| I. |
TITLE OF THE BOOK: |
| |
A. |
Hebrew: In Hebrew the
book is titled <wjn which
is probably the passive form of “comforted” with the name of
Yahweh omitted |
| |
B. |
Greek: In Greek the book
is titled Naoum which is
basically a transliteration of the Hebrew |
| II. |
AUTHOR: |
| |
A. |
He is identified as Nahum
the Elkoshite (Nahum 1:1) |
| |
B. |
The title “the Elkoshite”
may have reference to the town that Nahum was from (e.g., Elkosh);
however, it is not presently known where that town was located.
Perhaps it was in Judah since he writes to Judah. |
| |
C. |
His name means
“consolation” or “comfort” which has significance since that is
what he will bring to Judah through his message about the
destruction of Nineveh |
| |
D. |
Canonicity of Nahum has
never been seriously challenged |
| III. |
DATE: 663 to 612 B.C.
(perhaps between 663 to 654 B.C.) |
| |
A. |
The prophecy’s
identification of the Assyrian (Ashurbanipal) destruction of the
Egyptian city of Thebes (No-amon), in upper Egypt on the Nile
(Nahum 3:8), suggests that the book was written after 663 B.C. |
| |
B. |
Since the essence of the
book is to describe the upcoming destruction of the Assyrian
capital of Nineveh, it is probable that the book was written
before 612 B.C. |
| |
C. |
Perhaps the book’s
emphasis upon the power of the Assyrians may suggest a date before
645 B.C. since its decline was evident by 626.
This would have been during the reign of Manasseh (686-642 B.C.) |
| |
D. |
Conclusion: Therefore it
is reasonable to affirm that Nahum was written sometime between
663 B.C. and 612 B.C., perhaps before the rebuilding of the city
of Thebes from 663 B.C. to 654 B.C. |
| IV. |
HISTORICAL SETTING: |
| |
A. |
The Assyrian power rose
with Ashurnasirpal II (884-859 B.C.) and Shalmaneser II (859-824
B.C.) |
| |
B. |
Tiglath-pileser III (Pul in the Scriptures) began
a group of conquerors who took Syria and Palestine including
Shalmaneser V (727-722 B.C. who began the deportation of Samaria),
Sargon II (722-705 B.C. who completed the deportation of Samaria),
Sennacherib (704-581 B.C. who attacked king of Judah, Hezekiah
[Josiah’s father]), and Esarhaddon (681-669 B.C. who led campaigns
against Egypt) |
| |
C. |
Esarhaddon’s son,
Ashurbanipal (669-631) ruled much of the upper Egyptian city of
Thebes, but his decline and that of Assyria’s soon followed |
| |
D. |
In 616 B.C. Nabopolassar
expanded his kingdom, and in 612 B.C. he joined with the Medes and
Scythians to destroy Nineveh |
| |
E. |
Assyria’s army was
defeated in 609 B.C. at Haran |
| |
F. |
What was left of
Assyria’s army went to Carchemish (just west of the Euphrates
River and north of Aram) |
| V. |
RELATIONSHIP TO OTHER
PROPHETS: |
| |
A. |
Jonah: Nahum is related
to Jonah who prophesied 150 years earlier against Nineveh and
experienced a great revival in the city. It seems that Nineveh has
now fallen again into is severe sin and is being told again of
certain judgment |
| |
B. |
Nahum is one of three
prophets who have prophesies against other nations: |
| |
|
1. |
Nahum-against Assyria |
| |
|
2. |
Obadiah-against Edom |
| |
|
3. |
Habakkuk-against Babylon. These three
countries/empires afflicted God’s people throughout their history |
| VI. |
PURPOSES: |
| |
A. |
To place a “burden”
(oracle) or destruction upon Nineveh. Note-there is no counter
condemnation upon Judah |
| |
B. |
To provide comfort for
Judah who was afflicted by Assyria with the assurance that God is
in control and will fight for His people. Bob Chisholm says it
this way, “The sovereign Lord, who is the most powerful of all
warriors, would avenge the harm done to His covenant people by
appropriately and thoroughly judging their Assyrian oppressors” |