What is it that God wants

Ordinary Life  •  Sermon  •  Submitted
0 ratings
· 7 views
Notes
Transcript
Handout
Sermon Tone Analysis
A
D
F
J
S
Emotion
A
C
T
Language
O
C
E
A
E
Social
View more →
Hosea—Micah 2. Who, Not What (6:6–8)

Who, Not What

What is it that God wants from me?

It is a question that many people ask; for good reason as the number of answers are staggering.
The Christian life is not difficult, it is impossible…C.S. Lewis
It is harder to know the mind of God than it is to know...
ADD: Cheesecake Slide
The collective whole of one’s life.
I was gonna say what to order at the Cheesecake factory.
These messages are to the least and the lost. They are for those who wonder if they have strayed too far, done too much damage. They are those who feel disconnected from God; to those who feel their life is not working, that something is missing. Those who don’t know the way back.
How to re-establish the broken relationship with God.
It is a map, a new orientation, a way to live that is pleasing to God, a way of life that brings God’s blessing and reflects God’s peace.
The whole orientation of one’s life

For God, from God:

As I mentioned week before last, this way of being which has love for God at its core motivation.
This is what your life should look life
BUT it also has to do with the Love that God has for you, for his people. This is how God is.
It is the sort of Love that God has, which is THE heart of the covenant between the Lord and Israel; it reflects his faithful love.
Hosea—Micah 2. Who, Not What (6:6–8)

responses ranged from burnt offerings to a beloved child.

Hosea—Micah 2. Who, Not What (6:6–8)

Who, Not What (6:6–8)

Surprise: it is no thing at all!

What God really wants is you!

it is who, not what (Micah 6)
This is a matter of the heart.
The collective whole of one’s life.
The whole orientation of one’s life.
This is what your life should look life.
The Wesleyan Bible Commentary, Volume 3: Isaiah–Malachi A. Jehovah Accuses and Answers (6:1–8)

“come with things, but give yourself.

Hosea—Micah 2. Who, Not What (6:6–8)

The answer begins by saying there will be no surprises! “He has showed you … what is good

Hosea—Micah 2. Who, Not What (6:6–8)

Who, Not What (6:6–8)

There will be no surprises, he has shown us, plainly.
Hosea—. Who, Not What (6:6–8)
The whole tradition of the commandments and also wisdom directives, long known in Israel.
The answer begins by saying there will be no surprises! “He has showed you … what is good.
The answer begins by saying there will be no surp
What God wants is you!
Hosea—Micah 2. Who, Not What (6:6–8)

Who, Not What (6:6–8)

Hosea—Micah 2. Who, Not What (6:6–8)

“It’s you, not something

The Wesleyan Bible Commentary, Volume 3: Isaiah–Malachi A. Jehovah Accuses and Answers (6:1–8)

“come with things, but give yourself.

Hosea—Micah 2. Who, Not What (6:6–8)

Who, Not What (6:6–8)

Hosea—Micah 2. Who, Not What (6:6–8)

Who, Not What (6:6–8)

t
Who, Not What
Who, Not What
Hosea—Micah 2. Who, Not What (6:6–8)

responses ranged from burnt offerings to a beloved child

Hosea—Micah 2. Who, Not What (6:6–8)

The answer begins by saying there will be no surprises! “He has showed you … what is good.

Doing, loving, walking

the whole tradition of the commandments and also wisdom directives, long known in Israel.
surprise: no thing at all!
What God does want is me!
Hosea—Micah 2. Who, Not What (6:6–8)

The answer makes clear that what God does want is me! “It’s you, not something

Hosea—Micah 2. Who, Not What (6:6–8)

The answer makes clear that what God does want is me! “It’s you, not something

“It’s you, not something
Hosea—Micah 2. Who, Not What (6:6–8)

God would have from God’s people a certain way of living, sketched in broad outline in the three statements which follow.

Hosea—Micah 3. Doing, Loving, Walking

Doing, Loving, Walking

Hosea—Micah 3. Doing, Loving, Walking

thematic word from the prophet Amos and emphasizes the social dimension: “to do justice

These are each things that one does.
Moral demands
oh Adam

Israel did not act in righteousness, nor did they love mercy, nor did they walk humbly in fellowship with the Lord.

Israel did not act in righteousness, nor did they love mercy, nor did they walk humbly in fellowship with the Lord.

Hosea—Micah 3. Doing, Loving, Walking

Amos’s comparison of justice to a flowing, churning stream (Amos 5:24)

Hosea—Micah 3. Doing, Loving, Walking

The powerful oppress the powerless (2:1–2, 8–9; 3:1–3, 9–10), laborers are exploited (3:10), courts are corrupt (3:11). To do justice means to work for the establishment of equity for all, especially for the powerless.

Hosea—Micah 3. Doing, Loving, Walking

Second, “to love kindness.” Here is the thematic word for Hosea, hesed. This word is especially rich in meaning, as the variety of its translations indicates. When used of human relationships, it means love with a strong element of loyalty, such as that between a husband and wife (Hos. 2:19 “steadfast love”) or between two friends (1 Sam. 20:14, “loyal love”). When used of the human relationship to God, it again means love-loyalty (Hos. 6:4, “love” and 6:6, “steadfast love”; see the commentary on these texts).

Israel did not act in righteousness, nor did they love mercy, nor did they walk humbly in fellowship with the Lord.

Hosea—Micah 3. Doing, Loving, Walking

“to walk humbly with your God.” This expression stresses the theological dimension of the sort of life God wants

Hosea—Micah 3. Doing, Loving, Walking

The word translated “humbly” has more the sense of “circumspectly, carefully,” than humility

Hosea—Micah 3. Doing, Loving, Walking

The important word is “walk,” which is used to describe the whole orientation of one’s life

Hosea—Micah 3. Doing, Loving, Walking

In Judaism the word for ethics is halacha which means “walking”; the idea is that the task of ethics is to describe how one ought to walk one’s day-by-day life.

Jesus: walk, follow me
Hosea—Micah 3. Doing, Loving, Walking

One who so walks with God will not be exempt from the dark places of life. That person does have the assurance though that this walk is not taken alone: “Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I fear no evil; for thou art with me …” (Ps. 23:4).

Hosea—Micah 3. Doing, Loving, Walking

“How should I respond? What does God want from me?” That is the question. The answer given here describes a step-by-step living with God and living for others, acting as advocate for the powerless and showing care for those who are hurting and who need help.

“is good and most kind.” He is “merciful, compassionate and rich in mercy,”22 which “he prefers to every sacrifice

“is good and most kind.” He is “merciful, compassionate and rich in mercy,”22 which “he prefers to every sacrifice

He is “the Savior of all people, and especially of the faithful.”25 Therefore the children of God must also be “merciful”26 and “peacemakers,”27 “forgiving each other as Christ also forgave us,”28 “not judging, lest we be judged.”29

“Forgive, and you will be forgiven.”31

Yet many such things as these are only said, not done, merely bandied about, unmanning rather than strengthening discipline, flattering God and pandering to themselves

Israel did not act in righteousness, nor did they love mercy, nor did they walk humbly in fellowship with the Lord.

Why not? Because they were uncircumcised in their hearts

khesed [TH2617, ZH2876] (mercy) describes the loyal love

A way of life that is humble

God lives with those whose spirits are “contrite and humble” (Isa 57:15)

Jesus taught that the humble will inherit the earth (Matt 5:5; on humility

Hosea—. Doing, Loving, Walking
This is what your life should look life
The Wesleyan Bible Commentary, Volume 3: Isaiah–Malachi A. Jehovah Accuses and Answers (6:1–8)

“come with things, but give yourself.

Hosea—. Doing, Loving, Walking
thematic word from the prophet Amos and emphasizes the social dimension: “to do justice
Related Media
See more
Related Sermons
See more