“Go marry a prostitute” are the first words that
the prophet Hosea hears from God in the book of Hosea (1:2 NET). His
tragic marriage with Gomer provides an analogy for the relationship
of God with his people Israel. God loves, confronts, pleads, becomes
angry, and seeks reconciliation in this book containing words of
judgment as well as hope.
The
book of Hosea is one of the twelve Minor Prophets, but among these
books Hosea is preeminent. It is the longest and appears first
canonically, and it was one of the first of all the prophetic books
to be written down. The emotive poetry depicting God’s
heartbreak over the trauma of his broken relationship with his people
is hardly matched anywhere else in Scripture.
Historical
Background
The
first verse sets the book into the reigns of Jeroboam II of
Israel (784–748 BC) and Uzziah (769–733 BC), Jotham
(758–743 BC), Ahaz (733–727 BC), and Hezekiah (727–698
BC) of Judah. It is difficult to pinpoint when it was during the
reign of Jeroboam II that Hosea began his ministry or how far
into the reign of Hezekiah he served. Scholars generally date Hosea’s
ministry between 760 and 720 BC.
During
Jeroboam’s reign, Israel expanded its borders (2 Kings
14:25, 28) due to the relative weakness of its two traditional
northern enemies, Assyria and Aram. This expansion led to economic
prosperity for the upper classes but oppression for the lower
classes, which was condemned by the prophet Amos. Shortly after the
death of Jeroboam, Tiglath-pileser III came to the throne of
Assyria in 744 BC, and as Assyrian influence began to increase in
Israel, political stability for the nation declined. The reigns of
Israel’s final rulers were characterized by chaos, as six kings
reigned over Israel in less than one generation (2 Kings
15:8–31; 17:1–6). Jeroboam’s son Zechariah was
killed by Shallum, who was killed by Menahem, who was succeeded by
his son Pekahiah, who was killed by Pekah, who was killed by Hoshea,
who was exiled by Assyria.
Hosea’s
oracles generally target the northern kingdom, with over forty
references to “Israel” scattered throughout the book
(e.g., 1:4–6), but the tribe of Ephraim is also mentioned over
thirty times (e.g., 4:17; 5:3, 5). As the most influential northern
tribe, Ephraim is often used synonymously for Israel, but some of the
references to Ephraim may be due to the fact that after Assyria
conquered and exiled most of Israel in 733 BC, Ephraim was all that
remained until its destruction in 722 BC.
Outline
I.
Historical Setting (1:1)
II.
Hosea’s Family (1:2–2:1)
III.
God’s Family (2:2–23)
IV.
God Calls Hosea to Bring Gomer Back (3:1–5)
V.
The First Set of Messages (4:1–11:11)
VI.
The Second Set of Messages (11:12–14:9)
Message
The
message of the book of Hosea is God’s; his voice dominates the
book, whether he is speaking to the prophet or to the entire nation.
While markers of God’s speech are concentrated in the first
three chapters (1:2, 4, 6, 9; 2:1, 13, 16, 21; 3:1), clearly God is
speaking in most of the remainder of the book (4:1; 11:11). Hosea’s
first-person perspective appears explicitly only as he narrates how
God has told him to go and bring back his wife, Gomer (3:1–5).
Hosea may be speaking as the nation is called to return to God
(6:1–3; 14:1–3), or these calls may be coming from the
people. God also uses quotes from the people to illustrate his points
(8:2; 9:7; 10:3).
God’s
initial commission to Hosea to marry the prostitute Gomer serves as
the frame on which to hang the content of the book. God’s
primary message is that the people of Israel have been unfaithful to
the covenant that they had initially established at Sinai after he
had delivered them from enslavement in Egypt. God had said that he
would be their God, and Israel would be his people (Exod. 6:7), so
they had made a covenant that the people promised to obey (24:1–8).
Just as Hosea’s heart has been broken by the unfaithfulness of
his wife, God has been devastated by Israel’s adulterous
behavior. Gomer gives birth to three children: Jezreel (“God
Sows”), Lo-Ruhamah (“Not Pitied”), and Lo-Ammi
(“Not My People”). The name of each child has
significance in the book: “Jezreel” because God is going
to judge Jeroboam’s house for the blood shed by his
great-grandfather Jehu in the valley of Jezreel (see 2 Kings
9:36–37; 10:6–7, 11); “Not Pitied” because
God will no longer show mercy to the nation; “Not My People”
because he is no longer their God and they are no longer his people.
The themes of sowing (Hos. 2:23; 8:7; 10:12), God showing pity (2:1,
4, 23; 14:3), and Israel as the people of God (2:1, 23; 4:6, 8, 12;
6:11; 11:7) reappear throughout the book.
The
book cycles through patterns of accusation, punishment, and hope. God
accuses his people of being unfaithful to their covenant. This
unfaithfulness takes two primary forms: worship of foreign idols and
reliance on foreign nations. Despite their commitment to follow God’s
laws, they have blatantly broken the first two commandments: have no
other gods, and make no idols (Exod. 20:3–4). The first ruler
of the northern kingdom of Israel, Jeroboam I, had constructed
two calves of gold, one in Dan and one in Bethel (1 Kings
12:25–33), similar to the one made by Aaron in the wilderness
(Exod. 32:4). Jeroboam I’s golden calves have survived
beyond the reign of Jeroboam II and contributed to Israelite
apostasy during the period of the entire northern monarchy. The book
of Hosea specifically condemns calf worship (8:5–6; 10:5),
which even took the form of kissing the calves (13:2). Israel’s
idolatry also involved consulting blocks of wood instead of God
(4:12), joining themselves to idols (4:17), constructing idols of
silver and gold (8:4), and sacrificing to idols (10:5).
Because
God wants Israel to be exclusively committed to him, he has forbidden
them from making treaties with other nations (Exod. 34:12, 15; Deut.
7:2; 23:6). The book of Hosea describes their disobedience to this
command in their dealings with Assyria and Egypt. God accuses them of
depending on Assyria (Hos. 5:13; 7:11; 8:9; 12:1) and declares that
the calf they worship will be exiled to Assyria (10:6), and Assyria
will become their king (11:5). God reminds Israel of the Egyptian
deliverance in the past (2:15; 11:1; 12:13; 13:4), he condemns their
reliance on Egypt in the present (7:11, 16; 12:1), and he proclaims
that they will return to Egypt in the future (8:13; 9:3, 6; 11:5).
The “return to Egypt” should be interpreted not
geographically but figuratively, as a return to bondage and exile,
which will be performed by Assyria first in 733 BC and finally in
722 BC.
Israel’s
sins provoke God’s anger (5:10; 8:5; 13:11) and prompt him to
declare that he will punish his people (1:4; 2:13; 4:9; 5:2, 9; 8:13;
9:7, 9; 10:10). The punishment sent by God specifically targets
Israel’s king, though it is difficult to be certain which one.
Jehu’s house is the subject of the first royal condemnation
(1:4–5), which may refer to the assassination of Zechariah,
Jeroboam II’s son (2 Kings 15:8–10). The king
is called to listen to the judgment because it pertains to him (Hos.
5:1). Some of Israel’s kings have already fallen (7:7), which
may refer to the period of monarchical instability after Jeroboam II.
Eventually, Israel’s king will be completely cut off (3:4;
10:3, 7, 15; 13:10), which happened in 722 BC, when Assyria destroyed
the capital Samaria.
In
the midst of accusation and punishment, the book also includes words
of hope, specifically that Israel will return to its God, and their
relationship will be restored. Three times the people are called to
return to God: in the beginning (2:14–23), in the middle
(6:1–3), and at the end of the book (14:1–3). God views
his people not only as his wife but also as his children (11:1–4),
and he promises that because of his compassion his anger will cease
(11:8–9) and he will lead his children as they return to their
homes (11:11). In a surprising twist, immediately after telling Hosea
to give the three children names signifying judgment (1:4–9),
God declares that Israel will be called the “children of the
living God,” and the children’s names change to “Ammi”
(“My People”) and “Ruhamah” (“Pity”)
(1:10–2:1 NET). God also promises that the people of Israel
will be as numerous as the sand of the seashore (1:10), recalling his
promise to Abraham (Gen. 22:17).
Both
parental and marital imagery from the book of Hosea appear elsewhere
in Scripture. While in Hosea the line “out of Egypt I called my
son” (11:1) refers to God bringing his “children”
out of Egyptian bondage, Matthew shows how it also describes early
events in Jesus’ life as his family fled to Egypt (Matt. 2:15).
Jeremiah graphically describes the sins of Judah as adultery and
faithlessness (Jer. 3:1–25). Paul compares the relationship
between a husband and a wife to that of Christ and the church (Eph.
5:23–24). The book of Revelation concludes by describing how
the residents of the new Jerusalem will be adorned like a bride for
her husband, and they will be his people and he will be their God
(Rev. 21:2–9; 22:17).