“What
do you see, Amos?” he asked. “A basket of ripe fruit,” I answered (Amos 8:2).
After
Israel’s crimes are clearly delineated, God shows Amos a vision of Israel’s
punishment. First he sees a locust invasion and then fires ravaging the
countryside, both of which spell drought and starvation for the kingdom. Twice,
Amos intercedes: How can Jacob survive?
He is so small! (7:2 and 5) In both cases, God relents.
Then
Amos sees a wall built perfectly straight as confirmed by a plumb line. What do you see, Amos? And Amos replies,
A plumb line (v.8). And God explains
he is placing a plumb line among the people of Israel, and that no further
deviation from true would be
tolerated. The first two visions were about God bringing punishment upon
Israel. J. Keir Howard asserts that the third vision implies Israel will
crumble from within, doomed by its own crookedness. [1]
Then
God shows Amos another vision: a basket of ripe fruit. Have you ever noticed pears
or peaches arriving at the perfect stage of ripeness? We better eat these quick, or they’re going to rot. Once fruit is
ripe, there’s really no way to hold back time – in a day or two they’ll have to
be thrown out.
God
relented from sending the locusts or the fires, but Israel’s own internal decay
was bringing it down. The wheels were set in motion, with no rescue in sight.
What
would God’s plumb line show about your life?
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