The Bible Recap - Day 201 (Hosea 1-7) - Year 3
Episode Date: July 20, 2021SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! - Join our PATREON family for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Tw...itter 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!
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
We've been hovering over the fall of the Northern Kingdom of Israel and we keep dipping
in and out of prophecy and narrative to give us the whole lay of the land.
Today we started out in Hosea, another minor prophet who prophesied the demise of Israel. His message was probably intended for both
kingdoms, Israel and Judah. During this time, Israel was financially flourishing,
or at least the elite were, and their hearts had grown callous to God as they
drifted further from compassion and generosity and a humble awareness of who
was providing for them.
Their sacrifices were empty and they were still worshiping other gods.
So God sends his prophet to intervene, and here's how he wants Ozea to do it.
Mary a prostitute.
Excuse me?
As we've seen before, God often calls the prophets to personally feel and experience the
weight of what they're going to be speaking into.
We've seen them getting beaten up on purpose, putting on skits, walking around naked, and
now marrying an adulteress.
So once again, we see that being a prophet is not a fun calling.
God says all this is to reveal what things are like in His relationship with Israel.
So the language of this adultery image is woven throughout the book to continue to reveal
God and his character to both ancient Israel and to us today.
Josea marries a woman named Gomer, and she gives birth to three kids.
The text only clarifies that the first child is his, the second and third children might
be from one or more of her lovers, and even the names God tells Josea to give the two children
seem to distance him from them. And of course, this is about far more than just their family. Those names
are given to symbolize God's distance from Israel at this point in time. More on that later.
In chapter 2, God parallels this story with his love for Israel. His people give themselves up
for mere things, as though Yahweh isn't providing for them.
So God sets out to thwart their pursuit of idolatry.
But God knows that the only thing that will bring lasting change is for his people to actually
love him, not just be forced to obey him.
He sets out to pursue them all over again, to show them how desirable a relationship with
him can be.
And eventually, Israel's heart will turn back to him,
and he will override the meaning of their given names
to display his love and demonstrate the change in their relationship.
Meanwhile, things fall apart in Hosea's relationship with Gomorrah, too.
God says to go out and find her,
she's apparently living with another man,
to pay off all her debts and to bring her home and commit to her. Then we move on to the second section of Hosea's prophecies, beginning
with chapter 4. This section details everything Israel has done wrong, so that they're forced to
confront it. It's important to remember that Israel was at theocracy, and they were in a covenant
with God, which they've broken. So they're living under the curse of that covenant,
and the consequences of their sins are reflected
in their political and societal circumstances.
It probably feels really natural to draw similar
conclusions about countries and governments today,
but we really have no modern day equivalent
to Israel's relationship with God.
And it probably goes without saying,
but there's nothing in scripture indicating
that America is the new Israel, regardless whether that sounds like a good thing or a bad thing to you.
We've talked about this before, but it bears repeating.
People in this day would often refer to the Northern Kingdom of Israel collectively as
Ephraim, which is one of the 10 tribes in the Northern Kingdom.
Posea uses the word that way 37 times in this short book.
It's a lot like how the Southern Kingdom is collectively
called Judah, one of the two tribes in that kingdom.
This was probably a helpful way to distinguish Israel
as a whole, all 12 tribes from Israel, the kingdom,
after the split.
In 46, God tells Israel,
my people are destroyed for lack of knowledge.
The leaders and elders were commanded to teach the people about Yahweh,
but they've dropped the ball for so long that no one knows who God is anymore,
much less has a relationship with him.
Instead, they've turned to idolatry, and idolatry has turned them into fools.
In chapter 5, he turns from addressing all the people,
and speaks directly to the priests and leaders of Ephraim,
and he continues to parallel them with the prostitute.
And in 5, 4 through 6, he has an even harsher word for them.
He says, you don't know God.
He paints a picture of them taking their animals to sacrifice to the God they don't know,
not even realizing that he isn't there.
And it's probably important for me to clarify,
this is poetic imagery of course God is technically there since he's everywhere, but the point of
this prophecy is that God's blessing is not present on their sacrifice and they're clueless
about that. In chapter 6 and 7, the people of Israel appear to be seeking God, but they're only
seeking relief, and God knows it.
He compares their love to the morning dew that evaporates quickly.
Imagine someone you love having only a predictably fleeting affection for you.
It's crushing.
You can't enjoy it even in the moment it seems to be real because you know it's about
to vanish.
That's how God feels about Israel here. And he reminds them again,
I want your hearts, not your bulls.
My God shot was in the naming of the three children
in chapter one, verses four through nine.
On the surface, these names may seem cruel for sure,
but if we look closer, they actually paint a picture
of the story of our sin and Christ's redemption. Verse 4 says,
The Lord said to him,
Call his name Jezreel,
For in just a little while,
I will punish the house of Jehu for the blood of Jezreel.
In this name,
we see that there is sin and it must be punished.
Verse 6 says,
The Lord said to him,
Call her name No Mercy,
But I will know more have mercy on the house of Israel to forgive them all, Call her name, No mercy, but I will no more have mercy
on the house of Israel to forgive them all.
In this name,
we see that we were without mercy.
Verse 9 says,
The Lord said,
Call his name,
Not my people,
or you are not my people,
and I am not your God.
In this name,
we see that we were not his children.
If you put them all together, we see that our sins must be punished.
We were without mercy, and we were not his children.
But then, one, ten through two, one, says,
In the place where it was said to them, you are not my people.
In the very place of our brokenness and need,
it shall be said to them, children of the
living God, say to your brothers, you are my people and to your sisters, you have received
mercy.
He redeems us right where we are.
And he reiterates it again in 210.
Our sin required a punishment.
He had mercy on us and he adopted us into his family through the death of Christ and the indwelling of his spirit. In the Bible recap is brought to you by D-group, discipleship and Bible study groups that meet in homes and churches around the world,
and the discipleship and discipleship that meet in homes and churches around the world,
and the discipleship that meet in homes and churches around the world,
and the discipleship that meet in homes and churches around the world, The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group.
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