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Mercy and justice sound like opposites, but Amos refuses to let us split God into the parts we prefer. We follow the final chapters of the Book of Amos as God gives the prophet five vivid visions, each one pressing the same hard question: what happens when a nation keeps leaning into idolatry and still expects peace? Along the way, we see something many people miss about the judgment of God, it is never random, never careless, and never disconnected from his patience.
Two early visions land with force because they touch everyday survival: locusts devouring the later crop and fire portraying drought that drains the land dry. Amos does what faithful leaders do, he prays, he pleads, and he asks how God’s people can stand. God relents, showing real mercy without pretending sin is harmless. Then the tone shifts as the plumb line appears, a simple tool that exposes a crooked wall. Israel’s spiritual collapse is measurable, and the confrontation at Bethel shows how quickly religious power tries to silence a voice that will not negotiate truth.
The final images grow even more sobering: a basket of summer fruit signaling the end, a famine of hearing God’s words, and a temple collapse that shows no idolater can outrun accountability. And yet, the closing note is not bleak. God preserves a remnant, promises restoration, and points hope down the corridor of history toward Messiah, Jesus the Redeemer. If you’ve wrestled with repentance, justice, mercy, or what it means to hear God clearly, this conversation will meet you there. Subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.
The Christian's Compass is a companion study guide that corresponds to each of these lessons along The Wisdom Journey. Download a copy for free, or cover the cost of printing and shipping and we'll mail you a booklet.
Learn More: https://www.wisdomonline.org/mp/the-christians-compass
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