Put yourself in
Habakkuk’s place. As a prophetic bridge between God and Jerusalem, you sound
the alarm about the injustices in Judah foisted upon the poor and the weak by
the rich and the powerful. God says, That’s okay. Even now I’m
raising up a violent nation that will eradicate Judah. Problem solved. According to Robert Chisholm, that’s not the
remedy Habakkuk had in mind [2].
The prophet makes
that quite clear in his ensuing dialog with the Almighty. O Lord,
are you not from everlasting? . . . Why then do you tolerate the treacherous?
Why are you silent while the wicked swallow up those more righteous than
themselves? (1:12,13).
This is an important
question: Are you not from everlasting? Habakkuk was betraying a weakness in human
understanding. God looks at things on an epic scale, from everlasting to
everlasting. We see only right now… and maybe the five minutes before and the
five minutes after. But looking at the big picture, God – speaking to Babylon –
says there is coming a time when the tables will be turned: Because
you have plundered many nations, the peoples who are left will plunder you (2:8).
Habakkuk finally
gets it: I will wait patiently for the day of calamity to come on
the nation invading us (3:16).
TODAY’S MEDITATION
How are things looking? How
would things look differently if you could see the big picture? Ask God, who
sees your future and your past, to help you trust that he will be with you come
what may.
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