With his pie half-eaten, he took another swig of coffee, laid his fork down, and waited while the waitress refilled his cup from a steaming pot. He nodded his thanks.”
With his pie half-eaten, he took another swig of coffee, laid his fork down, and waited while the waitress refilled his cup from a steaming pot. He nodded his thanks.”
That’s what life’s all about, ain’t it? Lookin’ after each other.”
It was true, there was in this world a class of people who never worked for what they wanted, who took what they pleased them no matter how.”
–D. B. Olsen (The Night of the Bowstring)
“True instruction was in his mouth, and nothing wrong was found on his lips. He walked with Me in peace and fairness and turned many from sin.”
The river went on and on, growing dimmer, becoming a mere thread, to vanish in a blue haze out of which the Rocky Mountains rose, first obscure and like low masses of clouds, and then clear blue, to rise up and up magnificent reaches to pierce the sky with their snow-like peaks.”
–Zane Grey (Wyoming)
“For behold! He who forms mountains, and creates the wind, who declares to man what his thought is, and makes the morning darkness, who treads the high places of the earth–the LORD God of hosts is His name.”
–Amos 4:13 (NKJV)
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“Life’s troubles can function as signpost warnings.” –Lloyd Ogilvie
Amos, after dealing with the women and the apostates, now turns his attention to the people, the nation as a whole. He speaks five oracles, or better–five calamities that the Lord has attempted to use to draw their attention back to Him. I’m one who says that most natural calamities and disasters are just that–natural. God created the law of physics and nature and put them in place so things just naturally happen. Weather and climate are part of the natural course of things. However! God often uses His creation in various ways and for various purposes. I remember when Katrina was heading for New Orleans. I heard a preacher say it was not from God because God does not miss. If you remember, the storm did not hit New Orleans straight on. However! Perhaps it was not judgment, but only a warning. 2001, the attack by terrorists, was it a warning or judgment? Amos points to the warnings that have come from God and notes that each concludes with “Yet you did not return to Me.”
Verse 6 — famine. “Cleanness of teeth” means hunger, or empty stomachs. There was famine in the land. Not on everyone, but enough to bring hunger. Ogilvie says that “no particular famine is focused, but a general period of hard times.” Times were tough, the people probably grumbled. As Wiersbe points out, “When farmers can’t grow crops, food is scarce, food prices go up, and people suffer and die.” Hmmm, have you noticed in the recent year how high your grocery bill has become?
Verses 7-8 — rain comes and goes. Cities that received rain did not turn to the Lord in gratitude; those in drought did not connect it to God’s judgment. “The people had become insensitive to Yahweh’s control of nature and their lives.” (Ogilvie) This also shows that God is in control. Rain or no rain; it is up to Him.
Verse 9 — pestilence. Blights, scorchings, mildew, locust came upon the land and the food supply. Crops were destroyed, but it did not bring repentance.
Verse 10 — plagues and war. It would do us good to review Deuteronomy 28; there we see the results of obedience versus that of rebellion. Sickness and disease were on the scene. (Hmmm, COVID possibly?) War came upon them, enough so that there was death and that brought a stench. I wonder if it was not just the stench of decay and death but of the system they were living in, a way of life that opposed God.
Verse 11 — destruction. Some cities were destroyed, others were saved. In all of this the people maintained their “stubborn infidelity” to Him. (Ogilvie) Warnings had been given, but were not heeded. This shows “their ingratitude and hardness of heart was even more wicked.” (Wiersbe)
YET YOU DID NOT RETURN TO ME
These were all warnings. These miseries and calamities were sent to bring the people to repentance and get their focus back on the Lord. Since they ignored the warnings, God will “unleash full punishment of the whole nation. If Israel will not meet God with humble repentance, she will meet Him in judgment.” (Ogilvie)
“Therefore thus will I do to you, O Israel; because I will do this to you, prepare to meet your God, O Israel!” (Amos 4:12, NKJV)
Too late to repent. Today is the day of salvation. (2 Corinthians 6:2) Verse 12 gives a description of the Lord of Hosts. “This is the God who was coming to judge His people, and they were not prepared.” (Wiersbe) Craigie makes mention of the people singing, “O come, all ye faithful.” Amos would blast and say that they were singing, “O come, all ye faithless.”
As a nation we should look back at the message and warnings of Amos. Do they fit our country? Are we doing the same things? Even more important, perhaps we should turn inwardly to ourselves. “It never hurts, and frequently it helps, to reflect upon the dramatic events of our lives, to consider the road we are taking, to ask if it is still the road in which we walked when we first embraced the faith with joy.” (Peter C. Craigie) Let each of us examine ourselves. Ogilvie helps us along the way with these words, “Consistent fellowship with the Lord helps us know what He is seeking to give us in the ever-changing drama of our lives. Daily, moment by moment, God-centered worship makes for worshipful living. God is constantly calling us to worship Him. This requires a contrite spirit and truthfulness about our lives.”