The Vision Of The Ripe Fruit (8:1-14)
Neal Pollard
The fourth vision illustrates a terrible problem of covetousness. The people’s dysfunctional relationship with money was so corrupt that it contributed greatly to the pending demise of the northern kingdom. The vision (1-3) is followed by an oracle (4-14) that appears to explain why such judgment loomed.
In the vision, God presents the object–a basket of summer fruit. The Lord God shows this to Amos and calls him by name, asking him what he saw. The prophet answers and God tells him what it means. As the fruit is ripe, so the time is ripe. Donald R. Sunukjian explains, “’Ripe fruit’ (qāyiṣ) was ‘summer fruit’ or ‘end-of- the-year fruit’—the last fruit of the season, fully ripened, with a short edible life. ‘Ripe time’ (qēṣ) was ‘end time’ or ‘cutting time’—the ‘reaping time’ of death (BKC, Walvoord and Zuck, 1447). Israel’s time was about to come, and weeping and wailing over the profuse volume of death would follow. That the songs were being sung in the temple indicates the grief of the southern kingdom over the demise of their brethren in the northern kingdom.
Amos follows this vision with a message explaining its meaning. In other words, Amos wants the people who are the object of the vision to “hear this” (4a). This vision is for those who rob the poor, trample down the needy, can’t wait for the Sabbath and feast days to be done so they can get back to cheating the helpless, use dishonest measures and scales to cheat the buyers, dilute their grain with chaff, and enslave the poor for the smallest amounts of money (4-6, NLT). Rightly, James Smith asserts, “these verses contain one of the strongest indictments against covetousness found anywhere in the Bible” (OT Survey Series: Minor Prophets, 195). Israel was so consumed with materialism that it caused them to demolish the two greatest commandments. It became their god and it trumped their love and concern for their brethren, especially the most vulnerable and helpless among them. The Bible warns repeatedly of the grave dangers that follow such a mindset, as common as it is (Mat. 6:19-21; Luke 12:15-21; 1 Tim. 6:9-10, 17-21).
In response, God relates His judgment against such sin. He uses apocalyptic (catastrophic) language to depict what would follow this behavior:
- God would never forget it (7).
- The land would quake and all would mourn (8).
- Their worship would resemble a funeral (10).
- The people would experience a spiritual famine (11).
- The people would be lost and aimless (12).
- The young would suffer (13).
- They would all fall along with their idols (14).
Within this judgment are various figurative images to paint the picture more vividly. It is pictured as the flooding of the Nile (8), a solar eclipse (9), a funeral for an only son (10), and a famine (11). Collectively, the point is made unmistakably. The end, for Israel, was coming. It would be cataclysmic and complete. What precipitated it? The maker was misplaced by money. God’s people had worshipped the creature over the Creator. With full clarity, God had told them since Sinai, “You shall no other God before Me” (Ex. 20:3; Deut. 5:7). So, today, it is instructive for us to consider the stewardship of our things and the steadfastness of our hearts when it comes to monetary matters. Across the ages, Jesus pleads, “Beware, and be on your guard against every form of greed; for not even when one has an abundance does his life consist of his possessions” (Luke 12:15).
