Old Testament Reading: Amos 8:1-12
For Sunday, July 18, 2010: Year C, Ordinary 16
The book of Amos contains the famous articulation of God’s call for justice, “Let justice roll down like water, and righteousness like an ever—flowing stream” (Amos 5:24). It's been quoted by Martin Luther King Jr., Jim Wallis, and countless others. It appears on bumper stickers, t-shirts and coffee mugs. What they usually fail to point out, however, is that God’s water of justice was sent to drown God’s children.
Prosperity…on the Backs of the Poor and Powerless
The Prophet Amos is called in a time of relative prosperity for Israel, but like most times of prosperity it is brought about on the backs of the poor and powerless. In chapter 8 God tells Amos that God is so outraged by the way the poor are treated that there is no more mercy for them -- only wrath. God shows him a basket of ripe summer fruit to illustrate that his wrath is fully ripened and is ready blow. Because God’s children have “trampled on the needy, and bring to ruin the poor of the land,” God says, “the end has come upon my people Israel; I will never again pass their way. The songs of the temple shall become wailing in that day……The dead bodies shall be many, cast out in every place.”
When is injustice so unspeakable that it demands violent response? Mao thought he knew; Che and Fidel thought they knew. The French Resistance and the Weather Underground thought they knew. I just think that God could come up with a more creative response than to fly into a rage and threaten to annihilate God’s own children. No wonder they are abusing the weakest and powerless among them, look how their Father treats them! And this isn’t the first or the last time he has threatened them. Consider the implications in God sending waters of justice to drown them? Didn’t he do the whole rainbow thing as a promise that he wouldn’t do that ever again?
The Hardest Question
How do we respond when God expresses God’s concern for the poor through violence and threats of annihilation? I can try to explain away these violent threats of an unstable father, saying, "It was a different time;" or of course, "It was written by people, it is their perception of God, not what God is really like —it’s metaphorical." I could do that, but I don’t want to. Why don’t we just condemn that kind of violent, threatening speech, no matter who or what it is in the service of. When is injustice so unspeakable that it demands violent response?