Amos Ch 4 – Study

All NIV text is Blue
Additional notes are Black

For those who may wish to ‘study’ this chapter, the following simple resources are provided for you. Each passage has a four-Part approach to help you take in and think further about what you have read.

A. Find Out
  1. Who does the Lord focus on next in Samaria? v.1
  2. What does He warn them will happen? v.2,3
  3. What does He tell them to do? v.4,5
  4. What had they failed to heed? v.6
  5. What had the Lord done? v.7
  6. So what had followed? v.8
B. Think:
  1. What has the Lord got against these women?
  2. What does He clearly think about their worship and offerings?
  3. How had He already sought to warn them in various ways?
C. Comment:

Affluence in a society is often seen most clearly in the antics of the women and this is who now comes under God’s spotlight.  Bashan was to the east of what we know of as the Sea of Galilee as part of the northern kingdom and was known for its well-fed cattle, hence Amos aligns these affluent women with them (v.1), somewhat sarcastically.

Amos is not gentle in his words about them and the picture he gives of impending judgment is unpleasant – being dragged away by hooks rather like fish (v.2) and they will be taken in exile (v.3 – Harmon’s location is unknown).

But then he scathingly tells them to go and offer their offerings at the two altars that had been used for idol worship (v.4) implying it is pointless, i.e. nothing will stave off this judgment. They can boast about how spiritual they are (v.5) but it is meaningless.

And them he starts a series of things that had happened at His hand, that are always associated with things being wrong with the nation – but they failed to take any notice.

The first of these was famine (v.6) and the second was drought, (v.7) which creates the famine by poor harvests. The third was the consequence all this had on the people (v.8), staggering weakly from town to town looking for water. They should have understood!

D. Application:
  1. Do we watch the state of the nation and understand these things?
  2. The quality of the life of a nation indicates so often, its righteousness or otherwise!
A. Find Out
  1. What was the fourth ‘sign’ they had ignored? v.9
  2. What was the fifth? v.10a
  3. What was the sixth? v.10b
  4. What was the seventh v.11
  5. What should they now be doing? v.12
  6. How does the Lord describe Himself? v.13
B. Think:
  1. Recap in your mind all the (seven) ‘signs’ the Lord had given them which they had failed to heed.
  2. What, in your own words, was their state at the end of this?
  3. What is the significance of v,12 & 13?
C. Comment:

The second half of the chapter continues a denunciation that Amos (the Lord) has started in the first half, a series of examples of how the Lord had been blighting their land and nation in order to bring them to their senses so they would cry out to Him – but they had not done that.

So there has followed a blight on their land together with destruction by locusts (v.9), then illnesses (v.10a) and stresss that caused death by fighting (v.10b), and some of them had just been struck down by the Lord (v.11) and again and again comes the denunciation, “yet you have not returned to me”. One cannot help thinking of similar denunciations in the book of Revelation (Rev 9:20,21, 16:9,11) The truth is that Lord either brings such judgments or simply allows them to be the outworking of sinful mankind, in order to bring about repentance and a returning to Him, yet the records show that so often, sin blinds and especially when there is occult involvement, that blindness leads to a hardness of heart that refuses to heed all the God is saying.

His warning in v.12 is only detailed in the following chapter (although also note 4:2,3). For now He simply warns them to get ready to meet Him (v.12) and to remember who He is, the Creator and upholder of all things, the Mighty One before whom they should quake (implied).  Their failure to listen has been categorized, now He will go on to lay out what is coming.

D. Application:
  1. Mankind shows Sin revealed in obstinacy, a refusal to listen.
  2. Realise that God is not put off by this but will still act.