Prophet Old Testament

Prophet Zephaniah

7th century BC

Also known as Sophonias

One of the Twelve Minor Prophets and a contemporary of Jeremiah, who preached repentance during the reign of King Josiah.

Feast Day
December 3
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Prophet Zephaniah

Life

Zephaniah (Sophonias) is counted among the Twelve Minor Prophets of the Old Testament, where he stands ninth in the traditional order. He prophesied in the seventh century before Christ during the reign of Josiah, the pious king of Judah, and was a contemporary of the Prophet Jeremiah. The Orthodox synaxarion tradition relates that he was of the tribe of Simeon, while the superscription of his own book traces his ancestry through four generations to a forebear named Hezekiah. He is commemorated by the Church on December 3.

According to the synaxarion, Zephaniah lived at the royal court, where he preached repentance and supported King Josiah in his campaign to remove idol worship from Judah. His preaching coincided with the king's wider religious reform, and his book is regarded as one of the principal witnesses to the religious life of that era. The biblical superscription places his ministry in Jerusalem, a city the prophet appears to have known intimately.

The brief book that bears his name proclaims the coming 'day of the Lord,' a day of divine wrath against Judah and Jerusalem for their idolatry and corruption. The prophet condemned the worship of foreign gods and the moral failures of the people's leaders and priests, calling them to repentance. He also foretold judgment upon the surrounding nations, naming Gaza, Ashkelon, and other peoples among those who would be punished. The book closes with a vision of restoration and the gathering of a humble remnant under the kingdom of God.

In his own words Read Hide
The LORD thy God in the midst of thee is mighty; he will save.
Zephaniah, 3:17 · King James Version (PD)
Timeline 1 moments Read Hide
  1. 7th century BC Prophesied under King Josiah Zephaniah preached repentance at the royal court during the reign of Josiah of Judah, a contemporary of the Prophet Jeremiah.

Contributions & Legacy

1 contributions Read Hide

Prophecies

Zephaniah foretold a day of the wrath of God falling first upon Judah and Jerusalem and then upon the surrounding nations. The synaxarion lists the punishment of Gaza, Ashkelon, and other places, while his book extends the judgment to the Philistine cities and to peoples such as the Moabites, Ammonites, Cushites, and Assyrians, with the fall of Nineveh foretold among them.

Alongside these warnings, the prophet's message turns to hope: a purified and humble remnant is promised restoration, and the book ends looking toward the kingdom of God. By tradition his name has been interpreted in several ways, among them 'the Lord has hidden' and 'watch-tower of the Lord,' read as fitting an seer given to behold the mysteries of God's will.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints