Minor Prophets
Minor Prophets
Minor Prophets
Introduction
Milt Langston
Southgate church of Christ
INTRODUCTION TO THE MINOR PROPHETS
•A. FIVE CLASSES OF SPEAKERS IN THE OLD TESTAMENT (Homer Hailey) (Ezek. 7:26;
Jer. 18:18).
•1. The word prophet comes from the Hebrew word Nabi = a spokesman; an inspired
person.
•2. The definition of the word has come to mean one who under the influence of the Holy
Spirit speaks the word of God.
•3. Scripture helps us understand the meaning of the word... READ EXODUS
4:16... "Moreover, he shall speak for you to the people; and he will be as a mouth for you and
you will be as God to him." READ ALSO EXODUS 7:1... "Then the LORD said to Moses,
"See, I make you as God to Pharaoh, and your brother Aaron shall be your prophet."
•4. Therefore we can conclude that a prophet is as a mouth to the one in who's authority he
speaks.
•5. There were prophets who spoke who have not written books. These are refered to a
"pre-literary" prophets.
•b. Nathan who rebuked David (2 Sam 12:1ff), who prophesied of the Messiah (2 Sam
7:1-17) and who anointed Solomon (1 Kings 1).
•c. Elijah, Elisha, "sons of the prophets," Micaiah, who stood against the false prophet
Zedekiah (1 Kings 22:1-36)....
•d. And many others....
•6. Then there are the literary prophets like Isaiah - Malachi.
•a. Minor prophets are not lesser prophets.... their books are just shorter than the four
major prophets' books.
•b. There were even prophets to other countries like Balaam.
•7. In the New Testament there were prophets who spoke the word of God such as the
apostles and men like James, Mark or Luke.
•C. FALSE PROPHETS.
•1. Along with the true there arose also false prophets (see Deut. 18:20-22; Jer. 28).
•a. These flourished from a very early period in the nation's history to the time of the
close of the Old Testament writings.
•b. The false prophets fall into two general classes, mercenary and political; some
prophesied for money, others for political favor (see Mic. 3:5, 11).
•c. Often-times the false prophets were nationalistic ---that is, they defended the
national practices and rulers through ignorance; but whether false through ignorance or
self-will, they and their messages were no less severely denounced by the true prophets.
•2. Albert C. Knudson has well said: "An ignorant conscientiousness may be quite as
dangerous to a community as deliberate wickedness."
•3. When opposed by false prophets, the true prophets rise to their greatest heights of zeal
and fearlessness.
•E. THE POLICICAL BACKGROUND FROM THE TIME OF ELISHA TO THE TIME OF
AMOS. Shortly after the death of Solomon (932131 B.C.), the empire built by David divided into
two kingdoms, Judah and Israel. The years that followed were filled with bitterness, war, and the
introduction of idolatry. Solomon had opened the door for idolatry to enter the national life by
building altars for the gods of his foreign wives (I Kings 11:4-8; Neh. 13:26). After his death idolatry
eventually became more and more a part of the religious life of the people of Judah. In the
northern kingdom Jeroboam introduced calf worship, making it the national religion of Israel (I
Kings 12:25-33). Added to this system of perversion of Jehovah worship, Ahab and Jezebel
introduced pure idolatry into Israel in the form of Baal worship. This departure from Jehovah by
both nations led to all manner of political, social, and moral corruption. In His intense desire to
turn the people back to Himself, Jehovah raised up prophets with the special mission of pointing
out to the people the contrast between their sins and His own holiness and the righteousness of
His law. Although the prophetic era seems to have begun with Samuel (Acts 3:24), Elijah and
Elisha stand out as the beginning of Jehovah's accelerated use of prophets in His effort to save
His people from complete apostasy. Homer Hailey, A Commentary on The Minor Prophets, pp24-
25. (2 Kings 8:1-15:7 and 2 Chronicles 21-26)
•1. Israel during this time....
•a. Jehu, 841-814/13 B.C. (2 Kings 9:1-10:28; Athaliah and Joash, rulers in Judah).
•1) Jehu was anointed at RamothCilcad by a son of the prophets who was sent by
Elisha for this purpose (9:1-10).
•a) The house of Ahab was smitten and Jezebel was slain by Jehu as had heen
predicted by Elijah (9:11.36).
•b) Ahab's sevcntv sons were subsequently slain (10:1-17); the priests and
worshipers of Baal were also put to death (10:18-28).
•2) The sin of Jehu was his worship of the calves set up by Jeroboam.
•b. Jehoahaz, 814/13-798 B.C. (II Kings 13:1-9; twenty third year of Joash, king of
Judah).
•1) Jehovah began to deliver Israel into the hand of Syria; Jehoahaz called for help
from Jehovah, who hearkened to him because of His pity for Israel.
•2) However, Jehoahaz and Israel "departed not from the sins of the house of
Jeroboam," leading ultimately to the downfall of the nation.
•1) Jehoash came to Elisha as he lay upon his deathbed and was told to take arrows
and shoot them from an open window.
•a) The prophet made no explanation except that the arrows were Jehovah's
arrows of victory over Syria's arrow.
•2) He was then told to take arrows and smite upon the ground; he did this three
times.
•a) The prophet was displeased because he had smitten the ground no more
than three times, and he announced that there would be only three victories over
the Syrians.
•b) After the death of Elisha, Jehoash smote Syria three times, accordmg to the
prophecy of Elisha.
•d. Jerohoam II, 793-753 B.C. (overlapping reign, 793/92-782/81 B.C.; 2 Kings 14:23-
29; Amaziab, king of J udah).
•1) Jeroboam II restored the borders of Israel to the largest extent since the reign of
Solomon.
•3) Great prosperity was enjoyed under his leadership; but prosperity brought with it
greed, corruption, and vices of many kinds.
•4) Toward the close of Jeroboam's reign, Amos began to prophesy.
•a. Jehoram, 853-841 B.C., co-regent with Jehoshaphat, 853-848 B.C.; his independent
reign, 848-841 B.C. (2 Kings 8:16-24; 2 Chron. 21).
•1) As could be expected, Jehoram, son of Jehoshaphat and husband of Athaliah,
the daughter of Ahab, was a wicked king.
•a) In his days Edom revolted.
•b) Jehoram made high places of idolatrous worship which led the people further
into sin; for this he was rebuked by a letter from Elijah (2 Chron. 21:11-15).
•c) The Philistines, Arabians, and Ethiopians were stirred up against him.
•d) According to the word of the prophet, he died of a terrible bowel disease.
•2) His character and the nature of his reign had been so revolting that the people
were glad when he died.
•b. Ahaziah, 841 B.C. (II Kings 8:25-29; 11 Chron. 22:1-9). Ahaziah, the son of Jehoram
and Athaliah, walked in the way of Ahab, the idolatrous king of Israel. Death came within a
year and cut short his reign.
•c. Athaliah, 841-835 B.C. (2 Kings 11; 2 Chron. 22:10-23:21). Athaliah, the daughter
of Ahab and usurper of the throne, slew all the royal seed except Joash.
•1) He was rescued from the hands of Athaliah by a daughter of Jehoram and
daughter of Ahaziah, the infant Joash escaped.
•2) After reigning six years, Atbaliab was slain by the people in an insurrection led by
Jehoiada the priest.
•2) He did that which was right while Jehoiada the priest lived, but upon the death of
Jehoiada he became evil.
•3) He forsook Jehovah, restored the worship of the Asherim, and slew Zechariah,
the son of Jehojada.
•4) During his reign the Syrians took awav the treasures of the house of God.
•1) It is said that this king did right, but not with a perfect heart.
•2) He put down Edom and brought their gods to Jerusalem ''and set them up to be
his gods, and bowed down himself before them" (2 Chron. 25:14, 15).
•a) Joash broke clown the walls of Jerusalem and took the gold, silver, and other
valuables to Samaria.
•b) Amaziah reigned fifteen years after that.
•2) He was sixteen years old when he began to reign, and he reigned for fifty-one
years.
•3) He is named as one of the good kings of Judah; he did that which was right.
•a) He put down the enemies of Judah, promoted husbandry, and brought great
prosperity to the people.
•b) But in the midst of success he became proud and offered incense to Jehovah
(a responsibility of the priests only); for this he was smitten with leprosy and lived a
leper until the end of his life.
•1. 721 B.C. The destruction of Samaria and Israel carried into captivity by Assyria.
•2. 606 B.C. The first captives taken into captivity from Judah.
INTRODUCTION:
•A. GENERAL:
•1. The first of "the Minor Prophets" we shall consider is Obadiah, whose book is the
shortest of all books in the Old Testament.
•2. The book of Obadiah is not well known but it contains some powerful lessons for our
day.
•a. It is the only one-chapter book in the Old Testament and contains only 21 verses.
•b. The occasion of the book is some recent sack of Jerusalem by the Philistines and
Arabians in which Edom had aided and abetted.
•1) She had encouraged Judah's foes, enjoyed Judah's fall, and enslaved Judah's
fugitives.
•2) The book warns Edom of her own coming destruction for her sins against her
brother.
•B. NAME:
•1. His name means "Servant of Yahweh (Jehovah)," and this name was quite common...
•2. Thirteen different people are called by this name in the Old Testament.
•3. One Jewish tradition identifies him as the one who was Ahab's steward....
•a. Who hid 100 prophets from Jezebel, King Ahab's wife (1 Kings 18:3-4).
•b. Who feared the Lord from his youth (1 Kings 18:12).
•a. The Obadiah sent by Jehoshaphat to teach the law in Judah (2 Chron. 17:70.
•b. The Obadiah who was one of the overseers in repairing the temple under Josiah's
reign as king of Judah (2 Chron. 34:12).
•2. The prophet refers to an attack on Jerusalem; commentators offer these two
possibilities:
•a. The days of Jehoram (848-844 B.C.), when Philistines and Arabians attacked the
city - 2 Chr 21:8-10,16-17
•b. The destruction of Jerusalem by the Babylonians (586 B.C.)
•3. The internal evidence appears to support the early date of 845 B.C. (Keil, Hailey)
•b. There is no mention of the destruction of the temple, the deportation to Babylon, or
the remnant who went to Egypt.
•4. We will accept the early date, that it was around 845 B.C. for the following reasons...
•5. There are six characteristics of 586 B.C. (The Babylonian Destruction) not found in
Obadiah....
•a. The razing of the walls (2 Kings 25:10; Jeremiah 52:14; Nehemiah 2:15-17).
•b. The burning of the Royal Palace (2 Kings 25:9; Jeremiah 52:13).
•d. The capture and deportation of the King to Babylon (2 Kings 25:7).
•e. The deportation to Babylon of the entire nation with but few exceptions (2 Kings
25:11-12).
•f. The emigration of the Jews to Egypt (2 Kings 25:26; Jeremiah 41:16; 43:22).
•g. Edom is condemned for her pride and her cruelty. Her crimes are described in
progressive stages:
•4) Edom set up road blocks to prevent the citizens from escaping v.14 and sold
them into slavery.
•h. She is condemned for her cruelty and unbrotherliness....
•5) cruelty of the hands, v.13, laid hands on Judah's substance and cut off escape.
•a. When Seir, the Edomite counterpart of Zion, will be cast down.
•b. The rescued of Israel will be in Zion, for in it the redeemed shall be found.
•3. From this we get our title for this lesson: "The Pride and Judgment of Edom."
•2. There was sibling rivalry between Edom and Israel, found first in Esau and Jacob.
•3. While Jacob and Esau eventually reconciled (Gen 32-33), their descendants were often
at odds with one another.
•a. In the Exodus, Edom refused Israel passage through their land - Num 20:14-21.
•4. Located south of the Dead Sea, they built their cities in the cliffs and thought themselves
impregnable.
•a. The Edomites were a rough and tough group of mountain people.
•b. They lived in the desert-mountain region of Mt. Seir, reaching from south of the Dead
Sea to the Gulf of Arabah.
•1) They carved great protective fortresses in the rock mountains and canyons.
•2) One of their principle cities was Sela (Hebrew), or Petra (Greek), which simply
meant "The Rock" and was carved out of the side of the mountains.
•3) The rose-red, orange and yellow mountain wall made Petra a colorful stronghold.
•a. The Edomites were overcome by the Nabataeans, forced to settle south of Judah.
•b. Around 100 B.C., they were conquered by John Hyrcanus of the Maccabees.
•1) Hyrcanus forced many of them to be circumcised and accept the Law.
•2) As such, many became nominal Jewish proselytes (Herod the Great was one
such proselyte).
•c. By 100 A.D., Edom as a race and nation had become lost to history.
[With this background, let's now read through the prophecy of Obadiah, with the aid of the following...]
•A. The decree has gone forth to the nations, "The vision of Obadiah. ‘Thus says the Lord GOD
concerning Edom-- We have heard a report from the LORD, And an envoy has been sent among
the nations saying, ‘Arise and let us go against her for battle....'" (v.1).
•1. What does this say to us about world affairs and wars and judgments by reason of
them?
•2. Was the war in Vietnam ordered by God? What do you suppose it accomplished for
God?
•B. Deceived by pride in her location, Edom will be brought down the text declares, "Behold, I
will make you small among the nations; You are greatly despised. The arrogance of your heart
has deceived you, You who live in the clefts of the rock, In the loftiness of your dwelling place,
Who say in your heart, ‘Who will bring me down to earth?' Though you build high like the eagle,
Though you set your nest among the stars, From there I will bring you down,' declares the
LORD" (vs.2-4).
•1. Destruction will be complete, "If thieves came to you, If robbers by night-- O how you will
be ruined!-- Would they not steal only until they had enough? If grape gatherers came to you,
Would they not leave some gleanings? O how Esau will be ransacked, And his hidden
treasures searched out!" (vs.5-6).
•2. Edom will be betrayed by her allies, "All the men allied with you Will send you forth to the
border, And the men at peace with you Will deceive you and overpower you. They who eat
your bread Will set an ambush for you. (There is no understanding in him.)" (v.7).
•3. Not even wisdom and might can save them because God is against them! "'Will I not on
that day,' declares the LORD, ‘Destroy wise men from Edom And understanding from the
mountain of Esau? Then your mighty men will be dismayed, O Teman, So that everyone may
be cut off from the mountain of Esau by slaughter.'" (8-9)
•A. Notice carefully that Edom is being judged for her violence and unbrotherly conduct toward
Jacob. "Because of violence to your brother Jacob, You will be covered with shame, And you will
be cut off forever. On the day that you stood aloof, On the day that strangers carried off his
wealth, And foreigners entered his gate And cast lots for Jerusalem-- You too were as one of
them" (vs.10-11).
•1. Wow! There are lessons here for the people of our day....
•b. I said nothing when they came and took away the Jews....
•3. Today in America political correctness demands and even pressures us to stand aside
saying nothing about homosexuals...tomorrow will it be petafelia...
•B. A rebuke against their conduct, "Do not gloat over your brother's day, The day of his
misfortune. And do not rejoice over the sons of Judah In the day of their destruction; Yes, do not
boast In the day of their distress. Do not enter the gate of My people In the day of their
disaster. Yes, you, do not gloat over their calamity In the day of their disaster. And do not loot their
wealth In the day of their disaster. Do not stand at the fork of the road To cut down their fugitives;
And do not imprison their survivors In the day of their distress" (vs.12-14).
•C. Therefore the "Day of the Lord" for them will mean receiving the same sort of treatment! "For
the day of the LORD draws near on all the nations. As you have done, it will be done to you. Your
dealings will return on your own head. Because just as you drank on My holy mountain, All the
nations will drink continually. They will drink and swallow And become as if they had
never existed" (vs.15-16).
•A. Deliverance and holiness will be found on Mt. Zion, not Mt. Seir (the prominent mountain in
Edom with its beautiful orange red glow)! "But on Mount Zion there will be those who escape. And
it will be holy." (v.17a).
•b. The saved assembled upon that mountain....Israel sinned because they did not come
before the Lord at Zion!
•2. The church comes from the Greek word ekklesia = the called out assembly.
•a. God still sits on His throne in the new Jerusalem on Mt. Zion (READ HEB. 12:22-
24).
•b. We come to Him....He is not on the high places, but on Zion! God attracts the saved
like light attracts moths. We assemble!
•B. The house of Jacob shall consume the house of Esau, "And the house of Jacob will possess
their possessions. Then the house of Jacob will be a fire And the house of Joseph a flame; But
the house of Esau will be as stubble. And they will set them on fire and consume them, So that
there will be no survivor of the house of Esau,' For the LORD has spoken" (vs.17b-18).
•1. Again, Judah's people were not any better than Edom's.
•2. It was the fact that Jehovah sat on Zion, not Seir.
•3. That's why our strength is our submission to the Lord today. If He is our Lord....we will
overcome, but if we ignore His lordship, we will fail.
•C. The children of Israel will possess Edom and surrounding nations is the prophecy of Obadiah
in verses 19-20,"Then those of the Negev will possess the mountain of Esau, And those of the
Shephelah the Philistine plain; Also, possess the territory of Ephraim and the territory of Samaria,
And Benjamin will possess Gilead. And the exiles of this host of the sons of Israel, Who are
among the Canaanites as far as Zarephath, And the exiles of Jerusalem who are in Sepharad Will
possess the cities of the Negev" (vs.19-20).
•D. The ultimate rule will be that of the Lord's, "The deliverers will ascend Mount Zion To judge
the mountain of Esau, And the kingdom will be the LORD'S" (v.21).
[With this brief survey of Obadiah's "vision" concerning Edom (1), here are some thoughts regarding...]
•1. Edom's destruction began with the Babylonian invasion under Nebuchadnezzar (ca. 600
B.C.).
•2. It continued into the fourth century B.C. with the invasion of the Arabs known as the
Nabataeans, forcing them to a region south of Judah.
•3. In the second century B.C., the Maccabees brought them under subjection when Judas
Maccabeus slew twenty thousand of them.
•4. John Hyrcanus (134-104 B.C.) forced the remnant to accept circumcision and the Law.
•B. ITS ULTIMATE FULFILLMENT...
•1. May likely have been with the coming of the Messiah (Jesus Christ)!
•2. For with His coming, and the establishment of the spiritual kingdom beginning in
Jerusalem...
•a. Deliverance and holiness did come from Mt. Zion (i.e. Jerusalem)! - Lk 24:47.
•b. The kingdom (rule) is the Lord's! - cf. Lk 1:31-34; Mt 28:18; 1 Pe 3:22; Re 1:5.
•c. The house of Jacob (i.e., the true spiritual Israel) did possess Edom as the Gentiles
among them became Christians! --- cf. Ro 11:13-18 (where faithful Gentiles are spoken as
being grafted into the stock of Israel).
•3. As support for this interpretation, consider:
•1) Which foretells how "A Star shall come out of Jacob, A Scepter shall rise out of
Israel" (the Messiah?)
•a) 2) And how Edom will be come a possession
•2) Therefore the fulfillment is figurative, not literal, as Gentiles become Christians.
CONCLUSION:
•A. With this brief look at "The Book Of Obadiah", we have seen that...
•1. The prophets were not limited in their prophecies to just the nation of Israel.
•2. God held the heathen nations accountable for their actions.
•3. While it was written primarily to comfort the Israelites in Obadiah's day, there are lessons
to be gleaned for us as well...
•4. The message of hope may have had its ultimate fulfillment in what we can enjoy
ourselves today, in the person and work of Jesus!
•B. In verse 15, we find the expression "the day of the Lord"...
•1. An expression often used by the prophets referring to God's judgment upon the nations.
•2. The particular "day of the Lord" of which Obadiah wrote was "near", and was fulfilled with
the destruction of Edom!
•a. Of which God's judgments upon the nations were only a shadow, a type....
•b. Peter writes of that day, in which the whole world will be judged - "But by His word
the present heavens and earth are being reserved for fire, kept for the day of judgment and
destruction of ungodly men. But do not let this one fact escape your notice, beloved, that
with the Lord one day is like a thousand years, and a thousand years like one day. The
Lord is not slow about His promise, as some count slowness, but is patient toward you, not
wishing for any to perish but for all to come to repentance. But the day of the Lord will
come like a thief, in which the heavens will pass away with a roar and the elements will be
destroyed with intense heat, and the earth and its works will be burned up. Since all these
things are to be destroyed in this way, what sort of people ought you to be in holy conduct
and godliness, looking for and hastening the coming of the day of God, because of which
the heavens will be destroyed by burning, and the elements will melt with intense heat! But
according to His promise we are looking for new heavens and a new earth, in which
righteousness dwells" (2 Pe 3:7-13).
•C. Obadiah said to the Edomites in verse 3, "The pride of your heart has deceived
you!" (NIV). Are we ready for that "day of the Lord"? Or do we in our arrogance take pride in our
wisdom, might, or position in life? If so, Obadiah was also speaking to us....
•1. How much better to humbly recognize that... "...on Mount Zion will be deliverance; it will
be holy" (Obadiah 1:17).
•2. Have you come to Mount Zion, and to Jesus the Mediator of the New Covenant?
•2. Just as Edom took pride in their geographical location, allies, wisdom and might.
•3. Such arrogance God will punish - cf. READ Isaiah 13:9-11... "Behold, the day of the
LORD is coming, Cruel, with fury and burning anger, To make the land a desolation; And He
will exterminate its sinners from it. For the stars of heaven and their constellations Will not
flash forth their light; The sun will be dark when it rises And the moon will not shed its
light. Thus I will punish the world for its evil And the wicked for their iniquity; I will also put an
end to the arrogance of the proud And abase the haughtiness of the ruthless."
•1. This was Edom's guilt also.... "Because of violence to your brother Jacob, You will be
covered with shame, And you will be cut off forever" (v.10).
•2. How we treat our brethren affects our relationship with the Lord. Paul says, "For if
someone sees you, who have knowledge, dining in an idol's temple, will not his conscience, if
he is weak, be strengthened to eat things sacrificed to idols? For through your knowledge he
who is weak is ruined, the brother for whose sake Christ died. And so, by sinning against the
brethren and wounding their conscience when it is weak, you sin against Christ" (1 Cor. 8:10-
12).
•b. It is God's desire that we encourage one another to live more holy and reverent lives
for Christ.
•c. It is a grave sin to cause the destruction of another brother's faith....causing him to
be lost again!
•3. Are we careful about our dealings with our brethren?
•C. "DO NOT REJOICE WHEN YOUR ENEMY FALLS..." - Pro 24:17-18.
•1. This Edom did when Judah was plundered.... "Do not gloat over your brother's day, The
day of his misfortune. And do not rejoice over the sons of Judah In the day of their destruction;
Yes, do not boast In the day of their distress" (v.12).
•b. We know this because "Love....does not rejoice in unrighteousness, but rejoices with
the truth" (1 Cor. 13:6), and God is love (1 John 4:8, 16).
•3. Do we sometimes inwardly rejoice when something bad befalls someone we are
opposed to?
•D. IN TIME OF DIVINE JUDGMENT, GOD PROVIDES A MEANS AND PLACE OF ESCAPE
FOR THOSE WHO TURN TO HIM...
•1. Note again verse 17, where Mount Zion would become a place of deliverance: "But on
Mount Zion there will be those who escape, And it will be holy."
•2. Today, spiritual Mount Zion is a place to which we can turn cf. READ He 12:22-24.
•A. THE KINGS OF JUDAH AND ISRAEL AND THE PROPHETS OF THEIR TIME:
•a. The name appears frequently , with at least a dozen men sharing the name in the
O.T.
•b. Described as "the son of Penthuel," there is no reason to associate him with any
other Joel mentioned in the Bible.
•1) We can be reasonably certain that he was a native of Jerusalem. He would have
been aware of all the priestly corruption.
•2) He was a pious, godly, courageous preacher who followed the locust plague to
cry for the nation's repentance.
•3) As a preacher...we must rank Joel highly.
Joel 1:5... "Awake, drunkards, and weep; And wail, all you wine drinkers, On account of the sweet wine That is
cut off from your mouth."
Joel 2:2... "A day of darkness and gloom, A day of clouds and thick darkness. As the dawn is spread over the
mountains, So there is a great and mighty people; There has never been anything like it, Nor will there be again
after it To the years of many generations."
Joel 2:3... "A fire consumes before them And behind them a flame burns. The land is like the garden of Eden before
them But a desolate wilderness behind them, And nothing at all escapes them."
Joel 2:10... "Before them the earth quakes, The heavens tremble, The sun and the moon grow dark And the stars
lose their brightness."
Joel 2:32... "And it will come about that whoever calls on the name of the LORD Will be delivered; For on Mount
Zion and in Jerusalem There will be those who escape, As the LORD has said, Even among the survivors whom the
LORD calls."
Joel 3:10... "Beat your plowshares into swords And your pruning hooks into spears; Let the weak say, ‘I am a
mighty man.'"
Joel 3:16... "The LORD roars from Zion And utters His voice from Jerusalem, And the heavens and the earth
tremble. But the LORD is a refuge for His people And a stronghold to the sons of Israel."
Joel 3:17... "Then you will know that I am the LORD your God, Dwelling in Zion, My holy mountain. So Jerusalem
will be holy, And strangers will pass through it no more."
Joel 3:18... "And in that day The mountains will drip with sweet wine, And the hills will flow with milk, And all the
brooks of Judah will flow with water; And a spring will go out from the house of the LORD To water the valley of
Shittim."
Isaiah 13:16... "Their little ones also will be dashed to pieces Before their eyes; Their houses will be plundered And
their wives ravished."
Zeph. 1:15... "A day of wrath is that day, A day of trouble and distress, A day of destruction and desolation, A
day of darkness and gloom, A day of clouds and thick darkness."
Isaiah 51:3... "Indeed, the LORD will comfort Zion; He will comfort all her waste places. And her wilderness He will
make like Eden, And her desert like the garden of the LORD; Joy and gladness will be found in her, Thanksgiving
and sound of a melody."
Ezekiel 36:35... "They will say, 'This desolate land has become like the garden of Eden; and the waste, desolate
and ruined cities are fortified and inhabited.'"
Isaiah 13:10... "For the stars of heaven and their constellations Will not flash forth their light; The sun will be dark
when it rises And the moon will not shed its light."
Obadiah v.17... "But on Mount Zion there will be those who escape, And it will be holy. And the house of Jacob will
possess their possessions."
Isaiah 2:4... "And He will judge between the nations, And will render decisions for many peoples; And they will
hammer their swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks. Nation will not lift up sword against
nation, And never again will they learn war."
Micah 4:3... "And He will judge between many peoples And render decisions for mighty, distant nations. Then they
will hammer their swords into plowshares And their spears into pruning hooks; Nation will not lift up sword
against nation, And never again will they train for war."
See also Amos 1:2; Isaiah 13:13; Ezekiel 36:11; Isaiah 52:1 and Amos 9:13.
•2. Some place it as one of the earliest of the "literary prophets" (ca. 900 B.C.).
•3. Others believe it was written after the exile (ca. 400 B.C.).
•4. Hailey, Young, and other scholars defend the early date. Richard Rogers gives the
following reasons for the early date...
•a. The enemies of Israel are the Philistines, Phoenecians, Egyptians and Edomites.
•c. No reference to Babylon which soon followed but perished by 536 B.C.
•d. Amos, who undoubtedly wrote in the eight century B.C., seems to quote Joel....
•1) Amos 1:2... "He said, ‘The LORD roars from Zion And from Jerusalem He utters
His voice; And the shepherds' pasture grounds mourn, And the summit of Carmel dries
up.'"
•2) Joel 3:16... "The LORD roars from Zion And utters His voice from Jerusalem, And
the heavens and the earth tremble. But the LORD is a refuge for His people And a
stronghold to the sons of Israel."
•e. The place assigned this book in the Hebrew bible shows their belief in the books
earlier date.
•5. This date places Joel prophesying during the reign of Joash.
•a. As you recall, Joash was made king when he was only seven years old. He
remained a good king till the priest Jehoiada died. Then he turned so wicked he was
eventually assassinated by his own servants.
•1) Jehosaphat a righteous man had befriended Ahab the king of Israel a wicked
man. Their families intermarried as a matter of fact Jehosaphat's two sons had the
same names as Ahab'
•2) The result of this befriending of Israel is that the idolatry in Israel became
transplanted (our should I say more solidly entrenched) in Judah.
•3) Athaliah, Joash's grandmother, had ruled for six years before Joash and she held
sway over Judah for longer than that being the queen grandmother to Joash. She like
her mother Jezebel actively supported and like a missionary tried to convert Judah to
the worship of Baal.
•c. So we can see that Joel preached during a time of political, social, religious as well
as economic (remember the locust plague) turmoil.
•a. The greatest fear of Asians of this day and time was a locust plague.
•2) For its future judgment... the eggs laid by the swarming locust.
•a) From the first of the plague when the locust first swarm till the last of the eggs
hatched and the locust left was 5 months.
•2. Joel tells Judah as this plague is being endured that the coming judgment of Jehovah is
going to make this locust plague pale in comparison.
•3. All of Joel's preaching is done in the shadow of this recent locust plague.
•b. It is a day of salvation (Joel 2:28-32; See also Isaiah 63:4; Malachi 4:1-5).
•2. God's use of natural calamity as a call to repentance (Joel 2:12-13).
•4. The pouring out of the Holy Spirit upon all flesh [thus making Himself available to all
men] (Joel 2:28-32).
•3. Or to put it another way, the first half of the book describes how God fought against his
own people to make them honor him alone. And the second half of the book describes how he
will fight against the nations who refuse to honor him alone.
•4. What I would like to do is guide you through the whole book in a summary way, then go
back and focus on the main messages of the two halves as they apply to us today.
THE TEXT OF THE BOOK OF JOEL:
I. THE LOCUST PLAGUE AND DROUGHT CALL THE PEOPLE TO REPENTANCE (1:1-2:27).
•A. THE LAND IS LAID WASTE BY THE PLAGUE (1:1-12).
•1. Let's begin with Joel 1:1.... "The word of the LORD that came to Joel, the son of
Pethuel."
•b. And that does not matter too much in the end, because his intention is to be a
mouthpiece for God, not himself.
•2. In verses 2 and 3 he says that his message should be passed on from generation to
generation.
•3. Then in verse 4 he describes the catastrophe of the locust plaque: "What the gnawing
locust has left, the swarming locust has eaten; And what the swarming locust has left, the
creeping locust has eaten; And what the creeping locust has left, the stripping locust has
eaten."
•4. The results of this locust plague were utterly devastating. In verses 5-12 the people are
called upon to weep and wail.
•a. Verse 5: all the wine is cut off from the drunkard's mouth.
•c. Verse 9: there is not even enough grain for the cereal offerings in the temple. The
people can't even worship God on the lowest level of sacrifice.
•B. SO, STARTING IN VERSE 13 JOEL CALLS FOR ISRAEL TO CRY OUT TO THE LORD
BECAUSE HE SEES IN THIS CATASTROPHE THE JUDGMENT OF GOD LEADING UP TO
THE GREAT AND TERRIBLE DAY OF THE LORD (1:13-20)!
•1. The priests are called to lead the lament and proclaim a fast (READ 1:13-14).
•2. The locust plague, says Joel, only heralds the coming of The Day of the Lord (READ
1:15-18).
•3. Joel and even the animals lead this lament (READ 1:19-20).
•C. CHAPTER TWO BEGINS WITH ANOTHER WARNING THAT THE TERRIBLE DAY OF
JUDGMENT CALLED"THE DAY OF THE LORD" IS COMING AND THAT THIS LOCUST
HORDE IS THE DAWN OF THIS DAY (2:1-11).
•1. In verse 1 he says, "Blow a trumpet in Zion, And sound an alarm on My holy
mountain! Let all the inhabitants of the land tremble, For the day of the LORD is coming;
Surely it is near!"
•2. Then in verses 3-11 Joel describes the locust horde again as a raging army with horses
and chariots and warriors.
•a. Verse 3, "A fire consumes before them And behind them a flame burns. The land is
like the garden of Eden before them But a desolate wilderness behind them, And nothing at
all escapes them."
•b. Verse 9, "They rush on the city, They run on the wall; They climb into the houses,
They enter through the windows like a thief."
•c. And in verse 11 they are said to be the army of the Lord. "The LORD utters His
voice before His army; Surely His camp is very great, For strong is he who carries out His
word. The day of the LORD is indeed great and very awesome, And who can endure it?"
•1. So far, then, we learn that God is fighting his people for some reason.
•a. We're not told why. Which probably means that Joel intended for us to learn more
about God here than about ourselves.
•b. God has sent his army of locust against Israel and threatened that the end is near.
•2. But is only destruction in his mind? No. Verses 12-14 tell us more about this warrior
God: "'Yet even now,' declares the LORD, ‘Return to Me with all your heart, And with fasting,
weeping and mourning; And rend your heart and not your garments.' Now return to the LORD
your God, For He is gracious and compassionate, Slow to anger, abounding in lovingkindness
And relenting of evil. Who knows whether He will not turn and relent And leave a blessing
behind Him, Even a grain offering and a drink offering For the LORD your God?"
•a. Even though God has threatened destruction of his own people (since he can raise
up from stones children to Abraham! Matt. 3:9) yet he holds out the opportunity of
repentance and salvation at the eleventh hour.
•b. If they will repent, he will repent.
•c. If they will rend their hearts, he will cease to rend their land.
•1) This principle of repentance Jesus tries to explain to us over and over again.
•2) We are inexorably linked to God being created in His image....
•b) If we hold grudges against others He will hold our sins against us.
•3) Repentance is humbling ourselves before our creator and coming back to Him,
and our treatment of others created by God is an indicator of our relationship with God.
•3. So in verses 15-17 Joel calls for fasting and for the priests to pray for God not to make
his heritage a byword among the nations [It is a call to national repentance]! (READ 2:15-17).
•1. The judgment of the Lord is to urge His people back to Himself.
•2. These verses tell what He longs to do if His people will only repent: READ 2:18-20.
•b. But a horse that can be controlled while maintaining its spirit is of more value to his
owner.
•2. In these verses He calls His people to courage and gladness: READ 2:21-24.
•a. The ultimate aim of God in sending the locust horde against his people is to secure
their undivided allegiance: "You shall know that I, Yahweh, am your God and there is no
one else."
•b. Evidently, the cause of the locust plague had been the people's half-hearted
allegiance.
•1) Some of their affections had gone after things other than God.
•a) We've already seen by the date of the writing that idolatry was being tried.
•1] Kind of like today when people say: "Worship at the church of your
choice!" People were saying...even the ruling class: "Worship the god of your
choice!"
•2] Others were saying, "You can worship Yahweh too!" "Just because you
worship Baal doesn't mean you have to stop worshipping Jehovah."
•4) For few things are more dishonoring to God and dangerous for us than love to
God which is only half-hearted.
•2. God wanted to bless Judah, but He knows that He cannot bless a people he has given
the ability to reject Him and who reject Him.
•a. He was trying to persuade His people to return to the source of their blessings.
•a. He had said that the day of the Lord was near (in 1:15; 2:1,11).
•b. (We will look at what "The Day of the Lord" is in the application and lessons drawn
from this book)
•c. God's call to repentance (vs. 12-17).
•d. And He has promised to bless the people if they repent (vs. 18-27).
•a. The value of natural calamities (they can serve to turn men back to God).
•b. The nature of true repentance, "'Yet even now,' declares the LORD, 'Return to Me
with all your heart, And with fasting, weeping and mourning; And rend your heart and not
your garments.' Now return to the LORD your God, For He is gracious and
compassionate, Slow to anger, abounding in lovingkindness And relenting of evil" (2:12-
13).
•c. The character of the Lord is stated: "He is gracious and compassionate, slow to
anger, abounding in lovingkindness and relenting of evil."
•d. "The Day of the Lord," when referring to God's judgment on a city or nation, can be
averted (cf. Jer. 18:7-8; Jonah 3:1-10).
•3. Now we will look at Joel's prophetic predictions concerning the future...
II. THE DAY OF JEHOVAH, HERALDED BY THE OUTPOURING OF THE SPIRIT (2:28-3:17.
•A. "AFTERWARD" YET PRECEDING THE DAY OF THE LORD, GOD'S SPIRIT WILL BE OUT
POURED (READ 2:28-29).
•1. When is "afterward?"
•a. I think this answers the conditions stated in verse 27, "Thus you will know that I am in
the midst of Israel, And that I am the LORD your God, And there is no other...."
•1) Before God's people could ever "never be put to shame!" (2:27), God had to make
His presence established beyond a shadow of a doubt....at least in God's own eyes, and
in the eyes of every believer.
•2) I think Jesus referred to this very thing when He said of the Jews, "If I had not
come and spoken to them, they would not have sin, but now they have no excuse for
their sin. He who hates Me hates My Father also. If I had not done among them the
works which no one else did, they would not have sin; but now they have both seen and
hated Me and My Father as well. But they have done this to fulfill the word that is written
in their Law, 'THEY HATED ME WITHOUT A CAUSE.'" (John 15:22-25).
•b. It is a time when God will have fully established that it was by His power and His
choice that His people will be saved....
•1) Verse 27 tells us "Then you will know that I am in Israel, that I am the Lord your
God, and that there is no other; never again will my people be shamed" (NIV).
•a) God knew what was in store for Israel...
•2] He was going to carry the people into captivity and scatter them throughout
the world.
•3] He was going to bring back a remnant to rebuild Jerusalem and the temple
•b) The Day of Jehovah is not relished by Jehovah, because of its devastation and
destruction of sinners, yet it will hold the salvation of His people...those He has
chosen.
•2) Later verse 32 will tell us, "...it will come about that whoever calls on the name of
the LORD Will be delivered..."
•3) The last part of verse32 describes those who will survive as "the survivors whom
the LORD calls."
•a) It is not because Israel was special that men will be saved....
•b) It is because Israel was chosen. This is the crux of Romans 9-11.
•c) The Day of the Lord will destroy most, but it will save those who heed God's
call to Himself. Those who call upon the Lord. Even today the saved are refered to
as the elect or the called out, and the church is the assembly of those who are called
out (ekklaysia).
•c. Salvation is always linked with destruction. When the gospel is preached men are
either saved or lost depending on how they heed the good news.
•2. Of course, from Acts 2:16-21, Peter tells us that this prophecy in Joel refers to what
happened on the day of Pentecost when the promised Kingdom of Heaven was established.
•B. THE WONDERS IN HEAVEN AND ON EARTH TO APPEAR BEFORE THE COMING OF
THE "DAY OF THE LORD" (READ 2:30-31).
•3. This is a recurring theme and image depicting coming judgment used over and over by
the prophets of God.
•C. THERE WILL BE DELIVERANCE IN MOUNT ZION AND JERUSALEM (READ 2-32).
•1. The word sarid (ãéø„NÜ) = survivors; it can also be translated remnant.
•2. A similar word sheerith (úéø„àÅLÔ) = remnant as is found in Jeremiah 31:7 where he
says, "...give praise and say, 'O LORD, save Your people, The remnant of Israel.'"
•3. The word sarid comes from a root meaning survivor, and sheerith comes from a root
word meaning to escape. Both hold the idea of a remnant or those who remain.
•4. The saved are those who remain after the judgment of the Lord passes!
•1. (READ 3:1-3) God proposes to judge the nations "in those days and at that time".
•a. What time does "in those days and at that time" refer to?
INTRODUCTION:
A. Amos was a herdsman from the southern nation of Judah that was called by God to go up
and preach against the sins of the northern kingdom, Israel.
B. Jeroboam, the first northern king, had established the worship of the golden calves at
Dan and at Bethel.
1. Amos appeared at one of their services at Bethel and spoke out.
2. The herdsman-prophet went up to Bethel and by inspiration announced God's
coming judgment upon the nations surrounding Israel for all their sins and crimes.
3. He got the ear of the people as they probably uttered "Amen" to his sermon, and
"Preach on brother!"
4. But then the prophet stopped "preaching" and started "meddling" talking about the
sins of Israel.
C. Israel was at the peak of its prosperity but had reached bottom spiritually, and was
morally corrupt and decadent.
D. The Theme of the Book: Jehovah is the God of Righteousness and Judgment.
E. The Message of the Book: D – O – O – M !!
F. Or lesson on Amos will discuss:
1. Who Was Amos?
2. When Was Amos Written?
3. The Times When Amos Lived.
4. The Message.
5. An Outline of Amos
6. Applications and Lessons from Amos to our times.
I. WHO WAS AMOS THE PROPHET?
A. Name Amos comes from a Hebrew word which means "burden bearer."
1. Word Amos is a derivative of Hebrew word "Amas", meaning "to carry."
2. It seems to fit Amos because his profession was not that of being a prophet.
a. He was a shepherd of mountain sheep.
b. He was a fruit picker.
c. But God gave to him the burden of a message to bring from God to Israel.
3. Frequently called "The Prophet of Righteousness" because of his bold outcries against
the moral decay around him.
4. No reference to anyone in his family - not ever his father's name.
5. He came from the village of Tekoa in Judah (the southern kingdom).
a. It is a small village 12 miles southwest of Jerusalem, 5 to 6 miles south of Bethlehem.
b. Located in the mountainous region of Judea.
c. Indicates that Amos was a resident of Judah sent to Israel to inform them of God's
pending judgment against them.
d. By profession Amos was a herdsman and cultivator of sycamore or wild fig trees
(seqmim, HEBREW).
1) The word translated “shepherd” comes from a root word “nakads” which indicates
a type of sheep herded (it was smaller and spotted with superior wool). Amos was not
just a shepherd, he was a mountain shepherd.
2) He also harvested the fruit of the sycamore tree. This fruit (wild figs) was
somewhat woody in nature. It was eaten by the poorer people and had to be pinched
or bruised before it would ripen (George Adam Smith quoted by Homer Hailey).
e. From these humble circumstances God sent Amos to to Bethel in Israel where wine
flowed, honey dripped and where excesses of every kind abounded.
1) Amos was truly a country bumpkin in the big city.
2) He was not impressed with Israel’s excesses and wasted no time in preaching
God’s message of pending condemnation for their sins if they did not repent.
B. Amos' message was directly from God.
1. He was obviously a country preacher who was good at his job…his message was easy to
understand…his method was effective….
2. He got the people’s attention by prophesying the destruction of Israel’s enemies: Syria,
Philistia, Phonecia, Edom, Ammon, Moab then Judah….
3. After getting their attention….he prophesied concerning Israel’s sin.
4. It was not popular…in 7:10-17 he will be rebuked by Amaziah a false priest and Jeroboam
II the king who tell him to leave Israel and stop prophesying.
5. Though he was called from humble occupations to serve God as a bold preacher of
reform he fulfilled his mission.
C. A Character Sketch of Amos.
1. Amos was humble – he did not try to hide his station in life.
2. Amos was wise – he did not preach over the heads of the people.
3. Amos was clever – he caught the people’s fancy by judging their enemies first.
4. Amos was fearless – he did not tickle his listener’s ears, he told the truth.
5. Amos was faithful – fourteen times he will say “thus says the Lord!”
A. (1:1) Called to prophecy in the “in the days of Uzziah king of Judah, and in the days of
Jeroboam son of Joash, king of Israel.”
1. The earthquake doesn't help us much, as there were several during this time period in the
history of Israel.
2. Most commonly agreed between 760 and 750 BC.
B. Amos lived during the time of Hosea, and probably during the times of Jonah and Joel.
1. He followed Obadiah but his message is very similar… Amos 1:11-12 reads, “Thus says
the LORD, ‘For three transgressions of Edom and for four I will not revoke its punishment,
Because he pursued his brother with the sword, While he stifled his compassion; His anger
also tore continually, And he maintained his fury forever. So I will send fire upon Teman And it
will consume the citadels of Bozrah.’” Now look at Obadiah vs. 10-14, “Because of violence to
your brother Jacob, You will be covered with shame, And you will be cut off forever. On the
day that you stood aloof, On the day that strangers carried off his wealth, And foreigners
entered his gate And cast lots for Jerusalem-- You too were as one of them. Do not gloat over
your brother's day, The day of his misfortune. And do not rejoice over the sons of Judah In the
day of their destruction; Yes, do not boast In the day of their distress. Do not enter the gate of
My people In the day of their disaster. Yes, you, do not gloat over their calamity In the day of
their disaster. And do not loot their wealth In the day of their disaster. Do not stand at the fork
of the road To cut down their fugitives; And do not imprison their survivors In the day of their
distress.”
2. He also followed Joel but uses some of the very same phrases…. Look at Amos 1:2, “He
said, ‘The LORD roars from Zion And from Jerusalem He utters His voice; And the shepherds'
pasture grounds mourn, And the summit of Carmel dries up.’” Compare this with Joel
3:16, “The LORD roars from Zion And utters His voice from Jerusalem, And the heavens and
the earth tremble.”
III. LIFE IN ISRAEL DURING THE TIMES OF AMOS.
A. Amos prophesied during a time when the national prosperity was great.
1. Great prosperity, commercial advantages, and material wealth were at their peak.
a. Israel would never have this level of prosperity again!
b. Rich getting richer - Poorer getting poorer.
2. Luxury, ease, and idleness brought decay to the nation.
a. In Amos 5:11we read, “Therefore because you impose heavy rent on the poor And
exact a tribute of grain from them, Though you have built houses of well-hewn stone, Yet
you will not live in them; You have planted pleasant vineyards, yet you will not drink their
wine.”
b. And in Amos 6:4 –6 tells gives us a description of the these times: “Those who recline
on beds of ivory And sprawl on their couches, And eat lambs from the flock And calves from
the midst of the stall, Who improvise to the sound of the harp, And like David have
composed songs for themselves, Who drink wine from sacrificial bowls While they anoint
themselves with the finest of oils, Yet they have not grieved over the ruin of Joseph.”
c. Does this sound familiar?
B. Amos writes like Jonah during a time for Israel when there were two great problems….
1. The nation had become corrupt in its relationship with God.
2. Assyria as a nation was conquering the entire world, and she was breathing down the
back of Israel.
3. Amos, Hosea, Isaiah and Micah all preached during this time and their messages were all
similar….
a. God’s rule is universal…
1) All the prophets will advise Israel to trust in the Lord who rules the nations.
2) Instead if you read Israel’s history she will turn to the king of Assyria for protection
rejecting God and refusing to trust Him.
3) In the end Assyria will destroy Israel.
b. God’s character is holy and righteous…
1) Israel will rebel against God and seek Him in unrighteous ways…they will try to
create Jehovah in the image of the idols of the nations around them resulting in insult to
Jehovah.
2) They will try to appease God with worship rituals while pursuing a way of life which
is abhorrent to God.
C. The Moral condition of the people is spelled out clearly in 6:1-6 (READ TEXT).
1. They laughed at the day of doom: thought of it as foolishness.
2. Thought they were indestructible.
a. For ever prophets of God, there were many false prophets telling the people that
everything was as God wanted it to be…
b. READ 1 KINGS 22:1-9…
D. Religion had evolved into a mere formality and mere token adherence to God’s laws.
1. Notice God’s response to their worship: “I hate, I reject your festivals, nor do I delight in
your solemn assemblies. Even though you offer up to Me burnt offerings and your grain
offerings, I will not accept them; And I will not even look at the peace offerings of your fatlings.
Take away from Me the noise of your songs; I will not even listen to the sound of your
harps” (Amos 5:21-23).
a. God hates worship that is not from the heart.
b. That which is not sincere is a waste of time.
2. Jeroboam I the first king of Israel after the split with Judah instituted worship to God at
Bethel and at Gad (READ 1 KINGS 12:26-33).
a. The people were trying to worship Jehovah the way the nations around them
worshipped their idols resorting to sinful practices on the high places that Jeroboam I had
built… high places were shady resort type places where idolaters reveled in sinful sexual
practices.
b. Idolatry was very popular in the nations around Israel and Judah.
c. Israel from the start tried to worship Jehovah the way the nations around them
worshipped their idols…it appealed to men but angered and insulted God.
3. Notice what God says about this worship, “These who pant after the very dust of the earth
on the head of the helpless also turn aside the way of the humble; And a man and his father
resort to the same girl In order to profane my holy name. On garments taken as pledges they
stretch out beside every altar, And in the house of their God they drink the wine of those who
have been fined” (Amos 2:7-8).
4. Amos 4:4 states that it was sinful, “Enter Bethel and transgress; In Gilgal multiply
transgression! Bring your sacrifices every morning, your tithes every three days.” It was a
place of transgression instead of a place of worship to Jehovah.
5. In Amos 5:26 Amos says, “You also carried along Sikkuth your king and Kiyyun, your
images, the star of your gods which you made for yourselves.”
a. The worst insult against Jehovah is that they had misrepresented Him as no more
than an idol.
b. In our worship today…we need to be very careful that we are not trying to please
ourselves in our worship of God which insults His desire to be praised.
1) We need to be innovative in our worship to keep our praise a sacrifice and offering
to God and to guard against becoming ritualistic and unfeeling.
2) But we must be very careful to guard against forgetting why we worship….to
please God.
a) Worship was meant to exhort one another….in our common spiritual pursuit of
praising God.
b) But it was not meant to entertain and please man.
c) When we make worship an entertainment and we forget God’s will, we run the
risk of doing what Israel did….worship in a way that insults God’s righteousness
and even results in open rebellion and sin.
E. It was in this atmosphere that Amos was given his commission.
V. AN OUTLINE OF AMOS.
A. Judgments of God against the nations for their sins (1:1- 2:16).
1. “For three transgressions….and for four…” = means this was not isolated transgressions,
but a pattern of transgressions.
2. Damascus, Gaza, Tyre, Edom, Ammon, Moab, Judah and Israel all prophesied against.
B. Details of Israel's sins and the coming judgment (3:1- 6:14).
1. (3:1-15) God had established a special relationship with Israel, but because of iniquity and
oppression, they would be punished.
2. The list of sins against Israel (4:1-13).
a. (4:1-3) Pompous women.
c. (4:6-11) They ignored the other signs of God to try to steer them back to obedience.
1) Not only did they dishonor God in their worship.
2) They insulted Him further by ignoring His work to bring them to repentance.
A STUDY OF THE MINOR PROPHETS
LESSON FIVE
Hosea - God's Redeeming Love
Milt Langston Southgate church of Christ
INTRODUCTION:
•A. At about the same time that old Amos was preaching to the northern kingdom of Israel,
another prophet came on to the scene...
•1. His name was Hosea.
•a. Joshua's name was the same as this prophet before Moses changed it (Numbers
13:8, 16).
•b. Joshua = savior and comes from the root word meaning salvation. Jesus is the
Greek word for savior or Joshua.
•B. While the audience was the same, there were some differences...
•1. Amos was a country prophet from Judah (Tekoa) to the south; Hosea appears to
have been from Israel.
•2. While Amos showed little patience with his northern relatives, Hosea displayed a
large degree of sympathetic understanding toward his own people.
•3. Some might say that Amos was reminiscent of John the Baptist in his approach,
and Hosea is reminiscent of how Jesus approached people.
•a. As we get into this lesson we'll see why Hosea was more sympathetic.
•b. Ezekiel maybe closer to Hosea in his style than any other prophet, but
Hosea's message stands alone in its uniqueness.
•C. Hosea preached in Israel during a long period of time. According to the references
of the kings listed in the first chapter, there is a 65 year span of time between them.
•1. He preached in Israel northern kingdom after the land was divided by God.
•a. Its capital was the city of Samaria.
•b. And its religious centers were Gad and Bethel.
•2. Not only was Amos a contemporary with Hosea, he also preached at the same
time as Jonah in the northern kingdom Israel.
•3. Hosea preached in Israel as Isaiah and Micah preached in Judah maybe at the
same time.
•D. It was a time of great prosperity and great sin and great rebellion against God in
Israel, and finally of great tragedy as Israel faced certain destruction in judgment by God's
hand.
•1. During this time Israel had given itself over to the foreign idol worship of the
nations around them.
•a. They had even turned worship to Jehovah into the same type of idolatry
worshipping on altars built on the "high places." This dishonored God's will and His
laws just as it degraded the Most High to be reckoned as no more than an idol.
•b. Judah also was doing the same things, but they were just starting what Israel
had long been doing.
•2. In America today we have honky-tonk bars and night places where unrestrained
pleasure is advocated, and many enter into this type of revelry...this is portrayed on
television as every day activities of most people as traditional values are down played
and rarely ever advocated.... (and this is our problem)....
•3. But in Hosea's day the places of revelry were the religious places where the idols
were worshipped.
•a. It is no wonder that the Israelites were so drawn to them....it was the in thing
to do...it was fun!
•b. Idolatry offered an easy religion which did not restrain passions and
lusts....they actually fulfilled them...there was absolutely no restraint to a person's
pursuit of pleasure...as a matter of fact idolatry was base and hedonistic in nature...
•c. As we saw in our study of Amos, the people of Israel traded a relationship
with Jehovah with the seeming restraints of His laws and regulations for a
relationship with self-created idols which offered no physical restraints at all.
•E. Hosea will show us that God viewed idolatry as an act of unfaithfulness or an act of
adultery on Israel's part.
•1. Jehovah was like a husband to Israel just as Jesus is like a bride groom to the
church today...
•2. And they were acting like an unfaithful wife.
I. BACKGROUND INFORMATION.
•3. In the book we learn of his wife, Gomer (Hosea 1:3) and his children...
•1. The date could be from before 753 B.C. which was at the end of Jeroboam's reign in
Israel to as late as 725 which was at start of Hezekiah's reign in Judah. It could not have gone
beyond 722 B.C. which marked the destruction of Samaria and Israel by Assyria.
•2. Hosea preached during the reigns os Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah, kings of
Judah. And Jeroboam II is also mentioned as ruling in Israel (Hosea 1:1).
•4. Hosea was probably a young man when Amos was was finished with his ministry.
•1. For a historical background to the times of Hosea the prophet read 2 Kings cps. 14 - 17
and 2 Chronicles 26-29.
•2. The northern kingdom of Israel was on its last legs....
•a. Sin was even more rampant than seen in the book of Amos.
•3. One word sums up the condition of the nation of Israel: Harlotry (whoredom, KJV). The
word is used thirteen times throughout the book.
•E. MESSAGE: The nation that forgets or does not know God's nature is doomed.
•1. Some scholars think this story is only an allegory to impart the lesson of Israel's
unfaithfulness.
•2. Some think Hosea married a woman who was a temple prostitute at God's command.
•3. Others think Gomer was just a woman Hosea married who got caught up in the events of
the time and became unfaithful.
•4. We may never know for sure which of these is true, but we know that God's word
contains only truth and imparts instruction for our learning (Rom. 15:4).
•B. An analogy is made between Hosea's experience with Gomer, and the Lord's experience
with Israel.
•A. God said to Hosea, "Go, take to yourself a wife of harlotry, and have children of harlotry; for the
land commits flagrant harlotry, forsaking the Lord" (Hosea 1:2).
•1. Personally I would like to think that Gomer and Hosea were two young people who loved
each other.
•2. Unfortunately they lived in a time of "flagrant harlotry" and "forsaking" of the Lord.
•B. Hosea was a prophet of God. Maybe his and Gomer's martial problems began because they
did not share the same commitment to Jehovah.
•1. It could be that marriage problems began because Hosea refused to go to the popular
parties because it involved worship of an idol (I know these are "maybe's" and not facts, but
the Bible does tell us that Gomer and Hosea's marriage broke up).
•a. "Jehovah is not the only god in the world you know!
•1) I have friends who worship Baal, and they say he's the only god.
•2) We say Jehovah is the only god. It's time for both of us to loosen up a little
bit? (It's hard to argue with this kind of worldly logic...especially if it comes from your
husband or your wife).
•b. Listen, Hosea, we can still worship Jehovah, but why do we have to be so
disrespectful of all the other gods.
•c. Hosea, you are bigoted and narrow-minded. You think your god is the only right
god.
•d. You bore me...all you ever do is preach doom and destruction, doom and
destruction....all I hear is ‘you can't do this and you can't do that!' You can't do anything if
you follow Jehovah like you do!
•e. Come on honey, why can't we bow down to Baal and enjoy ourselves a little?"
•C. Hosea must have lived in an unhappy house, but, then, Gomer becomes pregnant. I wonder
if maybe this might have brought hope back into their marriage for a while. She gives him a
son. God tells Hosea to name him "Jezreel!"
•1. Jezreel is a valley from Mt. Carmel to Mt. Tabor and Gilboa. It is the valley known as
Armageddon in the book of Revelation.
•2. It is a place where God made the Children of Israel victorious in battle...maybe Hosea
thinks: at last a "victory."
•3. Then God speaks...Jezreel will not be the sight of victory this time, but of defeat where
Israel will be judged and scattered because of their sin.
•a. In the text God mentions the punishment of the house of Jehu for all those he killed
coming to power.
•b. Hosea began preaching during the life of the last king of the house of Jehu,
Jeroboam II! (22 years of civil unrest followed his death).
•D. Years later, we must assume Hosea has been preaching all this time, Gomer is no longer
faithful to Hosea at all...she is becoming a harlot...and a daughter is born.
•1. This child may not be Hosea's child.
•E. Later another son is born...God calls him "Lo-ammi" = not my people.
•1. Now Hosea knows the child is not his own. The child is the son of one of Gomer's
lovers.
•2. Still, Hosea loves his wife...he does not divorce her even though by law he had the right.
•c. No doubt they say, "Here is a prophet teaching against what his own wife
practices." "Hosea, you are a joke!"
•F. One day Hosea returns to an empty house...Gomer leaves him for years before she
returns...
•2. The Text does not tell us how long Gomer was gone...probably for years and years
especially since Hosea was a prophet for so long a time span.
•3. Through Hosea's tears for his lost wife he saw deeper into the heart of God than any
man before him...
•G. The things Hosea saw are the lessons this book teaches us.....
VI. AN OUTLINE OF HOSEA.
I. ISRAEL'S UNFAITHFULNESS PICTURED (1:1-3:5).
•A. (1:1-11) GOMER'S UNFAITHFULNESS SYMBOLIZED ISRAEL'S
UNFAITHFULNESS. The names God tells Hosea to give to Gomer's three children express God's
judgment upon the nation....
•1. Jezreel = Scattered by God.
•B. (2:1-13) DETAILS OF GOMER'S AND ISRAEL'S ADULTRY. "'I will punish her for the days
of the Baals When she used to offer sacrifices to them And adorn herself with her earrings and
jewelry, And follow her lovers, so that she forgot Me,' declares the LORD" (2:13).
•C. (2:14-3:5) DETAILS OF GOMER'S RELATIONSHIP WITH HOSEA.
•1. God will woo Israel back because of His love (2:14-23).
•a. Through Hosea's experience with Gomer, God provided Israel a concrete illustration
of what His relationship with Israel had been like.
•b. Israel had played the harlot; but God would take her back, following a period of
punishment and probation.
•2. Keeping this analogy in mind will assist us in our understanding of the remaining
chapters of this book!
•3. A lesson to be learned for us from this analogy is how God views apostasy....He views it
as spiritual harlotry!
•a. Christians, we are "betrothed to Christ" (2 Cor. 11:2).
•b. But we too can become spiritual harlots if we are not careful! Paul warns, "But I am
afraid that, as the serpent deceived Eve by his craftiness, your minds will be led astray
from the simplicity and purity of devotion to Christ" (2 Cor. 11:3).
II. ISRAEL'S SINS PROCLAIMED (4:1-7:16).
•A. GOD'S CONTROVERSY WITH ISRAEL'S GUILT (4:1-19).
•4. (4:15-19) Israel is Joined to Her Idols - Let Judah take Warning.
•1. (5:1-7) The Guilt of the Priests, the People and the Princes (everyone).
•2. (5:8-15) Judgment must follow - Everyone will suffer the consequences...the destruction
will be slow but sure.
•C. GOD'S CONTROVERSY WITH ISRAEL'S INSINCERITY - AN ABOMOMINATION
BEFORE THE LORD (6:1-11).
•1. (6:1-3) Israel's return without heartfelt repentance.
•2. (6:4-11) God is not deceived - Israel has no sorrow for her sins.
•2. (7:8-16) Israel's foreign policy - Israel appealed to foreign nations instead of trusting
God. In the end this will be her destruction.
III. ISRAEL'S JUDGMENT PRONOUNCED (8:1-10:13).
•A. JUDGMENT - NATIONAL CORRUPTIONS AND ITS CONSEQUENCES (8:1-14).
•1. (8:1-7) Judgment has become inevitable - idolatry is an abomination - Israel will reap
what she has sown.
•2. (8:8-10) Israel's appeals to the nations will not save her.
•B. THE DEGENERACY OF ISRAEL AND THE RUIN OF ITS KINGDOM (9:1-10:15).
•2. (9:10-17) God will leave Israel as He found Her - In need of Jehovah (parched and dry).
•1. (11:1-7) Israel's Ingratitude (This takes us back to Israel's history a third time; see also
9:10; 10:9; 11:1).
•2. (11:8-11) Israel deserved utter destruction - but God's love tempers judgment with mercy.
•1. (14:1-8) God's grace once more to those who turn to Him!
•2. (14:9) Epilogue of the Book - In the end Israel cries unto Jehovah, and He hears their cry
and responds by an outpouring of rich blessings upon them.
VII. WHAT HOSEA SAW AND LEARNED ABOUT GOD.
A STUDY OF THE MINOR PROPHETS
LESSON SIX
Jonah - Messenger to Nineveh
Milt Langston Southgate church of Christ
INTRODUCTION:
•4. There is no way to doubt the historicity of Jonah and have regard for the integrity of
Jesus.
•B. BACKGROUND....
•1. Jonah was a well known prophet of God associated with the royal court of Jeroboam II
(ca 790-749 BC).
•2. Jonah was a states-man prophet like Isaiah and Jeremiah, not a 'backwoods' prophet
like Elijah or John the Baptist.
•3. He was called to cry against that "great city" Nineveh, the capital of Assyria and long
time enemy of Israel. Nineveh was surrounded by a complex of suburbs with a heavy
population of about 600,000 at this time.
•a. It was fortified with several walls, the greatest defense being a wall 8 miles long and
100 feet high and wide enough for three chariots to drive abreast, with 1500 towers which
were 200 feet high.
•b. Jonah's experience was a "sign" to the people of Nineveh and they repented upon
hearing his message of destruction for their city.
•4. In sack cloth and ashes they showed remorse for their evil and God spared them from
destruction to the regret and pouting of Jonah.
•5. Jonah is probably the most well known of "The Minor Prophets": Jonah, whose name
means "Dove".
•6. His book does not contain prophecy per se, rather it contains the history of a prophet...
•a. A prophet reluctant to fulfill the mission God assigned him.
•7. This short book of "Jonah" easily falls into four sections...
•8. It is the story of a man who tried to set himself up as the judge to determine who is
worthy to receive God's pardon.
•a. In many respects, you and I are a lot like Jonah.
•b. So, the story of Jonah and the lessons to be learned are very applicable to us today.
•b. He was from Gath Hepher (4 miles NE of what was later Nazareth in Galilee).
•a. It was located about 220 NNW of the present city of Baghdad.
•b. The Assyrians were noted for their cruelty, especially to prisoners.
•b. On the edge of the Mediterranean world, Jonah was running in the opposite direction
of Nineveh.
•4. In retrieving Jonah, God gained some converts (the sailors) - cf. 1:14-16.
•1. Failure to do God's will is sin: Jonah's disobedience was a sin of omission.
•a. We can speculate as to why Jonah did not want to do God's will....
•2) It would be the Assyrians who would devastate and destroy Samaria.
•3) Some think old Jonah knew these things by prophesy, therefore; he did not want
to comply with God's instructions, but whatever the reason....
•b. It was willful refusal to answer God's call.
•1) James tells us in James 4:17, "Therefore, to one who knows the right thing to do
and does not do it, to him it is sin."
•a) In the context of James cp. 4, James is talking about the person who makes
his plans and lives his life ignoring the will or desire of God.
•b) Or the person who lives seemingly independent of God....knowing God and
living this way is sin says James.
•c. True obedience often involves more than what we avoid doing. It also involves our
positive response to God's call to service.
•2. God held Jonah accountable for his refusal to answer His call.
•1) Where does one run in an attempt to get away from God?
•2) David said it this way, "Where can I go from Your Spirit? Or where can I flee from
Your presence? If I ascend to heaven, You are there; If I make my bed in Sheol, behold,
You are there. If I take the wings of the dawn, If I dwell in the remotest part of the sea,
Even there Your hand will lead me, And Your right hand will lay hold of me" (Psalm
139:7-10).
•2) The means of his attempted escape (the sea) becomes the instrument of his
punishment.
•3. God concerns Himself with the wickedness of heathen nations (1:2).
•5. God is able to use incidents in the lives of His servants for His glory (Look again at
1:5 with 1:14-16).
[With the end of chapter one, Jonah is now in the belly of the great fish. Having run away from God,
we now find him...]
•1. The prayer is written like a psalm; its present form may have been composed after the
fact, looking back.
•2. Jonah realized that what happened was God's doing (1:3).
•3. It is interesting to note that his prayer is more of a THANKSGIVING, than a petition...
•a. The consequences of his sin forced him to reconsider the error of his ways.
•1) "Someone has observed that there are times when we must be made to go into
the lowest depths that we may regain a living faith" (Hailey).
•2) It was not till Jonah found himself in the belly of that fish that he began to consider
doing the Lord's will.
•3) Sometimes we, like Jonah, must suffer the consequences of our sin before we are
ready to repent.
•1) Satan tries to get us to thinking: "Oh, God cannot use me. I'm doomed."
•2) That's hogwash. God used Jonah, and He can use you if you'll just wake
up! After all, He is your creator, and He loves you.
•a. Notice that Jonah's prayer thanks God for a deliverance already begun.
•1) The creature which the Lord "provided" had saved Jonah from drowning and,
Jonah anticipated a greater deliverance to come.
•2) Jonah was maybe a bit more perceptive than we are sometimes.
•b. Likewise, God delivers us from the full consequences of our sin as an invitation to
seek his even greater pardon.
•1) Paul states one of the most powerful and comforting statements when he
says, "And we know that God causes all things to work together for good to those who
love God, to those who are called according to His purpose" (Romans 8:28).
•2) Notice how God demonstrates this fact: Jesus was set upon by Satanic forces
becoming the object of everything that is unfair, cruel, unkind and sinful....yet by it
salvation was provided for all who will accept it!
•a) If you and I will just get with God....we will have become victorious....
•4] ....regardless...because of the power that will be in us comes from God who
channels it through us!
•c. God may run to our aid, but it is we who need to run....we need to run with all our
might toward God....
•1) The church is almost destroyed because of a "take Him or leave Him" attitude
towards Jesus and His church which exists among many today.
•2) This kind of attitude will get you swallowed up by the world every time!
•3) "If you are not with Me," says Jesus, "You are against me!"
•d. The reason we need to be running toward God is so we can run with Him!
•3. Prayers in time of need should be made with an attitude of thanksgiving as well as
petition (Read Phil. 4:6).
[Having learned his lesson, Jonah is now ready to do God's will; so we next see him...]
•3. The people of Nineveh are moved to repent, including the king (3:5-9).
•4. The Lord takes notice, and relents of the disaster He had intended to bring (3:10).
•3. With sackcloth for both man and beast, the king calls for a true change of behavior (3:8-
9).
•4. The king of Assyria reasons like the prophet Joel who says, "Who knows whether He will
not turn and relent And leave a blessing behind Him, Even a grain offering and a drink offering
For the LORD your God?" (Joel 2:14).
•5. Nineveh's example of repentance is a rebuke of Israel...
•a. Israel in Jonah's own day is described (Read 2 Kings 17:13-14,18; 2 Chron. 36:15-
16).
•1) Was not David a king after God's own heart? God gave David several second
chances.
•2) Was not Peter an apostle Jesus loved? Jesus gave Peter several second
chances.
•3) And somehow....we delude ourselves into thinking that God cannot use us!? Will
He not also give us another chance?
•1) Peter says, "The Lord is not slow about His promise, as some count slowness, but
is patient toward you, not wishing for any to perish but for all to come to repentance" (2
Pet. 3:9).
•2) We must learn that God is watching us intently because He loves us and wants us
to be saved.
•2. When Jonah obeyed God's call and cooperated with His will, his ministry was
blessed with power and success.
•a. At the preaching of a Hebrew prophet a hostile, pagan nation was led to repentance.
•b. Never has there been recorded in scripture a more successful result from the
preaching of repentance.
•1) From the king on down the people submitted before the Lord.
•2) Brethren, can you see the power of God's word to change lives that is released
through a life that has fully submitted to His will.
•a) When Jonah bowed before the Lord's will instead of trying to run away from
it....look what happened!
•b) God blessed Jonah's preaching with results....it was a blessing to God too...He
wanted the people to repent.
•c. Remember God's words through Paul recorded in Eph. 3:20-21, "Now to Him who is
able to do far more abundantly beyond all that we ask or think, according to the power that
works within us, to Him be the glory in the church and in Christ Jesus to all generations
forever and ever. Amen."
•4. The least likely prospects might be the ones who will convert (e.g., 1 Co 6:9-11).
•5. We see the place of fasting and prayer, as one seeks to petition God (e.g., Ezr 8:21-
23).
[Jonah's mission was a success! Souls headed for destruction were saved! You would think that
Jonah would have been elated. But in the final chapter we are surprised to see this prophet...]
•2. God uses a plant, a worm, and a hot east wind to teach Jonah (4:5-8).
•c. A vehement east wind that with the sun exhausts Jonah (4:8).
•3. God uses the plant to teach Jonah an object lesson (4:9-11).
•b. The Pharisees toward Jesus eating with sinners (Matt 9:10-11).
•3. Jonah is shown to have more compassion for a plant, than for innocent children!
•b. Jonah is an intolerant nationalist who wishes to see his nation's enemies destroyed,
not saved.
•1) Like me and like you sometimes, he did not trust what God was doing.
•2) In what amounts to an insult he thought God was making a mistake....at any rate
he didn't like it.
•c. The Ninevites or Assyrians have been brutally do
A STUDY OF THE MINOR PROPHETS
LESSON SEVEN
Micah - Judgment Now, Blessings Later
Milt Langston Southgate church of Christ
INTRODUCTION:
•· Amaziah 796-767
Co-regency:Amaziah & Uzziah 790-767
•· Uzziah 767-739
Co-regency: Uzziah & Jotham 750-739
(Isaiah 740-700)
•· Jotham 750-735
Co-regency: Jotham & Ahaz 744-735
(Micah 742-687)
•· Ahaz 732-715
722 B.C. Samaria destroyed by Shalmaneser and Israel taken into captivity.
•· Hezekiah 715-686
710 B.C. Sennacherib wastes most of Judah but his troops which surround Jerusalem are
destroyed by God's angel.
Co-regency: Hezekiah & Manasseh 797-686
•· Manasseh 697-642
(Nahum 664-612)
•· Amon 642-640
(Jeremiah 621-580)
•· Josiah 640-609
(Zephaniah 640)
614 B.C. Assyrians defeated by Medes at Asher
•· Jehoahaz 609
609 B.C. Nebuchadnezzar takes Haran from Assyrians; Judah made vassel to Babylon. Jehoiakim made king.
•· Jehoiakim 609-598
(Habakkuk 605)
605 B.C. Nebuchadnezzar defeats the Assyrians and Egyptians at Carchemish marking an end of the Assyrian empire.
•· Jehoiachin 598/7
•· Zedekiah 597-586
ISRAEL
•· Jehoash 798-782
Co-regency: Jehoash & Jeroboam II 793-782
•· Jeroboam II 793-753
(Jonah 760)
(Amos 760)
(Hosea 755-722)
•· Zechariah 753-752
•· Shallum 752
•· Menahem 752-742
•· Hosea 732-722
722 B.C. Samaria destroyed by Shalmaneser and Israel taken into captivity.
ASSYRIA
(Jonah 760)
•· Shalmaneser V 727-722
722 B.C. Samaria destroyed by Shalmaneser and Israel taken into captivity.
•· Sargon II 722-705
710 B.C. Sennacherib wastes most of Judah but his troops which surround Jerusalem are
destroyed by God's angel.
•· Sennacherib 705-681
•· Esarhaddeon 681-669
•· Ashurbanipal 669-627
605 B.C. Nebchadnezzer defeats the Assyrians and Egyptians at Carchemish marking an end of the Assyrian empire.
•3. His activity as a prophet covers the reign of three kings from about 735 to as late as 687
B.C.
•4. He preached in Judah at the same time Isaiah preached in Judah.
•5. Because he doesn't mention his father's name it is concluded that his family was of
insignificant and humble status.
•6. Though he lived in Judah his message was "concerning Samaria and Jerusalem" (1:1).
•A. He preached during the "days of Jotham, Ahaz and Hezekiah, kings of Judah."
•B. This gives him a span of from 20 to 55 years.
•C. We've set the date at 735 - 687.
II. BACKGROUND.
•2. (2:6-11) False prophets who would silence the true prophet.
•A. THE SINS AND CRIMES OF THE HEADS OF THE NATION (3:1-12).
•a. The glorification of Zion -- the center of universal religion of Jehovah (4:1-5).
•b. The restoration of "the former dominion" -- healing of the dispersed (4:6-8).
•2. (4:9-5:1) Distress and captivity before restoration, "now."
•b. Deliverance of Zion and destruction of the enemy -- Jehovah's purpose (4:11-5:1).
•a. The Messiah to arise out of Bethlehem, who shall feed the flock (5:2-4).
SALVATION (6:1-7:20).
•2. (6:6-8) Not outward sacrifice, but righteous conduct, is God's requirement.
•3. (7:14) Prayer for renewal of grace, (7:15-17) and the Lord's answer.
•a. He lay awake at night planning how to steal from poor widows.
•c. The young talented preacher who told the old widow how much he loved her
ranch...and would love to live on it.
•2) He promptly sold it. Now all the church knew why he wanted it.
•2. The rulers who hated good and loved evil (3:1-4).
•a. If they were not given money, they made war on those who held back...they extorted
the people in the name of religion.
•b. In chapter three verses 6,7 & 11 the words "diviner" or "divination" is used. This
world is always associated with witchcraft and sorcery in the Bible. Micah is using a play
on words. The NIV uses the word "telling fortunes" in verse 11.
•4. The Priests who taught for hire (3:11).
•a. In chapter six vs.6-7 Micah asks for the people, "With what shall I come to the LORD
And bow myself before the God on high? Shall I come to Him with burnt offerings, With
yearling calves? Does the LORD take delight in thousands of rams, In ten thousand rivers
of oil? Shall I present my firstborn for my rebellious acts, The fruit of my body for the sin of
my soul?"
•1) The answer to this question which asks, "What does God want?" launches us
into one of the richest sections of the entire O.T.
•2) But the very question shows that the priests of this time didn't know what God
wanted.
•b. The priests had lost contact which the law...and when they taught it was not to impart
knowledge but to gain money.
•B. MICAH GIVES US A CLEAR PICTURE OF GOD.
•2. He is Righteous and the God of ethics: "He will hide His face from them at that time
Because they have practiced evil deeds" (3:4). See also 6:8; 2:1-2; 3:2-3,10,11; 7:2.
A STUDY OF THE MINOR PROPHETS
LESSON EIGHT
Nahum - The Consoler: Nineveh Will Be Destroyed
Milt Langston Southgate church of Christ
INTRODUCTION:
JUDAH
•· Amaziah 796-767
Co-regency:Amaziah & Uzziah 790-767
•· Uzziah 767-739
Co-regency: Uzziah & Jotham 750-739
(Isaiah 740-700)
•· Jotham 750-735
Co-regency: Jotham & Ahaz 744-735
(Micah 742-687)
•· Ahaz 732-715
Co-regency: Ahaz & Hezekiah 725-715
722 B.C. Samaria destroyed by Shalmaneser and Israel taken into captivity.
•· Hezekiah 715-686
710 B.C. Sennacherib wastes most of Judah but his troops which surround Jerusalem are
destroyed by God's angel.
Co-regency: Hezekiah & Manasseh 797-686
•· Manasseh 697-642
(Nahum 663-612)
•· Amon 642-640
(Jeremiah 621-580)
•· Josiah 640-609
(Zephaniah 640)
614 B.C. Assyrians defeated by Medes at Asher
•· Jehoahaz 609
609 B.C. Nebuchadnezzar takes Haran from Assyrians; Judah made vassel to Babylon. Jehoiakim made king.
•· Jehoiakim 609-598
(Habakkuk 605)
605 B.C. Nebuchadnezzar defeats the Assyrians and Egyptians at Carchemish marking an end of the Assyrian empire.
•· Jehoiachin 598/7
•· Zedekiah 597-586
ISRAEL
•· Jehoash 798-782
Co-regency: Jehoash & Jeroboam II 793-782
•· Jeroboam II 793-753
(Jonah 760)
(Amos 760)
(Hosea 755-722)
•· Zechariah 753-752
•· Shallum 752
•· Menahem 752-742
•· Hosea 732-722
722 B.C. Samaria destroyed by Shalmaneser and Israel taken into captivity.
ASSYRIA
•· Shalmaneser III 859-824
•· Shalmaneser V 727-722. He began the siege of Samaria, but died before the city fell.
722 B.C. Samaria destroyed by Shalmaneser and Israel taken into captivity.
•· Sargon II 722-705. He completed the siege of Samaria (722 or 721). He was murdered in 705 B.C.
•· Sennacherib 705-681. He boasted on his monuments that he had shut up Hezekiah in Jerusalem "as a bird in a
cage." He was murdered by two of his sons in 681 B.C., who were then driven out by a younger son, Esarhaddon, who became king.
•· Esarhaddeon 681-669
•· Ashurbanipal 669-627. His campaign in Egypt resulted in the fall of No-amon (Thebes) (3:8). Much booty was
carried away by him into Assyria. According to the records he was a very cruel king.
•· Assur-etil-ilani 625-620.'
•· Sin-shar-ishkeen (Esarhaddon II) 620-612. When Nineveh was being besieged by the Medes and
Chaldeans, Esarhadon II gathered his wives and children and his wealth into the palace and set fire to it. He perished in the fire.
605 B.C. Nebchadnezzer defeats the Assyrians and Egyptians at Carchemish marking an end of the Assyrian empire.
•1. Many students and scholars acclaim Nahum's writing to be one of the most poetic
of all the Minor Prophets.
•b. George Smith describes it, "His language is strong and brilliant; his rhythm
rumbles and rolls, leaps and flashes, like the horsemen and chariots he describes"
(Vol. II., p.91).
•2. Nahum says nothing of the internal conditions of Judah and Jerusalem as he
writes.
•a. He leaves this to Jeremiah, Habakkuk, and Zephaniah who were his
contemporaries.
•a. The name "is in a sense symbolical of the message of the book, which was
intended to comfort the oppressed and afflicted people of Judah." (Eiselen,
I.S.B.E., p. 2109).
•b. He prophesied at the same time as Jeremiah and Zephaniah who were
pronouncing judgment upon Judah, however; Nahum prophesied against
Nineveh.
•b. Some think it may be a city located north of Nineveh called "El-kosh." But this
city was unknown in these early times.
•c. Others think Elkosh is another name for Capernaum which means "village of
Nahum." Capernaum is located by the Sea of Galilee of N.T. fame which would
have made Nahum of the Northern tribes, but he or his family could have
migrated to Judah (remember that northern Israel was destroyed in 722 B.C.
which would make this city under Assyrian domination).
•d. Still others think Elkosh was "Elkesie" which is located beyond the Jordan
which is another area dominated by Assyrian control.
•1. Because the book records the fall of No-amon (Egyptian Thebes) in chapter 3:8
which occurred as early as 663 B.C., and because it predicts the fall of Nineveh
which occurred in 612 B.C.; we can place the date of writing somewhere in between.
•2. Most scholars place the date between 630 - 612 B.C.
I. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND.
•A. SEE CHART OF FIRST PAGE (TIME LINE OF KINGS OF JUDAH, ISRAEL AND
ASSYRIA).
•B. ASSYRIA WAS ON THE WAY OUT...THE DAY OF THE LORD WAS NEAR TO
ASSYRIA.
•1. Brother Homer Hailey writes: "The native forces of Assyria were expended and
exhausted by long and extensive wars.
•a. The population of her cities was never homogenous, but they were made up of
foreigners who were drawn to them by trade and the desire for wealth.
•b. With nothing more than trade and commerce to hold them together, the nation
was bound to break up eventually.
•c. The character of the Assyrian rulers and people in general was that of
excessive cruelty.
•2. Farrar gives a vivid and clear description of their general character: Judged from
the vaunting inscriptions of her kings, no power more useless, more savage,
more terrible, ever cast its gigantic shadow on the page of history as it passed
on the way to ruin. The kings of Assyria tormented the miserable world. They
exult to record how ‘space failed for corpses'; how unsparing a destroyer is
their goddess Ishtar; how they flung away the bodies of soldiers like so much
clay; how they made pyramids of human heads; how they burned cities; how
they filled populous lands with dead and devastation; how they reddened
broad deserts with carnage of warriors; how they scattered whole countries
with the corpses of their defenders as with chaff; how they impaled ‘heaps of
men' on stakes, and strewed the mountains and choked rivers with dead
bones; how they cut off the hands of kings and nailed them on the walls, and
left their bodies to rot with bears and dogs on the entrance gates of cities; how
they employed nations of captives in making brick in fetters; how they cut
down warriors like weeds, or smote them like wild beasts in the forests, and
covered pillars with the flayed skins of rival monarchs."
•3. Assyria was ripe for judgment, and Nahum's message is simple: "The Fall of
Nineveh."
•b. But by this time no mercy would be shown, judgment would be final.
•C. A nation built on pride, cruelty, force and selfishness cannot hope to have friends in
the day of its fall.
•E. When God's lifts His finger in judgment, the mightiest of nations fall.
INTRODUCTION:
•A. Jonah warned the people of Nineveh and they repented, now over a hundred years
later Nahum warns, and the Assyrians will be destroyed.
•B. The book of Nahum can be easily divided by its three chapters:
•1. (READ 1:1-3a) God's vengeance, even though He is slow to anger is described.
•b. To put it in more modern terms we could say: "God controls the temperature of
our sun. One minor nova eruption would vaporize the earth and everything in
it. It is not wise to provoke such an all powerful one to anger."
•a. There are many enemies about these days...even members of the Lord's
church are beginning to wonder if they are on the right side.
•b. What Nahum was up against in his day is not so different from what we face
today.
•4) To us today as in Nahum's day there is a lesson: God is our only hope...not
the power of any nation.
•4. (1:7) God is A Stronghold to the Faithful. "The LORD is good, A stronghold in the
day of trouble, And He knows those who take refuge in Him" (v.7).
•a. God is Good...that and not evil is the power of victory in the world.
•1) Satan wants us to think that evil and unrighteous men and politicians are
in control.
•2) Satan's lie is that he and not God will win the victory.
•3) A righteous person needs to be reminded that the wicked will be brought to
judgment and the righteous will be victorious.
•4) It is God and not Satan who will win the battle for the world.
•b. God is Our Only Refuge in the Day of Trouble...not a fortified city, not the stock
market, not our army and navy.
•b) In the judgment coming to Jerusalem, God was working His eternal
purpose...and He provides the only refuge from judgment.
•2) In God there is power to endure. Listen to Isaiah, "Though youths grow
weary and tired, And vigorous young men stumble badly, Yet those who wait
for the LORD Will gain new strength; They will mount up with wings like
eagles, They will run and not get tired, They will walk and not become
weary" (Isaiah 40:30-31).
•1] Ecstasy...
•2] Energy...
•3] Endurance...
•a) God has not forsaken the righteous when he judges the wicked.
•5. (1:8) God Puts an End to Those who Continue to Oppose Him. "But with an
overflowing flood He will make a complete end of its site, And will pursue His enemies
into darkness" (1:8).
•a. Christians ride behind this awesome judge...they are wise not to face Him: "I
saw heaven opened, and behold, a white horse, and He who sat on it is called
Faithful and True, and in righteousness He judges and wages war. His eyes are a
flame of fire, and on His head are many diadems; and He has a name written on
Him which no one knows except Himself. He is clothed with a robe dipped in
blood, and His name is called The Word of God. And the armies which are in
heaven, clothed in fine linen, white and clean, were following Him on white
horses. From His mouth comes a sharp sword, so that with it He may strike
down the nations, and He will rule them with a rod of iron; and He treads the
wine press of the fierce wrath of God, the Almighty. And on His robe and on His
thigh He has a name written, ‘KING OF KINGS, AND LORD OF LORDS'" (Rev.
19:11-16).
•b. The message is there will be pay day some day.
•1) It appeared that Assyria had everything going its way for hundreds of years.
•6. Here's the point: The awfulness of man represented by Assyria in Nahum, is no
match for the awesomeness of God.
•b. God brings the wicked to punishment and provides for His own till that day,
and He protects His own when the day comes.
•1. (READ 1:9-11) Nineveh will not afflict the nations again, despite what they have
plotted against the Lord.
•3. (READ 1:14-15) There shall be good tidings in Judah; now she can keep her
feasts.
•a. Reading Amos' message to Israel, we know that the prophets, the priests and
even the royal family was corrupt and led the people into idolatry.
•b. Yet there were common folks who still trusted in the Lord.
•1) Because of the sins of the people God sent these same Assyrians to destroy
and defeat Samaria.
•2) Surely there were faithful soldiers and faithful wives of soldiers and faithful
children of soldiers who died and were carried captive because of God's
judgment on Samaria in 722 B.C.
•c. Do you suppose God remembers and knows when the faithful die?
•1) That soldier who's dying thoughts was his faith in His God...surely God
remembered.
•2) That soldier who's last breath wheezed out "Emanuel?!" God remembered
as we will see in Nahum.
•d. When the Jewish city of Lachish was later destroyed by Shalmaneser, artifacts
in Nineveh depict heaps of dead Jewish soldiers with the city surrounded by
impaled bodies. Surely there were men and women who died who trusted the
Lord. God remembers.
•2. (READ 2:1-4) A bit of tongue in cheek here tells the masters of destruction to get
ready for it themselves!
•b. But God remembers....they will not go free who persecute God's people.
•c. Speaking of the church Paul said of us, "Do you not know that you are a
temple of God and that the Spirit of God dwells in you? If any man destroys the
temple of God, God will destroy him, for the temple of God is holy, and that is
what you are" (1 Cor. 3:16-17).
•d. Even though the Assyrians were sent by God to judge God's people for their
sins, God is holding Assyria accountable for her detestable deeds.
•3. (READ 2:5-7) Nineveh is told that resistance is futile because God has decreed
Nineveh's destruction.
•a. In verse 6 it states, "The gates of the rivers are opened And the palace is
dissolved."
•b. The Believers' Study Bible states, "The Babylonian Chronicle tell that Nineveh
fell because the flooding rivers made breaches in the city's defenses."
•B. THE FLIGHT OF THE PEOPLE AND THE SACK OF THE CITY (2:8-13).
•1. (READ 2:8-10) The inhabitants of the city flee and the city will be plundered.
•a. Brother Homer Hailey points out that there was no love for the Assyrian people
by anyone else. Most who lived among the Assyrians were captives from
conquered countries.
•b. Commerce kept many near to the Assyrians. When the commerce was
removed, the allies of Nineveh fled like rats from a sinking ship.
•2. (READ 2:11-13) The Assyrians are here depicted as a pride of lions...but they are
being attacked this time.
•a. A lion does not fear many other animals on the African plains.
•b. But when God comes into the picture, the most secure nation does not have a
chance.
•2) They may deny God, but it does not change the fact.
•3) Like lions who think themselves invincible, sometimes a sober lesson must
be learned by the unbelieving.
•3. Nineveh's doom has been "declared" and "described" by Nahum. Now we see him
saying....
III. NINEVEH'S DOOM DESERVED (CP.3).
•1. (READ 3:1-4) Look at the devastation and misery Assyria has been spreading
around.
•c. The references to "harlotry" could refer to her idolatry or the rape (literal in
most cases) of those conquered by her.
•2. (READ 3:5-7) Assyria is about to get what she gave...she is about to reap what she
sowed.
•a. It was a custom in these days to shave the face of a conquered enemy so that
his face was naked to shame the enemy.
•b. It was also a custom to cut the back of the robe off the conquered enemy to
publicly expose their nakedness to shame them (READ 2 SAMUEL 10:4-6 of
David's account with the Ammonites...you'll see that because the Ammonites did
this to David it caused their destruction).
•B. NINEVEH IS NO BETTER THAN N0-AMON (OTHER CITIES THAT HAVE BEEN
JUDGED) (3:8-11).
•1. (READ 3:8) Nineveh is no better than No-amon (the city of Thebes in Egypt).
•2. (READ 3:9-10) No-amon was carried into captivity in spite of here allies and
natural protection.
•C. NINEVEH'S STRENGTH AND HER WEALTH WILL NOT SAVE HER (3:12-17).
•1. (READ 3:12-13) If anyone knew about how to batter down a city's walls it was the
Assyrians. Yet all their knowledge and all their preparations will be for nothing.
.INTRODUCTION:
•A. SETTING....
•1. This book takes place in a period of O.T. history know as "Judah Alone"... Israel is
gone....carried away into captivity by the Assyrians.
•a. The people of Judah were probably saying, "That's what Israel gets. They broke off
from us and rebelled against Jehovah." They were the old mother congregation.
•b. It was also a time of great prosperity...much like life is today in America....two chariots
in every garage...
•3. Nahum was pronouncing God's judgment upon Nineveh and the Assyrians.
•b. "His name, as Luther well puts it, speaks as one who took his nation to his heart,
comforted it and held it up, as one embraces and pressed to his bosom a poor weeping
child, calming and consoling it with good hope."(Cunningham Geikie, Hours With the Bible,
Vol. V., p.253-4).
•2. Concerning the DATE....
•b. It was a time just as Babylon was making her move from obscurity westward toward
world conquest.
•1) In 612 B.C. a young upstart general named Nebuchadnezzar led an coalition of
nations against Assyria and destroyed her power at the city of Nineveh fulfilling Nahum's
prophesy. Esarhaddon the king of Assyria seeing that he was defeated at Nineveh
gathered all his wealth and wives and children into the palace and set it on fire before
the walls were breached.
•2) In 609 B.C. he besieged and destroyed the city of Haran.
•3) And in about 606 B.C. he completely eliminated the last vestiges of Assyrian
resistance defeating Assyria and her allies at the city of Carchemish.
•a) In this fray good king Josiah of Judah was killed in battle trying to delay the
Egyptian army from aiding Assyria.
•b) Egypt in turn subjugated Jerusalem to Egypt which was a short lived exercise
because Egypt was defeated by Nebuchadnezzar together with Assyria at
Carchemish.
•4) From there Nebuchadnezzar entered Jerusalem and left with all her gold and
carried away thousands of captives including Daniel as Judah became a pawn piece for
more powerful nations.
•3. Concerning the MESSAGE: the book easily falls into three sections...one from God's
point of view, and the other from Habakkuk's point of view...
•a. Habakkuk to God:
•2. Habakkuk seems to be carrying the message of the righteous (God's people) to God, and
then carries God's answer back to the people.
•a. In all the other prophets' writings God sends his message to His people including the
righteous and the wicked.
•1) To the wicked He says, "Repent for judgment is coming."
•b. But in Habakkuk there seems to be a dialogue between God and Habakkuk who
represents the righteous who still trust in God.
•c. The wicked are talked about, but the message from this book is to the righteous.
•3. He does this in the form of a complaint....and in doing so his book goes from pain to
praise as God reveals Himself in this book.
•4. As we study this book, let's remember what Paul said, "For whatever was written in
earlier times was written for our instruction, so that through perseverance and the
encouragement of the Scriptures we might have hope"(Romans 15:4).
•D. HABAKKUK LIVED IN A TIME NOT VERY DIFFERENT FROM THE WAY THINGS ARE
TODAY...
•1. It was a time when everything was going wrong.
•2. Like today in America...even Disney was making pornographic movies which advocate
violence, immorality and godlessness.
•3. The land was filled with violence, hatred, and outbreaks of evil. Every hill top was a place
of sin in Judah.
I. LESSONS FROM AN OUTLINE OF THE BOOK OF HABAKKUK.
I. HABAKKUK'S BURDEN: FAITH GRAPPLING WITH A PROBLEM ---- GOD'S ANSWER: WATCH
•A. HABAKKUK BRINGS THIS QUESTION TO GOD... "The oracle which Habakkuk the
prophet saw. How long, O LORD, will I call for help, And You will not hear? I cry out to You,
"Violence!" Yet You do not save. Why do You make me see iniquity, And cause me to look on
wickedness? Yes, destruction and violence are before me; Strife exists and contention
arises. Therefore the law is ignored And justice is never upheld. For the wicked surround the
righteous; Therefore justice comes out perverted" (1:1-4).
•1. Habakkuk raises a lament over the apparent rule of wickedness and violence.
•b. Why, says the prophet, do I have to cry "Violence" and hear no answer?
•2) The leaders are corrupt, and they are not doing anything about it.
•2. But Habakkuk is a man of God. So he brings the whole problem before God.
•a. Look around at the nation today and you'll see everything breaking up, the shaking of
long-standing foundations, people turning away from the faith and questioning things they
never questioned before.
•b. People are expressing doubts, even outright unbelief, in circles where doubts have
never been expressed before.
•c. Are you praying for loved ones, wanting to see God change them and reach their
eternal lives, and nothing happens?
•d. Maybe...like Habakkuk, we need to take the whole matter before God.
•B. GOD'S ANSWER.... "Look among the nations! Observe! Be
astonished! Wonder! Because I am doing something in your days-- You would not believe
if you were told. For behold, I am raising up the Chaldeans, That fierce and impetuous
people Who march throughout the earth To seize dwelling places which are not
theirs. They are dreaded and feared; Their justice and authority originate with
themselves. Their horses are swifter than leopards And keener than wolves in the
evening. Their horsemen come galloping, Their horsemen come from afar; They fly like an
eagle swooping down to devour. All of them come for violence. Their horde of faces
moves forward. They collect captives like sand. They mock at kings And rulers are a
laughing matter to them. They laugh at every fortress And heap up rubble to capture
it. Then they will sweep through like the wind and pass on. But they will be held guilty,
They whose strength is their god" (1:5-11).
•1. Brethren this book is unique. It is a message for the people, but it is sent as a message
between man and God.
•2. We are Habakkuk!
•3. God is quick to answer Habakkuk...to assure him that He is not indifferent!
•a. God is, as a matter of fact, hard at work on the problem even as He speaks.
•a. Here is a tiny insignificant nation called Chaldeans in our text, who became a world
power almost by accident, but will raise to prominence in a very short time...and God says,
"It is Me that is behind this!"
•b. Old Habakkuk stands there with his mouth flung open....these people are bitter,
hostile, ruthless and cold-blooded.
•1) And they are going to become as powerful as any nation on earth has ever been,
and they will sweep through the lands conquering everything, and it will look as though
nothing on earth can stop them.
•2) And there's nothing holy about them...they are going to trust in their own strength
and glory in their own might...kind of like humanists do today!
•5. This is hard for the prophet to take....so he poses a second question...
•C. THE PROPHET'S SECOND QUESTION.... "Are You not from everlasting, O LORD, my
God, my Holy One? We will not die. You, O LORD, have appointed them to judge; And
You, O Rock, have established them to correct. Your eyes are too pure to approve evil,
And You can not look on wickedness with favor. Why do You look with favor On those who
deal treacherously? Why are You silent when the wicked swallow up Those more
righteous than they? Why have You made men like the fish of the sea, Like creeping
things without a ruler over them? The Chaldeans bring all of them up with a hook, Drag
them away with their net, And gather them together in their fishing net. Therefore they
rejoice and are glad. Therefore they offer a sacrifice to their net and burn incense to their
fishing net; Because through these things their catch is large, And their food is
plentiful. Will they therefore empty their net And continually slay nations without
sparing? I will stand on my guard post And station myself on the rampart; And I will keep
watch to see what He will speak to me, And how I may reply when I am reproved" (1:12-
2:1).
•1. The way Habakkuk deals with this second problem and the way he asks for an answer
can be helpful to all of us...he passes through four phases in a gentle and respectful way of
asking "Why, God, Why?"....
•a. HE STARTS OUT THINKING ABOUT GOD, AND REMINDS HIMSELF THAT GOD
IS EVERLASTING(v.12).
•a) The Chaldeans will come trusting in their gods and in their own power and in
their own strength.
•b) But the prophet reminds himself that our God is not like that. He is not one of
these localized tribal deities.
•2) He is the God who covers history.
•4) He is an everlasting God who when the Chaldeans are gone will still be God.
•1) He uses the word which we translate "Lord" which God gave for himself to
Moses....Jehovah which translated means "I am who I am!"
•2) Maybe people were saying that "God is dead." But Habakkuk goes right back to
what he knows about God. He is self-existent and He cannot be defeated!
•c. THIRD HE REMINDS HIMSELF OF GOD'S HOLINESS, "My Holy One!"
•d) The Hebrew writer put it this way, "And, 'You, Lord, in the beginning laid the
foundation of the earth, and the heavens are of Your hands; they will perish, but you
remain....and your years will not come to an end'" (Heb. 1:10-12).
•2) Because God is everlasting, self-existent and holy; and because He is our God the
prophet says,"We will not die!"
•3) But He still does not understand it.
•a) How can a holy God employ such an impure and godless agent?
•b) Have you ever heard anyone say, "This country may not be perfect, but it is
better than any other country on the face of the earth"?
•4) That's what Habakkuk is thinking.
•a) He's thinking...these Chaldeans are like fishermen who catch a bunch of fish
and instead of praising God, the worship the hook or the net which they used to catch
the fish.
•b) What he's really thinking is God....are you out of your mind?
•5) Could God us a Nazi Germany to judge a people who were really better morally
than those who punished them? We know He can because He did! But He punished
the German's too!
•6) Can He use Arab nations or Communist Chinese to punish us today?
•d. SO THE FORTH THING HE DOES IS JUST LEAVE THE PROBLEM WITH GOD
AND WAITS FOR HIS ANSWER (2:1).
•1) Habakkuk does the wise thing. He gets away from the problem for a while, and
let's God handle it.
•2) He leaves the matter with God and waits for His next step.
•b. Or do you explain your fears and problems to God and leave it with Him and wait for
His answer.
II. HABAKKUK'S VISION: FAITH GRASPING THE SOLUTION ---- GOD'S REVELATION: STAND
•1. As Habakkuk waits for God we read, "Then the LORD answered me and said, 'Record
the vision And inscribe it on tablets, That the one who reads it may run'" (2:2).
•a. In other words, "Habakkuk, I'm going to tell you the answer.
•b. Now, I want you to write it down and I want you to write it plainly so that anyone who
reads it will be able to immediately understand its portent.
•2. Then God adds these significant words, "For the vision is yet for the appointed time; It
hastens toward the goal and it will not fail. Though it tarries, wait for it; For it will certainly come,
it will not delay" (2:3).
•a. God is saying, "Habakkuk, this isn't going to happen right away."
•2) Then He says, "Don't worry about what happens in between. Even though it looks
like everything is going wrong, what I have said will happen is going to happen, and if it
seem to delay, wait for it."
•3) It will come....and the victory will ultimately be the Lord's.
•3.
Those who depend upon the Lord are dependable!
Then God goes to a principle that is quoted three times in the NT and forms the basis for the
greatest movements that God has ever had among human beings. He says, "Behold, as for
the proud one, His soul is not right within him; But the righteous will live by his faith" (2:4).
•a. This verse is quoted in Romans, Galatians and Hebrews. The people of God...the righteous
shall live and survive and continue living regardless of what happens...by faith.
•b. When you boil it all down there are only two possible outlooks on life, and there are
only two attitudes by which we can face life.
•1) Either we face what ever comes with faith depending on God and relying on His
promises.
•2) Or we face them depending on our own ability to reason out everything.
•a) The sad message that we must receive here is that all those who live life
reasoning without God's participation in life will be destroyed in God's ultimate
judgment.
•b) Only those who take what God has said and believe that when He says
something it will happen and live depending on that fact will be saved in the day of
judgment.
•c. One reason churches are not doing what God intended for them to do...is because
leaderships and memberships have been converted by the world into trusting in budgets
and human reasoning and the cleverness of the human rational processes in the name
of Christianity.
•d. Only those who learn to live by faith in God will survive judgment and prosper till then.
•1) A people who think they are serving God will picket abortion clinics, and strive with
human reasoning to create clever gimmicks to do God's will...but they will all fail.
•2) But a people who trust in God will alter history, topple tyranny, depose despots
and eliminate unrighteousness.
•e. As a matter of fact...in all the church only the righteous will live (that means survive)
by their faith in God. You see He is actively involved in life because He is the creator of it.
•4. Throughout the rest of this second chapter, then, there is a very interesting analysis of
the Chaldeans and what God plans to do with them.
•5. To summarize, God says to the prophet, "Now Habakkuk, don't you worry about the
Chaldeans; it is true that I have purer eyes than to behold evil and it also true that I am
raising up this people to judge the nation of Israel, but in turn I will judge the
Chaldeans."
•a. The very thing they trust in will prove to be their downfall.
•B. GOD'S ANSWER: SECOND, GOD WILL INDEED JUDGE THE PROUD....LET ME WORRY
ABOUT THE WICKEDNESS OF THE CALDEANS....
•1. Woe to the proud possessed with the lust of conquest and plunder.... "Furthermore,
wine betrays the haughty man, So that he does not stay at home. He enlarges his
appetite like Sheol, And he is like death, never satisfied. He also gathers to himself all
nations And collects to himself all peoples. Will not all of these take up a taunt-song
against him, Even mockery and insinuations against him And say, 'Woe to him who
increases what is not his-- For how long-- And makes himself rich with loans?' Will not
your creditors rise up suddenly, And those who collect from you awaken? Indeed, you
will become plunder for them. Because you have looted many nations, All the
remainder of the peoples will loot you-- Because of human bloodshed and violence
done to the land, To the town and all its inhabitants" (2:5-8).
•2. Woe to their efforts to build a permanent empire through cruelty and godless
gain.... "Woe to him who gets evil gain for his house To put his nest on high, To be
delivered from the hand of calamity! You have devised a shameful thing for your house
By cutting off many peoples; So you are sinning against yourself. Surely the stone will
cry out from the wall, And the rafter will answer it from the framework" (2:9-11).
•a. There are lessons here to us all...
•b. Don't just invest your life to yourself...for if you do when you grow old; your
investments will rot and crumble away before your eyes.
•c. Therefore, don't just put away for a nest egg in this life...
•d. Invest in a better life by dying to selfish desires and serve the needs of others around
you. The God of creation will take care of you! (But I digress)
•3. Woe to those who build cities with bloodshed.... "Woe to him who builds a city with
bloodshed And founds a town with violence! Is it not indeed from the LORD of hosts
That peoples toil for fire, And nations grow weary for nothing? For the earth will be filled
With the knowledge of the glory of the LORD, As the waters cover the sea" (2:12-14).
•a. To those who will not listen to the gospel of Jesus.
•c. But one thing is sure....everyone will know of the glory of the Lord one day!
•4. Woe to those with cruelty in their treatment of those they have conquered.... "Woe to
you who make your neighbors drink, Who mix in your venom even to make them drunk
So as to look on their nakedness! You will be filled with disgrace rather than
honor. Now you yourself drink and expose your own nakedness. The cup in the
LORD'S right hand will come around to you (this is where we get: "What goes around
comes around), And utter disgrace will come upon your glory. For the violence done to
Lebanon will overwhelm you, And the devastation of its beasts by which you terrified
them, Because of human bloodshed and violence done to the land, To the town and all
its inhabitants" (2:15-17).
•5. Woe to the man who trusts in a false god, who thinks that the forces around him are able
to control him, give him life and fulfill his desires.... "What profit is the idol when its maker
has carved it, Or an image, a teacher of falsehood? For its maker trusts in his own
handiwork When he fashions speechless idols. Woe to him who says to a piece of
wood, 'Awake!' To a mute stone, 'Arise!' And that is your teacher? Behold, it is overlaid
with gold and silver, And there is no breath at all inside it. But the LORD is in His holy
temple. Let all the earth be silent before Him" (2:18-20).
•a. The greatest folly of the Babylonians was that as God sat in His holy temple...they
trusted in their idols and ignored him.
•b. Just as people today ignore the God who still sets in His holy temple...as they trust in
their money, or their wisdom, or themselves.
•C. SUMMARY....
•1. The answer to Habakkuk's second question appears to be this: While God may use a
wicked nation like Babylon to punish the wickedness of Judah, He will not let Babylon's
wickedness go unpunished either!
•2. In the meantime, the righteous person will live (survive) by his faith in God, which
Habakkuk illustrates with his prayer...
III. HABAKKUK'S PRAYER: FAITH GLORYING IN ASSURANCE ---- GOD'S LESSON: KNEEL
AND
SEE (3:1-19).
•1. Before Habakkuk begins his prayer he shows us what he has learned.
•a. God is the God of history and He alone is moving; He has everything under control.
•b. The thing we need to remember is that these forces and the problems created by
them are not solved by trying to come to grips with only the immediate problem.
•1) That is like taking aspirin to try to cure cancer.
•c. No, these problems which faced Habakkuk and the problems which face us today are
only solved by the relationship of man to God.
A STUDY OF THE MINOR PROPHETS
LESSON TEN
Haggai - Building the Temple.
Milt Langston Southgate church of Christ
INTRODUCTION:
•A. IN OUR SURVEY OF "THE MINOR PROPHETS", WE NOW JUMP AHEAD ABOUT 100 YEARS...
•1. Prophets like Zephaniah, Nahum, and Habakkuk prophesied shortly before the seventy
years of Babylonian captivity (i.e. before 606-536 B.C.).
•2. Following the return under the leadership of Zerubbabel (536 B.C.), it was not long
before two more prophets were sent to the people of Israel.
•a. These prophets were Haggai and Zechariah...
•2. What we know of Haggai is limited to his book and references in Ezra.
•3. Together with Zechariah he motivated the Jews in rebuilding the temple.
•2. The day the prophesy began can be translated into modern dates as somewhere
between the first week of August to the 24 day of Demember.
•2. About 597 BC in the second "carrying away", Ezekiel was taken.
•3. Both Daniel and Ezekiel preached hope to the people because of the prophecies of
Jeremiah which said the captivity would only last 70 years (Jeremiah 25:9-12; Daniel 9:2).
•4. About 536 BC, after the 70 years, God spoke through the Medo-Persian King Cyrus and
declared the temple would be rebuilt (2 Chronicles 36:22-23). Zerubbabel leads the people.
•a. Ezra 1:1-11 -- Cyrus sent the captives back to Jerusalem with all the goods formerly
taken by Nebuchadnezzar (2 Chronicles 36:5-8; Daniel 1:1-2).
•b. Ezra 3:3-6 -- An altar is built and sacrifices are made, but the foundation of the
temple of Jehovah is not yet laid.
•c. Ezra 3:8-13 -- The foundation of the temple was laid, but the people quit working.
•d. Sixteen year later, God summons Haggai to exhort the people to get back to
rebuilding the house of the Lord - the temple. Haggai delivers 4 exhortations over the next
4 months, using "thus saith the Lord" (or some variation) 26 times in 38 verses.
•e. The Israelites were caught in an undertow of indifference. Undertow - an underlying
current, force, or tendency that is in opposition to what is apparent.
•5. About 516 BC the temple is completed.
•8. About 430 BC Malachi's prophecy closes the Old Testament Canon.
INTRODUCTION:
•A. GOD PROMISES SPIRITUAL BLESSINGS UPON HIS BUILDERS (HAGGAI 2:1-9).
•1. Now Haggai will come to the people with a message of comfort, courage and
consolation.
•a. He doesn't want these have been reluctant in the past to give up and stop
building...
•b. So in less than a month after they start back to building, here is old Haggai
saying,
•1) "Keep on Building!"
•2) "God is with You!"
•3) "Everything is going to get better now!
•c. It can become very easy to be critical all the time, but when God's people
are trying, encouragement works wonders!
•1) Haggai could not encourage in chapter 1 because the people were not
trying.
•2) Now in chapter 2 he can encourage.
•2. READ 2:1-2. Notice that the first message of Haggai from God was to the
leaders, but this one is to the leaders and the people. So the formula found in Haggai
for getting God's people to do what they ought to be doing is this:
•a. First, stir up the leaders, and you will get the job done.
•b. Then, comfort all the workers till the task is complete.
•3. Haggai gives a sure fire cure for indifference (2:3-5).
•a. Here he anticipates the opposition the builders will get (READ 2:3).
•1) As the walls start up the old men are going to discourage the builders
because this temple will only be a shadow of Solomon's temple.
•2) They will say, "If you had only been here in the 'good old days."
•3) Have you ever heard the old timers talk about the old 'brush arbor
meetings for two weeks when 50 people were baptized? What they didn't tell
you was when the same preacher came back the next year only one or two
would still be faithful.
•4) These older people in Haggai's day were depressed and depressed
others because they were looking to the earthly glory of the temple saying,
"Look at this little old thing! If you could have only seen Solomon's temple!"
•b. In the next two verses Haggai will give the solution to the
doldrums (READ 2:4-5). You want to know what cures indifference and
discouragement?
•1) Being strong instead of being weak.
•2) Remembering that God is with us.
•3) Getting busy and going to work.
•4) And remembering what we are here for!
•c. Sometimes we need someone to grab us by the shoulders and shake till our
teeth rattle saying, "Quit being lazy! Quit being indifferent! Pick up your hammers
and start building my house!!"
•d. Now the people need encouraging-anytime you tell people to get with it, you
had better give them a reason to do it, and that is what Haggai does in verses 6-9.
•1) Jesus never told anyone to do anything or give anything up without also
telling them what they would get for their doing or their giving.
•2) You and I need to be that smart too.
•4. In verses 6-9 God will give them a reason to build.
•a. READ 2:6-7. God says, "I'll fill this house with glory. You think Solomon's
temple was glorious, just wait till you see what I'm going to do with this one!"
•1) When God says that he is going to shake a nation, it means that he is
going to destroy or judge it. Just get your Old Testament out read all the
prophets, and see if this is not true.
•a) We know what Haggai is talking about because this passage is
quoted in Heb. 12:26-28.
•1] God will shake all nations...they are going to be destroyed.
•2] They are not going to last.
•3] The only thing that will survive God's shaking is the unshakable
kingdom which Hebrews chapter twelve is describing, in which you and I
dwell: The "church of the firstborn", "Mt. Zion", "the heavenly
Jerusalem" (Heb. 12:22-23).
•4] And this is what these Jews were building when they built that
temple!
•b) It is spiritual glory, not a visible or "seen" glory that we have.
•1] We know of it only by faith.
•2] Paul says in 2 Cor. 4:18, "So we fix our eyes not on what is seen,
but on what is unseen. For what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen
is eternal."
A STUDY OF THE MINOR PROPHETS
LESSON SEVEN
Zephaniah - Through Judgment to Blessing
Milt Langston Southgate church of Christ
INTRODUCTION:
•1. In this survey of "The Minor Prophets" we come to Zephaniah, the first of three prophets
who preached to Judah alone, following the downfall of the northern kingdom at the hands of the
Assyrians in 722 BC.
•2. Zephaniah's name means "Jehovah Hides."
•b. This has prompted some to call him "the royal prophet."
•B. He probably prophesied after Josiah's reforms (or his attempts to reform the people).
•1. Zephaniah calls the people "The remnant of Baal" (1:4). What do you suppose this
means?
•2. When he speaks for the Lord of punishing "the King's sons" do you suppose they who
are dressed in foreign clothes are also the "remnant of Baal?" If so it does not look too good
for Judah!
•2. Now it was about a hundred years later, and Assyria is on the way out...
•a. From 627 little is know about the kings of Assyria because it was a time of turmoil
and unrest for the nation.
•b. In 625 Nabopolassar established Babylon as a separate nation and began to battle
against Assyria.
•c. About 13 years later in 612 B.C. Nebuchadnezzar, Nabopolassar's son, defeated the
Assyrians effectively ending their power among the nations when Nineveh was conquered.
•a) It was during this time that King Josiah of Judah was killed when he got
involved in the world politics of the day.
•b) He was killed when he went to prevent Pharaoh Neco from assisting Assyria
against Babylon.
•c) Judah had become a small pawn in the hands of the more powerful kings of
the land.
•1] Briefly Judah became servants of Egypt, but Egypt was defeated by
Nebuchadnezzar with the Assyrians.
•2] So Judah became servants to Babylon for the rest of her existence before
captivity.
•2) In 605 Assyria will cease to exist when they and Egypt are defeated by Babylon
at the city of Carchemish.
•3. No doubt it was this rise of Babylon to power that gave occasion for Zephaniah's
prophesy.
•B. NATIONAL POLITICS OF JUDAH IN ZEPHANIAH'S DAY.
•1. After the good king Hezekiah was succeeded by his son Manasseh, a boy of twelve,
things went bad.
•a. Manasseh undid all the good Hezekiah his father had done (READ 2 CHRONICLES
33:1-9; see also 2 Kings 21:10-16). The nation was once again led to rebel against God.
•b. The Chronicles account tells us that later in life after being carried off by the
Assyrians to Babylon, Manasseh repented so God reinstated him as king (2 Chronicles
33:10-13).
•2. Amon, who followed Manasseh, was also wicked (2 Chronicles 33:21-25).
•3. Josiah was the last good king of Judah. He came to the throne at the age of eight and
sought God at age 15. He began to reform the land at age 20, and completed the reform at
age 26.
•4. It was after Josiah's reforms that Zephaniah prophesied. READ 2 KINGS 23:26-28 for a
summary of the situation from God's point of view.
•C. RELIGIOUS AND MORAL CLIMATE IN JUDAH IN ZEPHANIAH'S DAY.
•2. However, even though Josiah's reform restored the rituals of worship; the people's
devotion was only external.
•3. Social and moral corruption were widespread.
•a. So vivid are his descriptions that George Adam Smith wrote: "No hotter book lies in
all the Old Testament."
•b. And yet it ends on an encouraging note about the future....Therefore its overall
message is: Through Judgment to Blessing."
[Having encouraged the people to "look within" and see the need for their own repentance,
Zephaniah now prompts the people to "look around" to see...]
II. LOOK AROUND - GOD'S WRATH IS COMING UPON THE SURROUNDING NATIONS (2:4-3:7).
[Finally, lest the faithful remnant despair, Zephaniah ends his message with a "look beyond"...]
•b. We don't like waiting...after all physical life only lasts 70 or 80 years....God's is
eternal.
•c. One of the things we must learn having been born again into eternal life is that we
are on God's time schedule now...not our own...it might involve some waiting.
•2. Listen to Micah's commentary on this same subject in Micah 7:7-9... "But as for me, I will
watch expectantly for the LORD; I will wait for the God of my salvation. My God will hear
me. Do not rejoice over me, O my enemy. Though I fall I will rise; Though I dwell in darkness,
the LORD is a light for me. I will bear the indignation of the LORD Because I have sinned
against Him, Until He pleads my case and executes justice for me. He will bring me out to the
light, And I will see His righteousness."
•a. Do you notice that Micah admits that he is a part of the problem: "I have sinned
against Him!"
•b. What we see here is Micah's humility and his repentance and his faith as the
judgment which will surely come overtakes him.
•c. As judgment comes we much wait in trust for the Lord to save us....we cannot
remove faith from our salvation.
•d. Habakkuk said it this way concerning those who will survive God's judgment: "But the
righteous will live by his faith" (Habakkuk 2:4).
•3. Waiting on the Lord means trusting in the Lord's working...even in our sinful lives to work
out righteousness...we become righteous by trusting in God's ability to make us what we have
not been able to do for ourselves.
•4. This is one of the ceaseless lessons from the Minor Prophets.
•1. Zechariah came up to Jerusalem from Babylon under Zerubbabel (Neh. 12:4, 16).
•2. He was both a priest and a prophet, prophesying contemporarily with Haggai.
•a. Zechariah was the son of Berechiah, and the grandson of Iddo (Zec 1:1, 7).
•1) The same Iddo seems to be mentioned among the priests who returned from
exile under Zerubbabel and Joshua in the year 536 BC (Neh 12:4; Ezr 2:2).
•b. "When the prophets, Haggai the prophet and Zechariah the son of Iddo, prophesied
to the Jews who were in Judah and Jerusalem in the name of the God of Israel, who was
over them, then Zerubbabel the son of Shealtiel and Jeshua the son of Jozadak arose and
began to rebuild the house of God which is in Jerusalem; and the prophets of God were
with them supporting them" (Ezra 5:1-2).
•c. "And the elders of the Jews were successful in building through the prophesying of
Haggai the prophet and Zechariah the son of Iddo. And they finished building according to
the command of the God of Israel and the decree of Cyrus, Darius, and Artaxerxes king of
Persia" (Ezra 6:14).
•3. He was called to be a prophet to stir up the people in building the temple.
•1. Following 70 years of Babylonian exile, Israel was allowed to return back home...at least
a remnant.
•a. Precipitated by the decree of Cyrus, they returned to rebuild the temple (Ezra 1:1-5).
•b. The first group of exiles were led by Zerubbabel (Ezra 2:1-2).
•c. While they were quick to build the altar and the foundation of the temple, resistance
by adversaries soon resulted in a long delay (Ezra 4:1-5).
•2. To encourage Zerubbabel and the others, God sent two prophets: Haggai we've already
studied, and at the same tiime Zechariah (Ezra 5:1-2; 6:14-15).
•2. About the controversy concerning the date of the writing of the book.
•a. Several scholars have differing views as to the dates of the book's writing which are
pure conjecture.
•1) The long and the short of it is that some believe that part of the book was written
by the Zechariah who lived during Isaiah's time, part of the book was written by another
who lived during Jeremiah's time at the time of the destruction of Jerusalem, and the
last part of the book was either written by the Zechariah who returned from the exile or
maybe even from someone who lived as late as the second century B.C.
•2) These same type of liberal scholars who do this also taught that Isaiah was
written by three completely different people. One was Isaiah who was perceptive and
figured out what was coming for Israel. Another was a person who lived in Jeremiah's
day which answered the reason Isaiah could so accurately predict the destruction of
Jerusalem, and lastly the book was written by someone one who was a contemporary
with Christ which would explain why Isaiah could so vividly predict Christ's crucifixion.
•3) These liberal scholars were prevalent in higher education prior to our modern day
humanists. They were called religious deists. Their belief was based solely on
reason. To them God who created the universe then abandoned it, assuming no
control over life, exerting no influence on natural phenomena, and giving no
supernatural revelation.[1] Large universities for years taught their theories which such
as the one that Zechariah was written by three different people because of respect for
their high standing in education circles.
•c) At one time it was becoming politically incorrect to oppose their views and
they were always given as an alternative view.
•d) They were simply explaining away anything miraculous...they were actually
petty thugs much like those who insist today that evolution is fact and to oppose
such a view marks a person as being uneducated.
•b. In 1947 something occurred in Palestine which erased many of the theories of the
deists, and put egg on their faces and exposed them for what they are.
•1) A little shepherd boy stumbled into a cave discovering a cash of manuscripts of
the Old Testament now know as the Dead Sea Scrolls. One of the jars contained the
entire book of Isaiah which can be scientifically dated as being copied as far back as
100 B.C.
•2) The theory stated that the book of Isaiah was not written till the time of Christ, yet
we have in our hands a copy of Isaiah which is word for word the same as our present
day copies which was written 100 years before Christ.
•b) It and other archaeological discoveries pushed back the teachings of the
deists for many years.
•c. Yet when we study books like Zechariah we still see a hold over of these deistic
teachings which are still honored by higher education even today.
•d. That's why you see these theories that the book was written by more than just one
man.
•3. Zechariah's book is the longest and most obscure of "The Minor Prophets."
•b. It is apocalyptic in nature; filled with symbolic visions, and it is very much like Ezekiel
and Daniel.
•4. The theme of the book come from 1:14, "Proclaim, saying, ‘Thus says the LORD of
hosts, I am exceedingly jealous for Jerusalem and Zion.'"
•a. Dated in the 8th month of the second year of Darius (520 B.C.), READ 1:1.
•b. This places his prophecy between Haggai's 2nd and 3rd prophecies - Hag 2:1,10.
•c. Comparing this prophecy with Haggai's third suggests that while the temple was
being rebuilt, some repentance was still necessary - cf. Hag 2:14, "Then Haggai said, ‘So is
this people. And so is this nation before Me,' declares the LORD, and so is every work of
their hands; and what they offer there is unclean.'"
•a. The Lord has been angry with their fathers (e.g., Babylonian captivity) - READ 1:2.
•b. 2. The people need to return to the Lord to gain His favor - READ 1:3; cf. James
4:8, "Draw near to God and He will draw near to you."
•c. Don't be like their fathers, who ignored the prophets - READ 1:4; cf. 2 Chr 36:15-
18, "The LORD, the God of their fathers, sent word to them again and again by His
messengers, because He had compassion on His people and on His dwelling place; but
they continually mocked the messengers of God, despised His words and scoffed at His
prophets, until the wrath of the LORD arose against His people, until there was no
remedy. Therefore He brought up against them the king of the Chaldeans who slew their
young men with the sword in the house of their sanctuary, and had no compassion on
young man or virgin, old man or infirm; He gave them all into his hand. All the articles of
the house of God, great and small, and the treasures of the house of the LORD, and the
treasures of the king and of his officers, he brought them all to Babylon."
•d. Learn from their fathers, who learned things the hard way, READ 1:5-6.
[The first message is certainly clear enough, and seems to complement Haggai's third
message. Then three months later, Zechariah had a series of eight visions that occurred
in one night...]
•B. VISIONS IN THE NIGHT (1:7-6:9).
•1. THE ANGELIC HORSEMEN (1:7-17)... GOD'S EYES ARE ON THE WICKED!
•a. Zechariah sees a man riding on a red horse among myrtle trees in a hollow, followed
by red, sorrel, and white horses - READ 1:7-9.
•b. The horses are explained as sent by the Lord to walk throughout the earth, who
report (or perhaps those on them) that the earth is resting quietly - 1:10-11.
•c. The "Angel of the Lord" asks how long will God not show mercy on Jerusalem and
Judah - 1:12.
•d. The Lord responds with comforting words, which Zechariah is told to proclaim - 1:13-
17...
•1) Words describing the Lord's zeal for Jerusalem and Zion.
•e. So while the nations may appear "at ease", their judgment is forthcoming and God
will show mercy to Jerusalem.
•f. The purpose of this vision (and the one to follow) appear to confirm the promise
made to Zerubbabel by Haggai - cf. Hag 2:20-22, "Then the word of the LORD came a
second time to Haggai on the twenty-fourth day of the month, saying, ‘Speak to Zerubbabel
governor of Judah, saying, 'I am going to shake the heavens and the earth. I will overthrow
the thrones of kingdoms and destroy the power of the kingdoms of the nations; and I will
overthrow the chariots and their riders, and the horses and their riders will go down,
everyone by the sword of another.'"
•2. THE FOUR HORNS AND FOUR CRAFTSMEN (1:18-21)... GOD'S HAND WILL BE ON
THE WICKED.
•a. Zechariah sees four horns that are identified as that which scattered Judah, Israel,
and Jerusalem -1:18-19.
•b. He is then shown four craftsmen, who will cast out the horns (nations) that scattered
Judah - 1:20-21.
•1) This vision appears to confirm the promise made in the first vision...
•2) Both visions are designed to comfort the people who were building the temple!
•b. The FIRST PART of the vision indicates that Jerusalem would be inhabited to
overflowing, and protected by the Lord - 2:1-5.
•c. The SECOND PART calls for the dispersed Jews to return - 2:6-9.
•d. The THIRD PART proclaims the future joy of Zion and many nations - 2:10-12.
•e. Finally, a call to all to be silent, for God is aroused (i.e., is about to act!) - READ
2:13.
•f. This vision also appears designed to encourage the building of the temple!
•4. THE CLEANSING OF JOSHUA, THE HIGH PRIEST (3:1-10)... GOD WILL CLEANSE
AND EXALT HIS SERVANTS!
•a. In the first part of the vision... 3:1-5.
•1) Joshua, the high priest (cf. Hag 1:1), stands in filthy garments before Satan
and "the Angel of the Lord."
•2) Satan is rebuked, while Joshua is forgiven and clothed with rich robes, as "the
Angel of the Lord"stands by...
•3) Joshua and his companions (the restored priesthood?) are a sign...
•b) I.e., the coming Messiah - cf. Isaiah 11:1-2; Matt 2:23
•5) The Lord promises the removal of iniquity, describing prosperity "in that day."
•c. This vision seems designed to encourage the re-establishment of the priestly service
in the temple, and it certainly has Messianic overtones.
•1) Remember that the context of these visions is the work of Zechariah and Haggai,
who were sent to stir up the people to complete building the temple.
•2) This is not to discount the fact that their messages and visions often had
Messianic connotations...
•a) As so much of what happened in the Old Testament was a type of what was
to come.
•b) Even these prophecies of Zechariah often appear to have a double fulfillment.
•2] And a fulfillment that was realized with the coming of the Messiah, Our
Jesus!
•3] 3:8b, "...they are men who are a symbol, for behold, I am going to bring in
My servant the Branch."
•2) That by God's Spirit, not man's might or power, Zerubbabel shall bring forth the
capstone (finishing stone) of the temple - 4:6b-7.
•3) Thus Zerubbabel will finish the temple - 4:8-9.
•4) For the eyes of the Lord (represented by the seven lamps) which scan the whole
earth, rejoice to see the plumb line in the hand of Zerubbabel - 4:10.
•a) God asks, "For who has despised the day of small things?"
•c) Here's the lesson: "But these seven will be glad when they see the plumb line
in the hand of Zerubbabel--these are the eyes of the LORD which range to and fro
throughout the earth."
•1] Men may dispise the feeble efforts of a simple service to the Lord.
•2] But not the all seeing eyes of the Lord! He knows where our power lies!
•3] Any effort of faith is looked upon with favor from the Lord.
•d) No task of faith is insignificant...as Jesus says, "Even to the giving of a cup of
water in His name..."
•5) And that the olive trees represent "two anointed ones" (Joshua the high priest
and Zerubbabel the governor?) who stand beside the Lord - 4:11-14.
•c. With such encouragement, who can "despise the day of small things?" (as the
temple looked when its foundation was first laid - cf. Ezra 3:11-12; Hag 2:2-3).
•6. THE FLYING SCROLL (5:1-4)... THE WICKED PEOPLE REMOVED FROM THE
GLORIFIED LAND.
•a. Turning and raising his eyes, Zechariah sees a flying scroll, twenty cubits long and
10 cubits wide (approx. 30 feet by 15 feet) - 5:1-2.
•b. The scroll is explained as being the curse going out on the whole earth - 5:3-4.
•1) According to what is written on one side, every thief will be expelled.
•2) According to what is written on the other side, every perjurer will be expelled.
•3) Thus it will enter and consume the houses of thieves and those who swear
falsely.
•c. Such people were responsible for the downfall of Israel and Judah (cf. Hos 4:2-3;
Mic 2:2-3); this vision ensures such will be removed from God's people.
•7. THE WOMAN IN THE BASKET (EPHAH) (5:5-11)... WICKEDNESS IS CARRIED
AWAY ON DIVINE WINGS.
•a. Zechariah is directed to see a large basket, in which sits a woman - READ 5:5-7.
•1) She is thrust down into the basket with a lead cover over the top - 5:8.
•2) Two women with wings like those of a stork lift the basket to take it a house in the
land of Shinar (Babylon) - 5:9-11.
•c. This vision symbolizes that wickedness will be removed from the land.
•2) The chariot with the black horses is going to the north country, followed by the
chariot with the white horses.
•3) The chariot with the dappled horses is going to the south country.
•4) The chariots go throughout the earth, with those going to the north giving rest to
God's Spirit in the north country (north country = where the enemy dwells).
•c. This final vision appears to correspond with the first (cf. 1:7-11).
•1) In the first vision, the four horses report that the earth was at peace, while the
temple lay uncompleted.
•2) Now, it is God's Spirit which is given rest in the north country (Babylon?).
•d. Perhaps this vision reflects that God would be at ease once His purposes concerning
Jerusalem (restoration of its temple) and Babylon (judgment for its sins) were completed.
[With these eight visions in one night, Zechariah had a message to encourage Zerubbabel
and Joshua in their efforts to rebuild the temple. The message would be reinforced with yet
another given to Zechariah...]
•C. THE COMMAND TO CROWN JOSHUA (6:9-15)... A REPRESENTATION OF JESUS THE KING-PRIEST.
•a. Take the gift from the captives and make an elaborate crown - "Take silver and gold,
make an ornate crown..." (6:9-11a).
•b. Set the crown on the head of Joshua the high priest - "...and set it on the head of
Joshua the son of Jehozadak, the high priest" (6:11b).
•c. Speak the following words to Joshua - 6:12-13.
•4) He shall bear the glory, and shall sit and reign on the His throne.
•e. Those from far away will help build the temple - 6:15.
•a. Certainly this symbolic crowning was intended to encourage Joshua and those
captives who had returned to build the temple.
•b. But Joshua appears to be a type of the coming Messiah., i.e., Jesus...
•1) Jesus was called "a Nazarene" (branch) - Mt 2:23; cf. Zech 3:8.
•3) He would build the "temple of the Lord" (i.e., His church) Matt 16:18; Eph 2:21-
22.
•4) He would "rule on His throne" - 1 Cor 15:25; Rev 1:5; 2:27-28.
•A. SETTING...
•1. With the aid of the prophetic ministries of Haggai and Zechariah...
•b. What had begun in 536 B.C. was finally finished in 516 B.C.
•2. In 458 B.C., another group of exiles returned to Jerusalem, led by Ezra...
•a. A priest
•b. His work was to teach the people the word of God as is recorded in Ezra 7:10.
•3. About 444 B.C., a third group of exiles returned led by Nehemiah...
•b. Under his leadership, the walls of Jerusalem were rebuilt (Neh 1-6).
•c. Together with Ezra, he led the people to a great revival (Neh 7-13).
•4. Contemporary with Ezra and Nehemiah was another prophet, Malachi...
•1) Malachi attacked the spiritual and moral decay that was prevalent.
•2) I.e., making a charge, raising potential objections, and then refuting them.
•D. ONE WHO SINS WILLFULLY AND WANTONLY CANNOT PLEASE GOD BY AN ELABORATE WORSHIP.
•F. THE PEOPLE SUFFER WHEN THE PREACHER FAILS TO STUDY AND TEACH ALL THE TRUTH.
•G. GOD STILL HOLDS OUT THE CHALLENGE TO ALL HIS CHOSEN ONES TO PUT HIM TO THE TEST TO FIND
THE RICH SUPPLY OF BLESSING THAT ARE AVAILABLE.
INTRODUCTION:
•A. IN THIS STUDY, WE SHALL CONSIDER SEVERAL EXAMPLES OF MALACHI'S DIDACTIC STYLE OF TEACHING.
•1. The book is one of the most interesting books of the Bible.
•a. As you read through the book of Malachi it comes across as an interview.
•b. Almost a debate between GOD and Israel, with Malachi as the moderator.
•3. A question is posed and GOD gives and answer, then the Israelites are given a chance
to respond, this dialogue consists of some 24 total questions, each one centering around the
theme of "Is GOD Faithful"?
•A. EVIDENTLY THEY WERE QUESTIONING GOD'S LOVE FOR THEM (1:1)...
•1. After years of captivity, one might understand why they felt this way.
•2. Their return from Babylonian captivity was not without difficulty.
•c. "‘Was not Esau Jacob's brother?' declares the LORD. ‘Yet I have loved Jacob but I
have hated Esau'"
•2. God is speaking of Jacob and Esau as the representative of their descendant nations...
•a. Edom (the descendants of Esau) had become desolate; despite their claims to the
country, it would remain desolate (READ 1:3-4).
•b. But Israel would one day see the Lord magnified beyond its border (READ 1:5).
[If the people only observed how Israel was being restored while Edom remained desolate,
they would know God still loved them as a nation.]
[But perhaps their doubting of God's love had led to another problem that was prevalent at that
time...]
•1. Sons honor their fathers, and servants their masters; but they were despising God.
•2. When asked in what way, they are told of their defiled sacrifices.
•3. They were offering to God what they would be embarrassed to offer men.
•4. The Lord would even wish that someone shut the doors so they could not sacrifice.
•5. Despite their dishonor, God's name will be honored even among the Gentiles.
•c. To be included in that day we need to be a people who honor God even in the days
when men are dishonoring Him!
•d. This is what Jesus did which Paul speaks of in Philippians 2:5-11, and in response
God will give Jesus a name of honor and humble the proud before Him.
•a. There are some who put work before church; others put recreation before
church. Today school activities come before church activities.
•b. When church (the body of Christ; the rule of God) begins not to matter to us...
•1) God will not ask us: "Why doesn't church matter to you?"
•a) This present day culture of our has tried to force God into an existentialistic
mold...or worse to deny Him altogether.
•1] Really if the modern American society cannot deny God and are forced to
at least admit that others believe in Him.
•2] When he is talked about at all he is viewed with an existential definition.
•3] That's why the God of the Christians and the God of the Muslims or the
God of the Hindu to them is all the same far away god who does not interfere in
the affairs of man.
•b) Our study of the Minor Prophets shows us that God is not only very interested
in His creation...his eyes are constantly upon His creation because His plan is to
save all who will turn to Him for His own righteousness.
•c) The wonderful addition the New Testament makes to the Old Testament is
that God does this in a righteous and just way through Jesus the man God.
•d) This should cause you and me to guard against having a casual attitude
about God's kingdom because we have learned that it is the only kingdom that will
endure the earth's distruction.
•1] If you are in it you have secured salvation. That's how important it is.
•3] And if we have a casual attitude toward our worship of God ...we stand
the chance of angering God who created it for us, and we stand the chance of
mission out on its salvation!
•2] If we want to get in on the exaltation after this life is over, we had better
pay closer attention to God rule, to God's kingdom, to God's righteousness (cf.
Matthew 6:33).
•c. Jewish religion demanded the first fruits and best for sacrifice...to offer less
displeased God to the extent that He despised what was given.
•d. Jesus told us that we can build upon the sand, or we can build upon a rock. How do
we build upon a solid foundation?
•1. They also were profaning God's name by saying His service is contemptible and a
weariness.
•a. The people and priests profaned GOD'S name (v.12).
•1) Not through cursing or sinful living (this was the sin of their fathers, but they had
a different problem).
•1) A cry for shorter sermons, and a desire for an earlier dismissal time can be signs
of a deeper problem.
•2) The Children of Israel were bored with their worship, and their praise was from
the lips out, not from the heart where God desired it to come.
•2. Those who continued to bring blemished sacrifices would fall under God's curse, for He
is "a great King."
•a. Because God is a "great King"...
•1) You can bow before Him and praise Him and honor Him...even this is only
possible because of the grace of God in sending Christ who will accept our faith and
devotion.
•2) You can even rebel against Him in opposition.
•1. Addressing the priests directly, the nature of God's curse is graphically depicted (READ
2:1-6).
•2. Because they had failed to live up to what was expected of God's priests, He will make
them base and contemptible (READ 2:7-9).
•3. SOME APPLICATIONS...
•b. They had many educated and noble people to serve them and lead them in worship.
•c. They even had a book of scripture that came straight from the mouth of GOD.
•d. The Israelites could look upon the broad expanse of history and say GOD has
provided.
•1) They loved to talk of how GOD had delivered them from times of harm and times
of need.
•2) When it came to the things of GOD, they, like us, had it all.
•e. So why when we read the book of Malachi, do we find it so harsh and critical?
•1) I believe the answer is because the Israelites took what GOD gave them for
granted.
•2) They began to worship out of habit and sacrifice was just a word they heard on
the Sabbath.
•3) They began to let the influences of the world compromise their worship, and they
stood in a precarious position with GOD.
•f. Malachi wrote to prepare the people for the eminent coming of Jesus Christ.
•1) As Malachi prepared the children of Israel for the coming of Jesus.
•3) We should not view this as just another commentary on the weak, non-committal
faith of the Israelites.
•5) Paul said it this way, "For whatever was written in earlier times was written for our
instruction, so that through perseverance and the encouragement of the Scriptures we
might have hope" (Romans 15:4).
•1. They were dealing treacherously and profaning the covenant made with their fathers by
marrying pagan women ("the daughter of a foreign God"), (vs.10-11).
•b. God through Moses in Deut. 7:2-4 told Israel, "You shall make no covenant with them
and show no favor to them (speaking of the idolatrous nations around them). Furthermore,
you shall not intermarry with them; you shall not give your daughters to their sons, nor shall
you take their daughters for your sons. For they will turn your sons away from following Me
to serve other gods; then the anger of the LORD will be kindled against you and He will
quickly destroy you."
•2. For more background on this problem you can study Ezra chapters 9 & 10.
•3. Malachi prays that the Lord will cut off from Jacob those who do this (v.12).
•a. Why do you suppose Israel's men were drawn to pagan women (this is not a racial
issue, but a religious issue)?
•b. A substandard view of marriage reveals a substandard view of God who created man
and woman and joins them in covenant together.
•B. BY DIVORCING THEIR JEWISH WIVES (READ 2:13-16).
•1. Despite their weeping, God was no longer regarding their sacrifices (v.13).
•b. Peter tells Xian men to honor their wives "...so that your prayers will not be
hindered" (1 Peter 3:7).
•c. The altar was already wet from the tears of their wives!
•1) And now they are crying because things are not going will with them?!
•3) And then when things are not going well, we blame God...who is already
displeased...look out!, we're about to make Him angry.
•2. Israel's problem was that they had dealt treacherously with the wives of the their youth
(i.e., Jewish wives) by divorcing them (vs. 14-15).
•a. Even though they had entered into a covenant (e.g., "Till death do us part").
•b. Even though God had made them one (cf. Gen 2:24).
•3. Therefore God hates divorce, "'For I hate divorce,' says the LORD, the God of Israel,
‘and him who covers his garment with wrong,' says the LORD of hosts. ‘So take heed to your
spirit, that you do not deal treacherously'"(v.16).
•a. For it covers one's garment with wrong (violence); chaòmaòs chaòmaòs (khaw-
mawce') = "violence; by implication wrong; by metonymy unjust gain:- cruel (-ty), damage,
false, injustice, X oppressor, unrighteous, violence (against, done), violent (dealing),
wrong."
•1) Divorce wrongs a man's wife that he has promised to care for and protect...what
started out in love and mutual respect ends in violence!
•2) It wrongs a man's children leaving them without leadership, love and
support. Divorce devastates children, then and now.
•b. It is treacherous (bagad [bagad] in Hebrew) = "to act treacherously, deceitfully,
deal treacherously."
•1) This type of divorce causes a person to deceive with his promises.
•2) It is to act with treachery with one's spouse!
•c. In Christ's day some (as in the book of Malachi, and as some do today) were trying
to use divorce to avoid adultery...
•1) Adultery is breaking faith concerning your vows of faithfulness and having sexual
relations with someone other than your spouse.
•2) This type of divorce just to change marriage companions is the same as adultery
Jesus taught (Matthew 5:31-32; 19:3-8).
•3) The union of a man and a woman is a holy thing....it is sanctified in marriage.
•b) God's will is not evil, but best for His creation.
•b. By offering half-hearted worship born of unbelief instead of trusting and believing in
God.
•3. They were profaning God's covenant (2:10-16).
•b. By divorcing their Jewish wives (the wives of their youth...breaking faith).
•1. They had wearied God with their words (this sounds like a whine-ie type of griping).
•a. For they said that those who do evil is good in God's sight, that He even delights in
them.
•1) They were complaining that their obedience to God's laws was more of a
detriment than a blessing.
•2) To their way of thinking the unrighteous had an advantage over them.
•3) It seemed that God was blessing the unrighteous over them.
•1. My "messenger," "The Lord you seek," and the "messenger of the covenant." (READ
3:1).