Crosspoint Church | Georgetown, TX

Nahum: The Lord restores what is ruined!

Devotions this week based on The Prophets Week 7 – Nahum (WATCH HERE)


Nahum 2 paints a vivid and unsettling picture of battle. Chariots race through the streets, shields gleam red, warriors charge, and the great city of Nineveh trembles. To those who first heard Nahum’s words, this was a prophecy of deliverance. For over a century, the Assyrian Empire had dominated the known world with cruelty and terror. They had crushed nations, taken people captive, and even humiliated God’s own people. The Israelites had watched in fear as Assyria rose to power and destroyed the Northern Kingdom. Judah had survived only by God’s mercy. Now, in Nahum’s vision, God was turning the tide. The same nation that once seemed invincible would fall. The destroyer would be destroyed. The oppressor would be overthrown.

This chapter is not just about military defeat. It is about divine justice and restoration. God is not a passive observer of evil. He is not indifferent to violence, arrogance, or oppression. Nahum describes a God who acts decisively to bring justice. “The Lord will restore the splendor of Jacob like the splendor of Israel, though destroyers have laid them waste and have ruined their vines” (Nahum 2:2). Those words are full of hope. God’s people had been crushed, but God would lift them up again. Their beauty, their peace, and their worship would be restored.

One could read Nahum and focus only on the destruction, but behind the judgment is the heartbeat of mercy. God’s justice is never cruel or random. His purpose is always redemptive. When He brings down the proud, it is to lift up the humble. When He tears down what is wicked, it is to make room for what is holy and whole. When He judges nations, it is to set captives free. God’s justice and mercy always work together. They are not opposites but two sides of His perfect character. (See yesterday’s devotion.)

We see this most clearly in Jesus Christ. On the cross, God’s justice and mercy meet. Sin is punished. The guilty are set free. The wrath that should have fallen on us falls on Jesus instead. The destroyer is defeated not by armies or chariots but by the sacrificial love of the Son of God. Through His death and resurrection, Christ restores what sin has ruined. He restores our relationship with God. He restores peace where there was rebellion, hope where there was despair, and purpose where there was shame.

Nahum 2 reminds us that God will not allow evil to have the final word. He is the Lord of history. Every empire that exalts itself against Him eventually falls. Every heart that resists Him is called to repentance, and every believer who trusts Him can rest in His protection. When you see injustice and corruption in the world, you can take comfort in knowing that God still reigns. He may seem silent at times, but He is never absent. His timing is perfect, His justice is certain, and His mercy is unrelenting.

For those who trust in Him, the promise of Nahum 2:2 still stands. God restores the splendor of His people. He rebuilds what was broken. He brings beauty out of ashes. Perhaps you have experienced the destructive power of sin or the pain of being wronged. Perhaps parts of your life feel ruined or wasted. God’s promise is that He can restore what has been broken. It may not happen overnight, and it may not look exactly as you imagined, but His restoration is deeper and stronger than what was destroyed.

The fall of Nineveh was a warning to the proud and a comfort to the faithful. It reminds us that God sees, God acts, and God saves. He will not let evil go unanswered, and He will not leave His people forgotten. In Christ, we see the fulfillment of Nahum’s vision.  We see the God who fights for His people, defeats their enemies, and restores their splendor. When the world seems dark and uncertain, remember this truth: the Lord is not only the God who judges but also the God who restores. He can bring beauty from ruins and peace from chaos, for He is good, and His mercy endures forever.

Apply: Where is God working in your life today to restore what sin broke?

Prayer: Lord, thank you for being a God of justice and mercy.  Restore in me what sin has broken.  Forgive me for the sins of pride that bring me down and increase in me a humble spirit that relies fully on you.  AMEN.

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