1
"Come, and let us return to The LORD;for he has torn us to pieces,and he will heal us;he has injured us,and he will bind up our wounds. +
2
After two days he will revive us.On the third day he will raise us up,and we will live before him. +
3
Let us acknowledge The LORD.Let us press on to know The LORD.As surely as the sun rises,The LORD will appear.He will come to us like the rain,like the
spring rain that waters the earth."
+4
"Ephraim, what shall I do to you?Judah, what shall I do to you?For your love is like a morning cloud,and like the dew that disappears early. +
5
Therefore I have cut them to
pieces with the prophets;I killed them with the words of my mouth.Your judgments are like a flash of lightning.
+6
For I desire mercy, and not sacrifice;and the knowledge of God more than burnt offerings. +
7
But they, like Adam, have broken the covenant.They were unfaithful to me, there. +
8
Gilead is a city of those who work iniquity;it is stained with blood.
+ 9
As gangs of robbers wait to
ambush a man,so the company of priests
murder on the path toward Shechem,committing shameful crimes.
+10
In the
house of
Israel I have seen a horrible thing.There is prostitution in Ephraim.Israel is defiled.
+11
"Also, Judah, there is a
harvest appointed for you,when I restore the fortunes of my people.
+
Ho 6:1-11. THE ISRAELITES' EXHORTATION TO ONE ANOTHER TO SEEK THE LORD.
At Ho 6:4 a new discourse, complaining of them, begins; for Ho 6:1-3 evidently belong to Ho 5:15, and form the happy termination of Israel's punishment: primarily, the return from Babylon; ultimately, the return from their present long dispersion. Ho 6:8 perhaps refers to the murder of Pekahiah; the discourse cannot be later than Pekah's reign, for it was under it that Gilead was carried into captivity (2Ki 15:29).
1. let us return--in order that God who has "returned to His place" may return to us (Ho 5:15).
torn, and . . . heal-- (De 32:39; Jer 30:17). They ascribe their punishment not to fortune, or man, but to God, and acknowledge that none (not the Assyrian, as they once vainly thought, Ho 5:13) but God can heal their wound. They are at the same time persuaded of the mercy of God, which persuasion is the starting-point of true repentance, and without which men would not seek, but hate and flee from God. Though our wound be severe, it is not past hope of recovery; there is room for grace, and a hope of pardon. He hath smitten us, but not so badly that He cannot heal us (Ps 130:4).