Passage
For near <FI>is<Fi> the day of Jehovah, on all the nations, As thou hast done, it is done to thee, Thy deed doth turn back on thine own head.
For near <FI>is<Fi> the day of Jehovah, on all the nations, As thou hast done, it is done to thee, Thy deed doth turn back on thine own head.
Obadiah 1:13 Nor come into a gate of My people in a day of their calamity, Nor look, even thou, on its misfortune in a day of its calamity, Nor send forth against its force in a day of its calamity,
Obadiah 1:14 Nor stand by the breach to cut off its escaped, Nor deliver up its remnant in a day of distress.
Obadiah 1:15 For near <FI>is<Fi> the day of Jehovah, on all the nations, As thou hast done, it is done to thee, Thy deed doth turn back on thine own head.
Obadiah 1:16 For--as ye have drunk on My holy mount, Drink do all the nations continually, And they have drunk and have swallowed, And they have been as they have not been.
Obadiah 1:17 And in mount Zion there is an escape, And it hath been holy, And the house of Jacob have possessed their possessions.
The verse centers on "near", "jehovah", "nations", "thou", "hast", "done", and "thee". It is saying that the verse draws attention to "near" and "jehovah", so its meaning should be read from those terms before moving to application.
The nearby context moves from verse 14's "Nor stand by the breach to cut..." into verse 16's "For--as ye have drunk on My holy...", so "near" and "jehovah" belong inside that flow. In Obadiah context, the local focus is covenant, worship, and faithfulness.
A plain takeaway is to answer the verse's own emphasis on "near" and "jehovah" with trust shaped by these words, not by a vague optimism outside the passage.