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Amos

Amos. Coastland University. Key Verse. Amo 3:7 Surely the Lord GOD does nothing Unless He reveals His secret counsel To His servants the prophets. The Writing Prophets of the Divided Kingdom Stage. Who Was Amos?. Amos means “burden” or “borne” Layman, shepherd, and ‘tended’ to fig trees

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Amos

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  1. Amos Coastland University

  2. Key Verse • Amo 3:7 Surely the Lord GOD does nothing Unless He reveals His secret counsel To His servants the prophets.

  3. The Writing Prophets of the Divided Kingdom Stage

  4. Who Was Amos? • Amos means “burden” or “borne” • Layman, shepherd, and ‘tended’ to fig trees • From Tekoa in Judah (Southern Kingdom) • About ten miles south of Jerusalem

  5. Artificial Ripening and The Riddle of Amos’ Occupation Amos 7,14 - I was no prophet, neither was I a prophet’s son, but I was a herdsman and a gatherer of sycamore fruit. The English phrase “gatherer of sycamore fruits” is an “odd” translation of the Hebrew Boless shikmim Shikmim = sycamores = wild figs Boless = obscure, mentioned only once in the Bible The Problem The Hebrew word for gatherer is Ossef The Hebrew word for gash is boless Thus, boless probably means gash,pierce, or wound

  6. Knives used for gashing of sycomore figs in Egypt

  7. Bas-relief showing a sycomore tree with gashed fruit. Found at Thebes, Egypt.

  8. Gashed Sycomore Fruit from Egypt.

  9. Who Was Amos? (cont.) • Amos wrote this book probably about 760- 750 B.C., time during which he served as a prophet to Israel • This was the time during the reigns of Jeroboam II king of Israel and Uzziah (Azariah) king of Judah

  10. Who Was Amos? (cont.) • God gave him a vision of the future • Told him to take His message to Israel (Northern Kingdom)

  11. Amos was from Tekoa, south of Jerusalem • His Prophecy is directed toward the Northern Kingdom of Israel. ISRAEL •Tekoa JUDAH

  12. Amos 7:14-16 14 Then Amos answered and said to Amaziah, "I am not a prophet, nor am I the son of a prophet; for I am a herdsman and a grower of sycamore figs. 15 But the LORD took me from following the flock and the LORD said to me, 'Go prophesy to My people Israel.'16 And now hear the word of the LORD: you are saying, 'You shall not prophesy against Israel nor shall you speak against the house of Isaac.'

  13. God’s Temperament in Amos • In Amos God is portrayed as a ferocious lion and a consuming fire • But even in anger God is merciful. He always warned his people before inflicting punishment upon them

  14. God’s Judgment • God proclaims: “For three sins of _______, even for four, I will not turn back [my wrath].” • Sins of… • Damascus (Aram-Syria, etc.) • Gaza (Philistia) • Tyre (Phoenicia [North West Palestine]) • Edom – descendents of Essau – half breeds • Ammon – sons of Lot by his daughter • Moab – eldest son of Lot by one of his daughters • Judah • Israel

  15. Historical Setting • Political Setting • Defeat of Judah • Fall of Aram • Decline of Egypt and Assyria • Economic Setting • Religious Setting • Pluralistic Religion • Religion without Reality ISRAEL JUDAH

  16. God’s Reasons for Judgment • Because of God’s blessings, Israel had become rich and prosperous- they became self-sufficient, greedy, corrupt, and unjust • 2 Kings 14:23-28 • They were cruel to and were oppressing the poor, even selling them into slavery • They also had a hypocritical religion- had turned away from God but still carried on religious traditions and worshiped idols

  17. Covenant Lawsuit • Parties Introduced (3:1). • Covenant Indictment (3:2). • Sovereignty of the Sovereign (3:3-8) • Summons of the Guilty (3:9). • Judgment (3:10-15).

  18. ISRAEL Bashan JUDAH

  19. Amos 5 • Seek Me that you may live (5:4) • Seek the Lord that you may live (5:6) • Seek good and not evil, that you may live (5:14)

  20. Amos’ Visions of Judgment • Swarm of locusts (7:1-3) • God was preparing punishment upon Israel but he delayed it because Amos prayed that He have pity them • Fire (7:4-6) • God was preparing to devour Israel with fire but Amos intervened again • Amos would pray saying: “Sovereign Lord, I beg you, stop! How can Jacob survive? He is so small!”(7:2,5)

  21. Amos’ Visions of Judgment (cont.) • Wall and plumb line (7:7-17) • God would see if his people were crooked and, if they were, He would punish them • Basket of ripe fruit (8:1-14) • The people were ripe for punishment; they were once beautiful but now they are rotten • God standing by the altar (9:1-10) • Judgment would begin and punishment executed

  22. Amos Gets Rejected • Amaziah, priest of Bethel, sent this message to Jeroboam: (7:10-11) • “Amos is sending a conspiracy against you in the very heart of Israel against you in the very heart of Israel.” • Amaziah said to Amos: (7:12-13) • “Get out you seer! Go back to the land of Judah. Earn your bread there and do your prophesying there. Don’t prophesy anymore in Bethel, because this is the king’s sanctuary and the temple of the kingdom.”

  23. The famine of God’s Word… • Amos 8:

  24. Israel’s Restoration • Because Israel was a chosen people (3:2) God punished them for their sins and destroyed them. But God promised that he would not blot out their name completely. Some, the true believers, were saved • God’s covenant with David in 2 Samuel 7:12-16 stated that one of David’s descendants would always sit on his throne

  25. Israel’s Restoration (cont.) • The promise was not to be fulfilled by an earthly political leader, but by the Messiah, who would renew the spiritual kingdom and rule forever • 9:11,12 • “In that day I will restore David’s fallen tent. I will repair its broken places, restore its ruins, and build it as it used to be, so that they may possess the remnant of Edom and all the nations that bear my name,” declares the Lord, who will do these things.

  26. Israel’s Restoration (cont.) • 9:15 • “They will plant Israel in their own land, never again to be uprooted from the land I have give them,” says the Lord your God.

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