Text: Habakkuk 3:1-16
As we go through this Bible verses we can see that, prophet Habakkuk is offering a prayer here. A similar prayer can be found in psalms 77. By acknowledging God’s supreme power, Habakkuk is praising God’s personality, strength, and motive. Through out this passage we can find the subjugation of creation into the creator. None of the creation can domain over the creator. The end of the second chapter is concluding with the saying “let all the earth keep silence before Him”. So according to the prophet he was praising a God who is unimaginable and unbeaten. Habakkuk's memory of Yahweh's "deeds" (v. 2) reverts to the events surrounding the Exodus, in keeping with the Lord's repeated injunction to Israel (e.g., Exodus 13:3).
Our God is a God of wrath and consumable fire, although He/She is gentle and mercy to His/Her own people and anointed, it is very clear in Exodus. There we can see the wrath, kindness and mercy of God. Through illustrating these characters of God the prophet is declaring his prayer. When God extend His/Her care and concern to his people in Exodus, at the same time God punish the wicked and sinners, God cast them into the sea. So that here the prophet also praying “In wrath may you remember mercy” (2b) Because he knows that God will keep safe and sound those who loves, even in the midst of His/Her wrath . He believes that “God looked and made the nations tremble” (3:16) the psalmist also says in 7:8 “The lord judges the people according to their righteous. The opening parallel lines of v. 8 refer to the "rivers" and "streams" both as witnessing the anger of the Lord.
The waters of the Jordan may be envisaged but more likely the word "rivers" normally plural, as here is equivalent to "sea”. The Lord's dramatic conflict with the "sea" echoes his dominion over the waters of Creation and the Flood a complex of events that pervades Israel's literature as a pattern of future salvation and judgment, Exodus and Sinai alike are the incarnation of events with universal significance.
[Prince John, the leader of this meditation, is a Fourth year BD student in Gurukul Lutheran Theological College and Research Institute, Chennai, India]