My personal Bible reading right now has me reading the minor
prophets. The last few days have been spent in Amos. Though he lived and prophesied
around 760 B.C., some of his words sound as though they could be said to us in
the second decade of the twenty-first century A.D.
Amos is concerned about the gap between “the haves” and “the
have nots.”
Therefore because you
trample on the poor
and you exact taxes of
grain from him,
you have built houses
of hewn stone,
but you shall not
dwell in them;
you have planted
pleasant vineyards,
but you shall not
drink their wine.
Amos 5:11, ESV
In case we don’t get how seriously God looks upon such behavior, Amos
comes to our rescue again.
For
three transgressions of Israel
and for
four, I will not revoke the punishment,
because
they sell the righteous for silver,
and
the needy for a pair of sandals –
those
who trample the head of the poor int the dust of the earth
and
turn aside the way of the afflicted.
2:6, 7 ESV
In language that would be risky to use in our culture right now – and didn’t
go over too well in his (see 7:10-17), Amos reminds women that their lust for
luxury is not of God.
Hear
this word, you cows of Bashan,
who are
on the mountain of Samaria,
who oppress
the poor, who crust the needy,
who say
to your husbands, ‘Bring, that we may drink!”
4:1,
ESV
The real issue – found embedded in the message the prophet Amos preached
is idolatry. Yahweh has been replaced with gods made in their own image and
when that happens, justice becomes wormwood and righteousness is cast down upon
the earth. (5:7)
All of this should have brought about repentance for Israel. But listen
again to Amos.
Behold,
I am setting a plumb line
in the
midst of my people Israel;
I
will never again pass by them;
the high
places of Isaac will be made desolate,
and the
sanctuaries of Israel shall be laid waste,
and I
will rise against the house of Jeroboam with the sword.
What especially convicts me when I read Amos is that the words weren’t
said to some pagan nation of infidels that surrounded Israel and Judah. They
were said to “the people of God” and it seems to have been so easy for them to
get focused on possessions and luxury while ignoring the needs of their own
people around them. “Silver” and “sandals” seem to be the way “the less
fortunate” are viewed by “the very fortunate.”
We should all be grateful that before Amos is finished, he reminds us
that God deeply desires a people to call His own.
In
that day I will raise up
the booth
of David that is fallen
and
repair its breaches,
and
raise up its ruins
and
rebuild it as in the days of old,
that
they may possess the remnant of Edom
and
all the nations who are called by my name,
declares
the Lord who does this.
Amos 9:11, 12 ESV
James, the half-brother of Jesus, and the apostles seem to think this prophecy
was fulfilled when Gentiles were welcomed into the Kingdom of God. (Acts
15:12-21) As John Stott says about this quote from Amos in Acts, “In other
words, through the Davidic Christ Gentiles will be included in his new
community.” (The Spirit, The Church, and
the World, page 247)
There is part of me that rejoices when I read Amos. God welcomes “outsiders”
to become “insiders” in His kingdom. Isn’t that what Ephesians 2 is all about?
But there is a side of me that is convicted by Amos. It is so easy to
assume our national and religious status automatically makes us pleasing to
God. That was, it seems to me, what was in Israel’s head when Amos dared to
speak on behalf of God.
N.T. Wright insists that idolatry is humankind’s core sin. (See, for
example, The Day the Revolution Began.)
Idolatry can take all kinds of forms – and it isn’t that it always shows up in “evil
things” – we can allow “good things” to push God aside. Nationalism and
religion are a dangerous mix!
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