Hosea Part 14
Hosea 6:1-3
Hosea begs, Israel Passes
Meeting Purpose
To analyze Hosea 6:1–3, focusing on repentance and personal idols.
Key Takeaways
- Personal Idols ("Baals"): Modern idols are passions (e.g., sports, careers, possessions) that become gods when they displace God as the primary focus.
- Hosea's Plea for Repentance: Hosea 6:1–3 is a hopeful, inclusive call for Israel to return to God, using "us" and "we" to lead from within.
- The "Two/Three Day" Prophecy: The "after two days... on the third day" passage (v. 2) is a metaphor for a short period of judgment followed by restoration, not a direct messianic prophecy.
- Sincere vs. Superficial Repentance: The passage contrasts Israel's lip service with God's desire for genuine, heart-felt repentance, as shown in the story of the hymn "I'd Rather Have Jesus."
Topics
- The Problem: Modern Idols ("Baals")
o The Israelites' worship of "Baals" (fertility gods) was a grave sin, involving child sacrifice and spiritual harlotry.
o This led to a reflection on modern "small-g gods" that compete for our worship.
o Examples of Modern Idols:
§ Sports: Obsession with teams, collecting memorabilia.
§ Hobbies: The "holy grail" pursuit of better equipment (e.g., trumpets, woodworking tools).
§ Possessions: Cars, electronic auction sites.
§ Work & Money: Careerism, obsession with financial goals (e.g., reaching $1M).
§ Family: Idealizing family or children to the point of reputation-based pressure.
§ Performance: Perfectionism in sports, music, or other activities.
§ Social Media: Seeking validation through likes and followers.
§ Past Mistakes: Obsessing over past failures.
o The Balance: Passions can be used for God's glory when kept in perspective. The issue is when they become the primary focus.
o Quote (A.W. Tozer): "God cannot use a man greatly until he has broken that man greatly."
- The Solution: Hosea's Call to Repentance
o Hosea 6:1–3 is a shift in tone from the previous chapters, offering hope and persuasion.
o Hosea's Inclusive Language: Using "us" and "we" to lead the charge, showing solidarity with the people.
o The Call to Action:
§ Return to the Lord.
§ Be healed, revived, and restored.
§ Acknowledge the Lord with certainty ("as surely as the sun rises").
o The Challenge: Israel's repentance was often superficial, mere "lip service" (v. 4).
§ They ignored both Hosea's living parable (his faithfulness to Gomer) and their own history of rebellion.
o The "Two/Three Day" Passage (v. 2):
§ Text: "After two days he will revive us; on the third day he will restore us."
§ Interpretation: A metaphor for a short period of judgment followed by restoration.
§ Scholarly View (Tom Constable): A "coincidental parallel" to Christ's resurrection, not a direct messianic prophecy.
- The Standard: Sincere Repentance
o The core issue is the difference between superficial and sincere repentance.
o God's Desire (Hosea 6:6): "I desire steadfast love and not sacrifice, the knowledge of God rather than burnt offerings."
o Illustration: "I'd Rather Have Jesus"
o Origin: A poem by a woman whose alcoholic father was miraculously saved.
o Testimony: The father declared, "I would rather have Jesus than gold, than silver or gold."
o Significance: This story exemplifies genuine, heart-felt repentance that prioritizes God above all else.
Next Steps
- Identify personal idols ("small-g gods").
- Evaluate if passions are balanced or displacing God.
- Assess the sincerity of personal repentance
- Continue the Hosea study next week, starting with verse 4.
