)
The Lord called Amos to prophesy primarily to the Northern
Kingdom, during the same time that Isaiah was His
spokesman to the South. Even so, He had Amos give this
short message to Judah before launching into a full
scale rant against the North.
Although it was nearly 150 years away, judgment of the South was
coming. The warning provided by the imminent destruction
of the North by the Assyrians would be ignored and so
the Lord would send Babylon against the South. In the
process the City of Jerusalem including the magnificent
Temple of Solomon would be put to the torch and exist no
more. (2 Chron. 36:19)
Before they were taken captive to Babylon, the Lord had Jeremiah
tell the people not to resist this, but to go to Babylon
and settle there because after 70 years He would bring
them back.
He told them, “When seventy
years are completed for Babylon, I will come to you and
fulfill my gracious promise to bring you back to this
place. For I know the plans I have for you,” declares
the LORD, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you,
plans to give you hope and a future.” (Jeremiah
29:10-11)
As we’ll see now, He made no such promise to the Northern
Kingdom.
Judgment on Israel
This is what the
LORD says:
“For three sins of
Israel, even for four, I will not turn back {my wrath}.
They sell the righteous for silver, and the needy for a
pair of sandals. They trample on the heads of the poor
as upon the dust of the ground and deny justice to the
oppressed. Father and son use the same girl and so
profane my holy name. They lie down beside every altar
on garments taken in pledge. In the house of their god
they drink wine taken as fines (Amos 2:6-8).
Someone has said, “When the bonds between God and man are broken,
the bonds between man and man can fare no better.” This
picture of the oppression of the lower class by people
of privilege is only the beginning of the Lord’s
indictment against Israel but it proves the point and
provides a good lesson for us.
The Northern Kingdom split from the South over idolatry. Having
freed themselves from the restraints provided by God’s
Law, they yielded to man’s natural inclination to
mistreat the less fortunate. This was a violation of the
Law. The Lord had laid down very clear and strict laws
to protect servants and the poor, but these laws were
being scandalously ignored. Household servants were
bought and sold for a pittance. Female servants were
turned into family prostitutes. Garments taken in pledge
(as security for a loan) were illegally kept over night,
and the practice of levying exorbitant fines to settle
trumped up charges was common. Often it literally took
the clothes off the backs of the poor and food off their
tables.
Today even in developed countries the injustices suffered by the
poor are different but just as abhorrent. But, to follow
up on a couple of the examples above, women and girls of
all races are still sold as slaves in the sex trade, as
trafficking in humans continues worldwide. Some nations
still maintain low age of consent laws to encourage sex
tourism with the lure of young girls.
In the US and Europe , years of easy credit followed by declining
economies has had the effect of placing millions of
people in life long financial servitude. The
reduced purchasing power of their currencies further
compounds the problem, and leaves untold numbers of hard
working people with no hope of ever being free. In
the meantime the gap between the rich and the poor grows
ever wider.
Where is the moral restraint that used to prevent mercenary
lenders from exposing vulnerable consumers to
temptations they aren’t savvy enough to resist? Where is
the public outcry that just a few decades ago would have
demanded that the human traffickers be prosecuted under
the same laws that put an end to slave trading a few
hundred years ago? It disappeared when God was drummed
out of our society.
“I destroyed the
Amorite before them, though he was tall as the cedars
and strong as the oaks. I destroyed his fruit above and
his roots below. “I brought you up out of Egypt, and I
led you forty years in the desert to give you the land
of the Amorites. I also raised up prophets from among
your sons and Nazirites from among your young men. Is
this not true, people of Israel?” declares the LORD.
“But you made the Nazirites drink wine and commanded the
prophets not to prophesy.
“Now then, I will
crush you as a cart crushes when loaded with grain. The
swift will not escape, the strong will not muster their
strength, and the warrior will not save his life. The
archer will not stand his ground, the fleet-footed
soldier will not get away, and the horseman will not
save his life. Even the bravest warriors will flee naked
on that day,” declares the LORD.
(Amos 2:9-16)
When God promised the land of the Amorites to Abraham, He
said the transaction wouldn’t take place for 400 years
“because the sin of the Amorites has not reached its full measure.”
(Genesis 15:16)
Knowing the end from the beginning, God knew that the
Amorites wouldn’t repent of their evil ways. But He was
going to give them the time anyway, so they
couldn’t say He hadn’t warned them.
Though the Bible doesn’t speak of it, the character of God would
have demanded that He tell them their time was running
out. (In a few verses we’ll see Him implying just that
in respect to Israel.) Remember, for a time after the
flood all the people of the Earth worshiped God.
By Abraham’s time most had fallen away, discarding the
truth of their origins in favor of outrageous lies that
became the basis for their false religions.
But certainly the knowledge of their past still existed somewhere
in their memories. And at least one of Noah’s
sons, Shem, was still alive and living in the region of
the Amorites during the time that Abraham traveled the
length and breadth of their territories (Genesis
13:17) and could have borne witness to them.
These circumstances tell us it wasn’t that God hadn’t
warned them to change their ways, but that they hadn’t
listened. So, when the time was up He brought the
Israelites under the command of Joshua as His agents of
judgment and the Amorites were dispossessed.
Now the very nation who saw first hand how God feels about false
religion was indulging in the same behavior they had
judged in the Amorites. What’s more, they too had
ignored the warnings of the prophets and even undermined
the efforts of those who tried to remain holy. How
could they think that God would not judge them?
The South didn’t learn the lesson of the North, so they were
judged as well. And the world today hasn’t learned
the lesson of either. God is the same, yesterday,
today and forever. (Hebr.
13:8) How can we think that He won’t judge us?
Amos 3
Witnesses Summoned Against Israel
Hear this word the
LORD has spoken against you, O people of Israel—against
the whole family I brought up out of Egypt: “You only
have I chosen of all the families of the earth;
therefore I will punish you for all your sins.”
Do two walk
together unless they have agreed to do so? Does a lion
roar in the thicket when he has no prey? Does he growl
in his den when he has caught nothing? Does a bird fall
into a trap on the ground where no snare has been set?
Does a trap spring up from the earth when there is
nothing to catch? When a trumpet sounds in a city, do
not the people tremble? When disaster comes to a city,
has not the LORD caused it? Surely the Sovereign LORD
does nothing without revealing his plan to his servants
the prophets. (Amos 3:1-7)
These examples show that while God’s promises to Abraham were
unconditional, His relationship with Israel was based on
cause and effect. Obedience brought blessing and
disobedience brought judgment. In fact the entire Old
Testament can be boiled down to just one question.
“Israel, are you going to obey me or not?”
Just as Israel was warned by the prophets, so too is the world of
today. We should take comfort from the promise
that God will never do anything without informing us
first. No surprises, except to those who refuse to
believe the warnings. Paul wrote that the
judgments that came upon Israel were also meant to warn
us, upon whom the fulfillment of the ages has come (1
Cor. 10:11). He distinguished the believers
from the unbelievers at the end of the age by saying
that the former would not be taken by surprise, while
the latter would (1
Thes. 5:3-4). It turns out that even though
His promises to the Church are unconditional, mankind’s
relationship with God is still based on cause and
effect. Belief brings blessings while unbelief
brings judgment. Like the Old, the New Testament
can be boiled down to one question as well. Mankind, are
you going to believe me or not?
The lion has
roared— who will not fear? The Sovereign LORD has
spoken— who can but prophesy? Proclaim to the fortresses
of Ashdod and to the fortresses of Egypt: “Assemble
yourselves on the mountains of Samaria; see the great
unrest within her and the oppression among her people.” (Amos 3:8-9)
Even the pagan leaders of Philistia and Egypt would agree that
God’s judgment upon the Northern Kingdom is just and
well deserved.
“They do not know
how to do right,” declares the LORD, “who hoard plunder
and loot in their fortresses.”
Therefore this is
what the Sovereign LORD says:
“An enemy will
overrun the land; he will pull down your strongholds and
plunder your fortresses.”
This is what the
LORD says:
“As a shepherd
saves from the lion’s mouth only two leg bones or a
piece of an ear, so will the Israelites be saved, those
who sit in Samaria on the edge of their beds and in
Damascus on their couches.” (Amos 3:10-12)
Having severed their connection with their Creator, they no
longer had the ability to distinguish right from wrong.
Therefore the Lord was sending Assyria to judge them. On
their way the Assyrians would conquer Damascus as well.
Because of their numerous conquests, the Assyrian Empire was
growing. Without a strategy to prevent it, they’d soon
spend all their time keeping the peace, as conquered
nations mounted efforts to regain their independence. So
when the Assyrians conquered an enemy, they took all
those among the survivors who looked like potential
leaders and scattered them around the Empire, leaving in
place only those who posed no threat.
The Lord had Amos use a shepherd’s analogy to describe this. When
a wild animal devoured a sheep, the shepherd would save
the discarded parts of the animal for the owner’s
inspection to prove that it was eaten and not lost or
stolen. Just so, the Lord would preserve only a
remnant of Israel as proof that a judgment had taken
place. When the Assyrians led the captives of the
Northern Kingdom away, they left only a few survivors
behind to protect the harvest.
“Hear this and
testify against the house of Jacob,” declares the Lord,
the LORD God Almighty. “On the day I punish Israel for
her sins, I will destroy the altars of Bethel; the horns
of the altar will be cut off and fall to the ground. I
will tear down the winter house along with the summer
house; the houses adorned with ivory will be destroyed
and the mansions will be demolished,” declares the LORD. (Amos 3:10-15)
Shortly after the civil war, a golden calf had been set up in
Bethel near the site where Jacob had seen the ladder
ascending into heaven. (Genesis
28:10-19) Bethel soon became a center of pagan
worship that the Lord sometimes called Beth Aven, or
House of Evil. Their religion disgusted Him and its
centers would be destroyed. Likewise the fine houses of
the wealthy, bought with the money they extorted from
the poor, would be leveled to the ground.
The lesson here is clear. The Lord is patient, allowing ample
time for His disobedient children to return to the
righteous way. But there comes a time when His patience
runs out and His justice demands accountability. We are
on the cusp of that time today, and the prophecies tell
us that since we haven’t learned the lessons of history,
we’re doomed to repeat them. Stay tuned. 02-23-13