Though a part of what is here delivered belongs to the Israelites and
to the Jews, he yet calls his Book by what it principally contains; he
calls its _the burden of Nineveh _Of this word משא, _mesha, _we
have spoken elsewhere. Thus the Prophets call their prediction,
whenever they denounce any grie... [ Continue Reading ]
Nahum begins with the nature of God, that what he afterwards subjoins
respecting the destruction of Nineveh might be more weighty, and
produce a greater impression on the hearers. The preface is general,
but the Prophet afterwards applies it to a special purpose. If he had
only spoken of what God is... [ Continue Reading ]
The Prophet goes on with the same subject; and still longer is the
preface respecting the nature of God, which however is to be applied,
as I have said, to the special objects which hereafter he will state.
He says here that God is _slow to wrath _Though this saying is taken
also from Moses yet the... [ Continue Reading ]
Nahum continues his discourse, — that God, in giving proof of his
displeasure, would disturb the sea or make it dry. There may be here
an allusion to the history, described by Moses; for the Prophets, in
promising God’s assistance to his people, often remind them how God
in a miraculous manner broug... [ Continue Reading ]
Nahum continues still on the same subject, — that when God ascended
his tribunal and appeared as the Judge of the world, he would not only
shake all the elements, but would also constrain them to change their
nature. For what can be less consonant to nature than for mountains to
tremble, and for hil... [ Continue Reading ]
The Prophet shows here why he gave in the part noticed in the last
lecture, such an awful description of God; it was that men might know,
that when they shall come before his tribunal, no one will be able to
stand unless supported by his favor. Of the Prophet’s main object we
have sufficiently spoke... [ Continue Reading ]
The Prophet expresses more clearly here what we referred to in our
last lecture, — that God is hard and severe toward refractory men,
and that he is merciful and kind to the teachable and the obedient,
— not that God changes his nature, or that like Proteus he puts on
various forms; but because he t... [ Continue Reading ]
The Prophet goes on with the same subject, — that God can easily
preserve his people, for he is armed with power sufficient to overcome
the whole world. But the Prophet now includes the two things which
have been mentioned: Having spoken in general of God’s wrath, and of
his goodness towards the fai... [ Continue Reading ]
Some interpreters so consider this verse also, as though the Prophet
had said, that the calamity of the chosen people would not be a
destruction, as God would observe some moderation and keep within
certain limits. The unbelieving, we know, immediately exult, whenever
the children of God are oppress... [ Continue Reading ]
He goes on with this same subject, — that Gods when he pleases to
exercise his power, can, with no difficulty, consume his enemies: for
the similitude, which is here added, means this, — that nothing is
safe from God’s vengeance; for by perplexed thorns he understands
things difficult to be handled.... [ Continue Reading ]
The Prophet now shows why God was so exceedingly displeased with the
Assyrians, and that was, because he would, as a protector of his
Church, defend the distressed against those who unjustly oppressed
them. The Prophet then designed here to give the Jews a firm hope, so
that they might know that God... [ Continue Reading ]
The Prophet pursues here the same subject; but expresses more clearly
what might have been doubtful, — that whatever strength there might
be in the Assyrians, it could not resist the coming of God’s
vengeance. For _thus saith Jehovah, Though they be quiet and also
strong, _etc. I cannot now finish t... [ Continue Reading ]
He confirms what the former verse contains, — that God would now
cease from his rigor; for he says, that the deliverance of this chosen
people was nigh, when God would break down and reduce to nothing the
tyranny of that empire. This verse clearly shows, that a clause in the
preceding verse ought no... [ Continue Reading ]
Nahum explains more clearly, and without a figure, what he had
previously said of darkness, — that the kingdom of Nineveh would be
so overturned, that it could never recruit its strength and return
again to its pristine state. He indeed addresses the king himself, but
under his person he includes no... [ Continue Reading ]
The Prophet again teaches us, that whatever he prophesied respecting
the destruction of the city Nineveh, was for this end, — that God,
by this remarkable evidence, might show that he had a care for his
people, and that he was not unmindful of the covenant he had made with
the children of Abraham. T... [ Continue Reading ]