Today in our journey through the 66 books of the Bible we come to the minor prophet, Jonah. Author As with most of the books of Hebrew Scripture, there is no internal claim to authorship in this narrative. The book of Jonah was originally included in “The Twelve” because it was accepted as a prophetic book and Jonah as a historical prophet. There is a prophet called Jonah, son of Amittai, mentioned in 2 Kings 14:25. The Jonah of 2 Kings served as a prophet to the northern kingdom of Israel in the eighth century BCE shortly after the time of Elisha and before the time of Amos and Hosea. However, most biblical scholars today do not view the book of Jonah as historical. That is the case not simply because of the story of Jonah being swallowed by a great fish. If we believe in the miraculous, the tale of Jonah and the great fish is not sufficient reason to reject this story as historical. And there are naturalistic explanations of this story as well. For example, a local Cape Cod lob