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Monday, August 25, 2025

Hosea, Part IV

Throughout these verses, you hear God expressing Himself with highly charged words.  You can interpret the words one of two ways: (1) He is vengeful and punishing towards Israel, (2) He is angry and spiteful, giving it as good as He gets, (3) He is broken-hearted and anguished, speaking with words that are at one moment just, and another moment, merciful.

Which number you pick depends on how you see God. 

With #1, you could say, Why wouldn't He be angry at Israel?  Look at how they have betrayed Him, worshipping other gods and ascribing His goodness to them!  I'd punish them too!  I'd allowed the Assyrians to march in, and as they did, I would cheer them on.

So, for you, God is an agent of wrath, just waiting for the right moment to strike, because, after all, we deserve it. 

With #2, you could say, Of course, God holds grudges.  He not only sees our sin, but harps on our failings and shortcomings, because we never seem to get it right in His eyes.  There's no pleasing Him.  No wonder He's always upset about something. He needs to give us a break.

So, for you, God is never pleased with anything you do, for His standards are too high.  He focuses only on the negative and is quick to condemn you. 

With #3, you could say, He's my Father and if I am sinning, I am throwing darkness towards His light, disobedience against His love and accusation against His kindness.  I focus on myself and fail to see His hurt as that wall of sin grows taller and taller and shuts Him out.  He loves me with a fierce love and will do anything to win me back.  If that includes suffering, He will allow it.  He will watch me with grief but chastens me so I may see the error of my ways. He is just but His mercy is new every morning, whether I deserve it or not.  His love is not based on my how much or how little I deserve it; it's based on me simply being His child.

So, as we read Hosea, you can interpret God in many ways as He speaks to and through Hosea. Perhaps Hosea's greatest gift to us is presenting a God who cares.  If He was truly vengeful, He would have give His people no warning (they deserve what's coming to them anyway, right?) and when the Assyrians showed up, they would have been shocked.

God's love cannot help but point to Israel's sinful behavior and He will do anything to convince Israel to turn from her pursuit of spiritual adultery.  

(Jesus dying on a cross comes to mind here.)

If we think God is not willing to give His people a break, it's good to know that Hosea prophesied for over 25 years [1] before God allowed the Assyrians to invade Israel.

25 years of warning, pleading, showing, cajoling...God is patient.  He seeks the restoration not and  the destruction of His people. This shows His patience, mercy and love. 

In verses 2:9-12, God removes His material blessings from Israel.  He bestowed them out of love for His people, honoring His covenant to be their God, and now He removes those blessings. Why?  

We use the word, "enablement" today.  Think of it this way:  If God continues to provide to His people, ignoring their sinful ways, what will induce them to change?  Their behavior, whether good or bad, yields the same result: blessings. Why then be good?  Sin is lot more fun.  Chasing after temple prostitutes.  Doing whatever you want to the poor, the needy, and the widow.  Laughing with your neighbors over how great Baal's provision is!  You see it everywhere!

We know enabling the drug addict, the alcoholic, the abuser, the manipulator, the whiner, the "victim" (you name it) does not bring about the change the person truly needs. We talk about "rock bottom."  When you are flat on your back, that's when you look up.  

If we don't do this, knowing how counter-productive it is, why do we expect God to enable our sin and then accuse Him of being unkind when He won't? 

God is clear as to His next step: 

"I will punish her for the days
she burned incense to the Baals;
she decked herself with rings and jewelry,
and went after her lovers,
but me she forgot,”
declares the Lord. (2:16-17) 

But God is not abusive, punishing more than He needs to.  The punishment fits the crime.  But in the rest of the verses, (way longer than the verses outlining the punishment) He wants to restore Israel and lavish on her His love and bounty: 

“Therefore I am now going to allure her;
I will lead her into the wilderness
and speak tenderly to her.
There I will give her back her vineyards,
and will make the Valley of Achor a door of hope.
There she will respond as in the days of her youth,
as in the day she came up out of Egypt." (2:14-15) 

"Achor" means "trouble." God is putting an expiration date on the punishment, but His love is everlasting. 

"In that day,” declares the Lord,
“you will call me ‘my husband’;
you will no longer call me ‘my master.’
I will remove the names of the Baals from her lips;
no longer will their names be invoked..." (2:16-17) 

Restoration.  A marriage that is whole, faithful, loving.  Not at all the kind of marriage Hosea has and one that Israel is now demonstrating.  Where's the revenge?  Where's the "you get what you deserve" attitude?  God is the opposite of that.  He brings peace and safety to a people who now obey Him and have felt His chastisement for just the right amount of time. God's goal is always repentance, not rejection.   

"Bow and sword and battle
I will abolish from the land,
so that all may lie down in safety.
I will betroth you to me forever;
I will betroth you in righteousness and justice,
in love and compassion.
I will betroth you in faithfulness,
and you will acknowledge the Lord..." (2:18-20) 

Remember Hosea's children? All along God wanted these names to be what He called His children. 

"I will show my love to the one I called ‘Not my loved one.
I will say to those called ‘Not my people,' ‘You are my people’;
and they will say, ‘You are my God.’” (2:23) 

After this utterance, did Hosea go home and embrace his children, celebrating how their names, just like Israel's, were going to change? 


[1] Steven Hovater, "Historical Background of Hosea—Assyria," https://stevenhovater.com/2011/05/30/historical-background-of-hosea-assyria




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