Verse of the Day
Author Spotlight
Loading featured author...
Report Issue
See a formatting issue or error?
Let us know →
He rebukes the sea, and makes it dry, and dries up all the rivers. Bashan languishes, and Carmel; and the flower of Lebanon languishes.
Verse Takeaways
1
God's Supreme Power Over Nature
The verse uses dramatic imagery—drying up seas and withering fertile mountains like Bashan, Carmel, and Lebanon—to declare God's absolute sovereignty. Commentators explain that this isn't just a history lesson about the Red Sea; it's a statement that the most powerful and stable forces in creation are subject to God's command. His authority is ultimate and all-encompassing.
See 3 Verse Takeaways
Book Overview
Nahum
Author
Audience
Composition
Teaching Highlights
Outline
+ 5 more
See Overview
5
18th Century
Presbyterian
He rebukes the sea and makes it dry—delivering His people, as He did from Pharaoh (Psalms 106:9), the type of all later oppresso…
19th Century
Anglican
God’s character: a pledge that the oppressor of His servants shall be destroyed.
16th Century
Protestant
Nahum continues his discourse — that God, in demonstrating his displeasure, would disturb the sea or make it dry. There may be an allusion here to …
Consider supporting our work
17th Century
Reformed Baptist
He rebuketh the sea, and maketh it dry. As he did the Red sea, when the children of Israel passed through it as on dry la…
About a hundred years before, at Jonah's preaching, the Ninevites repented and were spared; yet, soon after, they became worse than ever. Nineveh d…