Jonah was in the whale three days and three nights.
Jonah 1:17
"Now the LORD had prepared a great fish to swallow up Jonah. And Jonah was in the belly of the fish three days and three nights."
Jonah was in the belly of the whale for three days and three nights. This event can be found in the Book of Jonah in the Old Testament of The Bible.
The book of Jonah says a great fish, chapter 1 verse 17 (KJV), which over time people have assumed was a whale.
Yes, Jonah is mentioned in the New Testament. Jesus refers to the story of Jonah in the Gospels, particularly in Matthew 12:39-41, to illustrate his coming death and resurrection.
Jonah's relationship with God was complex. While Jonah initially tried to flee from God's instructions, he eventually obeyed and carried out his mission to Nineveh. Despite Jonah's struggles and doubts, God showed mercy and forgiveness, illustrating His compassion towards Jonah and all humanity.
Noah was not swallowed by a fish; it was the prophet Jonah from the Bible who was swallowed by a fish. Jonah was swallowed by a great fish as a form of punishment for fleeing from God's orders. He was eventually spit out onto dry land after repenting and praying to God.
No, Simon Peter, also known as Peter, is not Jonah's son. Simon Peter was a fisherman who later became one of Jesus' twelve apostles, while Jonah was a prophet from the Old Testament known for being swallowed by a great fish.
The minister's sermon was about forgiveness and the importance of letting go of grudges to live a happier and more peaceful life.
Yes, the prophet Jonah was swallowed by a whale and was stuck there for three days and three nights.
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Nowhere.The word "whale" in the English translations of the book of Jonah in the Bible is a mistranslation of the Hebrew for a "large fish". A whale is a mammal, not a fish. We do not know the kind of fish the Hebrew was referring to.
large fish. (The Bible doesn't mention a 'whale' anywhere in the book of Jonah.)
Jonah was in the stomach of a 'great fish' - assumed by many to be a whale - for three days and three nights.
The word whale occures twice in the King James version of the Bible; Job 7:12 and Ezekiel 32:2. Jonah was swollowed by a great fish. Jonah 1:17
The only reference to a whale in the bible that I am aware of is in the book of Jonah.I don't have a King James version to confirm that they do refer as the fish as a whale. I have a NIV version and it says that God provided a great fish.As a child I recall the story being told with Jonah being swallowed by a whale There are 4 references to 'whale' in the KJV Bible: Genesis 1.21 Job 7.12 Ezekiel 32.2 Matthew 12.40 In Jonah, the 'whale' is called 'a great fish' (Jonah 1.17), but Jesus calls it a whale (Matthew 12.40)
Jonah 2:10-"And the Lord spoke unto the fish and it vomited Jonah upon the dry land." So basically Jonah got up chucked,or as it states in the bible. Scientific evidence would tell you that Jonah would have some damage done to his body from the acid inside of the whale's belly(which he bible speaks nothing of).
The whale spat Jonah out on dry land.
No one was swallowed by a "whale" in The Bible. This is a mistranslation and is probably one important reason why many people find the account ridiculous.The account being referred to is presumably that involving the prophet Jonah, found in the Book of Jonah in the Old Testament, and referred to, briefly, in the New Testament:According to the original account (in the Book of Jonah}, Jonah was swallowed by a gadol dag, a 'great fish' (Jonah 1:17), and in the Book of Matthew we are told that he was swallowed by a kitos, a 'great sea monster' (Matthew 12:40).