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May 9, 2024 · Date of Writing: The Book of Amos was likely written between 760 and 753 B.C. Purpose of Writing: Amos is a shepherd and a fruit picker from the Judean village of Tekoa when God calls him, even though he lacks an education or a priestly background. Amos' mission is directed to his neighbor to the north, Israel.
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to the book of Amos. The book is filled with the words and speeches of the prophet Amos. The events of Amos likely happened in the late 700s BCE but were written down later. Of course, we might wonder what an ancient text like this could teach us today, so let us keep exploring. Amos reports the Lord's judgment on Israel's Neighbors in chapter one.
- Who Wrote The Book?
- Where Are We?
- Why Is Amos So Important?
- What's The Big Idea?
- How Do I Apply this?
The prophet Amos lived among a group of shepherds in Tekoa, a small town approximately ten miles south of Jerusalem. Amos made clear in his writings that he did not come from a family of prophets, nor did he even consider himself one. Rather, he was “a grower of sycamore figs” as well as a shepherd (Amos 7:14–15). Amos’s connection to the simple li...
Amos prophesied “two years before the earthquake” (Amos 1:1; see also Zechariah 14:5), just before the halfway point of the eighth century BC, during the reigns of Uzziah, king of Judah, and Jeroboam, king of Israel. Their reigns overlapped for fifteen years, from 767 BC to 753 BC. Though he came from the southern kingdom of Judah, Amos delivered h...
Amos was fed up. While most of the prophets interspersed redemption and restoration in their prophecies against Israel and Judah, Amos devoted only the final five verses of his prophecy for such consolation. Prior to that, God’s word through Amos was directed against theprivileged people of Israel, a people who had no love for their neighbor, who t...
With the people of Israel in the north enjoying an almost unparalleled time of success, God decided to call a quiet shepherd and farmer to travel from his home in the less sinful south and carry a message of judgment to the Israelites. The people in the north used Amos’s status as a foreigner as an excuse to ignore his message of judgment for a mul...
Injustice permeates our world, yet as Christians we often turn a blind eye to the suffering of others for “more important” work like praying, preaching, and teaching. But the book of Amos reminds us that those works, while unquestionably central to a believer’s life, ring hollow when we don’t love and serve others in our own lives. Do you find your...
Summary: The book of Amos opens with the information concerning the prophet himself and the place where he resides. Amos is described as a sheepherder from Tekoa, a city ten miles south of Jerusalem. Amos received visions from the Lord concerning Israel to the north. He tells us he prophesied “in the days of Uzziah king of Judah, and in the ...
According to Amos 1:1, the author of the book is Amos. The name means “burden-bearer.” Amos further describes himself as a “shepherd”1 from Tekoa.” Some suggest that the designation “shepherd” is somewhat misleading. For example, Cragie suggests that, “Amos was not a simple shepherd.
Amos was a shepherd in a region called Tekoa, about six miles south of Bethlehem. Commentaries describe the area as somewhat rugged, rocky, and with sparse grazing fields. Shepherds in that region had to make extensive trips to feed their flocks. In the book of Amos, we find two uses Amos performed: he kept sheep (Amos 1:1),
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May 21, 2006 · “The author’s name, given in Amos 1:1, means ‘burdened.’ Amos’s heart was heavily burdened for the cause of Y AHWEH and the plight of the people. “Clearly Amos was not a ‘professional’ prophet (Amos 7:14) like the more numerous institutional or cultic prophets of his day. From his rustic background in the southern