Hebrew Bible / Habakkuk / All
- Habakkuk 1:2 / Psalm 13:1
- Habakkuk 1:8 / Deuteronomy 28:49
- Habakkuk 1:8 / Jeremiah 4:13
- Habakkuk 1:8 / Zephaniah 3:3
- Habakkuk 1:12 / Psalm 74:12
- Habakkuk 2:1 / Isaiah 21:8
- Habakkuk 2:3 / Hebrews 10:37
- Habakkuk 2:3 / Daniel 11:35
- Habakkuk 2:4 / Romans 1:17
- Habakkuk 2:4 / LXX Habakkuk 2:4
- Habakkuk 2:5 / Isaiah 5:14
- Habakkuk 2:12 / Micah 3:10
- Habakkuk 2:13 / Jeremiah 51:58
- Habakkuk 2:14 / Isaiah 11:9
- Habakkuk 2:15 / Jeremiah 51:7
- Habakkuk 2:16 / Psalm 75:8
- Habakkuk 3:2 / LXX Habakkuk 3:2
- Habakkuk 3:2 / Jonathan Habakkuk 3:2
- Habakkuk 3:3 / Great Hymn to the Aten
- Habakkuk 3:4 / Deuteronomy 33:2
- Habakkuk 3:4 / Exodus 34:29
- Habakkuk 3:5 / Jeremiah 14:12
- Habakkuk 3:5 / Epic of Gilgamesh XI
- Habakkuk 3:5 / Deuteronomy 32:24
- Habakkuk 3:5 / Enuma Elish IV
- Habakkuk 3:6 / Hymns and Prayers to Amun-Re
- Habakkuk 3:10 / 2 Samuel 22:11
- Habakkuk 3:11 / Psalm 77:17
- Habakkuk 3:11 / Joshua 10:13
- Habakkuk 3:11 / Zechariah 9:14
- Habakkuk 3:13 / Psalm 68:21
- Habakkuk 3:15 / Matthew 14:22
- Habakkuk 3:19 / Psalm 18:33
- Habakkuk 3:19 / 2 Samuel 22:34
Summary
Date: 6th Century B.C.E.
The book of Habakkuk consists of a report of a dialogue between the prophet and the
Lord and a prayer or psalm. It is most significant that a book that contains mainly human speech is considered to be "the (prophetic) pronouncement that Habakkuk, the prophet, saw." In other words, the written report of the words of a prophet to God becomes a revelation or divinely originated vision. The same process may have led to the consideration of the book of Psalms, for inĀstance, as Scripture.