Bible Commentaries

Sermon Bible Commentary

Amos 7

Clinging to a Counterfeit Cross
Verses 10-15

Amos 7:10-15

I. There is something very wonderful, and at the same time most natural, in the expansion of mind which a man brought up as Amos was, acquires when he has been raised out of himself and has been made to understand the glory and the guilt of his country. He knew that he was speaking of one who was true and in whom was no lie; he knew that he was testifying against lies; he knew that the whole universe and the consciences of those who heard him, however they might turn away from him or persecute him, were on his side, and were acknowledging his sentence to have issued from the mouth of the Lord Himself.

II. Amos would not have left his sheepfolds to denounce the idolatries of Israel if he had not felt that men, that his own countrymen, were maintaining a fearful fight against a will which had a right to govern them, and which could alone govern them for their good. He could not have been sustained in the witness which He bore if an ever-brightening revelation of the perfect goodness—of that goodness, active, energetic, converting all powers and influences to its own righteous and gracious purposes—had not accompanied revelations, that became every moment more awful, of the selfishness and disorder to which men were yielding themselves. It is precisely because he has not only history and experience to guide him, but the certainty of an eternal God, present in all the convulsions of society, never ceasing to act upon the individual heart when it is most wrapped in the folds of its pride and selfishness—it is precisely because he finds this to be true, whatever else is false, that he must hope.

F. D. Maurice, Prophets and Kings of the Old Testament, p. 155.


References: Amos 8:1.—Pulpit Analyst, vol. i., p. 167. Amos 8:1, Amos 8:2.—Spurgeon, Sermons, vol. vi., No. 343. Amos 8:2.—Preacher's Monthly, vol. vi., p. 186. Amos 8:11.—W. Wilkinson, Thursday Penny Pulpit, vol. iii., p. 205. Amos 9:1.—Clergyman's Magazine, vol. xi., p. 217.

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