The
First Product of Unfaithfulness: Impotence
Hosea 1:1-5, 11; 1 Kings 9-10
The problem Hosea faced as an up-and-coming prophet in
the nation of Israel. "When the Lord began to speak through Hosea, the
Lord said to him, ‘Go, take to yourself an adulterous
wife and children of unfaithfulness, because the land is guilty of the vilest
adultery in departing from the Lord.’ So he married Gomer, daughter of
Diblaim."
As hard pressed as you
might be to listen to me if I were the husband of an unfaithful woman, I urge
you to listen to Hosea. Here is a man who God asked to do something that seems
unreasonable. He asked him to marry Gomer, who would serve as an example of the
unfaithfulness of Israel. For us, the book of Hosea can either serve as a
warning or as a mirror. Unfortunately for the church today, I believe it is
more of the latter than the former. This is not just a warning, but also a
prophetic glimpse of the current state of today’s church. God reveals through
this prophet a message for a church that is far too unfaithfully his. What was
said about Israel then, could easily be said about us
today.
Today we will first see how our unfaithfulness leaves us impotent—without
strength. For example, do you ever wonder why it is so hard to break a sinful
habit? Do you wonder why you lack the strength to make changes in your life?
Have you wondered why you see so much addiction and why the people on your
Blessing List keep heading down paths that are unhealthy and destructive? We’ll
see how Gomer’s first child gives us an answer to why our strength is gone.
Let’s begin, however, with a little background. Those of you who stay up late
watching the History Channel might enjoy this. Then again, anyone who enjoys
the History Channel might just about enjoy anything.
Israel was a nation comprised of twelve tribes, initially named after the twelve sons of Jacob.
After David and his son Solomon ruled all of Israel, the ten northern tribes
rebelled when Solomon’s son Rehoboam was made king. Those ten tribes became
their own kingdom – Israel, or Ephraim. That left the southern tribes of Judah
and Benjamin as one kingdom, which retained the name of Judah.
With civil tensions at rest, the northern kingdom of Israel was enjoying a time
of peace and economic prosperity, but extreme wealth was accompanied by extreme
poverty. Israel also had a deteriorating social, moral, and
religious climate. Does that sound like any other nation you know?
At the center of this deterioration was a king named Ahab and his wife, Jezebel. 1 Kings 16:30 says Ahab "did more evil in the
eyes of the Lord than any of those before him." Jezebel introduced Baal
worship into Israel as well as the licentious orgies of the goddess Ashtoreth.
For example, Ahab demonstrated his materialism by constructing a huge ivory
palace in a city called Jezreel. Outside the palace walls was a vineyard owned
by a man named Naboth. Ahab really wanted this vineyard and Ahab was the
"what Ahab wants Ahab gets" type. (Remember the little girl on Willie
Wonka and the Chocolate Factory: "I want it now!") Naboth refused to sell, so Ahab had him falsely accused and tried for
blasphemy. After Naboth was stoned to death, Ahab took possession of the
vineyard. God was not pleased, and he condemned Ahab through Elijah. Ahab’s son
Joram succeeded his father on the throne.
When Joram was king, a military leader named Jehu was hanging out at the local
officer’s club when a wannabe prophet walked in and insisted on speaking with
him in private. Once alone, the young seminarian dumped oil on Jehu’s head and
said, "You’re gonna be king. Go and wipe out Ahab’s house." With
that, the youngster ran out the door, just as Elisha instructed him.
So Jehu rode like a madman down to Jezreel. When the tower saw Jehu coming,
Joram sent out a messenger to ask if he comes in peace. Jehu’s reply was
basically, "What do you know about peace?" Which translated means,
"fall in buddy or you’re gonna get it too." The soldier fell in
behind Jehu and a second messenger was sent who followed the same routine.
Finally Joram rides out there himself along with a visitor—Ahaziah, the king of
Judah. When Joram realized Jehu was not coming for a game of Pachisi, he turned
his chariot and rode like the dickens to get away, but Jehu pulled out his bow
and shot Joram in the back. Ahaziah saw all this and freaked out. He took off
running, but Jehu tracked him down and killed him too.
Then Jehu rode into Jezreel and talked a couple of eunuchs to toss Jezebel, the
queen mum, out onto the street. She goes splat and the dogs eat her, just as
Elijah predicted. Jehu later had 70 sons of Ahab killed, then he killed
everyone in Jezreel who remained from the house of Ahab, as well as Ahab’s
chief men, his close friends and his priests.
Jehu almost got it right in following God’s orders, but he went too far. I
thought of Jehu last week when I heard the story about my friend Mike cutting
down trees and bushes for his wife in the front of their house. He was cutting
everything down, just as instructed, but then got carried away. Before long, he
had cut down her favorite rhododendron and azalea. Oops!
When Jehu became king, he destroyed Baal worship in Israel–which was good—but
then continued to practice the worship of the golden calves—not good. So you could say that Jehu was much like most of us:
he obeyed God here and there, did some good things, and practiced a little
idolatry. No big deal, right?
In 2 Kings 10:30, the Lord said to Jehu, "Because you have done well in
accomplishing what is right in my eyes and have done to the house of Ahab all I
had in mind to do, your descendants will sit on the throne of Israel to the
fourth generation." So it appeared as though Jehu was going to get away
with idolatry and with the murder of Ahaziah and others outside of Ahab’s
family.
But if you think God let’s
some things go and affirms us as long as we do some things well, think again.
God is slow to anger. We also know that God is love, and according to 1
Corinthians 13, love "is not easily angered and keeps no record of wrongs."
But to deny that God is also just and that our sin deserves his wrath is to
deny his holiness and his perfection. He will not let the guilty go unpunished.
That’s where Hosea steps in.
Jehu’s reign had come and gone when the Lord began to use Hosea as his mouthpiece.
In fact, Jehu’s great grandson, Jeroboam, was now king of Israel.
God wanted to equip Hosea for his tough assignment, so he tells Hosea to take
an unfaithful wife. "So he married Gomer…and she conceived and bore him a
son. Then the Lord said to Hosea, ‘Call him Jezreel, because I will soon punish
the house of Jehu for the massacre at Jezreel, and I will put an end to the
kingdom of Israel. In that day I will break Israel’s bow in the Valley of
Jezreel."
Gomer symbolizes the
unfaithfulness of Israel. Each of her children would become a symbol of what
that unfaithfulness produced. The first product of Israel’s
unfaithfulness would be impotence. Every time Hosea called the boys name, he
would be reminded that he had a message to proclaim to Israel that God would
soon break them of their strength. As the main weapon of war, the bow
symbolized strength, and God vowed to break that bow in the same valley where
Ahab murdered for a vineyard and Jehu murdered for power. In 733 B.C., the
Valley of Jezreel became the scene of a major battle that led to the fall of
Israel to Tiglath-Pileser of Assyria. This ended Jereboam’s reign in Israel,
the fourth generation of Jehu’s reign, all as God had said.
This is all pretty
interesting, but what relevance does it have for us? Well, as much as Gomer
represented an unfaithful nation in the 8th century B.C., she also represents
an unfaithful church in the 21st century A.D. We would do well to realize that
the product of a generation of unfaithfulness, even if it is interwoven with
good deeds.
We sit around and stew and send e-mails to each other decrying the erosion of
our nation, pointing our fingers at this political party or that activist
group, when we ought to realize that it is unfaithfulness in the church that is
sapping us of our strength. When unfaithfulness persists, God will step in and
break the bow, taking away the strength of even his own people.
Why are our children
growing up in church and leaving the church behind at the first taste of
independence, vowing never to return? Why isn’t our divorce rate different than
the rest of the world? Why are so many of us being treated for depression? Why
aren’t people lined up at the doors of churches all across the nation to hear
the good news that Jesus changes lives? It’s because we’ve been unfaithful, and
we’ve brought punishment on ourselves. We are weak. David exclaimed, "See
how the evildoers lie fallen—thrown down, not able to rise!"
Do you feel like you’ve fallen and you can’t get up?
If you’re not there today, I know you’ve been there before. Let me tell you,
there are people all over our community who feel that way all the time! The
sons and daughters of unfaithfulness are paying the toll of previous
generations. Furthermore, a fair judgment rests upon those who are not covered
by the blood of Jesus. Powerlessness over sin is destroying families, clouding
out hope, and robbing people of their future right in our own back yard! Men
and women wander along unaware or unconcerned that judgment awaits them. For our
sake and theirs, we need to first turn back from OUR unfaithfulness and be
careful to do everything written in this Book of the Law. It is our job first,
because judgment begins in the house of God AND the powerlessness and
immorality we see around us is the first fruit of our unfaithfulness.
God wants us to open our
eyes and see the effect of an unfaithful people on its nation, but God never
opens the eyes of our heart without revealing his salvation. Even in
pronouncing judgment through Hosea, God wanted salvation to be known. In
v. 11, the Lord declares, "the people of Judah and the people of Israel
will be reunited, and they will appoint one leader and will come up out of the
land, for great will be the day of Jezreel."
Israel did not exist as a nation from the time it fell to Assyria nearly 3,000
years ago. Judah had fallen around 200 years later. In 1948, the descendants of
Israel and Judah "came out of the land" with one leader. Not two
kingdoms, but one. No Roman governor. Not as a province or a colony, but as a
nation. God turned the tragedy of Jezreel into triumph, reuniting a divided
kingdom.
And what has happened with the Jews will be ultimately realized when Jesus
returns to take up people from every tongue, tribe, and nation to be their one
ruler. He will take us up out of the land where weakness to sin prevails and he
will make us one under him.
In that day we will also say great is the day of Jezreel. To us, the day of
Jezreel is the day when God’s judgment fell on Jesus at the cross. When we
should have been punished for our unfaithfulness, God sent his own Son to bear
the punishment for our sake. Jesus became weak, so we could become strong. The
tragedy of the cross will be turned to triumph when we are finally rescued from
this land, brought together under one ruler, the Lord Jesus Christ.
When you consider the deterioration of our culture, realize it is the product
of an unfaithful church. Examine your heart and look for areas of
unfaithfulness that have left you powerless and have given birth to infirmity
in our children and our culture. Then turn from your unfaithfulness and make
every effort to rescue others from slavery to sin. Make known the mystery of
the cross, that great tragedy turned triumph for all who will be faithful to him.