Wednesday, December 25, 2024

2024.12.25 Hopewell @Home ▫ Amos 7:10–17

Wednesday, December 25, 2024 Read Amos 7:10–17

Questions from the Scripture text: Who speaks in Amos 7:10? What office does he hold? To whom does he speak? What office does he hold? About whom does he speak? Of what does he accuse him? What does he say about his words? What had Amos said about Jeroboam (Amos 7:11a–b)? and about Israel (verse 11c–d)? To whom does Amaziah speak in Amos 7:12a? What does he tell him to do (verse 12b)? What does he call him? Where does he tell him to go (verse 12c)? What does he imply about Amos’s motive (verse 12d–e)? Where does he tell him to stop (Amos 7:13a)? What does he call that place (verse 13b)? Who speaks in Amos 7:14a? To whom? What does he say was not his vocation (verse 14b–c)? What was (verse 14d)? And what else (verse 14e)? But Who made the change (Amos 7:15a)? And what did He tell him to do (verse 15b–c)? Whose people are they? With what formula does Amos begin his speech in Amos 7:16–17? What does he say that Amaziah has said (verse 16b–c)? But what does he now specifically prophesy about Amaziah’s wife (Amos 7:17b)? And what does he prophesy about whom else (verse 17c)? And what does he prophesy about what else (verse 17d)? And what does he prophesy about Amaziah himself (verse 17e)? And what does he prophesy about the nation as a whole?

What responses to God’s judgment should we watch against? Amos 7:10–17 looks forward to the hearing of God’s Word, publicly read, in the holy assembly on the coming Lord’s Day. In these eight verses of Holy Scripture, the Holy Spirit teaches us that we should watch against any murmuring or complaining against God’s judgment or those who preach it.

Don’t shoot the messenger (Amos 7:10). It’s a common enough saying, but when it comes to faithful preachers of the Word, that’s all that the offended can do. Truly, it is YHWH Who has said that Jeroboam shall die by the sword and all Israel surely be led away captive from their own land (Amos 7:11). But men cannot attack the living God. He is untouchable. We see all of the mediatorial offices in Amos 7:10: a priest, a king, and a prophet. And it is the priest who is indignant with the faithful prophet. Let men be careful not to bristle or lash out against the man who speaks God’s words to them; this will not end well for Amaziah.

Common accusations (Amos 7:11–12). Amaziah doesn’t deal at all with any of the substance of Amos’s preaching. Remember, the Lord began by painstakingly established His justness (chapters 1–2) and presenting His case (chapters 3–5). Only then did He pronounce the sentence/woes of Amos 6:1–7:9. The Lord did not owe this to Israel, Jeroboam, or Amaziah. But in presenting His case so clearly, He has left them even more without excuse.

So what does Amaziah do? He attacks Amos’s motives. He accuses him of being personal/political. “Flee to the land of Judah” (Amos 7:12c) isn’t just a recommended change of venue. It implies that Amos is a southern man, with southern leanings, and he belongs down there in the south. And “there eat bread” (Amos 7:12d) isn’t counsel to take nourishment. It implies that Amos’s words are mercenary not ministry, that he’s in it for the money. When people attack the Word of God, they often attack the motives of the one speaking those words. And their attacks often include these two types. Let us not be surprised if they are levied against us. And if ever we catch ourselves thinking such things about a preacher of the Word, let us make certain that we are not actually trying to evade biblical truth in what he says (whatever the mixture of motives may be).

Religious Pride (Amos 7:13). The king’s residence was actually at Samaria (cf. Amos 6:2). So, when Amos 7:13c uses the word “house,” it most likely means “temple,” as that word is also often used that way. This corresponds well to the “holy place of the king” in Amos 7:13b. It has been several hundred years since Jeroboam I set up his manmade YHWH worship in Bethel, with its own priesthood and religious calendar. Amaziah doesn’t just fail to see that this worship is offensive and provoking to God. He actually thinks that these manmade religious traditions are too sacrosanct to be subjected to Amos’s denunciations. Men reveal how ingrained their idolatry is, when they actually think that it is holy and defend it with such zeal.

The Innocence of the Preacher (Amos 7:14–15). Not every sound preacher is a faithful man. Sin and sinners are complex. Many a sound preacher has been justly liable to such accusations as Amaziah has made about Amos. That still doesn’t negate their sound words, but Amos is not one of them. He is not financially motivated at all. This wasn’t his business (Amos 7:14b) or the family business (verse 14c). And, he made a much better living before he became a preacher. The word for “sheepbreeder” (verse 14d) is different than that for “shepherd,” and implies a higher position above the shepherds. Indeed, his agricultural employments were diversified verse 14e), implying that Amos was actually fairly well off before YHWH called him out of that. Furthermore, Amos 7:15 answers the arrogance of Amos 7:13 by reminding Amaziah that Israel are YHWH’s own people, and He has the right to prophesy against them.

Judgment against the Murmurer (Amos 7:16–17). It is not surprising that a priest would take a holier-than-thou attitude, or even any member of the holy people (cf. Numbers 16:3). In all likelihood, Amaziah felt that he was merely serving the greater interests of “Israel” and “the house of Isaac” (Amos 7:16). But the truth is that one who does this is often also venting his own spirit, and the prophesying was about to get personal. The “Your,” “Your,” “Your,” and “You” in Amos 7:17 are all singular. It was Amaziah’s own wife who would become a harlot (verse 17b), his own children who would be slaughtered before him (verse 17c), his own land which would be distributed to others (verse 17d), and his own death that would be in a land as pagan in name as the Bethel worship was in substance (verse 17e). We must remember that God’s judgment is not just macro and corporate. It is also (and, eternally, all-the-more) individual and personal. We must each deal with Him. And how will we do so apart from Christ? Oh, do not resist His righteous judgment, but repent and fly to Christ!

When have you spoken Bible truth to someone and received a response in the same vein as Amaziah’s? What Bible truths have been hard for you to hear, and how did you respond to that truth? To the servant of the Lord who proclaimed it? Since you deserve the same judgment as Amaziah, what is your hope for escaping it?

Sample prayer:  Lord, You are just when You speak, and blameless when You judge (Ps 51:4b–c). The sin is ours, and we have even shown that wickedness by our responses to being corrected by Your truth. Do not let us respond like Amaziah any longer, lest we come under judgment like his, or worse. Give us, instead, soft hearts that admit sin and repent, looking to Jesus Christ alone to be our righteousness and atonement, which He surely will be. For His sake, forgive us, we ask in His Name, AMEN!

 Suggested Songs: ARP51A “God, Be Merciful to Me” or TPH51C “God, Be Merciful to Me”

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