Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Amos, Obadiah Part 1 • Dr. Ryan C. Davis • Nov. 14 - 20
Episode Date: November 9, 2022How do our trials allow us to turn to God? Dr. Ryan Davis examines the importance of covenants, prophets, and the essential nature of relationships.Please rate and review the podcast!Show Notes (Engli...sh, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/old-testament/Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/follow-him-a-come-follow-me-podcast/id1545433056Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15G9TTz8yLp0dQyEcBQ8BYThanks to the follow HIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Executive Producers, SponsorsDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
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Welcome to Follow Him, a weekly podcast dedicated to helping individuals and families with their
Come Follow Me study.
I'm Hank Smith and I'm John by the way, we love to learn, we love to laugh, we want to
learn and laugh with you.
As together, we follow Him.
Hello my friends, welcome to another episode of Follow Him.
My name is Hank Smith, I am your host, and I am here with my co-host
who is a servant of the Lord.
John, did you know that the name Obadaya
means servant of the Lord?
And when I learned that, I thought,
I might call John Obadaya.
My co-host Obadaya.
I think our listeners, they know by now
that that yeah, at the end of a name in the Old Testament
means Jehovah, right? So, servant name in the Old Testament means Jehovah right so
Serving of the Lord serving of Jehovah. That's what Oba Daya means. Yeah, I think I'd call you OB
OB-2 you said you mean OB-1 has been taking so I don't think I can
Think I can take you OB-1, but you be OB-2
No OB-1's brother is actually mentioned in the book Mormon in the book of Jacob
Obi-Wan's brother is actually mentioned in the book Mormon in the book of Jacob. Obi-Wan is what can I say more? So there's Obi-Wan brothers. Oh, it never gets old.
It does. And we do as well. John, we are in the books of Amos and Obadaya today. Probably not
books that I would say our audience is super
familiar with, so we had to bring in someone who could help us become familiar with this. Who is
joining us today? Yes, we're so happy to have Dr. Ryan Davis with us today. He received a PhD
in the Hebrew Bible and the ancient Near East from the University of Texas at Austin in 2016. He specializes in the prayers and rituals
of ancient Israel and Mesopotamia. Since 2015 he's been an adjunct instructor in the Department
of Ancient Scripture at Brighaming University teaching on both the Provo campus and the BYU
Salt Lake Center, which is where I teach. So that's really fun. I've run it for right and up there.
His most recent publication was titled
The God of the Psalms and the Broken.
And that's published in Old Testament Insights,
the Sacrifice of a Broken Heart and Contrite Spirit.
That's edited by Ken Alfred,
Gay Strather, Mary Jane Wooder,
we've had a couple of them on the program here.
How interesting, the prayers and rituals of ancient Israel and Mesopotamia and
To get Hebrew Bible and ancient ear East from the University of Texas, your PhD. We're so glad to have you here
Ryan. Thanks for joining us. I'm glad to be here. Thank you
Ryan comes highly
Recommended by his biblical scholar peers, especially one, Josh Sears,
who people love on our podcast.
I asked Josh, hey, Josh, you do you know
who can teach us about Amos and Obadiant?
He said, oh, there's only one person I can think of.
Dr. Ryan Davis, I was like, let's do it.
Wonderful.
Yeah.
You come highly recommended.
So how do you want to go about this, Ryan?
Is there anything our listeners need to know
before we jump in? I think
that there's value and just kind of jumping in right into the book of Amos. That nice thing
about prophetic books is they always have a little bit of an introduction, right? And verse
one, to orient you a little bit of who's speaking and what the context is. So, okay, let's do it.
I think it would be great just to give us a time frame that one of the things I think our listeners are getting now that's been so wonderful is
Okay, I know about the Assyrian captivity and I know about the Babylonian captivity and
One's in 721 BC one's in about 587 BC after Lehigh took off
So where does Amos fall in that timeline of the Old Testament?
So right here in verse 1, it tells us that he prophesied
in the days of Uzziah, King of Judah,
and the days of Jeroboam, King of Israel.
Jeroboam the second, the King of Israel,
he reigned from about the seven eighties to the seven forties, BC.
That sounds like it's just before Isaiah.
Yeah, so Isaiah begins his ministry kind of the
tail end of Uzziah's reign. Okay. He missed the baton over Isaiah. That's right. And yet the book of
Isaiah comes before this in the Old Testament. That's right. So things aren't always chronological.
And that's one of the things that makes it a little bit hard to read.
Yeah. So we're jumping back in time to when the kingdom was divided. The Syrians haven't come yet, Babylon hasn't come yet, but they are still divided. They have two kings.
Let's talk about that divided kingdom just a little bit. So we've got Israel in the north
that political Israel, the country Israel, not the person, but the country Israel in the North, that political Israel, the country Israel, not the person, but the
country Israel in the North, 10 tribes, and Judah in the South, with mostly Judah and
Benjamin.
We call that the divided kingdom ever since the end of King Solomon.
Good.
I like reviewing.
The repetition is the law of all learning, I think President Hinckley said.
I think it's good for everybody. We've already covered one verse. Look at us, you guys. We're coming. Ryan, you can call on us
to read or you can read. Tell us what you want to do. Let's start with verse two. I'll go ahead and
read this. And it says, and he said, the Lord will roar from Zion. So this kind of sets up Amos' prophecies and it helps us think about
the Lord or Jehovah as a lion. So this again makes me think about, you know, C.S. Lewis and
the Chronicles of Narnia. We're thinking about Jehovah as a lion and he's roaring. And this immediately kind of makes us think,
okay, why is the lion roaring?
This also ties to other parts of Amos.
So if we kind of flip over day, Amos chapter three,
this is where we kind of get the one scripture
if anyone knows any scripture in Amos,
we get Amos three seven.
And in that chapter in verseos, we get Amos 37. And in that chapter in verse four,
says, Will a lion roar in the forest?
When he hath no prey, will a young lion cry out of his den
if he have taken nothing?
Amos begins to tell us that lion's roar for a reason.
So if you hear a lion roaring,
there's a reason he's roaring.
This kind of sets us up to think,
okay, if God is the lion and he's roaring, then we need to wonder why. Something is up. Yeah,
the lion is roaring. Something has happened, how the volume of it was shocking.
Yes, there was one time, Ryan, I'm sorry to subject you to this story, but there was one
time I decided there was a zoo and it had an open cage.
It was bars instead of glass.
You could see the lion in there and he could see you and he could hear you and you could hear him.
I was a missionary at the time when I thought it would be funny to lean forward as close as I could get to those bars and I went,
just to see what it would do. It was looking at me and it went back and forth along the bars. It was kind of rubbing along the bars.
Every time it would come near me I'd go, RAR! Well, at one point, this thing stops. It was imprinted on my mind forever because it blew up,
it's like throat, like a balloon, and just roar and it literally shook my body. I was so scary.
my body. I was so scary. I remember falling down. I won't go into it. But it's an unbelievable sound up close. It literally shook my head, shook my whole body.
John, I'm kidding. We brought that up. You go past that so fast and a Lord will
roar, but you've heard a roar before. Oh yeah. Within like 10 feet. Maybe those
who were writing maybe Amos, maybe others
in his audience had heard a lion roar and it's not the cat meows or the dog barked. It was
insanely. It's so loud. So I think that helps. That helps me make it real. This goes with Amos
chapter 3, verse 7 and 8 and then we'll go back to our chapter 1. But it says, surely the Lord God will do nothing,
but he revealeth his secret unto his servants,
the prophets, the lion hath roared.
Who will not fear?
The Lord God hath spoken who can but prophesy.
You hear when the lion roars, you have to respond.
And that's how Amos feels, that he has been called by God,
and that call for him is a roar,
and he has to respond to it.
So in the same way, God is roaring to the people of Israel,
and they're going to have to respond to what he's saying.
That's fantastic.
And having had personal experience.
Yeah, I should say, having had personal experience, I would say the same thing.
The Lioneth Lord, who will not fear?
Oh, man, if you were close to that, I promise you you would fear.
Tell us about Amos.
We know Isaiah was a poet in a statesman and an advisor to kings, but here we've got
Amos was among the herdman.
Is he just a simple farm agriculture guy?
Yeah, so here in verse one, I guess we kind of skipped over that, but it says that he was a
herdman of Tukowa. We get a little bit of background to who Amos is. He's from Tukowa, so he's
from the southern kingdom of Judah. He is called to go to the northern kingdom and prophesied to them, but he himself is from the southern kingdom.
So, Tukoa is south of Bethlehem. And yeah, so it says he's a herdman here. And in chapter 7,
we learn that he takes care of cattle as well as sycamore trees. So, there's fruit that grows on
those sycamore trees and he takes care of them. He's involved in both agriculture,
taking care of animals.
So a very rural lifestyle he's called
and taken to go prophesied to the north.
But of course, for him, his experience with lions
is gonna be a little different.
If you're in charge of animals,
lions are dangerous and they're threat.
Yeah, I like that. So it's like I didn't ask to be a prophet here. I was taken care of my
herdsmen, but when the lion roars, what do you do? I have to respond.
That's exactly right. This is one of the themes of Amos is about our relationship with God,
that God does things,
and it's our choice to respond.
And we're going to see in Israel's history
in their covenantal story,
these are acts of love and deliverance
that he reaches out to Israel
and invites them to respond.
It would have been talking about the lion's roar,
but at the same time, most of the time, God is reaching out to us. This is to lift us up and to help us. And we respond.
Amos, I think, is responding and going somewhere that he's not familiar with to a people that
may be enemies, but he's doing this because of his relationship with God. He's willing to
respond.
It looks to me like he still uses the same parallelism, though, as Isaiah.
Is that right?
Looks like he repeats himself quite a bit.
Yes, so still poetry.
So we're going to see a lot of parallelism in the book of Amos.
The lion has roared.
And so our question is, okay, what is the lion saying?
What is God saying to the Northern Kingdom?
And this is where we begin in verse three.
And what's interesting back in chapter one,
we're back in chapter one in Amos,
is not immediately addressing the Northern Kingdom.
He begins by talking about the Lord's prophecies against the nations around Israel.
And we're going to see that this is a bit of a setup because he wants them to compare their
behavior with the nations around them. And he also wants to load them a bit of a false sense of
security because he's scolding everybody else. Yeah. And they also wants to load them a bit of a false sense of security because he's scolding
everybody else. Yeah, and they might feel good about themselves, but it's going to turn on them,
and they're going to learn something about their own behavior. Okay, so in verse three, says,
thus say the Lord for three transgressions of Damascus, and for four, I will not turn away the punishment thereof. He begins by
prophesying against Damascus. So this is Syria. These are the Arameans to the
North. This expression, three transgressions and for four, this gets repeated
throughout chapter one and chapter two. And the idea is they deserve what they're
getting for three transgressions, but they've done for.
So they even deserve it even more.
And what they've done is it says,
because they have thresched Gilead
with threshing instruments of iron.
Gilead is a region on the other side of Jordan.
And what the Syrians or the people of Damascus have done is attack them.
And they've treated the people of that region like you would treat grain.
So it says they've thresched,
gillied with threshing instruments.
With threshing instruments, this is like a sledge.
So a sledge is a sled that has iron spikes on the bottom.
And after you harvest the grain, and you put it on the threshing floor,
you drag this sledge over the grain to separate the grain from the stocks.
It's pretty violent because you're trying to separate these.
It's brutal.
What the people of Damascus have done
is something so violent to the people of Gilead
that they likened it to how they process agricultural food.
And this also helps us understand that
this is one of the problems with the nations around Israel
is they treat people as either opportunities to exploit or obstacles to eliminate.
They're treating the people like they would treat food processing. This is something that you do
in order to get more use out of them. We're going to see some of these other nations are also
selling these people into slavery. This is how they're treating those around them. Because're going to see some of these other nations are also selling these people into slavery.
This is how they're treating those around them. Because of this in verse four, the Lord says,
I will send fire into the house of Haseyo, which is one of these kings of Syria, which I'll devour,
the palaces of Ben Haddad. So that would make maybe the kingdom of Israel feel like,
good, they're going to get theirs.
Yeah, I mean, think that's terrible. That's horrible. Of course, they deserve what they're getting. Okay. Damascus is the capital city of Syria. We say that?
Yes. And in verse six, we move on to another nation. We start hearing about the cities of the Philistines, so it begins with Gaza.
It says, for three transgressions of Gaza and for four, I will not turn away the punishment thereof. And we read that they carried away the whole captivity to deliver them up to Eden.
So here they've taken prisoners of war and they're going to sell them to Eden, which is another
nation close to Judah.
So very similar to the Lord's like, they're going to get theirs too.
That's right. Again, they're treating the people of Giliad as a commodity that you go and you harvest them
and you sell them and you do this for gain. I've noticed that in my scripture study,
in my study of the gospel through the years,
that when you treat people like objects,
that's one of the times the Lord is going to react.
He's gonna roar like a lion.
For example, if you look at pornography,
it's using people as objects
and treating them as if they don't have a soul or a future or
past or parents or this seems to me that maybe we don't do things like this, we don't sell
people, we don't attack them, but we can sometimes use people as objects and we've got to watch
out for that, we don't do that.
That's right, I think that this is going to be one of Amos's message is that core to what it means to be a disciple of Jesus Christ is to make people are focused.
People are not a means to an end. People are the end themselves. That's what we're here to do is to take care of people.
They're not a commodity.
I think I've heard it put that you treat people like things and things like people.
Here it is, Mormon 839, why do you adorn yourselves with that which have no life, treating things
like people, and yet suffer the hungry, the needy, the naked, and the sick, and I want to
add in my book of Mormon who have life, and the afflicted to pass by you and notice them
not.
So I've got my margin, you treat things like people
and you treat people like things.
And it sounds like that's exactly what Amos is saying here.
So Ryan, it sounds like he's gonna keep doing this.
He does it again in verse nine,
he does again in verse 11,
or these all nations around Israel and Judah.
Yes, they're all the nations around them.
And he keeps doing this and eventually he's going to get us to Israel.
You see in Ammon it talks about the violence of war, right, that they've killed pregnant
women.
That's chapter 1, verse 13.
Yes.
And in chapter 2, verse 1, it moves to Moab.
This is also an interesting one.
It says, for three transgressions of Moab and for
four, I will not turn away the punishment thereof, because he burned the bones of the king of
Adam into lime. What this seems to be talking about is that they've treated the ancestors of the
Adamites this way, that they've gone into their tombs, taken their bones out and burned them.
And it says they've done this into lime or plaster.
So again, plaster is something you can use.
And what's interesting is that for the nations
around Israel, bones were sacred.
For many of these nations, the state of the bones
was connected with the state of the person
in the afterlife. What's interesting
is this even makes the Lord angry. The way the Moabites have treated the ancestors of the
Edamites, this is something that makes him angry, that their treatment of the dead.
That's interesting because none of these people are Israelites yet, but the Lord is still talking about them.
He's still concerned about everything they're doing.
This is interesting to me that we're not just focusing right in on Israel as if you're
the center stage here.
He's watching the whole world.
That's right.
In verse 4, and this is where we start to focus on Judah.
It's not quite Israel.
This is the Southern Kingdom. But it says for three
transgressions of Judah and for four, I will not turn away the punishment there because
they have despised the law of the Lord and have not kept his commandments. Now, it doesn't
elaborate and explain, well, but we're to understand that what's happened here is sort of on par with what he has already called out these
other nations for doing, that they have taken people, as slaves, sold them, mistreated, killed people,
dishonored the dead. They've treated people this way and he's kind of equated not following the law
of the Lord and not keeping his commandments with that. Immediately we think, well, what commandments? What are they not doing that is so
terrible compared to this? And that's where we get to verse 7 where we get, he
turns to Israel. And we're gonna hear exactly what has made the Lord
roar in the first place. In verse 6, he says, for three transgressions of Israel and for four,
I will not turn away the punishment thereof
because they sold the righteous for silver
and the poor for a pair of shoes.
So there's a lot of things happening here.
But one, we've heard about how all the other nations
have treated other countries, how they've exploited them.
But now we turn to Israel and we find out that Israel is doing the same thing, but not to a foreign captive.
They're doing the same thing to their own people.
When we hear about them selling the righteous for silver or the poor for a pair of shoes, we're
thinking about debt slavery.
So in the ancient world, if you had to borrow money, there was no bankruptcy.
If you couldn't pay back, you couldn't file bankruptcy.
If you couldn't pay alone, then the consequences could be your family members being sold into
slavery or you yourself being sold into slavery or you yourself being sold
into slavery. At the end of that verse that they sell the poor for a pair of shoes. So let's say you
borrowed money, you can't pay back enough for a pair of sandals, which again, you're thinking you
go to Old Navy and buy a pair of flip flops for cheap, that's not a very large sum of money.
And even if these people couldn't pay back that little sum of money,
they would be sold into slavery.
Because again, these people are seeing these people not as someone suffering
that needs their help, but as someone to exploit, someone to get some use out of.
These are honorable, innocent people.
I mean, it's not like they went and borrowed 10,000 talents from the new
testament. The punishment doesn't fit the crime.
It sounds like all those sins against charity. Again, you're treating
people like things.
Yeah, that's the problem here is that the covenant people are not understanding their obligation
to help take care of the people around them, and instead they're seeing the poor as someone
to exploit.
Or if you go to the next verse, it says that pant after the dust of the earth on the head
of the poor.
So another way this has been translated is something similar to that they trample into the dust the head of the poor. So another way this has been translated is something similar to
that they trample into the dust, the head of the poor. So again, there are either opportunities
to exploit or obstacles to eliminate. If they're in their way, just trample over them,
and they turn aside the way of the meek. The meek here can also be translated as oppressed, right? People that are suffering,
get them out of your way. If they're there, move them or trample over them.
Yeah, and this is the Lord's covenant people. This is not good.
They have not understood what they're here to do. In verse 8, we also hear that this translates into
their relationship with God. And of course, your relationship with those around you and your relationship with God
are very much connected.
And it says, in verse 8, they lay themselves down upon clothes laid to pledge by every
altar, and they drink the wine of the condemned in the house of their God.
And so the word God there is lower case in the King James version,
but it may as well, it may also be an uppercase G,
because the Hebrew word behind it is Elohim.
They could be going to the altar or to the house of God,
but the problem is that they're going and feasting.
So temples were also a place of celebration, of feasting.
And what they're doing is they're laying down
on clothes that are taken in a pledge.
So if you borrow money and sometimes you would need
to put down some collateral to show that either
you're gonna pay this back or if you don't,
that's gonna be taken.
Someone that doesn't have very much may even give you
the shirt off their back. The person that has given their garment to their creditor, the creditor takes this
and lays down on it and celebrates drinking wine and celebrating in the house of God,
basically on the backs of the poor. Wow. This is a difficult situation. So Amos finds himself going to a nation
where they are exploiting the very people
that they're there to help take care of.
A place where they don't take care of each other.
This is a survival of the fittest kind of society
where no one has each other's back
where you're just looking to get what's yours
and don't care about how this is going to affect the people around you.
Could I share the first paragraph in the Come Follow Me manual because I love how it says this.
God chose Abraham's seed to be his covenant people so that they would be a blessing to all people.
But instead, by the time of Amos' ministry, many of the covenant people were oppressing the poor and ignoring the prophets,
making their acts of worship empty and meaningless, true the nations surrounding them were also guilty of great sins,
but that has never been an excuse for God's people. So God sent a herdsman from Judah named Amos to
preach repentance to the kingdom of Israel. So just like you said, all these other nations,
but look, you're doing this,
where you can know where a people are at
is by how they treat the poor and the helpless.
And that's what he seems to be calling them out about.
Yes.
And the reason that Israel needs to be different,
and this is where Amos Pivots here,
or the Lord, reminds Israel why they should be different, is because of what
God has done for them. And this is where we get to verse 9, that it goes to their relationship with
God. He says, yet I destroyed the Am right before them. Meaning these are the Canaanites,
whose height was like the height of cedars, and he was strong as the yoke, yet I destroyed his fruit from above and his roots from beneath. And also, I brought you up from the land of Egypt and led you
40 years through the wilderness to possess the land of the Amorite. This reminds us that the way
that God began his relationship with Israel was by an unearned act of love and deliverance, that he rescued
them out of Egyptian slavery, that they were in bondage, they were suffering, and God went
to them because they needed help.
He rescued them.
He reached out to them, lifted them out of their trials, and invited them to help lift other people up out of their trials.
Jesus, he's the kid on the playground that saves us from the bully.
And then afterwards says, will you be my friend and will you help me rescue other people
who are being bullied, yeah. And that's, I think, really the foundation of what it means
to have a covenant relationship with Jesus Christ.
They are Heavenly Father in Jesus Christ,
reach out to us in love and deliverance.
And after they've rescued us, say, join with me,
help me find people that are suffering
and help them in the same way that I've helped you.
Don't wait for them to earn it. Don't wait for them to deserve it. Just go and help them, no matter what.
What a fantastic lesson so far. I mean, yes, everyone around you is doing these terrible things,
but you should be different. You should be different. You've received blessings that they haven't received.
You're no different than they are at this point.
You're treating people like objects.
And that example of, I saved you when you needed me,
when you needed help.
And why aren't you doing this for others?
Brian, that's a fantastic lesson
from these first two chapters.
I like that.
Do what you've seen me do. The I am the light,. I like that. Do what you've seen me do.
I am the light, Esha, hold up.
That what you have seen me do, the third Nephi, 18.
I like what you said, Ryan, it's the bully rescues you and then says,
now do what I do.
Let's go rescue others.
Let's do the same thing.
That's a good way to put it.
And this reminds me a lot of basically what King Benjamin taught his people
when he talks about our debt to God, that he does his best. King Benjamin tries to explain
to them all the things that God has done for them. How really any, and again, thinking about
things in economic terms, because remember the problem is Israel is thinking about people in terms of dollars and cents.
What can you do for me? How can you pad my pockets?
And King Benjamin uses kind of a dollars and cents analogy when he says,
you know what, you guys are unprofitable servants.
In the sense that God spends his life serving and blessing
and doing everything he can to take care of us.
And the question is, why?
There's actually no economic benefit for God.
Like he doesn't get much out of it, right?
We don't make him richer in the cosmic sense.
And I think about this in terms of our relationship
with our small children.
I have four daughters, 10 and younger.
That's a lot of princess movies, I bet, Ryan.
That's right.
That's right.
Small children don't pad your bank account, right?
They don't pay your mortgage.
They don't help you sleep at night.
They don't make your life less stressful.
The question is, why do we spend our entire life loving and serving a taking
care of these little ones? And the answer is because we love them and it makes life meaningful
and beautiful. That's what life's about. And the same reason why does God spend his
lives serving us and loving us and taking care of us if we don't pay the mortgage, if we're
on profitable servants, the reason is that he loves us and we make his life meaningful
and beautiful.
And when he has rescued Israel out of Egyptian slavery, when he's reached down to them, taken
them out of a terrible situation, he's helping them step into a new world.
I think this is what the
Book of Mormon says, or means when it says that we've been spiritually reborn, that we step into
a new world, a world where people love and take care of one another, not because of what that person
can do for us, but because they need help and we're here. And because Jesus Christ has done that for us, what it means to be
a covenant follower of Him is to do the same for others, that we look and we find people that are
suffering, that need our help, and we rescue them regardless of what they can do for us.
Yeah, has been recently articulated and emphasized by President Nelson is the work of salvation doing the work of salvation and we used to talk in President Kimbell's
time about the threefold mission of the church and then President Monson added
care for the poor and needy and somebody pointed out this I thought oh it's
really true because right now the way the work of salvation has been defined is
to live the gospel of Jesus Christ,
care for those in need, invite all to come into Christ, and unite families for eternity.
And somebody pointed out that the first one is personal, but all of the rest are focused
on others.
It's live the gospel, that's what I have to do.
But then it's care for the poor needy. That's others invite all to come unto Christ
That's others and unite families for eternity. That's kind of a temple work thing
That's in this life and in the next. I appreciate that focus that we're supposed to have on others that sounds like Amos is talking about here
And that's where they've kind of failed. Yes
One thing that's really struck me that I've learned
from the Old Testament so much is the importance
of relationships, that it's their relationship with God
that should inform what their relationship with those
around them is about.
And that relationship with God begins with love.
It begins with taking care of someone because they need help,
and that's how we need to relate with those around us.
The two great commandments both begin with the same three words, that'll show love.
Yeah, and you can't love someone without a relationship, or at least loving someone is most beneficial to them when you're
their friend. Really, the only thing that you can take with you into the next life are
your relationships. That's where we go to the temple. We make relationships with God through
covenant, and we make relationships with our family members. Every day, we think, what am I going
to do? How are my relationships with people
going to be strengthened?
And these two things are intertwined, right?
You can't have a relationship with God
unless you have good relationships
with those around you that you need to take care of people.
And this is one of the messages of Amos
is that these people are often going to the temple
that they're often trying to do what we
would consider kind of the outward relationships with God, but they've forgotten that if they really
want to worship the Lord, they have to take care of people. That's great. If you really want to worship
the Lord, you have to take care of people. You think like Elder Holland, Ryan, in October of 2014, General Conference,
and a talk called, are we not all beggars?
Quoting King Benjamin, just like you did,
Elder Holland says, down through history,
poverty has been one of humankind's greatest
and most widespread challenges.
Its obvious toll is usually physical,
but the spiritual and emotional damage it can bring
maybe even more debilitating.
In any case, the great Redeemer has issued no more persistent call than for us to join him
in lifting this burden from the people. As Jehovah, he would say, he would judge the house of
Israel harshly because the spoil of the needy is in your houses. A little bit later, he goes on to say, in our day, the
restored Jurcher Jesus Christ had not yet seen its first anniversary when the Lord commanded
the members to look to the poor and the needy and administer to their relief that they
shall not suffer. Note the imperative tone of that language, they shall not suffer. And
then he says, that is the language God uses when he means business.
I think we've hit the heart of this message here. And Ryan, I've noticed he says, I brought you out of
Egypt. I've raised up profits for you and look what you've done with them. You've gotten
the Nazarets to break their vows. You've told the prophets, stop prophesying. prophesying not.
That's verse 12. Yeah, it takes us back to the reason the lion is roaring. God, as Elder Holland said,
when he means business, that's the language he uses. And here, the lion is roaring. Because
this is really at the center of the gospel of Jesus Christ is taking care of people. It's not
just something that you do on the side. I think sometimes we think,
oh, I can live the gospel in my bedroom. I can read my scriptures, say my prayers, and do what I need
to do. But that's prelude to the work of salvation. And the work of salvation is literally helping people,
rescuing them out of hard times. If we've kind of skipped over to Amos chapter five,
there's two words that are really important
to what it means to live a covenant relationship with God.
So in Amos chapter five or seven,
we'll come back to this, we're gonna pull this out of context.
But he's addressing, of course, the Northern Kingdom of the area.
He says, ye who turn judgment to wormwood
and leave off righteousness in the earth.
So the two words we wanna talk about there
is judgment and righteousness.
It says they've turned judgment.
The word here that they're translating,
I think it might be better to translate as justice.
So the word justice, and they've changed this to rather than being something that is a
blessing, they've changed it to wormwood, something that's bitter, and righteousness. And rather than
it being here to bless the world, they've instead neglected it or cast it down. These two words,
justice and righteousness, they mean a little bit different in an old
testament context than they do to us. So in order to put this in a little bit of context, when we
think about righteousness, we usually tend to just think, I'm keeping the commandments. And that's
a part of righteousness, but righteousness in the Old Testament context means more to have right relationships
with those around you, a right relationship with God
and a right relationship with people.
And the way that you have a right relationship
is by taking care of people who are suffering,
by helping them and being there for them.
And God is talked about a lot in the Old Testament as righteous.
And the reason He's righteous is because He helps those who suffer.
One of the ways to think about righteousness, and we're going to jump out of Amos for just a little bit here.
Hopefully that's allowed.
But if we go to Psalm 982, let's check our follow him rule book just to make sure.
Okay. What are the bylaws on that? Where are we going? Did you say Psalm 98 verse 2. One of the things
that we're going to see is that righteousness is often paired with the word salvation.
So in 982 it says, the Lord half made known his salvation, his righteousness hath he openly
shoot in the sight of the heathen.
And so you can see there's a couplet in that verse that's separated there by our colon
right after salvation. But the Lord
have made known his salvation. So he's making it known. And then it says, his righteousness
had the openly shoot in the sight of the nations or the heathen. But it's towards righteousness
and salvation are synonyms in that verse. The reason they're synonyms is because righteousness moves us to rescue and to save those who need help.
And in the Old Testament, when you see the word salvation, they're not just talking about being saved at the last day.
They're talking about being rescued from any trial, any trouble, anything that we're going through. For God to be someone
who is righteous means that He wants to rescue you and get you out of every situation that is
difficult and where you are suffering. That's why God is righteous. And these people are doing the
exact opposite. They're exploiting those in these positions.
Now wonder the lion is roaring.
They've forgotten what righteousness really means.
In fact, I love the way in Psalm 34,
this is a well-known scripture.
In Psalm 34 verse 18, it says,
the Lord is nigh unto them that are of a broken heart and save if such as be of a
contrite or crushed spirit.
Sometimes, we think about this in positive terms, but to have your heart broken and your
spirit crushed, you're someone that's in a real tough place.
You're someone that's suffering and you need help, you need healing.
But it says here in this verse that the Lord is, nah, he's close to those who feel that
way.
That's because he's righteous.
That's because he saves those kinds of people.
And that's what he asks his covenant people to do.
He says, work alongside me.
I am down here doing my best to bind up the
brokenhearted, to set setting free the captive, helping those who need help. And I need help.
The field is white already to harvest, as the scripture says. There are people suffering
right now that need us to help them. You don't need to wait three months until the harvest. There's people that need help.
And that's what he asks us to do
as his covenant followers to work alongside him
and bringing righteousness to the world.
We don't do that by sitting on our thumbs.
We do it by finding people,
and going out and doing our best
to lift them out of difficult circumstances,
and being their friend, giving them love, hope,
encouragement.
This is fantastic, Brian.
I want to go and ask my neighbors how they're doing right now.
I want to go and go knock on the doors and say, Hey, how are things?
How can I help?
This idea of righteousness being right relationships with God and with other people. I wrote that in my margin because I was thinking about just how
King Benjamin's speech again
Was such a paradigm shift maybe for them to say
When you're in the service of your fellow beings
You're only in the service of your God in other words if we if we wanted to, we could say, you know, this world is so wicked and things are getting so dark and worldly. Let's hide. Let's take
all of our holy books and let's go build a fortress somewhere and hide. That's not righteousness.
That's not serving anybody. That's not helping anybody. We can't be alike to the world if
we're hiding from them. And so I love how King Benjamin would say, that's not I guess, serve God.
The way you serve God is by serving each other
and makes us know we've got to be in the world.
We're not supposed to be of the world,
but we're supposed to have right relationships with people.
I appreciate what you added to my footnotes there, Ryan.
Yeah, that was a fantastic insight.
And it's interesting, as you were saying that,
it reminded me not only is the way that we serve God
by helping and taking care of people,
King Benjamin also teaches us
that's how we repent as well.
He says in Mosiah chapter 4, verse 26,
and now for the sake of those things
which I've spoken unto you,
that is, for the sake of retaining
a remission of your sins from day to day
that you may walk guiltless before God. So, I mean, we can think about retaining a
remission of your sins and thinking about as repentance. And he says, this is how
you're going to do this. He says, I would that you should impart of your substance
to the poor. Every man, according to that, which he half, such as feeding the
hungry, clothing the naked, visiting the sick, administering to their relief,
both spiritually and temporarily according to their wants.
So in that sense, if we're serving God, we're taking care of people.
And that's also what repentance is.
One thing I like about that is repentance isn't just thinking, oh man, I messed up and what
do I need to do differently?
Repentance is thinking, what is going on in my family's life?
How can I help them?
What is going on in my neighbor's life?
What can I do to be a part of the solution?
What can I do to better work alongside Jesus Christ
in lifting the children of God in this world?
Because repentance isn't just turning away from something,
it's putting something in its
place.
And what do we put in its place?
We put righteousness.
And this is what righteousness is all about.
Hank, I need to go repent.
Why don't you guys carry on?
Yeah, I've got to go.
I've got some people to go take care of.
Yeah.
Yeah, what are we doing sitting around talking? Let's take a break
and go moe some lawns and go rig some leaves. Anyway, great insights. Thank you.
So we've talked about the righteousness aspect of that word, but the other aspect is also
justice. We think about justice a little differently in our culture. We tend to think about justice in the sense of just punishing a wrongdoer.
We call for justice.
We usually think about somebody getting what they deserve.
But justice is more than that.
It includes that aspect, but it's more than that in the Old Testament.
So if we go to Psalms and we'll get back to Amos.
But this is a way for us to help understand the words that Amos is using to teach us.
But if we go to Psalm 146, this is a beautiful Psalm.
It talks about the things that the Lord does for us.
And it sounds a lot like the list, the King Benjamin just listed of what we ought to do
for other people.
But if we go to Psalm 146, verse 7, and that starts out talking about the Lord, which executed the judgment for the oppressed.
And that word, judgment, is our same word, justice.
He executed a three, does justice for the oppressed.
And of course, we think about judging and these kinds of things in negative terms.
Nowadays, we say, oh, don't judge me. But in the Old Testament to judge someone
means to make sure that justice happens.
So if you're judging the oppressed
or you're providing justice for them,
you're protecting them.
You're making sure that they're not abused
or taken advantage of.
If we go back to thinking about Amos
where the nations around Israel are using
and abusing the people around them for their own benefit. But Israel is supposed to be different.
Israel is supposed to protect. Israel is supposed to be the people that are looking out for the
oppress, that are looking out for the people on the margins, that are not included, those that might be vulnerable
and take an advantage of, and the covenant people
of the Lord are supposed to be there to protect them,
and to make sure that they are not taken advantage of,
to make sure that they are given righteousness.
When I think about, again, when Jesus in the Beatitudes, when he
talked about those that hunger and thirst after righteousness, we can also think about this
in terms of somebody is waiting for someone to care about them. Someone is waiting for
someone to show righteousness to them. They are hungering and thirsting, looking for someone.
And the reason Jesus says that blessed are you
if you're hunger and you thirst after righteousness
is because this is what the covenant people
of the Lord are here to do for the world.
We're here to find those that are hungering and thirsting
and to give it to them through our friendship, through our love, through our service,
being there for them as they need it.
If you're hungry, we'll feed you.
If you're naked, we'll clothe you.
If you are sick, we'll heal you.
And these kinds of things, this is what the covenant people,
the Lord are here to do for the world.
the covenant people, the Lord are here to do for the world. Please join us for part two of this podcast.