A Reflection on Zephaniah 3: 17
The phrase in your midst is one of the most loaded statements in the entire Old Testament. It is the language of the Tabernacle, the Ark of the Covenant, the pillar of fire. It is the language of God refusing to stay at a comfortable distance. Today, through Zephaniah 3:17, God says it again. He is not at the edge of your life. He is in the middle of it.
There are moments when a single verse breaks through years of quiet despair. When a sentence of Scripture cuts through the noise and lands somewhere deep. Zephaniah 3:17 is that kind of verse. The Lord your God is in your midst, a warrior who gives victory. Read it slowly. Let it settle. Then ask yourself: if this is true, what has been stopping me from living like it?
The Warrior in Your Midst
God Who Fights for You
“The Lord, your God, is in your midst, a warrior who gives victory.”
Zephaniah 3 : 17
Watch Today’s Verse — Shared by Bishop Selvister Ponnumuthan
Wake-Up Call
You are not fighting alone. Read that again. You are not fighting alone.
There are mornings when the weight of life feels unbearable. Mornings when you wake up to the same unresolved problem, the same fear, the same grief you went to sleep with. And in those moments, the enemy of your soul whispers the cruelest lie of all: God has stepped back. He is watching from a distance. You are on your own.
Today, through the ancient and blazing words of the prophet Zephaniah, the Holy Spirit tears that lie apart.
“The Lord, your God, is in your midst, a warrior who gives victory.”
Not beside you at a safe distance. Not waiting at the gates. In your midst. Inside the battle. Inside your storm. Inside your sorrow. And He is not there as a sympathetic observer. He is there as a warrior — and warriors fight to win.
The Context: A City That Had Lost Everything
To hear this verse properly, you need to feel the darkness it was spoken into. Zephaniah prophesied to Jerusalem during the reign of King Josiah, at a moment when the nation had drifted so catastrophically from God that judgement felt not only just but inevitable. Temple worship had collapsed into idolatry. The officials were corrupt. The prophets were treacherous. The priests had profaned the sanctuary. The city that was once the dwelling place of God’s glory had become something barely recognisable.
And yet — in the final movement of his prophecy, Zephaniah turns. He does not end in ashes. He ends in a song. Scholars call the closing verses of Zephaniah 3 one of the most breathtaking reversals in all of prophetic literature. Where there was shame, God promises honour. Where there was exile, He promises return. Where there was silence, He promises singing.
And the foundation of it all? Not human effort. Not political recovery. Not religious reform. The foundation is this: The Lord your God is in your midst, a warrior who gives victory.
This means the promise was spoken when it seemed least deserved and least likely. That is precisely why it carries such power for us today.
The Warrior Who Sings
The Hebrew word translated warrior here is gibbor — a term that carries immense weight. It was used of mighty men of valour, of champions on the battlefield, of those whose strength turned the tide of a war. When the Bible calls God a gibbor, it is not using poetic exaggeration. It is making a precise theological statement: the same God who stretched out the heavens and parted the sea is the One who has taken up your cause.
But this verse does something even more astonishing than present God as warrior. Two verses later, in Zephaniah 3:17 in its fullness, we read that this same warrior will exult over you with loud singing. The mighty God who fights for you is also the God who sings over you.
In every human story we know, warriors are silent and grim when the battle begins. The singing comes after the victory. But in the economy of God, He sings before the battle ends — because for Him, the outcome is never in doubt. When God rejoices over you with singing, He is not waiting to see how things turn out. He is already celebrating what His power will accomplish.
This is not wishful thinking. This is the posture of omnipotence. The Victor sings over the battle while it is still being fought because He has already seen the end.
In Your Midst: The Incarnation Echoes Here
The phrase in your midst carries its own history in Scripture. It is the language of the Tabernacle, of the pillar of fire, of God walking among His people in the wilderness. But it reaches its fullness in a manger in Bethlehem. Emmanuel — God with us — is the New Testament completion of this ancient promise.
Jesus did not send a representative. He came Himself. He entered the dust and weariness of human life. He walked the road. He wept at the graveside of Lazarus. He knelt in Gethsemane under a weight that would have crushed anyone else. And He rose — not as a ghost or a symbol, but in a resurrected body, as the firstfruits of a victory that now belongs to everyone who is in Him.
When Zephaniah says God is in your midst, the New Testament believer hears something richer still: the risen Christ, through His Spirit, inhabits you. The warrior is not outside you, waiting to be invited. He is within you, already at work.
The Apostle John captures this perfectly: Greater is He who is in you than he who is in the world (1 John 4:4). This is not a motto. It is a military fact.
What This Means for the Battle You Are Facing Today
Perhaps you are facing something today that has made you feel profoundly alone. A health diagnosis. A relationship broken beyond what you thought repairable. A financial situation that keeps worsening no matter how faithfully you try. A grief that does not lift. A temptation that feels stronger than your will to resist.
Hear this truth spoken directly to your situation: God is not managing your crisis from a boardroom in heaven. He is in your midst. He is in the hospital room. He is in the courtroom. He is in the sleepless 3am hour. He is in the grief and the confusion and the fear.
And He is there not as a comforter who simply holds you while you suffer — though He is that too — but as a warrior who gives victory. The word translated gives victory in the Hebrew implies saving, rescuing, delivering. This is active, interventionist, purposeful divine engagement.
He has not written you off. He has not turned away. He is fighting.
Questions to Carry Into Your Day
1. In what area of your life have you most believed the lie that you are fighting alone?
2. When you picture God in relation to your current struggle, do you picture Him as near or far? Why?
3. What would it change about your day if you believed, not merely in theory but in lived reality, that the Lord your God is in your midst as a warrior who gives victory?
A Prayer for Today
Lord God, Mighty Warrior,
I confess that I have often faced my battles as though I were fighting alone. I have allowed fear to shout louder than Your promises. I have let the enemy convince me that You are distant when Your word declares that You are in my very midst.
Today I receive what Zephaniah declared over a broken people: that You are near, that You are strong, and that You give victory. Not because I have earned it, but because that is who You are.
Fight for me, Lord. And where I cannot see the battle turning, let me hear Your song over my life — the song of a God who is already celebrating what Your power will accomplish.
In the name of Jesus, the Warrior who rose, I pray.
Amen.
The battle is real. But the Warrior is greater. The Lord your God is in your midst — and He gives victory.
A Note to the Reader
Before You Go Deeper
The reflection you have just read was written for the heart. What follows is written for those who want to go further.
The Scholarly Companion does not replace the devotional post. It stands behind it — the way roots stand behind a canopy. You do not need to see the roots to receive the shade. But if you want to understand why this verse has stood for three thousand years, the companion is an invitation.
The devotional post asked what this verse means for your life. The scholarly companion asks what this verse means. Both questions matter.
Read on at whatever pace serves you. The warrior is still in your midst.
The Warrior in Your Midst
A Scholarly Companion to Wake-Up Calls Reflection No. 98
I. Introduction: A Verse at the Hinge of Despair and Hope
Among the minor prophets of the Hebrew Bible, Zephaniah occupies a singular position. His book opens with one of the most unrelenting declarations of divine judgement in all of prophetic literature — a sweeping vision of the Day of the Lord that announces the obliteration of the created order. And yet its closing verses, Zephaniah 3:14–20, execute what scholars have called one of the most dramatic reversals in the entire prophetic corpus. It is within this climactic reversal that verse 17 stands as the theological fulcrum: a compressed, dense, and architecturally precise declaration about the nature, location, and action of the God of Israel.
This companion post offers a scholarly reading of Zephaniah 3:17 across four registers: the historical and canonical context of the prophecy, the Hebrew lexical and syntactic structure of the verse, the reception of this verse in patristic and theological tradition, and its resonance within a contemporary Christian spirituality of divine presence and spiritual warfare. The goal is not to exhaust the verse but to deepen the reader’s encounter with its inexhaustible claim.
II. Historical and Canonical Context
2.1 The Prophet and His Moment
Zephaniah ben Cushi ben Gedaliah ben Amariah ben Hezekiah prophesied during the reign of Josiah king of Judah (640–609 BCE), according to the superscription of 1:1. The unusual depth of his genealogy — four generations — has prompted scholarly debate. Some commentators, notably John D. W. Watts and Marvin Sweeney, argue that the reference to Hezekiah in the lineage is an intentional marker of royal descent, placing Zephaniah among the aristocratic class of Jerusalem and giving his critique of the city’s leadership its particular bite.
The historical context is critical. Josiah’s reign was defined by a sweeping reform movement — the rediscovery of the Book of the Law in 621 BCE (2 Kings 22) triggered a purge of syncretistic worship, centralisation of the cult in Jerusalem, and renewal of the Passover. Whether Zephaniah’s prophecy preceded or accompanied this reform remains contested. Frank Moore Cross and others in the Deuteronomistic school have argued that Zephaniah’s rhetoric shows significant alignment with Deuteronomic theology, suggesting a prophetic voice deeply embedded in the reform movement. O. Palmer Robertson, by contrast, situates the prophecy in the early pre-reform period, when Canaanite and Assyrian religious practices still saturated Judahite life.
What is beyond dispute is that Zephaniah’s audience stood between the memory of Assyrian dominance and the rising threat of Babylonian power. Their world was politically unstable, religiously compromised, and socially stratified in ways that produced the specific corruptions Zephaniah catalogues in chapters 1–3.
2.2 The Structure of the Book and the Placement of 3:17
Scholars broadly agree on a tripartite structure for Zephaniah: judgment against Judah and Jerusalem (1:1–2:3), oracles against the nations (2:4–3:8), and restoration of the remnant (3:9–20). Within this structure, 3:14–20 functions as a hymnic conclusion — a shift from prose to elevated poetry that marks the prophetic resolution of the theological crisis announced in chapter 1.
Adele Berlin’s close reading in the Anchor Bible Commentary identifies a deliberate chiastic architecture in 3:14–20. The passage opens and closes with calls to rejoicing (3:14 and 3:20), with 3:17 positioned at the structural centre as the theological ground of the entire unit. This is not accidental. The verse functions as the load-bearing clause: everything the prophet has promised about restoration, honour, and return rests on the claim that God is in the midst of His people as warrior and deliverer.
III. Hebrew Lexical and Syntactic Analysis
3.1 The Full Hebrew Text
The Masoretic Text of Zephaniah 3:17 reads as follows (with transliteration):
יְהוָה אֱלֹהַיִךְ בְּקִרְבֵּךְ גִּבּוֹר יוֹשִׁיעַ (YHWH ʾElohayikh bʾqirbêkh gibbor yoshiʾaʿ) — The LORD your God is in your midst, a warrior who saves
The verse continues:
יָשִׂישׂ עָלַיִךְ בְּשִׂמְחָה יַחֲרִישׁ בְּאַהֲבָתוֹ יָגִיל עָלַיִךְ בְּרִנָּה (yassis ʾalaykh bʾsinḥah yaḥarish bʾʾahavato yagil ʾalaykh bʾrinnah) — He will rejoice over you with gladness; He will renew you in His love; He will exult over you with loud singing
3.2 Gibbor: The Warrior Term
The Hebrew term translated warrior is gibbor (גִּבּוֹר). Its semantic range is both precise and powerful. In its nominal form, gibbor denotes a man of might, valour, or exceptional military prowess. It is the same word used of David’s mighty men (2 Samuel 23), of the men of Benjamin who could sling a stone at a hair (Judges 20:16), and — most significantly for Zephaniah’s theology — of God Himself in Isaiah 9:6, where the coming son is called El Gibbor, Mighty God.
The HALOT lexicon (Hebrew and Aramaic Lexicon of the Old Testament) notes that when gibbor is applied to a divine subject, it carries its fullest military valence: not merely strength in the abstract but active, engaged, victorious might in the context of conflict. Francis Brown’s BDB (Brown-Driver-Briggs Hebrew Lexicon) similarly lists the divine uses of gibbor as denoting one who is powerful to save by force, with the implication of overcoming an opposing power.
The significance for the reader of Zephaniah 3:17 is considerable. The prophet is not offering a comforting metaphor. He is making a precise ontological claim: the God who takes His place in the midst of His people is a gibbor — a warrior whose category of power is not merely moral influence but active military dominion.
3.3 Yoshia: The Verb of Salvation
The participle yoshiʾaʿ (יושִיעק) derives from the root yasha (ישע), the same root from which the names Yeshua and Joshua are formed. The TDOT (Theological Dictionary of the Old Testament) traces yasha through approximately 350 occurrences in the Hebrew Bible, concluding that its dominant sense is to create space, to bring into a wide open place, to deliver from constriction and threat. The word consistently implies active intervention on behalf of one who cannot save themselves.
The participial form here is significant. Where a simple past tense would have stated that God saved, the participle presents the saving as an ongoing, characteristic activity: God is, by nature, one who saves. His saving is not occasional but constitutive of who He is as gibbor. John Goldingay and David Payne, in their commentary on Isaiah for the International Critical Commentary series, note that the combination of gibbor with yasha forms a compact theological proposition: divine might is not neutral power but purposive salvation.
3.4 Bʾqirbêkh: In Your Midst
The prepositional phrase bʾqirbêkh is constructed from the preposition be (in) and the noun qereb (קֶרֶב), meaning the inner part, the inward part, the midst. HALOT identifies qereb in spatial usage as denoting the interior or centre of a group or space, with the personal suffix ך (kh) in the feminine second person singular indicating direct address to Zion, the city personified as a woman in the prophetic tradition.
What the phrase refuses is any reading of divine presence as peripheral. The Lord is not located at the edges of the community’s experience, available upon request. He is positioned at its centre, structurally interior to the very situation His people inhabit. Brevard Childs, in his Biblical Theology of the Old and New Testaments, connects this language of divine “midstness” to the Tabernacle theology of Exodus, where God commands: “Let them make me a sanctuary, that I may dwell in their midst” (Exodus 25:8). The movement of Zephaniah 3:17 is thus not innovation but fulfilment: the same God who entered the camp in the wilderness is the one who enters the ruins of the city.
3.5 The Singing of God: A Textual and Theological Puzzle
The second half of verse 17 introduces one of the most striking images in the Hebrew Bible: God singing. The verb yagil (יָגִיל), from the root gil, denotes exultation, jubilation, and joyful shouting, often in a liturgical or celebratory context. The accompanying noun rinnah (רִנָּה) denotes a ringing cry of joy, a shout of triumph. When these two are combined — yagil with bʾrinnah — the effect is one of full-throated, uninhibited divine celebration.
The middle clause, yaḥarish bʾʾahavato, has generated significant textual debate. The Masoretic text reads, in most translations, He will be quiet in His love or He will renew you in His love. The LXX (Septuagint) reads differently, prompting some to emend the Hebrew. The NRSV’s footnote acknowledges the textual complexity. What the majority of commentators affirm, however, is that the sequence creates a deliberate emotional arc: rejoicing, then a profound, hushed love, then the eruption of singing. Hans Walter Wolff describes this as the portrait of a God whose emotions toward His people move through the full range of love — from exuberance to deep quiet to song.
The theological weight of God’s singing before the battle is fully resolved has been explored by Old Testament scholar Ellen Davis, who notes that in the Ancient Near Eastern context, victory songs followed triumph. A god who sang before the outcome was visible was either deluded or absolutely certain of the result. Zephaniah’s God, by singing in the present tense over a people still in crisis, makes the most audacious possible claim: His victory is so certain that the celebration has already begun.
IV. Comparative Contexts: Divine Warrior Theology in the Hebrew Bible
Zephaniah 3:17 does not introduce the divine warrior motif but draws upon a rich and ancient tradition within Israelite theology. Frank Moore Cross, in his landmark study Canaanite Myth and Hebrew Epic, traces the figure of the divine warrior through the Song of the Sea (Exodus 15), the Song of Deborah (Judges 5), and numerous Psalms, arguing that the warrior-king pattern was central to early Israelite religious identity. The divine warrior fights, wins, and then enters His temple in triumph — a pattern Cross sees replicated throughout the Psalter and the Prophets.
The following table places Zephaniah 3:17 within its key comparative texts across the Hebrew Bible:
| Text | Key Term / Image | Theological Emphasis |
| Exodus 15:3 | YHWH ish milchamah (The LORD is a man of war) | God as direct combatant in historical deliverance |
| Psalm 46:5 | God is in the midst of the city | Divine presence guaranteeing stability against chaos |
| Isaiah 9:6 | El Gibbor (Mighty God) | Messianic figure sharing the warrior attribute of God |
| Isaiah 42:13 | YHWH goes forth like a warrior | God arousing Himself for eschatological action |
| Zephaniah 3:17 | Gibbor yoshiʾaʿ in your midst | God as warrior present within, not above, His people |
| Revelation 19:11–16 | The Word of God on a white horse | New Testament fulfilment of the warrior-deliverer motif |
What distinguishes Zephaniah 3:17 within this tradition is the specificity of the preposition: in your midst. Where Exodus 15 and Isaiah 42 present God as a warrior before and against the enemy, Zephaniah locates the warrior inside the community of the threatened. This is a significant theological move. The battle is not only God’s battle fought on behalf of His people from a position of external superiority; it is a battle fought from within the very situation of vulnerability.

V. Patristic and Theological Reception
5.1 The Early Church Fathers
The Greek Fathers read Zephaniah 3:17 through the lens of Incarnation with notable consistency. Cyril of Alexandria, in his commentary on the minor prophets, interprets the warrior in your midst as a direct prophecy of the Logos entering human flesh. For Cyril, the phrase bʾqirbêkh is fulfilled not merely in God’s covenant presence among Israel but in the hypostatic union, in which the eternal Son took human nature into Himself and entered the very midst of human experience, including its exposure to suffering, temptation, and death.
Theodoret of Cyrrhus similarly reads the verse as prophetically pointing to Christ, noting that it is not a general God who enters the midst but the Lord your God — the God of covenant relationship, the one who is bound to His people by elective love. For Theodoret, the warrior who saves is the same figure who in the New Testament is described as saving His people from their sins (Matthew 1:21), using the same root (σὠζω, sōzō) that the LXX employs to render yasha.
5.2 Augustine and the Inner Battle
Augustine of Hippo’s use of Zephaniah 3:17 is less frequent but theologically suggestive. In his commentary on Psalm 46, Augustine develops the theme of God as the interior helper (auxiliator interior), drawing on the language of divine presence in the midst as supporting his theology of grace. For Augustine, the battle of the Christian life is fundamentally interior — the struggle against concupiscence, disordered desire, and pride — and the warrior who saves is the one who fights within the soul, not merely in external circumstances.
This Augustinian reading opens a contemplative dimension of Zephaniah 3:17 that has been richly developed in later Western spirituality, from Bernard of Clairvaux’s Christocentric mysticism to the Ignatian discernment tradition, which locates the movement of the Spirit in the interior life of the person.
5.3 Reformation and Post-Reformation Readings
John Calvin, in his commentary on Zephaniah, emphasises the pastoral function of the verse within its canonical context. He reads the warrior language as a corrective to a too-inward or too-abstract piety that loses sight of God’s concrete, historical engagement with His people’s circumstances. For Calvin, the God of Zephaniah 3:17 is emphatically not a philosophical principle but a living, acting, warring Person who enters specific historical situations with purposive intent.
Matthew Henry’s devotional commentary, widely read in Protestant traditions, offers perhaps the most pastorally accessible synthesis of the verse’s components. Henry observes that the threefold activity of God in verses 17–18 — saving, rejoicing, and singing — corresponds to the threefold human need of deliverance, assurance, and consolation. This structural observation, while not formally exegetical, captures an important pastoral truth: the verse addresses the whole person in distress, not merely the external circumstances of the distress.
VI. The Incarnational Fulfilment: Reading Zephaniah 3:17 with the New Testament
The New Testament does not cite Zephaniah 3:17 directly, but its conceptual field is saturated with the verse’s themes. Three New Testament texts in particular provide the theological completion of the prophetic promise.
6.1 Matthew 1:23 and the Emmanuel Fulfilment
The Matthean citation of Isaiah 7:14 — Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and they shall call his name Emmanuel (which means, God with us) — is the New Testament’s most explicit rendering of the in-your-midst promise. The Greek meta (μετά) with which the Matthean formula is expressed carries the sense of company, accompaniment, and solidarity. But the Zephaniah resonance adds a dimension Matthew’s text alone does not fully capture: the Emmanuel is not merely present but militantly engaged as a warrior on behalf of those with whom He dwells.
6.2 John 1:14 and the Tabernacling of the Word
The Johannine Prologue’s declaration that the Word became flesh and dwelt among us uses the verb eskenosen(εἸσκήνωσεν), from the root skenō, the Greek equivalent of the Hebrew mishkan — the Tabernacle. John is writing in the tradition of divine in-midst-ness that Zephaniah inherits from Exodus. The warrior who was promised to dwell in the midst of Zion has now tabernacled in human flesh, bringing the battle into the very territory of human mortality, sin, and death.
6.3 1 John 4:4 and the Indwelling Spirit
The Apostle John’s first letter offers the New Testament’s most direct application of the warrior-presence motif to the individual believer: He who is in you is greater than he who is in the world (1 John 4:4). The personalisation is striking: the same divine warrior who in Zephaniah’s oracle is promised to the community of Zion is now, through the indwelling of the Spirit, present within the individual Christian. The battle has been internalised not as a psychological struggle alone but as the arena in which the victorious Christ exercises His lordship.
VII. Spiritual Warfare and the Theology of Divine Presence
The intersection of the divine warrior tradition with Christian spiritual warfare theology has received sustained academic attention. Walter Wink’s three-volume study Naming the Powers, Unmasking the Powers, and Engaging the Powers offers the most comprehensive modern treatment of the principalities and powers language of Pauline theology, situating the Christian’s battle within a cosmic conflict that has already been decisively determined by the cross and resurrection of Christ.
What Zephaniah 3:17 contributes to this conversation is the insistence on divine location. The God who wins the cosmic battle in Christ does not win it from a position of external transcendence alone. He wins it from within. The Incarnation is the supreme instance of God entering the territory of the enemy and fighting from inside the occupied zone. Jurgen Moltmann, in The Crucified God, develops this insight with particular intensity: the God who dies on the cross is the warrior who enters the very stronghold of death and dismantles it from within.
The warrior does not storm the city from outside its walls. He is born inside it. He fights from within the midst of our mortality, our suffering, our captivity. This is the scandal and the glory of Zephaniah 3:17 read through the Incarnation.
This theological trajectory has practical implications for the spirituality of the believer in crisis. The Zephaniah promise, read in its canonical fullness, refuses the consolation of a God who will eventually arrive to rescue us. It offers instead the more radical consolation of a God who is already present as warrior within the battle we are currently losing. The Christian’s task is not to summon God to the battlefield but to recognise that He was there before the battle began.
VIII. Conclusion: The Verse That Holds the World Together
Zephaniah 3:17 is a compressed masterpiece of theological assertion. In a single clause, it identifies the warrior (YHWH your God), His location (in your midst), His nature (gibbor, mighty warrior), and His action (yoshiʾaʿ, one who saves). The rest of the verse adds what no military metaphor alone could: this warrior loves, falls silent in tenderness, and sings.
The scholarly tradition surveyed in this companion has consistently recognised that the verse does not stand alone. It is the fulcrum of a prophetic reversal, the culmination of a divine warrior theology running through the entire Hebrew Bible, and — for the Christian reader — a promise that finds its fullest embodiment in the Incarnation, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
What the verse demands of its reader, in every generation, is not merely intellectual assent but what the patristic writers called metanoia — a turning of the whole person toward the God who has already turned toward us. The warrior is in our midst. He has been there all along. The question Zephaniah’s closing song presses upon us is simply this: are we yet living as though it is true?
Select Bibliography
1 Adele Berlin, Zephaniah: A New Translation with Introduction and Commentary. Anchor Bible, Vol. 25A. New York: Doubleday, 1994.
2 Francis Brown, S. R. Driver, and Charles A. Briggs, A Hebrew and English Lexicon of the Old Testament (BDB). Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1906; repr. Hendrickson, 1996.
3 Brevard S. Childs, Biblical Theology of the Old and New Testaments. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1992.
4 Frank Moore Cross, Canaanite Myth and Hebrew Epic: Essays in the History of the Religion of Israel. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1973.
5 Cyril of Alexandria, Commentary on the Twelve Prophets. Translated by Robert C. Hill. Washington, D.C.: Catholic University of America Press, 2007.
6 Ellen Davis, Getting Involved with God: Rediscovering the Old Testament. Cambridge, MA: Cowley Publications, 2001.
7 John Goldingay and David Payne, Isaiah 40–55: A Critical and Exegetical Commentary. International Critical Commentary. London: T&T Clark, 2006.
8 Ludwig Koehler and Walter Baumgartner, The Hebrew and Aramaic Lexicon of the Old Testament (HALOT). Translated and edited under the supervision of M. E. J. Richardson. Leiden: Brill, 2001.
9 Jurgen Moltmann, The Crucified God: The Cross of Christ as the Foundation and Criticism of Christian Theology. Translated by R. A. Wilson and John Bowden. London: SCM Press, 1974.
10 O. Palmer Robertson, The Books of Nahum, Habakkuk, and Zephaniah. New International Commentary on the Old Testament. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1990.
11 Marvin A. Sweeney, Zephaniah: A Commentary. Hermeneia Series. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2003.
12 G. Johannes Botterweck, Helmer Ringgren, and Heinz-Josef Fabry, eds., Theological Dictionary of the Old Testament (TDOT). 15 vols. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1974–2006.
13 Walter Wink, Naming the Powers: The Language of Power in the New Testament. Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1984.
14 Hans Walter Wolff, Anthropology of the Old Testament. Translated by Margaret Kohl. Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1974.
Rise & Inspire • Wake-Up Calls 2026 • Reflection No. 98 & Scholarly Companion
riseandinspire.co.in | 9 April 2026
The reflection on Zephaniah 3:17, together with its scholarly companion, is written by Johnbritto Kurusumuthu. It is inspired by the daily biblical verse shared by His Excellency, Rt. Rev. Dr. Selvister Ponnumuthan, Bishop of the Diocese of Punalur.
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