Little is known about Nahum's personal history. His name means "comfort", and is derived from the same
root as the Hebrew verb meaning "to comfort". He came from the town of Alqosh (
Nahum 1:1), which scholars have attempted to identify with several cities, including the modern
Alqosh in northern
Iraq and
Capernaum of northern
Galilee. He was a very nationalistic Hebrew, however, and lived amongst the Elkoshites in peace. Nahum, called "the Elkoshite", is the seventh in order of the minor prophets. According to
Jerome, Nahum's Elkosh was a little town in
Galilee. This identification could explain how the famous New Testament city of
Capernaum got its name. Scholars with a preference for
Hebrew manuscripts place Nahum's prophecy after the Assyrian king
Ashurbanipal's
Sack of Thebes in 663 BC. This view is the current majority opinion because the city of Thebes is referred to in the past tense in the
Masoretic Text of Nahum 3:8-10. However, both the
Septuagint and
Vulgate refer to the city in the present tense, and the former opinion held by scholars was that Nahum lived about a century earlier, before both the
captivity of the ten lost tribes and the Sack of Thebes. The first-century Jewish historian
Flavius Josephus places Nahum's life during the reign of
Jotham. This view was also held by the Catholic scholar
Thomas Worthington in his notes for the original
Douay-Rheims Bible, writing: "Nahum prophesied about 50 years after
Jonah ... 135 before the destruction of Niniveh." In this view, rather than Ashurbanipal, Nahum's prophecy would have been directed at
Tiglath-Pileser III, who revitalized the Neo-Assyrian Empire into a world power again and conquered most of the Levant, defeating and subjugating previously influential kingdoms, including
Aram-Damascus. Tiglath-Pileser was contemporary with the reign of Jotham. ==Works==