The Famine Will Bring Disaster, vv 12-14

They will wander from sea to sea and from north to east, seeking the word of the LORD, but they shall not find it.

The word “wander” literally means “reel.” The word is used of the reeling of drunkards, of the swaying to and fro of trees in the wind, and the searching of people bewildered. The idea is that these people are wandering about, not knowing what has happened or what to do. You’ve seen the pictures and video of people who escaped front the World Trade Center shortly before it imploded wandering about in the heavy dust, not knowing what has happened or what to do. That’s really the idea of what’s going on here—the people are so bewildered without divine revelation that they do not know what to do.

The people wander from sea to Sea and from north to east, seeking the word of the Lord. The description “from sea to sea” refers to the Mediterranean Sea and the Dead Sea, in other words, this means from east to west. Thus, the people are going everywhere—east and west, north and south—seeking for a prophet but none would be found. Although the people would desire desperately to hear from God, he would not answer them.

In the day of the famine, the fair virgins and strong young men shall faint from thirst. The mention of the fair virgins and strong young men refers to those who would best be able to endure a famine, but the famine is taking a toll on them and they are beginning to fall under the severity of the famine. This shows just how terrible this famine is. It is so severe that those who are best able to endure it cannot endure.

This famine would come upon those who gave themselves to idolatry. The famine would come upon those who swore by the sin of Samaria. The sin of Samaria obviously refers to the golden calves Jeroboam established. That’s clear from the mention of Dan and Beersheba, where Jeroboam erected these golden calves.

These would fall and never rise again. Falling and never rising again certainly refers to the Assyrian invasion when Assyria took the northern kingdom of Israel. Those northern tribes were lost, never to rise again. This underscores just how seriously God takes obedience to his Word. Because the people rejected God’s Word, he was going to reject them—he would send them off and they would no longer he his people. He had given them an opportunity for repentance; in fact, Amos’ preaching was an opportunity for repentance and returning to the Lord, but the people refused to hear him.

We need to understand how seriously God takes obedience to his Word. “Not everyone who says to Me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My Father in heaven” (Matt. 7:21). “This is love, that we walk according to His commandments” (2 Jn. 6).

If we disobey God, he will severely punish us as he did the 10 tribes. At Saul’s coronation, Samuel told the Israelites, “If you do not obey the voice of the LORD, but rebel against the commandment of the LORD, then the hand of the LORD will be against you, as it was against your fathers” (1 Sam. 12:15). Jesus will come to take vengeance “on those who do not know God, and on those who do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ” (2 Thess. 1:8).

Will you receive God’s vengeance for disobedience? Do you need to come and begin obeying the Lord this morning?

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The Famine Will Come, v 11

God said that he would send a famine on the land of hearing the words of the Lord. The famine of hearing the words of the Lord would not arise because the people lost God’s Word and could not find it. God was going to cause this famine. Why on earth would God cause a famine of his word?

  • Israel had rejected God’s Word. Amos 2:11-12; Amos 7:12-13.
  • Because Israel had not listened when they had the opportunity, God was going to remove his Word.

The figure of a famine is appropriate in light of Deuteronomy 8:3: “Man shall not live by bread alone; but an lives by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God.”

How would this famine of the word of God be achieved? This famine would be realized in that God would not send prophets to speak for him. This famine, in all likelihood, refers to the Intertestamental Period when there were nearly 400 years where God sent no prophet.

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Expository Sermon on Amos 8:11-14 | The Coming Famine of God’s Word

The Coming Famine (Amos 8:11-14)

 

Theodore Roosevelt said, “A thorough knowledge of the Bible is worth more than a college education.” In today’s world, far more than TR’s world, a college education is almost indispensable—It is difficult find a good-paying job without some post-secondary education. But a knowledge of the Scriptures is far more important than a college education. The Scriptures tell man where he came from and where he is going. The Scriptures tell man how to live, how to prevent heartache from coming into his life.

The Scriptures tell man of Jesus Christ, the Redeemer of mankind, and how to have his sins removed so that he can live in heaven eternally.

But what if the Bible were taken away? What if the government were to come into our homes and remove our Bibles? We would not know how to live or how to prevent heartache from coming into our lives—we would remember basic morality, but we would begin to forget all that God wanted. We would begin to forget all the stories of Jesus and how he aided those around him. We would have no basis for sharing our faith with others, for there would be no authority to which we could point.

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A Famine Of God’s Word

In the last days (ie, right now) there will come a time when it will become increasingly harder and harder to find the truth of God’s word.  Preachers won’t preach it anymore, the government and atheist groups will suppress, hide or try to corrupt it, or even rewrite it, churches will change it, and many other things.  In short, it will become REALLY hard to find the undoctored, unaltered, purely presented gospel.  For all intents and purposes, we’re already there.

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