Amos: THE LORD ROARS (II)

“For Three Transgressions…And For Four” (Part 2)(2:1-16)

Neal Pollard

Amos two represents a poor chapter break. The judgments on the five nations in chapter one shared in common that they were Semitic people who were not God’s promised people. Amos 2:1-3 mentions one more such people, then Amos 2:4-16 deals with judgments on Judah and Israel (His covenant people who were divided). It becomes apparent that the major focus of the prophet’s writings is Israel, as he saves his worst and his most for last. 

Moab is guilty of atrocities against Edom, much like Tyre and Philistia. They burned the bones of the king of Edom, and for this God was going to render judgment with fire (2). He bluntly says that Moab would die and her leaders are specifically identified (2-3). 

Then, God turns His gaze to Abraham’s descendants, the children of promise (4-16). First, there is Judah. Notice that the nature of their sin is connected to their relationship to the Law. They rejected it, neglected it, and forsook it (4). Thus, they faced a judgment of fire (5).

What you will notice is that Amos is now ready to concentrate his message to his primary audience, Israel (6-16). The thoroughness, detail, and specifics are withering. The central issue is greed and covetousness. As the inspired apostle later writes, “But those who want to get rich fall into temptation and a snare and many foolish and harmful desires which plunge men into ruin and destruction. For the love of money is a root of all sorts of evil, and some by longing for it have wandered away from the faith and pierced themselves with many griefs” (1 Tim. 6:9-10). Look at the sorts of evil Amos mentions concerning Israel.

  • They sell the righteous for money (6).
  • They sell the needy for a pair of sandals (6).
  • They take advantage of the helpless (7).
  • They shove the oppressed out of the way (7, NLT).
  • Father and son slept with the same woman (7).
  • They corrupted their religious practices (8).
  • They ignored God’s judgment upon others (9).
  • They forgot God’s past deliverance (10). 
  • They rejected their God-given privileges and blessings (11), even abusing them (12).

Therefore, they faced an inescapable judgment (13-16). They would groan, not escape, lose strength, and their military would collapse and desert their posts. Every earthly thing they rested their trust in would fail them. The old hymn, Stand Up For Jesus, admonishes, “The arm of flesh will fail you, you dare not trust your own.” But that is exactly what Israel did. Just because they were God’s people did not insulate them from His absolutely righteous judgment. 

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Author: preacherpollard

preacher,Cumberland Trace church of Christ, Bowling Green, Kentucky

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