Greek Key Terms:
Context: After resurrection, eleven disciples meet Jesus on Galilee mountain (v. 16). Jesus declares "all authority in heaven and earth given to me" (v. 18), then issues Great Commission based on that universal authority. Commission has four elements: (1) GO to all nations, (2) MAKE DISCIPLES, (3) BAPTIZE in Trinitarian name, (4) TEACH obedience to all Christ commanded. Closes with promise of Christ's perpetual presence until age's consummation. This fulfills and exponentially expands Jonah's reluctant mission to one Gentile city.
Connections:
Connection Method(s): Typology (Providential, Forward-Looking), Contrast, Redemptive-Historical Progression — Christ's Great Commission fulfills and exponentially expands Jonah's reluctant Gentile mission, contrasting Jonah's flight with Christ's willing sending, while marking the decisive redemptive-historical shift to universal gospel proclamation.
Christological Connection: The Great Commission represents Christ's transformation of Jonah's mission from reluctant, narrow, nationalistic to eager, comprehensive, universal. Where God had to force Jonah to one Gentile city, Christ willingly commissions disciples to ALL nations. Where Jonah resented Gentile salvation, Christ commands it. Where Jonah's message was five words of judgment, Christ's message is comprehensive teaching of all his commands. The commission rests on Christ's resurrection authority - "all authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me" (v. 18). This echoes Daniel 7:13-14 where Son of Man receives universal dominion. Christ is the faithful Messenger who doesn't flee like Jonah but embraces global mission. The Trinitarian baptismal formula (v. 19) shows fullness of revelation - Father, Son, Holy Spirit - far exceeding Jonah's era. Christ promises perpetual presence ("I am with you always," v. 20) - unlike Jonah, disciples don't go alone but with Immanuel, God-with-us. The scope is breathtaking: not just Nineveh but ALL NATIONS (πάντα τὰ ἔθνη, panta ta ethnē). The timeline extends to "end of the age" (συντελείας τοῦ αἰῶνος, synteleias tou aiōnos) - mission continues until eschatological consummation. Acts traces fulfillment: Peter preaches to Cornelius (Acts 10), Paul becomes apostle to Gentiles (Acts 9:15, 22:21, 26:17), gospel spreads from Jerusalem to Rome and beyond. What Jonah accomplished in one city under protest, Christ's disciples accomplish in every nation with joy. The reluctant prophet's limited mission becomes the risen Messiah's global mandate, fulfilled as Gentiles from every tribe, tongue, and nation worship the Jewish Messiah (Revelation 5:9, 7:9).
Trajectory Table: 083 - Jonah (Death, Resurrection, and Mission to Gentiles)