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The Restoration of Israel

September 26, 2021 • Grayson Gilbert • Amos 9:11–15

In the final section of Amos, the prophet gives an incredible word of hope to the Israelites in the throes of judgment. While the nation must still face days of agony ahead—he reminds them that far better days lay ahead for the nation, and that God is faithful to fulfill every single one of His promises. Though the Northern Kingdom shall fall and never rise again, God promises to restore His people once again and reunite them under the banner of Christ.

More from Amos

Nowhere to Run, Nowhere to Hide

August 22, 2021 • Grayson Gilbert • Amos 9:1–10

Amos now comes to the final word of judgment to be given and it is perhaps the most severe word because the Lord Himself tells the Israelites they have nowhere to run to and nowhere to hide. They cannot avoid judgment. The reason they cannot avoid God's wrath is rather simple. He sees all things, He controls all things, and He reveals all things for what they truly are, which inevitably means they are only fooling themselves. Make no mistake; the same God who judged Israel shall stand as Judge on the Last Day. The same will be said for those who are not in Christ and His penetrating gaze is upon them: you have nowhere to run and nowhere to hide.

The Sound of Silence

July 25, 2021 • Grayson Gilbert • Amos 8

Amos now comes to the fourth vision of his prophecy, which reveals that the Northern Kingdom of Israel is ripe for judgment because they are a profane generation. They have not only despised the Word of the Lord, but abused their own people in the most grotesque of ways. Thus, their fortunes shall be reversed and the Lord shall give them silence in return for their rejection of His prophets on the day of their calamity. Yet behind this reality lay a principle that demands the utmost sobriety of any generation: we think trite thoughts about the judgment of God, yet it is no small thing to be trifled with.

The Plumb Line in the Pulpit

June 27, 2021 • Grayson Gilbert • Amos 7:10–17

In the midst of prophesying, Amos is interrupted by a priest named Amaziah. The two exchange words concerning the visions of judgment Amos has pronounced from the Lord. Unfortunately for the priest, this exchange is a demonstration of God's plumb line in action, where He stands and measures the two against His Word. Amos measures up, but Amaziah falls woefully short and finds himself the recipient of judgment. Thus, the text reveals three non-negotiable qualities of the man of God—yet the question remains for today: shall those behind the pulpit measure up, or shall they go the way of Amaziah?