When the Word comes a 2nd time

eNCOURAGEMENT

An encouragement for Sunday morning…

girl walking near trees

If you have been with me a while you will know I love the story of Jonah. Sometimes I wonder if there is a bit of Jonah in all of us, at least one or two of his characteristics, usually at an inconvenient or inappropriate moment. Perhaps you can relate to Jonah today, which is why I have written this as a Saturday special so that on Sunday morning you will be at your best; ransomed, healed, restored and forgiven – not on probation, fully there, restored, your best version of you (in Christ). In your worst moment you may think you’ve blown it for good. Not just stumbled – torched the bridge, sunk the ship, burned the church T-shirt. That one moment, that one bad choice, and you’re sure it’s over. You replay it in your head like a Spotify tune on loop, and the verdict is always the same: you’re done.

Jonah knew that soundtrack. God told him to go to Nineveh. Jonah ran the other way. God hurled a storm at the boat. The sailors hurled Jonah into the sea. Then the fish swallowed him whole. Three nights in darkness, breathing in decay, and then the fish spat him onto dry land – no carrots, no garnish, just a drenched man who reeked of failure.

And then – this: “Then the word of the LORD came to Jonah the second time” (Jonah 3:1).

A second time. Same call. Same God. Same mission. Jonah had run hard, but God’s mercy ran even harder. Eminem got it wrong – you don’t just get one shot. Not with the Lord.

Your failure isn’t the end. It’s not pretty, it’s not painless, but it’s not final. Abraham lied. David committed adultery and murder. Peter denied Christ. And yet God still used them – not because they cleaned themselves up, but because His grace doesn’t snap under the weight of our sin.

Grace doesn’t pat you on the back and tell you to take it easy. It shoves you back into obedience with the scars still visible like a reluctant fighter forced back into the ring. Jonah still had to walk into Nineveh, no Uber and plenty of time to think, muse, ponder… He still had to say the words God gave him. Limping obedience is better than sitting in the sand telling yourself you’re finished.

You think you’ve wrecked it? Jesus went to the cross knowing exactly what you’d wreck and how many times. He bled for rebels, liars, cowards, and runaways. He died, rose, and still speaks to those who think they’re beyond reach.

When His word comes again – and it will – you don’t negotiate. You get up. You go. And you don’t look back.

Don’t wait for Sunday, you are not on probation – once you have confessed and repented of sin, it’s time to sing, laugh, dance and worship.

 

Samson’s hair began to grow

God is at work – do not give up.

I once was invited to a Saturday night gathering of a number of churches. I hadn’t heard the telephone call correctly. Listening is so over-rated… On arrival, I went into the back room of the church for a cup of coffee and to say hello to the other leaders. A lady came over to explain what was happening—worship, testimonies (remember them?), notices, and then over to me. Me? Turns out I was the preacher. I looked blankly at her, saying nothing, as I frantically scrambled around in my head, wondering what to preach to the 400-strong crowd excitedly worshipping in the main auditorium.

It probably sounded something like this…

“But the hair of his head began to grow again after it had been shaved.” (Judges 16:22, ESV)

Skip through Samson’s brilliant birth story, being set apart, angels, immense strength, and the chaos of his life as power and charisma met with a lack of character and integrity – his demise was an even greater spectacle of astonishment. That previous statement of Scripture about Samson’s hair sits quietly, defying Samson’s failure. No warning or announcement. Just a sentence that whispers. Slips in beneath the noise. And yet, it tells us everything we need to know about the nature of God’s grace.

Samson had fallen hard. Hair cut. Captured. Tortured. His strength, a symbol of God’s calling on his life, had been squandered. He broke his vow, betrayed his consecration, and was handed over to his enemies. And now blind, imprisoned, and ridiculed, he seemed entirely removed from the purpose he was born for. The crowds jeered, the temple echoed with laughter, and Israel’s great, strong, mighty deliverer had become entertainment in their equivalent of the O2 Arena.

But… (The word used in Scripture where despite the odds, the difficulties, the barriers and obstacle, God intervenes) while they paraded him like a trophy of defeat, something began in the shadows. His hair grew.

Not dramatically or suddenly. It rarely does. Just steadily. Quietly. Unseen by those who had written him off. But there it was – evidence that God hadn’t walked away. You might be able to relate. God is relentless and persistent in His grace and blessing for you but it is more often than not, slowly, bit by bit, little by little; and always as much as you need at that moment. The ‘suddenly’ of life comes suddenly and when we least expect it – perhaps a ‘suddenly’ is coming your way. Perhaps.

That process, Samson’s hair slowly growing, is what grace looks like sometimes. Not a rescue with fanfare, but a slow, almost unperceivable reawakening. A silent mercy moving in places no-one’s watching. And though the Philistines didn’t notice it, and Samson perhaps couldn’t feel it, heaven had not forgotten him. The clock was ticking, amber lights are flashing …

This wasn’t a story of second chances as in God’s dealings with Jonah. This was far deeper. This was a God who refuses to abandon what He already began.

There’s no denial; Samson’s failure was real. So was the judgement, but God’s covenant wasn’t based on performance. His purpose ran deeper than the man’s mistakes. And in that slow, almost imperceptible growth, God was preparing a return. Not to restore the past, but to fulfil the purpose.

It’s a word the church in the UK needs to hear. In a cultural moment where influence feels painfully diminished and relevance questioned, where the whispering voice of the church seems quieter and the gospel easily side-lined, it’s tempting to believe the story has moved on. That what once was strong has now been left behind.

But what if, in the silence, God is doing something again?

Not in headlines or social media platforms. Not through popularity or power. But in the unnoticed places. In hearts that are turning. In hidden spaces of prayer. In leaders marked not by charisma, but by repentance, godliness, faith and radical obedience. What if the hair is starting to grow again?

Slow. Quiet. Steady.

Not because we deserve another chance. But because God doesn’t forget His people. His glory isn’t finished with this land. And His mercy doesn’t rely on our performance to move.

It may not look like revival or feel like strength but the signs are there if you take time to look. There’s hunger. There’s confession. There’s a stripping back of the unnecessary. And in it all, there’s a whisper, “I’m not done.”

Samson’s return wasn’t flashy, no smoke machines or music intro. He stood between two pillars, humbled, broken – but with one more prayer on his lips. And God answered. Not because Samson had redeemed himself, but because God remembered him.

We don’t serve a God who forgets. We serve a God who, even in judgement, works toward mercy. Who allows shaking not to shame, but to prepare. Who restores not for nostalgia, but for glory.

The church may feel side-lined. Weak. Misunderstood. But she is not abandoned. And if the hair is growing again – slow as it may be – it’s because God is moving again. Grace upon grace. Quiet. Unseen. But real.

And when He moves, no one will ask how it happened. They’ll simply know: God remembered. And the story was never over.

Here comes the Church …