Sermon Tone Analysis

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Introduction
Welcome
Last week we left everyone in a bad place
Amos has just pronounced judgement on all the nations surrounding Israel and Judah
Then he moved to Judah and finally to Israel itself
There is a progression to the oracles from those nations that weren’t directly connected to God to those that are - those who didn’t have a covenantal relationship with God to those that did
A change is evident in the level of accountability in these oracles because both Judah and Israel have received the covenant stipulations in the Torah and are not just dependent on conscience to develop their sense of right and wrong
Another interesting point to mention is the utter sovereignty that Amos ascribes to God through these oracles
J.A. Motyer writes this:
It is the crowning evidence that Amos is speaking of the God of the whole Bible, the God of the Bible-loving Christian, that in the name of his God he faces a whole world, in all the reality of its cruelties, its unresolved injustices, its privileged and under-privileged peoples, and submits it totally and without reserve to the sway and judgment of the one and only God. … Feel the weight of the monotheism of Amos!
When he reviews the world of the have-nots, the nations who have never received any revelation of Yahweh (1:3–2:3), he takes absolutely no cognizance of the fact that each worshipped a god of its own.
Such information was quite irrelevant.
It was not to that god that they were answerable, nor could that god save them in the day of Yahweh’s wrath.
There was only one God over the whole earth, and to him they must and would render account.
“But much more is it the message of Amos that this truth has its foremost and more abundant application to the people of God themselves (2:4–3:2).
To whom much is given, of him much shall be required.
Judgment will not only come to but will begin at the house of God, and will be manifest there in a seemingly pitiless and all-destroying intensity.”
Tonight we’re going to look at how Amos finishes out this oracle against the nation of Israel
He’s going to shift gears on them a little bit
Instead of merely proclaiming judgement he’s going to remind them of who they are and what God had done for them
First he’s going to talk about God’s provision in Amos 2:9-11
Then he’s going to reveal Israel’s rejection in Amos 2:12
And finally God’s reaction in Amos 2:13-16
Let’s read the text and then explore what it has to say to us today
God’s Provision
Amos 2:9-11; Genesis 15:16; Numbers 13:29, 32-33;
The Amorites
Amos starts off his recounting of God’s provision in an interesting place - with the destruction of the Amorites
The Amorites is a blanket way of describing all of the Caananite people groups
They had inhabited the promised land from the time of Abraham
Amos uses the two strongest and most massive of the native trees in the region emphasizes the stature of the Amorites and draws a clear picture for the Israelites in their mind
These are the people that the spy’s gave the report about when they returned and influenced the Israelites not to enter the Promised Land
God reminds them that He destroyed this people before them with a complete and total destruction
fruit above is a reference to the seed that would allow the tree to survive through generations - destroying the seed would allow no possibility of future life
the root below is a reference not only to the population but the entire civilization that had been established - blotting out all memory of them as if they had never existed
Much like the Anasazi people who disappeared from the southwestern United States in the 12th or 13th centuries
Amos reminds the Israelites that it was not their impressive skills or abilities that defeated the Amorites it was God’s sovereign action on their behalf
The Exodus
The exodus was the singular event that defined the Israelite nation
Amos now turns to this event to remind the Israelites of God’s gracious provision for them in rescuing them from bondage in Egypt
It is a common occurence for the Jews to remind each other of the Exodus
The Psalmists refer back to the Exodus
Stephen referred to the Exodus in his defense before the Sanhedrin
The Exodus points to the deliverance of His people from bondage
The Wilderness
The Israelites took a 4 day journey and turned it into 40 years
They were on the very cusp of entering into the Promised Land when they believed the stories of the 10 spies over those of Caleb and Joshua and refused to enter in to the land God had promised to give them
Despite everything they had seen in Egypt and on the shores of the Red Sea they still doubted
As a result they lost the opportunity to enter in to the Promised Land
Yet God still provided for them
manna from Heaven to feed them
Water from the rocks to give them drink
A pillar of fire to lead them during the night
A cloud to lead them during the day
He protected them from their enemies -
The Nazirites and Prophets
It is interesting that these are the groups that Amos is guided to as an example for the people
This points to the fact that the priesthood was utterly corrupt and therefore a poor example for the people
The nazirite vow was established in Numbers 6
They were to be an example to the Israelites of what a holy life looked like
The two Nazirites that Scripture gives us as examples are Samson
and Samuel (although Samuel was also a prophet)
Prophets were sent to the Israelites to call them back to their covenantal obligations to the Law and to the Lord
Through these two offices God provided for the Israelites a model and guidance for life in their land
God says “is this not so” - this is a rhetorical question because none of these provisions could be disputed
How does this affect us today - can you see God’s provisions in your life through this oracle?
He defeated an enemy in the Amorites that the Israelites could not have defeated on their own
He rescued us out of bondage through the power of His Son’s shed blood
He is even now leading us through the wilderness of this world on our way to the promised land
He has provided us with His Gospel as well as mighty men of the faith that we can listen to and learn from
Have you submitted to His provisions for your life?
Israel’s Rejection
The provisions found in the destruction of the Amorites, the Exodus and in the Wilderness were irrefutable
But Israel still found ways to reject God - the same way they always had - they attacked His teaching and His teachers
This was not new - it had happened during the Exodus
During the time of the Judges
This was the pattern that went all the way back to the Garden of Eden when the Serpent attacked what God had said
This group of Israelites had corrupted even these examples of pure living
They’d forced the Nazirites to compromise their vows by making them drink wine
They’d forced the prophets to stop speaking
In effect this was telling God we don’t want to hear from You anymore - we’re good without You
The same thing is happening in our day and age
Churches have given over to the world’s standards - compromising what has been given down to us in favor of looking like the pagans
homosexual marriage
liberal theology
Bible teaching pastors have been replaced by zip-line riding, Spiderman dressing clowns who do nothing but entertain and exegete the latest Disney film rather than the Bible
A.W. Pink said this
“The vast majority of the churches are in a sorry state!
Those that are out-and-out worldly are at their wits end to invent new devices for drawing a crowd.
Others which still preserve and outward form of godliness often provide nothing substantial for the soul; there is little ministering of Christ to the heart, and little preaching of sound doctrine without which souls cannot be built up and established in the faith.
The great majority of the churches summon some professional speaker to the aid who puts on a high-pressure campaign and secures sufficient new ‘converts’ to take the place of those who have lapsed since he was last with them.
What a farce it all is!
A.W. Pink died in 1952.
Paul warned us that it would be this way
It’s also in the way that we worship, pray and think about God
When we worship are the words that we sing solely about what God is going to do for us without ever recognizing how beautiful, amazing and glorious He is?
How have we rejected God - even by saying thanks for dying for me but I’ll take it from here....
We may not like the reaction
God’s Reaction
Amos 2:13-16;
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