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Daily Radio Program for Chuck Missler

Episode for Monday May 19th Amos: Chapter 2:6 - Chapter 4

Daily Radio Program for Chuck Missler

Chuck Missler

Religion & Spirituality

5652 Ratings

🗓️ 19 May 2025

⏱️ 27 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Hosea, a contemporary of Isaiah (for most of his ministry) and Amos (in his earlier years) was the Jeremiah of the Northern Kingdom. His main target was the Northern Kingdom, yet his message was for the people of God. When Solomon died, Jeroboam rebelled and plunged the Northern Kingdom into a prosperous but idolatrous separation. After two centuries of abandoning their heritage, God sent Hosea to present His indictment and declare that He would use their enemies as His judgment. Amos was sent to Israel at a time when the nation feels militarily secure and prosperous, yet is turning to idolatry and abandoning their heritage. Misplaced confidence; false sense of security; abandonment of the greatness of their nation... (Sounds familiar, doesn't it?) In many ways a complement to Hosea, this perspective on the plight of Israel parallels the predicament of our country today. This study contains 13 hours of verse by verse teachings. Copyright © 11-01-2010

Transcript

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0:00.0

66.6640. Your future lies in 6640. Sixty-six books by 40 authors, and yet we now discover it's an integrated message system from outside our time domain.

0:17.6

Welcome to 6640, the ministry outreach of Koinania House and Koinnea Institute.

0:23.4

Today's Bible teacher is Chuck Missler, connecting the Bible to your life and the world around you.

0:28.8

In today's study, Chuck completes his teaching on the book of Amos, chapter 2, verse 6 through chapter 4.

0:44.8

Yeah. Verse 6 through Chapter 4. We all know the story of the Samaritans in New Testament.

0:47.8

They were a detested half-Jew that lived up in that region.

0:51.9

Why were they half-Jews?

0:52.8

Because they're the results of this

0:54.4

commingling policy of the Assyrians when they conquered him. Follow me? When Babylon

0:59.4

conquers the southern kingdom, it takes them as a group in captivity for 70 years, but they

1:04.6

come back as a cogent group. Okay? Now, the so-called invincible nation ceased to exist. But there's a chapter,

1:16.4

there's lots of to this whole story, but let me just give you one reference to check out.

1:21.7

Second Chronicles 11. Just remember Second Chronicles 11. What you'll discover there,

1:31.8

Jeroboam I, took the northern kingdom into idolatry,

1:33.7

worshipping these golden calves.

1:39.2

If you were a Levite in that region, that was an anathema.

1:44.0

Idolatry was the politically correct point of view. If you were faithful to temple worship

1:46.3

and all that, which as a Levite you would be, what did you do? You picked up and migrated south

1:52.0

where the politically correct mode was to worship at the temple, right? Make sense? If you read

1:58.5

the passage carefully, you'll realize that the Levites move south.

2:02.0

You can also infer from the text that others that wanted to be faithful to the temple

2:06.7

left town.

...

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