Prophet Old Testament

Prophet Nahum

Also known as Naum

One of the Twelve Minor Prophets, who foretold the fall of Nineveh and warned against injustice and violence.

Feast Day
December 1
Draft
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Commemorated as

The Holy Prophet Nahum

Life

Nahum is one of the Twelve Minor Prophets of the Old Testament, the author of the short prophetic book that bears his name. By tradition he is called "the Elkoshite," after the village of Elkosh; Orthodox tradition places this in Galilee, while other traditions locate it in northern Mesopotamia. His name is understood to mean "God consoles" or "comfort," from the Hebrew verb meaning "to comfort." He is commemorated by the Orthodox Church on December 1.

Nahum is reckoned the seventh of the Twelve Minor Prophets, his book standing between those of Micah and Habakkuk. He is dated to the seventh century B.C., a period framed by the height and decline of the Assyrian Empire. His prophecy is directed almost entirely against Nineveh, the Assyrian capital, whose ruin he foretold on account of its iniquity, together with the destruction it had brought upon the kingdom of Israel and the blasphemy of King Sennacherib against God.

Nahum differs from most of the prophets in that his book issues no call to repentance and contains no denunciation of Israel for infidelity to God; it is concerned instead with the judgment coming upon Nineveh, expressed in vivid poetic imagery of the city's downfall. According to the tradition recorded in the synaxarion, he died at the age of forty-five and was buried in his native region.

In his own words Read Hide
The LORD is good, a strong hold in the day of trouble; and he knoweth them that trust in him.
Nahum, 1:7 · King James Version (PD)

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Prophecy against Nineveh

The Book of Nahum is devoted to the fall of Nineveh, the capital of Assyria, the empire that had conquered the northern kingdom of Israel and threatened Judah. Where the earlier prophet Jonah had been sent to call Nineveh to repentance, Nahum proclaims the city's coming destruction as a divine judgment upon its violence and pride. Nineveh fell to a coalition of Babylonians and Medes in 612 B.C.

Nahum's oracle particularly recalls the blasphemy of the Assyrian king Sennacherib against the God of Israel. The book's distinctive character lies in its single, sustained focus on the downfall of an oppressing power, rather than on the moral correction of God's own people.

Veneration

Together with Saint Nahum of Ochrid, commemorated on December 23, the Prophet Nahum is invoked by the faithful on behalf of those suffering mental disorders.

Notes

Distinct from Nahum of Ochrid (OS-1398).

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints