Amos 2

Amos 2

Amos continues his pronouncements of judgment, first against Moab for its act of desecrating a king's bones, and then directly against Judah and Israel. He condemns Judah for rejecting God’s law, but his harshest words are for Israel, listing numerous social sins: oppressing the poor, immorality, corruption, and silencing God’s prophets. Amos reminds them that despite God’s miraculous power in delivering them from Egypt and giving them the land, their consistent disobedience will result in swift and certain punishment.

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Jeremiah 40

Jeremiah uses the obedient example of the Rechabites, who faithfully kept their ancestor's command to not drink wine, to condemn Judah's constant disobedience to God's law.

Jeremiah 41

Jeremiah writes all his prophecies on a scroll. King Jehoiakim listens to the scroll being read and defiantly cuts and burns it. Jeremiah dictates a new, expanded scroll.

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