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#572               THE PROPHECY OF HOSEA

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Scripture          Hosea 1:2-5, NIV

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Orig. 8/22/1971; Rewr. 6/21/1989

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Passage: When the Lord began to speak through Hosea, the Lord said to him, “Go, marry a promiscuous woman and have children with her, for like an adulterous wife this land is guilty of unfaithfulness to the Lord.” So he married Gomer daughter of Diblaim, and she conceived and bore him a son.

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Then the Lord said to Hosea, “Call him Jezreel, because I will soon punish the house of Jehu for the massacre at Jezreel, and I will put an end to the kingdom of Israel. In that day I will break Israel’s bow in the Valley of Jezreel.”

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Purpose: Continuing a Prayer Meeting study in the Old Testament prophets, here examining background material as it relates to a prophet and his call.

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Keywords:      Bible Study     Love of God               Judgment       Unfaithfulness           Restoration

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Timeline/Series:         Sequential

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Introduction

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            Though Hosea appears first among the minor prophets, called the “twelve,” chronologically, he does not appear until after Joel, Jonah, and Amos have already appeared.  They were more or less contemporary, called the “Eighth Century  prophets.”

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            Joel  prophesied to the people of the Southern Kingdom.  Jonah was sent from the Southern Kingdom to address the sins of an up-and-coming power that would confront the Northern Kingdom.  Amos went up from the Southern Kingdom to proclaim God’s word to the people in Samaria.

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            Hosea only  of the prophets was native to the Northern Kingdom.  He joins Amos as the only other who would prophesy to the people  of the Northern Kingdom—Israel or Samaria.

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            You, perhaps, are aware that his name means “Yahweh delivers,” and as such is identical with the name “Joshua.”

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            What is unique about Hosea is not so much his message as his method. He was chosen, out of a context of marital infidelity, to be an example to the people of their unfaithfulness to God.  When he lived is no problem.  He, himself, describes the time (V1).  He is mentioned only here.  His father is mentioned nowhere else.  Some describe him to be the fruit of some other prophet’s imagination.  He is merely an allegory put to use to make a point.  Not so!  It is the story of compromised love under the stress of the times.

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            We have described previously the time of Joel and Jonah and Amos.  It was a time of material imbalance.  The rich grew richer.  The poor, poorer.  God’s word must touch the lives of all of them.

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I.          Examining the Prophecy in Profile.  V1, “The word of the Lord that came unto Hosea, the son of Beeri, in the days of Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah, kings of Judah, and in the days of Jeroboam, son of Joash.”

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There were no more than fifty years between the death of Jeroboam and the Assyrian invasion.  Hezekiah was on the throne in Judah. A kind of renewal was taking place.  But in the north, debauchery was everywhere.

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George Adam Smith, “It is not only as in Amos,  the sins of the luxurious, of them that are at ease in Zion, which are exposed; but literal bloodshed, highway robbery/murder, abetted by the priests . . . .  Israel’s self-reliance is gone.  She is as fluttered as a startled bird; ‘They call to Egypt, they go to Assyria,’ (Hosea 7:11).  But everything is hopeless.  Kings cannot save.  For Ephraim is seized in the pangs of a fatal crisis.” 

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One named Jehu had been the instrument  of judgment upon the earlier  sins of Israel.  Jehu’s sons to the fourth generation were to come to the throne.  II Kings 10:30; II Kings 15:12:  “And so it came to pass.”  Jehoahaz (17), Jehoash (16), Jeroboam II (4), and Zechariah (6 mo.)  From the time of Jeroboam II, a grim picture comes into view.  Of Jehu and his descendants evil “departed not from the sins of Jeroboam.” II Kings 10:31, 13:2, 13:11, 14:24, 15:9 (6 mo.)  The rest of the story is one of assassination.  Zechariah (6mo), Shallum (1mo), Manahem (10 y died), Pekahiah (2y), Pekah (20y), Hoshea (9y captivity).

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Sidlow Baxter

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“Things were even worse morally and spiritually than they were politically.  Ever since the days of the first Jeroboam, when the ten tribes had disrupted from the house of David to form a separate kingdom, the worship of the golden calf at Bethel had been a snare to Israel.  Although the Bethel calf was supposed at first to  represent Jehovah, yet more and more the idol itself became the object of worship. . . .  Thus the way was paved for the coarse, cruel nature-worship associated with the names of Baal and Ashteroth, with all the attendant abominations  of child sacrifice and revolting licentiousness.”

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II.         Hosea’s Marriage  Became the Symbol of the Crisis.  V2, “Go, take unto thee a wife of whoredoms.”

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            Thus is established the insensibility of sin.  Hosea is pictured as from a faithful remnant of spiritual people.  He chooses a woman named Gomer as wife. He is directed to take a prostitute for a wife. 

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Zanah—fornicate, apostatize; or, he is told to take a woman out of such a culture.

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Eretz—land (with its inhabitants).

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            He chooses one with a propensity to moral failure.  Some thus call it an allegory.  The marriage produces three children:  Jezreel—“God sows”; Lo-ruhamah—“not loved” (uncertain); Loammi—“not my people” (no doubt).

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            God will assess their sin and punish it:  They will respond as a people not loved (Proverbs 13:24); separated from God they become foreigners.  But the heart of God is revealed here and the intent of the book.  V6, “I will have mercy, . . . I will take them away.” V10, “In the place where it was said unto them, ye are not my people. . . .”

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            The guilt of sin at every age is going to be measured and manifested.  Gomer was guilty as charged.  She pays.  Her sin is like the sin of the nation.  They, too, must pay for their sin.  Once restitution has been made, restoration is in order.  Hosea 2:23, “And I will say to them which were not my people, ‘Thou art my people’; and they shall say, ‘Thou art my God.’”

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            The supreme criterion of relationship is love.  Gomer accepts Hosea’s proposal.  For a time the marriage is wholesome, v3.  In boredom she seeks other pursuits, 2:5.  Hosea seeks her out and redeems her from so-called friends who enslaved her.  He seeks to do, not as the law allows, but as love demands.  Jeremiah 3:1, “. . . ‘Thou hast played the harlot with many lovers; yet return again to me,’ saith the Lord.”

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III.       Israel’s Sin: The Indictment of Circumstance.  Hosea 4:1, “Hear the word of the Lord, ye children of Israel: for the Lord hath a controversy with the inhabitants of the land.”

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            It is with the nation.  Four  of last five commandments (4:2).  The land will be affected by this human distraction (4:3).

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            It is with the religious leaders:  striving between people/priest (4:4); priests have forgotten the law; prophets “fall” used both figuratively and  in relation to their roles;  people/priests (4:9) instead of strengthening are enticing to ruin.  Hosea 5:1, “. . . and my people love to have it so.”

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            There is a mediating word to Judah (Hosea 4;15).  Be different in worship (v15).  Be different in obedience (v16). 

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            Stopped at Animal Land near Dallas.  Children’s zoo revealed a pesky goat trying to feed anywhere, whatever.  A lamb nearby waiting docilely to be fed.

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            The next chapter reveals that Judah will not heed this warning (Hosea 5:5).

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            They have therefore sinned and are marked for judgment.  God waits for sincere repentance (Hosea 5:15).  He is not moved by their insincerity.  Hosea 6:4, “goodness as a morning cloud”; 6:6, “I desire mercy, and not sacrifice.”  Three things in Israel that God hates: Compromise (7:7,8a), limited development (7:8b), unconscious decay (7:9).

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IV.       Israel’s Punishment:  The Judgment of Compromise.  Hosea 8:4-10, “They have set up kings,, but not by me.  They have made princes, and I knew it not: . . . they have made them idols. . . .  Thy calf, O Samaria, hath cast thee off. . . .”

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            There is judgment on compromise in political life.  Hosea 8:4, “They have set up kings, but not by me; they have made princes, and I knew it not.  We will do well to remember that we do not surprise God.  The sense of “knew it not” is that God had not been sought for direction.

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            There was judgment on compromise in religious life.  8:5, “Thy calf, O Samaria.” 8:11, “Ephraim hath made many altars to sin.”  8:12, “I have written to him the great things of my law, but they were counted as a strange thing.” 

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            There was judgment on compromise  in economic betterment.  8:14, “Judah hath multiplied fenced cities: but I shall send a fire . . . and it shall devour the palaces thereof.”  9:2, “The floor and the winepress shall not feed them, and the new wine shall fail in her.”

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            There was judgment on compromise in family life.  9:12, “Though they bring up their children yet I will bereave them.”  9:16, “Though they bring forth, yet will I slay even the beloved fruit of their womb.”

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V.        Israel’s Restoration: The Yearning of Covenant Love.

‍ ‍

            It is the passionate love of a true father for the child.  Hosea 11:1, “When Israel was a child, then I loved him, and called my son out of Egypt.”  Same word “love” used by God of Abraham for Isaac (Genesis 22:2).  The weight of spiritual/moral things should be pressed upon parents.  Getting them involved in drug alert.

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            More, it is the burning love of a husband for his wife.  See 11:7-12 picture of betrayal and rebellion.  11:8, “How shall I give up, Ephraim?”  Isaiah 62:4,5, portrays this idea.  The pastor is allowed to look in on great love affairs.

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            It is the love of a parent in the deep regret of some necessary punishment.  This is going to hurt me more than you.  Tough love.  Hosea 12:9, “And I that am the Lord thy God from the land of Egypt will yet make thee to dwell in tabernacles.”

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            It is the love of one who has chanced all on the outcome of love.  14:8, “Ephraim shall say, What have I to do any more with idols?  I have heard him, and observed him: I am like a green fir tree: from me is thy fruit found.” 

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            Isaiah 58:11, “And the Lord shall guide thee continually, and satisfy thy soul in drought, and make fat thy bones: and thou shalt be like a watered garden.”

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Links and References

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Smith              https://www.britannica.com/biography/George-Adam-Smith

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Baxter              https://www.abebooks.com/9780801012747/Sidlow-Baxter-Heart-Awake-Authorized-0801012740/plp?ref_=ps_ms_267691761&cm_mmc=msn-_-comus_dsa-_-naa-_-naa&msclkid=44c75692fc1f135ed4373c9a7a986da2

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#572               THE PROPHECY OF ISAIAH

Scripture          Hosea 1:2-5, NIV

Orig. 8/22/1971; Rewr. 6/21/1989

Passage: 2 When the Lord began to speak through Hosea, the Lord said to him, “Go, marry a promiscuous woman and have children with her, for like an adulterous wife this land is guilty of unfaithfulness to the Lord.” 3 So he married Gomer daughter of Diblaim, and she conceived and bore him a son.

4 Then the Lord said to Hosea, “Call him Jezreel, because I will soon punish the house of Jehu for the massacre at Jezreel, and I will put an end to the kingdom of Israel. 5 In that day I will break Israel’s bow in the Valley of Jezreel.”

Purpose: Continuing a Prayer Meeting study in the Old Testament prophets, here examining background material as it relates to a prophet and his call.

Keywords:      Bible Study     Love of God               Judgment       Unfaithfulness           Restoration

Timeline/Series:         Sequential

Introduction

            Though Hosea appears first among the minor prophets, called the “twelve,” chronologically, he does not appear until after Joel, Jonah, and Amos have already appeared.  They were more or less contemporary, called the “Eighth Century  prophets.”

            Joel  prophesied to the people of the Southern Kingdom.  Jonah was sent from the Southern Kingdom to address the sins of an up-and-coming power that would confront the Northern Kingdom.  Amos went up from the Southern Kingdom to proclaim God’s word to the people in Samaria.

            Hosea only  of the prophets was native to the Northern Kingdom.  He joins Amos as the only other who would prophesy to the people  of the Northern Kingdom—Israel or Samaria.

            You, perhaps, are aware that his name means “Yahweh delivers,” and as such is identical with the name “Joshua.”

            What is unique about Hosea is not so much his message as his method. He was chosen, out of a context of marital infidelity, to be an example to the people of their unfaithfulness to God.  When he lived is no problem.  He, himself, describes the time (V1).  He is mentioned only here.  His father is mentioned nowhere else.  Some describe him to be the fruit of some other prophet’s imagination.  He is merely an allegory put to use to make a point.  Not so!  It is the story of compromised love under the stress of the times.

            We have described previously the time of Joel and Jonah and Amos.  It was a time of material imbalance.  The rich grew richer.  The poor, poorer.  God’s word must touch the lives of all of them.

I.          Examining the Prophecy in Profile.  V1, “The word of the Lord that came unto Hosea, the son of Beeri, in the days of Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah, kings of Judah, and in the days of Jeroboam, son of Joash.”

There were no more than fifty years between the death of Jeroboam and the Assyrian invasion.  Hezekiah was on the throne in Judah. A kind of renewal was taking place.  But in the north, debauchery was everywhere.

George Adam Smith, “It is not only as in Amos,  the sins of the luxurious, of them that are at ease in Zion, which are exposed; but literal bloodshed, highway robbery/murder, abetted by the priests . . . .  Israel’s self-reliance is gone.  She is as fluttered as a startled bird; ‘They call to Egypt, they go to Assyria,’ (Hosea 7:11).  But everything is hopeless.  Kings cannot save.  For Ephraim is seized in the pangs of a fatal crisis.” 

One named Jehu had been the instrument  of judgment upon the earlier  sins of Israel.  Jehu’s sons to the fourth generation were to come to the throne.  II Kings 10:30; II Kings 15:12:  “And so it came to pass.”  Jehoahaz (17), Jehoash (16), Jeroboam II (4), and Zechariah (6 mo.)  From the time of Jeroboam II, a grim picture comes into view.  Of Jehu and his descendants evil “departed not from the sins of Jeroboam.” II Kings 10:31, 13:2, 13:11, 14:24, 15:9 (6 mo.)  The rest of the story is one of assassination.  Zechariah (6mo), Shallum (1mo), Manahem (10 y died), Pekahiah (2y), Pekah (20y), Hoshea (9y captivity).

Sidlow Baxter

“Things were even worse morally and spiritually than they were politically.  Ever since the days of the first Jeroboam, when the ten tribes had disrupted from the house of David to form a separate kingdom, the worship of the golden calf at Bethel had been a snare to Israel.  Although the Bethel calf was supposed at first to  represent Jehovah, yet more and more the idol itself became the object of worship. . . .  Thus the way was paved for the coarse, cruel nature-worship associated with the names of Baal and Ashteroth, with all the attendant abominations  of child sacrifice and revolting licentiousness.”

II.         Hosea’s Marriage  Became the Symbol of the Crisis.  V2, “Go, take unto thee a wife of whoredoms.”

            Thus is established the insensibility of sin.  Hosea is pictured as from a faithful remnant of spiritual people.  He chooses a woman named Gomer as wife. He is directed to take a prostitute for a wife. 

Zanah—fornicate, apostatize; or, he is told to take a woman out of such a culture.

Eretz—land (with its inhabitants).

            He chooses one with a propensity to moral failure.  Some thus call it an allegory.  The marriage produces three children:  Jezreel—“God sows”; Lo-ruhamah—“not loved” (uncertain); Loammi—“not my people” (no doubt).

            God will assess their sin and punish it:  They will respond as a people not loved (Proverbs 13:24); separated from God they become foreigners.  But the heart of God is revealed here and the intent of the book.  V6, “I will have mercy, . . . I will take them away.” V10, “In the place where it was said unto them, ye are not my people. . . .”

            The guilt of sin at every age is going to be measured and manifested.  Gomer was guilty as charged.  She pays.  Her sin is like the sin of the nation.  They, too, must pay for their sin.  Once restitution has been made, restoration is in order.  Hosea 2:23, “And I will say to them which were not my people, ‘Thou art my people’; and they shall say, ‘Thou art my God.’”

            The supreme criterion of relationship is love.  Gomer accepts Hosea’s proposal.  For a time the marriage is wholesome, v3.  In boredom she seeks other pursuits, 2:5.  Hosea seeks her out and redeems her from so-called friends who enslaved her.  He seeks to do, not as the law allows, but as love demands.  Jeremiah 3:1, “. . . ‘Thou hast played the harlot with many lovers; yet return again to me,’ saith the Lord.”

III.       Israel’s Sin: The Indictment of Circumstance.  Hosea 4:1, “Hear the word of the Lord, ye children of Israel: for the Lord hath a controversy with the inhabitants of the land.”

            It is with the nation.  Four  of last five commandments (4:2).  The land will be affected by this human distraction (4:3).

            It is with the religious leaders:  striving between people/priest (4:4); priests have forgotten the law; prophets “fall” used both figuratively and  in relation to their roles;  people/priests (4:9) instead of strengthening are enticing to ruin.  Hosea 5:1, “. . . and my people love to have it so.”

            There is a mediating word to Judah (Hosea 4;15).  Be different in worship (v15).  Be different in obedience (v16). 

            Stopped at Animal Land near Dallas.  Children’s zoo revealed a pesky goat trying to feed anywhere, whatever.  A lamb nearby waiting docilely to be fed.

            The next chapter reveals that Judah will not heed this warning (Hosea 5:5).

            They have therefore sinned and are marked for judgment.  God waits for sincere repentance (Hosea 5:15).  He is not moved by their insincerity.  Hosea 6:4, “goodness as a morning cloud”; 6:6, “I desire mercy, and not sacrifice.”  Three things in Israel that God hates: Compromise (7:7,8a), limited development (7:8b), unconscious decay (7:9).

IV.       Israel’s Punishment:  The Judgment of Compromise.  Hosea 8:4-10, “They have set up kings,, but not by me.  They have made princes, and I knew it not: . . . they have made them idols. . . .  Thy calf, O Samaria, hath cast thee off. . . .”

            There is judgment on compromise in political life.  Hosea 8:4, “They have set up kings, but not by me; they have made princes, and I knew it not.  We will do well to remember that we do not surprise God.  The sense of “knew it not” is that God had not been sought for direction.

            There was judgment on compromise in religious life.  8:5, “Thy calf, O Samaria.” 8:11, “Ephraim hath made many altars to sin.”  8:12, “I have written to him the great things of my law, but they were counted as a strange thing.” 

            There was judgment on compromise  in economic betterment.  8:14, “Judah hath multiplied fenced cities: but I shall send a fire . . . and it shall devour the palaces thereof.”  9:2, “The floor and the winepress shall not feed them, and the new wine shall fail in her.”

            There was judgment on compromise in family life.  9:12, “Though they bring up their children yet I will bereave them.”  9:16, “Though they bring forth, yet will I slay even the beloved fruit of their womb.”

V.        Israel’s Restoration: The Yearning of Covenant Love.

            It is the passionate love of a true father for the child.  Hosea 11:1, “When Israel was a child, then I loved him, and called my son out of Egypt.”  Same word “love” used by God of Abraham for Isaac (Genesis 22:2).  The weight of spiritual/moral things should be pressed upon parents.  Getting them involved in drug alert.

            More, it is the burning love of a husband for his wife.  See 11:7-12 picture of betrayal and rebellion.  11:8, “How shall I give up, Ephraim?”  Isaiah 62:4,5, portrays this idea.  The pastor is allowed to look in on great love affairs.

            It is the love of a parent in the deep regret of some necessary punishment.  This is going to hurt me more than you.  Tough love.  Hosea 12:9, “And I that am the Lord thy God from the land of Egypt will yet make thee to dwell in tabernacles.”

            It is the love of one who has chanced all on the outcome of love.  14:8, “Ephraim shall say, What have I to do any more with idols?  I have heard him, and observed him: I am like a green fir tree: from me is thy fruit found.” 

            Isaiah 58:11, “And the Lord shall guide thee continually, and satisfy thy soul in drought, and make fat thy bones: and thou shalt be like a watered garden.”

Links and References

Smith              https://www.britannica.com/biography/George-Adam-Smith

Baxter              https://www.abebooks.com/9780801012747/Sidlow-Baxter-Heart-Awake-Authorized-0801012740/plp?ref_=ps_ms_267691761&cm_mmc=msn-_-comus_dsa-_-naa-_-naa&msclkid=44c75692fc1f135ed4373c9a7a986da2

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DISCOVERING GLADNESS