The Book of the Prophet Habakkuk



Chapter 1


The burden which Habakkuk the prophet saw:

Tweet thisPost on Facebook

O Jehovah, until when shall I cry for help, and You will not hear? I cry out to You, Violence! But You do not save.


Why do You show me evil, and You look upon toil? For destruction and violence are before me; and there is strife, and contention rises up.

Tweet thisPost on Facebook

On account of this the law has become helpless, and justice does not continually go forth. For the wicked hems in the righteous, so justice goes forth, being perverted.


Look among the nations and see, and be amazed. Be amazed! For a work is working in your days [which] you will not believe, though it be told to you.


For, behold, I raise up the Chaldeans, the bitter and impetuous nation which is going into the broad spaces of the land, to possess dwellings not his own.


He [is] terrible and fearful; his judgment and his glory comes from himself.

Tweet thisPost on Facebook

His horses also are swifter than leopards and are fiercer than the evening wolves. And their horsemen spread themselves; yea, their horsemen come from afar; they shall fly as the eagle hurrying to eat.


All of him shall come for violence; the gathering of their faces [is] forward; and they gather captives like the sand.

Tweet thisPost on Facebook

And he shall scoff against the kings, and officials [shall be] a scorn to him. He shall scorn every fortress, and he shall heap up dirt and capture it.

Tweet thisPost on Facebook

Then he sweeps on [like] a wind; and he transgresses and is guilty, [crediting] this power of his to his god.

Tweet thisPost on Facebook

[Are] You not from of old, Jehovah our God, my Holy One? We shall not die, Jehovah, for You have appointed him for judgment. And, [my] Rock, You have established him for correction.

Tweet thisPost on Facebook

[You are] of purer eyes than to behold evil, and You are not able to look upon vexation. Why do you look on those who deal deceitfully? Will You be silent when the wicked swallows [one] more righteous than he?


For You make man like the fish of the sea, like creeping things with no ruler over him.

Tweet thisPost on Facebook

He takes up all of him with the hook; he drags him with his net and gathers him with his seine. On account of this he rejoices and exults.


So he sacrifices to his net, and burns incense to his seine; because by them his portion [is] fat, and his food rich.

Tweet thisPost on Facebook

Shall he therefore empty his net, and shall he not spare to continually slay nations?

Tweet thisPost on Facebook






This goes to iframe