Every civilization preserves certain stories.
Some explain beginnings. Others recount great victories or devastating defeats. Some celebrate heroes. Others remember suffering, exile, failure, and renewal. Although these narratives arise from different cultures, religions, and historical periods, many endure because they illuminate realities that every generation must eventually confront for itself.
The story of Jonah is one such narrative.
For centuries it has been read as history, parable, prophecy, theological reflection, moral instruction, satire, allegory, and spiritual autobiography. Scholars continue debating its literary form, historical setting, and theological purpose. Religious communities have interpreted it in diverse ways, while artists, philosophers, psychologists, and writers have repeatedly returned to its imagery of storm, descent, darkness, mercy, and unexpected transformation.
This essay asks a different question.
Rather than asking whether Jonah should primarily be understood as literal history or symbolic narrative, we ask:
What does Jonah disclose about reality?
That question neither dismisses nor settles the many ways the story has been interpreted. Instead, it invites us to explore why this ancient narrative continues speaking across cultures, centuries, and worldviews. The oldest stories often survive not because every reader agrees on their meaning, but because they continue illuminating dimensions of reality that each generation must discover anew.
The preceding essays have suggested i) that human beings inhabit reality through stories and that ii) broken worlds repeatedly interrupt the continuity by which individuals and communities understand themselves. We have also proposed that iii) rupture belongs not only to human experience but to the unfinished character of becoming itself. Jonah now becomes one of our first opportunities to explore how an enduring narrative may illuminate this process.
The central theme of this essay is therefore not prophecy, nor miracle, nor even the great fish for which Jonah is so often remembered.
The central theme in this essay will be the interrupted character of becoming reality.
Jonah's journey unfolds through departure, resistance, descent, interruption, reflection, mercy, and renewed participation. Whether one approaches the narrative as sacred Scripture, profound literature, symbolic theology, or enduring myth, these movements continue describing experiences recognizable far beyond the world of the ancient Near East. They belong to families, civilizations, ecosystems, institutions, and individual lives wherever continuity gives way to disruption and new possibilities emerge.
This is why Jonah continues speaking.
Not because it answers every question.
But because it asks one that remains perpetually before humanity:
What becomes possible when interrupted lives refuse to surrender participation in the becoming nature of reality?
That question belongs not only to Jonah.
It belongs to every life that has descended into uncertainty, every community struggling through disruption, every civilization confronting its own failures, and every person seeking renewal after brokenness.
It belongs, ultimately, to reality itself.
Before Jonah became the story of one reluctant prophet, descent had already become one of humanity's oldest experiences.
Every life eventually encounters moments that interrupt its expected course.
Some arrive suddenly through illness, accident, betrayal, or loss. Others unfold slowly through disappointment, exhaustion, loneliness, or the quiet realization that the life once imagined will never fully arrive.
Civilizations likewise descend through war, ecological collapse, economic failure, political corruption, or the gradual erosion of trust. Ecosystems lose balance. Institutions decline. Relationships fracture. Even stars exhaust themselves and give birth to new cosmic possibilities through their own transformations.
Descent, therefore, is not an exception to reality.
It is one of reality's recurring patterns.
Yet descent is rarely welcomed. Human beings naturally seek stability, continuity, and security. We build homes, establish traditions, preserve memories, and cultivate communities because continuity allows identity to emerge and flourish. The interruption of these continuities often feels like the loss not only of what we possess, but of who we have become.
This is why descent is so often experienced as disorientation.
The familiar becomes unfamiliar. The meaningful becomes uncertain. The future becomes difficult to imagine. Questions once considered settled suddenly reopen. Assumptions that quietly guided our lives no longer seem sufficient. We find ourselves inhabiting landscapes we never expected to enter.
Throughout history, human beings have searched for language capable of describing these experiences. Philosophers have spoken of tragedy and contingency. Psychologists have explored trauma, resilience, and transformation. Religious traditions have described exile, wilderness, temptation, death, and rebirth. Literature has long portrayed descent into darkness before renewal becomes possible. Different vocabularies, perhaps - but remarkably similar patterns.
It is little wonder, then, that the world's most enduring narratives so frequently begin with interruption rather than achievement:
Odysseus is driven from home.
The Buddha leaves the palace.
Israel enters exile.
Dante descends into the Inferno.
The heroes of countless indigenous traditions journey into wilderness before returning with wisdom for their communities.
The pattern repeats because reality itself appears to repeat it.
Nor does every descent leads to renewal. Some become tragedy. Some remain unfinished. Some leave wounds carried across generations.
To acknowledge this is important.
A process-relational metaphysic must never romanticize suffering or imply that every interruption possesses hidden purpose. Brokenness remains genuinely broken. Loss remains genuine loss. Some personal-social realities resist every attempt at explanation, completion, renewal, or fulfillment. They remain unfinished chapters in the ongoing story of becoming.
A mature process metaphysic is not optimistic. It is realistically hopeful without denying the brokeness that can invade or inhabit processual reality.
Yet history also reveals another recurring possibility.
Interruption need not become the final word.
Again and again, individuals, families, and civilizations discover unexpected capacities for adaptation, reconciliation, creativity, and renewed participation. The future is seldom identical to the past, but neither is it wholly determined by it. Reality remains unfinished.
It is precisely at this point that the ancient story of Jonah enters the conversation.
Not as an isolated religious account, but as one of humanity's enduring reflections upon what interrupted becoming may yet become.
That refusal is more than simple disobedience.
It is resistance to becoming.
Jonah becomes one of humanity's enduring mirrors because his resistance is immediately recognizable.
His flight toward Tarshish is therefore more than geographical escape.
Interrupted becoming does not begin with the storm.It begins with resistance.
Yet another kind of interruption arises through our own refusals - our unwillingness to forgive, to change, to reconcile, to learn, to trust, or to enter unfamiliar futures.
The interruptions that happen to us.And the interruptions we ourselves create.
His descent toward the sea therefore becomes more than punishment or consequence.It becomes the outward expression of an inward reality already unfolding.
No life exists entirely unto itself.
No action remains wholly private.No refusal remains without consequence.
The storm is not simply divine intervention.It is the visible manifestation of relational reality responding to interrupted participation.
- When reality calls for participation, Jonah withdraws.
- When others struggle to preserve life, Jonah remains absent from their efforts.
- When the world is being transformed around him, he retreats inward.
Sometimes the deepest interruption is not the storm outside us.It is the refusal to awaken within it.
Will we remain asleep within familiar certainties?Or will we awaken to the reality that now stands before us?
The great fish has long dominated the story of Jonah.
For some, it stands as evidence of divine miracle. For others, it represents myth, symbol, parable, or literary imagination. Generations have debated its biological possibility while often overlooking the deeper interruption the narrative places before us.
The fish is not the beginning of Jonah's descent.
It is the place where descent finally comes to rest.
Everything that has unfolded thus far in Jonah's life - his call, refusal, flight, the storm, the sea- has carried Jonah toward a moment in which escape is no longer possible. Every familiar strategy has failed. Every attempt to preserve the life he had chosen for himself has dissolved beneath forces greater than his own will.
Only then does silence arrive.
Whether understood literally, symbolically, psychologically, or theologically, the depths have always represented one of humanity's oldest images of interruption. Beneath the surface of ordinary life lie those places where identity itself becomes uncertain. We encounter them through grief, failure, illness, depression, exile, addiction, trauma, profound disappointment, or the collapse of futures we once believed inevitable.
The depths of identity interruption cannot be hurried.
They cannot be mastered through determination alone.
They are asking something different. They are asking are we willing to remain present long enough in interruption for transformation to become possible?
This is why the great fish should not be reduced to either biological curiosity or supernatural spectacle. Within the narrative it becomes something far more significant. It becomes the space in which interrupted becoming is no longer resisted.
For the first time in the story, Jonah cannot flee. He cannot negotiate. He cannot outrun reality. He can only inhabit it. Perhaps this is one of the deepest disclosures of the narrative.
Human transformation seldom begins while we remain convinced that we still control the outcome.
It often begins only after our illusions of control have quietly come to an end.
The great fish therefore functions less as an instrument of punishment than as a place of suspension. Old certainties have dissolved. New certainties have not yet appeared. Jonah inhabits the difficult interval between the life that has ended and the life not yet ready to begin.
Every generation knows such places. A hospital room. A prison cell. A refugee camp. A rehabilitation center. A lonely apartment. A cemetery. A wilderness. The names differ. The experience remains remarkably familiar.
Not every descent reaches such a place. Not every interruption becomes transformative. Yet countless human lives testify that profound change often begins only after the collapse of familiar identities.
The narrative does not promise this outcome. It merely observes it. The depths become, not the guarantee of sudden renewal, but the possibility of renewed participation.
Perhaps this explains why Jonah continues speaking across centuries. The great fish is not merely about survival. It is about the strange and often unwelcome spaces in which becoming itself pauses long enough to discover another direction.
Or perhaps more accurately, Jonah has become willing to continue participating in the reality he had once resisted.
The interruption did not remove the calling.It transformed Jonah's relationship to it.
Relationships still require reconciliation.Communities still require healing.Justice still demands courage.Broken worlds remain broken.
Does reality ultimately tend toward closure......or does it remain open to genuinely new possibilities?
It is this openness that surprises Jonah most.And perhaps ourselves as well.
But Jonah refuses such closure.
Instead, the story introduces one final interruption.
His outward journey has reached its destination.His inward journey has not.
Transformation is rarely completed in a single moment.
It spirals.It advances.It hesitates.It retreats.It begins again.
The storied ending further exposes one of humanity's recurring tendencies. We often recognize our own suffering more quickly than the suffering of others. We defend what protects us more readily than what enlarges our shared humanity. And sadly, we sometimes prefer certainty to compassion, justice to mercy, and familiar identities to transformative participation.
The untimeliness of mercy becomes the final interruption.
This may also explain why the book ends without resolving Jonah's response.
God asks a question. Jonah never answers. The lingering silence is intentional. The interruption now belongs to the reader.
The narrative never tells us.
Descent need not become final defeat.
Interruption need not become permanent closure.Renewal need not erase brokenness.
His story closes without completion.
The narrative refuses to transform him into an uncomplicated hero because reality rarely transforms human beings so completely. Like Jonah, we ourselves continue carrying old fears into new futures, old prejudices into new understandings, old resentments into new relationships, and old wounds into new possibilities.
Perhaps Jonah's greatest gift is that he never becomes who we expect him to become.And neither do we.
A process-relational metaphysic therefore does not promise perfect endings.
Yet neither does reality appear closed.
It belongs to every reader. Every life. Every participant in reality.How shall we continue becoming?
And so do we.
Campbell, Joseph. The Hero with a Thousand Faces. 3rd ed. Novato, CA: New World Library, 2008.
Eliade, Mircea. Myth and Reality. New York: Harper & Row, 1963.
Frankl, Viktor E.. Man's Search for Meaning. Boston: Beacon Press, 2006.
Jung, Carl Gustav. Symbols of Transformation. Collected Works of C. G. Jung, Vol. 5. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1967.
Levenson, Jon D.. Creation and the Persistence of Evil. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1988.
MacIntyre, Alasdair. After Virtue. 3rd ed. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 2007.
Niebuhr, Reinhold. The Nature and Destiny of Man. 2 vols. Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 1996.
Ricoeur, Paul. The Symbolism of Evil. Boston: Beacon Press, 1967.
Whitehead, Alfred North. Adventures of Ideas. New York: Free Press, 1967.
Whitehead, Alfred North. Process and Reality. Corrected ed. Edited by David Ray Griffin and Donald W. Sherburne. New York: Free Press, 1978.
Why Were These Authors Chosen?
Essay IV was about the stories we inhabit.Essay V was about brokenness and failed becoming.Essay VI becomes about transformation through interrupted becoming.
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