Woe and Wounding
Nahum chapter 3 delivers a divine verdict on Nineveh, not as a sudden judgment but as the culmination of a long history of violence, deception, and spiritual corruption, exposing the empire’s identity as a city built on bloodshed, seduction, and sorcery. The prophet portrays God’s justice as both inevitable and righteous, reversing Nineveh’s own methods of humiliation and exposing the emptiness of its power, which crumbles like ripe figs shaken from a tree and scatters like locusts at dawn. The fall of Nineveh is not merely a historical event but a moral declaration: the wicked will face incurable wounds, and their downfall will be met not with mourning but with joy, as the oppressed finally see justice restored. Yet this judgment extends beyond ancient Assyria, pointing to the universal reality of human rebellion against God, where all stand under the threat of divine consequence—until Christ, the true Shepherd, bears the incurable wound in our place, absorbing God’s wrath so that we might be healed, gathered, and set free. The final hope is not in human strength or self-mastery, but in the resurrection of Jesus, who turns the sentence of death into the promise of eternal life, inviting all who are scattered to find refuge in Him and rejoice in the ultimate victory of God’s justice and mercy.

