Alastair's Adversaria - Biblical Reading and Reflections: August 6th (Hosea 4 & John 8:31-59)
Episode Date: August 5, 2021The Lord's controversy with Israel and the priest. The true sons of Abraham. My reflections are searchable by Bible chapter here: https://audio.alastairadversaria.com/explore/. If you are interested... in supporting this project, please consider supporting my work on Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/zugzwanged), using my PayPal account (https://bit.ly/2RLaUcB), or buying books for my research on Amazon (https://www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/36WVSWCK4X33O?ref_=wl_share). You can also listen to the audio of these episodes on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/alastairs-adversaria/id1416351035?mt=2.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hosea chapter 4. Hear the word of the Lord, O children of Israel, for the Lord has a controversy with the inhabitants of the land.
There is no faithfulness or steadfast love, and no knowledge of God in the land.
There is swearing, lying, murder, stealing and committing adultery.
They break all bounds, and bloodshed follows bloodshed.
Therefore the land mourns, and all who dwell in it languish, and also the beasts of the field and the birds of the heavens, and even the fish of the sea are taken away.
yet let no one contend and let no one accuse, for with you is my contention, O priest. You shall stumble
by day. The prophet also shall stumble with you by night, and I will destroy your mother. My people are
destroyed for lack of knowledge, because you have rejected knowledge. I reject you from being a
priest to me, and since you have forgotten the law of your God, I also will forget your children.
The more they increased, the more they sinned against me. I will change their glory into shame.
They feed on the sin of my people. They are greedy for their iniquity, and it shall be like people
like priest. I will punish them for their ways, and repay them for their deeds. They shall eat,
but not be satisfied. They shall play the whore, but not multiply, because they have forsaken
the Lord to cherish hoarddom, wine and new wine, which take away the understanding. My people inquire
of a piece of wood, and their walking staff gives them oracles, for a spirit of haudom has led them
astray, and they have left their guard to play the whore. They sacrifice on the tops of the mountains,
and burn offerings on the hills, under oak, poplar and terribinth, because their shade is good.
Therefore your daughters play the whore, and your brides commit adultery. I will not punish your
daughters when they play the whore, nor your brides when they commit adultery. For the men themselves
go aside with prostitutes, and sacrifice with cult prostitutes, and a people without understanding
shall come to ruin. Though you play the whore, O Israel, let not Judah become guilty. Enter not into Gilgal,
nor go up to Bethaven, and swear not, as the Lord lives. Like a stubborn Heifer, Israel is stubborn.
Can the Lord now feed them like a lamb in a broad pasture? Eiffram is joined to idols. Leave him alone.
When their drink is gone, they give themselves to whoring. Their rulers dearly love shame.
A wind has wrapped them in its wings, and they shall be ashamed because of the
their sacrifices. The opening three chapters of Jose
concerned the prophetic sign act of his taking a wife of Hordham as a symbol of
the Lord's relationship with unfaithful Israel. In chapter four we enter the main
body of the prophecies of the book, which opens with a powerful indictment upon the
people. Joshua Moon describes the centrality of the land within this prophecy. In part
because of the condensed form, the text plays a role as virtually a paradigm of
Jose's message of judgment, and the central facet of that paradigm is the land. The accused or
inhabitants in the land. The failure of covenantal obligations happens in the land. In judgment,
the land mourns. This manner of speaking trades on the ancient motif of a deity as sovereign
over its land, with the people standing as tenants who can be removed for violation of the deity's
terms. By concentrating our focus on the land, echoes of eviction, exile, can be heard without any
explicit mention being made.
Josea chapter 4 verses 1 to 3
introduce a controversy
or confrontation with the people of the land
on account of their unfaithfulness.
Versus 1 to 3 could be read as an introduction
to the main body of the book's prophecies more generally.
It demands the people's attention,
declares the fact that the Lord has a
controversy with them, gives the content
of the controversy and speaks of the Lord's judgment
that rests upon them.
In particular, the people lack the essential
qualities that the Lord would look for in a covenant partner,
faithfulness, steadfast love, and the knowledge of him.
Instead, the Lord lists a litany of sins that fill the land,
clear breaches of the Ten Commandments.
John Goldingay compares the indictment to the description of humanity prior to the flood.
Although this prophecy was likely delivered during the reign of Jeroboam II,
a period during which things were relatively stable,
such a situation would not last for long.
Verse 3 describes a languishing of the land and of its inhabitants, both man and beast,
that corresponds with its spiritual languishing.
The exact way that we should translate verse 4 is something commentators are divided on.
Moon, for instance, places the first half of the verse in quotation marks
as the words of an opponent of Hosea.
Goldingay extends the words of the supposed opponent of Hosea to run to the end of verse 5.
The words of the opponent pick up the language of the opening statement of verses 1.
to three concerning the Lord's contention. The response of the Lord through Jose is to sharpen the
charge, directing it at the priest more particularly, for with you is my contention, O priest.
In the inquest concerning the spiritual failure of the people, the blame is largely placed
at the feet of the religious leaders, the priest and the prophet. They are unreliable guides
who do not know the way. They themselves will stumble. The reference to the destruction of the
priest's mother, as Andrew Deerman notes, recalls the symbolism of Goma earlier in the book.
It might be a reference to the nation more generally, or to the capital city of Sumeria.
The priest, with whom the Lord is contending, has held responsible for the people's lack of knowledge.
They are destroyed on account of the ignorance of the priest, who has rejected knowledge,
and so the Lord rejects the priest.
The priest, who was charged to teach and uphold the law of the Lord among the people,
has forgotten the law, so the Lord will forget his to.
children. Along with the destruction of the mother, the forgetting of the children also recalls
the opening chapters and Josea's prophetic sign. Moon makes the important observation that, taken with
the rejection of the priest's mother and children, represents the cutting off of all generations.
We should also recognize the poetic justice that the Lord manifests in his judgment. Rejecting knowledge
leads to rejection from being priest. The priest's forgetting the law leads to the Lord's forget
of the priest's children. The priesthood is supposed to address the guilt of the people.
However, the priesthood is currently exacerbating the people's sin. As a consequence, the Lord would
strip them of the honour of their status. In the sacrificial system, the priests ate the sin offerings
in order to seal atonement for the people. The Lord plays upon this language in verse 8. The priests feed
on the sin of the people, but really, rather than serving as part of the atonement for and
disposal of the sins of the people, the priests are actually greedy.
for and sustained by the people's sins. The priests may fancy that their position of privilege
grants them some immunity from the Lord's judgment, but they will find that they will be punished
along with the people, receiving the recompense for their deeds. As they have sought to feed on the
people's sins, they will not be satisfied. As they engage in hoarddom, they would be rendered fruitless.
They've abandoned the Lord for the sake of their lusts and the insensibility of intoxication.
They should have been guarding the people of the Lord, and, as a man. They should have been guarding the people of the Lord,
as they have failed to do so, the people are given over to idolatry, pathetically looking to
pieces of wood for guidance. The priests, in their failure faithfully to perform their duties,
have encouraged the spirit of hoarder among the people, who pursue idolatry throughout the land
in its various cultic sites. As a consequence of their failure to guard and guide the people of the
Lord, the Lord would give the women of their households over to a spirit of hoarding,
bringing shame and disgrace upon them as their daughters became prostitutes and their wives cook-olded them what's more the lord would not punish their daughters or their wives for such sins the husband's right to protest the sin of the women of their households and bringing shame upon them is greatly diminished by the fact that they have been bringing dishonour upon themselves
They have been engaging in idolatrous sexual rituals with cult prostitutes,
and also having relations with common whores.
They have no grounds for protest.
We might recall Judah and Tamar in Genesis chapter 38,
where Judah was exposed as having no grounds upon which to cast judgment upon his daughter-in-law,
as he was guilty of the very sin of which he accused her.
Israel is so far gone that the Lord's one hope is that Judah not be infected by their infidelity.
Judah must be quarantined from the epidemic of idolatry that is destroying Israel,
giving the sights and practices of Israel's idolatrous abominations, ground zero for the infection,
a very wide berth. Given Israel's stubborn rebellion, can the Lord gently tend the nation
as a shepherd might provide for a docile lamb? Certainly not. Ephraim, another name for the northern
nation of Israel, after the leading northern tribe, must be kept at a distance, lest his idolatry
and compulsive iniquity prove contagious. Now a strong wind has arrived, and will put them to shame
as it carries them off in judgment. A question to consider, the priest is especially singled out
as responsible here. What insights do we have elsewhere in Scripture for the cause of the weight
of the responsibility that lies on the shoulders of the priest in such matters?
John chapter 8, verse 31 to 59. So Jesus said to the Jews who had believed him,
If you abide in my word, you are truly my disciples, and you will know the truth and the truth will set you free.
They answered him, we are offspring of Abraham and have never been enslaved to anyone.
How is it that you say, you will become free? Jesus answered them, truly, truly I say to you,
everyone who practices sin is a slave to sin. The slave does not remain in the house forever.
The sun remains forever. So if the sun sets you free, you will be free indeed.
I know that you are the offspring of Abraham, yet you seek to kill me because my word finds no place in you.
I speak of what I have seen with my father, and you do what you have heard from your father.
They answered him, Abraham is our father. Jesus said to them,
If you were Abraham's children, you would be doing the works Abraham did.
But now you seek to kill me, a man who has told you the truth that I heard from God.
This is not what Abraham did.
You are doing the works your father did.
They said to him,
We were not born of sexual immorality.
We have one father, even God.
Jesus said to them,
If God were your father, you would love me,
for I came from God and I am here.
I came not of my own accord, but he sent me.
Why do you not understand what I say?
It is because you cannot bear to hear my word.
You are of your father the devil,
and your will is to do your father's desires.
He was a murderer from the beginning, and does not stand in the truth, because there is no truth in him.
When he lies, he speaks out of his own character, for he is a liar and the father of lies.
But because I tell you the truth, you do not believe me.
Which one of you convicts me of sin?
If I tell the truth, why do you not believe me?
Whoever is of God hears the words of God.
The reason why you do not hear them is that you are not of God.
The Jews answered him,
Are we not right in saying that you are a Samaritan and have a demon?
Jesus answered, I do not have a demon, but I honor my father and you dishonour me.
Yet I do not seek my own glory.
There is one who seeks it, and he is the judge.
Truly, truly, I say to you, if anyone keeps my word, he will never see death.
The Jews said to him, now we know that you have a demon.
Abraham died, as did the prophets, yet you say,
if anyone keeps my word, he will never taste death. Are you greater than our Father Abraham who died?
And the prophets died. Who do you make yourself out to be? Jesus answered,
If I glorify myself, my glory is nothing. It is my father who glorifies me, of whom you say,
He is our God. But you have not known him. I know him. If I were to say that I do not know him,
I would be a liar like you, but I do know him, and I keep his word.
Your father Abraham rejoiced that he would see my day.
He saw it and was glad.
So the Jews said to him,
You are not yet 50 years old, and have you seen Abraham?
Jesus said to them, truly, truly I say to you,
before Abraham was, I am.
So they picked up stones to throw at him,
but Jesus hid himself and went out of the temple.
As in the Gospel of Luke and the Pauline epistles,
the question of the identity of the true sons of Abraham
is prominent within the Gospel of John, and nowhere more so than in the second half of Chapter 8.
Jesus' argument about slaves and sons in the House of Abraham
anticipates Paul's allegory of Hagar and Sarah in Galatians chapter 4, for instance.
Jesus addresses the Pharisees as those who were akin to slaves in the House of Abraham.
One day they would be removed.
He also describes them as the children of the devil here.
They are seed of the serpent, or a brood of vipers.
The question of who a person's true father is, the question that dominates this passage,
is answered in the one that they take after.
The closely related question of whether one is a slave or a son is also revealed by people's actions.
By their fruits, you will know them.
The person who makes a practice of sin is a slave to sin.
We might again observe similarities between Jesus' arguments in this passage
and various arguments in John's first epistle, in places such as 1 John 5 verse 1.
believes that Jesus is the Christ has been born of God, and everyone who loves the Father loves
whoever has been born of him. Or in chapter 3, verses 6 to 10, no one who abides in him
keeps on sinning. No one who keeps on sinning has either seen him or known him. Little children
let no one deceive you. Whoever practices righteousness is righteous, as he is righteous. Whoever
makes a practice of sinning is of the devil, for the devil has been sinning from the beginning.
the reason the Son of God appeared was to destroy the works of the devil.
No one born of God makes a practice of sinning, for God's seed abides in him,
and he cannot keep on sinning, because he has been born of God.
By this it is evident who are the children of God, and who are the children of the devil.
Whoever does not practice righteousness is not of God, nor is the one who does not love his brother.
Likewise we find common themes of abiding in Jesus and His Word,
looking through the Johanine literature, the Gospel of John, the Epistles of John and the Book of Revelation,
we can see numerous points of contact and close resemblance.
The description of Jesus' interlocutors in verse 31 as the Jews who had believed him
is surprising if they are the same persons as are trying to kill him in verse 40.
The reference to the Jews who believed in him connects this discourse with verse 30's reference to many who believed in him.
However, perhaps the they of verse 33 refers to a different or a broader group.
one that includes the religious officials who oppose him.
Alternatively, other commentators have suggested that factions among Jesus' own followers
or within the later church might be in view here.
As elsewhere in the gospel, Jesus speaks in ways that are misunderstood by the people to whom he is speaking.
When he speaks of freedom, they think of freedom from slavery as a people.
Their insistence that they, as the offspring of Abraham, have never been enslaved to anyone,
seems to be at odds with the experience of Israel in Egypt and in Babylon,
if not also the Jews' current situation under Roman rule.
However, they seem to have in view their pride in being sons of Abraham
and believed that the nation, even when under foreign rule,
was internally free and destined for freedom.
Jesus clearly has in view a different sort of freedom
than the Jews to whom he is speaking.
The real slavery that should concern them
is not bondage to a foreign nation, but bondage to sin.
The slave does not have a permanent place in the household,
while the son does.
Jesus as the Son is able to bring people into the freedom characteristic of sonship.
When the Jews insist that their father is Abraham, Jesus underlines the contrasts between them and Abraham,
the man that they wrongly claim to be their father.
They are trying to kill Jesus, even though he told them the truth,
completely out of keeping with the behavior of Abraham, who had welcomed the messengers who came to him.
Their violent hatred and murderous intent towards Jesus is characteristic of their father the devil,
who was a murderer from the beginning.
The intent of the devil is to kill and destroy,
to take, and to diminish life wherever it is.
Being only a creature himself, he can never create, only destroy.
In particular, humanity created in the image of God
is something he will always seek to attack.
The devil, in addition to being a murderer from the beginning,
is also a liar and the father of lies,
who speaks lies out of his own character.
We might of course recall the temptation of Eve in the garden
and the deceptions of the serpent on that occasion.
Jesus is tracing a line back from actions through character to origins. Those who practice sin
are in bondage to sin and are the children of the devil himself. While the Jews may insist that
they are the children of Abraham, their behavior belies their claims. Jesus presents a powerful
indictment against the Jews here. If they truly were of God, they would receive the words of the
man that God sent. They haven't made any demonstrable charge against Jesus. Instead, they reject him,
not merely despite his telling the truth, but because he does so.
Somewhat surprisingly, the Jews answer him by saying that he is a Samaritan and he has a demon.
Presumably these two charges go together.
Earlier in Chapter 7 verse 20, people were speculating that Christ had a demon.
The connection between his being a Samaritan and having a demon
perhaps suggests that they believe that the worship of the Samaritans is a worship of demons.
It's possible that they're insinuating here that Jesus is the bastard son of a Samaritan.
When it came to the question of being heirs and descendants of the patriarchs,
the Samaritans were in competition and opposition to the Jews.
The Samaritans challenged the Jews' claim to be exclusive descendants of Abraham.
However, the Samaritans had earlier received Jesus,
and so their charge against Christ sets up an unfavourable contrast
between them and the Samaritans who received him.
Christ had earlier spoken about the fact that those who received his word
definitively passed from death to life.
When he makes a similar claim here, the Jews regard this as
proof positive that he is possessed by a demon. Abraham and the prophets have already died. Is Christ
suggesting that He is greater than them? Of course, Jesus is the greatest son of Abraham. He's the true
heir. He goes on to declare that Abraham, their supposed father, rejoiced to see his day,
and he saw it and was glad. Perhaps he here has in mind the encounter that Abraham had with the angel
of the Lord in Genesis chapter 18 and 22. In John's Gospel, there are several occasions where
appearances of God to his people in the Old Testament are regarded as anticipations of the coming of
Christ. Christ is the glorious vision of the Lord that Isaiah saw in the temple in chapter 6. Christ is the
great I am. He is the one who appeared to Moses on Mount Sinai. He is connected with the vision of the
ladder given to Jacob at Bethel. The one who had been active throughout Israel's history is now
unveiled and made flesh, walking among us, revealing his true identity as Jesus. The crowd wonder why
he is making these claims, he's not yet 50 years of age, and yet he's claiming to have seen Abraham.
It seems strange that they would choose the figure 50, given that Jesus is only around 30 years of
age. Perhaps this should be seen as one of John's Gospels's allusions to Jubilee themes.
Jesus' remarkable claim in response, truly, truly I say to you, before Abraham was, I am,
is one in which he identifies himself with God, applying the name for God, I am, to himself.
He is not just claiming some sort of angelic status or some sort of pre-existence or the power of some lower deity.
He is identifying himself with God himself.
God has come and visited his people.
In its current form, beginning with the Nun-Johonine text of the woman caught in adultery,
John Chapter 8 begins and ends with failed stoning attempts.
Once again they are unsuccessful in taking Jesus' life because his hour has not yet come.
A question to consider.
Reading this chapter alongside Romans chapter 4,
how does the Apostle expand upon the logic of Jesus' argument here
in addressing the question of believing Gentiles within the family of Abraham?
