Nahum 1 sings a hymn of God’s justice and goodness over an arrogant empire. The Lord ends Nineveh’s plots, shelters those who trust him, and calls Judah to celebrate peace because the wicked will not invade again.
Bible Themes and Doctrines
Nahum 1 sings a hymn of God’s justice and goodness over an arrogant empire. The Lord ends Nineveh’s plots, shelters those who trust him, and calls Judah to celebrate peace because the wicked will not invade again.
Micah 7 laments a barren society, then waits in hope for the Lord who hears. The chapter ends in doxology: God pleads the case of the repentant, restores his flock, and buries sins in the sea.
Micah 6 summons creation to hear God’s case, recalls his rescue, and exposes dishonest worship that cheats neighbors. The Lord answers with a simple good—do justice, love mercy, and walk humbly with him—so that disciplined people can return to a life that honors his name.
Micah 5 turns siege and shame toward hope by promising a ruler from Bethlehem whose strength is the Lord’s and whose presence is peace. Under his care the remnant becomes dew and lion, idols are purged, and security reaches as far as his greatness extends.
Micah 4 lifts a chastened people to a horizon where the Lord’s word goes out from Zion, nations seek his paths, and weapons become tools for harvest. The same God who sends labor promises rescue, gathering the lame and ruling forever so that families rest unafraid under vine and fig tree.
Micah 3 confronts rulers who devour the flock and prophets who sell comfort, then announces a verdict that reaches the city’s stones. The chapter models Spirit-given courage and prepares the ground for the peace promised just beyond the plowed field.
Micah 2 traces how private coveting becomes public seizure and how the Lord answers with measured judgment and true comfort. The chapter ends with a shepherding promise: a gathered remnant, an opened way, and the Lord himself at the head.
Micah 1 opens with a courtroom summons and a storm-theophany that exposes idolatry at the very centers of Israel and Judah. The Lord’s descent brings severe mercy that calls his people from pretense to honest repentance and prepares the way for future restoration.
Jonah 4 ends not with a tidy moral but with God’s question about compassion. Through a plant, a worm, and a wind, the Lord exposes narrow pity and invites His servant to share His concern for a great city and every life within it.
Jonah 3 records obedience after mercy and a citywide turn from evil. Nineveh’s fast, the king’s humility, and God’s relenting reveal how powerful the Lord’s word is and how ready He is to forgive when people truly turn.
From the belly of the fish, Jonah prays Scripture, looks toward God’s temple, renounces idols, and confesses, “Salvation comes from the Lord.” His gratitude before landfall trains us to trust God’s mercy in every deep.
Jonah 1 opens with a call and a flight that triggers a storm, a confession, and a surprising calm. God pursues His prophet for the sake of a lost city and turns a pagan crew into worshipers, pointing to a greater mercy that will reach the nations.
Edom’s red cliffs could not hide pride from the Lord. Obadiah 1 indicts kin-violence and announces Zion’s deliverance, ending with the sure promise that the kingdom will be the Lord’s.
Obadiah exposes Edom’s pride and kin-violence, warns that deeds return upon one’s head, and ends with hope on Zion. The closing promise—“the kingdom will be the Lord’s”—anchors repentance and steady hope.
Amos 9 begins with the Lord shattering false security at the altar and ends with a pledge to rebuild under David’s line. Hear the warning, embrace the sifting mercy, and live in hope for the day when God plants His people to remain.