Today's
Scripture Reading (June 12, 2026): Nahum 1
It had been
about a hundred years since Jonah tried to escape going to Nineveh by making a
detour to the south coast of Spain and the city of Tarshish. A century has
passed since a whale swallowed Jonah and then spewed the prophet up onto the
coast. It has been a hundred years since Jonah presided over a revival in
Nineveh. Unfortunately, over those hundred years, the revival in Nineveh has
died, and the people have returned to their evil ways. So, Nahum gets to proclaim the judgment of which Jonah could only dream.
Nahum says
that "an overwhelming flood he
will make an end of Nineveh" (Nahum 1:8). For the people who first heard
these words, the prophecy of Nahum had to bring the minds of the people in his
audience back to the time of Noah and the days of the flood that covered the
earth. There is no doubt about the power of the Assyrian Empire. The Empire had
itself been a metaphorical "overwhelming flood" that had dominated
the known world. The Empire stretched from parts of Iran through modern-day
Iraq and into Syria and Turkiye, and down through Jordan and Israel into Egypt,
and even into the eastern part of Libya. And as Nahum makes this prophecy,
Assyria is still strong.
But within fifty years, the nations
would come together to defeat the Assyrians. It will be a "tidal wave"
of opposition as the Babylonians and Persians join with other smaller powers to
overcome the Empire. Not far down the road, both the Babylonians and the
Persians would also have their time on the world stage before giving way to a
Greek flood.
But James Boice (1938-2000) reminds
us that this wasn't just a figurative flood. While it wasn't the overwhelming
flood that Noah knew, there was a flood that helped to take down the Assyrian
Capital.
"According to secular accounts, during the final siege
of Nineveh by a rebel army of Persians, Medes, Arabians, and Babylonians,
unusually heavy rains caused the rivers to flood and to undermine the city's
walls, which then collapsed…the invading armies entered the city through this
breach in its defenses" (James Montgomery Boice).
Jonah tried
to escape his mission by taking a boat to Tarshish, but he was stopped by a
storm and high waves that threatened to sink the boat he was on. It was a
whale, or a big fish, that saved the prophet and threw him up onto dry ground.
But the water that sank Nineveh, both figurative and literal, didn't carry a
message of salvation for the people. This time, the water would carry the final
vote.
Tomorrow's
Scripture Reading: Nahum 2
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