Minor Prophets: The Book of Jonah

Many treat the book of Jonah as allegory, an attempt to process the nature of God, Godโ€™s purposes for the whole earth, Godโ€™s plan for Godโ€™s people, and to grapple with living in the promised land under foreign control.

Minor Prophets: Amos, God upon the Altar

The people bone weary of Amosโ€™ invectives and angry judgement, yet held in the grip of the powerful voice that seemed to emanate from his entire body.

Minor Prophets: Amos, Basket of Summer Fruit

The first layer of meaning is straightforward. Ripe fruit, when it is plucked from the tree, is cut off. For the harvester, the ripened fruit is a lovely blessing, but for the fruit itself, to be harvested means its time on the tree will come to an end.

Minor Prophets: Amos, Royal Smack Down

When God has called us to something, we cannot do anything else, and we cannot do anything less.

Minor Prophets: Amos, Locusts and Fire

God is true to character, God is just and righteous, and calls Godโ€™s people to be the same. The Lord is also merciful. Only eternity will reveal how much and how often the Lord has spared Godโ€™s people because of the often hidden prayers offered up as intercession.

Minor Prophets: Amos, Three Breaches

What happens when Godโ€™s people lose touch with Godโ€™s values and Godโ€™s character? They do not stop being Godโ€™s people. But. They do experience a profound disconnection from God. Instead of experiencing and living out the exuberant joy of shalom, they create and participate in systems that harm.

Minor Prophets: Amos “Let Justice Roll Down”

They were to allow Godโ€™s core values of justice and righteousness to become their core values, which would be reflected in their compassion and care for the economically, politically, and socially disadvantaged

Minor Prophets: Amos Lowers the Boom

Like one of those disaster sagas, I wonder if the people were numb at this point, hollowed of all feeling, the shock of these words landing like mallets on the taut head of a kettle drum.

Minor Prophets: Amos, Sound the Trumpet!

By chapter 3, the book of Amos begins the recording of three sermons preached to Israel (Chapters 3-5), calling all of God's people to repentance. Each of the sermons begins with the words โ€œHear this word...โ€ Woven throughout Amosโ€™ words were the theologies of the ancient Hebrew faith.

Minor Prophets: Amos and Social Justice

This was not just about Godโ€™s eternal wrath over evil, this was about Godโ€™s temporal judgment over wrongs done to the earth and to each other.