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New Living Translation

English Standard Version

  • This is the message that the prophet Habakkuk received in a vision.
    Habakkuk’s Complaint
  • The oracle that Habakkuk the prophet saw.
  • How long, O LORD, must I call for help?
    But you do not listen!
    “Violence is everywhere!” I cry,
    but you do not come to save.
  • Habakkuk’s Complaint

    O Lord, how long shall I cry for help,
    and you will not hear?
    Or cry to you “Violence!”
    and you will not save?
  • Must I forever see these evil deeds?
    Why must I watch all this misery?
    Wherever I look,
    I see destruction and violence.
    I am surrounded by people
    who love to argue and fight.
  • Why do you make me see iniquity,
    and why do you idly look at wrong?
    Destruction and violence are before me;
    strife and contention arise.
  • The law has become paralyzed,
    and there is no justice in the courts.
    The wicked far outnumber the righteous,
    so that justice has become perverted.
  • So the law is paralyzed,
    and justice never goes forth.
    For the wicked surround the righteous;
    so justice goes forth perverted.

  • The LORD’s Reply

    The LORD replied,
    “Look around at the nations;
    look and be amazed!a
    For I am doing something in your own day,
    something you wouldn’t believe
    even if someone told you about it.
  • The Lord’s Answer

    “Look among the nations, and see;
    wonder and be astounded.
    For I am doing a work in your days
    that you would not believe if told.
  • I am raising up the Babylonians,b
    a cruel and violent people.
    They will march across the world
    and conquer other lands.
  • For behold, I am raising up the Chaldeans,
    that bitter and hasty nation,
    who march through the breadth of the earth,
    to seize dwellings not their own.
  • They are notorious for their cruelty
    and do whatever they like.
  • They are dreaded and fearsome;
    their justice and dignity go forth from themselves.
  • Their horses are swifter than cheetahsc
    and fiercer than wolves at dusk.
    Their charioteers charge from far away.
    Like eagles, they swoop down to devour their prey.
  • Their horses are swifter than leopards,
    more fierce than the evening wolves;
    their horsemen press proudly on.
    Their horsemen come from afar;
    they fly like an eagle swift to devour.
  • “On they come, all bent on violence.
    Their hordes advance like a desert wind,
    sweeping captives ahead of them like sand.
  • They all come for violence,
    all their faces forward.
    They gather captives like sand.
  • They scoff at kings and princes
    and scorn all their fortresses.
    They simply pile ramps of earth
    against their walls and capture them!
  • At kings they scoff,
    and at rulers they laugh.
    They laugh at every fortress,
    for they pile up earth and take it.
  • They sweep past like the wind
    and are gone.
    But they are deeply guilty,
    for their own strength is their god.”
    Habakkuk’s Second Complaint
  • Then they sweep by like the wind and go on,
    guilty men, whose own might is their god!”
  • O LORD my God, my Holy One, you who are eternal —
    surely you do not plan to wipe us out?
    O LORD, our Rock, you have sent these Babylonians to correct us,
    to punish us for our many sins.
  • Habakkuk’s Second Complaint

    Are you not from everlasting,
    O Lord my God, my Holy One?
    We shall not die.
    O Lord, you have ordained them as a judgment,
    and you, O Rock, have established them for reproof.
  • But you are pure and cannot stand the sight of evil.
    Will you wink at their treachery?
    Should you be silent while the wicked
    swallow up people more righteous than they?
  • You who are of purer eyes than to see evil
    and cannot look at wrong,
    why do you idly look at traitors
    and remain silent when the wicked swallows up
    the man more righteous than he?
  • Are we only fish to be caught and killed?
    Are we only sea creatures that have no leader?
  • You make mankind like the fish of the sea,
    like crawling things that have no ruler.
  • Must we be strung up on their hooks
    and caught in their nets while they rejoice and celebrate?
  • Hea brings all of them up with a hook;
    he drags them out with his net;
    he gathers them in his dragnet;
    so he rejoices and is glad.
  • Then they will worship their nets
    and burn incense in front of them.
    “These nets are the gods who have made us rich!”
    they will claim.
  • Therefore he sacrifices to his net
    and makes offerings to his dragnet;
    for by them he lives in luxury,b
    and his food is rich.
  • Will you let them get away with this forever?
    Will they succeed forever in their heartless conquests?
  • Is he then to keep on emptying his net
    and mercilessly killing nations forever?

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