The Book of Habakkuk presents a dialogue between the prophet and God in a time of injustice and turmoil. Habakkuk questions why evil prospers and why God seems silent, yet the Lord responds with a vision of faith: “The righteous shall live by his faith.” The prophet learns that divine justice operates on a higher plane, unfolding in God’s own time. In Catholic interpretation, Habakkuk voices the believer’s struggle to reconcile faith with suffering, finding peace in trust. His prayer reveals that waiting upon God is itself an act of worship.

TestamentOld Testament
Section4. Prophets
CategoryFieldExplanationHabakkuk
Canonical IdentityNameOfficial title of the bookHabakkuk
TestamentOld or New TestamentOld Testament
Canonical GroupSection of ScriptureMinor Prophets
Order in CanonPosition in Catholic sequence42
Authorship and OriginAttributed AuthorTraditional writerHabakkuk the prophet, likely from Judah
Approximate DateEstimated time of compositionc. 620–597 BC
Original LanguagePrimary written formHebrew
ProvenanceCultural or geographic originKingdom of Judah, near the time of Babylon’s ascendancy
Historical ContextPeriod RepresentedDates of events describedc. 625–597 BC
Dominant PowersCivilizations or empires activeAssyria (declining), Babylon (rising), Judah
Social / Religious SettingCultural backgroundMoral and political unrest in Judah; reflection on divine justice amid impending Babylonian invasion
External InfluencesNeighboring cultural echoesBabylonian imperial power and prophetic lament tradition
Structure and ContentChaptersTotal number of canonical chapters3
GenreLiterary typeProphetic dialogue and psalm of faith
Major SectionsCore divisions or movements1. Dialogue on Injustice and Judgment (1) 2. Woe Oracles against the Wicked (2) 3. The Prophet’s Prayer and Hymn of Faith (3)
Key FiguresCentral charactersHabakkuk, God
SettingMain geographic focusJudah and the broader Near Eastern world under Babylonian threat

Habakkuk ends with a hymn of confidence: though the fields fail and the flocks perish, “yet I will rejoice in the Lord.” The book closes on faith purified by trial—praise offered in desolation. For Catholics, this conclusion defines the essence of hope: steadfast trust when reason falters. Habakkuk’s final song prefigures Christian endurance through the Cross, where faith triumphs not by understanding all things but by surrendering fully to the God who saves.


The Book of Habakkuk is a dialogue between the prophet and God about injustice, suffering, and faith. In the NABRE (New American Bible, Revised Edition), it is understood as a prophetic meditation on divine justice—how a holy God can allow violence and corruption, yet still remain faithful to His promises. Set in the late 7th century BC, just before Babylon’s rise, Habakkuk struggles with God’s plan to use a pagan nation as an instrument of punishment. His questioning turns to trust as he learns that “the just one, because of his faith, shall live” (Hab 2:4)—a verse that becomes central to later Jewish and Christian theology.

Section NameChaptersSummaryKey FiguresNotes (NABRE Style)
Dialogue Between the Prophet and God1:1–2:5Habakkuk complains about violence and injustice in Judah. God answers that He will raise Babylon as an instrument of judgment. The prophet questions this further, and God replies that the righteous must live by faith.Habakkuk, GodNABRE emphasizes the book’s honesty—faith does not silence doubt but brings it before God for transformation.
Woes Against Oppressors and the Vision of Justice2:6–20A series of “woes” condemn greed, cruelty, and idolatry. The Lord’s justice will humble the proud and vindicate the faithful.Habakkuk, nationsNABRE reads this as assurance that divine justice, though delayed, is absolute—evil carries the seed of its own destruction.
The Prophet’s Prayer and Hymn of Faith3Habakkuk prays, recalling God’s mighty deeds in salvation history. Despite desolation, he rejoices in the Lord: “I will rejoice in God my savior.”Habakkuk, GodNABRE identifies this as the climax—lament transformed into praise; faith triumphant over fear.

The Book of Habakkuk ends in worship and confidence. In NABRE interpretation, the prophet moves from questioning to trust—teaching that faith means reliance on God’s justice even when it is unseen. Habakkuk’s closing hymn turns anxiety into adoration: God’s sovereignty endures beyond history’s chaos. The book’s enduring message is simple and eternal—the righteous live not by sight, but by faith.


The Book of Habakkuk records a dialogue between a questioning prophet and a just yet mysterious God. Written during a time of moral collapse and foreign threat, it explores divine justice in the face of evil. The prophet’s complaints evolve into praise as he learns that faith persists even when answers are unclear. NABRE interprets Habakkuk as a spiritual journey—from protest to peace, from fear to faith—anchored in the truth that “the righteous live by faith.”

SectionChapterTitle / FocusSummaryKey FiguresNotes (NABRE Style)
Dialogue Between the Prophet and God1 – Habakkuk 1Habakkuk’s First Complaint and God’s ReplyHabakkuk laments Judah’s violence and injustice; God answers that Babylon will be His instrument of judgment.Habakkuk, GodNABRE emphasizes prophetic honesty—faith wrestles with doubt rather than ignoring it.
Dialogue Between the Prophet and God2:1–5 – Habakkuk 2The Righteous Live by FaithHabakkuk awaits God’s response; God declares that the proud will perish, but the righteous will live by faith.Habakkuk, GodNABRE identifies this as the book’s theological center—trust sustains the believer amid uncertainty.
Woes Against Oppressors and the Vision of Justice2:6–20 – Habakkuk 2Woes to the WickedA series of “woes” condemn greed, injustice, and idolatry; God’s judgment will humble the proud and vindicate the faithful.Habakkuk, NationsNABRE interprets these woes as moral vision—evil is self-destructive, divine justice inevitable.
The Prophet’s Prayer and Hymn of Faith3 – Habakkuk 3Habakkuk’s Prayer and PraiseHabakkuk recalls God’s mighty deeds of deliverance and rejoices despite desolation: “I will rejoice in God my Savior.”Habakkuk, GodNABRE presents this as climax of faith—lament transformed into worship, fear overcome by trust.

Habakkuk ends in worship and confidence. The prophet who began in confusion closes with song, exalting the God whose power transcends nations and whose mercy endures all turmoil. NABRE sees the book’s conclusion as faith perfected: acceptance of divine sovereignty amid uncertainty. Its message endures through every age—justice may delay, but God reigns, and the righteous live not by sight, but by faith.