Amos 7:7-15
This is what he showed me: behold, the Lord was standing beside a wall built with a plumb line, with a plumb line in his hand. And the Lord said to me, “Amos, what do you see?” And I said, “A plumb line.” Then the Lord said,
“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 shall be made desolate,
and the sanctuaries of Israel shall be laid waste,
and I will rise against the house of Jeroboam with the sword.”
Amos Accused
Then Amaziah the priest of Bethel sent to Jeroboam king of Israel, saying, “Amos has conspired against you in the midst of the house of Israel. The land is not able to bear all his words. For thus Amos has said,
“‘Jeroboam shall die by the sword,
and Israel must go into exile
away from his land.’”
And Amaziah said to Amos, “O seer, go, flee away to the land of Judah, and eat bread there, and prophesy there, but never again prophesy at Bethel, for it is the king's sanctuary, and it is a temple of the kingdom.”
Then Amos answered and said to Amaziah, “I was no prophet, nor a prophet's son, but I was a herdsman and a dresser of sycamore figs. But the Lord took me from following the flock, and the Lord said to me, ‘Go, prophesy to my people Israel.’
Grace, mercy and peace to you from God our Father, and from our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. Amen. To the prophet Amos comes during a busy time in the Old Testament story. Amos is a prophet of judgment against the northern kingdom of Israel, and understand what's happening in our story, we need to understand some history. So we're gonna go back all the way to King David. So you know, King David, he was the one to basically unite the kingdoms, kingdom of Israel, all 12 tribes, and finally conquer the area that was supposed to be the promised land. He brings it all together under his rule. And then when his son Solomon takes over the kingdom, Solomon begins the long line of kings that start to stray away from God and His promises of Solomon, because of this gets judgment from God, that when his son takes the throne, God is going to split the kingdom into two, there will be the two tribes of the South, and the 10 tribes of the North, the North becomes Israel, and the South is called Judah. This happens under Solomon son, Rafa Boehm, a Prophet goes to another man named Jeroboam, who was promised that if he follows God and His promises and keeps his law, he will get the 10 tribes of the northern kingdom for him and for his family. So, Jeroboam rebels, the 10 tribes go their own way Rehoboam in the south, Jeroboam in the north. And then Jeroboam says, you know, it's not a great idea for me to send all of my people down to Jerusalem, to worship, because they're all going to someone else's kingdom. It's not mine. So against God's law, he builds to sanctuaries. The one that's important for us is the city of Bethel, where the king's sanctuary is, and the priest Amaziah. Comes out against Amos. During this time, King Uzziah comes to power in the south, and we get several prophets. Amos is the one that we are looking at. He is likely around 750 or 760 BC. It's about the same time as Jonah, who goes out to the city of Nineveh, capital city of a Syria, the ones who will be the big bad guys very soon. And then only a little while later is the prophet Isaiah, who comes shortly after Amos after uzawa in Judah dies. And so we what we get are prophets, Amos to the northern kingdom, Isaiah to the southern kingdom, and Jonah to Nineveh or a Syria, who would soon come in and destroy the northern kingdom of Israel, kill off Jeroboam xline, and take them into exile. Those are the characters of our day. Amos, the prophet actually comes from the southern kingdom, a city of Tekoa, which is just on the other side of the border, which means that when he comes into this northern kingdom, he is an outsider. He is from Judah. It's almost like an enemy Prophet, coming into your territory. And that is the situation we get when we get to the beginning of our reading. Amos has been coming out with Oracle's against everybody. But in this chapter, he is now starting to speak to Israel to the northern kingdom. And what I'd like to do today is contrast his message to Israel and the results with Jonah, who goes to a foreign kingdom in Nineveh With a similar message, and different results. So let's look at Amos first. And then we'll look at Jonah. Amos goes to this northern kingdom. And he gives them a message. God says, Behold, I am setting a plumb line in the midst of my people Israel, and I will never again pass by them, the high places of Isaac shall be made desolate, and the sanctuaries of Israel shall be laid waste. And I will rise against the house of Jeroboam with the sword. Now, if you are like me, and have never built a single thing in your life, you read the words plumb line, and you go, Hmm, I wonder what that is. I found out it's a string with a weight at the bottom that you set up so that it goes completely vertical. And that's how you build a straight wall. You compare the wall to the line, and then you get straight. Easy enough. That makes sense, right. And God is using this metaphor as a standard of behavior for the northern kingdoms. He says, I have a standard. And if your wall is curved, it's going to be destroyed. And that is what he then says, about the northern kingdom, the sanctuaries of Israel shall be laid waste. And I will rise against the house of Jeroboam with the sword. God has sent a message of judgment to this northern kingdom. He says, If you violate my laws and my standards, and continue to do so there will be judgment. For that kingdom, that judgment meant the violence and destruction of the mighty armies of Syria, who are some of the worst conquerors in all of history, in their savagery and anger. Now, you can imagine, what would happen if someone walks into the White House, from say, I don't know Russia, and said, Guess what? God's going to destroy your kingdom and your country. I don't think whoever it was, we would listen to them simply because of their identity, where they came from. And that's a big piece of the rejection of this message. Amaziah, the priest of Bethel sees Amos, and he rejects this message for a couple of reasons. The first reason is, Amos is from Judah, an enemy kingdom. And he thinks the prophet is just there to stir up trouble. He says, Go flee away to the land of Judah, back to your home country and prophesy there. But don't come here with your divisive words and all of your bad news. rejects the message because of who Amos is. The second reason he rejects the message is because it is not in the plan. He says, this is the king's sanctuary. You can't say this about the king. Here we have one message. We support our kingdom. We do not say bad news. How dare you come out against our temple and our sanctuary. And what he says is, but never again prophesy at Bethel for it is the king sanctuary and it is the temple of the kingdom that none of this dis information and and conspiracy theories. We are all on message here. And then finally, he accuses Amos of selling out of doing it just for money. That's what he said. He says when he says flee to the land of Judah and eat bread there and prophesy there. He thinks that Amos is just a professional Prophet, who was there to stir up trouble and get YouTube subscriptions.
Notice what Amaziah doesn't do He doesn't actually attend to the message. He simply says, Amos, you're a bad guy. So I don't have to listen to you. Instead of hearing what God says, judgment is coming. And so they totally avoid the entire thing. God warns them says turn, and they reject it. And we know what the result is. Syria does come, they come with their armies, and they destroy the northern kingdom of Israel during the time of Isaiah. And the people go into exile, Jeroboam his family falls under the sword, and everything that Amos predicted, comes true. Now, you can understand why this might happen. You can understand why Jeroboam and Amaziah would reject a message like this. Nobody wants to hear bad news. And in fact, when news is contrary to what we expect, we find all sorts of ways of getting around it. Explain it away. We talk about something else. And it's even worse when it's an accusation. Jeroboam you have been unfaithful to God's promise. And that's a hard thing to hear. Whether you're a king, or a Christian 1000s of years later, you are someone who is hearing the message of God for the first time. If you are a sinner, and unfaithful. It's hard to hear. And one way to react to that is to do it Amaziah and Jeroboam did. Say, you're totally wrong. I've got it all set. We're all rights, and you're just a bad guy anyway. That's what Israel did. And that's what many people do. Instead of turning, repenting and receiving forgiveness, the bad news of God's judgment, they respond with anger. But there's another way. This is the way that happened with the prophet Jonah. Jonah was alive at just about the same time. And God went to him and said, to go to Nineveh with a very simple message. Yet 40 days and Nineveh will be overthrown. That's a whole lot shorter than Amos is vision, right? Amos gets this beautiful thing of the plumb line and the wall and all of that. And there's Oracle's and Jonah gets one line. 40 days. That's it. Now, if you know the story, Jonah didn't want to go and after much goings on, and he eventually makes it to the city of Nineveh. And he says 40 days, and Nineveh will be overthrown. And what's amazing about this is what happens next. Nineveh does not have the history with God. The northern kingdom does. They don't have Moses and the prophets. They don't have the great confession that God is slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love that he forgives those who turned to him. They have none of that. A profit from an enemy city comes to them and says 40 days and destruction. That's it. And what does Nineveh do? These foreigners who do not know the true God they hear the words and repent. In fact, it is such a repentance that the king of the city commands that every person all the way down to the animals to put themselves was in sackcloth and ashes and fast with the hope that this God who only offered one line would turn from his anger and relent. What a different response from people who had no idea who God was just some foreign prophet of a foreign god. And yet they hear the word of judgments, and they repent. And you know how the story goes, and God sees their repentance. And he turns to Jonah and he says, I will relent of the disaster, that I was going to bring them. Which makes Jonah really mad. He wants a Syria destroyed, because they're the big bad. They're the ones who will not so very long from now come in and kill that northern kingdom, with all of their violence, and wrath. And God sends Jonah to preserve this city from His judgment, so we could use them against Israel. What a difference in their reaction is to the message of judgment from God. Jonah comes and says, You will be destroyed if they don't react in anger, or accusations, or accuse him of disinformation to repent. And God, forgive. This message is a good example for everyone who hears a message of judgment from God. Because without a message of judgments about our sin, there is no forgiveness. without accepting the hard news that comes from God's Word, we will never know that we needed a Savior, who would take the penalty for our sins onto his body and give us forgiveness. And we all know this because well, we are here. You have heard this message and believe. But for the Christian, this message is ongoing, and sometimes surprising. Because sometimes the piece of our life that is filled with sin we overlook. And we need to hear the message again. And it's hard. But accepting that means a path to forgiveness. responding with anger means we turn aside from the gospel. hearing the message of judgment, and saying I repent is the only way to move through it to the forgiveness and reconciliation that Christ offers. That's what Jonah helps us to see. And it's the same thing for the world, right? God did not send Jonah out into the world or to the northern kingdom with smooth words and kind offers. He said, judgment is coming. And that always came with the offer of repentance, and forgiveness. And it's only through that message of judgment that the world can have the forgiveness we enjoy. When they run into their sin, and see that they need a savior, just like us. Sure, they may react like Amaziah or King Herod for that matter, with anger with hostility. But it still means it's the only way to bring the people we love to the gospel. It's a hard pill to swallow this judgment. But it's the only way for salvation
because To understand and know that you need a Savior knows that you need to need. It means that you need to know that you lack this message, just like amis, just like Jonah, just like John the Baptist or Jesus. This message of our sin needs to be believed and accepted, even when it's hard. Salvation only comes on the other side of it by the grace of Jesus Christ, in response to our repentance. In his name, amen.
Transcribed by https://otter.ai