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BY DAVID WOETZEL, B.S.
"Because I will do this unto thee, prepare to meet
thy God, O Israel" (Amos 4:12).
In this fourth chapter of his book, Amos, the
shepherd of Tekoa, lays out an awful indictment.
In verses 2-3 he had
prophesied of impending military failure before Israel's enemies and of future
captivity: "the days shall come upon you, that He |God| will take
you away with hooks, and your posterity with fishhooks."
In the fourth and fifth verses
Amos sarcastically invites them to offer polluted sacrifices in their sacred
cities: "Come to Bethel, and transgress; at Gilgal multiply
transgression. . . ."
Gilgal was the first campground upon entering
the Promised Land, where the Passover was celebrated.
Bethel was Israel's religious center, where
their king Jeroboam had erected an idolatrous altar.
These references highlighted their spiritual
failure.
But Amos also reminded his contemporaries that
God had tried to warn them by
famine and hunger (verse 6);
drought and unpredictable natural disaster (verses 7-8);
pest and crop disease (verse 9);
disease and death (verses 10-11).
The refrain comes back after
each of these verses "yet have ye not returned unto me, saith the
Lord."
The conclusion of this indictment comes in our
text verse.
God will bring these people
face to face to give an account: "Prepare to meet thy God."
Even so, many people today prepare for business
appointments, family holiday reunions, and social engagements of every sort.
Yet they are woefully unprepared to meet their
God.
No command could be more
appropriate or timely: "Prepare to meet thy God."
Why should we invest our
energy preparing for mere physical encounters when the God that "formeth
the mountains" and "declareth unto man what is His
thought" (verse 13) is soon to call us before Him?
The
Institute for Creation Research (ICR)
wants people to know that God’s Word can be trusted in everything it speaks
about—from how and why we were made, to how the universe was formed, to how we
can know God and receive all He has planned for us.
After
50 years of ministry, ICR remains a leader in scientific research within the
context of biblical creation. Founded by Dr. Henry Morris in 1970, ICR exists
to conduct scientific research within the realms of origins and Earth history,
and then to educate the public both formally and informally through
professional training programs, through conferences and seminars around the
country, and through books, magazines, and media presentations.
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