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Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Hosea XXIV: Confession and Restoration

God's final words to His people encourage them to confess so that they may be restored. 

Isn't that what God is all about?

No, God is not vengeful.  

That would imply He strikes us out of anger.

That He has a contentious and capricious spirit.

That He bears a heart that wishes to crush us without mercy by ignoring our pleas.

That He leaves a debris trail behind Him, and walks out of our lives satisfied that He made it clear who is Boss.

(That sounds like us, not Him.)

Perish the thought!

Throughout Hosea, God has warned and wooed.

Cautioned and cajoled.

How have the people reacted? 

Let's start with chapter 14, the final chapter of Hosea, and watch one more time this striking interplay between His justice and mercy.

Return, O Israel, to the Lord your God,
   for your sins have brought you down.
Bring your confessions, and return to the Lord.
Say to him,
“Forgive all our sins and graciously receive us,
so that we may offer you our praises
Assyria cannot save us,
nor can our warhorses.
Never again will we say to the idols we have made,
‘You are our gods.’
No, in you alone
do the orphans find mercy” (1-3).

God even gives them the words to say.  This passage feels as if it's a kind of ceremony, such as a wedding, with vows to be spoken. When the priest or pastor says to the couple, "Repeat after me," those words are binding once the couple speak them.  

God is effectively saying, "Repeat after Me," and those words are binding once the people speak them.  He will accept the words as a confession their sins, as they choose to turn from their evil ways. 

Then the Lord, if His people confess their sins, says, as if He is reciting a vow, 

The Lord says,
“Then I will heal you of your faithlessness;
my love will know no bounds,
for my anger will be gone forever.
I will be to Israel
like a refreshing dew from heaven.
Israel will blossom like the lily;
it will send roots deep into the soil
like the cedars in Lebanon.
Its branches will spread out like beautiful olive trees,
as fragrant as the cedars of Lebanon.
My people will again live under my shade.
They will flourish like grain and blossom like grapevines.
They will be as fragrant as the wines of Lebanon (4-7).

Because of His covenantal relationship with His people, these words are indeed like a vow.  He made His covenant with His people a long time ago, vowing to stand by Israel.  His adherence to the covenant was not based on Israel's obedience. If that were so, God would have abandoned it and His people a long time ago. No, He upholds the covenant, because it is based on His loving-kindness.  

The word for lovingkindness and covenant are the same: hesed.  

How else could God deal with a sin-soaked universe and a desperately fallen people?  If He based it on anything else but His beautiful lovingkindness, we would have no hope.  

God wants to bring His people back to a new life, one that is vibrant, alive and in love with Him.  In other words, God's renewal always has one goal: to restore our relationship with Him.  And as a result, with each other.

God's last words to His people through Hosea are ones that should seep into our own hearts: 

O Israel, stay away from idols!
I am the one who answers your prayers and cares for you.
I am like a tree that is always green;
all your fruit comes from me (8). 

Wow.  Do you hear Jesus' words here?  

I am the true vine, and my Father is the gardener. He cuts off every branch in me that bears no fruit, while every branch that does bear fruit he prunes so that it will be even more fruitful. You are already clean because of the word I have spoken to you. Remain in me, as I also remain in you. No branch can bear fruit by itself; it must remain in the vine. Neither can you bear fruit unless you remain in me.

I am the vine; you are the branches. If you remain in me and I in you, you will bear much fruit; apart from me you can do nothing. If you do not remain in me, you are like a branch that is thrown away and withers; such branches are picked up, thrown into the fire and burned. If you remain in me and my words remain in you, ask whatever you wish, and it will be done for you. This is to my Father’s glory, that you bear much fruit, showing yourselves to be my disciples (John 15:1-8). 

Only through God, born anew by confessing our sins and asking Him to live in us, can we produce the kind of fruit He greatly desires from us:  love, devotion, obedience and relationship.

I love God's last words, spoken by a prophet who has walked this long journey with God's people and wants them to think long and hard about the future: 

Let those who are wise understand these things.
Let those with discernment listen carefully.
The paths of the Lord are true and right,
and righteous people live by walking in them.
But in those paths sinners stumble and fall (9).

Wise words then.  

Wise words now. 

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