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And indeed, (A)wine betrays the (B)haughty man
So that he does not (C)stay at home.
He (D)enlarges his appetite like Sheol,
And he is like death, never satisfied.
He also gathers to himself all nations
And assembles to himself all peoples.

“Will not all of these (E)lift up a taunt-song against him,
Even satire and riddles against him
And say, ‘(F)Woe to him who increases what is not his—
For how long—
And makes himself [a]rich with loans?’
Will not [b]your creditors (G)rise up suddenly,
And those who make you tremble awaken?
Indeed, you will become spoil for them.
Because you have (H)taken many nations as spoil,
All that is left of the peoples will take you as spoil—
Because of human bloodshed and violence [c]done to the land,
To the town and all its inhabitants.

“Woe to him who is greedy for (I)evil gain for his house
To (J)put his nest on high,
To be delivered from the hand of evil!
10 You have counseled a (K)shameful thing for your house
By cutting off many peoples;
So you are (L)sinning against your own soul.
11 Surely the (M)stone will cry out from the wall,
And the rafter will answer it from the [d]framework.

12 “Woe to him who (N)builds a city with bloodshed
And founds a town with injustice!
13 Is it not, behold, from Yahweh of hosts
That peoples (O)toil for fire,
And nations grow weary for nothing?
14 For the earth will be (P)filled
With the knowledge of the glory of Yahweh,
As the waters cover the sea.

15 “Woe to you who make [e]your neighbors drink,
Who mix in your venom even to make them drunk
So as to look on their nakedness!
16 You will be filled with disgrace rather than glory.
Now you yourself (Q)drink and [f]expose your own nakedness.
The (R)cup in Yahweh’s right hand will come around to you,
And (S)utter disgrace will come upon your glory.
17 For the (T)violence [g]done to Lebanon will cover you,
And the devastation of its beasts [h]by which you terrified them,
(U)Because of human bloodshed and (V)violence [i]done to the land,
To the town and all its inhabitants.

18 “What (W)profit is the graven image when its maker has engraved it,
Or a molten image, a (X)teacher of [j]lies?
For its maker (Y)trusts in his own making
When he fashions speechless idols.
19 Woe to him who (Z)says to a piece of wood, ‘(AA)Awake!’
To a mute stone, ‘Arise!’
And that is your teacher?
Behold, it is overlaid with (AB)gold and silver,
And there is (AC)no breath at all inside it.
20 But (AD)Yahweh is in His holy temple.
[k]Let all the earth (AE)be silent before Him.”

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Footnotes

  1. Habakkuk 2:6 Lit heavy
  2. Habakkuk 2:7 Lit those who bite you
  3. Habakkuk 2:8 Lit of the land
  4. Habakkuk 2:11 Lit wood
  5. Habakkuk 2:15 Lit his neighbor
  6. Habakkuk 2:16 As in DSS and ancient versions; or stagger; lit show yourself uncircumcised
  7. Habakkuk 2:17 Lit of Lebanon
  8. Habakkuk 2:17 Lit which terrified them
  9. Habakkuk 2:17 Lit of the land
  10. Habakkuk 2:18 Lit a lie
  11. Habakkuk 2:20 Lit Hush before Him, all the earth

Indeed, wine will betray the proud, restless man![a]
His appetite[b] is as big as Sheol’s;[c]
like death, he is never satisfied.
He gathers[d] all the nations;
he seizes[e] all peoples.

The Proud Babylonians Are as Good as Dead

“But all these nations will someday taunt him[f]
and ridicule him with proverbial sayings:[g]
‘Woe to the one who accumulates[h] what does not belong to him
(How long will this go on?)[i]
he who gets rich by extortion!’[j]
Your creditors will suddenly attack;[k]
those who terrify you will spring into action,[l]
and they will rob you.[m]
Because you robbed many countries,[n]
all who are left among the nations[o] will rob you.
You have shed human blood
and committed violent acts against lands, cities,[p] and those who live in them.
The one who builds his house by unjust gain is as good as dead.[q]

He does this so he can build his nest way up high
and escape the clutches of disaster.[r]
10 Your schemes will bring shame to your house.
Because you destroyed many nations, you will self-destruct.[s]
11 For the stones in the walls will cry out,
and the wooden rafters will answer back.[t]
12 Woe to the one who builds a city by bloodshed—

he who starts[u] a town by unjust deeds.
13 Be sure of this! The Lord of Heaven’s Armies has decreed:
The nations’ efforts will go up in smoke;
their exhausting work will be for nothing.[v]
14 For recognition of the Lord’s sovereign majesty will fill the earth
just as the waters fill up the sea.[w]

15 “Woe to you who force your neighbor to drink wine[x]

you who make others intoxicated
by forcing them to drink from the bowl of your furious anger[y]
so you can look at their naked bodies.[z]
16 But you will become drunk[aa] with shame, not majesty.[ab]
Now it is your turn to drink and expose your uncircumcised foreskin![ac]
The cup of wine in the Lord’s right hand[ad] is coming to you,
and disgrace will replace your majestic glory!
17 For you will pay in full for your violent acts against Lebanon;[ae]
terrifying judgment will come upon you
because of the way you destroyed the wild animals living there.[af]
You have shed human blood
and committed violent acts against lands, cities, and those who live in them.
18 What good[ag] is an idol? Why would a craftsman make it?[ah]
What good is a metal image that gives misleading oracles?[ai]
Why would its creator place his trust in it[aj]
and make[ak] such mute, worthless things?
19 Woe to the one who says to wood, ‘Wake up!’—
he who says[al] to speechless stone, ‘Awake!’
Can it give reliable guidance?[am]
It is overlaid with gold and silver;
it has no life’s breath inside it.
20 But the Lord is in his majestic palace.[an]
The whole earth is speechless in his presence!”[ao]

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Footnotes

  1. Habakkuk 2:5 tn Heb “Indeed wine betrays a proud man and he does not dwell.” The meaning of the last verb, “dwell,” is uncertain. Many take it as a denominative of the noun נָוָה (navah, “dwelling place”). In this case it would carry the idea, “he does not settle down,” and would picture the drunkard as restless (cf. NIV “never at rest”; NASB “does not stay at home”). Some relate the verb to an Arabic cognate and translate the phrase as “he will not succeed, reach his goal.”sn The Babylonian tyrant is the proud, restless man described in this line as the last line of the verse, with its reference to the conquest of the nations, makes clear. Wine is probably a metaphor for imperialistic success. The more success the Babylonians experience, the more greedy they become just as a drunkard wants more and more wine to satisfy his thirst. But eventually this greed will lead to their downfall, for God will not tolerate such imperialism and will judge the Babylonians appropriately (vv. 6-20).
  2. Habakkuk 2:5 tn Heb “who opens wide like Sheol his throat.” Here נֶפֶשׁ (nefesh) is understood in a physical sense, meaning “throat,” which in turn is figurative for the appetite. See H. W. Wolff, Anthropology of the Old Testament, 11-12.
  3. Habakkuk 2:5 sn Sheol is the proper name of the subterranean world which was regarded as the land of the dead. In ancient Canaanite thought Death was a powerful god whose appetite was never satisfied. In the OT Sheol/Death, though not deified, is personified as greedy and as having a voracious appetite. See Prov 30:15-16; Isa 5:14; also see L. I. J. Stadelmann, The Hebrew Conception of the World, 168.
  4. Habakkuk 2:5 tn Heb “he gathers for himself.”
  5. Habakkuk 2:5 tn Heb “he collects for himself.”
  6. Habakkuk 2:6 tn Heb “Will not these, all of them, take up a taunt against him…?” The rhetorical question assumes the response, “Yes, they will.” The present translation brings out the rhetorical force of the question by rendering it as an affirmation.
  7. Habakkuk 2:6 tn Heb “and a mocking song, riddles, against him? And one will say.”
  8. Habakkuk 2:6 tn Or “increases.”
  9. Habakkuk 2:6 tn This question is interjected parenthetically, perhaps to express rhetorically the pain and despair felt by the Babylonians’ victims.
  10. Habakkuk 2:6 tn Heb “and the one who makes himself heavy [i.e., wealthy] [by] debts.” Though only appearing in the first line, the term הוֹי (hoy) is to be understood as elliptical in the second line.
  11. Habakkuk 2:7 tn Heb “Will not your creditors suddenly rise up?” The rhetorical question assumes the response, “Yes, they will.” The present translation brings out the rhetorical force of the question by rendering it as an affirmation. sn Your creditors will suddenly attack. The Babylonians are addressed directly here. They have robbed and terrorized others, but now the situation will be reversed as their creditors suddenly attack them.
  12. Habakkuk 2:7 tn Heb “[Will not] the ones who make you tremble awake?”
  13. Habakkuk 2:7 tn Heb “and you will become their plunder.”
  14. Habakkuk 2:8 tn Or “nations.”
  15. Habakkuk 2:8 tn Or “peoples.”
  16. Habakkuk 2:8 tn Heb “because of the shed blood of humankind and violence against land, city.” The singular forms אֶרֶץ (ʾerets, “land”) and קִרְיָה (qiryah, “city”) are collective, referring to all the lands and cities terrorized by the Babylonians.
  17. Habakkuk 2:9 tn Heb “Woe [to] the one who profits unjustly by evil unjust gain for his house.” On the term הוֹי (hoy) see the note on the word “dead” in v. 6.
  18. Habakkuk 2:9 tn Heb “to place his nest in the heights in order to escape from the hand of disaster.” sn Here the Babylonians are compared to a bird, perhaps an eagle, that builds its nest in an inaccessible high place where predators cannot reach it.
  19. Habakkuk 2:10 tn Heb “you planned shame for your house, cutting off many nations, and sinning [against] your life.”
  20. Habakkuk 2:11 sn The house mentioned in vv. 9-10 represents the Babylonian empire, which became great through imperialism. Here the materials of this “house” (the stones in the walls, the wooden rafters) are personified as witnesses who testify that the occupants have built the house through wealth stolen from others.
  21. Habakkuk 2:12 tn Or “establishes”; or “founds.”
  22. Habakkuk 2:13 tn Heb “Is it not, look, from the Lord of hosts that the nations work hard for fire, and the peoples are exhausted for nothing?”
  23. Habakkuk 2:14 tn Heb “for the earth will be filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord, just as the waters cover over the sea.”
  24. Habakkuk 2:15 tn No direct object is present after “drink” in the Hebrew text. “Wine” is implied, however, and has been supplied in the translation for clarity.
  25. Habakkuk 2:15 tc Heb “pouring out your anger and also making drunk”; or “pouring out your anger and [by] rage making drunk.” The present translation assumes that the final khet (ח) on מְסַפֵּחַ (mesappeakh, “pouring”) is dittographic and that the form should actually be read מִסַּף (missaf, “from a bowl”). sn Forcing them to drink from the bowl of your furious anger. The Babylonian’s harsh treatment of others is compared to intoxicating wine which the Babylonians force the nations to drink so they can humiliate them. Cf. the imagery in Rev 14:10.
  26. Habakkuk 2:15 sn Metaphor and reality are probably blended here. This may refer to the practice of publicly humiliating prisoners of war by stripping them naked. See J. J. M. Roberts, Nahum, Habakkuk, and Zephaniah (OTL), 124.
  27. Habakkuk 2:16 tn Heb “are filled.” The translation assumes the verbal form is a perfect of certitude, emphasizing the certainty of Babylon’s coming judgment, which will reduce the majestic empire to shame and humiliation.
  28. Habakkuk 2:16 tn Or “glory.”
  29. Habakkuk 2:16 tc Heb “drink, even you, and show the foreskin.” Instead of הֵעָרֵל (heʿarel, “show the foreskin”) one of the Dead Sea scrolls has הֵרָעֵל (heraʿel, “stumble”). This reading also has support from several ancient versions and is followed by the NEB (“you too shall drink until you stagger”) and NRSV (“Drink, you yourself, and stagger”). For a defense of the Hebrew text, see P. D. Miller, Jr., Sin and Judgment in the Prophets, 63-64.
  30. Habakkuk 2:16 sn The Lord’s right hand represents his military power. He will force the Babylonians to experience the same humiliating defeat they inflicted on others.
  31. Habakkuk 2:17 tn Heb “for the violence against Lebanon will cover you.”
  32. Habakkuk 2:17 tc The Hebrew appears to read literally, “and the violence against the animals [which] he terrified.” The verb form יְחִיתַן (yekhitan) appears to be a Hiphil imperfect third masculine singular with third feminine plural suffix (the antecedent being the animals) from חָתַת (khatat, “be terrified”). The translation above follows the LXX and assumes a reading יְחִתֶּךָ (yekhittekha, “[the violence against the animals] will terrify you”; cf. NRSV “the destruction of the animals will terrify you”; NIV “and your destruction of animals will terrify you”). In this case the verb is a Hiphil imperfect third masculine singular with second masculine singular suffix (the antecedent being Babylon). This provides better symmetry with the preceding line, where Babylon’s violence is the subject of the verb “cover.” sn The language may anticipate Nebuchadnezzar’s utilization of trees from the Lebanon forest in building projects. Lebanon and its animals probably represent the western Palestinian states conquered by the Babylonians.
  33. Habakkuk 2:18 tn Or “of what value.”
  34. Habakkuk 2:18 tn Heb “so that the one who forms it fashions it?” Here כִּי (ki) is taken as resultative after the rhetorical question. For other examples of this use, see R. J. Williams, Hebrew Syntax, 73, §450.
  35. Habakkuk 2:18 tn Heb “or a metal image, a teacher of lies.” The words “What good is” in the translation are supplied from the previous parallel line. “Teacher of lies” refers to the false oracles that the so-called god would deliver through a priest. See J. J. M. Roberts, Nahum, Habakkuk, and Zephaniah (OTL), 126.
  36. Habakkuk 2:18 tn Heb “so that the one who forms his image trusts in it?” As earlier in the verse, כִּי (ki) is resultative.
  37. Habakkuk 2:18 tn Heb “to make.”
  38. Habakkuk 2:19 tn The words “he who says” in the translation are supplied from the previous parallel line.
  39. Habakkuk 2:19 tn Though the Hebrew text has no formal interrogative marker here, the context indicates that the statement should be taken as a rhetorical question anticipating the answer, “Of course not!” (so also NIV, NRSV).
  40. Habakkuk 2:20 tn Or “holy temple.” The Lord’s heavenly palace, rather than the earthly temple, is probably in view here (see Ps 11:4; Mic 1:2-3). The Hebrew word קֹדֶשׁ (qodesh, “holy”) here refers to the sovereign transcendence associated with his palace.
  41. Habakkuk 2:20 tn Or “Be quiet before him, all the earth!”