Amós 2:13

Horae Homileticae de Charles Simeon

DISCOURSE: 1185
GOD’S COMPLAINT AGAINST US

Amós 2:13. Behold, I am pressed under you, as a cart is pressed that is full of sheaves.

THE effect of long-continued provocations is to weary out our patience. Some few occasional offences we can easily forgive: but when they are repeated from time to time, they gall the mind, and produce considerable irritation, and stir us up, either by word or deed, to avenge ourselves. Something of this kind is represented as passing in the mind of God. We must not indeed conceive of him as if he had the same passions with ourselves; but yet he will so suit his dispensations to our conduct, that they shall bear the stamp of retributive justice, and accord, in a measure, with what is produced in the world by human passions. Hence he speaks of himself after the manner of men, in order to accommodate himself to our weak and carnal apprehensions: and, having told his people how greatly their transgressions had been multiplied against him, he declares, as one whose patience was quite exhausted, that he was “pressed under them, as a cart is pressed that is full of sheaves.”
Let us consider,

I. What reason God has for this complaint against us—

We need not enter minutely into the particular accusations brought against the Israelites of old: in a general view, they may be reduced to three; which may with equal justice be laid to our charge:

1. Our disregard of his laws—

[God had given his people laws, which they violated without remorse [Note: Compare ver. 6–8. with 2 Crônicas 19:6; 1 Reis 21:3.Levítico 18:8; Levítico 18:15.Êxodo 22:26.]. And has he not prescribed the moral law as the rule of our conduct? and is it not in all respects “holy, and just, and good?” Yet how have we obeyed it? Have we studied it with a view to find out the will of God? Have we been restrained and regulated by it as far as we knew it? Have we not, on the contrary, transgressed it in ten thousand instances? Have we not been swayed by the considerations of our worldly honour and interest, more than by a regard to God’s authority? Where our own will has stood in competition with God’s, have we not been ready to say, like Pharaoh, “Who is the Lord, that I should obey his voice?”

Do we then suppose, that the Governor of the universe is indifferent about the observance of his laws? Or, if he be not, must he not be “fretted [Note: Ezequiel 16:43.],” “grieved [Note: Salmos 78:40.],” and “vexed [Note: Isaías 63:10.],” with our rebellions, and even “broken with our whorish heart [Note: Ezequiel 6:9.]?” Lot vexed his righteous soul from day to day, on account of what he saw and heard in Sodom [Note: 2 Pedro 2:8.]: and must not He who is infinitely holy, and who sees all the iniquity in the world at one view, be overwhelmed, as it were, with grief and vexation at our iniquities? Surely the comparison in the text rather falls short of, than exceeds, the truth: for we have “drawn out iniquity as a cart rope [Note: Isaías 5:18. with Bishop Lowth’s note upon it.],” continually adding fresh materials, and protracting it, without intermission, to an unknown length; and therefore well may God complain, that “we have wearied him with our iniquities [Note: Isaías 43:24.],” and that he is “pressed under us as an overloaded cart.”]

2. Our mindfulness of his mercies—

[God particularly specifies the mercies he had vouchsafed to Israel, which had only served to aggravate their guilt [Note: ver. 9–11.]. And what innumerable mercies has he conferred on us! How has he formed us in the womb, and made us perfect in all our members; when we might have been hideous monsters, that could not endure the light of day! How has he furnished us with rational faculties, when many of our fellow-creatures are idiots, yea, less rational than the beasts! Above all, how has he endued us with an immortal soul, capable of knowing, serving, and enjoying God to all eternity! How has he kept us through the helpless years of infancy, and brought us in safety to the present hour; while thousands have never lived to receive instruction, or been cut off in the midst of their iniquities! Yet in what manner have we requited him for all his mercies? Have we blessed and adored and magnified him for all his love? Have we endeavoured to improve our time and faculties in his service? Have not rather the multitude and continuance of his gifts been the occasion of our entirely forgetting the Donor?

Make this your own case. If you had a servant whom you were daily loading with benefits, and yet could never prevail upon him to testify the smallest sense of his obligations to you, would you not be wearied at last, and think it right to discard such a worthless person from your service? And do you imagine that your heavenly Benefactor is not grieved at your ingratitude? Hear how he complains of it; and judge for yourselves: “I have nourished and brought up children, and they have rebelled against me: the ox knoweth his owner, and the ass his master’s crib; but Israel doth not know; my people do not consider [Note: Isaías 1:2.].” “What could have been done more for my vineyard, that I have not done in it? Wherefore, when I looked that it should bring forth grapes, brought it forth wild grapes [Note: Isaías 5:4.]?” Do these complaints argue no weariness on the part of God? Do they not manifest that he is “pressed under us beyond measure,” and scarcely able to sustain any farther load? May we not soon expect him to say, “I am grieved with that generation; and swear in my wrath, that they shall never enter into my rest [Note: Salmos 95:10.]?”]

3. Our contempt of his blessed Gospel—

[The summit of Israel’s wickedness was that “they said to the prophets, Prophesy not [Note: ver. 12.]. Now God has sent his prophets to us, to proclaim the glad tidings of salvation through a crucified Redeemer, and to declare that all who believed in that Saviour should receive the Holy Spirit, as their Teacher, their Sanctifier, their Comforter [Note: Atos 2:38.]. But how have we received their message? Have we cordially embraced the Saviour? Are we seeking yet daily and hourly the influences of the Holy Spirit? Are not many of us rather ready to despise the Gospel, and to dispute against its truths as over-righteous fancies and enthusiastic dreams? Do not even those who profess to embrace the Gospel, shew by their lives how little they regard it in their hearts? And do not the very services which they present to God, provoke him to say, “Your new moons and your appointed feasts my soul hateth; they are a trouble unto me; I am weary to bear them [Note: Isaías 1:14.]?” Is not such a contempt of his Gospel most painful to him, and most destructive to us [Note: Mateus 21:37.Hebreus 2:3; Hebreus 10:28.]?

See then the grounds of complaint which God has against us; and say whether the assiduity of harvestmen in loading their carts with the sheaves does not too much resemble us, who are thus incessantly loading God with our iniquities, till he can bear no more? Yea, we help and encourage each other in the work, as if we were afraid that we could not otherwise heap up upon him a sufficient load.]
The manner in which this complaint is made, calls us especially to consider,

II.

What reason we have to be deeply concerned about our state—

Wherever we see in Scripture the word, “Behold,” we may be sure that there is something worthy of our most solemn attention. And well may that word be prefixed to the declaration in the text, since an accumulating of such a load of guilt is a “treasuring up of a proportionable weight of wrath [Note: Romanos 2:5.].” Let three things then be considered by all who are thus offending God:

1. God is able to vindicate the honour of his injured majesty—

[Survey the universe, and ask, Whether he who formed it out of nothing, be not able to avenge himself on such worms as we are? If that be not sufficient, cast an eye into the bottomless abyss of hell, and ask, ‘Who formed it? and, On what occasion? and, Who are the inhabitants of those dreary mansions?’ Or, if you choose rather to see what notices of his power and wrath you can find on earth, ask of the antediluvians, and they shall tell thee; or of the cities of the plain, and they shall warn thee; or of the Jews, who are scattered over the face of the whole earth, as living monuments of his indignation. As God said to his people of old, “Go to my place, which was in Shiloh, and see what I did to it, for the wickedness of my people Israel [Note: Jeremias 7:12.];” so would I refer you to all these instances, that you may know what a God “you have to do with;” and that “him who walketh in pride he is able to abase [Note: Daniel 4:37.].” If any doubt yet remain upon your mind, go and provide an answer to that question which Job put to his contentious friends; “God is wise in heart, and mighty in strength; who hath hardened himself against him, and prospered [Note: Jó 9:4.]”.]

2. As he is able, so is he determined, to avenge himself—

[God has warned us plainly, that “the wicked shall be turned into hell, and all the people that forget God [Note: Salmos 9:17.].” But this is not all. He is like a man bearing with indignities for a time, under a pleasing expectation, that the vengeance which he shall shortly execute upon his enemy shall be signal and complete. See with what firm determination he prepares himself for his vindictive work, “whetting his sword, bending his bow, and making ready the instruments of death [Note: Salmos 7:11.];” and swearing most solemnly by his own life and perfections, that “as soon as he has whet his sword, he will render vengeance to his enemies, making his arrows drunk with their blood, and causing his sword to devour their flesh [Note: Deuteronômio 32:40.].” See with what pleasure he looks forward to that period, when, like a man who has thoroughly avenged himself, his wrath shall be pacified by the entire destruction of his foe! “I have set the point of my sword against them, that their heart may faint, and their ruins be multiplied: Ah! it is made bright, it is wrapt up for the slaughter [Note: Ezequiel 21:15.].” “Mine anger shall soon be accomplished on them, and I will cause my fury to rest upon them, and I will be comforted [Note: Ezequiel 5:13.]:” “So will I make my fury towards them to rest, and my jealousy shall depart from them, and I will be quiet, and be no more angry [Note: Ezequiel 16:42.].” Farther, see what delight he expresses when the time for vengeance is arrived! “Ah! I will ease me of mine adversaries, and avenge me of mine enemies [Note: Isaías 1:24.]:” “I will see what their end shall be; for they are a very froward generation, children in whom is no faith [Note: Deuteronômio 32:20.].”

Should not such declarations as these appal us? Should they not convince us what “a fearful thing it is to fall into the hands of the living God?”]

3. The time for retribution is fast approaching—

[When the cart is already overladen with corn, the heaping of sheaves upon it must quickly cease. And when our God is already “pressed under us,” so that he can scarcely sustain any further weight, we may be sure that “the measure of our iniquities is nearly full,” and that the hour of vengeance draws nigh. Methinks, God is at this moment saying, in reference to us, “My Spirit shall not strive with them any more [Note: Gênesis 6:3.].” “To me belongeth vengeance and recompence: their foot shall slide in due time; for the day of their calamity is at hand, and the things that shall come upon them make haste [Note: Deuteronômio 32:35.].” What a mercy is it that there is yet an hour’s respite allowed us! How should we redeem the time! How should we avail ourselves of the present moment, to flee from the wrath to come! How should we tremble, lest the order should be already given, not to take us to the granary of heaven, but to cast us into the flames of hell!

“Behold” then, brethren! “behold,” what a God you are offending, and in what danger you stand! One more sheaf perhaps may complete the load: and will you proceed to lay it on? O cease from your fatal work, and cry to your long-suffering God for mercy ere it be too late!]

Infer—
1.

What a burthen ought sin to be to us!

[You have heard what a burthen it is to God; that he even groans under it, and is weary to bear it. And ought it not to be a burthen to us who have committed it? Ought not we to be “weary and heavy-laden” with a sense of it [Note: Mateus 11:28.]? Ought we not to feel it as an insupportable burthen; “to be troubled for it; to be bowed down greatly, and to roar for the disquietness of our hearts [Note: Salmos 38:4.]?” Turn then to God, ye people; “be afflicted, and mourn, and weep; let your laughter be turned to mourning, and your joy into heaviness: humble yourselves under the mighty hand of God [Note: Tiago 4:9.];” “and put your mouths in the dust, if so be there may be hope [Note: Lamentações 3:29.].”]

2. What obligations do we owe to Jesus Christ!

[Jesus has borne the burthen of our sins, not only as our Creator and Governor, but as our Redeemer. Even in the former view, he has been “grieved at the hardness of our hearts [Note: Marcos 3:5.],” and has groaned over us [Note: João 11:38.], and found his burthen almost insupportable [Note: Marcos 9:19.]. But, in the latter view, O what has he sustained? the guilt of all the human race! the wrath of an avenging God! Go, listen to his cries and agonies in the garden of Gethsemane! See the blood issuing from every pore of his body! Trace him to Golgotha, and behold him expiring on the cross: Ask, What was the cause? and you will find that he was sinking under the weight of your iniquities, and if He was thus overwhelmed with the load, what must become of us, if we, after all, should have to bear the curse due to our sins? Let every eye be fixed on him with humble, grateful adoration. Let every one look to his vicarious sacrifice for pardon and peace. And, as he has thus graciously “borne our sins in his own body on the tree,” let us trust in him. Let us “go to him weary and heavy-laden, and we shall find eternal rest to our souls.”]

Veja mais explicações de Amós 2:13

Destaque

Comentário Crítico e Explicativo de toda a Bíblia

Eis que estou pressionado debaixo de ti, como é pressionado um carro cheio de feixes. ESTOU PRESSIONADO SOB VOCÊ - então Calvino (cf. Isaías 1:14 ). Margin tradutor ativo: 'Eu vou deprimir seu lugar'...

Destaque

Comentário Bíblico de Matthew Henry

9-16 Muitas vezes precisamos ser lembrados das misericórdias que recebemos; que adicionam muito ao mal dos pecados que cometemos. Eles tinham ajuda para suas almas, que os ensinavam a fazer bom uso de...

Destaque

Comentário Bíblico de Adam Clarke

Verso Amós 2:13. _ EIS QUE ESTOU PRESSIONADO POR VOCÊ _] O _ marginal _ ler é melhor: "Eis que pressionarei seu lugar, como um carrinho cheio de feixes pressiona." Trarei sobre você a _ roda de destru...

Através da Série C2000 da Bíblia por Chuck Smith

Vamos voltar agora para o livro de Amós. No primeiro verso de Amós ele se apresenta. Estas são as palavras de Amós, que estava entre os pastores [ou um pastor] em Tekoa ( Amós 1:1 ), Agora Tekoa é um...

Bíblia anotada por A.C. Gaebelein

CAPÍTULO 2 _1. Moabe ( Amós 2:1 )_ 2. Judá ( Amós 2:4 ) 3. Israel ( Amós 2:6 ) Amós 2:1 . Tão forte era o ódio de Moabe que eles desonraram os ossos d

Bíblia de Cambridge para Escolas e Faculdades

Amós 2:6. O pecado de Israel e sua punição 6 16. Finalmente, Amós vem a Israel. Os israelitas podiam ouvir com equanimidade, ou mesmo com satisfação, enquanto as falhas de seus vizinhos estavam sendo...

Bíblia de Cambridge para Escolas e Faculdades

_Eis que sou pressionado sob ti, como um carrinho é pressionado_&c. O sentido intransitivo da conjugação_Hifil_העיק (apropriadamente, para_mostrar pressão_, ou_restrição_), embora apenas possível, não...

Bíblia de Cambridge para Escolas e Faculdades

A retribuição....

Comentário Bíblico Católico de George Haydock

_Eu vou gritar. Incapaz de suportar mais a enorme carga de seus pecados, etc. O Espírito de Deus, como São Jerônimo percebe, acomoda-se à educação do profeta e o inspira com encorajamentos tirados dos...

Comentário Bíblico de Albert Barnes

EIS QUE ESTOU PRESSIONADO SOB VOCÊ - Deus deu à luz Seu povo, como os que são levados pelas roldanas. “Vocês já viram”, disse-lhes ele por Moisés, “como eu te dei nas asas de uma águia, e te trouxe p...

Comentário Bíblico de João Calvino

O verbo עיק, _ oik, _ em hebraico geralmente é transitivo e também é neutro. Este lugar, então, pode admitir duas interpretações. A primeira é que Deus foi pressionado sob os israelitas, como uma carr...

Comentário Bíblico de John Gill

Eis que eu estou pressionado debaixo de você, com o peso de seus pecados, com o qual eles o fizeram para servir, e o haviam o cansado; Sua paciência estava completamente desgastada, ele não poderia ma...

Comentário Bíblico do Estudo de Genebra

Eis que estou (k) pressionado sob você, como uma carroça cheia de feixes. (k) Você me cansou com seus pecados; ( Isaías 1:14 )....

Comentário Bíblico do Púlpito

EXPOSIÇÃO Amós 2:1 Julgamento sobre Moabe. Amós 2:1 Moab. O profeta agora denuncia a outra nação conectada por laços de sangue com Israel (veja Amós 1:13). A hostilidade de Moabe foi demonstrada na...

Comentário da Bíblia do Expositor (Nicoll)

ATROCIDADES E ATROCIDADES Amós 1:3 - Amós 2:1 COMO todos os profetas de Israel, Amós recebe oráculos para nações estrangeiras. Ao contrário deles, no entanto, ele organiza esses oráculos não depois,...

Comentário de Arthur Peake sobre a Bíblia

O PECADO E A CONDENAÇÃO DE ISRAEL. De repente, o profeta se vira e confronta Israel. As nações pagãs obscuras pecaram e devem ser punidas. O que dizer de Israel, o povo escolhido de Deus? Ora, só porq...

Comentário de Coke sobre a Bíblia Sagrada

EIS QUE ESTOU PRESSIONADO SOB VOCÊ— _Eis que farei uma pressão sob você, como uma carroça carregada de feixes faz pressão; _—Ver. 14. _E o vôo deve,_ & c. REFLEXÕES.- 1º, a controvérsia de Deus ainda...

Comentário de Dummelow sobre a Bíblia

PECADOS E INGRATIDÃO DE ISRAEL 6-8. Israel está agora ameaçado da mesma forma que o resto, mas Amós 2:6 não foram falados por Amos em Bethel; eles formam a conclusão do prefácio que ele escreveu após...

Comentário de Ellicott sobre toda a Bíblia

I AM PRESSED. — Baur, Pusey, and _Speaker’s Commentary_ support this rendering of the Heb. _mç‘îq_, the corresponding form in the next clause also being taken in the intransitive (_i.e.,_ passive sens...

Comentário de Frederick Brotherton Meyer

NEM ISRAEL ESCAPARÁ Amós 2:6 Primeiro, o profeta enumera os pecados de Israel. Eles eram injustos com os pobres, levando suas extorsões a tal ponto que os levou ao desespero. Eles eram impuros. Eles...

Comentário de Joseph Benson sobre o Antigo e o Novo Testamento

_Eis que estou pressionado por ti. Os_ teus pecados esgotaram a minha paciência e estou cansado de os suportar: compare com Isaías 43:24 ; Malaquias 2:17 . Nesse sentido, a cláusula é entendida pela L...

Comentário de Peter Pett sobre a Bíblia

JULGAMENTO DE YHWH SOBRE ISRAEL ( AMÓS 2:6 ). Embora esse julgamento sobre Israel certamente siga inicialmente o padrão sétuplo anterior, ele é distinto por manifestamente, em seguida, quebrá-lo. Não...

Comentário de Peter Pett sobre a Bíblia

A CERTEZA DE SEU JULGAMENTO SOBRE ISRAEL. SERÁ TAL QUE SERÁ INEVITÁVEL ( AMÓS 2:13 ). O julgamento de Israel agora é descrito em termos de ser atropelado por uma carroça pesada, totalmente carregada,...

Comentário de Sutcliffe sobre o Antigo e o Novo Testamentos

Amós 2:2 . _Kirioth,_ uma cidade de Moab, com palácios. Jeremias 48:24 . Amós 2:6 . _Por três transgressões de Israel. _Esta frase, explicada em Amós 1:3 ,

Comentário popular da Bíblia de Kretzmann

CONTRA ISRAEL...

Comentário popular da Bíblia de Kretzmann

Eis que estou pressionado sob você, em vez disso, "Eis que vou pressioná-lo". COMO UMA CARROÇA CHEIA DE POLIAS É PRESSIONADA, como uma carroça carregada de polias pressiona o solo abaixo....

Comentários de Charles Box

_MAIS SOBRE AS TRANSGRESSÕES DE ISRAEL -- AMÓS 2:11-16 :_ Deus levantou alguns dos filhos dos filhos de Israel para serem profetas. Alguns dos jovens se dedicaram a ser nazireus. Os profetas ficavam e...

Exposição de G. Campbell Morgan sobre a Bíblia inteira

Tendo assim pronunciado a palavra de Deus a respeito das nações vizinhas, revelando assim o fato de Seu governo sobre todos, o profeta voltou-se para Judá e declarou que ela também deveria compartilha...

Hawker's Poor man's comentário

Tendo o Senhor contado com todas as nações vizinhas, os inimigos jurados de Israel, e tendo também começado com Judá, agora toma nas mãos sua irmã Israel. E é um relato solene. Principalmente começand...

John Trapp Comentário Completo

Eis que estou pressionado sob você, como uma carroça cheia de feixes. Ver. 13. _Eis que estou pressionado por você, etc. _] Uma comparação de países (como este profeta está cheio de), simples, mas ené...

Notas Bíblicas Complementares de Bullinger

COMO. CARRINHO . de acordo com um carrinho [cheio]....

Notas da tradução de Darby (1890)

2:13 você, (d-6) Lit. 'no seu lugar.' Outros, 'estou pressionado sob você (ou seja, 'seus pecados') enquanto a carroça está carregada de feixes'....

Notas Explicativas de Wesley

Sob você - Sob a carga de seus pecados....

O Comentário Homilético Completo do Pregador

NOTAS CRÍTICAS . ] Amós 2:6 . ISRAEL] As dez tribos são o principal objeto da profecia. Em primeiro lugar, os crimes prevalecentes de injustiça e opressão, imoralidade vergonhosa e ousado desprezo de...

O ilustrador bíblico

_Eis que estou pressionado sob você, como uma carroça cheia de feixes._ --Nós vamos hoje ao portão do campo de colheita, para ver a carroça empilhada no alto com muitos feixes vindo rangendo, fazendo...

Série de livros didáticos de estudo bíblico da College Press

PUNIÇÃO PROMETIDA, A ALIANÇA NATIONISRAEL TEXTO: Amós 2:13-16 13 Eis que te apertarei no teu lugar, como aperta um carro cheio de feixes. 14 E a fuga perecerá do veloz; e o forte não fortalecerá...

Sinopses de John Darby

O COMENTÁRIO A SEGUIR COBRE OS CAPÍTULOS 1 E 2. No início, Jeová, proclamando Seus próprios direitos do lugar de Seu próprio trono, ruge de Sião e emite Sua voz de Jerusalém. Depois, bem no final, tam...

Tesouro do Conhecimento das Escrituras

Ezequiel 16:43; Ezequiel 6:9; Isaías 1:14; Isaías 43:24; Isaías 7:13;...