I Will Allure Her and Bring Her Into the Wilderness (Hosea Study #6)

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(To read these posts in order from the beginning, start here.)

Read Hosea 2:14

Long before God asked Abraham to sacrifice his son Isaac, he had another son, Ishmael. God had promised Abram and Sarai a son, and when he didn’t move fast enough for them, they took matters into their own hands. Sarai gave her handmaid Hagar to Abram as a wife and things didn’t turn out so well. Sarai became jealous of Hagar and dealt harshly with her. So, Hagar escaped into the wilderness with her son Ishmael. 

This wilderness is where Hagar met God.  And here in Hosea, once again we find ourselves meeting God in the wilderness. Our last post left us sitting in the tension of God’s wrath…his controlled righteous anger against idolatry (or anything that falls short of his perfect nature and character). But then, in typical Hosea form, there is a sudden and almost shocking change of tone. “Therefore, behold, I will allure her, and bring her into the wilderness and speak tenderly to her.” I can’t wait to get to that “speaking tenderly part” but I wanted to focus this post on the concept of wilderness, since it is such a recurrent and important theme throughout the Bible. 

When God brings Israel into the wilderness, he is separating her from the distractions of her adulterous lovers where she can focus entirely on his pursuit of her.

Here are some characteristics of the wilderness we find in the Bible: 
 
 
1. The wilderness is harsh and dangerous, causing a person to rely solely upon God.  
 
Not long after God miraculously delivered Israel from slavery in Egypt, they started complaining: “At least we had meat and bread in Egypt! Yet you’ve brought us into the wilderness to die of hunger!” (my paraphrase). Then the Lord told Moses he would rain bread from heaven every day, but each morning they would only be allowed to gather up one day’s portion of manna. 
 
God told Moses this was a test. Will Israel keep his law? Would they trust him for their sustenance day by day or would they take matters into their own hands? For forty years they complained and failed to keep God’s law, so he kept them in the wilderness to test, refine, sometimes punish, but ultimately teach them to rely solely on him.  
 
 
2. The wilderness is a place of sanctuary in times of danger.
 
David once wrote that he was overwhelmed with horror and that his heart was in deep anguish. He wished he had the wings of a dove to fly away into the wilderness, which he described as a place where he could find shelter (Psalm 55). It was in the wilderness that he found safety from Saul, who was trying to kill him. Saul as his men pursued David when God saved David from Saul’s hand in a last-minute intervention. That’s why this place was named “Rock of Escape.”
 
The wilderness is where God told Elijah to hide from Ahab after predicting a drought. Elijah obeyed, and God sent ravens to bring him bread and meat. 
 
In both cases, the wilderness represented a place where God protected his people from danger. 
 
 
3. The wilderness is a place of testing, repentance, and spiritual growth
 
After the last book of the Old Testament was written, God was silent for 400 years. Then John the Baptist burst on the scene preaching a message of repentance. People from all over Jerusalem, Judea, and Jordan came confessing their sins as John baptized them. Jesus was led by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil. 
 
Intense spiritual battles were fought and won in the wilderness. 
 
 
4. The wilderness is a place for encountering God 
 
Now back to our story in Hosea, the wilderness serves two drastically contrasting roles. After Yahweh says he will make Israel like a wilderness, strip her naked, and kill her with thirst, he promises to bring her into the wilderness and speak tenderly to her. But this isn’t the first time people have had profound encounters with God in the wilderness. Remember when Elijah hid from Ahab after predicting a drought? Not long after that, he won a tremendous victory against the prophets of Baal only to flee for his life when Jezebel threatened to kill him. He curled up under a broom tree in the wilderness and prayed that he might die. God met him there by sending an angel to minister to him and ultimately speaking to Elijah and giving him important instructions about what to do next. 
 
I wanted to dedicate an entire post to the theme of wilderness because there is so much to apply isn’t there? When we think of the wilderness we think of times of struggle, danger, thirst, fear, isolation, and the unknown. Sometimes God brings us into the wilderness to test us, call us to repentance, cause us to rely only on him, and remove the distractions that would take our attention away from him. It’s where we are tested and sanctified. 
 
Often, it’s where we meet God. 
 
This is my prayer as I study this theme of wilderness: 

Lord, please forgive me for all the times I have failed to trust you completely when I have found my self in “wilderness”situations that were painful, difficult, and well out of my control. Looking back on my life, I see your hand at work in every trial, grief, fear, and circumstance. I praise you for your sovereign hand working all things together for good. Thank you for times of difficulty that you have used to forge patience, make me strong, and teach me to trust you. Help me to mine every treasure out of every wilderness experience as you, the God of all grace restores, confirms, strengthens and establishes me.  (1 Peter 5:10)

 

 

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