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Christ is seen in Obadiah as the judge of the nations, but not possessor of the kingdom.
The major theme of Obadiah is a declaration of Judah’s coming doom because of its arrogance and cruelty to Edom.
Obadiah was the overseer who superintended the restoration of the temple in Josiah’s day.
Obadiah is the second shortest book in the Old Testament.
The prophecy of Obadiah centers on an ancient feud between Edom and Israel.
Jonah is the only prophet whom Jesus likened to himself.
God’s loving concern for the Gentiles is a truth disclosed only in the New Testament.
Jonah is without spot or wrinkle or any such thing.
Jonah learned to sorrow over his self- will.
Unlike other Old Testament books, Jonah revolves exclusively around a Gentile nation.
God used a storm and casting of lots to teach Jonah compassion and obedience.
Jonah did not want to see God spare the notoriously cruel Assyrians.
The most wonderful miracle of Jonah is the sudden and complete repentance of all Nineveh.
In the final chapter, God’s love and grace are contrasted with Jonah’s anger and compassion.
There is a problem with the statement that God “repented” of what He was about to do to Nineveh.
Jonah was sanctified in spots, a strange mix of strengths and weaknesses, as well as courageous.
Jonah was a child of the tribe of Zebulon.
