Nahum Chapter 3

0
September 18, 2025

Bible Challenge & Quiz

Read a New Bible & Commentary. Take the Quiz.
F.O.G Jr. selected first to celebrate launch. Learn more.

🌟 The Most Amazing City Ever! 🌟

🌊 The River of Life

The angel showed John something incredible – a beautiful river that sparkled like diamonds! This wasn’t ordinary water, but the river of lifea that flowed right from God’s throne and Jesus the Lamb’s throne. Imagine the clearest, most beautiful water you’ve ever seen, but even more amazing than that!

🌳 The Amazing Tree of Life

Right in the middle of the golden street, and on both sides of this special river, grew the most wonderful tree ever – the tree of life!b This tree was so amazing that it grew twelve different kinds of delicious fruit, and it made new fruit every single month! And get this – the leaves on this tree could heal people from every nation on earth. How cool is that?

✨ No More Bad Things

In this perfect city, there will never be anything bad or scary ever again! God and Jesus will live right there with everyone, and all of God’s people will get to serve Him and be close to Him. The most amazing part? Everyone will get to see God’s facec – something that’s never happened before because God is so holy and perfect! And God will write His special name right on everyone’s forehead, showing they belong to Him.

☀️ Never Dark Again

There won’t be any nighttime in this city, and nobody will need flashlights or even the sun, because God Himself will be their light! It will be bright and beautiful all the time. And all of God’s people will get to be kings and queens who rule forever and ever with Jesus!

📖 God’s Promise is True

The angel told John something very important: “Everything you’ve heard is completely true! God, who gives messages to His prophets, sent His angel to show His servants what’s going to happen very soon.”
Then Jesus Himself spoke to John: “Look, I’m coming back soon! Anyone who remembers and follows what’s written in this book will be so blessed and happy!”

🙏 Don’t Worship Angels

John was so amazed by everything he saw that he fell down to worship the angel! But the angel quickly stopped him and said, “Don’t worship me! I’m just a servant like you and all the prophets and everyone who obeys God’s word. Only worship God!”

📚 Share This Message

The angel told John not to keep this message secret, but to share it with everyone because Jesus is coming back soon! He explained that people who want to keep doing wrong things will keep doing them, but people who want to do right things will keep doing them too. Everyone gets to choose!

🎁 Jesus is Coming with Rewards

Jesus said, “Look, I’m coming soon, and I’m bringing rewards with Me! I’ll give each person exactly what they deserve for how they lived. I am the Alpha and Omegad – the very first and the very last, the beginning and the end of everything!”

🚪 Who Gets to Enter

“The people who have washed their clothes cleane will be so blessed! They’ll get to eat from the tree of life and walk right through the gates into My beautiful city. But people who choose to keep doing very bad things – like hurting others, lying, and worshiping fake gods – will have to stay outside.”

⭐ Jesus, the Bright Morning Star

“I, Jesus, sent My angel to tell all the churches this amazing news! I am both the Root and the Child of King Davidf, and I am the bright Morning Star that shines in the darkness!”

💒 Come to Jesus

God’s Spirit and the bride (that’s all of God’s people together!) both say, “Come!” And everyone who hears this should say, “Come!” If you’re thirsty for God, come and drink! Anyone who wants to can have the free gift of life-giving water!

⚠️ Don’t Change God’s Words

John gave everyone a very serious warning: Don’t add anything to God’s words in this book, and don’t take anything away from them either! God’s words are perfect just the way they are, and changing them would bring terrible trouble.

🎉 Jesus is Coming Soon!

Jesus promised one more time: “Yes, I am coming soon!”
And John replied, “Amen! Come, Lord Jesus! Please come quickly!”
May the grace and love of the Lord Jesus be with all of God’s people. Amen!

📝 Kid-Friendly Footnotes

  • aRiver of life: This is special water that gives eternal life! It’s like the most refreshing drink ever, but it makes you live forever with God.
  • bTree of life: This is the same tree that was in the Garden of Eden with Adam and Eve. Now it’s back in God’s perfect city, and everyone who loves Jesus gets to eat from it!
  • cSee God’s face: Right now, God is so holy and perfect that people can’t look at Him directly. But in heaven, everyone who loves Jesus will get to see God face to face – like the best hug ever!
  • dAlpha and Omega: These are the first and last letters of the Greek alphabet (like A and Z in English). Jesus is saying He’s the beginning and end of everything!
  • eWashed their clothes clean: This means people who asked Jesus to forgive their sins. Jesus makes our hearts clean like washing dirty clothes!
  • fRoot and Child of King David: Jesus is both God (so He’s greater than King David) and human (so He’s from David’s family). This shows Jesus is the special King God promised to send!
  • 1
    This chapter is currently being worked on.
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • 11
  • 12
  • 13
  • 14
  • 15
  • 16
  • 17
  • 18
  • 19

Footnotes:

  • 1
    Woe to the bloody city! She’s completely full of deceptive plunder, [Her] prey never departs.
  • 2
    The noise of a whip, the noise of a rattling wheel, Galloping horses, and dancing chariots.
  • 3
    Horsemen mounting, Swords aflame, and lightning spears, Many pierced, a mass of corpses, there is no end to the dead bodies, They stumble over their dead bodies!
  • 4
    [All] because of the amount of prostitution from the desirable prostitute, The favourable one, mistress of sorceries, Who sells nations by her prostitution, Families by her sorceries.
  • 5
    “Look! I am against you,” declares יהוה (Yahweh) Tzva’ot, I will uncover your skirts over your face, And reveal your nudity to the nations, The kingdoms, your disgrace.
  • 6
    I will throw on you horrible filth, Make you foolish, and set you up as a spectacle.
  • 7
    It will come to pass that all who see you, Will flee from you, and say, “Ninveh is devastated, who will mourn for her?” Where will I find comforters for you?
  • 8
    Are you better than No-Amon, Dwelling by the waters of the Nile, with water surrounding her, Whose defensive wall was the sea, Whose city wall was from the sea?
  • 9
    Ethiopia was her strength, and Egypt without end, Put and Luvim were among your helpers.
  • 10
    Yet she became an exile, she went into captivity, Her infants were dashed to pieces at the head of every street, They threw lots for her honourable men, All her great men were chained with shackles.
  • 11
    You too will become drunk, You will be hidden shut, you will also seek refuge from the enemy.
  • 12
    All your fortifications are fig trees with first fruits, When shaken they fall into the eater’s mouth.
  • 13
    Look! Your people are [like] women in your midst, The gates of your land are completely open to your enemies, Fire consumes your gate bars.
  • 14
    Draw water for yourself for the siege, Strengthen your fortifications! Go into the mud pit and trample on the clay, Make the brick mold strong.
  • 15
    There fire will consume you, the sword will cut you down, It will consume you like the locust! Multiply yourselves like the locust, Multiply yourselves like the swarming locust.
  • 16
    You increased your traders more than the stars of the skies. The locust strips, and flies away.
  • 17
    Your officials are like a swarming locust, Your generals are like hordes of grasshoppers, Encamping in the stone walls on a cold day, The sun rises, they flee, and their place where they were is unknown.
  • 18
    Your shepherds are sleeping, King of Ashur, Your nobles are lying down, Your people are scattered on the mountains, There is no one gathering them.
  • 19
    There is no relief from your collapse, Your wound is fatal, All who hear of your report, will clap hands over you, For on whom, has your evil not passed over continually?

Footnotes:

  • 1
    Woe to the bloody city! it [is] all full of lies [and] robbery; the prey departeth not;
  • 2
    The noise of a whip, and the noise of the rattling of the wheels, and of the pransing horses, and of the jumping chariots.
  • 3
    The horseman lifteth up both the bright sword and the glittering spear: and [there is] a multitude of slain, and a great number of carcases; and [there is] none end of [their] corpses; they stumble upon their corpses:
  • 4
    Because of the multitude of the whoredoms of the wellfavoured harlot, the mistress of witchcrafts, that selleth nations through her whoredoms, and families through her witchcrafts.
  • 5
    Behold, I [am] against thee, saith the LORD of hosts; and I will discover thy skirts upon thy face, and I will shew the nations thy nakedness, and the kingdoms thy shame.
  • 6
    And I will cast abominable filth upon thee, and make thee vile, and will set thee as a gazingstock.
  • 7
    And it shall come to pass, [that] all they that look upon thee shall flee from thee, and say, Nineveh is laid waste: who will bemoan her? whence shall I seek comforters for thee?
  • 8
    Art thou better than populous No, that was situate among the rivers, [that had] the waters round about it, whose rampart [was] the sea, [and] her wall [was] from the sea?
  • 9
    Ethiopia and Egypt [were] her strength, and [it was] infinite; Put and Lubim were thy helpers.
  • 10
    Yet [was] she carried away, she went into captivity: her young children also were dashed in pieces at the top of all the streets: and they cast lots for her honourable men, and all her great men were bound in chains.
  • 11
    Thou also shalt be drunken: thou shalt be hid, thou also shalt seek strength because of the enemy.
  • 12
    All thy strong holds [shall be like] fig trees with the firstripe figs: if they be shaken, they shall even fall into the mouth of the eater.
  • 13
    Behold, thy people in the midst of thee [are] women: the gates of thy land shall be set wide open unto thine enemies: the fire shall devour thy bars.
  • 14
    Draw thee waters for the siege, fortify thy strong holds: go into clay, and tread the morter, make strong the brickkiln.
  • 15
    There shall the fire devour thee; the sword shall cut thee off, it shall eat thee up like the cankerworm: make thyself many as the cankerworm, make thyself many as the locusts.
  • 16
    Thou hast multiplied thy merchants above the stars of heaven: the cankerworm spoileth, and flieth away.
  • 17
    Thy crowned [are] as the locusts, and thy captains as the great grasshoppers, which camp in the hedges in the cold day, [but] when the sun ariseth they flee away, and their place is not known where they [are].
  • 18
    Thy shepherds slumber, O king of Assyria: thy nobles shall dwell [in the dust]: thy people is scattered upon the mountains, and no man gathereth [them].
  • 19
    [There is] no healing of thy bruise; thy wound is grievous: all that hear the bruit of thee shall clap the hands over thee: for upon whom hath not thy wickedness passed continually?
  • 1
    Woe to the city of blood, full of lies, full of plunder, never without prey.
  • 2
    The crack of the whip, the rumble of the wheel, galloping horse and bounding chariot!
  • 3
    Charging horseman, flashing sword, shining spear; heaps of slain, mounds of corpses, dead bodies without end—they stumble over their dead—
  • 4
    because of the many harlotries of the harlot, the seductive mistress of sorcery, who betrays nations by her prostitution and clans by her witchcraft.
  • 5
    “Behold, I am against you,” declares the LORD of Hosts. “I will lift your skirts over your face. I will show your nakedness to the nations and your shame to the kingdoms.
  • 6
    I will pelt you with filth and treat you with contempt; I will make a spectacle of you.
  • 7
    Then all who see you will recoil from you and say, ‘Nineveh is devastated; who will grieve for her?’ Where can I find comforters for you?”
  • 8
    Are you better than Thebes, stationed by the Nile with water around her, whose rampart was the sea, whose wall was the water?
  • 9
    Cush and Egypt were her boundless strength; Put and Libya were her allies.
  • 10
    Yet she became an exile; she went into captivity. Her infants were dashed to pieces at the head of every street. They cast lots for her dignitaries, and all her nobles were bound in chains.
  • 11
    You too will become drunk; you will go into hiding and seek refuge from the enemy.
  • 12
    All your fortresses are fig trees with the first ripe figs; when shaken, they fall into the mouth of the eater!
  • 13
    Look at your troops—they are like your women! The gates of your land are wide open to your enemies; fire consumes their bars.
  • 14
    Draw your water for the siege; strengthen your fortresses. Work the clay and tread the mortar; repair the brick kiln!
  • 15
    There the fire will devour you; the sword will cut you down and consume you like a young locust. Make yourself many like the young locust; make yourself many like the swarming locust!
  • 16
    You have multiplied your merchants more than the stars of the sky. The young locust strips the land and flies away.
  • 17
    Your guards are like the swarming locust, and your scribes like clouds of locusts that settle on the walls on a cold day. When the sun rises, they fly away, and no one knows where.
  • 18
    O king of Assyria, your shepherds slumber; your officers sleep. Your people are scattered on the mountains with no one to gather them.
  • 19
    There is no healing for your injury; your wound is severe. All who hear the news of you applaud your downfall, for who has not experienced your constant cruelty?

Nahum Chapter 3 Commentary

When God’s Justice Finally Arrives: The Fall of the Unthinkable

What’s Nahum 3 about?

This is the climactic chapter where Nahum delivers God’s final verdict on Nineveh – a city so powerful it seemed untouchable, now facing complete destruction. It’s about divine justice catching up with systemic cruelty, and why sometimes God’s love requires His wrath.

The Full Context

Nahum chapter 3 serves as the dramatic finale to a prophetic book written around 663-612 BCE, likely during the reign of King Josiah of Judah. The prophet Nahum delivers God’s judgment against Nineveh, the capital of the Assyrian Empire – the same empire that had brutalized the northern kingdom of Israel and terrorized Judah for generations. This wasn’t just political commentary; it was a theological statement about a God who sees injustice and won’t ignore it forever. The Assyrians had perfected the art of psychological warfare, skinning prisoners alive, displaying heads on poles, and deporting entire populations to break their spirit.

Within the broader structure of Nahum’s prophecy, chapter 3 follows the pattern of ancient Near Eastern judgment oracles, but with a uniquely Hebrew theological perspective. While chapters 1-2 established God’s character and announced Nineveh’s doom, chapter 3 provides the detailed indictment and sentence. The literary style shifts between vivid battle scenes, direct accusations, and taunting questions that would have resonated powerfully with Judah’s traumatized population. Understanding this requires grasping how unprecedented Nineveh’s fall would have seemed – imagine someone in 1942 confidently predicting the complete collapse of Nazi Germany within three years.

What the Ancient Words Tell Us

The Hebrew of Nahum 3 is brutally vivid, starting with ’ir damim – literally “city of bloods.” This isn’t just about bloodshed; it’s about a city whose very identity is soaked in violence. The plural form suggests not just individual murders but systemic, ongoing bloodletting that has become Nineveh’s defining characteristic.

When Nahum describes the attacking army in verses 2-3, he uses rapid-fire Hebrew that mimics the sound of battle itself. Qol shot (crack of whip), qol ra’ash ophan (rumble of wheels) – you can almost hear the chaos. But here’s what’s fascinating: the Hebrew grammar suddenly shifts in verse 3 to completed action verbs, as if the battle is already over. It’s prophetic perfect tense – speaking of future events as accomplished facts because God has already determined the outcome.

Grammar Geeks

The word keshafim (sorceries) in verse 4 comes from the root meaning “to cut up” or “mutter.” Ancient Mesopotamian magic involved cutting up animals and muttering incantations. Nahum isn’t just calling Nineveh evil – he’s saying they’ve turned statecraft itself into dark magic, manipulating and deceiving nations through their brutal diplomacy.

The most chilling phrase appears in verse 4: ba’alat keshafim – “mistress of sorceries.” This feminine form suggests Nineveh is personified as a seductive sorceress who lures nations into her web before destroying them. The sexual imagery isn’t accidental – it reflects how the Assyrians would forge alliances through political marriages and treaties, only to betray their partners when convenient.

What Would the Original Audience Have Heard?

Picture yourself as a Judean farmer in 625 BCE, listening to these words. Your grandfather might have survived the Assyrian siege of Jerusalem in 701 BCE, when King Sennacherib’s army surrounded the city and seemed poised to destroy it. Your neighbors still tell stories about relatives dragged off to Assyrian captivity, never to return.

When Nahum proclaims Nineveh’s doom, you’re hearing something that sounds almost too good to be true. This is the empire that had seemed invincible for over a century, that had perfected the machinery of terror and oppression. Their psychological warfare was legendary – they would pile enemy heads into pyramids outside conquered cities, not just to intimidate but to break the human spirit.

The comparison to Thebes in verses 8-10 would have hit like a thunderbolt. Thebes (No-Amon in Hebrew) was Egypt’s ancient capital, considered one of the world’s most magnificent cities. When the Assyrians sacked it in 663 BCE, the shockwaves rippled throughout the ancient world. It was like watching Rome fall – unthinkable until it happened.

Did You Know?

Archaeological evidence from Nineveh shows that the city’s walls were 60 feet high and wide enough for three chariots to drive side by side. The city was protected by the Tigris River and seemed impregnable. Yet Nahum confidently predicts its complete destruction – which happened in 612 BCE when a coalition of Babylonians and Medes literally diverted the river to breach the walls.

Wrestling with the Text

Here’s where we need to sit with some uncomfortable questions. Does God really orchestrate the violent destruction of entire cities? The imagery in Nahum 3 is unflinchingly brutal – corpses piling up, people stumbling over bodies, the complete humiliation of a once-proud empire.

Part of our struggle comes from reading this through modern eyes. We live in an era where we’ve (rightly) become suspicious of religious language being used to justify violence. But Nahum isn’t calling for holy war or encouraging Judah to take up arms. Instead, he’s proclaiming that God Himself will act as judge and executioner against systematic cruelty.

The key insight is in verse 19: “Everyone who hears the news about you claps his hands at your fall, for who has not felt your endless cruelty?” This isn’t arbitrary divine wrath – it’s the inevitable consequence of Assyria’s choices catching up with them. They had sown violence on an international scale and were about to reap the whirlwind.

But there’s something else here that’s easy to miss. Nahum doesn’t celebrate the death of Assyrian civilians. The focus is on the fall of a system, the collapse of an empire that had built itself on oppression. It’s justice, not revenge – and there’s a crucial difference.

“Sometimes God’s love for the oppressed requires His wrath against the oppressor – not because He enjoys destruction, but because He refuses to let injustice have the final word.”

How This Changes Everything

Understanding Nahum 3 reshapes how we think about divine justice in our own context. This isn’t an angry God throwing a tantrum – it’s a righteous judge finally calling court to session after decades of documented crimes against humanity.

For the original audience, this prophecy would have provided profound hope. They’d lived under the shadow of Assyrian terror for generations, wondering if God really saw their suffering or cared about justice. Nahum’s message was revolutionary: no empire is too big to fall, no system of oppression too entrenched to topple, when it finally faces divine judgment.

But here’s what makes this relevant today: the same God who saw Assyrian brutality sees modern injustice. The same divine character that refused to let Nineveh’s cruelty go unpunished is still at work in our world. This doesn’t mean we should pray for our enemies’ destruction, but it does mean we can trust that God takes human suffering seriously.

Wait, That’s Strange…

Notice that Nahum never calls for repentance in chapter 3, unlike most prophetic books. Jonah went to Nineveh calling for repentance and got it. But that was 150 years earlier. Nahum suggests there comes a point where the opportunity for repentance has passed – not because God doesn’t want it, but because a society can become so hardened that change is no longer possible.

The chapter also reveals something profound about how God works in history. He doesn’t always intervene immediately, but His justice is never absent – it’s building toward a moment of reckoning. The wheels of divine justice grind slowly, but they grind exceedingly fine.

Key Takeaway

When human systems become so corrupt that they exist solely to perpetuate suffering, God’s love for the oppressed will ultimately triumph over the power of the oppressor – not through human vengeance, but through divine justice that makes all things right.

Further Reading

Internal Links:

External Scholarly Resources:

Tags

Nahum 3, Nahum 1:7, Nahum 2:13, Divine Justice, God’s Wrath, Assyrian Empire, Nineveh, Thebes, Prophetic Literature, Ancient Near East, Oppression, Judgment, Cruelty, Violence, Prophecy, Old Testament

Subscribe
Notify of
0 Entries
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Coffee mug svgrepo com


Coffee mug svgrepo com
Have a Coffee with Jesus
Read the New F.O.G Bibles
Get Challenges Quicker
0
Add/remove bookmark to personalize your Bible study.