Dwell in the Word: Hosea 2:1-13

Consider these questions as you dwell in Hosea 2:1-13:

1. Hosea's analogy of God's relationship with Israel being likened to an unfaithful wife sheds light on idolatry and Israel's spiritual unfaithfulness. How does this metaphorical portrayal of unfaithfulness highlight the seriousness of Israel's idolatry and its repercussions on their relationship with God?

2. The passage emphasizes God's provision for Israel, which they misappropriated for false worship, neglecting God's true blessings. How does this misdirection of God's gifts signify a deeper spiritual issue? What does it teach us about our perception of God's provisions in our lives today?

3. The chapter concludes with God's declaration of punishment due to Israel's pursuit of false gods and their forgetfulness of Him. In what ways does this punishment serve as an act of God's love and discipline? How can we apply the lesson from Hosea's message to our modern pursuit of fulfillment and faithfulness to God?

Transcript:

 So, as we come to chapter two, we see the root of the issues that are happening between Israel and God are basically idolatry, right? God is using this imagery of an unfaithful wife to help us to understand how Israel has been unfaithful to him. And so, what do we see here? What are the issues that happen as we see in verse eight?

God says and she did not know that it was I Who gave her the grain the wine and the oil and who lavished on her silver and gold which they used for Baal. So, God is saying look I am the one who has provided for you all these things and what did you do? You took them and you offered them as an offering to a false god.  Now, this is helping us to really understand what is going on here.

God has been the one who has been the support of the people of God, right? He has been the support of Israel and Judah. And what do they keep doing? They keep turning away. They are like an unfaithful wife. They are like Gomer has been to Hosea. And so, we see here. That this issue is very serious because they are offering all this stuff that God is blessing them with.

In false worship, they're not getting anything from Baal. Baal is a false god. There is nothing that he will give, they are not going to truly receive any blessings from Baal and so, God is going to expose  how  vapid, how unfulfilling all of this relationship to these false gods is and so we see in verse 11. That God is going to put an end to all the mirth, the feast, the new moons, the sabbaths and all the appointed feasts, all the festivals that they're doing now, some of those may have been sabbaths and appointed feasts that that were directed towards God, but they had adulterated them.

They had adulterated them. They had used them for other reasons. They had made them a part of pagan worship. And so, they are not truly worshiping God. So, God is going to put an end to all that joy. He's going to show them that He is the one that they are to follow by judging them for their sin and their idolatry.

And so, we get down to this last verse, uh, verse 13. And I will punish her for the feast days of the Baals, when she burned offerings to them and adorned herself with her ring and jewelry and went after her lovers and forgot me, declares the lord.  This is why they are being punished because they have forgotten God You've heard me say many times how there was this this flow in the old testament where God would call his people And they would believe and there would be times of wonderful faithfulness to God, but then they would turn away. They would go to idolatry and then God would punish them and bring them back and we have to remember, that while these punishments seem harsh and seem severe, they’re truly an act of mercy. Are they not? Because they have a purpose of disciplining his people, of calling them back to him. And as painful as this language is here, I honestly, I don't like reading it. It's uncomfortable.  But it is calling God's people back to him. Stop Wasting your time on false worship. Stop adorning yourself with false beauty and going after lovers that fault you.  Those false gods is what God means here when he speaks of these lovers. Stop going after them thinking that they're going to give you forgiveness.

That they're going to give you fulfillment.  And so, what does God say that, that they have forgotten him. They have forgotten him.  So, we see here something very important. God punishes the unfaithfulness of his people because he disciplines the ones that he loves. We know this to be true.

So, we need to remember something important. When we are being disciplined It is because God loves us, and we are called to remain faithful. Why? Because God has first been faithful to us. He does not leave us or forsake us. He is the one who gives us what we need. Why would we go after things that cannot fulfill us?

Why would we go after false things that cannot love us, that cannot give us joy, that cannot give us salvation? Why would we do that?  So, we are called here by these harsh words in the book of Hosea to return to the Lord our God. May we desire to be faithful to Him. May we remember that God is the one who truly provides for us.

May we not be thinking that we can somehow provide for ourselves. May we not be thinking that somehow, we are able to do this on our own. We need the Lord. So, may we pursue Him, instead of the things of the world.

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Dwell in the Word: Hosea 2:14-23

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February 27 Sermon: Lord of the Sabbath