What’s Your Nineveh?

(2 customer reviews)

Every one of us has a Nineveh — the calling we keep running from.

Years ago, Keith Thorn had a conversation with a friend who said, “I just can’t believe the story of Jonah and the whale.” Thorn’s reply was simple: “All miracles take the same faith—from Christ’s resurrection to waking up each morning.”

That moment planted a lifelong question: Why do we reject belief not because it’s unbelievable, but because of what belief would require of us?

In What’s Your Nineveh?, Thorn re-imagines the ancient story of Jonah as a modern mirror for the quiet ways we flee from purpose, conviction, and the words God lays on our hearts. When we suppress what we’re called to say or do, we end up swallowed by our own silence—an inner hell of unrest, anxiety, and regret. Read More

Buy Online Here

AmazonBooks Placeholer 1Burnes

2 reviews for What’s Your Nineveh?

  1. 98e4c8fdd487967bcdb73d98c25fb8fcc911b7ccc9d9a5a67ad96d556c8330e9?s=100&d=mm&r=g

    Jamie Michele

    In What’s Your Nineveh? When Running from Your Calling Becomes Its Own Kind of Hell, Keith Thorn turns the biblical account of Jonah into a question of what happens when a person keeps refusing the duty God has placed on them. In the Bible, Jonah flees God’s command to go to Nineveh, only to find himself cast into the sea, where a great fish becomes the place in which his refusal is brought to a breaking point. When he finally reaches Nineveh, there’s a change from physical flight to the harder question of what it means to accept mercy when it is given to the people God wanted judged. Thorn uses Jonah’s return as proof that divine purpose remains after failure, asking whether the grace that saved Jonah can also be accepted when it is extended to others.

    Keith Thorn’s What’s Your Nineveh? takes a Bible story that a lot of people have heard of but few non-Christians thoroughly know, retells it within its intended context, and applies it to a message that is relatable. What hit home hardest is how Thorn treats Jonah’s renewal as the heart of the book, especially in the beautifully handled passage where the loss of the plant’s shade is a metaphor for the narrowness of his heart before opening him to compassion. The writing is surprisingly easy and, in several places, even light and conversational. Nineveh was foreign to me, and Thorn molded it from an idea into a real place. By making Jonah’s inward change parallel to our everyday lives, the author shares his wisdom in a style that feels personal.

  2. 98e4c8fdd487967bcdb73d98c25fb8fcc911b7ccc9d9a5a67ad96d556c8330e9?s=100&d=mm&r=g

    Kevin Breeding

    You can tell when someone speaks from the deep. It’s authentic. “. – Keith Thorn, What’s Your Nineveh. Best book I’ve read in years

Add a review

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *