Sermons

Summary: To learn the meaning and message of the prophet Obadiah

Let’s break some new ground and learn what God has for us to know from Obadiah.

I. The man

Nothing is known about this prophet outside of his name. Although there are 10 men by the name Obadiah named in the Old Testament, scholars are in agreement none of them was this man.

Many prophets share a little about themselves in the course of sharing their prophesy, but Obadiah doesn’t.

II. Time of writing

There is only one indicator of timing in the text – verse 11 presents the fall of Jerusalem.

11On the day you stood aloof

while strangers carried off his wealth

and foreigners entered his gates

and cast lots for Jerusalem,

you were like one of them.

The time of the destruction of Jerusalem and captivity of Babylon around 586BC.

III. Written to

The nation of Edom. Edomites are the descendants of Esau.

Let me remind you of their story:

Jacob and Esau were twins, with Esau being born first. This meant he would get the birthright from his father. A double portion of the inheritance. However, one day Esau came home so famished he was ready to eat tree bark. Jacob had made a pot of stew. Seizing the moment of weakness, Jacob told him he could have the stew if he would give up his birthright. Jacob was wrong to do this to his brother and Esau was wrong to value the birthright so little. This escalated the tensions between them.

With the help of his mother Jacob later deceives his father into giving the blessing. They made Isaac believe he was giving it to Esau. After this Jacob had to leave home and lived in fear of Esau.

Sometime later in Genesis 33 the two brothers do meet and some level of forgiveness is restored.

IV. Purpose in writing

His message was one of warning judgment was coming on them from the Lord God. Strangely, there is no appeal for repentance.

Secondly, the purpose was to inform the people of Israel that God would restore them to the promised land someday.

Some people look at the book of Obadiah and question, it is not directly about Israel; it is a negative theme – judgment; it is not great literary work, so why does it belong in the Old Testament.

One of the questions asked by scholars is why does the prophesy of Obadiah belong in the Holy Bible?

1. It shows God’s judgment on Israel’s enemies. Try to put yourself in the sandals of a Jew in 586BC. You have experienced not only the horror of invasion by the Babylonians and the killing of friends and love ones, the loss of everything you have worked for – then to see some people from Edom come loot and steal what was left instead of defending you – you would gain satisfaction at God giving them punishment for their selfishness.

2. It promises restoration of Israel to its land after captivity.

As of tonight, the outline I will be using:

I. Verses 1, 2 - introduction

II. Verses 3-9 - Edom’s false security

III. Verses 10 – 18 – judgment on the nations

IV. Verses 19-21 – restoration to Israel

V. Verses 1-2

Verse 1 - 1 The vision of Obadiah.

Historians are always interested in how a prophet gets his message. How? Obadiah answers this question in his first statement – it was the result of a vision from the Lord God. Prophetic visions were widely accepted among the Jewish people. It is unclear whether the vision was a trance like state or God revealed insightful understanding to the prophet of current and future events.

Other prophets declare:

Hosea 1:1 “the word of the Lord that came to Hosea during the reigns of Uzziah …”

Nahum 1:1 “An oracle concerning Nineveh. The book of the vision of Nahum”

Habakkuk 1:1 “the oracle that Habakkuk the prophet received”

- an oracle is a divine utterance delivered to man in response to a question or seeking guidance

This is what the Sovereign LORD says about Edom—

In this phrase Obadiah states where his vision came from: The Sovereign Lord is the NIV. All other translations used “Lord God”. Notice that Lord is spelled with all letters capitalized to indicate the person name of God.

We have heard a message from the LORD:

NIV and Holman have “message”, NAS/ESV “report” and KJV “rumor”. This is Obadiah continuing to let people know what was revealed to him. Key words are “Lord says” and “heard a message”.

One part of the message given to Obadiah was that Israel’s enemies are gathering against her.

An envoy was sent to the nations to say,

What the NIV calls “envoy”, ESV has “messenger” and KJV “ambassador”.

Instead of nations KJV has heathen.

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James Lunsford

commented on Dec 28, 2020

Obadiah, to me is a fascinating small book. Although a product of real history, I cannot help but think that there is a shadow of prophecy involved also. It is almost like he is talking to us in our modern-day times. I may be wrong, but sometimes, but most times, when I see the word eagle I think of a reference to Modern day America. During my Bible studies, I keep going back to Obadiah with all kinds of questions in?’s in my mind. I enjoyed your survey of this book. I know the real life situation but sometimes I think there is a futuristic message in the book. God seems to give us bits and pieces from time to time, and like a puzzle they seem to fit. Thanks. I’m always searching for truth. No matter how much we study the Bible, no one on this earth I believe will never be able to master that book. I’ll believe that the Bible is an everlasting book.

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