Jonah Fast

Repentance, Obedience, and God’s Boundless Mercy

1. What Is Jonah’s Fast in the Coptic Church?

In the Coptic Orthodox Church, Jonah’s Fast is a three-day fast observed before the Great Lent.
It commemorates:

  • Jonah’s three days in the belly of the great fish

  • The repentance of the people of Nineveh (Nenawa)

  • God’s mercy that triumphs over judgment

Why only three days?

Although Jonah was in the fish three days and three nights (Jonah 1:17), the Church emphasizes:

  • The sign of repentance

  • Preparation of the heart before entering Great Lent

  • The sign of Christ Himself, who referred to Jonah as a prophecy of His death and resurrection

“For as Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of the great fish, so will the Son of Man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth.”
(Matthew 12:40)

So Jonah’s Fast is not just historical remembrance, but a doorway into Lent—a call to return before we journey with Christ to the Cross.


2. Who Is Jonah Biblically?

Jonah the Prophet

  • Jonah was a prophet from Israel

  • His story is found in the Book of Jonah (Old Testament)

  • His name means “dove”—symbol of peace, but ironically Jonah struggled with peace in his heart

God’s Call

“Arise, go to Nineveh, that great city, and cry out against it; for their wickedness has come up before Me.”
(Jonah 1:2)

Instead of obeying:

  • Jonah fled in the opposite direction (Tarshish)

  • He feared God’s mercy more than God’s judgment

  • He did not want Israel’s enemies to repent and be forgiven

God’s Discipline and Mercy

  • A storm arose

  • Jonah was thrown into the sea

  • God prepared a great fish

  • Jonah stayed inside for three days and nights

Inside the fish:

  • Jonah prayed

  • He repented

  • He acknowledged God’s sovereignty

“Salvation is of the Lord.”
(Jonah 2:9)

God did not destroy Jonah—He restored him.


3. Who Are Nineveh (Nenawa) and Its People?

Nineveh

  • Capital of the Assyrian Empire

  • One of the most powerful and cruel nations of the ancient world

  • Known for violence, pride, and oppression

  • Enemies of Israel

Humanly speaking, Nineveh deserved destruction.

Their Repentance

When Jonah finally preached:

“Yet forty days, and Nineveh shall be overthrown!”
(Jonah 3:4)

Something shocking happened:

  • The king humbled himself

  • The people fasted

  • They wore sackcloth

  • They cried to God

  • Even animals were included in the fast

“Who can tell if God will turn and relent, and turn away from His fierce anger, so that we may not perish?”
(Jonah 3:9)

And God did.

“Then God saw their works, that they turned from their evil way; and God relented from the disaster that He had said He would bring upon them.”
(Jonah 3:10)

This is one of the greatest repentance scenes in all Scripture.


4. The Spiritual Meaning of Jonah’s Fast

1. Repentance Is for Everyone

Nineveh teaches us:

  • No one is too sinful

  • No city is too corrupt

  • No heart is beyond God’s mercy

Jonah’s Fast confronts us with a question:

Do I believe God can forgive others as easily as He forgave me?

2. Obedience Is Better Than Knowledge

Jonah was:

  • A prophet

  • A man of Scripture

  • A believer

Yet he resisted God.

Jonah’s Fast reminds us:

  • Knowing God is not the same as obeying Him

  • Religious pride can blind the heart

3. God’s Mercy Is Bigger Than Our Justice

Jonah wanted justice
God wanted salvation

This fast heals:

  • Hardness of heart

  • Judgmental thoughts

  • Lack of compassion


5. Jonah as a Type of Christ

The Church reads Jonah Christologically:

JonahChrist
Three days in the fishThree days in the tomb
Descended into the seaDescended into death
Came out aliveRose from the dead
Preached repentancePreached the Kingdom

Christ Himself confirmed this connection:

“No sign shall be given except the sign of the prophet Jonah.”
(Matthew 12:39)

So Jonah’s Feast is secretly a resurrection feast, planted at the entrance of Lent.


6. How to Live Jonah’s Feast Practically

1. Enter the Fast with Repentance, Not Routine

Ask yourself:

  • What am I running away from?

  • Where is God asking me to obey?

  • Whom do I secretly want God not to forgive?

2. Pray Jonah’s Prayer

Especially Jonah chapter 2.
Pray it slowly. Personally. Honestly.

3. Practice Mercy

During these three days:

  • Forgive someone

  • Stop judging

  • Pray for people you dislike

  • Give alms secretly

4. Prepare for Great Lent

Jonah’s Fast is a spiritual reset button:

  • Let go of pride

  • Soften the heart

  • Enter Lent hungry for God, not just food rules


7. Why Jonah’s Feast Is Extremely Relevant Today

We live in a world like Nineveh:

  • Violence

  • Pride

  • Confusion

  • Moral chaos

And often, like Jonah:

  • We want condemnation, not repentance

  • We flee responsibility

  • We struggle with God’s mercy

Jonah’s Feast reminds us:

God would rather save a city than destroy it
God would rather correct His servant than replace him
God would rather forgive than punish


Final Reflection

Jonah’s Fast teaches us that:

  • Repentance changes destinies

  • Obedience restores calling

  • Mercy reveals God’s true heart

It is not just a fast of three days
It is a journey from death to life, from hardness to compassion, from fear to obedience.