Here is my sermon from Sunday. The text was Hosea 1:1, 2:14-23:
This
past Monday, on January 9, happens to be the day on which more people commit
marital infidelity than any other day of the year. I don’t know how they
figured that out, but it was what I heard this past week, and I thought it was
rather appropriate for today because what Hosea, the first of the 12 Minor
Prophets that we encounter, deals with is infidelity, the breaking of
relationship, and in particular the breaking of covenantal relationships. Of
course, when we think of breaking of vows, it is the breaking of marriage vows
that tends to come first. But there are
lots of other vows, sometimes merely implied, that we can also break, which can
lead us to break relationship. Several years ago, I showed a video of from the
Jimmy Kimmel show where he asked parents to give their kids terrible Christmas
presents, but this week I came across a similar video in which he asked parents
to tell their children that they had eaten all of their children’s Halloween
candy. Take a look… I am pretty sure
that Jimmy Kimmel is going to hell for that, and perhaps I am for showing it,
and you for laughing. But that breaking of relationship between these parents
and their children, and the responses the children have, I believe are
appropriate for the message we see in the prophet Hosea.
We
know very little about Hosea. We are told in that opening passage of the book
that he is the son of Beeri, a typical introduction in prophetic writings,
about whom we know nothing, and then the kings who were ruling in Israel and in
Judah. His prophetic career lasts from
the year 750 to 724 BCE, which is a fairly tumultuous time for Israel, or the
northern Kingdom. And as a reminder, after the death of King Solomon, the
united monarchy, as it is called, is divided into two kingdoms. The northern
kingdom, known as Israel, and the southern kingdom, known as Judah. The northern
kingdom is larger and contains 10 of the tribes of Israel, while Judah is
smaller and contains 2 tribes but also contains Jerusalem. While there are
several prophets who make prophecies about and for the northern kingdom, Hosea
is the only prophet that we know of who is from the northern kingdom, not from
Judah. Outside of the book of Job, Hosea is the hardest book for Biblical
translators. Not only is the text obscure and difficult in the Hebrew, the
Greek version of the Old Testament, known as the Septuagint, is also difficult.
Since it is then believed that the difficulty of the text comes not from
mistakes in transmission through the millennia, they believe that what we have
in the book of Hosea is evidence of a different dialect in ancient Hebrew. I
think that’s totally cool because that
means there were much larger divides between Israel and Judah than we might
otherwise not be aware of besides for a political boundary. I think that’s
totally cool. It’s like George Bernard Shaw’s quote that Britain and America
are a people “divided by a common language.”