The Bible Recap - Day 216 (Nahum 1-3) - Year 5
Episode Date: August 4, 2023SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! Seriously, go there. - Join our PATREON community for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits - Click here to find out TLC'...s Bible crush! FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Video: Nahum Overview - Exodus 34:6-7 - The Bible Recap - Day 212 - Find out more about D-Group - Check out our D-Group Promo Video SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Today we finished our 23rd book of the Bible, The Minor Prophet Nehum.
His words are directed toward the city of Nineba, which is the capital city of Assyria.
We've read a lot about Assyria lately.
Yesterday they planned an attack on
Jerusalem after all ready attacking 46 other cities in Judah, but were thwarted by the angel of the
Lord. And before that, they attacked and destroyed the northern kingdom of Israel and took its
people into exile. And we've also read about Assyria's capital city Nineveh before. It's the city
God sent Jonah to rebuke roughly a hundred years ago.
At the time, they repented, although Jonah wasn't too happy about it. But here we are a hundred years later,
and they fall in back into their wicked ways, as evidenced by their actions toward both kingdoms of God's people.
Nehom only explicitly mentions Nineveh a few times in this book. He mostly uses general terminology,
which has an added benefit for this prophecy.
It allows it to not only serve the immediate purpose
of warning Assyria, but also holds that second level,
meaning many prophecies do,
of being able to apply to future scenarios too.
Nehom's message is that God will always judge evil.
There have been and will continue to be
evil empires throughout time, and none of them will
outlive God and his judgment. Specifically here, God is judging a Syria for the way they've treated
his people. He starts out with a reminder of who he is in chapter 1, verses 2-3, and this passage
sounds a lot like Exodus 34, 6-7, which has been a common refrain throughout the Old Testament.
In fact, we talked about it just four days ago on day 2-12.
It's where God tells Moses his name.
I want to read the Exodus version to you, then I'll read the Nehum version.
But first, I want to point out something I think could help us understand this a little
bit better.
Do you ever read ingredient labels on food packaging?
According to the FDA, product labels have to list the ingredients in order of prominence.
So that means the thing listed first is what that product contains the most of, and the
thing listed last is what's least prominent.
So if you pick up a can that has water listed first, awesome.
But if the second ingredient is high-frucced corn syrup, then uh-oh.
The point of all this is that the particular order of a list can often reveal what's being
emphasized in that particular situation. With that said, let's look at these two verses.
In Exodus 34, 6 through 7, God describes Himself to Moses like this,
The Lord, the Lord, a God merciful and gracious,
slow to anger in a bounding instead
fast love and faithfulness, keeping
steadfast love for thousands, for giving
iniquity and transgression and sin,
but who will by no means clear the guilty,
visiting the iniquity of the fathers
on the children and the children's children
to the third and fourth generation.
Here, God is talking to one of his people
and giving him a message to pass along to the rest of his people.
And he starts with all these incredible qualities he possesses.
But then he tax on a reminder at the end that basically says,
Oh, but by the way, lest you think I'm a pushover,
I do still punish sin.
With that in mind, here's Nehum 12-3, where Nehum is talking to the enemies of God about
who God is.
He says,
The Lord is a jealous and avenging God.
The Lord is avenging and wrathful.
The Lord takes vengeance on his adversaries and keeps wrath for his enemies.
The Lord is slow to anger and great in power, and the Lord will by no means clear the guilty. Here, Nehum references the Exodus 34 passage, but he reverses the order.
This is certainly intentional, and I think it's brilliant.
How you view God and how God relates to you is entirely based on whether you know him or not.
By the way, this Exodus passage that we keep seeing throughout the Old Testament
is one of the sections we chose to offer as a memory-versory source in this month's bonus content for our Patreon
supporters.
So, if you want to commit those awesome characteristics to memory, click the link in the show notes
or visit the BibleRecap.com.
Throughout this book, Nehum offers reminders that God has his eyes not only on the wicked
people he's going to punish, but also on the remnant of his people
that he plans to restore and bless. He encourages Israel with reminders that they'll be set free and
will be able to celebrate their feasts again with just something they couldn't do while a Syria
was oppressing them. Their cities were destroyed and they were exiled. But that's never stopped God
before. God undoes the undoing done by our enemies.
Near the end of the book,
Nehom says that the Assyrian leaders all fail to serve their people well.
Their princes inscribes flee,
and their royals are asleep at the wheel.
The people of the land have no one to lead them, and they scatter.
Meanwhile, the other nations around them,
the ones who've been victims
of their oppression, rejoice that they're being stopped in their tracks.
So what happened after Nehum wrote this book? A Syria did fall, just like Nehum foretold.
The river that flowed through the city overflowed its banks and brought enough destruction
that it made it easy for the Babylonians to come in and take over.
And interestingly, in the Babylonian Chronicles and ancient texts that tells their version of events, they report that a fire broke out in Nineveh in the midst of the flood and the siege,
which Nehum prophesied in 315 when he said,
there will the fire devour you. It all happened in 612 BC.
The theme of this short book was my God shop for today.
Nehum is a heavy book for sure, but ultimately it should encourage us because it points to
the fact that our God is a defender of his people, and our God addresses injustice. If
you live in a country that has some form of systemic injustice or oppression, which honestly is most, if not all countries,
be encouraged to know that God will deal with it.
It does not escape him.
It may seem to take longer than you want.
It may not be resolved in your lifetime,
but our God is not blind to it.
It may seem like no one cares or speaks up about it loudly enough,
but nothing is lost on our God.
When leaders mislead, God can still be trusted.
It's just another reminder of why we can't put our hope in nations or powers,
because only God can rule in complete righteousness.
I'm glad he's miking forever. He's where the joy is.
Miking forever. He's where the joy is.
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Yes, there are two totally different tools,
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To find out more about D-group and the study we're about
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We did a fun interview where they put my Bible knowledge to the test, and also we got
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If you want to find out, text Crush to 91979 to watch the video or click the link in the
show notes.
to watch the video, or click the link in the show notes.