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 1

The oracle that the prophet Habakkuk saw.

 

The Prophet’s Complaint

2

O L ord, how long shall I cry for help,

and you will not listen?

Or cry to you “Violence!”

and you will not save?

3

Why do you make me see wrongdoing

and look at trouble?

Destruction and violence are before me;

strife and contention arise.

4

So the law becomes slack

and justice never prevails.

The wicked surround the righteous—

therefore judgment comes forth perverted.

 

5

Look at the nations, and see!

Be astonished! Be astounded!

For a work is being done in your days

that you would not believe if you were told.

6

For I am rousing the Chaldeans,

that fierce and impetuous nation,

who march through the breadth of the earth

to seize dwellings not their own.

7

Dread and fearsome are they;

their justice and dignity proceed from themselves.

8

Their horses are swifter than leopards,

more menacing than wolves at dusk;

their horses charge.

Their horsemen come from far away;

they fly like an eagle swift to devour.

9

They all come for violence,

with faces pressing forward;

they gather captives like sand.

10

At kings they scoff,

and of rulers they make sport.

They laugh at every fortress,

and heap up earth to take it.

11

Then they sweep by like the wind;

they transgress and become guilty;

their own might is their god!

 

12

Are you not from of old,

O L ord my God, my Holy One?

You shall not die.

O L ord, you have marked them for judgment;

and you, O Rock, have established them for punishment.

13

Your eyes are too pure to behold evil,

and you cannot look on wrongdoing;

why do you look on the treacherous,

and are silent when the wicked swallow

those more righteous than they?

14

You have made people like the fish of the sea,

like crawling things that have no ruler.

 

15

The enemy brings all of them up with a hook;

he drags them out with his net,

he gathers them in his seine;

so he rejoices and exults.

16

Therefore he sacrifices to his net

and makes offerings to his seine;

for by them his portion is lavish,

and his food is rich.

17

Is he then to keep on emptying his net,

and destroying nations without mercy?

 


This verse is added by the Prophet as an explanation; for it was not enough to speak generally of God’s work, without reminding them that their destruction by the Chaldeans was nigh at hand. He does not indeed in this verse explain what would be the character of that judgement which he had mentioned in the last verse Habakkuk 1:5; but he will do this in what follows. Now the Prophets differ from Moses in this respect, for they show, as it were by the finger, what he threatened generally, and they declare the special judgements of God; as it is indeed evident from the demonstrative adverb, “Behold.” How necessary this was, we may gather from the perverseness of that people; for how distinctly soever the Prophets showed to them God’s judgements, so that they saw them with their eyes, yet so great was their insensibility, that they despised denunciations so apparent. What, then, would have been done, if the Prophets had only said in general, ‘God will not spare you!’ This, then, is the reason why the Prophet, having spoken of God’s terrible vengeance, now declares in express terms, that the Chaldeans were already armed by Him to execute His judgement. The rest we leave for tomorrow.


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