The Bible Recap - Day 193 (Amos 6-9) - Year 5
Episode Date: July 12, 2023SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! Seriously, go there. - Join our PATREON community for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits - Check out Facing Fatherhood... with Way Nation! FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - The Bible Recap in ASL SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Today we finished our 19th book of the Bible.
Congratulations!
Alright, let's wrap up the back half of Amos.
He starts by calling out the leaders of the land who relax into lives of luxury and pay no mind to the needy and poor
and who fail to notice that they've gotten so far off track in their relationship with God.
He promises destruction for all the ways they forsaken God.
In chapter 7, God shows Amos three different images and they all foretell destruction.
Twice Amos pleads with God to relent, and he does. Remember how the
Prophet Jonah didn't want the people of Nineveh to repent, and God pointed out how ridiculous that was?
Amos is the opposite of Jonah. He begs God to stay his hand. But when the third vision appears,
Amos starts to get the point that this is inevitable, a necessary part of God's process to turn his people's hearts back to himself.
The first vision was of locust eating a field
and devouring all the farmer had to live on
after he'd paid the keen with the first portion of growth.
The second was of a fire devouring everything.
And while both of those visions involved land,
the third vision is a construction image. Amos sees a plum line, which is a tool used to make sure a wall is straight.
It's like a level, but vertical instead of horizontal.
If a wall isn't vertical, it's going to collapse eventually.
Leaning Tower of Pisa, your days are numbered.
The metaphor God is setting up here is that the northern kingdom of Israel is about to collapse because they're so far off the standard and can't be set right.
As you can imagine, none of this sits well with Amazaya, who was the priest at the time.
Amazaya goes to King Jerry II, accuses Amaz of conspiring against him, and twists the prophecies to help his point.
Then Amazaya tries to deport Amus.
I can't imagine how this must feel for Amus.
Remember how he begged God to relent?
He's just the messenger here and he's being targeted.
I wanna give him a hug.
Obeying God doesn't mean everyone will understand
your motives or honor your actions.
But despite Amaziah's lies, Amaz knows the truth.
He knows who God is and he knows who he is to God,
a humble servant sent to speak the truth.
And God has more words to speak to Amaziah through Amaz.
He doesn't relent.
Amaz says that Amaziah will lose all his land,
his wife will become a prostitute
and he and his kids will die.
Oh, and Israel is still going into exile.
Then Amaz has a fourth vision of summer fruit, and this one makes less sense to those of us who don't know Hebrew, so let me draw an analogy.
Let's say God shows me a vision of my foot on the break of a car and asks me what I see. And I say, I see breaks.
And then God responds,
thus will I break them in half.
God's making that kind of play on words here
because the Hebrew word for summer fruit
is pronounced the same way as the word for end.
Then God says that the kingdom of Israel
is coming to an end.
In chapter eight,
God promises something that is terrifying to me.
He tells them he's going to take away his words, that there will be a famine and a drought
of his words.
They had rejected his words when they were readily available to them.
They despised them.
So he says, no more.
And this happens not long after this point.
It's almost certainly what is referred to as the 400 years of silence
that occurs between the end of the Old Testament
and the beginning of the New Testament.
We're still about 300 years away from that, but it's coming.
The fifth and final vision is of the Lord standing beside the altar
commanding the place to be destroyed.
What place exactly?
We're not sure, but it seems likely that it's referring to the false places of worship.
Either the places of idol worship, or the shrine in Bethany, where they're not supposed
to be offering sacrifices to him, but still are.
The rest of this vision might feel harsh, but again, we have to zoom out and remember
what Israel has done that led up to this. God says he has fixed
his eyes on his enemies for evil and not for good. Is this easy to swallow? No. But
is this unjust? Absolutely not. And despite their sin, he's still preserving a remnant.
This feels a lot like when he had to wait for all the unbelieving Israelites
to die before he could bring the rest of the people into the promised land. They've
earned destruction, but he promises mercy. Of all the people in this story, those who get mercy
are the only ones who don't get what they deserve. And the book ends by reminding us what part
this plays in the whole story. Judgment isn't the end, destruction isn't the point.
God's goal in punishment is always restoration,
and these are steps on the path to that place.
God hasn't cast off his people.
They're suffering the consequences of their actions,
but he still loves them.
His discipline is a part of his love,
just like any good parent.
Yahweh promises to raise up, to repair, to rebuild, to restore. He has his heart set on restoration.
He's playing the long game here, and he gives them a vision of what's to come so that they don't lose
heart in the middle of the destruction. In a time when they're about to counter what will feel like his rejection,
he reminds them of the great love he has for them.
Today, my God shot was an eight, eight through 10
where Amos is describing the day of the Lord's judgment.
The imagery and events in this section
remind me of something.
Does any of this ring abel to you
when it's all strung together like this?
In verse 8, the land trembled. In verse 9, the sun went down at noon and the earth was darkened in broad daylight. In verse 10, there was a feast that turned into mourning, and the mourning was
like that of the death of an only son. 700 years after this was written, in the middle of the
celebration of the Passover feast, the land trembled and the sky written, in the middle of the celebration of the Passover feast,
the land trembled and the sky went black in the middle of the day when God the Son, the only Son, died.
Everything God is about to put Israel through, He went through Himself, and He went through it for them to bring them back to Himself,
and He went through it for you and for me.
Does sin require severe punishment? Yes.
Does it seem unfair, absolutely?
And the most unfair thing of all
is that I'll never receive that punishment myself
because Jesus took it on my behalf.
He's where the joy is.
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