October 3, 2011
Central Truth
Our sin is serious. God's holiness demands that our sin be dealt with in a manner that satisfies His justice. What God accomplished through the cross is the ONLY thing that satisfies His justice to bring us salvation.
Yet I have been the Lord your God
Since the land of Egypt;
And you were not to know any god except Me,
For there is no savior besides Me.
(Hosea 13:4)
1
When Ephraim spoke, there was trembling;
he was exalted in Israel,
but he incurred guilt through Baal and died.
2
And now they sin more and more,
and make for themselves metal images,
idols skillfully made of their silver,
all of them the work of craftsmen.
It is said of them,
“Those who offer human sacrifice kiss calves!”
3
Therefore they shall be like the morning mist
or like the dew that goes early away,
like the chaff that swirls from the threshing floor
or like smoke from a window.
4
But I am the LORD your God
from the land of Egypt;
you know no God but me,
and besides me there is no savior.
5
It was I who knew you in the wilderness,
in the land of drought;
6
but when they had grazed,
1
13:6
Hebrew according to their pasture
they became full,
they were filled, and their heart was lifted up;
therefore they forgot me.
7
So I am to them like a lion;
like a leopard I will lurk beside the way.
8
I will fall upon them like a bear robbed of her cubs;
I will tear open their breast,
and there I will devour them like a lion,
as a wild beast would rip them open.
9
He destroys
2
13:9
Or I will destroy
you, O Israel,
for you are against me, against your helper.
10
Where now is your king, to save you in all your cities?
Where are all your rulers—
those of whom you said,
“Give me a king and princes”?
11
I gave you a king in my anger,
and I took him away in my wrath.
12
The iniquity of Ephraim is bound up;
his sin is kept in store.
13
The pangs of childbirth come for him,
but he is an unwise son,
for at the right time he does not present himself
at the opening of the womb.
14
I shall ransom them from the power of Sheol;
I shall redeem them from Death.
3
13:14
Or Shall I ransom them from the power of Sheol? Shall I redeem them from Death?
O Death, where are your plagues?
O Sheol, where is your sting?
Compassion is hidden from my eyes.
15
Though he may flourish among his brothers,
the east wind, the wind of the LORD, shall come,
rising from the wilderness,
and his fountain shall dry up;
his spring shall be parched;
it shall strip his treasury
of every precious thing.
16
4
13:16
Ch 14:1 in Hebrew
Samaria shall bear her guilt,
because she has rebelled against her God;
they shall fall by the sword;
their little ones shall be dashed in pieces,
and their pregnant women ripped open.
This is a tough passage to get through. At least it was for me the first time I read it. The language used by the Lord in this chapter, and most of Hosea for that matter, is pretty dramatic. We see God as a lion and leopard stalking prey. He is a mother bear robbed of her cubs and ripping open the perpetrator. We hear of little ones being dashed to pieces and pregnant women being ripped open. Geesh!
It's easy for me to get consumed by the harsh language and metaphors and completely miss what this all points to: the holiness and infinite mercy of our amazing Father! I think this chapter perfectly breaks down what we as utterly depraved humans must battle against every single day. Let's see if we can relate to Israel's pitfalls. We see Israel looking to man-made things for joy, life, and salvation (verse 2). We see Israel getting proud in their prosperity and forgetting who even allowed it to develop (verse 6). We see Israel compared to a baby who refuses to exit the womb at the proper time and experience full life outside of the womb (verse 13). This doesn't sound like us at all, does it?
As I studied this chapter, I was struck by the fact that I often don't view these actions as seriously as God does. Let's take a look back at that harsh language. These are all pictures of what our stubborn sin deserves. They are extremely dramatic, but truthfully they don't scratch the surface of the gap between God's holiness and our depravity. God takes these actions extremely seriously. His holiness leaves Him no other option. But the blinding light in the middle of all of this is verse 4. God is our Savior! In His perfect wisdom, He devised a way for His wrath to be satisfied so that we might have more intimate fellowship with Him than the Israelites could have ever imagined. Christ satisfied God's wrath perfectly. Reading this chapter through this lens can make dramatic and unsettling words produce deep joy in our hearts because of God's mercy.
1. How often do you take a real look at the seriousness of your sin and allow that to hammer home the beauty of God's mercy?
2. Which of Israel's pitfalls described in this chapter do you struggle with most? Why do you think that is?
3. What might you need to let go of to find life in apart from Christ?
WEEKLY FAMILY ACTIVITY
HOSEA 13–JOEL 3 (OCTOBER 3-7)
Read Joel 1–2:13.
What is the story that Joel wants the people to pass down to their children?
Why is this an important story? (Answer: God wants us to know that destruction will happen at the end of time, just like it did in Joel's time with the locusts. It is important for us to be secure in our hearts of who God is to us, just like it was important for Israel to know who God was to them.)
What or who do you put your confidence in, other than God? (Help your kids think about different things: friendships, good grades, a sports team, mom and dad, no spankings, etc.)
How might those things/people fail you?
Reread Joel 2:12-13.
The Israelites had put their confidence in things besides God. Where does God want us to turn? Why is God who we need to confidently believe in with our hearts?
Get a piece of red paper. Tear out a heart. (Remember it is not about being perfect, it is about our hearts trusting God.) On one side, write all the things that could create a false sense of confidence/security (like a life without locusts). On the other side, write Joel 2:32a.