Habakkuk

Narrator: Chris Genthree
 •  6 min. read  •  grade level: 9
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ABHow diverse and perfect is the development of the ways of God in His word! Not only does it contain the great events that establish the fact of His government, and the character of that government, not only the proofs of His fidelity to His people, and his estimate of the evil that led to judgment, but also His answer to every feeling caused by the series of events by which He chastised them, His relief for the anguish that must be felt by one who is faithful, on account of the affliction of God's beloved people, together with the profitable exercise of his faith.. The perfect ways of God are unfolded on the one side, and on the other, the heart is formed to the intelligency of those ways, and to the enjoyment of the full effect of the faithfulness of the God of love; while, during the expectation of this effect, confidence in God Himself is established, and the links of the heart with God are abundantly strengthened.
It is of this latter part, the development of faith and of spiritual affections amid the trial, that Habakkuk treats in his prophecy. It speaks of the exercise of the heart of one who, full of the Spirit, is attached to the people of God. Still, it is Israel that is brought before us.
First of all, the prophet complains that the evil which exists among the people is insupportable. This is the natural effect of the working of the Spirit of God, in a heart jealous for His glory and detesting evil. The heart of the prophet, formed in the school of the law, speaks perhaps of the evil in the spirit of the law. The Spirit of God does not bring him out of this position, which was properly that of the prophet before God, and he judges the evil in a holy manner, according to a heart that was faithful to the blessings of the Lord.
Thereupon, the Lord reveals to him the terrible judgment, by which He will chastise the people who thus gave themselves up to evil. He would raise up against them the Chaldeans, those types of pride and energy, who, successful in all their enterprises, sought glory only in the opinion they had of themselves. Their head, forsaking the true God who had given them their strength, would worship a God of his own.1
But all this awakens in the prophet a different sentiment from that which he before experienced. Here was his God denied by the instrument of vengeance; and the beloved people trodden down by one more wicked than themselves. But faith knows that the true God is the Lord, and (already a profound consolation) that it is the Lord who has established the wicked in power for the correction of His people. But shall they continue to fill their net with men, as though they were but fish? There the prophet stops, that God, in His time, may explain these dealings which disquiet his heart. He hearkens, he watches, like a sentinel, to receive the answer of God to the anxiety of his soul. God, in order to comfort His prophet and all His faithful people, commands him to write the answer so plainly, that he who runs may read it. He bears in mind the affections of His people. He appreciates them, for, in truth, they are given, according to His own heart, by the Holy Ghost.
He will, even before the deliverance, comfort the heart that is oppressed by the feelings to which faith itself gives birth. If faith produces them, the answer to that faith will not be wanting. Deliverance would not yet come. The vision was yet for an appointed time, but deliverance on God's part would assuredly come. God, who set value on faith, would himself intervene. If deliverance tarried, the faithful should wait for it. It would surely come and would not tarry. To the heart of man it tarried. Patience was to have its perfect work. The patience of God had been long and perfect: The time of deliverance should not tarry one moment after the hour appointed by God in His wisdom.
God had judged the spirit of pride, whose effects had overwhelmed the heart of the prophet. The oppressor was not upright, but the portion of the just was to live by faith, and by faith he should live. A deliverance for the people which did not, so to say, require this faith, might have been preferred. But God would have the heart thus exercised. The righteous must pass through it and learn to trust in the Lord, to count on Him in all circumstances, to learn what He is in Himself, come what may.
Nevertheless, although God allowed His people, on account of their sins, to be crushed by injustice and oppression; the conduct of the oppressor cried unto heaven, and brought judgment on his own head. Woe unto him! for even apart from God's relations with His people, it is He who judges the earth and delivers it from the oppressor and the wicked. His graven image shall not profit him; what can the dumb stone do for the man that set it up? But the Lord was in His holy place, in His temple. All the earth should keep silence before Him. It should be filled with the knowledge of His glory, as the bed of the sea with the waters that cover it. The people of the world should labor as in the fire for very vanity-and this, from the Lord; for He will fill the world with the knowledge of Himself.
This answer recalls to the prophet all the glory of the Lord, when He appeared for His people at the beginning, when He came out of His place and overturned every obstacle in order to establish His people in blessing.
At this remembrance of His power, the prophet trembles, but in the consciousness that it is the source of a perfect and assured rest in the day of trouble, when the destroyer should come up and invade the people.
He concludes his prophecy with the blessed result of all these precious lessons, namely, the expression of perfect confidence in the Lord. He would rejoice and be glad in Him, if all blessings should fail. The Lord Himself was his strength, his trust and his support, and He would set him on the high places of His blessing, giving him, as it were, hind's feet to ascend there by His favor.
There is nothing finer than this development of the thoughts of the Spirit of God, the sorrows and anxieties produced by Him, the answer of God to give understanding and strengthen faith, in order that the heart may be in full communion with Himself.
It will be remarked here, that it is the idolatrous oppressor who especially appears, although the first invasion is described, for that was the immediate cause of the prophet's anguish. The Chaldeans therefore are distinctly named. It is that people, as we know, who reduced the people of God to captivity.
 
1. Sad effect of pride, which, unknown to itself; is the parent of weakness. Man cannot sustain himself, and the pride which rejects the true God, must and does make one for itself, for pride cannot stand in the presence of the supreme God. Man makes a God: this too is pride; but he cannot do without one, and after all, we are the slates of that which we cannot do without.