This is a world of sin; and it is everywhere. Sinful choices. Sinful leaders. Sinful teachers and sin-based practice. . . and, no, I am not speaking about today and the struggles associated with our current moment in history. You read and hear enough about that.
Rather, this is the context that the prophet Hosea lived and served the Lord in. As the end of the Northen Kingdom of Israel drew close, Hosea stood before God’s people with some of the harshest words recorded in the Old Testament. I once attempted to count the sins listed in Hosea’s prophecies against God’s people and I stopped at 44. . . 44 unique sins. Not 10. Like the 10 Commandments. 44 sins.
Hosea’s vivid imagery sets up a stark contrast for us, today. God is well-aware, well acquainted and familiar with the sins of His people and yet Hosea also offers us the rich imagery of our God who will not give up on the relationship He has with us.
“This passage witnesses to God’s compassion toward a people who cannot even repent properly without God’s grace.”[1]
In spite of all our sin, and in spite of the sins of the Israelites, God will not give up on His people. As you think about that today, I wonder how that feels in your life?
Move 1- begging for favor
While we know that God’s grace is the most important truth in this passage, it is not how the passage begins.
Instead, as our passage begins in chapter 5. There in that one verse that I read, God seems aloof. Far off. Willing to walk away; walk back. And this is not a trait or a choice that we associate with God. For there are few hymns, and few confessional statements that affirm that farness of God. Or the aloofness of God. We do not celebrate a God who stands at a distance from us.
We all prefer to confess, and we can testify to how close God is to those who build, and nurture, a relationship with him. Last week I spent time reflecting on the relational nature of God in His Triune sense and I said that God wants us to mimic that relationship with each other. Here in Hosea, God seems to back away from that conclusion.
Verse 15, God is speaking, “I will return again to my place… until they beg for my favor.”
And the place that God returns to, it is not close to His people. It feels, it reads, as far away from us. I wonder when was the last time that you felt God pulling away from you—by God’s choice?
While our world talks about the great pressure that we are under and spends great amounts of time talking about protection and security, or text today, leaves us feeling a bit… vulnerable. And in our vulnerable state, God withdraws.
But even as he withdraws, there is a hint of our good news.
The NRSV uses the word ‘beg.’ Now your Bible might say something like, ‘earnestly seek me’ or ‘seek me early’ when it translates verse 15. As I often like to say, the word choice is important here—and Hosea’s word choice is very important to clear up what God is asking us to do.
The word that I am focuses upon indicates a pre-dawn choice; something done early in the morning. And a task performed earnestly.
Like seeking God’s mercies which are fresh every day. New as we awaken. There is vigilance in this action. An undistracted heart is necessary for as we face each new day, and the challenges of these new days, we recognize that God has placed a redemptive summons right before us as our eyes as we open them and therefore there is but one response.
Just in that little phrase, as God has seemingly withdrawn, the Lord makes space for us press back towards him. To earnestly move towards God.
Is that a choice that you are making, church family? To seek God . . . Not just today on Sunday, in worship for this time or during a time of Bible study at home? But is that a choice that you make each morning as your eyes open as you confront a new day. Hosea calls it ‘begging for God.’
Do you seek the Lord in this way?
In Hosea chapter 5, God wonders if our hearts yearn for him, beg for him in our distress in this way.
Move 2- our response
For as we do. . . well. . . we read the people’s response as chapter 6 begins and this should get you excited.
Now there is a tendency when we ‘make our God’ to make the Lord in a safe, pleasant image. We tone God down a bit. Now this is done in response to how we read about God in the Word. So, an image, or a creation, that elevates this ‘begging’ imagery from chapter 15 that Hosea offers us, and frankly, we tend to tone it down a bit. This makes the message of the Lord a bit more palpable, easier to accept each day.
By doing this, we elevate grace above the reality of the God of Hosea; the God who expressed those 44 sins I began with a short time ago.
Why would a God who wants us to earnestly, prayerfully, seek him, each morning? Why would this God not welcome us with open arms, offer us new mercies each morning, without though, the reality of purging us from sin.
Verse 1 holds this dichotomy up to the church and it asks us to think and to patiently reflect on what God is saying and asking of each person who finds chapter 6.
For in verse 1 we are torn, and we yet healed. Struck down, and yet it is God who binds us up. In that one verse we find such strong language by the prophet that does not easily fit into the mold many have created for God.
And why does this happen? Why are the wounds revealed, because sin is still in the picture—even as grace is also in the picture in Christ.
And it is only as we seek the Lord faithfully, it is only as we know this and accept this, that we are healed and revived as verse 3 tells us.
For once we find the Lord, once we are revived, the entire tone of this passage shifts, and we can respond faithfully to God. While the work in the text began with us… we had to find God. We had to beg; to earnestly seek the Lord each day. We had to confess our sins. The church finds that God’s faithfulness is speaking for the Lord.
For God will not give us up.
Even if our combined behavior might mandate that God should give up on us. Even when 44 sins condemn our behavior and our lack of faith, God does not give up on us.
Move 3- to know God
For in this moment God desires that His church, that you and I, in the words of verse 3, “press on to Know the Lord.”
This idea does not encompass book knowledge. As a Hebrew it is not the ability to confess the Shama in public, or any other confessional statement of the church or society today. It is, instead, the deep ability to discern, to discover, and to know in your very core of being, where nothing can shake or touch you, that “I am the Lord your God.”
This is one of the most profound verbs in the entire Hebrew language. To know in this way stretches the people from a superficial level into a deep, covenantal awareness and intimacy. This knowledge is the place where we hear and feel God whisper our name and draw us close and He did to Moses before a bush that did not burn.
And while we think the Hebrews did not have a depth of relationship as we have with Jesus following his resurrection, to know, in this way, tells each of us, that they did. That they sought it. They longed to know God in this way.
To know God deeply in this way, alters the entire focus and reality of life and mission and ministry for us as the Church. Everything changes when we have sought God and know God. God is no longer living a distance from the people, but God is close and the pre-dawn seeking of God, is the pre-dawn reality of living with God.
For God, the God of Hosea who felt so cold and judgmental, the God who enumerated all those sins, was busy the whole time trying to stay close to his people hoping they could choose the same level of relationship with Him that he was trying to choose with them.
Conclusion
Church family how does it feel to develop a relationship with the Lord who does not give up on you in this way?
For we all have that understanding in our lives as the Church. It should motivate our faith and our work here at Bethesda together. It should underpin all that we do each day for God. For while it might seem that God is pulling back from you, in fact, God has never given up on us.
DM