Let Them Eat Cake

Links for today’s readings:

Apr 22  Read: Amos 6 Listen: (2:13) Read: Matthew 26 Listen: (10:01)

Scripture Focus: Amos 6:1, 4

1 Woe to you who are complacent in Zion,
    and to you who feel secure on Mount Samaria,
you notable men of the foremost nation,
    to whom the people of Israel come!

4 You lie on beds adorned with ivory
    and lounge on your couches.
You dine on choice lambs
    and fattened calves.

Reflection: Let Them Eat Cake

By Erin Newton

“Better a low motive than no motive,” my mother used to say. The statement was always somewhat of a joke, noting how action was at least better than inaction. As far as a Christian ethic is concerned, I don’t think it’s really the mindset we are supposed to adopt. But what about inaction? If action is better than inaction, is inaction better than… wrong action? Or are they both just as bad?

Amos declares to Israel’s elite that they are complacent. Complacency is defined as: “marked by satisfaction with the status quo especially when accompanied by unawareness of actual dangers or deficiencies.” Satisfied with the status quo alongside obliviousness toward danger. Synonyms are “self-satisfied” or “unconcerned” or “apathetic.” Amos could have just said, Woe to you who are satisfied with how things are and are oblivious to the dangers in Israel.

Do they approve of the dangers in Israel? It doesn’t necessarily say that they are participating in the danger or that they are financing or supporting the evil around them. They simply do not care enough to react.

The “notable men of the foremost nation” implies that these were the elite, the powerful, the important leaders of the community. What are they doing? They are lounging. They are lying around in their fancy furnishings. They are eating their expensive foods. They are comfortable. They lack nothing. But most importantly to God, they lack empathy.

Sometimes we view overt sinful actions as the worst thing we can do. That mindset leads us to avoid evil (which is a good thing) but can lead us to avoid doing anything. Amos reminds us that there is something just as bad as doing evil, it is to care so little that we do nothing.

Why don’t the notable people of Israel do or say something? I assume they fear losing the luxuries they have. Like Marie Antoinette, when faced with the starving multitudes who beg for a crumb of bread, the elite shrug and reply, “Let them eat cake.”

Maybe the fear is not just losing one’s own comforts but not knowing where provisions will come from. In contrast to this apathetic mindset, Jesus faced a multitude of hungry people and told his disciples, “Feed them.”

Complacency is abhorred by God just as much as sinful actions. Let us open our eyes and loosen our grips to see the dangers in our community and then do something.

Divine Hours Prayer: A Reading

Jesus said to the disciples: “In truth I tell you, when everything is made new again and the Son of man is seated on his throne of glory, you yourselves will sit on twelve thrones to judge the twelve tribes of Israel. And everyone who has left houses, brothers, sisters, father, mother, children or land for the sake of my name will receive a hundred times as much, and also inherit eternal life. Many who are first will be last, and the last, first.” — Matthew 19.28-30

– From The Divine Hours: Prayers for Springtime by Phyllis Tickle

Read more: Of Pride and The Sword

Jesus pointedly referenced the theme of the sword in scripture…a warning to Peter and…a condemnation of religious leaders and the empire with which they were partnering.

Read more: Victims and Victimizers

Let us be humble and repentant. Otherwise, God may become terrifying to us and bring comfort, peace, and justice to our victims.

Justice to Wormwood

Links for today’s readings:

Apr 21 Read:  Amos 5 Listen: (3:44) Read: Matthew 25 Listen: (6:04)

Scripture Focus: Amos 5.7, 10, 25-26

7 There are those who turn justice into bitterness 
and cast righteousness to the ground.
10 There are those who hate the one who upholds justice in court 
and detest the one who tells the truth.
25 “Did you bring me sacrifices and offerings 
forty years in the wilderness, people of Israel? 
26 You have lifted up the shrine of your king, 
the pedestal of your idols, 
the star of your god— 
which you made for yourselves.

Reflection: Justice to Wormwood

By John Tillman

As the people ignored Amos’s calls to repent, God called into question Israel’s entire history of worship, implying that in their hearts they had always worshiped a god of success, wealth, and comfort rather than him.

Rather than provide justice (mishpat) to the poor, they were frustrating justice and causing bitterness, more literally, “wormwood.” Wormwood is translated as “bitterness” multiple times. It is symbolic of a curse or poison and may refer to hemlock. For example, wormwood is used to describe the poison of an adulteress whose lips “drip honey,” but in the end, she leads victims to a bitter death. (Proverbs 5.4)

Justice is very much the business of people of faith, and when people ignore it or frustrate it…God notices. God points out that the wealthy enjoy great benefits of stone mansions and lush vineyards (Amos 5.11), but because of their treatment of the poor, the vineyards will be filled with wailing instead of joy and they will be exiled from their comfortable homes. (Amos 5.16-17)

Amos is sympathetic to the plight of living in a corrupt land where justice is denied. “The times are evil” Amos acknowledges and points out that “the prudent keep quiet.” (Amos 5.13) But this acknowledgment of the evil state of the world is not an endorsement of doing nothing or a command to be quiet. Prudence should mean “approaching a problem wisely,” but too often it means “avoiding a problem selfishly.” Rather than avoid trouble, God charges the people to “hate evil, love good” and to “maintain justice in the courts” despite the days being evil.

We are under the same charge. Is there bitterness and poison? We must counter it with justice and righteousness. Justice, or mishpat, is the law being upheld. Righteousness, or sedeq, implies the actions that uphold it. We must not sit quietly but speak out. We must not avoid the unjust but confront them and comfort their victims.

It will not do for us to sing about justice without bringing it to pass. We must bring justice to counter bitterness. We must bring a flood of mishpat to wash away wormwood.

23 Away with the noise of your songs! 
I will not listen to the music of your harps. 
24 But let justice roll on like a river, 
righteousness like a never-failing stream! — Amos 5.23-24

Divine Hours Prayer: The Refrain for the Morning Lessons

Purge me from my sin, and I shall be pure; wash me, and I shall be clean indeed. — Psalm 51.8

– From The Divine Hours: Prayers for Springtime by Phyllis Tickle

Read more: A Trinity of Neglect

The goats didn’t actively cause hunger or oppression or sickness. They just didn’t do anything about it.

Read more: Wake-up Call

We need a wake-up call. From the goats, a clamorous claxon resounds: Serve Others! Serve the poor! Serve the hungry! Serve the outcast!

Fat Cows and Fat Cats

Links for today’s readings:

Apr 20  Read: Amos 4 Listen: (2:21) Read: Matthew 24 Listen: (5:59)

Scripture Focus: Amos 4.1-3

1 Hear this word, you cows of Bashan on Mount Samaria, 

you women who oppress the poor and crush the needy 

and say to your husbands, “Bring us some drinks!” 

2 The Sovereign Lord has sworn by his holiness: 

“The time will surely come 

when you will be taken away with hooks, 

the last of you with fishhooks. 

3 You will each go straight out 

through breaches in the wall, 

and you will be cast out toward Harmon,” 

declares the Lord.

Reflection: Fat Cows and Fat Cats

By John Tillman

Amos called Samaria’s women “cows of Bashan.” He wasn’t body shaming, but he was drawing attention to shameful things.

Just as the poet of Song of Songs was not insulting the bride by saying her hair was like a flock of goats (Song of Songs 4.1; 6.5), Amos was not insulting the physical appearance of these women by comparing them to prize cattle.

The region of Bashan was a symbol of wealth and power. Bashan had rugged mountains and terrain (Psalm 68.15-16), towering forests of strong trees (Ezekiel 27.6; Isaiah 2:12-14; Zechariah 11.2), and strong, well-fed cattle of all kinds. These fattened animals were desirable for eating (Ezekiel 39.18) and for sacrifices.

In agrarian societies, cattle are a symbol of culture and wealth. This is why Pharaoh saw fat and skinny cows in his warning dream about the famine. (Genesis 41.1-4) Amos’s “fat cow” metaphor is less instinctive to our finance-driven society, but “fat cats,” which is similarly unrelated to physical appearance, still resonates today. 1920s journalists coined “fat cats” to shame ultrawealthy industrialists and robber-barons who had outsized influence on political campaigns and public policy. Their influence contributed to increasing poverty and the Great Depression. 

Amos shamed the wanton appetites and greed of Samaria’s society that contributed to the oppression of the poor. Their hearts, not their bodies, were misshapen and we can find the same “heart” in our society. Amos would not have to look far today to find “cows of Bashan” and “fat cats” and we don’t either.

Don’t make excuses, thinking Amos only meant uber-wealthy people. His condemnation is broader. Amos wasn’t just talking about rich women—he included everyone. Take the log from your eye first. (Luke 6.41-42) Much more is demanded of those who have been given much (Luke 12.48), however, greed is not just a sickness of the wealthy. It infects us all.

Our society promotes and celebrates unfettered appetites of greed and pleasure. If you want it, you need it. If you need it, you take it. Or, better yet, force someone to give it to you. We cannot sit in this river passively—we’ll be swept away to destruction. We must constantly resist the current by paddling toward mercy, benevolence, and equal justice and anchoring ourselves to the generosity of Christ.

Like God, look at the heart, not outward appearance. (1 Samuel 16.7) It is shameful for those blessed by the generosity of Jesus to find our hearts shaped by greed. Continually confess and repent this cultural influence of greed and power.

Divine Hours Prayer: The Request for Presence

For the sake of your Name, lead and guide me. — Psalm 31.3

– From The Divine Hours: Prayers for Springtime by Phyllis Tickle

Read more: Prepared to Meet God

Through the mediation of Jesus, we can prepare to meet God with confidence.

Read more: Cherishing Chaff

Many things the disciples prized, Jesus recognized as poison. Many things they cherished Jesus called chaff in the wind.

Burden Bearers

Links for today’s readings:

Apr 17  Read: Amos 1 Listen: (2:38) Read: Matthew 21 Listen: (7:10)

Links for this weekend’s readings:

Apr 18  Read: Amos 2 Listen: (2:12) Read: Matthew 22 Listen: (4:56)
Apr 19  Read: Amos 3 Listen: (2:11) Read: Matthew 23 Listen: (4:53)

Scripture Focus: Amos 1.1-2

1 The words of Amos, one of the shepherds of Tekoa—the vision he saw concerning Israel two years before the earthquake, when Uzziah was king of Judah and Jeroboam son of Jehoash was king of Israel. 
2 He said: 
“The LORD roars from Zion 
and thunders from Jerusalem;

Reflection: Burden Bearers

By John Tillman

Amos, the fig picker and shepherd prophet, was an outlier. He was not trained as a prophet, was not a part of the priestly lineage or profession, and was not a part of the higher class of educated people from whom most prophets came. And even if all of that were not the case, he was an out-of-towner. He came from the southern kingdom of Judah to the northern kingdom of Israel to confront one of Israel’s most powerful and successful kings.

Financially and militarily, Israel was at its peak of power when Amos arrived. 

Because of God’s compassion for the people, God had used Jeroboam II to save them militarily, despite his being an evil king. (2 Kings 14.23-27) But God would also remove him. Bad news was coming. The good times were about to be over. The country was proud, powerful, and profitable, but the stench of spiritual rot was real, and the wealth of the few was squeezed from the poor. (Amos 4.1-2)

Amos would have been comfortable among the fishermen-followers of Jesus. When these men confronted the religious elite of their day, the Sanhedrin were astonished that “they were unschooled, ordinary men…” (Acts 4.13

Amos shared the background of the shepherds in the fields who heard of Jesus’ birth. He would have been more familiar with the smell of the sheep and the fields than temple courts and palaces. But instead of carrying “good news of great joy,” Amos carried news of great suffering, judgment, and disaster.

Amos’s name means “burden” or “burden bearer” and he certainly bore a burden. He was burdened with bad news. Yet, the Lord was still willing to relent. (God turned back two judgments due to Amos’s prayers. Amos 7.1-6) Amos was burdened with a love for Judah and Israel. Yet, he would be accused of being an unpatriotic outsider and a conspirator against the king. (Amos 7.10-17)

Part of the “good news” of the gospel is the “bad news” of our sins. This is a part of the burden we bear toward others to speak this truth to them in love.

May we, like Amos, be burdened to intercede and intervene. 

May we bring to others the news that Jesus Christ will, if we ask him to, bear our burdens of sin and spare us as a remnant from the judgment to come.

Divine Hours Prayer: The Greeting

You are the Lord, most high over all the earth; you are exalted far above all gods. — Psalm 97.9

– From The Divine Hours: Prayers for Springtime by Phyllis Tickle

Read more: The Discrepancy of the Fig Tree

The fig tree discrepancy that concerns Jesus is the discrepancy between outward posturing and the true fruit of faith. Truly flourishing faith produces deeds.

Read more: Judgment, The Great Equalizer

God judges the heart within us, not the dirt we live on. Judgment equalizes us all, but so does his mercy.

Prayer in our Vocation

Links for today’s readings:

Apr 16  Read: Joel 3 Listen: (3:20) Read: Matthew 20 Listen: (4:22)

Scripture Focus: Matthew 20.25-26

Jesus called them together and said, “You know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and their high officials exercise authority over them. Not so with you. Instead, whoever wants to become great among you must be your servant.”

Reflection: Prayer in our Vocation

By John Tillman

In his book, Letters to Malcolm, Chiefly on Prayer, C.S. Lewis complained that he found it ironically unhelpful to turn into a church for midday prayers.

There always seems to be someone practicing the organ or noisily going about cleaning and mopping. “Of course, blessings on her,” Lewis says. “‘Work is prayer,’ and her enacted oratio is probably worth ten times my spoken one.”

We have not held tightly to the concept of work as prayer. We see work as occupation—something that takes time we would spend elsewhere. Christians have the unique opportunity to see work as vocation—choosing to give to others on behalf of Christ.

To some, it might be a surprise that one of the primary definitions of the word “vocation” is a divine calling. One does not have to be a staff member of a church or an employee of a Christian ministry (or even a volunteer, noisily cleaning up the sanctuary and disturbing an Oxford don’s prayers) to turn grudging occupation into prayerful vocation.

One prominent example of prayerful, secular work is Fred Rogers. Despite the lack of overt religious expression on his show, Mister Rogers was an ordained minister whose specific assignment was to serve children and families through mass media. And serve them he did.

Paying tribute to Rogers on NBC Nightly News, reporter Bob Faw said, “The real Mister Rogers never preached…he never had to.” Following his spiritual calling in no way interfered with Rogers becoming one of the most successful and respected television professionals of all time.

For every believer, the gospel is our vocation. We learn to express it through our occupations.

Rogers’ spiritual discipline and sensitivity to the Holy Spirit made his show a vehicle for the gospel without explicit language of faith. Many of our readers work in faith-negative environments where faith is unwelcome, but that doesn’t mean each action can’t communicate a gospel-filled love to others.

In our careers, we have a choice between the drudgery of meaningless tasks and the honor of serving others around us in Christ’s name. If we need a picture of what that looks like, it may be helpful to us to turn on an episode of “the neighborhood.”

May we make our work our prayer.

By every action, may we pray for our co-workers, our customers, our city, and our world.

Reflection: Prayer in our Vocation

By John Tillman

In his book, Letters to Malcolm, Chiefly on Prayer, C.S. Lewis complained that he found it ironically unhelpful to turn into a church for midday prayers.

There always seems to be someone practicing the organ or noisily going about cleaning and mopping. “Of course, blessings on her,” Lewis says. “‘Work is prayer,’ and her enacted oratio is probably worth ten times my spoken one.”

We have not held tightly to the concept of work as prayer. We see work as occupation—something that takes time we would spend elsewhere. Christians have the unique opportunity to see work as vocation—choosing to give to others on behalf of Christ.

To some, it might be a surprise that one of the primary definitions of the word “vocation” is a divine calling. One does not have to be a staff member of a church or an employee of a Christian ministry (or even a volunteer, noisily cleaning up the sanctuary and disturbing an Oxford don’s prayers) to turn grudging occupation into prayerful vocation.

One prominent example of prayerful, secular work is Fred Rogers. Despite the lack of overt religious expression on his show, Mister Rogers was an ordained minister whose specific assignment was to serve children and families through mass media. And serve them he did.

Paying tribute to Rogers on NBC Nightly News, reporter Bob Faw said, “The real Mister Rogers never preached…he never had to.” Following his spiritual calling in no way interfered with Rogers becoming one of the most successful and respected television professionals of all time.

For every believer, the gospel is our vocation. We learn to express it through our occupations.

Rogers’ spiritual discipline and sensitivity to the Holy Spirit made his show a vehicle for the gospel without explicit language of faith. Many of our readers work in faith-negative environments where faith is unwelcome, but that doesn’t mean each action can’t communicate a gospel-filled love to others.

In our careers, we have a choice between the drudgery of meaningless tasks and the honor of serving others around us in Christ’s name. If we need a picture of what that looks like, it may be helpful to us to turn on an episode of “the neighborhood.”

May we make our work our prayer.

By every action, may we pray for our co-workers, our customers, our city, and our world.

Divine Hours Prayer: The Call to Prayer

Come, let us bow down, and bend the knee, and kneel before the Lord our Maker.
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