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These devotions are part of the Follow the Word Bible reading program at St. John Lutheran Church in Cypress, Texas. This year we are reading through the Scriptures together, listening for how God speaks through his Word day by day. I hope you will join me on this journey.
Today’s readings are Hosea 3-5, Psalm 35.
Hosea 3:1-5
And the LORD said to me, “Go again, love a woman who is loved by another man and is an adulteress, even as the LORD loves the children of Israel, though they turn to other gods and love cakes of raisins.” 2 So I bought her for fifteen shekels of silver and a homer and a lethech of barley. 3 And I said to her, “You must dwell as mine for many days. You shall not play the whore, or belong to another man; so will I also be to you.” 4 For the children of Israel shall dwell many days without king or prince, without sacrifice or pillar, without ephod or household gods. 5 Afterward the children of Israel shall return and seek the LORD their God, and David their king, and they shall come in fear to the LORD and to his goodness in the latter days.

I have often said that the Old Testament is one giant object lesson on what does not work. That’s an overstatement, of course, but there is an important truth behind it. It isn’t that God’s ways fail. Rather, sinful people repeatedly reject even God’s greatest gifts.
God walked with Adam and Eve in the cool of the day. They still rebelled and brought sin, death, and decay into the world. God led Israel by a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night. Yet while Moses was receiving the Ten Commandments, the people fashioned and worshiped a golden calf. They demanded a king like the nations around them, and we’ve been reading for weeks how that turned out. Again and again, God’s people abandoned him to worship the false gods of the nations.
The overarching story of the Old Testament teaches us that something greater would be needed if God’s people were to live as he intended—for their good and for the blessing of the nations.
Today’s reading begins with another object lesson. God commands Hosea to redeem his unfaithful wife, Gomer. There is much to grieve in this account. Gomer has been unfaithful, yet Hosea purchases her back. The price he pays is only half the normal price of a slave, and he calls her to faithfulness as they begin life together again.
Through Hosea, God promises that although Israel will go into exile because of her unfaithfulness, he will not abandon her. He himself will redeem her and bring her home.
This is the story of the Gospel. We, too, have been unfaithful in countless ways. Yet Christ has purchased us—not with silver or gold, but with his holy, precious blood and with his innocent suffering and death. As Luther beautifully explains in the Small Catechism, Jesus is our Lord because he has redeemed us. He is not our Lord because he has exercised his great power over us, but because he has bought us back from sin, death, and the power of the devil.
We are his. And he is our Lord.






