NAHUM’S MESSAGE ABOUT GOD
Nahum 1:1-7
Prayer
We don't know much about
Nahum:
1. He was a
prophet.
2. He was a native
of Elkosh (probably a Galilean village).
3. He lived about
650 years before Christ.
And 4. He prophesied the
destruction of Nineveh.
Nineveh is the city where
Jonah preached.
Jonah wanted it destroyed.
But God asked, “Should I not
spare Nineveh that great city wherein are more
than six score thousand
person.”
More than 120,000 people
lived in Nineveh.
God wanted to spare it.
He told Jonah to preach
there.
Jonah tried to run away.
But a whale changed his mind.
He went and preached.
A revival broke out.
God spared the city.
And now, about 150 years have
passed.
Nineveh was still a great
city filled with merchants.
Nahum said Nineveh had “multiplied
her merchants above the stars of
heaven” (Nah. 8:i6).
Nineveh was wealthy.
He said, Nineveh had “immense
stores of gold and silver” (Nah. 2:9).
Nineveh was filled with influential
people.
He said Nineveh had “Crowned
ones, nobles, marshals and captains as
plentiful as locusts and
great grasshoppers.”
But Nineveh was a wicked
place.
Nahum called it, “The bloody
city;”
He said it was “full of lies
and robberies.”
This new generation had no
respect for God.
So God sent a second prophet
to Nineveh.
This time it was Nahum.
And this time God told His
prophet to prophesy the destruction of Nineveh.
Nahum didn't try to run away.
But before he prophesied the
destruction of Nineveh, he told the Ninevites
what God is like.
Today, I want to speak on
Nahum's Message about God.
I will make eight points.
1st---God is
Jealous (Nahum 1:2).
This is His very own
description of Himself when He gave the Ten
Commandments.
“Thou shalt have no other
gods before me.”
“For I the Lord thy God am a
jealous God.”
God is jealous about His
glory.
He wants us to give Him first
place;
To acknowledge who He is and
what He does.
Our blessings are not
accidents.
Our blessings are the
goodness of God.
God is jealous about His
people.
He loves His people.
He vowed to protect His
people.
He feels compelled to react
when His people are threatened.
So know that God is a jealous
God;
That we cannot give our
worship to other gods;
And the world cannot
persecute His people and get away with it forever.
2nd---“The Lord revengeth”
(Nahum 1:2).
Could this be true?
Does God seek revenge?
Let's get the picture.
Israel had divided into a
Northern Kingdom and a Southern Kingdom.
The Northern Kingdom
abandoned God.
So God used Nineveh to
destroy it.
But the Southern Kingdom was
still faithful to God.
And He did not want His
faithful people harmed.
But Nineveh was attacking
them too.
So God said tell Nineveh, “The
Lord revengeth.”
“Tell Nineveh the Lord takes
revenge on those who abuse His people.”
“Tell Nineveh the Lord hath
given a commandment concerning thee.”
“I will make thy grave; for
thou art vile” (Nahum 1:14).
Nineveh was the capital of
Assyria.
The king ignored Nahum.
He did a stupid thing.
He surrounded Jerusalem with
a large army.
So God sent the death angel
and killed 185,000 of his troops.
The survivors were forced to
withdraw (Isaiah 36-37).
A short time later, the king
went in to pray to his false gods.
His sons slipped in behind
him and assassinated him.
God revenges His people.
This is why God will send the
Battle of Armageddon.
He said, “I will also gather
all nations, and bring them down into the valley of
Jehoshaphat,”
“And will plead with them
there for my people and for my heritage Israel,”
“Whom they have scattered
among the nations, and parted my land”
(Joel 3:2).
The world can tell Israel to
dismantle the settlements on the West Bank.
The world can divide the land
and give part of it to the PLO.
The world can surround
Jerusalem with a large army.
But the world needs to know
that “The Lord revengeth.”
3rd---God will
pour out His wrath on those who constantly oppose Him.
Nahum said, “The Lord reserveth
wrath for His enemies” (Nahum 1.2).
Some don't believe in the
wrath of God.
But God hates sin.
And constant sin triggers His
wrath.
His wrath is something that
flashes forth;
Something that brings woe;
Something that is not to be
trifled with.
It is the wrath of the
Creator;
The wrath of an all powerful
being.
Notice, that Nahum asked, “Who
can stand before His indignation;”
“And who can abide the
fierceness of His anger” (Nahum 1:6)?
“Indignation” is one of the
names of the Tribulation Period.
Listen to Rev. 6:12-17:
Its about the indignation or
the Tribulation Period.
“I beheld when he had opened
the sixth seal, and, lo, there was a great
earthquake;”
“And the sun became black as
sackcloth of hair, and the moon became as
blood;”
“And the stars of heaven fell
unto the earth, even as a fig tree casteth her
untimely figs, when she is
shaken of a mighty wind.”
“And the heaven departed as a
scroll when it is rolled together; and every
mountain and island were
moved out of their places.”
“And the kings of the earth,
and the great men, and the rich men, and the
chief captains, and the
mighty men, and every bondman, and every free
man, hid themselves in the
dens and in the rocks of the mountains:”
“And said to the mountains
and rocks, Fall on as, and hide us from the face of
him that sitteth on the
throne, and from the wrath of the lamb;”
“For the great day of his
wrath is come; and who shall be able to stand?”
Nahum asked, “Who can stand
before His indignation?”
John asked, “Who shall be
able to stand?”
The answer is, “No one!”
Dr. Edward Rommen said, “Refusal
of God's mercy means acceptance of
God's consequential wrath.”
He said, “Perhaps we need to
view salvation and judgment as two sides of the
same coin” (Decision Magazine-Oct.
1995).
“If salvation is being
offered to all who believe, then the obvious implication
is that condemnation is being
offered to those who do not believe.”
This is the point.
We are offered a choice.
We can choose mercy and
salvation;
But if we don't choose mercy
and salvation we are choosing judgment and
wrath.
Mercy and salvation are
offered over and over again.
But those who refuse the good
things of God.
Are choosing the bad things.
Through Jesus, God offers as
the opportunity to spend eternity in heaven.
But those who reject Jesus,
are choosing to spend eternity in hell.
They don't intend to go
there.
But they are choosing to go
there.
4th---“The Lord is
slow to anger” (Nahum 1:3).
God holds back His anger.
He gives us time to repent.
God said He would destroy the
world with a flood.
He told Noah to warn the
people.
Noah preached 120 years.
Then, the flood came.
God said He would destroy
Sodom and Gomorrah.
He told Abraham.
His angels told Got.
Lot told his sons-in-law.
The angels got Lot out.
Then, the fire and brimstone
fell.
God said He would destroy
Nineveh.
He told Jonah to warn the Ninevites.
They repented.
He gave them another 150
years.
He is the Master of the
second chance, the third, the fourth, etc.
He delights in giving people
time to repent.
But if people do not repent,
their doom is just as certain as those who died in
the flood.
It may be 120 years in
coming.
But it will come.
There are those alive today
who are already under the condemnation of God.
God is no hurry to punish
them.
But their doom is sealed, if
they do not repent.
And they are ignoring every
opportunity to do it.
5th---“The Lord
will not acquit the wicked” (Nahum 1:3).
God's wrath never flashes
forth when people repent.
But He is holy.
And He will n0t allow sinners
to get away with their sin forever.
His Word would not be true,
if He did.
So those who refuse to repent
will not be acquitted.
A man was caught stealing
jewels.
He told the judge, “My arms
did it.”
He said, “I shouldn't be cast
into prison for what my arms did.”
The judge said, “I'm
sentencing your arms to 30 years in prison.”
“You can decide, if you want
to go with them.”
This thief did not fool the
judge.
We won't fool the Lord.
And the Lord will not acquit
the wicked.
6th---“God is
great in power” (Nahum 1:3).
Nahum describes the power of
God in a threefold way:
One, he said God has “His way
in the whirlwind and in the storm, and the
clouds are the dust of His
feet” (Nahum 1:3).
Tornados and storms are
powerful.
They can do great damage.
Hurricane Gilbert struck the
coast of Florida a few years ago with winds that
exceeded 215 mph.
The damage ran into the
billions.
But God's power is greater
than tornados and storms.
Two, Nahum said God, “rebuketh
the sea, and maketh it dry and drieth up all
the rivers.”
“Bashan languisheth and
Carmel and the flower of Lebanon 1anguisheth”
(Nahum 1:4).
Nahum was saying three of the
most fertile areas on earth are suffering drought
because of the power of God.
The rivers and seas dried up,
and the prosperity of those areas disappeared.
Three, Nahum said the “mountains
quake at Him and the hills melt and the
earth is burned at His
presence, yea the world and a11 that dwell therein”
(Nahum 1:5).
This world will be destroyed
by fire.
Peter said, “the heavens and
the earth are reserved unto fire” (II Peter 3:7).
Nahum gave another prophecy.
Its about Nineveh.
“The gates of the rivers
shall be opened, and the palace shall be dissolved”
(Nahum 2:6).
A Greek Historian (Diodorus Siculus)
recorded that Nineveh was attacked by
Babylon.
There was a wall around the
city.
And the king of Assyria whose
palace was at Nineveh closed the gates.
He stationed troops on the
walls.
He felt secure.
Then, a great rain fell.
There was a river running
through Nineveh.
It got out of its banks.
The flood waters washed the
dirt under the city wall near the river.
A large section of the city
wall collapsed.
The river receded.
The Babylonians fought their
way through the opening.
They conquered Nineveh.
The king saw enemy troops
pouring in.
He gathered his family inside
the palace.
He ordered his troops to burn
it to the ground.
Nahum prophesied, “The gates
of the rivers and the palace shall be
dissolved.”
The gates collapsed.
And the palace became a pile
of ashes.
This is the point.
The power of God is
irresistible.
We all know people who think
they will go to heaven without Jesus;
People who think they will
stand before God without Jesus and be acquitted
of their sins.
They don't have a ghost of a
chance.
Jesus said, “If thy hand
offend thee, cut it off; it is better for thee to enter into
life maimed than, having two
hands to go into hell, into the fire that never
shall be quenched.”
“And if thy foot offend thee,
cut it off; it is better for thee to enter lame into
life than, having two feet,
to be cast into hell into the fire that never shall be
quenched” (Mark 9:42-45).
We cannot hold back the power
of God.
It is absolutely necessary
that we do things God's way.
7th---“The Lord is
a stronghold in the day of trouble” (Nahum 1:7).
This is the good news.
We have talked about the
great power of God;
The power that spoke the
world into being;
The power that destroyed
185,000 troops;
The power that causes
earthquakes, hurricanes and volcanoes,
The power that dries up
rivers and seas,
The power that collapses city
walls and palaces.
Now, we learn that this great
power can work for us.
This great power can come to
our aid in times of trouble.
Paul talked about it.
He asked, “If God be for us,
who can be against us” (Rom. 8:31)?
If this kind of power is on
our side, what do we have to be afraid of?
People can smash us into a
thousand pieces.
But God can put us back
together.
Disease can destroy our body.
But God can raise us from the
dead.
Fire can destroy the world.
But not one spark will touch
us.
Satan can make us fall.
But God can pick us up.
Notice, that Nahum said, “The
Lord is a stronghold in the day of trouble.”
He didn't say trouble won't
come into our life.
He said God will help us when
it does.
A boy asked a missionary, if
he believed in God.
The missionary said, “Yes.”
The boy asked, “Is God,
really God?”
The missionary said, “Yes.”
Finally, the boy asked, “Why
do you worry so much then?”
God can handle our problems.
And He has promised to help
us in the day of trouble.
8th---“The Lord knoweth
them that trust Him.”
This time, I think Nahum was
looking far into the future.
He was looking at the cross.
Jesus knows those who trust
Him.
He said, “I know my sheep” (Jn.
10:14).
Our name is written in the
Lamb's Book of Life.
In closing, Nahum wanted the Ninevites
to know what God is like.
God is jealous.
He takes revenge to establish
justice;
To protect His name;
To protect His people.
His wrath is great.
He is slow to anger.
He will not acquit those who
reach the point of no return.
His power is great.
He will protect those who
trust Jesus.
And Jesus knows the
difference between the lost and the saved.
Are you saved?