Sunday, February 4, 2018

Nahum, the Prophet


Nahum, the Prophet                                            February 03, 2018 

Nahum 1:  The Comfort to Judah  (a duel prophecy for our time) 

      903 B.C.  Rise of Nineveh 

      759 B.C.  The warning of Jonah

      722 B.C.  Destruction of Northern Kingdom

      709 B.C.  The Invasion of Judah

      663 B.C. The Prophecy of Nahum

      625 B.C. The Destruction of Assyria 

This book was written between 663 – 612 where Nahum witnessed the invasion of the Assyrian empire against Jerusalem. 

·      Subject of this prophecy is the approaching complete and final

destruction of Nineveh, the capital of the Assyrian empire. 

·      It was a large city and was then the center of the civilization and commerce of the world.

·      It was strongly fortified on every side, bidding defiance to every enemy;

·      It was utterly destroyed as a punishment for their great wicked ways. 

·      Jonah had given his message of warning to the Assyrian and they repented.

·      Nahum predicted the destruction of the city,

·      Predictions which were fulfilled (625 B.C.)

·      City was destroyed by Babylon, apparently by fire

·      The Assyrian empire came to an end, changed the face of Asia. 

The city of Nineveh

·      located on the east side of the Tigris River,

·      about 550 miles northeast of Samaria. That

·      great city was second in size only to Babylon.

·      large city, protected by an outer wall and an inner wall:

·      the inner wall was 50 feet wide and 100 feet high;

·      three chariots abreast raced on top.

·      had 1200 towers, each 200 ft high.

·      City was 60 miles in circumference

·      population of 600,000 was supported by internally grown crops. 

·      was known for its idolatry; it had temples dedicated to the gods Nabu, Asshur, Adad, and Dagon, the fish god, Ishtar. 

The coming judgment on Nineveh (in return for her terrible killings on various nations including Israel, the Northern Kingdom, in 722 B.C.) would bring great comfort to the afflicted Judah. 

Judah had felt the threat of the Assyrian Empire breathing down her neck. In fact, Assyria had defeated much of Judah and had even surrounded Jerusalem in 701 B.C.  

2 Kings 19:34-35 'For I will defend this city, to save it For My own sake and for My servant David's sake.' " (35) And it came to pass on a certain night that the angel of the LORD went out, and killed in the camp of the Assyrians one hundred and eighty-five thousand; and when people arose early in the morning, there were the corpses--all dead. 

The purpose of Nahum’s book is to announce the fall of Nineveh and thereby comfort Judah with the assurance that God is in control. 

Introduction 

Nahum 1:1 A pronouncement about Nineveh: The record of the vision of Nahum from Elkosh. 
 

Vision of Nahum verses the Word of the LORD came to Jonah 

The book of Nahum may be divided as follows:

1.   The Character of God, 1:1-8

2.   God’s Punishment of His Enemies; 1:9-15

3.   The Destruction of Nineveh; 2

4.   The Cause of the Destruction; 3 

The name “Nahum” abbreviated form of the name Nehemiah which means “Comfort of (God) Yahweh”  appropriate for his ministry to Judah.
 
A native of Elkosh, (in Galilee, Kephar-Nahum, City of Nahum_Capernaum –cu per i um) little is known about the prophet himself. A brief introduction in 1: 1 is the only time in Scripture that either the prophet or the city appears. 

The capital of the Assyrian Empire was Nineveh, the city that heard the preaching of Jonah a hundred years before and repented. Nahum will address a city that has slipped back into sin, and is again ripe for judgment. 

We covered Jonah last week. 

The holiness of the Lord; judgment upon Nineveh 

Nahum 1:2 A jealous God, the LORD avenges. The LORD avenges; The Lord is an angry husband. The LORD takes vengeance on his enemies, reserving anger for his adversaries.    (a different view of Jesus personality) 

·      Nahum shows us that God not only deals with individuals as individuals,

·      He also deals with nations as nations.

·      “This is the prophecy which sets forth, more clearly than any other, the truth concerning the wrath of God, in its national application.”

·      Nations will be held to account by God

·      Set themselves against God will end up receiving His vengeance 

Nahum 1:3 The LORD is slow to anger and powerful, and he will never let the guilty go unpunished. The LORD's path is in the windstorm and hurricane; thunderclouds are dust beneath his feet. 

Jesus power is so great that He controls the mightiest forces known to man. 

Nahum is talking about the character of Jesus who brings judgment. God’s power should make us trust in His help and to fear His judgment.  Grace. 

Nahum 1:4 He rebukes the sea, and it evaporates; he dries up all the rivers. Bashan and Carmel wither, while the flowers of Lebanon languish. 

Nahum 1:5 Mountains shake because of him, and the hills melt. The earth goes into upheaval at his presence, as does the world with all of its inhabitants. 

God is the moral  ruler of the universe; and He is a righteous judge. Penalties must be paid. 

Nahum 1:6 Who can stand before his fury? And who can endure his fierce anger? His displeasure pours out like fire, and rocks are broken to pieces because of him. 

Nahum 1:7 The LORD is good--a refuge in troubled times. He knows those who are confiding in him. 

Nahum 1:8 But with an overwhelming deluge he will bring utter desolation to Nineveh, and his enemies he will pursue with darkness. 

God’s Punishment of His Enemies 

Nahum 1:9 What are you scheming against the LORD? He will bring about utter desolation--affliction will not strike twice!  (so severe the first time) 

Nahum 1:10 Indeed, while tangled as by a thorn bush, while drunken as by a strong drink, the Ninevites will be burned like dry straw. 

This is how ripe Nineveh is for judgment, and how complete the fire of judgment will be when it comes. 

Nahum 1:11 Someone has left you who plans evil against the LORD. He is a wicked counselor. 

Nahum 1:12 This is what the LORD says: "No matter how strong they are, and no matter how numerous, they will surely be annihilated and pass away. Though I have afflicted you, I will do so no more.  (Judah) 

Nahum 1:13 Now I will break off Assyria's yoke from you, and tear apart your shackles." 

Nahum 1:14  Now this is what the Lord has decreed about you, Nineveh: "There will be no more children born to carry on your name. I will cut out the graven and molten images from the temples of your gods. I myself will dig your grave, because you are vile." 

God warns Nineveh of its coming judgment and destruction.

The joyful news 

Nahum 1:15 Look! There on the mountains! The feet of the one who brings good news, who broadcasts a message of peace. Judah, celebrate your solemn feasts and keep your vows, because the wicked will never again invade you. Nineveh will be completely eliminated! 

Knowing the grace and mercy of Jesus to His people should not make the believer careless in obedience, it should make the believer more careful to obey every word of the LORD. 

Interesting, what 2 things Jesus said:

·      celebrate your solemn feasts
·      keep your vows 

The Destruction of Nineveh Detailed 

Nahum 2:1 You are being attacked by advancing forces! Guard your rampart! Watch your roads! Prepare yourselves! Marshall your defenses! 

The prophet sees a mighty army coming against the city of

Nineveh. 

Nahum 2:2 For the LORD will restore the glory of Jacob, just as he will restore the glory of Israel, although plunderers have devastated them, vandalizing their vine branches. 

Nahum 2:3 The shields deployed by Israel's elite forces are scarlet, their valiant men are clothed in crimson. When they are prepared, the polished armament on their chariots will shine, and lances will be brandished about ferociously. 

Nahum 2:4 Their chariots storm through the streets, jostling each other along broad avenues. They look like torches, as they dart around like lightning. 

Nahum 2:5 He will remember to summon his finest troops. They will stumble on their way, hurrying over to Nineveh's wall. Their defensive shield is in place. 

Nahum 2:6 The river gates will be opened, and the palace will collapse. 

The Tigris overflowed, took out a section of the wall, and the city became like a pool of water… 2 ½ miles of wall were along the Tigris. 

Nahum 2:7 It has been determined: She shall be led away captive, She shall be brought up; And her maidservants shall lead her as with the voice of doves, Beating their breasts. 

Nineveh will fall before this mighty army, and she will be humbled and led away captive even as the Assyrians led other nations in captivity 

Nahum 2:8 Nineveh is a reservoir whose water is draining away. "Wait! Wait!" they cry, yet not even one person looks back. 

Nahum 2:9 Take the silver! Take the gold! There is no end to the treasure--fabulous riches of every imagination.  (Nineveh brought low and spoiled) 

Nahum 2:10 Nineveh is empty, desolate, and wasted. Her heart melts, her knees shake. Much pain is in every side, And all their faces are drained of color.  

Nahum 2:11 Where is this lion's den? Where is the place where the young lions fed, where the lion and its mate walked with their young, the place where they feared nothing? 

Nahum 2:12 This lion renders its prey to pieces to feed its whelps, and strangles enough prey for its mate, filling its lairs with prey and its dens with rendered flesh. 

They crushed and plundered other nations like lions destroying prey 

Nahum 2:13 "I am against you," declares the LORD of the Heavenly Armies, "and I will send your chariots up in smoke. A sword will devour your young lions, I will eliminate your prey from the earth, and the voice of your messengers will no longer be heard." 

This title refers to God’s place as Commander in Chief over all the armies of heaven 

That day would come to an end under the judgment of God. 

Nahum 3: The Cause of the Destruction, Woe to Nineveh 

God loved Nineveh: it was His closing comments to Jonah. But both individuals and nations can cross a line too far, the red line. 

Nahum 3:1 Woe to the bloody city! It is all full of lies and robbery. Its victim never departs. 

Nahum 3:2 The crack of whips and the clamor of wheels! The galloping horses and the bounding chariots!
Nahum takes a tour of the city of Nineveh and observes how ripe it is for judgment. He sees it is a busy city, full of the noise of a whip and the noise of rattling wheels, of galloping horses, of clattering chariots. Yet it is busy with violence, deception, and idolatry 

Nahum 3:3 The cavalry attacks--the flashing sword and the glittering spear! Many are the slain--so many casualties!--No end to bodies, and the soldiers trip over the corpses. 

No wonder Nahum called Nineveh “the city of blood”, a city noted for its “cruelty”!  

Violence & Cruelty, they recorded and known for. (same for Adolf Hitler)
Not only where the rulers of Assyria terribly cruel, they boasted of the cruelty on monuments that exist in museums to this day.

·      “I cut off their heads and formed them into pillars”

·      “I flayed all the chief men who had revolted, and I covered the pillar with their skins”

·      “Many within the border of my own land I flayed, and spread their skins upon the walls”

·      “I cut off the limbs of the officers, the royal officers who had rebelled”

·      “3,000 captives I burned with fire”

·      “Their corpses I formed into pillars”

·      “From son I cut off their hands and their fingers, and from other I cut off their noses, their ears, and their fingers, of many I put out their eyes”

·      “I made one pillar of the living, and another of heads, I bound their heads to posts round about the city” 

Nahum 3:4 Innumerable are the harlotries of this well-favored whore, this mistress of witchcraft, who enslaves nations through her fornication and families through her sorceries. 

The Lord emphasis is now on the humbling of the city, before on military defeat. 

Nahum 3:5 "Look, I am against you," declares the LORD of the Heavenly Armies, "so I will pull up your dress over your face. I will show your nakedness to the nations, and your disgrace to the kingdoms.

Nahum 3:6 I will hurl abominable filth upon you, making you look foolish, and making an example of you. 

Nahum 3:7 It will be that everyone who looks at you will run away, saying, 'Nineveh has been violently overthrown! Who will mourn for her? Where will I find anyone to comfort you?'" 

The City is ripe for judgment. 

Nahum 3:8 "Are you any better than Thebes, which sits by the upper Nile, surrounded by water? The sea was her defense, the waters her wall of protection. 

·      The prophet speaks of the capture and destruction of No-Amon, Hebrew name of the Egyptian city of Thebes.

·      The Assyrians knew this well, because it was their armies that destroyed Thebes.

·      Nahum says, “Remember what you did to No Amon? The same is coming on you

·      Fall of Thebes, occurred about 663 B.C.  

Nahum 3:9 Sudan was her source of strength, along with Egypt--there were no limits. Put and the Libyans were her allies. 

Nahum 3:10 But she, too, was exiled--she went into captivity! Her young children were dashed to pieces at every crossroad of their streets, and her famous citizens were sold by lottery, while all of her aristocrats were put in chains. 

Nahum 3:11 You will also become drunk. You will disappear, trying to hide from your enemies. 

Nahum 3:12 All your defenses are like fig trees with ripe early fruit--when shaken, it falls right into the devourer's mouth." 

Nahum 3:13 "Look at your people--they are women! Your borders stand wide open to your enemies, while fire consumes the bars of your gates. 

Digs around the city found large deposits of ash, which is evidence of a major fire. 

Nahum 3:14 Draw water, because a siege is coming! Strengthen your fortresses! Make the clay good and strong! Mix the mortar! Go get your brick molds! 

Nahum 3:15 In that place fire will consume you, the sword will cut you down, consuming you as locusts do. Multiply yourself like locusts, increase like swarming grasshoppers. 

Nahum 3:16 You added to your inventory of businessmen--they number more than the stars of heaven. The creeping locust sheds its skin and flies away. 

Nahum 3:17 Your imperial guards are like the swarming grasshopper; your marshals are like hordes of grasshoppers, settling in the stone walls on a chilly day. The sun rises, and they flee away; no one knows where they went. 

Nahum 3:18  Hey king of Assyria! Your shepherds are asleep and your nobles are lying down! Your people lie scattered on the mountains, and there is no one to gather them together. 

Nahum 3:19  There is no healing for your injury--your wound is fatal. Everyone who hears about you will applaud, because who hasn't escaped your endless evil? 

Nineveh has come to a place where there is no healing for her people. There is a line that people—and nations—cannot cross without the judgment of God. 

Prophecies Fulfilled from Historical records

·      The besieged city would prepare bricks and mortar for emergency defense walls. “To the south of the gate, the moat is still filled with fragments of stone and mud bricks from the walls, heaped up when they were breached.”

 

·      The city gates would be destroyed. “The main attack was directed from the northwest and the burning fell upon the gate at this corner…within the gate are traces of the counter wall raised by the inhabitants in their last try

·      In the final hours of the attack the city would be drunk. “The Assyrian king… distributed to his soldiers meats and liberal supplies of wine and provisions. The enemy’s camp made an unexpected attack by night”

·      Nineveh would be destroyed by a flood. In the third year of the siege, heavy rains caused a nearby river to flood part of the city and break part of the Walls.

·      Nineveh would be destroyed by fire, excavations have revealed charred wood, charcoal, and ashes. “There was no question about the clear traces of burning of the temple and palace, for a layer of ash about two inches thick.

·      The city’s capture would be attended by a great massacre of people. “In two battles fought on the plain before the city the rebels defeated the Assyrians… So great was the multitude of the slain that the flowing stream, mingled with their blood, changed its color for a considerable distance.”

·      Babylonian Records: “Great quantities of the spoil from the city, was carried off.  The city was made into a mound and ruin heap”  

·      The officers would weaken, desert and flee its people would try to escape.

·      Nineveh’s images and idols would be destroyed.  “The statue of the goddess Ishtar lay headless in the debris of city ruins”

·      Nineveh’s destruction would be final. Many cities of the ancient Near East were rebuilt after being destroyed, but not Nineveh. 

City of Nineveh


 

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