“Happy is the person whom God corrects! Do not resent it when he rebukes you.” Job 5:17 (GNT)
If I'm running from what God has called me to do, there is something I should know: God is calling me back to him.
He knows that the longer I run, the worse life will get for me. And he wants to get my attention before it’s too late.
Even though God is patient, he won’t let me ignore his call forever. God loves me just the way I am, but he loves me far too much to let me stay that way.
One day he’s going to get my attention.
The prophet Jonah found this out the hard way when he ran from God by boarding a boat headed in the opposite direction from where God had called him. While on the boat, a storm came up—and “it was getting worse all the time” (Jonah 1:11 GNT).
The more Jonah ran, the worse the storm got. Jonah’s running had consequences.
It’s the same way for me. When I run from God, eventually I’ll find myself surrounded by storms. Sometimes those are the storms of God’s correction. But when God corrects me, it’s not negative. It’s because he loves me!
Loving parents discipline their children because they love them and want to see their children change their behavior for their own good. God is the same way. The Bible says: “Happy is the person whom God corrects! Do not resent it when he rebukes you” (Job 5:17 GNT).
As the storm got more intense, Jonah’s shipmates asked a question many people ask when troubles build: “What should we do . . . to stop the storm?” (Jonah 1:11 GNT). The answer is always the same. I must completely surrender my life to God. When I surrender, peace comes.
Jonah did this. He responded, “Throw me into the sea, and it will calm down. I know it is my fault that you are caught in this violent storm” (Jonah 1:12 GNT).
It was Jonah’s first unselfish act—and his first step toward a fresh start. He admitted he was the cause of the storm, and he surrendered to God’s will.
If I'm running from God’s plan for my life and now I'm facing a storm, surrender to him. It might not be a literal storm—or one where I'm tossed overboard like Jonah—but it feels just as overwhelming. The good news is, I can confidently surrender to God because he is for me, and he’s calling me back to him.
In summary:
When I run from God’s calling, life only grows harder, but God uses correction—like a loving parent—to bring me back to Him. Jonah learned this when he fled from God, only to face a worsening storm until he surrendered and admitted his fault, which became the first step toward a fresh start. In the same way, when I face storms in life, they may be God’s way of getting my attention and calling me to surrender. His correction isn’t punishment but love, reminding me that true peace comes when I stop resisting and fully submit to His will.
Bottom line:
Running from God only leads to storms, but His correction is an act of love that calls you back to Him. So the next step is to stop resisting and fully surrender to God—acknowledge where I’ve been running, turn back to Him, and trust that His plan will bring peace and a fresh start.