Friday, March 27, 2026

Hosea 1-7

 

Hosea 1

Hosea 1:1 Hosea prophesied during the reigns of several kings, spanning decades. We find record of their rules starting: Azariah a.k.a. Uzziah (2 Kings 14:21), Jotham (2 Kings 15:32), Ahaz (2 Kings 16:1), Hezekiah (2 Kings 16:20), and Jeroboam II (2 Kings 14:16,23). The prophecies of Hosea announce that God challenges and overcomes politics. He judges the actions of rulers based on His standards, regardless of whether or not the people follow Him - He expects rulers to set an example by leading them according to His standards.


Hosea 1:2-3 The Lord told Hosea to marry a prostitute or promiscuous woman as an object lesson for Israel, to illustrate to them how He perceived their idolatry. 


Hosea 1:4-5 Their first child, a son, was named Jezreel, to let the house of Jehu know they would be judged and punished for the massacre at Jezreel. This evidently refers to Jehu killing everyone in Ahab’s extended family who was in that city, to fulfill the Lord’s command. (2 Kings 10:11) This was part of the cleansing of the Northern Kingdom of worshippers of Baal.  This judgment does not make sense to me. The Lord raised Jehu up to eliminate Ahab and his Baal-worshipping reign. Second, Hosea’s prophecy was at least fifty years after this event. Zechariah, son of Jeroboam II was killed after only ruling six months, putting an end to the house of Jehu. (2 Kings 15:8-12). This was after three successive descendants of Jehu turned away from the Lord to worship Baal.


Hosea 1:6-9 Gomer had two more sons (unclear if Hosea was the father since she was a prostitute). The first was “not loved”. The second was “not my people”. A logical progression  - not being loved leading to being disowned. But who disowned who? Was the third son fathered by another man, representing Israel’s idolatry, hence really, truly not Hosea’s son (2:4)? 

 

Hosea 1:10-11 The Lord foresees a day when wall will be made right, Israel will flourish as one nation who will be called children of the Living God, and will appoint one leader. Fulfillment of this is uncertain. Perhaps it refers to the church beginning in Acts, or perhaps to a future time when the Jews from around the world re-unite by receiving Christ and becoming truly the children of God. 


Hosea 2:1 appears to complete the prophetic vision of 1:10-11, brothers and sisters in the Lord.


Hosea 2:2-7 Hosea now deals in a literal sense with his wife’s lifestyle, by forcing her to face the consequences of the truth. This is not a game show. When she finds herself abandoned and broke, she will decide to return to her husband. 


Hosea 2:8 Her big mistake was to think that the immediate source of the things of life - food, money - was the root cause of them. She engaged on her trade (prostitution) not understanding that her husband’s providing for her needs was what kept her going … until he stopped. This is symbolic of how the Lord was dealing with Israel. 


Hosea 2:9-13 continues the consequences that Israel will face for their unfaithfulness.


Hosea 2:14-15 The tone changes from warnings of consequences to wooing her back to the fold of committed marriage. Speaking tenderly, giving her gifts, offering hope. 


Hosea 2:16-20 When Israel responds to being wooed, there will be an engagement and a marriage. A renewal of marriage. This time with faithfulness, justice, love, and compassion.  Genuine, agape love seeks the best for the beloved and is not selfish. She will change roles from being a slave (to sin, to false masters) to being a spouse, a partner in a committed relationship. He will remove the names of the false gods from her lips. 


Hosea 2:21-23 On that day, when the marriage happens, the Lord will not only bless her with material blessings and security and peace in the land, He will adopt her illegitimate children. (1:9)


Hosea 3:1-3 Hosea is now commanded by the Lord to show this kind of agape love to his former wife, buying her back from slavery. She will be freed, but not to continue to pursue her adulterous lifestyle. But Hosea also will not be sexually intimate with her, either. She is to learn that true faithfulness and commitment are far beyond mere physical pleasure.


Hosea 3:4-5 Israel will go for centuries without a king, and without ritual religion. They will again seek the Lord in the last days. Perhaps this can be likened to the return of the prodigal son after living in the pigsty. (Luke 15:17-20) Although Israel as an ethnic and political identity exists, only a subset of the Jews truly seek the Lord. So this prophecy must relate to a future, end times fulfillment when all of Israel turns to Jesus. We know from other apocalyptic Scriptures that a lot of other things will happen, but this is the Lord’s heart. 



Hosea 4


Hosea 4:1-3 Cause and effect: what else can sin produce but disaster, failure, and heartbreak?  (8:7) Betraying God impacts both society and nature (vss. 2-3) In the natural world there wouldn’t seem to be any connection, but in God’s realm, it is as inevitable as universal gravitation.


Hosea 4:4-9 The priests and prophets share in the responsibility for this disaster. Each person is accountable directly to God for their own actions. Spiritual leaders are supposed to have pointed them to Him, but they used their positions not to teach His ways, but to practice sin themselves. 


Hosea 4:10-15 The object lesson of prostitution re-surfaces. Spiritual prostitution and ritual prostitution are inextricably linked. Why else would temple prostitution be such a widespread practice in pagan religions - not just in Palestine, but throughout the world? And then prostitution becomes normal for society. Once God and His ways are rejected, only human and carnal standards of behavior are left.


Hosea 4:15-19 This warning summarizes the wrongs of Israel. The Northern kingdom of Israel is so thoroughly committed to spiritual adultery with idols and the evil spirits they represent that contact will contaminate. So the Southern Kingdom of Judah should leave them alone so they don’t get caught in the consequences that Israel will reap.

This raises the question of when a person or nation is irredeemably contaminated by their decision to sin. That standard is not clearly stated here, only that Israel had crossed it. In the New Testament we see Jesus refusing to condemn the woman at the well and the woman caught in the act of adultery. (John 4:7-26,  8:1-11).  Paul told the Corinthians to excommunicate a man who was committing incest with his stepmother.  (1 Corinthians 5:1-5) He also told them not to be yoked unequally. (2 Corinthians 6:14-18) The standard of discerning between a mission field and a minefield must be discerned by the leading of the Holy Spirit. In such situations, the Lord Himself must speak to us directly.


Hosea 5:1 The Lord now speaks directly to Israel. He recalls prior events in which Israel interacted with Him by mentioning their locations.

  • At Mizpah, which means watchtower, it is unclear what specific events are referred to in which Israel was a snare. Earlier events showed no signs of Israel being unfaithful. There are multiple locations that are candidates for this reference. (1 Samuel 7; 10:17?) The most likely is near Mount Hermon, where idolatry likely occurred, but Mizpah is not specifically named in Scripture in this context.    
  • Mt. Tabor, located in Israel west of the Sea of Galilee,  mentioned in connection with Barak’s defeat of Sisera… (Judges 4 ), also likely the location of idolatry…. A net spread out implies tripping someone up, or capturing them like a fish. Mentioned in Psalm 89:12 in connection with  singing for joy at the Lord’s name.


Hosea 5:2-7 Hosea mentions several dimensions of Israel’s sin: they are rebels; they engage in spiritual and physical prostitution, resulting in illegitimate children; they seek the Lord in pagan worship,  syncretism; they are arrogant. But somehow they coax or tempt Judah to join them in their sin. 


Hosea 5:8-12 A day of judgment is coming, and God’s wrath will be poured out. Even Judah will not be spared His wrath. After the northern kingdom was overrun by Assyria, five years later Judah was attacked and almost conquered. (2 Kings 18:9-10, 13) But Hezekiah’s prayer and genuine devotion to the Lord resulted in Sennacherib being forced by the Lord to give up his siege, after his army was supernaturally destroyed.  (2 Kings 19:35-36)


Hosea 5:13-15 Even though the Northern Kingdom turned to Assyria for help, they and their king can’t cure Israel’s sin problem. Whether the leadership leads the people astray, or the people’s sin forces the leaders to turn from the Lord, politics cannot solve a spiritual problem. Turning to worldly politicians for spiritual help is like asking a politician for medical advice, it doesn’t make sense and won’t work. Unfortunately, Israel had to learn to obey God the hard way, in the school of hard knocks. Then they would get the message and seek the true God.


Hosea 6


Hosea 6:1-3 Hosea appeals to Israel. The phrase ‘on the third day He will restore us’ is paraphrased in the New Testament with reference to Jesus’ resurrection. (Luke 24:46, 1 Corinthians 15:4) The hope of restoration after repentance is ultimately realized in Jesus, sadly not in Hosea’s day. Jesus spoke of His desire for the Jews as a whole, or specifically in Jerusalem, to be gathered under His wings. (Luke 13:34) We know that about forty years later, Jerusalem was destroyed by the Roman army under the command of Titus. (Luke 23:28-30) This was part of the Roman suppression of a Jewish revolt. Sadly, not only did they not learn the lessons from Hosea and the destruction of Israel and Judah several hundred years earlier, they did not recognize that the resurrection of Jesus offered them the fulfillment of Hosea’s words in this passage. The church, those who had received Jesus, suffered but were only made stronger.


Hosea 6:4-6 The Lord compares Israel’s love to a morning mist, repeated later by Hosea. (13:3) It is enjoyable but fleeting, vanishing when the sun rises in the sky. There is a warning about the misuse of Scripture. God’s word can kill rather than bring life, when misused or when rejected.  (Isaiah 55:11) It has power. But the source of power is God’s heart, which desires that we have a heart like His. Hence, He desires us to have mercy more than He wants sacrifice, as Jesus pointed out. (Matthew 9:13, 12:7)


Hosea 6:7-11 The Lord repeats Israel’s transgressions: breaking their covenant; murder, even by priests; prostitution. And Judah will face a similar harvest from what they sow. 


Hosea 7


Hosea 7:1-2 Continuing the list of Israel’s transgressions: they lie and deceive; they rob and steal. They are unaware that God sees and remembers, and that their sins define their lives and thereby consume them, not their victims. It is not just a single sin, but at least five of the Ten Commandments are violated.


Hosea 7:3-7 The wine inflames passions to smolder and burn. They then interact, king with people, but the people destroy the kings, one after another: Zechariah (son of Jeroboam), Shallum, Menahem, Pekahiah, Pekah, Hoshea. (2 Kings 15:8-31) Kings fall to assassination and gain power by assassination. God and the concept of divine right of succession, are not a consideration, so He lets them reap the fruit of their actions.


Hosea 7:8-10 Ephraim is a cake not turned - like a pancake on a griddle that isn’t flipped. Inedible because part of it remains raw and part of it is burnt. Israel lacks sense, like a careless cook.


Hosea 7:11-12 Ephraim is like a dove - not in the sense of the Holy Spirit, but like a senseless bird who flies anywhere. In this case, Israel turns to Egypt and Assyria for help. Instead, they are caught in a net. 


Hosea 7:13-16 As mentioned earlier, these nations cannot save Israel from their sin or its consequences. The Lord wants to save them, but they choose instead to practice self-mutilation to appeal to false gods, and turn to worldly nations. They will reap accordingly.


Friday, March 20, 2026

Leviticus 26-27

Leviticus 26 Promises of flourishing, and warnings about rebellion


Leviticus 26:1-2 A repetition of the second and fourth commandments (Exodus 20: ) sets the stage for the blessings an cursing to follow. Do not worship idols and observe the Sabbath. Respect God’s holy place, the sanctuary.


Leviticus 26:3-13 Promises to those who keep His laws. Fruitful harvests, peace and national safety and victory in war, population growth. Most importantly, God Himself would walk among them. This did not require the Incarnation of Jesus, although He was its ultimate fulfillment. There are several places in the Old Testament where God was tangibly present with His people, and of course He is always invisibly but spiritually with us through the Holy Spirit.


Leviticus 26:14-39 Five stages of punishment for disobedience, in increasing severity. Israel went through all of these stages.

  • Disease and defeat in war, being ruled by others.
  • Drought and famine.
  • Wild animals to ravage their children and livestock.
  • Cannibalism, mass death, pillaging and ruin of cities, exile. The land will be laid waste so that it can enjoy its Sabbath rest. (See below)
  • Those few who survive will flee in terror even when no one is pursuing. Exiles will die in foreign lands.


Leviticus 26:40-45 But He will not destroy them completely. If the survivors of all the above repent and to Him, the Lord will remember His covenants with their ancestors, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and those who left Egypt. 


Leviticus 26:46 This concludes the laws, rules, and regulations given via Moses to Israel on Mount Sinai.


A recap of the Ten Commandments shows that the Levitical law further explained all of them except the ban on coveting.

  • Have no other Gods before YHWH. (Exodus 20:3) (Leviticus 20:1-5) Stone them to death.
  • Do not worship idols (Exodus 20:4-6) (Leviticus 19:4) 
  • Do not profane the Name of the Lord (Exodus 20:7) (Leviticus 24:17-22) The punishment is death.
  • Keep the Sabbath holy (Exodus 20:8-11) (Leviticus 19:3)
  • Honor your father and mother (Exodus 20:12) (Leviticus 19:3, 20:9) - death penalty
  • Do not murder (Exodus 20:13) (Leviticus 24:17-22) - the punishment is death.
  • Do not commit adultery (Exodus 20:14) (Leviticus 18:20, 20:10) - death penalty
  • Do not steal (Exodus 20:15) (Leviticus 19:11)
  • Do not give false witness against your neighbor (Exodus 20:16) (Leviticus 19:11-12)
  • Do not covet (Exodus 20:17) - perhaps not discussed in Leviticus because it is an internal sin, so no objective or concrete evidence is possible. 


Sadly, it appears that Israel did not observe the Sabbath years, and the promise of 26:34 was fulfilled as noted in 2 Chronicles 36:31. At the time of the Babylonian exile, when Nebuchadnezzar carried off the remaining Jews, it was observed that the land enjoyed its sabbath rests for the period of desolation, seventy years.  This implies that Israel did not observe Sabbath years for a lengthy period. The Sabbath schedule was that there were to be 8 sabbath years in every fifty year period. Taking seventy years times the inverse ratio 50/8 gives 437.5 years for a total span. This is interpreting the time span as though each end of every six years immediately turned over a new six year cycle with no rest. Jerusalem was destroyed by Babylon and the remaining Jews were carried into captivity in 586 BC. 586 BC + 437.5 = 1023.5 BC. Saul became king of Israel around 1020 BC. Given uncertainty in ancient dates, this seems a plausible interpretation. This covers the entire time that Israel was a kingdom.  

How this differs from modern life where most don’t even observe a weekly Sabbath, and the consequences of the modern lifestyle, is entirely open to debate. I do not know if anyone in modern Israel observes Sabbath years or Jubilee years. But the stress of modern society and work is doubtless a major factor the disease-ridden society we live in.


Leviticus 27 Redeeming What Is the Lord’s


As an appendix to the conclusion in chapter 26, Moses here laid out guidelines for evaluating the price  of redemption for various kinds of items that have been promised or devoted to the Lord.


Leviticus 27:1-8 if a person is dedicated to the Lord, the price of buying them back is based on age and gender. Adults in the prime of life cost the most, children and those over sixty are less. (Recall that Moses was about eighty at this time.) Females were priced at roughly 60% of males. No explanation is given for these prices. Presumably this had something to do with their productivity over their remaining lifespan. Poor people could appeal to the priest to get their price reduced.


Leviticus 27:9-13 An animal that was vowed to the Lord can only be redeemed by a substitute of equal or higher quality. A clean animal that is vowed becomes holy. 


Leviticus 27:14-15 The price for redemption of a house dedicated to the Lord will be set by the priest. 


Leviticus 27:16-21 The price for a field depends on two factors. The amount of seed it will take to plant it, and the number of years until the next Jubilee. Fields can be redeemed for 120% of their valuation. Otherwise, they will become the permanent possession of the priesthood at the next Jubilee.


Leviticus 27:22-25 A field bought from another and then dedicated to the Lord has the additional provision that it will revert to its original owner at the year of Jubilee, and not become the priests’ property. 


Leviticus 27:26-27 Special rules for the firstborn  animal. If it is clean, it is automatically the Lord’s. If it is an unclean animal, it can be bought back for 120% of its value.


Leviticus 27:28-29 Nothing that is devoted to the Lord can be bought back. It is His - person, animal, or land. A person  that is devoted to destruction must be killed. No exceptions or redemption.


Leviticus 27:30-33 The tithe can be redeemed for a 20% surcharge. Inferring, this means if someone has a number of animals and ten percent of the increase needs to be tithes, they can buy back the animal for cash, at a 20% markup. However, the substitution of one animal for another has limits and special rules.


Leviticus 27:34 This really is the conclusion of Leviticus. (26:46)


Leviticus 24-25

Leviticus 24 Light, Blasphemy, and eye-for-eye retaliation


Leviticus 24:1-4 The Israelites are to bring pure olive for the priests to burn in the tent of meeting, outside the most holy place, continuously (continually). The priests will put flame on top of the golden altar.  After God created the heavens and earth, the very next thing He created was light. (Genesis 1:3-5). The psalmist says that God’s word is light, going beyond simply saying God spoke to bring light into existence. (Psalms 119:105,130) The point being, coming into God’s presence brings the opportunity to hear from Him, and thus have our lives and paths illuminated by truth. Of course, this is only opportunity, we are free to accept or reject what He slows us, or unintentionally or deliberately misinterpret it. The flame of burning olive oil simply symbolizes this opportunity to partake of the truth. (John 8:12, 9:15)


Leviticus 24:5-9 The Israelites are to bring twelve loaves of bread to set on the table in the holy place every sabbath. Each loaf is to contain 0.2 ephah (about seven cups) of flour. These will become food for the priests, part of their food allotment. This bread probably speaks on at least three levels. On the physical level, it reminded Israel of the manna He provided in the wilderness for forty years to the twelve tribes, and continued to provide as they farmed in the promised land. Next, God provides His word as bread for our souls. At the spiritual level, Jesus is the bread of life, represented in the New Testament by the Eucharist. Twelve loaves probably represent the tribes of Israel or Jesus’ apostles.  (Matthew 4:4,  Luke 22:19)


Leviticus 24:10-16 A mixed breed man (perhaps teenager), cross between Israelite and Egyptian, got into a fight and cursed the Lord’s Name, violating the third commandment. (Exodus 20:3) The Lord told Moses that anyone who curses His Name is to be stoned. This is an equal opportunity rule, applying to both Israelites and gentiles residing with them. His Name is to be respected because He is holy. The entire assembly is to lay their hands on him  (reminiscent of 4:15, 16:21) and participate in the execution.  Presumably this was to transfer any guilt for the offense to the offender, and to remind the rest of their responsibility to honor God with their speech.


Leviticus 24:17-22 The punishment for violating the sixth commandment is death. (Exodus 20:13) The eye-for-an-eye rule is to be applied to injuries of all sorts, including fracture, eye or tooth damage, or loss of an animal. It also applies equally to both Israelites and gentiles. Jesus contravened this rule. (Matthew 5:38-42) He said to forgive and turn the other cheek. He went on to tell us to love our enemies and pray for those who despitefully use us (Matthew 5:43-48), because this is the character of God who forgives us. But at this point in Israel’s formation, having just spent 400 years in Egypt, they needed to understand that might does not make right, and the powerful could not abuse the downtrodden with impunity.


Leviticus 24:23 The Israelites obeyed God and stoned the blasphemer.


 

Leviticus 25 Sabbath Years and Slavery


Leviticus 25:1-7 Israel was to let the land lie fallow for one year every seven, calling it a Sabbath year. The land was to be allowed to rest. God would provide such an abundant harvest the sixth year that they could have food until the harvest of the eighth year, which reset the clock.  Verse 6 is a bit puzzling because it says whatever a land yields the Sabbath year would be food for them, but since they weren’t to harvest it, it is not clear how this worked.  Perhaps this simply means harvesting for sale was not to happen, but the farmer could feed his household from it. There is some recent thought that letting the land rest was a natural way to allow for ecological health in farmlands.


Leviticus 25:8-13 The year of jubilee is an additional Sabbath year that occurs after seven Sabbath years, so that there will be two Sabbath years in a row. Hence this happens every fifty years. The rules for this jubilee year are the Sabbath rules with additional provisions for the  return of families to their ancestral properties, the forgiveness of debts, and the freeing of slaves.  


Leviticus 25:14-17, 23-28 Further elaboration on the return of the land emphasizes that the land belongs to the Lord and the Israelites are only tenants. If someone sells their ancestral land, they are really only subleasing it to the other party for the number of years until the next jubilee. Hence, the sale price should be accordingly pro-rated. 


Leviticus 25:18-22 As with the year of jubilee, the Lord promises bountiful harvests to feed the Israelites, in this case for two full years of rest for the land.

Giving the land rest possibly stands for giving our bodies rest, although on a larger scale than weekly Sabbaths. Certainly God rested on the seventh day of creation, although the duration of the days in Genesis has been the subject of some debate. (Genesis 2:2-3) It appears that He planted the garden of Eden after He created Adam and Eve. I can find no hint at a year of jubilee in the Genesis account. Israel wandered in the wilderness for forty years, and did not plant nor harvest in the desert, but simply gathered manna for six days per week.  (Exodus 16:22-30) Entering the promised land was a celebration of sorts, but the Israelites had to fight. There is no record of them observing Sabbath years during the era of the judges. In the New Testament there isn’t any parallel dynamic matching this time line, of celebrations of rest every seven or every fifty years. 


Leviticus 25:29-34 Rules for the redemption of non-agricultural dwellings: The right of redemption extends to dwellings in small towns. However, houses in walled cities have only a one year right of redemption. After that, the sale is permanent. All houses of Levites have a permanent right of redemption, regardless of location. And a special rule, the pastures of Levites  are never to be sold, because they belong to God.


Leviticus 25:35-43 A warning about mistreating fellow Israelites who become poor. They are not to be taken advantage of, by gouging them financially. They are to be helped. They do not lose their status as Israelites, even if they sell themselves as slaves to other Israelites. Treat them with respect.  In the year of jubilee they are to go free and return to their ancestral land, to which they did not lose the right of redemption.  


Leviticus 25:44-46 By contrast, foreigners can be treated as chattel slaves, property, to be owned, bought, and sold. No right of redemption. This applies whether they are bought from other nations or are immigrants to Israel. Unfortunately, verses like this have been used to justify slavery across the centuries and millennia. Often in the antebellum era, slaves had a much deeper relationship with Christ than their owners, who practiced the form of religion without substance or depth. Seeing these verses from a racial perspective completely ignores the spiritual dimension. A person with a personal relationship with Jesus will see those lacking that personal relationship as a mission field for evangelization, not as property to be bought and sold.


Leviticus 25:47-55 If a foreigner living within Israel becomes wealthy and an Israelite sells himself to them, the right of redemption remains. In addition to the year of Jubilee, a relative has the statutory right to buy him back from the foreigner. Prices to be prorated based on the calendar.