Hebrew Key Terms:
Context: After Jonah confesses that he is fleeing from Yahweh, pagan sailors reluctantly cast him into the stormy sea as substitutionary sacrifice. Immediately the sea calms, and Yahweh "appoints" (sovereign preparation) a great fish to swallow Jonah. The prophet remains in the fish's belly three days and three nights - a period Jesus will explicitly identify as prophetic sign of his own death, burial, and resurrection.
Connections:
Connection Method(s): Typology (Direct, Forward-Looking) — Jesus explicitly identifies Jonah's three days in the fish as the prophetic type of His own death, burial, and resurrection (Matthew 12:40), making this a direct, dominically-established typological connection.
Christological Connection: Jonah's three days in fish's belly is Christ's own chosen sign of his death, burial, and resurrection. Jesus explicitly declares: "As Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of the great fish, so will the Son of Man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth" (Matthew 12:40). The fish becomes type of the tomb - enclosed place of death that becomes instrument of resurrection. But Christ's experience surpasses Jonah's: Jonah deserved death for disobedience and was preserved alive in fish; Christ was innocent yet truly died and was truly raised. Jonah's preservation pointed forward to Christ's resurrection. The "appointed" fish shows God's sovereign control over death itself - what swallows can also release, what entombs can also resurrect. The precise three-day period establishes prophetic pattern fulfilled in Christ's passion: died Friday afternoon, in tomb Friday night/Saturday/Sunday morning, raised third day. This becomes THE sign Jesus offers unbelieving Israel: no sign except death and resurrection.
Trajectory Table: 083 - Jonah (Death, Resurrection, and Mission to Gentiles)