
Text -- Nahum 1:8 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Nah 1:8 - -- running flood - His judgments like a mighty flood that overflows all banks, shall swallow up Assyria.
running flood - His judgments like a mighty flood that overflows all banks, shall swallow up Assyria.
JFB: Nah 1:8 - -- That is, with irresistible might which overruns every barrier like a flood. This image is often applied to overwhelming armies of invaders. Also of ca...
That is, with irresistible might which overruns every barrier like a flood. This image is often applied to overwhelming armies of invaders. Also of calamity in general (Psa 32:6; Psa 42:7; Psa 90:5). There is, perhaps, a special allusion to the mode of Nineveh's capture by the Medo-Babylonian army; namely, through a flood in the river which broke down the wall twenty furlongs (see on Nah 2:6; Isa 8:8; Dan 9:26; Dan 11:10, Dan 11:22, Dan 11:40).

JFB: Nah 1:8 - -- Nineveh is personified as a queen; and "her place" of residence (the Hebrew for "thereof" is feminine) is the city itself (Nah 2:8), [MAURER]. Or, He ...
Clarke: Nah 1:8 - -- But with an overrunning flood - Bishop Newcome thinks this may refer to the manner in which Nineveh was taken. The Euphrates overflowed its banks, d...
But with an overrunning flood - Bishop Newcome thinks this may refer to the manner in which Nineveh was taken. The Euphrates overflowed its banks, deluged a part of the city, and overturned twenty stadia of the wall; in consequence of which the desponding king burnt himself, and his palace, with his treasures. - Diodor. Sic., Edit. Wessel., p. 140, lib. ii., s. 27

Clarke: Nah 1:8 - -- Darkness shall pursue - Calamity. All kinds of calamity shall pursue them till they are destroyed.
Darkness shall pursue - Calamity. All kinds of calamity shall pursue them till they are destroyed.
Calvin -> Nah 1:8
Calvin: Nah 1:8 - -- The Prophet goes on with the same subject, — that God can easily preserve his people, for he is armed with power sufficient to overcome the whole w...
The Prophet goes on with the same subject, — that God can easily preserve his people, for he is armed with power sufficient to overcome the whole world. But the Prophet now includes the two things which have been mentioned: Having spoken in general of God’s wrath, and of his goodness towards the faithful, he now applies his doctrine to the consolation of his chosen people. It is then a special application of his doctrine, when he says, By inundation, he, passing through, will make a consummation in her place There is a twofold interpretation of this verse.
Some make this distinction, — that God, as it were, in passing through, would consume the land of Israel and Judah, but that perpetual darkness would rest on his enemies. Hence they think, that the distress of the chosen people is distinguished from the overthrow of the kingdom of Asshur, for God would only for a time punish his own people, while he would give up profane and reprobate men to endless destruction. Then, by passing through, must be understood, according to these interpreters, a temporary distress or punishment; and by darkness, eternal ruin, or, so to speak, irreparable calamities. But the Prophet, I doubt not, in one connected sentence, denounces ultimate ruin on the Assyrians. By inundation, then, he, in passing, will make a consummation in her place; that is, God will suddenly overwhelm the Assyrian, as though a deluge should rise to cover the whole earth. He intimates, that God would not punish the Assyrians by degrees, as men sometimes do, who proceed step by step to avenge themselves, but suddenly. God, he says, will of a sudden thunder against the Assyrians, as when a deluge comes over a land. Hence this passing of God is opposed to long or slow progress; as though he said — “As soon as God’s wrath shall break forth or come upon the Assyrians, it will be all over, for a consummation will immediately follow: by inundation, he, passing through, will make a consummation in her place.” 216 By place he means the ground; as though he had said that God would not only destroy the face of the land, but would also destroy the very grounds and utterly demolish it. A feminine pronoun is here added, because he speaks of the kingdom or nation, as it is usual in Hebrew. But it ought especially to be noticed that the Prophet threatens the Assyrians, that God would entirely subvert them, that he would not only demolish the surface, as, when fire or waters destroy houses, but that the Lord would reduce to nothing the land itself, even the very ground.
He adds, And pursue his enemies shall darkness He has designated the Assyrians only by a pronoun, as the Hebrews are wont to do; for they set down a pronoun relative or demonstrative, and it is uncertain of whom they speak; but they afterwards explain themselves. So does the Prophet in this place; for he directs his discourse to the Israelites and the Jews, and he begins by announcing God’s vengeance on Nineveh and its monarchy; but now he speaks as of a thing sufficiently known and adds, Pursue shall darkness the enemies of God By this second clause he intimates that the ruin of that kingdom would be perpetual. As then he had said that its destruction would be sudden, as God would, as it were, in a moment destroy the whole land; so now he cuts off from them every hope, that they might not think that they could within a while gather strength and rise again as it is the case with the wicked, who ever contend against God. The Prophet then shows that evil which God would bring on them would be without remedy. Some render the verb
TSK -> Nah 1:8
TSK: Nah 1:8 - -- with : Isa 8:7, Isa 8:8, Isa 28:17; Eze 13:13; Dan 9:26, Dan 11:10,Dan 11:22, Dan 11:40; Amo 8:8, Amo 9:5, Amo 9:6; Mat 7:27; 2Pe 3:6, 2Pe 3:7
the pla...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Nah 1:8
Barnes: Nah 1:8 - -- But with an overrunning flood He will make an utter end of the place thereof - that is, of Nineveh, although not as yet named, except in the ti...
But with an overrunning flood He will make an utter end of the place thereof - that is, of Nineveh, although not as yet named, except in the title of the prophecy, yet present to the prophet’ s mind and his hearers, and that the more solemnly, as being the object of the wrath of God, so that, although unnamed, it would be known so to be. Image and reality, the first destruction and the last which it pictures, meet in the same words. Nineveh itself was overthrown through the swelling of the rivers which flowed around it and seemed to be its defense (see the note at Nah 2:6). Then also, the flood is the tide of the armies, gathered from all quarters, Babylonians , Medes, Persians, Arabians, Bactrians, which like a flood should sweep over Nineveh and leave nothing standing. It is also the flood of the wrath of God, in whose Hands they were and who, by them, should "make a full end of it,"literally, "make the place thereof a thing consumed,"a thing which has ceased to be. For a while, some ruins existed, whose name and history ceased to be known; soon after, the ruins themselves were effaced and buried . Such was the close of a city, almost coeval with the flood, which had now stood almost as many years as have passed since Christ came, but which now defied God. Marvelous image of the evil world itself, which shall flee away from the face of Him who sat on the throne, "and there was found no place for it"Rev 20:11.
And darkness shall pursue His enemies - Better, "He shall pursue His enemies into darkness"Darkness is, in the Old Testament, the condition, or state in which a person is, or lives; it is not an agent, which pursues. Isaiah speaks of the "inhabitants of darkness"Isa 42:7, "entering unto darkness"Isa 47:5; "those who are in darkness"Isa 49:9. "The grave is all darkness"Psa 88:12; Job 17:13, "darkness, and the shadow of death"Job 10:21. Hence, even Jews rendered , "He shall deliver them to hell."Into this darkness it is said, God shall pursue them, as other prophets speak of being "driven forth into darkness". The darkness, the motionless drear abode, to which they are driven, anticipates the being cast into "the outer darkness, where shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth."Rup.: "The vengeance of God on"these who remain "His enemies"to the last, "ends not with the death of the body; but evil spirits, who are darkness and not light, pursue their souls, and seize them."They would not hear Christ calling to them, "Walk, while ye have the light, lest darkness come upon you"Joh 12:35. "They are of those that rebel against the light; they know not the ways thereof, nor abide in the paths thereof"Job 24:13. "They loved darkness rather than light"Joh 3:19. And so they were driven into the darkness which they chose and loved.
Poole -> Nah 1:8
Poole: Nah 1:8 - -- But or And , or Therefore , since God is so good to Israel oppressed by Assyria, and so terrible, just, and mighty to punish oppressors.
With an o...
But or And , or Therefore , since God is so good to Israel oppressed by Assyria, and so terrible, just, and mighty to punish oppressors.
With an overrunning flood his judgments, like a mighty flood that overfloweth all banks, and scorns all that might check it, shall swallow up Assyria and Nineveh. which was in part effected by Phraortes about A.M. 3312, and in part by his son Cyaxares, who broke the Assyrian kingdom, and took Nineveh.
He the Lord, by the Medes, will make an utter end, will destroy, so that it shall never recover or be rebuilt,
of the place thereof of Nineveh, that is, Nineveh itself. So in Scripture sometimes the place is said to perish when the thing itself doth, as Dan 2:35 Rev 12:8 20:11 .
Darkness: troubles, desolating afflictions, extreme evils. in Scripture style, are called darkness, Job 15:22 17:12 Psa 35:6 55:5 Ecc 5:17 Isa 42:7 59:9 , &c.; Joe 2:2 .
Shall pursue not a single calamity, which is soon at an end, but indeed a succession of calamities, a continued course of them, shall pursue: so Phraortes began, Cyaxares continued, Scythians helped on, and Astyages finally, with four hundred thousand men, finished the pursuit in the sack and ruin of Nineveh after two years’ siege.
His enemies the Ninevites and Assyrians.
Haydock -> Nah 1:8
Haydock: Nah 1:8 - -- Thereof; viz. of Ninive. (Challoner) ---
This is connected with Ver. 1. (Haydock) ---
Ninive was taken by the waters of the Tigris overflowing, a...
Thereof; viz. of Ninive. (Challoner) ---
This is connected with Ver. 1. (Haydock) ---
Ninive was taken by the waters of the Tigris overflowing, at the first siege. (Diodorus ii.; Atheneus xii.) ---
The like might happen at the second, though profane authors be silent. (Calmet) ---
Many think that the flood means great armies, Isaias viii. 7. ( Forerius ; Vatable) ---
Septuagint, "He will utterly destroy: those who rise up and his enemies, darkness," &c. (Haydock) ---
Chaldean, The.[Theodotion?] and Aq.[Aquila?] adopt the same sense, but Symmachus, &c., agree with us. (Calmet)
Gill -> Nah 1:8
Gill: Nah 1:8 - -- But with an overrunning flood he will make an utter end of the place thereof,.... Of Nineveh, against whom this prophecy was, and upon whom it lay as ...
But with an overrunning flood he will make an utter end of the place thereof,.... Of Nineveh, against whom this prophecy was, and upon whom it lay as a burden, Nah 1:1; and now though the Lord was good to them that trust in him, and a strong hold to them in a time of trouble; yet he was determined to destroy their enemies the Assyrians, and Nineveh their chief city; and that by the means of a powerful army, which, like a flood or inundation of water breaking in, overruns and carries all before it; and very fitly may the Medes and Babylonians, who joined together in an expedition against Nineveh, be compared to such a flood for their number and force; since, as the historian tells y us, they were no less than four hundred thousand men: though this may be literally understood; for as the same writer z observes,
"there was an oracle received by the Ninevites from their ancestors, that Nineveh could never be taken by any, unless the river (on which it stood) first became an enemy to it; and so it was, that, in the third year of the siege, the river, being swelled with continual rains, overflowed part of the city, and broke down the wall for the space of two and half miles; hence the king concluded the oracle was fulfilled, and gave up all hopes of safety; and through the breach of the wall the enemy entered, and took the city;''
and an "utter end" was made of it, and of the place of it, insomuch that historians and geographers disagree about it; some say it was situated upon the river Euphrates, others upon the river Tigris, which is the most correct; some say on the east of that river, others on the west; some will have it to be above the river Lycus, and others below it; so true is that of Lucian a, that Nineveh is now entirely lost, and no traces of it remain; nor can one easily say where it once was; and travellers in general, both ancient and modern, agree that it lies wholly in ruins, and is a heap of rubbish. Benjamin Tudelensis b, who travelled into these parts in the twelfth century, relates, that between Almozal or Mosul, and Nineveh, is only a bridge, and it (Nineveh) is a waste; but there are villages, and many towers. Haitho, an Armenian c, who wrote more than a hundred years after the former, says,
"this city (Nineveh) at present is wholly destroyed; but, by what yet appears in it, it may be firmly believed that it was one of the greatest cities in the world.''
Monsieur Thevenot d, who was upon the spot in the last century, observes,
"on the other side of the river (Tigris from that on which Mosul stands) at the end of the bridge begins the place, where, in ancient times, stood the famous city of Nineveh. --There is nothing of it, (adds he) now to be seen, but some hillocks, which (they say) are its foundations, the houses being underneath; and these reach a good way below the city of Mosul:''
and darkness shall pursue his enemies; the enemies of God and his people, who would make such a devastation of Nineveh; even he would cause all manner of calamities, often signified in Scripture by darkness, to follow and overtake them; so that they should be brought into the most uncomfortable and distressed condition imaginable.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Nah 1:8 The BHS editors propose emending the Masoretic reading יְרַדֶּף (yÿraddef, Piel imperfect of ...
Geneva Bible -> Nah 1:8
Geneva Bible: Nah 1:8 But with an overrunning flood he will make an utter end of the ( i ) place thereof, and darkness shall pursue his enemies.
( i ) Signifying that God ...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Nah 1:1-15
TSK Synopsis: Nah 1:1-15 - --1 The majesty of God in goodness to his people, and severity against his enemies.
MHCC -> Nah 1:1-8
MHCC: Nah 1:1-8 - --About a hundred years before, at Jonah's preaching, the Ninevites repented, and were spared, yet, soon after, they became worse than ever. Nineveh kno...
Matthew Henry -> Nah 1:2-8
Matthew Henry: Nah 1:2-8 - -- Nineveh knows not God, that God that contends with her, and therefore is here told what a God he is; and it is good for us all to mix faith with tha...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Nah 1:7-8
Keil-Delitzsch: Nah 1:7-8 - --
But the wrath of God does not fall upon those who trust in the Lord; it only falls upon His enemies. With this turn Nahum prepares the way in Nah 1:...
Constable -> Nah 1:2-14; Nah 1:2-8
Constable: Nah 1:2-14 - --II. Nineveh's destruction declared 1:2-14
The rest of chapter 1 declares Nineveh's destruction in rather hymnic ...
