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| How the Threat of the Destruction of the Ninevites is to Be Understood Which in the Hebrew Extends to Forty Days, While in the Septuagint It is Contracted to Three. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 44.—How the Threat of the
Destruction of the Ninevites is to Be Understood Which in the
Hebrew Extends to Forty Days, While in the Septuagint It is
Contracted to Three.
But some one may say, “How shall
I know whether the prophet Jonah said to the Ninevites, ‘Yet
three days and Nineveh shall be overthrown,’ or forty
days?”1219 For who
does not see that the prophet could not say both, when he was sent
to terrify the city by the threat of imminent ruin? For if its
destruction was to take place on the third day, it certainly could
not be on the fortieth; but if on the fortieth, then certainly not
on the third. If, then, I am asked which of these Jonah may have
said, I rather think what is read in the Hebrew, “Yet forty days
and Nineveh shall be overthrown.” Yet the Seventy, interpreting
long afterward, could say what was different and yet pertinent to
the matter, and agree in the self-same meaning, although under a
different signification. And this may admonish the reader not to
despise the authority of either, but to raise himself above the
history, and search for those things which the history itself was
written to set forth. These things, indeed, took place in the
city of Nineveh, but they also signified something else too great
to apply to that city; just as, when it happened that the prophet
himself was three days in the whale’s belly, it signified
besides, that He who is Lord of all the prophets should be three
days in the depths of hell. Wherefore, if that city is rightly
held as prophetically representing the Church of the Gentiles, to
wit, as brought down by penitence, so as no longer to be what it
had been, since this was done by Christ in the Church of the
Gentiles, which Nineveh represented, Christ Himself was signified
both by the forty and by the three days: by the forty, because He
spent that number of days with His disciples after the
resurrection, and then ascended into heaven, but by the three days,
because He rose on the third day. So that, if the reader desires
nothing else than to adhere to the history of events, he may be
aroused from his sleep by the Septuagint interpreters, as well as
the prophets, to search into the depth of the prophecy, as if they
had said, In the forty days seek Him in whom thou mayest also find
the three days,—the one thou wilt find in His ascension, the
other in His resurrection. Because that which could be most
suitably signified by both numbers, of which one is used by Jonah
the prophet, the other by the prophecy of the Septuagint version,
the one and self-same Spirit hath spoken. I dread prolixity, so
that I must not demonstrate this by many instances in which the
seventy interpreters may be thought to differ from the Hebrew, and
yet, when well understood, are found to agree. For which reason I
also, according to my capacity, following the footsteps of the
apostles, who themselves have quoted prophetic testimonies from
both, that is, from the Hebrew and the Septuagint, have thought
that both should be used as authoritative, since both are one, and
divine. But let us now follow out as we can what
remains.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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