
Text -- Amos 5:1-6 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
So she was, when first espoused to God.

Broken to pieces upon her own land, and so left as a broken vessel.

Consult not, worship not the idol at Bethel, Gilgal, or Beersheba.

Wesley: Amo 5:6 - -- The kingdom of the ten tribes, the chief whereof was Ephraim, the son of Joseph.
The kingdom of the ten tribes, the chief whereof was Ephraim, the son of Joseph.

Wesley: Amo 5:6 - -- el - If once this fire breaks out, all your idols in Beth - el shall not be able to quench it.
el - If once this fire breaks out, all your idols in Beth - el shall not be able to quench it.
JFB: Amo 5:1 - -- An elegy for the destruction coming on you. Compare Eze 32:2, "take up," namely, as a mournful burden (Eze 19:1; Eze 27:2).

JFB: Amo 5:2 - -- The Israelite state heretofore unsubdued by foreigners. Compare Isa 23:12; Jer 18:13; Jer 31:4, Jer 31:21; Lam 2:13; may be interpreted, Thou who wast...
The Israelite state heretofore unsubdued by foreigners. Compare Isa 23:12; Jer 18:13; Jer 31:4, Jer 31:21; Lam 2:13; may be interpreted, Thou who wast once the "virgin daughter of Zion." Rather, "virgin" as applied to a state implies its beauty, and the delights on which it prides itself, its luxuries, power, and wealth [CALVIN].

JFB: Amo 5:2 - -- In the existing order of things: in the Messianic dispensation it is to rise again, according to many prophecies. Compare 2Ki 6:23; 2Ki 24:7, for the ...


JFB: Amo 5:3 - -- That is, "the city from which there used to go out a thousand" equipped for war. "City" is put for "the inhabitants of the city," as in Amo 4:8.
That is, "the city from which there used to go out a thousand" equipped for war. "City" is put for "the inhabitants of the city," as in Amo 4:8.

JFB: Amo 5:3 - -- Shall have only a hundred left, the rest being destroyed by sword and pestilence (Deu 28:62).
Shall have only a hundred left, the rest being destroyed by sword and pestilence (Deu 28:62).

JFB: Amo 5:4 - -- Literally, "Seek . . . Me, and live." The second imperative expresses the certainty of "life" (escape from judgment) resulting from obedience to the p...

JFB: Amo 5:5 - -- In Judah on the southern frontier towards Edom. Once "the well of the oath" by Jehovah, ratifying Abraham's covenant with Abimelech, and the scene of ...

JFB: Amo 5:5 - -- A play on similar sounds in the Hebrew, Gilgal, galoh, yigleh: "Gilgal (the place of rolling) shall rolling be rolled away."
A play on similar sounds in the Hebrew, Gilgal, galoh, yigleh: "Gilgal (the place of rolling) shall rolling be rolled away."

JFB: Amo 5:5 - -- Beth-el (that is, the "house of God"), called because of its vain idols Beth-aven (that is, "the house of vanity," or "naught," Hos 4:15; Hos 10:5, Ho...

JFB: Amo 5:6 - -- Bursting through everything in His way. God is "a consuming fire" (Deu 4:24; Isa 10:17; Lam 2:3).

JFB: Amo 5:6 - -- The kingdom of Israel, of which the tribe of Ephraim, Joseph's son, was the chief tribe (compare Eze 37:16).
The kingdom of Israel, of which the tribe of Ephraim, Joseph's son, was the chief tribe (compare Eze 37:16).

JFB: Amo 5:6 - -- That is, none in Beth-el to quench it; none of the Beth-el idols on which Israel so depended, able to remove the divine judgments.
That is, none in Beth-el to quench it; none of the Beth-el idols on which Israel so depended, able to remove the divine judgments.
Clarke: Amo 5:1 - -- Hear ye this word - Attend to this doleful song which I make for the house of Israel.
Hear ye this word - Attend to this doleful song which I make for the house of Israel.

Clarke: Amo 5:2 - -- The virgin of Israel - The kingdom of Israel, or the ten tribes, which were carried into captivity; and are now totally lost in the nations of the e...
The virgin of Israel - The kingdom of Israel, or the ten tribes, which were carried into captivity; and are now totally lost in the nations of the earth.

Clarke: Amo 5:3 - -- The city that went out by a thousand - The city that could easily have furnished, on any emergency, a thousand fighting men, can now produce scarcel...
The city that went out by a thousand - The city that could easily have furnished, on any emergency, a thousand fighting men, can now produce scarcely one hundred - one in ten of the former number; and now of the hundred scarcely ten remain: so reduced was Israel when Shalmaneser besieged and took Samaria, and carried the residue into captivity.

Clarke: Amo 5:4 - -- Seek ye me, and ye shall live - Cease your rebellion against me; return to me with all your heart; and though consigned to death, ye shall be rescue...
Seek ye me, and ye shall live - Cease your rebellion against me; return to me with all your heart; and though consigned to death, ye shall be rescued and live. Deplorable as your case is, it is not utterly desperate.

Clarke: Amo 5:5 - -- But seek not Beth-el - There was one of Jeroboam’ s golden calves, and at Gilgal were carved images; both were places in which idolatry was tri...
But seek not Beth-el - There was one of Jeroboam’ s golden calves, and at Gilgal were carved images; both were places in which idolatry was triumphant. The prophet shows them that all hope from those quarters is utterly vain; for Gilgal shall go into captivity, and Beth-el be brought to naught. There is a play or paronomasia on the letters and words in this clause:

Clarke: Amo 5:6 - -- In the house of Joseph - The Israelites of the ten tribes, of whom Ephraim and Manasseh, sons of Joseph, were the chief.
In the house of Joseph - The Israelites of the ten tribes, of whom Ephraim and Manasseh, sons of Joseph, were the chief.
Calvin: Amo 5:1 - -- Some render the verse thus, “Hear ye this word, because upon you, or for you, I raise a lamentation:” but we shall hereafter speak more at large ...
Some render the verse thus, “Hear ye this word, because upon you, or for you, I raise a lamentation:” but we shall hereafter speak more at large as to the proper rendering. Let us see what the subject is. The Prophet here denounces on the Israelites the punishment they had deserved; and yet they did not think that it was nigh; and they ferociously despised, I have no doubt, the denunciation itself, because no chance had as yet taken place, which might have pointed out such a destruction. Hence the Prophet and his threatenings were both despised.
He however threatens them here in severe terms with the judgment of God, which they feared not: and this is the reason why he says, Hear ye. It was not, indeed, without reason that he thus began and intimated that they greatly flattered themselves, nay, that they stopped their ears against wholesome counsels: the admonition would have been otherwise superfluous. The Prophet then indirectly reproves that supine indifference in which the Israelites indulged themselves.
But with regard to the words, some, as I have before mentioned, refer this lamentation to Amos himself, as though he had said, that he lamented the state of the people, finding that they were so stupid, and did not perceive how dreadful the wrath of God is. Since, then, they thus flattered themselves in their sins, those interpreters think that the Prophet here assumes the character of a mourner for that irreclaimable people. Hear, he says, this word even because I lament over you. For the more refractory the people were, the more touched with grief the prophet no doubt was: for he saw how horrible the judgment of God was, which was nigh them, on account of their stubbornness. No wonder then that the Prophet says here, that he undertook or raised lamentation for the people; and this mode of speaking is common in Scripture.
But yet I rather think that another sense is more suitable to this place, which becomes evident by putting in an exegetic particle, Hear ye then this word which I raise upon you, even a lamentation, etc. The word
It afterwards follows, Even a lamentation, O house of Israel; which means, “I raise upon you a word, which will constrain you to mourn and lament: though now ye are so refractory against God, that ye spurn all warnings, and reject all threatening; yet this word shall at last prove mournful to you.” This seems to be the genuine sense of the Prophet: in the first place, he reproves the stupidity of the people of Israel, by demanding a hearing; then he reproves their contempt of God in despising all threatenings; and he shows also that this prophecy would prove mournful to them for having so long trifled with God, “The lament of the house of Israel shall be this word, which I now raise up upon you.” it follows —

Calvin: Amo 5:2 - -- This was substantially the vengeance which was now nigh the Israelites, though they rested securely, and even scorned all the threatening of God. Th...
This was substantially the vengeance which was now nigh the Israelites, though they rested securely, and even scorned all the threatening of God. The virgin of Israel, he says, has fallen Expounders have too refinedly explained the word virgin; for they think that the people of Israel are here called a virgin, because God had espoused them to himself, and that though they ought to have observed spiritual chastity towards God, they yet abandoned themselves to all kinds of pollutions: but a virgin, we know, is a title given for the most part by the Prophets to this or that people on account of their delicacies; for Babylon, no less than Samaria or the people of Israel, is called a virgin. Certainly this refined interpretation cannot be applied to Babylon, to Egypt, to Tyre, and to other places. I have therefore no doubt but the Prophet here arraigns the Israelites, because they, relying on their strength, indulged themselves. They were quiet in their own retreats, and when all kinds of blessings abounded, they lived daintily and sumptuously. As then they were indulging themselves in such pleasures he calls them a virgin. The virgin of Israel then has fallen, and shall no more rise again.
A condition may be here included, as an exhortation to repentance immediately follows: we may then fitly regard this as being understood, “except they timely repent:” otherwise the Israelites must have fallen without hope of restoration. But we may also refer this to the body of the people: fallen then had the virgin of Israel, not so however that they were all destroyed, as we shall hereafter see; for the Prophet says that the tenth part would remain: but this is rightly said of the people generally; for we know that the kingdom had so fallen, that it never afterwards did rise. A remnant of the tribe of Judah did indeed return to Jerusalem; but the Israelites are at this day dispersed though various parts of the world; yea, they are hid either in the mountains of Armenia, or in other regions of the East. Since then what the Prophet here denounces has been really fulfilled as to the whole kingdom, we may take the place without supposing any thing understood, “Fallen has the virgin of Israel.” For as God showed mercy when the people as a body were destroyed, that some remained, is what does not militate with the prophecy, that the whole body had fallen. Fallen then has the virgin of Israel, nor will she any more rise again; that is, the kingdom shall not by way of recovery be restored; and this, we know, has never taken place.
Forsaken is she, he says, on her own land, and there is none to raise her up; which means, that she will continue fallen: though she may remain in her own place, she will not yet recover what she had lost. We now understand the Prophet’s meaning; and, at the same time, we see that that people had so fallen, as never to rise again, as it has been stated, into a kingdom. Let us now proceed —

Calvin: Amo 5:3 - -- The Prophet now expresses more clearly what he had before said, — that the kingdom would perish and yet so that the Lord would preserve some remnan...
The Prophet now expresses more clearly what he had before said, — that the kingdom would perish and yet so that the Lord would preserve some remnants. Then as to the body of the people, Israel had fallen; but as to a few remnants they were saved; but they were a small numbers such as the Prophet mentions. We hence see that some hope of mercy was given to God’s chosen people, and that in the meantime destruction was denounced on the whole nation. We have already seen that their wickedness was past hope; it was therefore necessary to announce to them the sentence of final ruin; but it was so done, as not to drive to despair the faithful few, who remained hid among the multitude.
The city then, from which a thousand went forth, shall have a hundred remaining; and the city from which went forth a hundred, shall have ten Armies were wont formerly to be decimated, when any sedition had been made: but God threatens the Israelites here with a much heavier judgment, that only the tenth part would be saved from ruin. We now then perceive the design of the Prophet. Now this could not alleviate the grief of the people; but the hypocrites were more exasperated, on hearing that few would be saved, and that all hope of deliverance was cut off from them. When, therefore, they saw that God dealt with them with so much severity, envy increased their griefs and more embittered their minds; and this was what the Prophet designed; for it was of no use to apply any solace to the despisers of God: but as God knew that there were some seed remaining among the people, he intended to provide for the miserable, who would have been a hundred times swallowed up with grief, had no mitigation been offered them. The Prophet then directs his discourse to the few, when he says, “In the city from which a thousand had gone forth there will be a hundred; and in that from which a hundred went forth, ten will remain alive.” It now follows —

Calvin: Amo 5:4 - -- Amos here again exhorts the Israelites to repentance; and it was an address common to all, though the greater part, as we have said, were altogether ...
Amos here again exhorts the Israelites to repentance; and it was an address common to all, though the greater part, as we have said, were altogether past recovery; but it was necessary, as long as they continued a chosen people, to call them to repentance; for they had not been as yet abdicated. We further know, that the Prophets preached in order to invite some to God, and to render others inexcusable. With regard to the end and design of public teaching, it is, that all should in common be called: but God’s purpose is different; for he intends, according to his own secret counsel, to draw to himself the elect, and he designs to take away all excuse from the reprobate, that their obstinacy may be more and more apparent. We must further bear in mind, that while the people of Israel continued, the doctrine of repentance and faith was preserved among them; and the reason was that to which I have alluded, because they remained as yet in the fold of God. It is no wonder then that the Prophet gives again to the Israelites the hope of pardon, provided they repented.
Thus saith Jehovah to the house of Israel, Seek me, and ye shall live This sentence has two clauses. In saying, Seek me, the Prophet exhorts the Israelites to return to a sane mind: and then he offers them the mercy of God, if only they sought from the heart to reconcile themselves to him. We have elsewhere said that men cannot be led to repentance, unless they believe that God will be propitious to them; for all who think him to be implacable, ever flee away from him, and dread the mention of his name. Hence, were any one through his whole life to proclaim repentance, he could effect nothing, except he were to connect with this the doctrine of faith, that is, except he were to show that God is ready to give pardon, if men only repent from the heart. These two parts, then, which ought not to be separated, the Prophet here connects together very wisely and for the best reason, when he says, Seek me, and ye shall live; intimating that the gate of mercy was still open, provided the Israelites did not persevere in their obstinacy. But, at the same time, he lays this to their charge, — that they willfully perished through their own fault; for he shows that in themselves was the only hindrance, that they were not saved; for God was not only ready to receive them into favor, but also anticipated and exhorted them, and of his own free will sought reconciliation. How then was it, that the Israelites despised the salvation offered to them? This was the madness which he now charges them with; for they preferred ruin to salvation, inasmuch as they returned not to God when he so kindly invited them, Seek me, and ye shall live The same thing is stated in another place, where it is said, that God seeketh not the death of a sinner, (Eze 18:32)
But as we have already said, the Prophets spoke thus in common to all the people, but their doctrine was not to all efficacious; for the Lord inwardly attracted his elect, and others were rendered inexcusable. But still this is true, that the whole blame, that they perished, were in the children of Israel, for they refused the salvation offered to them. What indeed was the cause of their destruction, but their own obstinacy? And the root of the evil, was it not in their own hearts? Then none of them could evade the charge made against them by the Prophet, — that they were the authors of their own ruin, for each of them must have been conscious of his own perverseness.

Calvin: Amo 5:5 - -- But Amos afterwards defines the character of true repentance, when he says, Seek not Bethel, go not to Gilgal, pass not over to Beersheba Some thin...
But Amos afterwards defines the character of true repentance, when he says, Seek not Bethel, go not to Gilgal, pass not over to Beersheba Some think that the Prophet here repudiates all the disguises, which are usually pretended by hypocrites. We indeed know that when God calls such men to himself, that they seek indirect and tortuous courses; for none of them return sincerely and willingly to God. Men indeed see that they are justly reproved for having departed from God: but when they are called back to him they take a circuitous course, as I have said, and not the straight road. Thus, though they pretend to seek God, they seek subterfuges that they may not present themselves to him. All this is no doubt true; but the Prophet advances farther; for he shows here, that the Israelites by going to Bethel not only lost all their labor, but also grievously offended God; for superstition was in itself condemnable. If Amos had preached at Jerusalem, he might have said, “Go not into the temple, for in vain ye offer sacrifices;” as indeed he does say hereafter, “Come not with your flock.” For he there shows, that God is not to be pacified by ceremonies; nay, in that very chapter, he rejects feast-days and sacrifices; but in this place he ascends higher, and says that these two things are wholly contrary — to seek God, and to seek Bethel; as though he said, “If ye from the heart return to me, renounce all the superstitions to which you have been hitherto attached.”
It is indeed a proof of true conversion, when the sinner is displeased with himself on account of his sins and hates the things which before pleased him and with a changed mind devotes himself wholly to God. It is of this that the Prophet now treats; as though he said, “If there is in you a purpose to return to God, cast away all your superstitions; for these two things — true religion and idolatry, cannot be joined together. As long then as ye remain fixed in that false worship, to which you have accustomed yourselves, ye continue alienated from God. Then reconciliation with him demands that you bid adieu to all your corrupt forms of worship.” The import of the whole then is this, — that the Israelites could not be reconciled to God, except they departed from their superstitions. Let them turn away, he says, from Bethel, and Gilgal, and Beersheba
We indeed know that the calves were made at Bethel; and Gilgal, no doubt, became celebrated for the passing of the people over Jordan, and also, as it is well known, for the circumcising of the children of Abraham; and as to Beersheba, we know that Abraham dwelt there for a long time, and frequently offered sacrifices to God. Now, this vicious zeal (
The same thing may be said at this day to those who wish to blend the dregs of the Papacy with the pure and holy worship of God; for there are at this day many go-betweens, ( mediatores ) who, while they see that our doctrine cannot be disapproved of, yet wish to contrive some middle course; that is, they wish to reconcile Popery with the doctrine of the Gospel. But the Prophet shows that such a mixture cannot be endured by God. How so? Because light cannot agree with darkness. Hence, corruptions, except they be abolished, will always subvert the true worship of God. We now see, that the lesson conveyed by this doctrine is, that the pure worship of God cannot be restored while the corruptions of the world, which are contrary to his word, prevail.
Come not then to Gilgal, for by migrating it shall migrate There is an alliteration in the words of the Prophet, “Gilgal by rolling shall be rolled;” for Gilgal means rolling. Were such a phraseology allowable, it would be this, “Gilgal by gilling shall be gilled;” that is, it shall be rolled with quick rolling. God intimates that this place, under the protection of which the Israelites thought themselves safe, would be destroyed, as it had been already destined for destruction. Gilgal then be migrating shall migrate; not that the place could remove, but that it would be wholly demolished, so that nothing should remain there but dreadful tokens of God’s vengeance.

Calvin: Amo 5:6 - -- He then adds, Seek Jehovah, and ye shall live This repetition is not superfluous: the Prophet confirms what I have already stated, that such was th...
He then adds, Seek Jehovah, and ye shall live This repetition is not superfluous: the Prophet confirms what I have already stated, that such was the opposition between the true and legitimate worship of God, and idolatry and superstition, that the people of Israel, as long as they retained their corruptions, proved that they had nothing to do with God, whatever they may have pretended with their mouths and by their ceremonies. Seek God, he says, and ye shall live; and this repetition was very useful for this end, that hypocrites might know that they were justly condemned, inasmuch as they did not consecrate themselves wholly to God; for they were ever ready to contend with God whenever they could. “Why does God deal so strictly with us? why does he not concede to us at least something? for we do not deny him every thing. But if we do what we think to be right, why does he not indulge us at least on this account?” But when God not only urges hypocrites by his doctrine, but visits them also with punishments then they become angry, and even raise a clamor. Hence the Prophet, the second time, calls them to this duty, Seek Jehovah, and ye shall live; as though he said, “Ye will gain nothing by evasion; for if any one seeks God truly and from the heart, God will not disappoint him; he will receive him into favor and will bless him. That ye then pine away in your calamities, impute this to your own obstinacy and stubbornness: it is so, because ye do not truly seek God; for while ye retain your corruptions, as I have said before, ye do not seek him.”
But he adds Lest he pass on like a fire.
In the verse before I omitted one thing, to which I shall now advert. The Prophet said, that Bethel would be for a trouble, or be nothing. Bethel, we know, is called in another place Bethaven, the house of iniquity; and Aven means in Hebrew sometimes iniquity, sometimes grief or trouble, sometimes labor or difficulty, and sometimes nothing. It is not to be taken for iniquity in this place; this is certain: but Amos, on the contrary, speaks of punishment, which awaited that place, since it was abominable in the sight of God. As then he had said of Gilgal, that it would be rolled; so now he says of Bethel, that it would be for a trouble or grief, or be nothing. Either senses would be appropriate; — that Bethel, from which the Israelites hoped for a remedy to all their evils, would be to them a trouble, that is, the cause of their ruin, or that it would be nothing; as though he had said, that their hopes would be fallacious and empty in expecting any relief from Bethel. It afterwards follows —
TSK: Amo 5:1 - -- Hear : Amo 3:1, Amo 4:1
I take : Amo 5:16; Jer 7:29, Jer 9:10,Jer 9:17, Jer 9:20; Eze 19:1, Eze 19:14, Eze 26:17, Eze 27:2, Eze 27:27-32, Eze 28:12; E...

TSK: Amo 5:2 - -- virgin : Isa 37:22; Jer 14:17, Jer 18:13, Jer 31:4; Lam 2:13
is fallen : 2Ki 15:29, 2Ki 17:16; Isa 3:8; Hos 14:1
she shall : Isa 14:21, Isa 24:20, Isa...
virgin : Isa 37:22; Jer 14:17, Jer 18:13, Jer 31:4; Lam 2:13
is fallen : 2Ki 15:29, 2Ki 17:16; Isa 3:8; Hos 14:1
she shall : Isa 14:21, Isa 24:20, Isa 43:17; Jer 51:64
she is : Jer 4:20
none : Amo 7:2-5, Amo 9:11; Isa 51:17, Isa 51:18; Jer 2:27, Jer 30:12-14; Lam 1:16-19; Eze 16:36, Eze 16:37; Hos 6:2


TSK: Amo 5:4 - -- Seek : Amo 5:6; Deu 30:1-8; 1Ch 28:9; 2Ch 15:2, 2Ch 20:3, 2Ch 34:3; Psa 14:2, Psa 27:8; Isa 55:6, Isa 55:7; Jer 29:12, Jer 29:13; Lam 3:25, Lam 3:26; ...

TSK: Amo 5:5 - -- seek : Amo 4:4; Hos 4:15, Hos 9:15, Hos 10:14, Hos 10:15, Hos 12:11
Beersheba : Amo 8:14; Gen 21:33
Gilgal : There is a paronomasia here, both on the ...
seek : Amo 4:4; Hos 4:15, Hos 9:15, Hos 10:14, Hos 10:15, Hos 12:11
Beersheba : Amo 8:14; Gen 21:33
Gilgal : There is a paronomasia here, both on the letters and words:
and Bethel : Amo 7:17; Lev 26:30-32; Deu 28:41; Hos 4:15, Hos 10:8, Hos 10:15
come : Job 8:22; Psa 33:10; Isa 8:10, Isa 29:20; 1Co 1:28, 1Co 2:6; Rev 18:17

TSK: Amo 5:6 - -- Seek : Amo 5:4; Eze 33:11
lest : Exo 22:6
the house : Amo 6:6; Gen 48:8-20; Jos 18:5; Jdg 1:22, Jdg 1:23; 2Sa 19:20; 1Ki 11:28; Eze 37:19; Zec 10:6
th...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Amo 5:1 - -- In order to impress Israel the more, Amos begins this his third appeal by a "dirge"over its destruction, mourning over those who were full of joy, a...
In order to impress Israel the more, Amos begins this his third appeal by a "dirge"over its destruction, mourning over those who were full of joy, and thought themselves safe and enviable. As if a living man, in the midst of his pride and luxury and buoyant recklessness of heart, could see his own funeral procession, and hear, as it were, over himself the "earth to earth, ashes to ashes, dust to dust."It would give solemn thoughts, even though he should impatiently put them from him. So must it to Israel, when after the tide of victories of Jeroboam II, Amos said, "Hear this word which I am lifting up,"as a heavy weight, to cast it down "against"or "upon you,"a funeral "dirge,"O house of Israel. Human greatness is so unstable, human strength so fleeting, that the prophet of decay finds a response in man’ s own conscience, however he may silence or resent it. He would not resent it, unless he felt its force.
Dionysius: "Amos, an Israelite, mourneth over Israel, as Samuel did over Saul 1Sa 15:35, or as Isaiah says, "I will weep bitterly; labor not to comfort me, because of the spoiling of the daughter of my people"Isa 22:4; images of Him who wept over Jerusalem.""So are they bewailed, who know not why they are bewailed, the more miserable, because they know not their own misery."

Barnes: Amo 5:2 - -- She hath fallen, she shall rise no more, the virgin of Israel; she hath been dashed down upon her land, there is none to raise her up - Such is...
She hath fallen, she shall rise no more, the virgin of Israel; she hath been dashed down upon her land, there is none to raise her up - Such is the dirge, a dirge like that of David over Saul and Jonathan, over what once was lovely and mighty, but which had perished. He speaks of all as past, and that, irremediably. Israel is one of the things which had been, and which would never again be. He calls her tenderly, "the virgin of Israel,"not as having retained her purity or her fealty to God; still less, with human boastfulness, as though she had as yet been unsubdued by man. For she had been faithless to God, and had been many times conquered by man. Nor does it even seem that God so calls her, because He once espoused her to Himself For isaiah so calls Babylon. But Scripture seems to speak of cities, as women, because in women tenderness is most seen; they are most tenderly guarded; they, when pure, are most lovely; they, when corrupted, are most debased.
Hence , "God says on the one hand, "I remember thee, the love of thine espousals"Jer 2:2; on the other, "Hear, thou harlot, the word of the Lord"Eze 16:35. When He claims her faithfulness He calls her, betrothed."Again , "when He willeth to signify that a city or nation has been as tenderly loved and anxiously guarded, whether by Himsclf or by others, He calleth it "virgin,"or when lie would indicate its beauty and lovely array. Isaiah saith, ‘ come down and sit in the dust, virgin daughter of Babylon’ Isa 47:1, that is, thou who livedest before in all delicacies, like a virgin under the shelter of her home. For it follows, ‘ for thou shalt no more be called tender and delicate.’ "More pitiable, for their tenderness and delicacy, is the distress of women. And so he pictures her as already fallen, "dashed"(the word imitates the sound) to the earth "upon her own ground."An army may be lost, and the nation recover. She was "dashed down upon her own ground."In the abode of her strength, in the midst of her resources, in her innermost retreat, she should fall. In herself, she fell powerless. And he adds, she has "no one to raise her up;"none to have ruth upon her; image of the judgment on a lost soul, when the terrible sentence is spoken and none can intercede! "She shall not rise again."As she fell, she did not again rise. The prophet beholds beyond the eighty-five years which separated the prosperity under Jeroboam II from her captivity. As a people, he says, she should be restored no more; nor was she.

Barnes: Amo 5:3 - -- The city that went out by a thousand - (that is, probably that sent out a thousand fighting men, as the word "went out"is often used for, "went...
The city that went out by a thousand - (that is, probably that sent out a thousand fighting men, as the word "went out"is often used for, "went out"to fight,) "shall have"literally, "shall retain, an hundred."She was to be decimated. Only, the tenth alone was to be reserved alive; the nine-tenths were to be destroyed. And this, alike in larger places and in the small. The city "that went forth an hundred shall retain ten."Smaller places escape for their obscurity, the larger from their strength and situation. One common doom was to befall all. Out of all that multitude, one tithe alone was to he preserved , "dedicated to God,"that remnant which God always promised to reserve.

Barnes: Amo 5:4 - -- Seek ye Me and ye shall live - Literally, "seek Me; and live."Wonderful conciseness of the word of God, which, in two words, comprises the whol...
Seek ye Me and ye shall live - Literally, "seek Me; and live."Wonderful conciseness of the word of God, which, in two words, comprises the whole of the creature’ s duty and his hopes, his time and his eternity. The prophet users the two imperatives, inoneing both, man’ s duty and his reward. He does not speak of them, as cause and effect, but as one. Where the one is, there is the other. To seek God is to live. For to seek God is to find Him, and God is Life and the Source of life. Forgiveness, grace, life, enter the soul at once. But the seeking is diligent seeking. : "It is not to seek God anyhow, but as it is right and meet that He should be sought, longed for, prayed for, who is so great, a Good, constantly, fervently, yea, to our power, the more constantly and fervently, as an Infinite Good is more to be longed for, more loved than all created good."The object of the search is God Himself. "Seek Me,"that is, seek God for Himself, not for anything out of Him, not for His gifts, not for anything to be loved with Him. This is not to seek Him purely. All is found in Him, but by seeking Him first, and then loving Him in all, and all in Him. "And ye shall live,"first by the life of the body, escaping the enemy; then by the life of grace now, and the life of glory hereafter, as in that of the Psalmist, "your heart shall live who seek God"Psa 69:32.

Barnes: Amo 5:5 - -- But (and) seek not Bethel - Israel pretended to seek God in Bethel. Amos sets the two seeking, as incompatible. The god, worshiped at Bethel, w...
But (and) seek not Bethel - Israel pretended to seek God in Bethel. Amos sets the two seeking, as incompatible. The god, worshiped at Bethel, was not the One God. To seek God there was to lose Him. "Seek not God,"he would say, "and a phantom, which will lead from God."
And pass not to Beersheba - Jeroboam I pretended that it was too much for Israel to go up to Jerusalem. And Yet Israel thought it not too much to go to the extremest point of Judah toward Idumaea , perhaps, four times as far south of Jerusalem, as Jerusalem lay from Bethel. For Beersheba is thought to have lain some thirty miles south of Hebron , which is twenty-two miles south of Jerusalem ; while Bethel is but twelve to the north. So much pains will people take in self-willed service, and yet not see that it takes away the excuse for neglecting the true. At Beersheba, Abraham "called upon the name of the Lord, the everlasting God"Gen 21:33. There God revealed Himself to Isaac and Jacob Gen 26:23-24; Gen 46:1. There, because He had so revealed Himself, Judah made a place of idolatry, which Israel, seeking nought besides from Judah, sought. Beersheba was still a town or large village in the time of Jerome. Now all is swept away, except "some foundations of ruins,"spread over 34 of a mile, "with scarcely one stone upon another". The wells alone remain , with the ancient names.
Gilgal shall surely go into captivity - The verbal allusions in the prophets are sometimes artificial; sometimes, they develop the meaning of the word itself, as when Zephaniah says, "Ekron (probably the "firm-rooting") "shall be uprooted"Zep 2:4; sometimes, as here, the words are connected, although not the same. In all cases, the likeness of sound was calculated to fix them in men’ s memories. It would be so, if one with authority could say, "Paris perira", "Paris shall perish"or "London is undone."Still more would the words, Hag-gilgal galo yigleh, because the name Gilgal still retained its first meaning, "the great rolling , and the word joined with it had a kindred meaning. Originally it probably means, "swept clear away."God first "rolled away the reproaeh of Egypt"Jos 5:9 from His people there. Then, when it made itself like the pagan, it should itself be rolled clear away Jer 51:25. Gilgal was originally in Benjamin, but Israel had probably annexed it to itself, as it had Bethel and Jericho 1Ki 16:34, both of which had been assigned by Joshua to Benjamin Jos 18:21-22.
And Bethel shall come to nought - Hosea had called "Bethel, God’ s house,"by the name of "Bethaven Hos 4:15; Hos 10:5, Vanity-house."Amos, in allusion to this probably, drops the first half of the name, and says that it shall not merely be "house of vanity,"but "Aven, vanity"itself. "By sin the soul, which was the house or temple of God, becomes the temple of vanity and of devils."

Barnes: Amo 5:6 - -- Seek ye the Lord and ye shall live - Literally, "seek the Lord and live;"being united to Him, the Fountain of life. He reimpresses on them the ...
Seek ye the Lord and ye shall live - Literally, "seek the Lord and live;"being united to Him, the Fountain of life. He reimpresses on them the one simple need of the creature, "seek God,"the one true God as He revealed Himself, not as worldly people, or the politicians of Jeroboam’ s court, or the calf-priests, fabled of Him. "Seek Him."For in Him is all; without Him, nothing.
Lest He break out like fire in Bethel - Formerly the Spirit of God came vehemently down upon Sansom Jdg 14:6, Jdg 14:19; Jdg 15:14 and Saul 1Sa 10:6; 1Sa 11:6 and David 1Sa 16:13, to fit them as instruments for God; as did the Evil spirit, when God departed from Saul 1Sa 18:10. So now, unless they repented, God Himself would suddenly show His powerful presence among them, but, as He had revealed Himself to be, "the, Lord thy God is a consuming Fire"Deu 4:24. "And devour"it, literally, "and it"(the fire) "shall devor, and"there be "none to quench"it "in"(better, "for") Bethel."Bethel, the center of their idol-hopes, so far from aiding them then, shall not be able to help itself, nor shall there be any to help it. The fire of God kindles around it, and there is none to quench it for her (as in Jer 4:4).
Montanus: "The whole place treateth of mercy and justice. The whole ground of people’ s punishment, calamities, condemnation is ascribed to their own fault and negligence, who neglect the deliverance often promised and offered them by God, and ‘ love darkness rather than light, because their deeds are evil’ Joh 3:19. Whoever is not saved, the whole blame lies in their own will and negligence and malice. God, who ‘ willeth not that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance’ 2Pe 3:9, Himself unsought, seeks, entreats, ceases not to monish, exhort, set before them their guilt, that they may cease to prepare such evil for themselves. But they neither give Him entrance, nor hear His entreaties, nor admit the warnings of the divine mercy, which if they neglect, they must needs be made over to His justice. The goodness of God is lacking to no one, save those who are wanting to themselves. Wherefore, having often besought them before, He invites them yet again to salvation, putting forth that His Name, so full of mysteries of mercy; ‘ Seek the Lord and live,’ "seek Him who is, the Unchangeable. He who had willed their salvation, still willed it, for He "changes not"Mal 3:6. "He adds threatenings, that those whom He calls to life, He might either allure by promises, or scare from death through fear of the impending evil."
Poole: Amo 5:1 - -- A lamentation which is very sad and mournful to all concerned in it, woeful news to the kingdom of the ten tribes.
A lamentation which is very sad and mournful to all concerned in it, woeful news to the kingdom of the ten tribes.

Poole: Amo 5:2 - -- The virgin: this name is given to her not for her purity and integrity, for she was an adulteress, but either ironically, or because her present rich...
The virgin: this name is given to her not for her purity and integrity, for she was an adulteress, but either ironically, or because her present riches, glory, and beauty seemed to be that of a virgin that had her portion, strength, and honour untouched; or else by a figure as properly may it be applied to Israel, as to Babylon, Isa 47:1 , or to Egypt, Jer 46:11 , to Zidon, Isa 23:12 .
Is fallen or shall ere long fall, the thing put as done already because of the certainty of it. Or rather, is already falling by civil wars and conspiracies, which prepared way for the final ruin of Israel: it is possible this sermon of the prophet might be about the time that Shallum or Menahem usurped the throne. Or else it may refer to the times of Jehoahaz, when that of the third verse will appear to have been fulfilled; this seems most probable.
She shall no more rise though they might by repentance have risen again, yet the prophet, considering their obstinacy, speaks of it as a thing that should never be, as eventually it proved also, for Israel never recovered the fall by Shalmaneser.
She is forsaken upon her land broken to pieces upon her own land, and so left as a broken vessel; or she shall be by home divisions first broken, and afterwards carried captive.
There is none to raise her up none at home among all her princes, counsellors, and rulers, nor any friend among her allies; all leave her to sink.

Poole: Amo 5:3 - -- Thus saith the Lord God: this solemnly attesteth the certainty of the thing.
The city that went out by a thousand that sent out one thousand soldie...
Thus saith the Lord God: this solemnly attesteth the certainty of the thing.
The city that went out by a thousand that sent out one thousand soldiers as the quota they were assessed at to help against an invader,
shall leave a hundred shall lose nine parts of ten, so great shall the slaughter be which the prevailing enemy shall make upon Israel; and here the prophet useth a certain number to express an uncertain; or proverbially, scarce a tenth man shall escape.
That which went forth by a hundred shall leave ten, to the house of Israel the kingdom of the ten tribes; and this perhaps may refer backward to Jehoahaz’ s time, 2Ki 13 ; to be sure it is fulfilled in the wars of Shalmaneser and the taking Samaria.

Poole: Amo 5:4 - -- For or yet, truly.
Thus saith the Lord amidst all those threats there is still a reserve, a conditional proviso, and the Lord here does by his prop...
For or yet, truly.
Thus saith the Lord amidst all those threats there is still a reserve, a conditional proviso, and the Lord here does by his prophet declare it.
Unto the house of Israel though apostate both in sacred and civil things, though polluted and defiled greatly, and this through many scores of years, yet after all repentance would help them.
Seek ye me inquire for my law, and repent of your despising it, obey it in all things for the future, inquire diligently what promises I have made and wait for them, believe, obey, and repent; for this is to seek the Lord, when a people have turned from the Lord, as you have done, O house of Israel.
Ye shall live it shall be well with you, your persons, families, and the whole kingdom shall prosper, as the Hebrew phrase importeth.

Poole: Amo 5:5 - -- But seek not Beth-el consult not, worship not, depend not on the idol calf at Beth-el; or seek not God at Beth-el, but at Jerusalem, where he will be...
But seek not Beth-el consult not, worship not, depend not on the idol calf at Beth-el; or seek not God at Beth-el, but at Jerusalem, where he will be found; cast off idolatry, return to the true God and to his instituted worship, so shall ye live.
Nor enter into Gilgal a city of great idolatry, a place where God will not be sought nor found by you: see Hos 4:15 9:15 12:11 , where it is more fully explained.
Pass not to Beer-sheba though God of old did appear there to Isaac, Gen 26:24 , though Abraham dwelt there, Gen 21:31-33 , and Jacob sacrificed there with acceptance, Gen 46:1-3 , yet now God appointeth Jerusalem and the temple the only places of his solemn worship, and of your seeking him.
Gilgal the inhabitants of Gilgal, for the place could not go into captivity; it is a metonymy, the place put for the people.
Shall surely go into captivity Shalmaneser and his Assyrians shall certainly carry them away captives.
Beth-el both city and people,
shall come to nought shall be vanity and disappointment to all that trust to the idols of it.

Poole: Amo 5:6 - -- Seek the Lord, and ye shall life: the prophet repeateth his exhortation to repentance with the repeated promise of a good issue hereon: see Amo 5:4 ....
Seek the Lord, and ye shall life: the prophet repeateth his exhortation to repentance with the repeated promise of a good issue hereon: see Amo 5:4 .
Lest he break out: this is a new argument to persuade them to do their duty, for unless they do it God’ s judgments will break out upon them.
Like fire suddenly, with strength and prevalence, as the Hebrew word here rendered break out importeth. In the house of Joseph; the kingdom of the ten tribes, the chief whereof was Ephraim, who was the younger son of Joseph, and the first erecter of this kingdom was an Ephraimite, 1Ki 11:26 .
And devour it utterly consume it, as fire useth to do where it gets head and prevaileth.
And there be none to quench it in Beth-el if once this fire break out from God, all your idols in Beth-el shall not be able to quench it; no tears from your eyes there shed, no blood of sacrifice there offered, shall quench it.
Haydock: Amo 5:1 - -- Time. It is to no purpose speaking to the deaf, (Ecclesiasticus xxxii. 9.) or throwing pearls before swine, Matthew vii. 6. Amos was silent for a w...
Time. It is to no purpose speaking to the deaf, (Ecclesiasticus xxxii. 9.) or throwing pearls before swine, Matthew vii. 6. Amos was silent for a while, till God opened his mouth again, chap. iii. 8., and vii. 12.

Haydock: Amo 5:1 - -- Lamentation. Such canticles were usual, Isaias xiv. ---
Israel. It no longer formed a separate kingdom. (Calmet) ---
When the people fear no ev...
Lamentation. Such canticles were usual, Isaias xiv. ---
Israel. It no longer formed a separate kingdom. (Calmet) ---
When the people fear no evil, God laments for them. (Worthington)

Haydock: Amo 5:3 - -- City, before (Calmet) or after the captivity. It required a long time to fill the cities as they had been. (Haydock) ---
When the Assyrians invade...
City, before (Calmet) or after the captivity. It required a long time to fill the cities as they had been. (Haydock) ---
When the Assyrians invaded the country, it was greatly reduced. (Calmet)

Haydock: Amo 5:5 - -- Bethel,...Galgal,...Bersabee. The places where they worshipped their idols. (Challoner) ---
They had all been honoured by the patriarchs. Bersabe...
Bethel,...Galgal,...Bersabee. The places where they worshipped their idols. (Challoner) ---
They had all been honoured by the patriarchs. Bersabee had belonged to Juda under Achab, 3 Kings xix. 3. But it was originally in the tribe of Simeon, and Jeroboam II recovered all that had been lost, 4 Kings xiv. 25. (Calmet) ---
Unprofitable. Hebrew leaven, "for vanity," (Haydock) Bethaven.

Haydock: Amo 5:6 - -- Joseph. His two grandchildren gave name to the principle tribes of the kingdom. ---
Bethel. Septuagint, "Israel," which seems preferable. (Calme...
Joseph. His two grandchildren gave name to the principle tribes of the kingdom. ---
Bethel. Septuagint, "Israel," which seems preferable. (Calmet) ---
Yet Bethel may stand, as it denotes the apostate Israelites.
Gill: Amo 5:1 - -- Hear ye the word which I take up against you,.... And which was not his own word, but the word of the Lord; and which he took up, by his direction as ...
Hear ye the word which I take up against you,.... And which was not his own word, but the word of the Lord; and which he took up, by his direction as a heavy burden as some prophecies are called, and this was; and which, though against them, a reproof for their sins, and denunciation of punishment for them, yet was to be heard; for every word of God is pure, and to be hearkened to, whether for us or against us; since the whole is profitable, either for doctrine and instruction in righteousness, or for reproof and correction. It may be rendered, "which I take up concerning you", or "over you" z:
even a lamentation, O house of Israel; a mournful ditty, an elegiac song over the house of Israel, now expiring, and as it were dead. This word was like Ezekiel's roll, in which were written "lamentation, and mourning, and woe", Eze 2:10; full of mournful matter, misery, and distress, as follows:

Gill: Amo 5:2 - -- The virgin of Israel is fallen,.... The kingdom of Israel, so called, because it had never been subdued, or become subject to a foreign power, since i...
The virgin of Israel is fallen,.... The kingdom of Israel, so called, because it had never been subdued, or become subject to a foreign power, since it was a kingdom; or because, considered in its ecclesiastic state, it had been espoused to the Lord as a chaste virgin; and perhaps this may be ironically spoken, and refers to its present adulterate and degenerated state worshipping the calves at Dan and Bethel; or else because of its wealth and riches and the splendour and gaiety in which it appeared; but now, as it had fallen into sin and iniquity, it should quickly fall by it, and on account of it, into ruin and misery; and because of the certainty of it it is represented as if it was already fallen:
she shall no more rise; and become a kingdom again, as it never has as yet, since the ten tribes were carried away captive by Shalmaneser king of Assyria, to which calamity this prophecy refers, The Targum is,
"shall not rise again this year;''
very impertinently; better Kimchi and Ben Melech, for a long time; since as they think, and many others, that the ten tribes shall return again, as may seem when all Israel shall be converted and saved, and repossess their own land; see Hos 1:10. Abendana produces a passage out of Zohar, in which these words are interpreted, that the virgin of Israel should not rise again of herself, she not having power to prevail over her enemies; but God will raise her up out of the dust, when he shall raise up the tabernacle of David that is fallen, who shall reign in future time over all the tribes together, as it is said in Amo 9:11;
she is forsaken upon her land; by her people, her princes, and her God; or prostrate on the ground, as the Targum; she was cast upon the ground, and dashed to pieces by the enemy as an earthen vessel, and there left, her ruin being irrecoverable; so whatever is cast and scattered, or dashed to pieces on the ground, and left, is expressed by the word here used, as Jarchi observes:
there is none to raise her up: her princes and people are either slain by the sword, famine, and pestilence, or carried captive, and so can yield her no assistance; her idols whom she worshipped cannot, and her God she forsook will not.

Gill: Amo 5:3 - -- For thus saith the Lord God,.... This is a reason why there were none to raise her up: since
the city that went out by a thousand shall leave an h...
For thus saith the Lord God,.... This is a reason why there were none to raise her up: since
the city that went out by a thousand shall leave an hundred; that is, the city in which there were a thousand constantly going in and out; or which sent, caused to go out, or furnished, a thousand men upon occasion for war, had only a hundred persons left in it; or there remained but a hundred of the thousand they sent out, the rest being destroyed by one means or another:
and that which went forth by an hundred shall leave ten, to the house of Israel; where there were a hundred persons going out and coming in continually; or which sent out a hundred men to the army to fight their battles had now only ten remaining; to such a small number were they reduced all over the land, so that there were none, or not a number sufficient to raise up Israel to its former state and glory.

Gill: Amo 5:4 - -- For thus saith the Lord unto the house of Israel,.... Or "yet" a, notwithstanding all this, though such judgments were threatened and denounced, and s...
For thus saith the Lord unto the house of Israel,.... Or "yet" a, notwithstanding all this, though such judgments were threatened and denounced, and such desolations should certainly come, in case of impenitence, and an obstinate continuance in a course of sin; yet hopes are given of finding mercy and kindness upon repentance and reformation, at least to the remnant of them; see Amo 5:15;
seek ye me; seek my fear, as the Targum; fear and reverence, serve and worship, the Lord God; return unto him by repentance; seek to him by prayer and supplication; acknowledge your sins, and humble yourselves before him, and implore his pardoning grace and mercy:
and ye shall live; in your own land, and not be carried out of it; live comfortably, in great plenty of good things; and live spiritually, enjoying the favour of God, and his presence in his ordinances, and live eternally in the world to come.

Gill: Amo 5:5 - -- But seek not Bethel,.... Do not go to Bethel, the place where one of Jeroboam's calves was set up and worshipped, to consult the oracle, idols, and pr...
But seek not Bethel,.... Do not go to Bethel, the place where one of Jeroboam's calves was set up and worshipped, to consult the oracle, idols, and priests there; or to perform religious worship, which will be your ruin, if not prevented by another course of living:
nor enter into Gilgal; another place of idolatry, where idols were set up and worshipped See Gill on Amo 4:4;
and pass not to Beersheba; a place in the further part of the land of Israel; it formerly belonged to Judah, but was now in the hands of the ten tribes, and where idolatrous worship was practised; see Amo 8:14; it having been a place where Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, had dwelt, and worshipped the true God:
for Gilgal shall surely go into captivity; that is, the inhabitants of it; they will not be able with their idols and idol worship to save themselves, and therefore go not thither. There is an elegant play on words here b, as there is also in the next words:
and Bethel shall come to nought; which also was called Bethaven, the house of vanity, or of an idol which is nothing in the world; and therefore, because of the idolatry in it, should come to nothing, be utterly destroyed, and the inhabitants of it. So the Targum,
"they, that are in Gilgal, and worship calves in Bethel.''

Gill: Amo 5:6 - -- Seek the Lord, and ye shall live,.... This is, repeated to stir up unto it, because of their backwardness and slothfulness, and to show the importance...
Seek the Lord, and ye shall live,.... This is, repeated to stir up unto it, because of their backwardness and slothfulness, and to show the importance and necessity of it. By the "Lord" may be meant the Messiah, Israel's God that was to come, and they were to prepare to meet, Amo 4:12; and the rather, since life spiritual and eternal is only to be had from him, and he is to be sought unto for it, and all the blessings of it, peace, pardon, righteousness, rest, and salvation as well as temporal deliverance, and all outward mercies:
lest he break out like fire in the house of Joseph, and devour it; that is, lest his wrath and fury break out like fire as the Targum, by sending an enemy to invade the land, destroy it, and carry the inhabitants of it captive; even all the ten tribes, who frequently go by the name of Ephraim the son of Joseph, that being the principal tribe, and the first king of them being of it:
and there be none to quench it in Bethel; the calf worshipped there, and the priests that officiated, would not be able to avert the stroke of divine vengeance, or turn back the enemy, and save the land from ruin. The Targum is,
"and there be none to quench it, because of your sins, who have been serving idols in Bethel.''

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes


NET Notes: Amo 5:3 Heb “for/to the house of Israel.” The translation assumes that this is a graphic picture of what is left over for the defense of the natio...

NET Notes: Amo 5:4 The following verses explain what it meant to seek the Lord. Israel was to abandon the mere formalism and distorted view of God and reality that chara...

NET Notes: Amo 5:5 Again there is irony. The name Bethel means “house of God” in Hebrew. How surprising and tragic that Bethel, the “house of God”...

NET Notes: Amo 5:6 Heb “to/for Bethel.” The translation assumes that the preposition indicates advantage, “on behalf of.” Another option is to ta...
Geneva Bible: Amo 5:2 The ( a ) virgin of Israel is fallen; she shall no more rise: she is forsaken upon her land; [there is] none to raise her up.
( a ) He so calls them,...

Geneva Bible: Amo 5:3 For thus saith the Lord GOD; The city that went out [by] a thousand shall leave ( b ) an hundred, and that which went forth [by] an hundred shall leav...

Geneva Bible: Amo 5:5 But seek not Bethel, nor enter into ( c ) Gilgal, and pass not to Beersheba: for Gilgal shall surely go into captivity, and Bethel shall come to nough...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Amo 5:1-27
TSK Synopsis: Amo 5:1-27 - --1 A lamentation for Israel.4 An exhortation to repentance.21 God rejects their hypocritical service.
Maclaren -> Amo 5:4-15
Maclaren: Amo 5:4-15 - --The Sins Of Society
For thus saith the Lord unto the house of Israel, Seek ye Me, and ye shall live: 5. But seek not Beth-el, nor enter into Gilgal, ...
MHCC -> Amo 5:1-6
MHCC: Amo 5:1-6 - --The convincing, awakening word must be heard and heeded, as well as words of comfort and peace; for whether we hear or forbear, the word of God shall ...
Matthew Henry -> Amo 5:1-3; Amo 5:4-15
Matthew Henry: Amo 5:1-3 - -- This chapter begins, as those two next foregoing began, with, Hear this word. Where God has a mouth to speak we must have an ear to hear; it is ou...

Matthew Henry: Amo 5:4-15 - -- This is a message from God to the house of Israel, in which, I. They are told of their faults, that they might see what occasion there was for them ...
Keil-Delitzsch: Amo 5:1-3 - --
The Elegy. - Amo 5:1. "Hear ye this word, which I raise over you; a lamentation, O house of Israel. Amo 5:2. The virgin Israel is fallen; she does...

Keil-Delitzsch: Amo 5:4-9 - --
The short, cursory explanation of the reason for the lamentation opened here, is followed in Amo 5:4. by the more elaborate proof, that Israel has d...
Constable: Amo 1:3--7:1 - --II. Prophetic messages that Amos delivered 1:3--6:14
The Book of Amos consists of words (oracles, 1:3-6:14) and ...

Constable: Amo 3:1--6:14 - --B. Messages of Judgment against Israel chs. 3-6
After announcing that God would judge Israel, Amos deliv...

Constable: Amo 5:1-17 - --3. The third message on injustice 5:1-17
The structure of this message is chiastic, which focuse...

Constable: Amo 5:1-3 - --A description of certain judgment 5:1-3
5:1 This message begins as the previous two did, with a call to hear the Lord's word. However here Amos announ...
