American Evangelicals, Nigerian Christianity, and the Story of Nineveh
Repentance, Power, Tolerance, and the Gospel to the Gentiles
The story of Nineveh is one of the most misunderstood—and most dangerous—stories in the Bible. Dangerous not because it promotes sin, but because it exposes religious power, challenges tribal faith, and undermines moral superiority.
It confronts Christians everywhere—American evangelicals and Nigerian believers alike—with an unsettling truth:
God’s mercy often flows to people we believe do not deserve it.
Nineveh: A City Worse Than Modern “Godless” Nations
Nineveh was not a metaphorical sinner. It was historically brutal.
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Capital of the Assyrian Empire
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Known for:
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Mass executions
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Public torture
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Ethnic cleansing
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Religious paganism
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Israel’s sworn enemy
In Nigerian terms, Nineveh would be:
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A corrupt imperial power
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A violent oppressor
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A nation blamed for regional suffering
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Spiritually “unclean”
Yet God does not rain fire.
He sends a preacher.
Jonah: The Prophet Who Didn’t Want Revival
Jonah’s refusal wasn’t fear—it was ideology.
“I knew you are a gracious and compassionate God.” (Jonah 4:2)
Jonah believed:
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Some people are beyond mercy
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Justice should be punitive, not restorative
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God’s grace should favor his people
This mindset did not die with Jonah.
American Evangelicals: The Jonah Syndrome
Large segments of American evangelical Christianity emphasize:
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Moral absolutism
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Cultural dominance
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National exceptionalism
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Political alignment with power
Yet critics observe Jonah-like patterns:
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Grace is preached, but selectively applied
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Outsiders are viewed primarily as threats
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Repentance is demanded—but forgiveness withheld
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Judgment is enjoyed more than redemption
Nineveh asks a disturbing question:
Do we want sinners to repent—or to be punished?
Now Turn the Mirror to Nigeria
Nigeria is one of the most religious countries on earth.
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Churches everywhere
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Mosques everywhere
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God-language everywhere
Yet Nigeria also struggles with:
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Corruption
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Violence
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Ethnic hatred
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Political hypocrisy
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Religious tribalism
This makes Nineveh extremely relevant.
Nigerian Christianity and the Jonah Problem
Many Nigerian Christians sincerely love God—but the culture has absorbed troubling ideas:
1. Judgment Without Self-Examination
Christians loudly condemn:
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“Ungodly politicians”
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“Immoral youth”
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“Western corruption”
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“Muslims”
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“Traditional worshippers”
But often ignore:
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Church corruption
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Pastors enriching themselves
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Silence in the face of injustice
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Tribal favoritism
Nineveh repented as a city.
Nigeria often prays without reform.
2. Prayer as Escape, Not Repentance
Nigeria excels at prayer.
But Nineveh:
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Changed behavior
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Stopped violence
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Turned from injustice
Prayer without repentance becomes religious noise.
3. The “Chosen Nation” Delusion
Just as American evangelicals see America as divinely special, many Nigerians believe:
“Nigeria is God’s chosen project.”
Yet Nineveh proves:
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God has no permanent favorites
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Repentance—not destiny—moves heaven
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Nations rise and fall by moral response
Israel was chosen—and still judged.
Nineveh and Interfaith Reality in Nigeria
This is where the story becomes explosive.
Nineveh:
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Was pagan
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Had no Torah
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Had no prophets
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Had no covenant
Yet God accepted their repentance.
For Nigeria—where Christians and Muslims coexist—the implication is radical:
God responds to repentance, justice, and humility—even outside Christian identity.
This does NOT mean:
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All religions are the same
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Truth doesn’t matter
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Christ is irrelevant
It means:
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God is not tribal
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Moral response matters
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Mercy precedes full revelation
This aligns with Paul:
“God is not far from any one of us.” (Acts 17:27)
Jesus, Nineveh, and the Nigerian Church
Jesus shocked religious elites by saying:
“The men of Nineveh will rise in judgment against this generation.”
Why?
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They responded to less revelation
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They repented without miracles
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They changed without promises of blessing
In Nigerian context:
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We have churches, Bibles, crusades, media, anointing oil
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Yet often lack collective repentance
Nineveh had one sermon.
Nigeria has thousands.
Tolerance Is Not Compromise (For America or Nigeria)
Nineveh was not tolerated in sin.
It was warned.
Biblical tolerance means:
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Confronting wrongdoing
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Allowing repentance
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Refusing annihilation as the first response
It rejects:
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Religious violence
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Dehumanization
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Political demonization
In Nigeria—where religion often fuels conflict—Nineveh offers a better model:
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Warning without hatred
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Conviction without extermination
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Justice without vengeance
Why Nineveh Threatens Religious Power Everywhere
Nineveh undermines:
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Prosperity gospel
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Religious nationalism
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Ethnic superiority
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Church-as-empire
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Pastor-as-untouchable
Because it teaches:
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God listens outside institutions
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God forgives enemies
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God values repentance over labels
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God can bypass religious gatekeepers
That is terrifying to systems built on control.
The Unanswered Question That Haunts Us
The Book of Jonah ends abruptly.
God asks:
“Should I not care about Nineveh?”
No answer from Jonah.
Because the answer must come from:
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American Christians
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Nigerian Christians
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Muslims
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Religious leaders
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Political elites
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Ordinary citizens
Conclusion: Nineveh Was Not Saved by Religion—but by Response
Nineveh did not:
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Become Israel
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Adopt Hebrew customs
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Join a covenant
It simply repented.
That is the scandal—and beauty—of the Gospel trajectory.
For American evangelicals:
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It challenges nationalism
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It exposes selective grace
For Nigerian Christians:
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It challenges empty religion
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It demands moral reform
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It calls for humility across faith lines
Nineveh stands as a warning:
God may forgive the people we condemn—and judge the people who preach.
Final Provocation
If Nineveh could repent and be spared…
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What excuse does America have?
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What excuse does Nigeria have?
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What excuse does the Church have?
