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Week 2: Hosea

Introduction

Last week we saw the beginnings of the Northern Kingdom of Israel. From the very beginning, they setup idols and worshipped them and continued in idol worship until the end of the kingdom. But we saw that the Lord never left them without a prophet. 

The word prophet means messenger. A prophet was someone who was sent by God to deliver God's message to the king and to the people. Sometimes we think of a prophet as someone who sees the future - and sometimes, that is the role of a prophet - The Lord reveals to him what is GOING to happen. But that is a narrow view of the prophets. The work and messages of the prophets was to reveal the will of God. 

After the split of the Kingdom, Elijah and Elisha were our first big prophets. After them came the written prophets - 17 prophets whose prophecies are written and preserved in the Holy Scripture. We have 12 prophets called "Minor" because their books are shorter - Hosea, Amos, Micah, Joel, Obadiah, Jonah, Nahum, Habbakkuk, Zephaniah, Haggai, Zechariah, Malachi. And then there are four prophets called "Major" because their books are longer - Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel and Daniel. And Jeremiah also wrote the Lamentations. And then we have the prophet Baruch who is the disciple of Jeremiah. So a total of 17 written prophets.

These prophets were persecuted by Israel - that's why the Lord says in Matthew 5 "Blessed are you when they revile and persecute you, and say all kinds of evil against you falsely for My sake. Rejoice and be exceedingly glad, for great is your reward in heaven, for so they persecuted the prophets who were before you." and later in the gospel, when He laments over Jerusalem and says: "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the one who kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to her!"

They did not have an easy time. Isaiah was sawn in half. Some prophets were killed by the sword, or stoned, or beaten to death. Daniel, for example, was thrown in the lions' den.

Each book starts with "The word of the Lord that came to ..." (prophet name). The prophets were preaching a message of repentance but were also preaching about the coming of the Messiah. There is a strong message that as humans, there is nothing we can do for our own salvation, but there is One coming - a Messiah - who will save us. The prophets were speaking relative to their time period. 

We have three categories for the time periods of the prophets. Pre-exilic prophets, exilic prophets, and post-exilic prophets. Each prophet spoke to his generation - so a pre-exilic prophet like Hosea would say something like "Repent for the captivity is coming." Jeremiah would say "Repent so that the captivity would end." Zechariah would say "The captivity is over, cling to the Lord because the Messiah is coming."

Studying the prophets is different from studying the historical books or the poetic books. Most people consider the Prophetic books to be the most difficult to understand. Fr Daoud Lamei says you can read Genesis and Exodus and understand 80% of it without any sort of commentary or help. Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy is a little bit harder around 60% but still doable. Historical Books after that are all stories - you read a story and meditate on it. And you'll understand almost 100% of it by yourself. Poetic books, are hit and miss. You might read a verse and understand it, and read another and not understand it. Some verses need commentary and some are easy to understand. But when you come to the prophets, without any commentary or someone to explain it, it's like 20%. 

The reader needs to understand the time period and what the prophet is talking about. St Augustine says that some passages in Scripture are easy to understand, and some are hard and compares it with food. He says: "The Holy Spirit has, with admirable wisdom and care for our welfare, so arranged the HOly Scriptures as by the plainer passages to satisfy our hunger, and by the more obscure to stimulate our appetite. For almost nothing is dug out of those obscure passages which may not be found set forth in the plainest language elsewhere." (On Christian Doctrine - Book 2, Chapter 6). Sometimes I'm hungry and I need a quick meal and I'll eat whatever. But other times, I have a craving, or I'm looking for complex flavor. Still, both meals will provide me with the necessary sustenance. 

We will start to study the minor prophets with the Prophet Hosea. Hosea is pre-exilic, one of the earliest prophets, and in the same time as him were Amos, Micah and Isaiah the prophets. 

The name Hosea in Arabic is "Hosha3" like what the people were crying out on Palm Sunday: "Hosha3na" - Hosanna. Save us. It means "God saves" and is very close to the name of "Joshua" Ya-shoo3 (Ya --> Yahweh, shoo3 like sha3). Or Jesus (Ya Soo3). It's also very close to Isaiah - Ash3-ya - "The Lord is Salvation"

What are some features of the book of Hosea?

1 - The book of Hosea reveales the relationship of the Lord with His people. The Lord loves His people, and longs for His people.

2 - The people of God are introduced as His bride; yet the bride is afflicted with a sickness. Being her Groom, He approaches her as the true Physician, who alone, can cure her. What is this sickness?
- Lack of knowledge
- Attachment to the Land
- Loss of fulfillment
- Lack of discernment
- Nonchalance
- Pride
- Seeking God's gifts, rather than a relationship and unity with Him

On top of all of that, there is the idolatry and worship of Baal... the harlotry of Israel, seeking after other gods when they have the One True God. And in participating in the idolatry, they fall into magic, adultery, and all sorts of abominations.

3 - Repentance. No matter how often Israel falls, the Lord accepts the repentant heart, again because of His love.

May the Lord grant us to study the prophets and to glean from them His will as those same prophets revealed to God's people His will thousands of years ago. May it be an opportunity to look circumspectly and see ourselves in Israel, and may it be for our edification and salvation.

We'll read two chapters per day, and since Sunday is a catch-up day, we will finish next Monday, God willing.

Chapter 1

Chapters 1-3 of Hosea constitute the first part of the prophecy of this book.

God tells Hosea to take for himself a wife from the harlots and children of harlotry because the land has committed great harlotry. 

First off, this is a hard saying for Hosea to hear. Many of the fathers say that Gomer, his wife, did not commit harlotry until after they were married. Harlotry is the word for prostitution - in those days of Israel, there was the worship of Baal and as we mentioned before, that worship included abominations like fornication, harlotry, other sexual immorality, magic and things like that. So this is a woman who after they got married and had children, would go and worship Baal and commit adultery. A very hard saying for Hosea

But the Lord is making a point here - God has taken Israel as His bride. He is her Groom. And she has committed adultery. God is revealing to us how He feels. Imagine being a husband or wife and your spouse does something behind your back - like if I agreed with my wife we wouldn't make a big purchase and then I found out she made the purchase behind my back. Or a wife agrees with her husband to register their kids in a certain school and he goes and registers them in a different school. Even with examples like this that are not adultery, it is a betrayal, it is unfaithfulness. It's not a good feeling. This is how the Lord feels. Israel has committed adultery to her Groom.

What is the message to us? In the New Testament, the Church is the Bride of Christ... So I ask myself. Have I committed idolatry? Have I put something before God? Am I chasing after money, popularity, fitness, titles and degrees, possessions, cars, houses, or anything else at he expense of my spiritual life? 

The books of the Prophets are full of symbols and images like this.

Hosea has three kids:
Jezreel - Yazra3 eel - God plants or God sows. The first fruit of idolatry and rejection of God is simply the natural consequences - the reaping of what we sow. The chastisement that God plants in us are the fruit of our doing. St Paul writes in Galatians 6:8 "For he who sows to his flesh will of the flesh reap corruption, but he who sows to the Spirit will of the Spirit reap everylasting life."

Lo-Rahama - No Mercy - The second fruit of idolatry and rejection of God is that God will not have mercy. The Lord says in verse 6-7: "For I will no longer have mercy on the house of Israel, but I will utterly take them away. Yet I will have mercy on the house of Judah, will save them by the Lord their God, and will not save them by bow, nor by sword or battle, by horses or horseman."

When we read these prophecises, there are several double meanings - on the one hand, it is referring to the captivity. On the other hand, it is referring to the New Testament. One of the keys here is the word "save" or "salvation." What is salvation? When an Israelite would read this, he would think of salvation as being "deliverance from the captivity of Assyria" - or later on "deliverance from the captivity of Babylon" - or "from Persia" - or from the Greeks, or from the Romans, or in the modern day, delivery from the other nations of the land and restoration of the nation and kingdom of Israel. He is thinking about the worldly salvation from the worldly enemies. But when a Christian reads this, we think of salvation from sin, death and corruption. We think of eternal life. We think of what the Lord Jesus Christ accomplished in His Incarnation, Crucifixion and Resurrection.

"I will have mercy on the house of Judah, will save them by the Lord their God, not by bow nor sword or battle, horses or horsemen" - when Judah returns from the Captivity, there is no uprising or revolt or battle - but God puts it in the heart of the Persian King Cyrus that he allows the Jews to go back to their home. And when the Lord Jesus brings about the salvation of mankind, He does not do it with an army or an uprising or a battle. It's a double meaning.

So this second child of Hosea and Gomer, their daughter Lo Rahama, means "No mercy" and refers to Israel - the northern kingdom - which will not see the mercy of God, because they rejected the mercy of God, and chased after other gods.

The third child is called Lo-Ammi "For you are not My people and I will not be your God." This is the final fruit of idolatry and the rejection of God, is that you are no longer God's people. But there is hope... in verse 10

God anticipates their return to Him - but now Hosea is speaking with the prophetic eye about us - the Christians. In the Scripture, when you see references to Israel - many times, it is speaking prophetically about the New Israel which is Christianity.

"Yet the number of the children of Israel shall be as the sand of the sea, which cannot be measured or numbered." - the Lord here is renewing the promise that He made to Abraham - your children will be as the stars of heaven and as the sand of the sea. And indeed, we are all children of Abraham as St Paul says in Galatians 3:7 "Therefore know that only those who are of faith are sons of Abraham. And the Scripture, foreseeing that God would justify the Gentiles by faith, preached the gospel to Abraham beforehand, saying, 'In you all the nations shall be blessed.'"

The Lord continues in Hosea: "And it shall come to pass in the place where it was said to them, 'You are not My people', There it shall be said to them, 'You are sons of the living God.'"
The Israelites always called themselves God's people - but as Christians, we don't really use that title "God's people" - instead, we say that we are "children of God." The Gentiles rejected God first and they were not His people... but now it is the Gentiles who are called sons of the living God. St Paul refers to these verses by name in Romans 9 when He is discussing Israel's rejection. 

"Then the children of Judah and the children of Israel shall be gathered together, and appoint for themselves one head;"

Who is our head, but the Lord Jesus Christ. The children of Judah - which are the Jews who will believe - and the children of Israel - which are the Gentiles who will believe, shall be gathered together under the Lord Jesus Christ as the head, and will be called the Body of Christ: Christians.

"and they shall come up out of the land, for great will be the day of Jezreel."

For a Jew, coming up out of the land means getting out of Assyria or Babylon or Persia... but for a Christian, it means coming up out of the earth and going to heaven. Our sights are on heaven. The holy men - Elijah, Elisha, Moses, - they understood this as we do.

See the prophetic eye? See how the Lord revealed to His prophets what would happen? See how the Lord used his prophet Hosea to leave a message for the ages? The story continues in Chapter 2.

Chapter 2