And twice, God continued the conversation instead of granting his foolish request.
That’s grace upon grace. God doesn’t give up on us even when we’re being ridiculous. Even when our attitudes are completely out of sync with his heart. Even when we’re sitting in places we shouldn’t be, nursing grudges we shouldn’t hold, celebrating things that don’t matter while ignoring what does.
The Heart Transplant We All Need
There’s a film from 1990 called “Heart Condition” where a racist cop receives a heart transplant from a black man he despised. When he wakes up with this new heart, he finds that the donor’s spirit accompanies him everywhere, slowly changing how he sees the world.
This is what happens when we come to Christ. We receive a spiritual heart transplant. The old heart—hard, judgmental, self-centered—is replaced with a new one. But the process of that new heart transforming our attitudes, perspectives, and behaviors takes time. And along the way, it reveals just how broken our old heart was.
Jonah had a heart condition that God was trying to heal. He cared more about his own comfort than about 120,000 souls. He celebrated a plant but mourned when people were saved. He knew God’s character intellectually—gracious, merciful, slow to anger, abounding in steadfast love—but he hadn’t let that truth penetrate his heart.
Seeing People Through God’s Eyes
God’s final question to Jonah is really a question to all of us: If I created these people, if I love them enough to send someone to call them back to me, shouldn’t you care about them too?
We live in a world that makes it easy to dehumanize others. Political affiliations, racial differences, economic status, lifestyle choices—we find countless ways to divide ourselves and determine who deserves our compassion and who doesn’t.
But God’s concern extends to the lost, and so should ours.
That doesn’t mean we ignore sin or pretend wrong is right. Jonah absolutely proclaimed judgment against Nineveh’s evil. But his heart should have hoped for their repentance, not their destruction. He should have been the first to celebrate when they turned from their wicked ways.
The Call Forward
The same God who showed mercy to Nineveh shows mercy to us. The same God who was patient with Jonah is patient with us. The same God who cares about every nation, every ethnicity, every person—regardless of what they look like, where they’re from, or what they’ve done—is calling us to share that heart.
We need to learn to be gracious to people the way God has been gracious to us. Merciful the way he’s been merciful to us. Celebrating what God is doing in others even when he’s not doing the same thing in us at that moment, knowing that he has a plan for us too.
It’s time to stop waiting for people’s downfall and start praying for their transformation. Time to stop caring more about our comfort than about souls. Time to let the heart transplant we received actually change how we see the world.
Because when God forgives, it reveals his mercy, his grace, and his care for all people. And if we claim to follow him, our hearts should beat in rhythm with his.