If at any time I announce that a
nation or kingdom is to be uprooted, torn down and destroyed,
and if that nation I warned repents of its evil, then I will
relent and not inflict on it the disaster I had planned.
And if at another time I announce
that a nation or kingdom is to be built up and planted, and if
it does evil in my sight and does not obey me, then I will
reconsider the good I had intended to do for it.
(Jeremiah
18:7-10)
Perhaps the best known example of
an unfulfilled prophecy relating to the terms of Jeremiah
18:7-10 is that of Jonah going to Nineveh.
Jonah was told “Go to the great
city of Nineveh and preach against it, because its wickedness
has come up before me” (Jonah 1:2), but Jonah refused to go, and
caught a ship going in the opposite direction. So the word of
the Lord came to Jonah a second time: “Go to the great city of
Nineveh and proclaim to it the message I give you” (Jonah 3:2).
Jonah obeyed and proclaimed the
message he had been given: “Forty more days and Nineveh will be
overturned” (Jonah 3:4). However, far more than forty days
passed yet the city was not destroyed.
This very definite announcement,
this very black / white assertion, this clear statement of
prophecy, came to nothing! Why? Surely we would expect that any
clear-cut statement made by God would be carried out. Here He
told Jonah to state that Nineveh would be ‘overthrown’ (KJV,
ASV) in forty days. There were no conditions attached, no
ifs or buts, so why didn’t it happen?
And how many other prophetic
statements are there in the Old and New Testaments
which simply did not see their fulfilment? This publication
features the main ones and explains why God either did not do
the good he had promised, or why he withheld the judgment.