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Good News [1976], GOOD NEWS BIBLE WITH DEUTEROCANONICALS / APOCRYPHA Today's English Version (AMERICAN BIBLE SOCIETY, New York) [word count] [B15000].
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The Book of NAHUM The Book of Nahum is a poem celebrating the fall of Nineveh, the capital city of Israel's ancient and oppressive enemy, the Assyrians. The fall of Nineveh, near the end of the seventh century B.C., is seen as the judgment of God upon a cruel and arrogant nation.

Judgment on Nineveh 1.1–15 The fall of Nineveh 2.1—3.19

1   This is a message about Nineveh, the account of a vision seen by Nahum, who was from Elkosh. The Lord's Anger against Nineveh

2   
The Lord God tolerates no rivals;
  he punishes those who oppose him.
  In his anger he pays them back.

3   
The Lord does not easily become angry,
  but he is powerful
  and never lets the guilty go unpunished.

3   
Where the Lord walks, storms arise;
  the clouds are the dust raised by his feet!

4   
He commands the sea, and it dries up!
  He makes the rivers go dry.
The fields of Bashan wither,
  Mount Carmel turns brown,
  and the flowers of Lebanon fade.

5   
Mountains quake in the presence of the Lord;
  hills melt before him.
The earth shakes when the Lord appears;
  the world and all its people tremble.

6   
When he is angry, who can survive?
  Who can survive his terrible fury?
He pours out his flaming anger;
  rocks crumble to dust before him.

7   
The Lord is good;
  he protects his people in times of trouble;
  he takes care of those who turn to him.

8   
Like a great rushing flood he completely destroys his enemies; note
  he sends to their death those who oppose him.

9   
What are you plotting against the Lord?
  He will destroy you.
  No one opposes him more than once.

10   
Like tangled thorns and dry straw
  you will be burned up! note

11   From you, Nineveh, there came a man full of wicked schemes, who plotted against the Lord.

12   This is what the Lord says to his people Israel: “Even though the Assyrians are strong and numerous, they will be destroyed and disappear. My people, I made you suffer, but I will not do it

-- --

again.

13   I will now end Assyria's power over you and break the chains that bind you.”

14   This is what the Lord has decreed about the Assyrians: “They will have no descendants to carry on their name. I will destroy the idols that are in the temples of their gods. I am preparing a grave for the Assyrians— they don't deserve to live!”

15   Look, a messenger is coming over the mountains with good news! He is on his way to announce the victory! People of Judah, celebrate your festivals and give God what you solemnly promised him. The wicked will never invade your land again. They have been totally destroyed! note The Fall of Nineveh

1   
Nineveh, you are under attack!
The power that will shatter you has come.
  Man the defenses!
  Guard the road!
  Prepare for battle!

2   (The Lord is about to restore the glory of Israel, as it was before her enemies plundered her.)

3   
The enemy soldiers carry red shields
  and wear uniforms of red.
They are preparing to attack!
  Their chariots flash like fire!
  Their horses note prance!

4   
Chariots dash wildly through the streets,
  rushing back and forth in the city squares.
They flash like torches
  and dart about like lightning.

5   
The officers are summoned;
  they stumble as they press forward. note

5   
The attackers rush to the wall
  and set up the shield for the battering ram.

6   
The gates by the river burst open;
  the palace is filled with terror.

7   
The queen is taken captive;
  her servants moan like doves
  and beat their breasts in sorrow.

8   
Like water from a broken dam
  the people rush from Nineveh! note
“Stop! Stop!” the cry rings out—
  but no one turns back.

9   
Plunder the silver!
  Plunder the gold!
The city is full of treasure!

10   
Nineveh is destroyed, deserted, desolate!
  Hearts melt with fear;
  knees tremble, strength is gone;
  faces grow pale.

11   
Where now is the city
  that was like a den of lions,
  the place where young lions were fed,
  where the lion and the lioness would go
  and their cubs would be safe?

-- --

12   
The lion killed his prey
  and tore it to pieces for his mate and her cubs;
  he filled his den with torn flesh.

13   “I am your enemy!” says the Lord Almighty. “I will burn up your chariots. Your soldiers will be killed in war, and I will take away everything that you took from others. The demands of your envoys will no longer be heard.”

1   
Doomed is the lying, murderous city,
  full of wealth to be looted and plundered!

2   
Listen! The crack of the whip,
  the rattle of wheels,
  the gallop of horses,
  the jolting of chariots!

3   
Horsemen charge,
  swords flash, spears gleam!
Corpses are piled high,
  dead bodies without number—
  men stumble over them!

4   
Nineveh the whore is being punished.
Attractive and full of deadly charms,
  she enchanted nations and enslaved note them.

5   
The Lord Almighty says,
“I will punish you, Nineveh!
  I will strip you naked
  and let the nations see you,
  see you in all your shame.

6   
I will treat you with contempt
  and cover you with filth.
  People will stare at you in horror.

7   
All who see you will shrink back.
  They will say, ‘Nineveh lies in ruins!
  Who has any sympathy for her?
  Who will want to comfort her?’”

8   Nineveh, are you any better than Thebes, the capital of Egypt? She too had a river to protect her like a wall—the Nile was her defense.

9   She ruled Sudan and Egypt, there was no limit to her power; Libya was her ally.

10   Yet the people of Thebes were carried off into exile. At every street corner their children were beaten to death. Their leading men were carried off in chains and divided among their captors.

11   Nineveh, you too will fall into a drunken stupor! You too will try to escape from your enemies.

12   All your fortresses will be like fig trees with ripe figs: shake the trees, and

-- --

the fruit falls right into your mouth!

13   Your soldiers are like women, and your country stands defenseless before your enemies. Fire will destroy the bars across your gates.

14   Draw water to prepare for a siege, and strengthen your fortresses! Trample the clay to make bricks, and get the brick molds ready!

15   No matter what you do, you will still be burned to death or killed in battle. You will be wiped out like crops eaten up by locusts.

15   You multiplied like locusts!

16   You produced more merchants than there are stars in the sky! But now they are gone, like locusts that spread their wings and fly away.

17   Your officials are like a swarm of locusts that stay in the walls on a cold day. But when the sun comes out, they fly away, and no one knows where they have gone!

18   Emperor of Assyria, your governors are dead, and your noblemen are asleep forever! Your people are scattered on the mountains, and there is no one to bring them home again.

19   There is no remedy for your injuries, and your wounds cannot be healed. All those who hear the news of your destruction clap their hands for joy. Did anyone escape your endless cruelty? note
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Good News [1976], GOOD NEWS BIBLE WITH DEUTEROCANONICALS / APOCRYPHA Today's English Version (AMERICAN BIBLE SOCIETY, New York) [word count] [B15000].
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