The theme of the book of Habakkuk is the journey of spiritual growth from perplexity and doubt to the height of absolute trust in God. The ability to maintain our spiritual confidence comes through the act of giving God our confusion and choosing to trust His ability to keep us and to sustain us no matter what we face and go through.
Read the Story: Habakkuk chapters 1-3
Habakkuk lived in a very difficult and confusing time in the history of Judah. The king of Judah, Jehoiakim was an evil king who led the people into open rebellion against God. This moral decline throughout the nation greatly troubled Habakkuk, but what even troubled and confused him more was it seemed God was silent. How long would God allow this mess to continue? (Hab.1:2-4)
God answered Habakkuk’s questions (Hab.1:5-11). He told Habakkuk that judgment was on the way and He was going to use the Babylonians to administer it. This troubled the prophet even more. The Babylonians were even more wicked than the people of Judah, how could God justify using them? (Hab.1:12-17)
In chapter two, God again answers the prophet’s questions telling him Babylon would eventually experience His judgment as well, but as for him he was to live by faith trusting in the wisdom of God. (Hab.2:4). Habakkuk’s name means “he who clings.” Though things were confusing and the prophet didn’t understand it all, by working through his questions and God’s answers, he arrived at a place of clinging to God in absolute trust in God’s wisdom and faithfulness.
He wrote, “Though the fig tree does not bud and there are no grapes on the vine, though the olive crop fails and the fields produce no food, though there are no sheep in the pens and no cattle in the stalls, yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will be joyful in God my Savior.” (Hab. 3:17-18)
Habakkuk was declaring that even if conditions got so bad that all natural hope was gone, he was choosing to trust God no matter what. His confidence came from clinging to God trusting His wisdom and goodness.
Activity:
Like Habakkuk, write a declaration of your trust in God’s wisdom and goodness in spite of the confusion your circumstances maybe producing.
The theme of the book of Habakkuk is the journey of spiritual growth from perplexity and doubt to the height of absolute trust in God. The ability to maintain our spiritual confidence comes through the act of giving God our confusion and choosing to trust His ability to keep us and to sustain us no matter what we face and go through.
Habakkuk lived in a very difficult and confusing time in the history of Judah. The king of Judah, Jehoiakim was an evil king who led the people into open rebellion against God. This moral decline throughout the nation greatly troubled Habakkuk, but what even troubled and confused him more was it seemed God was silent. How long would God allow this mess to continue? (Hab.1:2-4)
God answered Habakkuk’s questions (Hab.1:5-11). He told Habakkuk that judgment was on the way and He was going to use the Babylonians to administer it. This troubled the prophet even more. The Babylonians were even more wicked than the people of Judah, how could God justify using them? (Hab.1:12-17)
In chapter two, God again answers the prophet’s questions telling him Babylon would eventually experience His judgment as well, but as for him he was to live by faith trusting in the wisdom of God. (Hab.2:4). Habakkuk’s name means “he who clings.” Though things were confusing and the prophet didn’t understand it all, by working through his questions and God’s answers, he arrived at a place of clinging to God in absolute trust in God’s wisdom and faithfulness.
He wrote, “Though the fig tree does not bud and there are no grapes on the vine, though the olive crop fails and the fields produce no food, though there are no sheep in the pens and no cattle in the stalls, yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will be joyful in God my Savior.” (Hab. 3:17-18)
Habakkuk was declaring that even if conditions got so bad that all natural hope was gone, he was choosing to trust God no matter what. His confidence came from clinging to God trusting His wisdom and goodness.