Habakkuk, 1

Catholic Public Domain Version

1 The burden that Habakkuk the prophet saw.

2 How long, O Lord, shall I cry out, and you will not heed? Shall I shout to you while suffering violence, and you will not save?

3 Why have you revealed to me iniquity and hardship, to see plunder and injustice opposite me? And there has been judgment, but the opposition is more powerful.

4 Because of this, the law has been torn apart, and judgment does not persevere to its conclusion. For the impious prevail against the just. Because of this, a perverse judgment is issued.

5 Gaze among the nations, and see. Admire, and be astounded. For a work has been done in your days, which no one will believe when it is told.

6 For behold, I will raise up the Chaldeans, a bitter and swift people, marching across the width of the earth, to possess tabernacles not their own.

7 It is dreadful and terrible. From themselves, judgment and their burden will issue.

8 Their horses are more nimble than leopards and swifter than wolves in the evening; their horsemen will spread out. And then their horsemen will approach from far away; they will fly like the eagle, hurrying to devour.

9 They will all approach towards the prey; their face is like a burning wind. And they will gather captives together like sand.

10 And concerning kings, he will triumph, and sovereign rulers will be his laughingstock, and he will laugh over every fortress, and he will transport a rampart and seize it.

11 Then his spirit will be altered, and he will cross over and fall. Such is his strength from his god.

12 Have you not existed from the beginning, Lord my God, my holy one, and so we shall not die? Lord, you have stationed him for judgment, and you have establish that his strength will be swept away.

13 Your eyes are pure, you do not behold evil, and you cannot look towards iniquity. Why do you look upon the agents of iniquity, and remain silent, while the impious is devouring one who is more just than himself?

14 And you will make men like the fish of the sea and like the creeping things that have no ruler.

15 He lifted up everything with his hook. He drew them in with his dragnet, and gathered them into his netting. Over this, he will rejoice and exult.

16 For this reason, he will offer victims to his dragnet, and he will sacrifice to his netting. For through them, his portion has been made fat, and his meals elite.

17 Because of this, therefore, he expands his dragnet and will not be lenient in continually putting to death the peoples.




Versículos relacionados com Habakkuk, 1:

In chapter 1 of the book of Habakkuk, the prophet regrets before God the oppression and violence he sees around him. He questions why God allows evil to prevail and why He does not intervene. God responds that He will use Babylonians as an instrument of judgment against the iniquity of Judah. Below are five verses related to the topics dealt with in Habacuque 1:

Proverbs 21:13: "Whoever closes the ears to the cry of the poor will cry out and will not be heard." This verse talks about the importance of listening and helping the needy. This relates to the theme of Habakkuk 1 because the prophet cries to God in the name of the suffering people, and wonders why his prayers are not met.

Isaiah 5:20: "Woe to evil to call well, and good, evil; who make darkness light, and light, darkness; who make bitter sweet, and sweet, bitter!" This verse talks about the inversion of values ​​and the distortion of truth. This relates to the theme of Habakkuk 1 because the prophet is perplexed to the apparent inconsistency of God, which allows evil and injustice.

Ezekiel 7:23: "Make them a manure of manure instead of diadema; spread over them your filth." This verse talks about divine punishment for corruption and impurity. This relates to the theme of Habakkuk 1 because God announces that he will judge the people of Judah for his iniquity and sin.

Jeremiah 12:1: "You are righteous, Lord, when I present my cause before you. However, I would like to argue with you about your righteousness. Why do the way of the wicked prosper? Why do all traitors live without problems?" This verse talks about human questioning before the mystery of divine justice. This relates to the theme of Habakkuk 1 because the prophet wonders why God allows the impunity of the oppressors and the disgrace of the innocent.

Psalm 73:2-3: "But I almost stumbled and fell, almost lost my balance, because I was envy of the proud, seeing the prosperity of these wicked." These verses talk about the temptation to envy the apparent prosperity of the unjust. This is related to the theme of Habakkuk 1 because the prophet admits his difficulty in understanding why God allows oppressors to triumph while the righteous suffer.


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