Amos Speaks Again Part 5
We've come to the final installment in our study of the Book
of Amos. The Lord's anger against the
Israelites continues, His promise of judgment
clear. There will be no last minute reprieve;
the Northern Kingdom will cease to exist. But as He always has, God will preserve a
believing remnant to keep the flame of His people flickering.
Amos 8
A Basket Of Ripe
Fruit
This
is what the Sovereign LORD showed me: a basket of ripe fruit. "What do you see, Amos?" he asked.
"A basket of
ripe fruit," I answered.
Then the LORD said
to me, "The time is ripe for my people Israel; I will spare them no
longer.
"In that day," declares
the Sovereign LORD, "the songs in the temple will turn to wailing. Many, many bodies—flung everywhere! Silence!"
Hear this, you who trample the
needy and do away with the poor of the land, saying,
"When will the New Moon be over that we may sell grain, and the Sabbath be
ended that we may market wheat?"—skimping the measure, boosting the price
and cheating with dishonest scales, buying the
poor with silver and the needy for a pair of sandals,
selling even the sweepings with the wheat.
The LORD has sworn by the
Pride of Jacob: "I will never forget anything they have done. "Will not the land tremble for this, and all who live
in it mourn? The whole land will rise
like the Nile; it will be stirred up and then sink like the river of Egypt.
(Amos 8:1-8)
The Nile River flooded every Spring, its waters
flowing over its banks to cover the entire delta region. The Lord used this to symbolize the fighting
men of Israel
raising a great army to resist the Assyrians.
The River of Egypt, or Wadi
al Arish, is a different river that has water in the
spring but dries up in the summer. It
symbolizes the outcome. Though Israel's army would be like the flooding Nile at
the beginning, it would soon disappear into the ground like the River of Egypt under the onslaught of the
Assyrians. The Lord could tolerate their corrupt practices no longer.
Throughout the Bible the Lord gets especially upset when the powerless are
exploited. Whether it's
widows and orphans, or slaves, or the poor, He's predictable in his
reaction. He takes their part and
oppresses those who oppress them. His
laws were written to give people every opportunity for a second chance. Israelites weren't allowed to charge each
other interest. They couldn't keep
collateral to secure a debt. Debts were
to be forgiven every 7 years, and those held in servitude as a means of
repaying their debts were to be freed and given a stake toward a new
beginning.
In Deut. 15:4 He said that the land was so bountiful that there
shouldn't be any poor among them if they just obeyed His laws. That means the
poor were a class created by the disobedience of the rich, and that's what made
Him so angry.
America
is the wealthiest country in history.
Compared to world standards even Americans of average means are
rich. And yet we have many poor among
us, and they're exploited just as surely as those in Biblical times. It still makes the Lord angry, and he'll
judge us in our time just as He did them in theirs.
"In that day," declares
the Sovereign LORD, "I will make the sun go down at noon
and darken the earth in broad daylight. I
will turn your religious feasts into mourning
and all your singing into weeping. I will make all of you wear sackcloth and
shave your heads. I will make that time
like mourning for an only son and the end of it like a bitter day. (Amos
8:9-10)
Although the context here is Israel's
defeat, this prophecy was eerily fulfilled on the day Jesus died. The Sun went dark at noon and from that time
forward Passover has been associated with the death of God's only Son. And in Zechariah 12:10 we're told that
near the end of the Great Tribulation as the Lord sets out to destroy all the
nations that attack Jerusalem, He will pour out a Spirit of Grace and
Supplication upon the house of David and the inhabitants of Jerusalem. "They
will look on me, the one they have pierced, and they will mourn for him as one
mourns for an only child, and grieve bitterly for him as one grieves for a
firstborn son."
Just in case they didn't know who He was talking about, the
Lord had two un-translated Hebrew letters placed after the phrase "look
upon me" in Zechariah 12:10.
They're the first and last letters of the Hebrew Alphabet, the Aleph and
the Tau. These
two letters also appear in the Hebrew text of Genesis 1:1 after the
phrase "in the beginning God …" Their better-known equivalents
are the Alpha and the Omega, the first and last letters of the Greek alphabet,
used to describe the Father in Rev. 1:8 and 21:6 and the Son in Rev.
22:13. Zechariah was identifying the
one they would look upon as the Messiah.
"The days are coming,"
declares the Sovereign LORD, "when I will send a famine through the land—
not a famine of food or a thirst for water, but a famine of hearing the words
of the LORD. Men will stagger from sea to sea and wander from north to
east, searching for the word of the LORD, but they will not find it.
"In that day "the lovely
young women and strong young men will faint because of thirst. They who swear
by the shame of Samaria, or say, 'As surely as
your god lives, O Dan,' or, 'As surely as the god of Beersheba lives'—they will fall, never to
rise again." (Amos 8:11-14)
They wanted to be free of any relationship with the Lord so they would
be. They wouldn't hear any prophets
calling them back though they traveled the length and breadth of the land. And
would the pagan gods to which they had given their allegiance save them? Not a chance.
Some believe that this famine of hearing God's Word will occur again at the
end of the age, as the anti-Christ seeks to eliminate all reference to God from
society. He'll even try to change the
calendar (Daniel 7:25) in his effort to erase every reminder of God from
peoples' lives.
Amos 9
Israel to Be Destroyed
I saw the Lord
standing by the altar, and he said: "Strike the tops of the pillars so
that the thresholds shake. Bring them down on the heads of all the people;
those who are left I will kill with the sword. Not one will get away, none will
escape. Though they dig down to the
depths of the grave, from there my hand will take them. Though they climb up to
the heavens, from there I will bring them down. Though they hide themselves on
the top of Carmel,
there I will hunt them down and seize them. Though they hide from me at
the bottom of the sea, there I will command the serpent to bite them. Though they are driven into exile by their
enemies, there I will command the sword to slay them. I will fix my eyes upon
them for evil and not for good." (Amos 9:1-4)
No matter where they tried to hide, the Lord would find them
and punish them. Psalm 121 says
that He who watches over Israel
will neither slumber nor sleep, but will watch over their coming and going
forever. Now He tells them that because
of their betrayal it'll be for evil not good.
As the writer to the Hebrews would say, It is a dreadful thing to fall into the hands of the Living God
(Hebr. 10:31)
The Lord, the LORD Almighty, he who
touches the earth and it melts, and all who live in it mourn— the whole land
rises like the Nile, then sinks like the river of Egypt- he who builds his lofty palace in the
heavens and sets its foundation on the earth, who calls for the waters of the
sea and pours them out over the face of the land— the LORD is his name.
"Are not you Israelites
the same to me as the Cushites?" declares the LORD .
"Did I not bring Israel
up from Egypt,
the Philistines from Caphtor and the Arameans from Kir? "Surely the eyes of the Sovereign LORD are on the
sinful kingdom. I will destroy it from the face of the earth— yet I will not
totally destroy the house of Jacob," declares the LORD.
"For I will give the command,
and I will shake the house of Israel
among all the nations as grain is shaken in a sieve, and not a pebble will
reach the ground. All the sinners among my people will die by the sword, all
those who say, 'Disaster will not overtake or meet us.' (Amos 9:5-10)
The Cushites were another race of people in the
region of Egypt,
ancestors of today's black Africans. Because of their sin, the Israelites, whom
the Lord brought out of Egypt
in a mighty act of deliverance, had become no better than the Cushites, whom He'd left there. No better than the
Philistines whom He brought from Caphtor, or the Arameans whom He brought from Kir. Therefore He was about to judge them, sifting
them as grain to separate the sinners from the faithful. The Kingdom would be gone, and not one of the
sinners would escape. But the faithful
remnant of Jacob would be spared.
Israel's Restoration
"In that day I
will restore David's fallen tent. I will repair its broken places, restore its
ruins, and build it as it used to be, so that they may possess the remnant of
Edom and all the nations that bear my name," declares the LORD, who will
do these things.
"The days are coming,"
declares the LORD, "when the reaper will be overtaken by the plowman and
the planter by the one treading grapes.
New wine will drip from the mountains and flow from all the hills.
I will bring back my exiled people Israel; they will rebuild the
ruined cities and live in them. They
will plant vineyards and drink their wine; they will make gardens and eat their
fruit. I will plant Israel in their
own land, never again to be uprooted from the land I have given them,"
says the LORD your God. (Amos 9:11-15)
The Lord's brother James, as the head of the early Church, presided over the
Council at Jerusalem
about 20 years after the cross. Because
of the evangelistic efforts of Peter, Paul, Barnabas and others, Gentiles were
becoming followers of Jesus. These
leaders had all gathered in Jerusalem to
determine whether a) Gentiles had to convert to Judaism before they could join
the Church, and b) if not, what would become of Israel. After a lively discussion it was decided that
Gentiles could be baptized directly into the Christian faith.
As for the future of Israel,
James said that the Lord was first going to take a people for Himself from
among the Gentiles. Using Amos
9:11-12 as His authority, he then explained that after that, the Lord would
return to rebuild David's fallen tabernacle.
He was speaking of the nation in general and the Temple in particular. Ezekiel had prophesied that in the latter
days Israel
would be reborn, (Ezekiel 36-37), but now James clarified that when that
happened they would revive Biblical Judaism as well. Otherwise there would be no need for a Temple. Daniel had also prophesied a Temple in the Latter Days. (Daniel 9:27)
You can read all about the Council at Jerusalem
in Acts 15:1-21.
There are three critical clues to the End Times in the way James used Amos
9:11-12. One is the chronology. First the Lord would focus on building His
Church, then He would return and rebuild the Temple. The second is that Israel would not disappear as a
people, nor would they be replaced in the Lord's plan by the Church. Israel and the Church would remain
separate entities. And the third is that
His shift back to Israel
would happen after He had taken the Church. The Greek word literally means to
carry away, or remove. It's most often translated
"receive."
Paul would soon write that Israel
has been blinded in part until the full number of Gentiles has come in (Romans
11:25), agreeing with James that what we now call the Rapture of the Church
would precede the Lord's shift back to Israel. After alluding to it several times in earlier
chapters, Ezekiel clearly said that this shift would happen as a result of the
battle he prophesied in chapters 38-39 (Ezekiel 39:22)
20 years after the Council at Jerusalem
the temple was destroyed, and soon after that the nation ceased to exist. For the last 1900 years the Lord's focus has
been on the Church. Some day soon the
Lord will cause events we are already witnessing to culminate in Ezekiel's
battle. The Church will disappear, Israel's eyes will be opened and
their re-gathering will be complete. The
Temple will be
built, and after the most terrible time of trial the world ever has or ever
will see, His faithful remnant will once again become the pre-eminent nation on
Earth.
When that happens, the land will
rejoice with the people, its curse broken forever. Their harvests will be so plentiful that
they'll hardly be in the barns when it's time to plant again. The exiled remnant will have been brought
back, their cities rebuilt, and no one will ever uproot them again. You can
almost hear the footsteps of the Messiah.
05-12-07