
Text -- Nahum 3:1-3 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Extortion and rapine.
JFB: Nah 3:1 - -- Literally, "city of blood," namely, shed by Nineveh; just so now her own blood is to be shed.
Literally, "city of blood," namely, shed by Nineveh; just so now her own blood is to be shed.

JFB: Nah 3:1 - -- Nineveh never ceases to live by rapine. Or, the Hebrew verb is transitive, "she (Nineveh) does not make the prey depart"; she ceases not to plunder.
Nineveh never ceases to live by rapine. Or, the Hebrew verb is transitive, "she (Nineveh) does not make the prey depart"; she ceases not to plunder.

JFB: Nah 3:2 - -- The reader is transported into the midst of the fight (compare Jer 47:3). The "noise of the whips" urging on the horses (in the chariots) is heard, an...
The reader is transported into the midst of the fight (compare Jer 47:3). The "noise of the whips" urging on the horses (in the chariots) is heard, and of "the rattling of the wheels" of war chariots, and the "horses" are seen "prancing," and the "chariots jumping," &c.

JFB: Nah 3:3 - -- Denoting readiness for fight [EWALD]. GESENIUS translates, "lifteth up (literally, 'makes to ascend') his horse." Similarly MAURER, "makes his horse t...
Denoting readiness for fight [EWALD]. GESENIUS translates, "lifteth up (literally, 'makes to ascend') his horse." Similarly MAURER, "makes his horse to rise up on his hind feet." Vulgate translates, "ascending," that is, making his horse to advance up to the assault. This last is perhaps better than English Version.

JFB: Nah 3:3 - -- Literally, "the glitter of the sword and the flash of the spear!" This, as well as the translation, "the horseman advancing up," more graphically pres...
Literally, "the glitter of the sword and the flash of the spear!" This, as well as the translation, "the horseman advancing up," more graphically presents the battle scene to the eye.

The Medo-Babylonian enemy stumble upon the Assyrian corpses.
Clarke -> Nah 3:1
Clarke: Nah 3:1 - -- Wo to the bloody city! - Nineveh: the threatenings against which are continued in a strain of invective, astonishing for its richness, variety, and ...
Wo to the bloody city! - Nineveh: the threatenings against which are continued in a strain of invective, astonishing for its richness, variety, and energy. One may hear and see the whip crack, the horses prancing, the wheels rumbling, the chariots bounding after the galloping steeds; the reflection from the drawn and highly polished swords; and the hurled spears, like gashes of lightning, dazzling the eyes; the slain lying in heaps, and horses and chariots stumbling over them! O what a picture, and a true representation of a battle, when one side is broken, and all the cavalry of the conqueror fall in upon them, hewing them down with their swords, and trampling them to pieces under the hoofs of their horses! O! infernal war! Yet sometimes thou art the scourge of the Lord.
Calvin: Nah 3:1 - -- The Prophet, as I have said, more clearly expresses here the reason why the vengeance of God would be so severe on the Ninevites, — because they ha...
The Prophet, as I have said, more clearly expresses here the reason why the vengeance of God would be so severe on the Ninevites, — because they had wholly given themselves up to barbarous cruelty; and hence he calls it the bloody city. Bloody city! he says. The exclamation is emphatical. Though
We hence see that the Prophet now shows why God says, that he would be an adversary to the Ninevites, because he could not endure its unjust cruelty. He bore with it indeed for a time; for he did not immediately execute his judgment; but yet he never forgot his own people.
As, then, God has once declared by the mouth of his Prophet that he would be the avenger of the cruelty which the Assyrians had exercised, let us know that he retains still his own nature; and whatever liberty he may for a time grant to tyrants and savage wild beasts, he yet continues to be a just avenger. It is our duty calmly to bear injuries, and to groan to him; and as he promises to be at length our helper, it behaves us to flee to him, and to ask him to succor us, so that seeing his Church oppressed, and tyrants exercising licentiously their power, he may hasten the time to restrain them. If then we were at all times to continue thus resigned under God’s protection, there is no doubt but that he would be ready even at this day to execute a similar judgment to that which the city Nineveh and its people had to endure.

Calvin: Nah 3:2 - -- The Prophet represents here as in a lively picture, what was nigh the Assyrians; for he sets forth the Chaldeans their enemies, with all their prepar...
The Prophet represents here as in a lively picture, what was nigh the Assyrians; for he sets forth the Chaldeans their enemies, with all their preparations and in their quick movements. 239 The sound of the whip, he says; the whips, made a noise in exciting the horses: the sound of the rattling of the wheel; that is, great shall be the haste and celerity, when the horses shall be forced on by the whip; the horse also shaking the earth, and the chariot bounding; the horseman making it to ascend; and then, the flame of the sword and the lightning of the spear He then says, that there would be such a slaughter, that the whole place would be full of dead bodies.
We now then understand what the Prophet means: for as Nineveh might have then appeared impregnable the Prophet confirms at large what he had said of its approaching ruin, and thus sets before the eyes of the Israelites what was then incredible.

Calvin: Nah 3:3 - -- As to the words, some interpreters connect what we have rendered, the horseman makes to ascend, with what follows, that is, he makes to ascend the...
As to the words, some interpreters connect what we have rendered, the horseman makes to ascend, with what follows, that is, he makes to ascend the flame of the sword and the lightning of the spear But as a copulative comes between, it seems rather to be an imperfect sentence, meaning, that the horseman makes to ascend or mount, that is, his horses, by urging them on. With regard to the word
TSK: Nah 3:1 - -- to : Isa 24:9; Eze 22:2, Eze 22:3, Eze 24:6-9; Hab 2:12; Zep 3:1-3
bloody city : Heb. city of bloods
full : Nah 2:12; Isa 17:14, Isa 42:24; Hos 4:2


TSK: Nah 3:3 - -- bright sword and the glittering spear : Heb. flame of the sword, and lightning of the spear, Nah 2:4; Gen 3:24; Hab 3:11
and there : Isa 37:36; Eze 31...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Nah 3:1 - -- Woe to the bloody city - Literally, "city of bloods", i. e., of manifold bloodshedding, built and founded in blood Hab 2:12; Jer 22:13, as the ...
Woe to the bloody city - Literally, "city of bloods", i. e., of manifold bloodshedding, built and founded in blood Hab 2:12; Jer 22:13, as the prosperity of the world ever is. Murder, oppression, wresting of judgment, war out of covetousness, grinding or neglect of the poor, make it "a city of bloods."Nineveh, or the world, is a city of the devil, as opposed to the "city of God.": "Two sorts of love have made two sorts of cities; the earthly, love of self even to contempt of God; the heavenly, love of God even to contempt of self. The one glorieth in itself, the other in the Lord.": "Amid the manifold differences of the human race, in languages, habits, rites, arms, dress, there are but two kinds of human society, which, according to our Scriptures, we may call two cities. One is of such as wish to live according to the flesh; the other of such as will according to the Spirit.""Of these, one is predestined to live forever with God; the other, to undergo everlasting torment with the devil."Of this city, or evil world, Nineveh, the city of bloods, is the type.
It is all full of lies and robbery - Better, "it is all lie; it is full of robbery"(rapine). "Lie"includes all falsehood, in word or act, denial of God, hypocrisy; toward man, it speaks of treachery, treacherous dealing, in contrast with open violence or rapine . The whole being of the wicked is one lie, toward God and man; deceiving and deceived; leaving no place for God who is the Truth; seeking through falsehood things which fail. Man "loveth vanity and seeketh after leasing"Psa 4:2. All were gone out of the way. Alb.: "There were none in so great a multitude, for whose sake the mercy of God might spare so great a city."It is full, not so much of booty as of rapine and violence. The sin remains, when the profit is gone. Yet it ceases not, but perseveres to the end; "the prey departs not;"they will neither leave the sin, nor the sin them; they neither repent, nor are weary of sinning. Avarice especially gains vigor in old age, and grows by being fed. "The prey departeth not,"but continues as a witness against it, as a lion’ s lair is defiled by the fragments of his prey.

Barnes: Nah 3:2 - -- The noise (literally, "voice") of the whip - There is cry against cry; the voice of the enemy, brought upon them through the voice of the oppre...
The noise (literally, "voice") of the whip - There is cry against cry; the voice of the enemy, brought upon them through the voice of the oppressed. Blood hath a voice which crieth Gen 4:10 to heaven; its echo or counterpart, as it were, is the cry of the destroyer. All is urged on with terrific speed. The chariot-wheels quiver in the rapid onset; the chariots bound, like living things; the earth echoes with the whirling swiftness of the speed of the cavalry. The prophet within, with the inward ear and eye which hears "the mysteries of the Kingdom of God"Mat 13:11, Mat 13:16 and sees things to come, as they shall come upon the wicked, sees and hears the scourge coming, with The words in Hebrew are purposely chosen with rough "r"sounds:

Barnes: Nah 3:3 - -- The horseman lifteth up - Rather, "leading up : the flash of the sword, and the lightning of the spear."Thus, there are, in all, seven inroads,...
The horseman lifteth up - Rather, "leading up : the flash of the sword, and the lightning of the spear."Thus, there are, in all, seven inroads, seven signs, before the complete destruction of Nineveh or the world; as, in the Revelations, all the forerunners of the Judgment of the Great Day are summed up under the voice of seven trumpets and seven vials. Rup.: "God shall not use homes and chariots and other instruments of war, such as are here spoken of, to judge the world, yet, as is just, His terrors are foretold under the name of those things, wherewith this proud and bloody world hath sinned. For so all they that take the sword shall perish with the sword."Mat 26:52. They who, abusing their power, have used all these weapons of war, especially against the servants of God, shall themselves perish by them, and there shall be none end of their corpses, for they shall be corpses forever: for, dying by an everlasting death, they shall, without end, be without the true life, which is God.""And there is a multitude of slain."Death follows on death. The prophet views the vast field of carnage, and everywhere there meets him only some new form of death, slain, carcasses, corpses, and these in multitudes, an oppressive heavy number, without end, so that the yet living stumble and fall upon the carcasses of the slain. So great the multitude of those who perish, and such their foulness; but what foulness is like sin?
Poole: Nah 3:1 - -- Woe! a comprehensive threat of many and great calamities coming.
To the bloody city Nineveh, the chief city of the Assyrian kingdom: see Nah 1:1 ....
Woe! a comprehensive threat of many and great calamities coming.
To the bloody city Nineveh, the chief city of the Assyrian kingdom: see Nah 1:1 .
It is all every part, officers and rulers, traders, both buyers and sellers, shops, houses, judicatories, all filled with falsehood and lies.
Lies cheating in their trades, and false witnesses before the judges.
Robbery their gain, though they count it honest, is no better in God’ s account than robbery or rapine, as is that the lion taketh, teareth, and devoureth, as the word in the Hebrew implies.
The prey unjust acquists by fraud and force; extortions and violent taking away what was not theirs.
Departeth not as they did so long since, they continue still so to do, no change from injustice to justice.

Poole: Nah 3:2 - -- The French reads this verse with a negative distributive, and so links this and the next verse with the former negative, Nah 3:1 ; thus, The prey de...
The French reads this verse with a negative distributive, and so links this and the next verse with the former negative, Nah 3:1 ; thus, The prey departeth not, nor the noise of the whip, nor, &c., intimating the long continuance of the Chaldeans insulting over the Ninevites.
The noise of a whip with which the charioteer roused and animated the horses which drew the warlike chariots.
The noise of the rattling of the wheels by the swift motion of the horses,
and of the pransing horses in the chariots proudly and stately trampling, and of the jumping chariots, made to jump by the swiftness and strength of the horses which drew them.
The French reads this verse with a negative distributive, and so links this and the next verse with the former negative, Nah 3:1 ; thus, The prey departeth not, nor the noise of the whip, nor, &c., intimating the long continuance of the Chaldeans insulting over the Ninevites.
The noise of a whip with which the charioteer roused and animated the horses which drew the warlike chariots.
The noise of the rattling of the wheels by the swift motion of the horses,
and of the pransing horses in the chariots proudly and stately trampling, and of the jumping chariots, made to jump by the swiftness and strength of the horses which drew them.

Poole: Nah 3:3 - -- The horseman the Chaldean and Mede, or their confederates in the war.
Lifteth up hath his sword not only drawn, but in a posture ever ready to smit...
The horseman the Chaldean and Mede, or their confederates in the war.
Lifteth up hath his sword not only drawn, but in a posture ever ready to smite, wound, or kill. The bright sword: these warriors kept their weapons in such manner, that they were fit both to cut and kill, and also to dazzle rite eye and affright.
And there in Nineveh, and the streets of it,
is a multitude of slain by the sword of the prevailing besiegers.
A great number of carcasses the slain lay in the streets unburied.
There is no end of their corpses none knew the numbers of the slain.
They both invaders and invaded, all within the city, stumble upon their corpses, are ready to fall at them, not able to avoid them.
Haydock: Nah 3:1 - -- Blood. Nemrod established his power by shedding blood, Genesis x. Ninus, who built Ninive, and his successors were also bloody. After 1200 years t...
Blood. Nemrod established his power by shedding blood, Genesis x. Ninus, who built Ninive, and his successors were also bloody. After 1200 years the empire decayed under Sardanapalus, as historians agree. Yet it continued longer, according to the Scriptures and Ribera, till the Chaldeans destroyed it, when it had subsisted about 1440 years. It was even possessed of great power after the return of the Jews from Babylon, as Eusebius, St. Augustine, Ven. Bede, &c., write. (Worthington) ---
Depart. Septuagint, "be touched." (Haydock) ---
He continues the metaphor of the lion seizing its prey. Here the last chapter should end.

Haydock: Nah 3:2 - -- The noise. He has described the forces of Ninive, now he specifies those of Cyaxares and Nabopolassar.
The noise. He has described the forces of Ninive, now he specifies those of Cyaxares and Nabopolassar.
Gill: Nah 3:1 - -- Woe to the bloody city,.... Nineveh, in which many murders were daily committed; innocent blood shed; the lives of men taken away, under the colour of...
Woe to the bloody city,.... Nineveh, in which many murders were daily committed; innocent blood shed; the lives of men taken away, under the colour of justice, by false witnesses, and other unlawful methods; and which was continually making war with neighbouring nations, and shedding their blood, which it stuck not at, to enlarge its wealth and dominions; and therefore "woe" is denounced against it; and it is threatened with the righteous judgments of God, with all sorts of calamity and distress: or, "O bloody city", as the Septuagint; for the word used is vocative, and expressive of calling, as Aben Ezra and Kimchi observe:
it is all full of lies and robbery; the palace and court; the houses of noblemen and common persons were full of flattery and deceit; men of high degree were a lie, and men of low degree vanity; no man could trust another, or believe what he said; there were no truth, honesty, and faithfulness, in conversation or commerce; their warehouses were full of goods, got by rapine and violence; and their streets full of robbers and robberies:
the prey departeth not; they go on in making a prey of their neighbours, in pillaging and plundering their substance; they repent not of such evil practices, nor desist from them; or because of the above sins they shall fall a prey to the enemy, who will not cease plundering them till he has utterly stripped them of all they have; and who is represented in the next verse Nah 3:2 as just at hand.

Gill: Nah 3:2 - -- The noise of a whip,.... Of a horseman or chariot driver whipping his horses to make speed to Nineveh, and enter into it, so near as to be heard by th...
The noise of a whip,.... Of a horseman or chariot driver whipping his horses to make speed to Nineveh, and enter into it, so near as to be heard by the inhabitants of it; and is thus represented in order to strike terror into them:
and the noise of the rattling of the wheels; that is, of the chariots upon the stones, whose drivers drove Jehu like, making the utmost haste they could to get in first, and seize the prey:
and of the pransing horses; or bounding steeds, upon a full gallop; either with horsemen on them riding full speed to partake of the booty; or in chariots, in which they caper and prance, and shake the ground as they go; hence it follows:
and of the jumping chariots; which, through the swiftness of the motion, seem to leap and dance as they run along.

Gill: Nah 3:3 - -- The horseman lifteth up both the bright sword and the glittering spear,.... Or, "the flame of the sword and the glittering spear" w; he rides with a d...
The horseman lifteth up both the bright sword and the glittering spear,.... Or, "the flame of the sword and the glittering spear" w; he rides with a drawn sword, which, being brandished to and fro, looks like a flame of fire; or with a spear made of polished iron, or steel, which, when vibrated and moved to and fro, glitters like lightning; a large number of which entering the city must be terrible to the inhabitants of it:
and there is a multitude of slain, and a great number of carcasses; of dead men lying in the streets, pierced and slain with the bright sword and glittering spear of the Medes and Chaldeans:
and there is none end of their corpses; the number of them could not be told; they lay so thick in all parts of the city, that there was no telling them:
they stumble upon their corpses; the Ninevites in fleeing, and endeavouring to make their escape, and the Medes and Chaldeans pursuing them.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes


Geneva Bible: Nah 3:1 Woe to the bloody city! it [is] all full of lies [and] robbery; ( a ) the prey departeth not;
( a ) It never ceases to spoil and rob.

Geneva Bible: Nah 3:2 The noise of a whip, ( b ) and the noise of the rattling of the wheels, and of the pransing horses, and of the jumping chariots.
( b ) He shows how t...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Nah 3:1-19
MHCC -> Nah 3:1-7
MHCC: Nah 3:1-7 - --When proud sinners are brought down, others should learn not to lift themselves up. The fall of this great city should be a lesson to private persons,...
Matthew Henry -> Nah 3:1-7
Matthew Henry: Nah 3:1-7 - -- Here is, I. Nineveh arraigned and indicted. It is a high charge that is here drawn up against that great city, and neither her numbers nor her grand...
Keil-Delitzsch: Nah 3:1 - --
The city of blood will have the shame, which it has inflicted upon the nations, repaid to it by a terrible massacre. The prophet announces this with...

Keil-Delitzsch: Nah 3:2-4 - --
This threat is explained in Nah 3:2., by a description of the manner in which a hostile army enters Nineveh and fills the city with corpses. Nah 3:2...
Constable: Nah 1:15--Hab 1:1 - --III. Nineveh's destruction described 1:15--3:19
This second major part of Nahum contains another introduction an...

Constable: Nah 2:3--Hab 1:1 - --B. Four descriptions of Nineveh's fall 2:3-3:19
The rest of the book contains four descriptions of Ninev...
