stempublishing.com : J. N. Darby : Synopsis : Amos : Chapter 9 |
Introduction Chapters 1 and 2 Chapter 3 Chapter 4 Chapter 5 Chapter 6 Chapter 7 Chapter 8 Chapter 9 |
Exact and discriminative judgment executed by God HimselfAmos 9 presents Jehovah Himself as directing the judgment in such a manner that Israel should in no wise escape it, God treating them as He would the nations that were strangers to Him, as the Philistines or the Syrians, whom, in His providence, He had brought from other lands. Nevertheless God did not forget Israel. He executed the judgment Himself, so that, while Israel should be sifted among all the nations, not one grain should be lost. The wicked who did not believe in the judgment should be overtaken by it. God's ultimate purposes of grace to David's seed and to Gentiles
In that day (that is, in the day of Jehovah's final judgment) He
would not raise up the tabernacle of Jeroboams and of Jehus,
although He had given them a place for a time during His
longsuffering government; but (fulfilling His own purposes of
grace) He would raise up the tabernacle of David His elect, and
rebuild it in its glory. He would raise it entirely from its ruins,
that His seed might possess the remnant of Edom and of all the
heathen that are brought to know the name of Jehovah*. At that
time Jehovah would also bring Israel back from their captivity, and
re-establish them in full blessing. They should enjoy the fruits
of their land. Jehovah would plant His people upon their land, and
they should be no more pulled up. It was the land which He Himself
had given them. The ways of God with Israel: their judgment and assured future restoration — the sure mercies of DavidThus we find, in the prophet Amos, the judgment of the kingdom of Israel; but this judgment applied to the whole of Israel as a nation, and their assured restoration, in connection with the re-establishment of the house of David in the last days — a re-establishment accomplished by God, which nothing should again overthrow. He would plant them, and none should pluck them up: a testimony which assuredly has never been fulfilled, and as assuredly will be; Israel shall be in their own land and never again removed. In general, then, this prophet sets before us, not great public events in the government of God, but the ways of God with His people, in view of their moral condition; the ten tribes, or the kingdom of Israel, being looked at as representing all Israel as a responsible nation, the link of their condition at that time with their original position (when, through the grace and power of Jehovah, they had come up out of Egypt), being the golden calves of Sinai and of Bethel. The prophecy closes, as we have seen, with the re-establishment in blessing of the whole people, under the house of David, according to the sovereign grace of God who changes not. It should be, for the whole nation, the sure mercies of David. |
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