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Texts -- Nahum 2:3-10 (NET)

Context
Prophetic Vision of the Fall of Nineveh
2:3 The shields of his warriors are dyed red ; the mighty soldiers are dressed in scarlet garments . The metal fittings of the chariots shine like fire on the day of battle ; the soldiers brandish their spears . 2:4 The chariots race madly through the streets , they rush back and forth in the broad plazas ; they look like lightning bolts , they dash here and there like flashes of lightning . 2:5 The commander orders his officers ; they stumble as they advance ; they rush to the city wall and they set up the covered siege tower . 2:6 The sluice gates are opened ; the royal palace is deluged and dissolves . 2:7 Nineveh is taken into exile and is led away ; her slave girls moan like doves while they beat their breasts . 2:8 Nineveh was like a pool of water throughout her days , but now her people are running away ; she cries out: “Stop ! Stop !”– but no one turns back . 2:9 Her conquerors cry out: “Plunder the silver ! Plunder the gold !” There is no end to the treasure ; riches of every kind of precious thing . 2:10 Destruction , devastation , and desolation ! Their hearts faint , their knees tremble , each stomach churns , each face turns pale !

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  • Nah 2:3-10 -- Prophetic Vision of the Fall of Nineveh

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Expository Notes on the Bible (Constable)

  • Some scholars have tried to prove that someone other than Nahum wrote sections of the book (1:1; 1:1-2:3; 1:2-10; 2:4-3:19), but their arguments are largely speculative. Jewish and Christian authorities have long held that Na...
  • Nahum mentioned the fall of the Egyptian city of Thebes (3:8), so we know he wrote after that event, which took place in 663 B.C. The Assyrian king Ashurbanipal conquered it. The prophet predicted the fall of the Assyrian cap...
  • I. Heading 1:1II. Nineveh's destruction declared 1:2-14A. The anger and goodness of Yahweh 1:2-8B. Yahweh's plans for Nineveh and Judah 1:9-141. The consumption of Nineveh 1:9-112. The liberation of Judah 1:12-133. The termin...
  • The rest of chapter 1 declares Nineveh's destruction in rather hymnic style, and chapters 2 and 3 describe its destruction. Each of these major parts of the book opens with a revelation of Yahweh....
  • 1:15 This is the first verse of chapter 2 in the Hebrew Bible. Nahum called his audience to give attention. Someone was coming over the mountains with a message of peace. Consequently the people of Judah could celebrate their...
  • The first message sees the details of the siege of Nineveh taking place in the city when the enemy attacked, and it ends with the reaction of a segment of the populace (v. 7).2:3 Nahum again focused on the destroyer (scattere...
  • The second description of Nineveh's fall is more philosophical than the first one and ends with a statement by Yahweh that gives the reason for its fall (v. 13).2:8 Nineveh had been as placid as the waters around the city for...
  • This description explains further the "why"for Nineveh's fall whereas the first two descriptions in the previous chapter gave more of the actual events, the "what"of it. There is much similarity between the descriptions of th...
  • This section, evidently another message that Nahum delivered concerning Nineveh's fall, begins by comparing it to the fall of another great city. Nahum proceeded to use many figures of speech to describe how various segments ...
  • 2:13 Zephaniah also prophesied the destruction of Assyria to Judah's north (really northeast) and her capital Nineveh (cf. Isa. 13:1-14:27; 21:1-10; Jer. 50-51). Since Nineveh fell to the combined forces of Babylonia, Media, ...
  • 4:2 As soon as John heard this invitation, he entered another ecstatic state (cf. 1:10). His body remained on the earth, but he saw a throne and someone sitting on it in heaven (cf. Ezek. 11:1, 5). "Throne"occurs 45 times in ...
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