(Hosea) : Love and Judgment: God's Dilemma
(Hosea) : Love and Judgment: God's Dilemma
(Hosea) : Love and Judgment: God's Dilemma
*April 612
Sabbath Afternoon
Read for This Weeks Study: Hos. 7:11, 12; 10:1113;
Matt. 11:2830; Rom. 5:8; 1 Pet. 2:24; Hosea 14.
Memory Text: But you must return to your God; maintain love
and justice, and wait for your God always (Hosea 12:6, NIV).
Key Thought: Hosea reveals more of Gods love for His wayward
people.
common way in which biblical authors talk about Gods love relationship with His people is by using metaphors. A metaphor conveys something profound about a lesser-known subject through something that is already known or familiar. Metaphors are symbols used to explain something other than themselves. The two most commonly used biblical metaphors regarding Gods relationship with His people are husband-wife and parent-child metaphors. Last week we looked at the husband-wife metaphor. This week we will look into a few more of Hoseas metaphors, the most dominant of which is the parent-child one. Hosea used metaphors for the same reasons that Jesus taught in parables: First, to explain truths about God through the familiar things of life; second, to impress on peoples minds important spiritual principles that could be applied in everyday existence.
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S unday April 7
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M onday April 8
A Trained Heifer
Read Hosea 10:1113. What message is the Lord giving to His people
here? How do we understand the phrase, until he comes and showers righteousness on you? (NIV). ________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________ In Hosea 10, Gods child, Ephraim, is compared to a trained heifer who loves to thresh grain because she can eat as she threshes. Thus, instead of being productive, Israels existence has become selfcentered. When God yokes Israel to work in open fields as the nation should, righteousness and kindness will grow. In Bible times, the yoke was an instrument of service. Young beasts of burden were trained to be docile by working first on the threshing floor (Jer. 50:11). While yoked, they simply would tread out corn with their feet. At the next stage, they pulled a threshing sledge over the corn (2 Sam. 24:22, NIV). This type of work prepared them for the more disciplined task of plowing a furrow in a field (1 Kings 19:19, Jer. 4:3). God had a similar plan in His training of Israel. He would put a yoke on Ephraims fair neck to make him work hard in the plowing and breaking up of the soil. In Hosea 10:12 the prophet presents what the Lord desires Israel to be through obedience to His word. Righteousness and steadfast love are the gifts promised by God to His wife when the covenant is renewed (Hos. 2:19). If people sow righteousness, they will reap kindness in return. Only by searching for the Lord and His will can Israel be delivered from the coming punishment. The door of mercy is still open for possible repentance on the part of Gods chosen people. The admonition to sow righteousness concerns people-to-people relationships; the search for God concerns the relationship between God and His people. The breaking up of the soil represents spiritual and social reform and renewal. The Lord and His people will work together in a mutual relationship to bring blessings back to the land. The results will be a glorious blossoming that will fill the whole earth (Hos. 14:57). Read Christs invitation to take His yoke upon ourselves (Matt. 11:2830). How can learning from Christ to be gentle and humble in heart (NIV) help us to find rest for our souls? ______________________________________________________
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T uesday April 9
A Toddling Son
When Israel was a child, I loved him, and out of Egypt I called My son. . . . I taught Ephraim to walk, taking them by their arms; but they did not know that I healed them (Hos. 11:1, 3, NKJV). In these verses, Hosea is saying that the Lords way is like the tender care of a new parent. Just as a parent tenderly and patiently teaches a child to walk, taking it up by his hands to prevent its fall, so the Lord has cared for Israel right from the beginning. God, who loves and forgives, is the heart of Hoseas message. Even when He applies discipline, He is deeply compassionate. His anger can be terrifying, but His mercy is beyond comprehension.
3:19. What is the one point that these verses all have in common? What comfort can we draw from these texts? ________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________ Through Moses, God informed the Egyptian king that Israel was His special child (Exod. 4:22, 23). Although all the nations of the earth, including Egypt, were Gods sons and daughters, the Hebrew nation was selected to be Gods firstborn son with special privileges. But along with those privileges came responsibilities. In the wilderness the Lord carried His people in the same way in which a father carries his son (Deut. 1:31, NIV). At times He disciplined them just like a man disciplines his son (Deut. 8:5, NIV). All who in this world render true service to God or man receive a preparatory training in the school of sorrow. The weightier the trust and the higher the service, the closer is the test and the more severe the discipline.Ellen G. White, Education, p. 151. There is no question that any parent who loves his children will discipline them, and always for their own good. If flawed and fallen humans do this, how much more so can we trust in Gods love for us, even during times of trial? For many of us, the issue is not about trusting Gods discipline. Rather, the struggle is knowing how to interpret the trials that come our way. How do we know if what we are going through is, indeed, God teaching us in the school of sorrow or if it is something else? Bring your answer to class on Sabbath. ______________________________________________________
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W ednesday April 10
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T hursday April 11
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F riday April 12
Further Study: Compare the following two quotations with the
messages presented in Hosea 714. Through nature, through types and symbols, through patriarchs and prophets, God had spoken to the world. Lessons must be given to humanity in the language of humanity. . . . The principles of Gods government and the plan of redemption must be clearly defined. The lessons of the Old Testament must be fully set before men.Ellen G. White, The Desire of Ages, p. 34. Through long, dark years when ruler after ruler stood up in bold defiance of Heaven and led Israel deeper and still deeper into idolatry, God sent message after message to His backslidden people. Through His prophets He gave them every opportunity to stay the tide of apostasy and to return to Him. . . . Never was the kingdom of Israel to be left without noble witnesses to the mighty power of God to save from sin. Even in the darkest hours some would remain true to their divine Ruler and in the midst of idolatry would live blameless in the sight of a holy God. These faithful ones were numbered among the goodly remnant through whom the eternal purpose of Jehovah was finally to be fulfilled.Ellen G. White, Prophets and Kings, p. 108.
Discussion Questions:
1 It has been suggested that through Hoseas life and ministry, l 3
Gods word to Israel had in a sense become flesh. How is this idea only a small reflection of the great truth about the humanity of Jesus? See John 1:14.
2 Ancient Israel did not depart from God overnight. Instead, its l
apostasy was a gradual process. Prepare to share with your class members some of the ways in which one can remain faithful to Gods eternal principles in a constantly changing world.
3 Some people believe that the gospel message about Gods l
great love and salvation is presented clearly only in the New Testament and not in the Old. What is wrong with that idea?
4 In class, go over your answer to Tuesdays final question. l 5 The Old Testament was the Bible that Jesus Christ and the l
apostle Paul read. Look into the New Testament quotations from Hosea that are found in Matthew 9:13 and Romans 9: 25, 26. How did Jesus and Paul use the gospel message in Hosea to proclaim truth to us?
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i n s i d e
Stor
Pamela Obero sat beside her mud house in Kenya and listened to the preachers sermon over the loudspeaker. She was curious about the Seventh-day Adventist meetings being held on a nearby vacant lot, even though she belonged to another church. The messages touched Pamelas heart, and at times she felt that the speaker talked directly to her. So, on Sabbath morning she took her five children to the meetings instead of to her own church. When the pastor invited those who wanted special prayer to come forward, Pamela took her children to the front. Her husband had died, and she was the sole support of her family. Life was difficult. Pamela had been an ardent member of the charismatic church to which she belonged. She had donated the land on which the church members built their mud-brick house of worship. So, when she did not attend church for three weeks, some church members visited and asked why she was no longer attending. I have found truth that I never knew before, she told them simply. And I am learning how to properly raise my family. Pamela and her children joined the nearest Seventh-day Adventist church, which was three miles (five kilometers) from her home. Then she learned that the charismatic church to which she had belonged had abandoned the mud-brick church they had built on her land. Pamela invited the church leaders to hold small-group worship services in the abandoned building, and the church accepted her offer. When Pamelas friends from her former church asked her questions about why she had left, she shared with them new truths she had learned and invited them to worship in the new Seventh-day Adventist church their former building. So far three of her friends have joined the Seventhday Adventist group that worships in the mud-brick church. The little congregation of 25 met in the mud-brick church for a year before it deteriorated to where it was no longer safe. The church members decided to rebuild with more permanent materials. Pamela makes and sells porridge and buns to provide for her children. She is poor, but she shares with those in need when she can. When her friends laugh at her poor house, she smiles and tells them, My God is my husband and my provider. He is so good to my family; I cannot thank Him enough. Your mission offerings reach searching hearts like Pamelas around the world. Thank you.
Pamela Obero shares her faith in Kendu Bay, Kenya.
Produced by the General Conference Office of Adventist Mission. Web site: www.AdventistMission.org
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