Getting Acquainted
Jonah, Micah, and Nahum reveal God’s directing of the nations for his purposes during the reemergence and ascendency of the Assyrian Empire. With messages of judgment against both Assyria and God’s own people in Israel and Judah, these prophets bring God’s explanation of world events to his people as they endure both prosperity and punishment from the Lord.
Jonah begins our study with what seems to be a simple word of judgment against the Assyrian city of Nineveh. However, as we look more closely at the book, it becomes clear that this judgment is directed not just at Israel’s enemies but actually against the people of Israel themselves. In their time of military expansion, wealth, and peace, Israel has become arrogant and self-focused, delighting in God’s steadfast love toward them but wanting to keep that love for themselves.
Micah continues this judgment against Israel and Judah for their turning away from God, especially through their mistreatment of the weak and powerless among them. This wickedness, perpetrated and promoted by the leaders, prophets, and priests in Israel, would bring about the judgment of God at the hands of the Assyrians and, later, of the Babylonians. Nevertheless, God forgives sins and delights in restoring his people. Accordingly, Micah promises a coming Shepherd-King who will deliver God’s people, restore them, and even take away those very things that led them astray.
Nahum concludes this time period with a condemning word against the Assyrians. Although they experienced God’s mercy and forgiveness because of their earlier repentance in the time of Jonah, they have once again exulted in violence and greed, and God’s Word to them, like their treatment of others, is graphic and devastating. The city of Nineveh will be destroyed completely by the avenging warrior God of Israel. (For further background, see the ESV Study Bible, pages 1683–1718; available online at www.esv.org.)
Date and Historical Background
Around 780–745 BC the Assyrian Empire, which had largely ruled the ancient world for nearly a century, seemed to wane in power, and as a result of this temporarily waning influence, Jeroboam II continued his father’s military expansion of Israel (2 Kings 14:23–28). Assyria’s ebbing power, however, would not last long. Tiglath-pileser became king of the Assyrian Empire in 745 BC and quickly reestablished Assyrian dominance throughout the region. Like many of the Assyrian kings before him, Tiglath-pileser’s reign was characterized by cruelty and destruction, especially upon those nations and peoples the Assyrians conquered. The northern kingdom of Israel experienced this cruelty, and in 722 BC it was devastated by the subsequent Assyrian king, Shalmaneser V, who ruled from 727–722 BC. Two kings later, Sennacherib (704–681 BC), made the prominent Assyrian city Nineveh the capital of the empire, enhancing the city and its defenses. However, less than one hundred years later, the city would be completely destroyed, and only a handful of years after that the empire itself would also be totally removed from history.
Into these world events, God sends his prophets with a message not just for Israel and Judah but also for Nineveh. The prophets of Jonah and Nahum sit as bookends surrounding Nineveh’s reestablishment as a world power, with Jonah prophesying during the reign of Israel’s king Jeroboam II (782–753 BC) and Nahum recording his oracles and visions in Judah likely sometime between 660 and 630 BC. The ministry of Micah lasts a minimum of 20–25 years, though perhaps longer, as he prophesies during the reigns of Judah’s kings Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah, placing Micah’s words sometime between 750 and 687 BC.
Outlines
Jonah
I. Jonah’s Commissioning and Response (Jonah 1:1–2:10)
A. Jonah’s commissioning and flight (Jonah 1:1–3)
B. Jonah and the pagan sailors (Jonah 1:4–16)
C. Jonah’s grateful prayer (Jonah 1:17–2:10)
II. Jonah’s Recommissioning and Response (Jonah 3:1–4:4)
A. Jonah’s recommissioning and compliance (Jonah 3:1–3a)
B. Jonah and the pagan Ninevites (Jonah 3:3b–10)
C. Jonah’s angry prayer (Jonah 4:1–4)
III. Jonah’s Lesson about Compassion (Jonah 4:5–11)
Micah
I. Superscription (Mic. 1:1)
II. The Announcement of Judgment on Israel and Judah (Mic. 1:2–2:13)
A. God’s punishment of Samaria and Judah (Mic. 1:2–16)
1. Judgment on Samaria (Mic. 1:2–7)
2. Judgment on Judah (Mic. 1:8–16)
B. Abuses and abusers of Yahweh’s land (Mic. 2:1–11)
1. Indictment and future punishment (Mic. 2:1–5)
2. Rejection of the prophetic word (Mic. 2:6–11)
C. The divine promise to gather Jacob (Mic. 2:12–13)
III. The Present Injustice and the Future Prospect of Just Rule in Jerusalem (Mic. 3:1–5:15)
A. Present leaders denounced (Mic. 3:1–12)
1. Judgment against the heads of Jacob (Mic. 3:1–4)
2. Judgment against the prophets (Mic. 3:5–8)
3. Judgment against the heads of Jacob (Mic. 3:9–12)
B. Jerusalem’s restoration among the nations—promised (Mic. 4:1–7)
1. Nations approach Zion in peace (Mic. 4:1–5)
2. Divine promise to gather Zion (Mic. 4:6–7)
C. Jerusalem’s restoration among the nations—accomplished (Mic. 4:8–5:15)
1. Restoration of Zion’s dominion (Mic. 4:8)
2. Nations approach Zion for battle (Mic. 4:9–13)
3. The Shepherd-King arrives and the remnant is restored (Mic. 5:1–15)
IV. The Lord’s Indictment and Restoration of His People (Mic. 6:1–7:20)
A. Israel accused: covenant violation (Mic. 6:1–8)
1. The prophetic summons (Mic. 6:1–2)
2. Divine interrogation and saving acts (Mic. 6:3–5)
3. People’s response and prophetic reply (Mic. 6:6–8)
B. Crisis in relationship (Mic. 6:9–7:7)
1. Divine indictment of treachery (Mic. 6:9–12)
2. Divine sentence for treachery (Mic. 6:13–16)
3. Consequence of disobedience: social upheaval (Mic. 7:1–7)
C. Zion’s repentance and renewed faith in Yahweh’s help (Mic. 7:8–13)
D. Restoration of the relationship between Israel and Yahweh (Mic. 7:14–20)
Nahum
I. Introduction (Nah. 1:1)
II. A Psalm Descriptively Praising the Lord (Nah. 1:2–8)
A. The Lord takes vengeance on his guilty adversaries (Nah. 1:2–3a)
B. The Lord rules creation in majesty, and no one can stand before his wrath (Nah. 1:3b–6)
C. The Lord delivers those who take refuge in him (Nah. 1:7)
D. The Lord destroys his adversaries (Nah. 1:8)
III. The Lord’s Coming Judgment on Nineveh and Deliverance of Judah (Nah. 1:9–15)
A. The destruction of wicked, plotting Nineveh (Nah. 1:9–12a)
B. Judah, having been afflicted by the Lord, is freed from Assyrian bondage (Nah. 1:12b–13)
C. The termination of vile, idolatrous Nineveh (Nah. 1:14)
D. Peace and deliverance for Judah (Nah. 1:15)
IV. Focus on Nineveh: The Lord’s Coming Judgment (Nah. 2:1–13)
A. The beginning of the attack on Nineveh (Nah. 2:1)
B. Reasons for judgment: the Assyrians’ plundering of Judah, though Judah’s restoration by God is planned (Nah. 2:2)
C. Attacking soldiers and military action at Nineveh (Nah. 2:3–5)
D. The fall and plundering of Nineveh (Nah. 2:6–9)
E. A taunting song portraying Nineveh’s destruction because of the city’s lust for conquest (Nah. 2:10–12)
F. The Lord speaks a word of judgment (Nah. 2:13)
V. Again, Focus on Nineveh: More concerning the Lord’s Coming Judgment (Nah. 3:1–19)
A. Reasons for judgment: the violence, lying, and greed of Nineveh (Nah. 3:1)
B. Military action at Nineveh and the ensuing slaughter of the Assyrians (Nah. 3:2–3)
C. Reasons for judgment: the wickedness of Nineveh (Nah. 3:4)
D. The Lord speaks a word of judgment (Nah. 3:5–7)
E. Comparison with the conquest of Thebes (Nah. 3:8–11)
F. A taunting song presenting Nineveh’s inevitable destruction because of the city’s incessant evil (Nah. 3:12–19)