Sermon Notes, July 24, 2016 PM
Minor Prophets with A Major Message
Habakkuk
Steve W. Reeves
INTRODUCTION:
A.
When I was a boy there was a program on television every Saturday that I would
not
miss. It wasn’t “Bugs Bunny,” “Road Runner,”
or even “Johnny Quest (although those
were some of my favorites). It was “Studio
Wrestling” on Channel 13 hosted by Lance
Russell and Dave Brown.
1. The wrestlers had names like Jerry
Lawler, Tojo Yamamoto, Bill Dundee, and
Gorgeous George.
2. They would smack each other, throw each
other, kick each other, bite each other
and you never knew what would happen next.
3. Do you realize that wrestling is
mentioned in the Bible?
a. Genesis 30:8 - Rachel said, “With
mighty wrestling I have wrestled
with my
sister, and I have indeed prevailed.”
b. Genesis 32:24-25 – “Then Jacob was
left alone, and a man wrestled with him
until daybreak. 25 When
he saw that he had not prevailed against him, he
touched the socket of his thigh; so
the socket of Jacob’s thigh was dislocated
while he wrestled with him.” Hosea
referred to this in Hosea 12:4.
c. Others wrestled with God in different
ways.
1.) Jesus wrestled with doing His Father’s
will in the garden of Gethsemane –
Matthew 26:29 - “My Father, if
it is possible, let this cup pass from Me; yet not
as I will, but as You will.”
2.) Paul and Barnabas “wrestled”
with one another regarding John Mark in Acts
15:39.
3.) Paul wrestled in prayer with God
asking Him to remove his “thorn in the flesh”
in 2 Corinthians 12:7-9.
4. As we consider “Minor Prophets with a
Major Message,” I want to look at a
prophet who wrestled with God
spiritually. His name is Habakkuk.
I. THE PROPHET AND HIS TIMES
A. There are several prophets about whom we
know very little.
1. Joel is one of these. Micah is
another. Habakkuk is yet another.
2. What we know about Habakkuk comes
from the book that bears his name.
a. His name means, “to embrace.”
b. From chapter 3 of his book we
detect that he is familiar with the temple and
with musical terms. This leads
to speculation that he was one of the temple
singers or perhaps a priest.
c. He also identifies himself as a
prophet in 1:1.
B. I think Habakkuk lived around 628 to 605
B.C.
1. Habakkuk wrote about the impending
invasion of Judah by the Babylonians.
2. We know that the stage for this
invasion was set as Babylon defeated the
Egyptians and Assyrians at the
battle of Carchemish in 605 B.C. Pharaoh
Necho of Egypt had come into power
in Palestine and was trying to help the
Assyrians fend off the Babylonians.
He underestimated the military might of the
Babylonians and Nebuchadnezzar prevailed.
3. These were the final years of
Jerusalem and Judah. Manasseh had been a
wicked king. He was succeeded by
good king Josiah who sought to institute
reforms. After Josiah’s death there
were Jehoiahaz, Jehoiakim and
Jerhoiachin (the last two were weak
vassals of the Babylonian king).
4. Habakkuk wrote at the same time as
Jeremiah, Nahum and Zephaniah.
C. As much as any prophet, Habakkuk tells
us how God uses nations to accomplish
His purposes.
1. Like her sister Israel to the north,
Judah had been involved in idolatry and
immorality. Israel was defeated in
722 by the Assyrians. Judah would hang on for
another 136 years but would
ultimately be overthrown by Babylon in 586 B.C.
2. It was the invasion of the
Babylonians which Habakkuk wrested with.
3. In this book of three chapters we
will see how Habakkuk wrestled with God in
chapter 1. In chapter 2 we will
notice how he waited and watched for God to
work. Finally, in chapter 3 we will
see how his wrestling, watching and waiting led
him to worship God.
II. HABAKKUK WRESTLED (Chapter 1).
A. Chapter 1 is an unfolding discussion
between Habakkuk and God.
a. Habakkuk wrestled with the evil and
violence he saw in the world.
b. Verses 1 – 4 is Habakkuk’s initial
outcry followed by God’s first response in
verses 5-11.
c. In verses 12 – 17 Habakkuk replies to
God.
B. In his cry to God Habakkuk says, “How
long, O Lord, will I call for help,
And You will not hear? I cry out to You, “Violence!” Yet You do not save.
3 Why do You make me see iniquity, And cause me to look on wickedness?
Yes, destruction and violence are before me; Strife exists and contention arises.
4 Therefore the law is ignored and justice is never upheld. For the wicked surround
And You will not hear? I cry out to You, “Violence!” Yet You do not save.
3 Why do You make me see iniquity, And cause me to look on wickedness?
Yes, destruction and violence are before me; Strife exists and contention arises.
4 Therefore the law is ignored and justice is never upheld. For the wicked surround
the righteous; therefore justice comes
out perverted.”
1. Habakkuk doesn’t hold anything back.
2. He sees wickedness, violence and
iniquity. There is strife and contention. He
wonders, “Why doesn’t God do something?”
3. He says to God, “If I can see this
why can’t you?”
4. How often have you thought, “I wonder
how much longer God is going to allow
this world to go on?” How often have we wondered, “Is God oblivious
to what is
happening in the world?”
C. God replied to Habakkuk by saying He had
a plan. In verse 5 he says, “Be
astonished! Wonder! Because I am doing
something in your days you would not
believe if you were told.”
1. God’s plan was greater than anything
Habakkuk could imagine.
2. “If God ever whispered in our ear he
would blow our brains out the other side.”
3. God is going to raise up the
Chaldeans (Babylonians). They are fierce and
impetuous.
4. Beginning in verse 7 God told
Habakkuk, “They are dreaded and feared;
Their justice and authority originate with themselves. 8 “Their horses are swifter
Their justice and authority originate with themselves. 8 “Their horses are swifter
than leopards and keener than wolves
in the evening. Their horsemen come
galloping, their horsemen come from
afar; they fly like an eagle swooping down
to devour. 9 “All of
them come for violence. Their horde of faces moves forward.
They collect captives like sand. 10 “They mock at kings and rulers are a laughing
They collect captives like sand. 10 “They mock at kings and rulers are a laughing
matter to them. They laugh at every
fortress and heap up rubble to capture it.
11 “Then they will sweep through like the wind and pass on. But they will be held
11 “Then they will sweep through like the wind and pass on. But they will be held
guilty, They whose strength is their
god.”
a. There had never been an army as
fierce as the Babylonians were. They were
exceedingly powerful and cruel.
b. If you are familiar with the
Civil War you will recall how the Union laid siege to
cities cutting off food supplies.
This was done in Vicksburg and Petersburg.
Many people died of starvation.
This was one of the tactics used by
Nebuchadnezzar.
D. Habakkuk wrestled with this. He did not
understand how God could use an
unrighteous nation to chastise His
people.
1. Judah was bad enough.
2. The Babylonians were the worst, most
vicious pagans of them all.
3. Why would God use pagans to
discipline His people? In verse 13 he
says, “Why
do You look with favor on those who
deal treacherously? Why are You silent
when the wicked swallow up those
more righteous than they?”
4. Never forget that God uses nations –
even unrighteous nations – to accomplish
His will.
III. HABAKKUK WATCHED GOD AT WORK
(Chapter 2).
A. When you wrestle with God what should
you do? Chapter 2 opens with
Habakkuk’s willingness to stand guard
and watch and wait on God..
1. I appreciate Habakkuk’s willingness
to do this.
2. People always get in trouble when we grow
impatient and don’t wait on God.
Remember Abraham and the promise of
a child?
B. As Habakkuk waited and watched he had a vision.
1. God told him to write what he saw and
post it publicly.
2. The remainder of chapter 2 is what
Habakkuk saw and wrote.
3. God used this vision to tell Habakkuk
he should not worry about the pagan
Babylonians. God would take care of
them in his own way at the proper time.
C. In 2:4 – ““Behold, as for the proud one,
His soul is not right within him; But the
righteous will live by his faith”
1. This passage is used by Paul
throughout the book of Romans.
2. What does it mean to be “just?” It
means to be right before God. Paul says
that our righteousness, like
Abraham’s, is a result of our obedient faith in the
Lord (see Romans 3-5).
D. The impending condemnation of the
Babylonians.
1. In verse 5 he God said they will become
intoxicated on their own success
like a drunkard with wine. Do you
remember the story from Daniel 4 when
Nebuchadnezzar boasted of his
success and God forced him to live as a
beast of the field? The worst
mistake any nation can make is to think their
military might alone can save them.
2. In verse 6 God said a time would come
when people would taunt Babylon. ‘Woe
to him who increases what is not
his— For how long— And makes himself rich
with loans?’ Verse 8 says, “Because
you have looted many nations, All the
remainder of the peoples will loot
you— Because of human bloodshed and
violence done to the land, To the
town and all its inhabitants.”
a. As we read this we are reminded
how “what goes around comes around.”
b. Paul said it like this in
Galatians 6:7 – “God is not mocked for whatsoever a
man sows that he shall also
reap.”
3. Verses 9 through 11 says that the
Babylonians have built themselves up by
tearing others down (sounds like
American politics). It will all come crashing
down upon them.
4. Verses 12 – 14 pronounce woe on
Babylon because it had been built up with
bloodshed and violence. Habakkuk
reminds us that God’s justice will come
upon those who practice such
lawlessness.
5. Verses 15 – 17 says that God is going
to repay them for their violence against
their neighbors. Vss. 16 - 20 - “You
will be filled with disgrace rather than honor.
Now you yourself drink and expose your own nakedness. the cup in the Lord’s
Now you yourself drink and expose your own nakedness. the cup in the Lord’s
right hand will come around to you,
and utter disgrace will come
upon your glory.
17 “For the violence done to Lebanon will overwhelm you, and the devastation of
17 “For the violence done to Lebanon will overwhelm you, and the devastation of
its beasts by which you terrified them, because of human
bloodshed and
violence done to the land, to the
town and all its inhabitants.”
E. Pay close attention to the closing
section of chapter 2 where we find a startling
contrast between the lifeless idolatrous
gods of the Babylonians and the Sovereign
God Yahweh of Israel.
1. In verses 18-19 God said that the
Babylonian’s gods will not save them. “Woe to
him who says to a piece of wood, ‘Awake!’ To a mute
stone, ‘Arise!’ And that is
your teacher? Behold, it is overlaid with gold and silver, And
there is no breath at
all inside it.”
2. Notice the contrast with verse 20 -
“But the Lord is in His holy
temple. Let all the earth be silent
before Him.”
3. This was God saying, “I am
sovereign.”
IV. HABAKKUK WORSHIPPED GOD (Chapter 3)
A. The realization of God’s justice and sovereignty
leads Habakkuk to worship.
1. He prays – vs. 1. Notice the
reference to Habakkuk “the prophet.” “Shigionoth” is
somewhat obscure but appears to be a
musical term of some type.
2. He prays for revival – vs. 2 – “O
Lord, revive Your work in the midst of the years,
in the midst of the years make it
known.” See also Psalm 71:20; 85:6; 119:37,
88,107, 154,156,159, 143:11.
3. Throughout this chapter Habakkuk
worships through prayer and praise for the
wondrous works of God.
B. His worship culminates with the
climactic expression of faith in verses 17-19.
Though the fig tree should not blossom and
there be no fruit on the vines,
Though the yield of the olive should fail and the fields produce no food,
Though the flock should be cut off from the fold and there be no cattle in the
Though the yield of the olive should fail and the fields produce no food,
Though the flock should be cut off from the fold and there be no cattle in the
stalls, 18 Yet I
will exult in the Lord, I will rejoice in the God of my salvation.
19 The Lord God is my strength, and He has made my feet like hinds’ feet,
And makes me walk on my high places.”
19 The Lord God is my strength, and He has made my feet like hinds’ feet,
And makes me walk on my high places.”
a. Hinds feet – are the feet of a
sure footed deer on a steep mountainside.
b. Even when the world is filled
with violence and turmoil you can trust in the
steadfastness of God.
CONCLUSION:
A. What
are you wrestling with? Is there conflict with another person? Are you
Wrestling with feelings of doubt? Are you
wrestling with physical infirmities? Are you,
like Habakkuk, wrestling with God?
B. There
is a solid rock amid the shifting sand of life, Habakkuk needed to understand
that God is sovereign in the midst of a
tumultuous world. This joyful
realization
caused him to break forth in words of
glorious triumph.
C. Oswald
Chambers wrote, "We have to pray with our eyes on God, not on the
difficulties." Amen!