Amos: The Lord Roars (IV)

What does it take to turn me around? What does God need to show me to bring me back to Him? That’s the question for Amos’ audience. What does chapter four say?

The Sin Of Stubbornness (4:1-13)

Neal Pollard

Sometimes, God punishes and chastises His people out of a merciful attempt to turn them around (Neh. 1:9) and He always does so as a loving Father (see Heb. 12:4-17). Chapter three begins chronicling the reasons for God’s judgment on the northern kingdom, then chapter four brings the discussion to a crescendo. If you have (had) a stubborn child or ever saw one, you might have at least a slight mental picture of what the prophet describes in this chapter. Notice how the people respond to God’s chastening.

The women were stubborn (1-3). How’s this for a flattering address? “Hear this word, you cows of Bashan who are on the mountain of Samaria” (1a). Israel’s women were cruel to the poor and needy. They pressured their husbands to sin. In response, Amos foretells the horrific cruelty the Assyrian invaders would inflict on these women, treating them in unthinkable ways. The place “Harmon” is not known, but the word is used of a manure pit in Isaiah 25:10. This would fit with the overall message that these women who bathed themselves in luxury would be disgraced and degraded in a total sense. 

The worshippers were stubborn (4-5). While God calls for His people to bring sacrifices, tithes, and offerings, they were sinning in doing so. First, Bethel and Gilgal were not the right places of worship. Second, while what they were offering may have been appropriate according to the Law and even showing some level of dedication, they were hypocrites. They came and worshipped, then left to live in willful sin. They may have been in the habit of worship, but they were not submitting their lives to God. They insisted on living rebellious lives, then sprinkling in some worship “at the appointed times.”

The woeful were stubborn (6-12). In the next several verses, God speaks of ways He tried to correct them. However, in verses six, eight, nine, ten, and eleven, God says that in the wake of the punishment, “Yet you have not returned to Me.” Famine did not turn them back (6). Localized drought did not do it (7-8). Lack of drinking water did not do it (8). Blight on their crops did not do it (9). Plague did not do it (10). He even compares His hand being against them as likened to what He did to Sodom and Gomorrah (11). Despite all of that, they would not return. So, God prepares them for what is to come with the hair-raising, “Because I will do this to you, Prepare to meet your God, O Israel” (12). Do you remember the invitation song, “Careless soul, why will you linger, wandering from the throne of God…”? Imagine God saying those words to you? Through Amos, this is just what happens.

And just who is saying this? See verse 13. It is our very Creator. The One who tells us our thoughts. The One who controls light and darkness and goes wherever He desires. It is “the Lord God of hosts.” This is a significant name in this book. It “designates the most awesome Warrior. Throughout these chapters which describe Israel’s violations (chaps. 3–6) the Lord is repeatedly presented (3:13; 4:13; 5:14–16, 27; 6:8, 14) as a mighty Suzerain who commands vast forces, whose power to punish rebels is both massive and irresistible” (Sunukjian, BKC, 1435).

Unknown's avatar

Author: preacherpollard

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

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.