Nahum: The God Who Judges, The God Who Saves
There are parts of the Bible we rarely visit, and Nahum is often one of them. Yet this short prophecy is very relevant for our generation. It reminds us that God is not only the Saviour who delights in mercy—as Jonah discovered—but also the Judge who acts in righteousness, as Nahum boldly announced.
Jonah's ministry resulted in the repentance of Nineveh. Nahum's ministry, about a century later, announced the judgment of God upon the same people. One hundred (or perhaps 150) years separate these two books. Still, the lesson is timeless: when you forget what God has done for you, you set yourself up for trouble, i.e. God's judgment.
1. The Core Message of Nahum
G. Campbell Morgan summarised Nahum's message like this:
"The core of the predictive message of Nahum was the utter destruction of a great city and a great people by the will and act of God."
R. K. Harrison adds: "In this small prophecy of doom, the author demonstrated… that the God of the nation whom the Assyrians had despised was in fact the artificer and controller of all human destiny."
This is not merely history. It is a reality for us in our current world. It is gospel truth.
The New Testament affirms the same truth:
• God rules over nations — "He has fixed a day on which he will judge the world in righteousness" (Acts 17:31).
• God's justice is perfect — "Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right" (Genesis 18:25, echoed in the NT principle of divine justice).
Nahum reminds us that God is not passive. He acts, He intervenes, and He judges.