God’s Justice vs Human Revenge (Nahum 2) – The Fall of Nineveh Explained
In Nahum 2, we are given a vivid prophetic picture of the fall of Nineveh and the judgment of God against a proud and violent empire. This sermon looks at a theme that runs through all of Scripture, the danger and destruction of human revenge and the perfection of God’s justice.
From the stories of Joab, Absalom, and David in Samuel and Kings, we see that revenge never truly fixes injustice. It only spreads it. It damages the person who receives it and the one who carries it out. Human justice, even when it feels justified, is still limited by human sin.
Nahum 2 shows us something very different. God’s justice is complete, righteous, and unstoppable. Through prophetic images of siege warfare, flooding, and collapse, Nahum describes the fall of Nineveh in 612 B.C., a city that once seemed untouchable.
In this message, we walk through that scene of judgment and then step back and ask what it means for us today. God does not ignore evil, and He will not clear the guilty. His justice is not cruelty; It is perfect moral judgment carried out without failure or corruption.
This passage also confronts us personally. It calls us away from vengeance, fear, and pride, and toward humility, repentance, and trust in God’s rule over every nation and every life.