Today's Scripture Reading (April 4, 2026): Amos 9
On Mount Carmel, Elijah proposed a battle between him and the prophets of
Ba'al. The idea was to bring two bulls to the mountain. The prophets of Ba'al
would choose a bull, and Elijah would take the other. They would build an
altar, then cut the bull into pieces and place the pieces on top of the wood of
the altar. What they wouldn't do was light the fire; that task would be left to
God.
The prophets of Ba'al would go first. They chose their bull, built the
altar, and placed its pieces on it. And then they began to pray to Ba'al. They
danced in front of the altar, asking Ba'al to send his fire down onto the altar
and consume the sacrifice. The contest was well chosen for the priests of Ba'al;
after all, Ba'al was the God of Thunder and Lightning. Consuming the sacrifice
should have been an easy task for such a god. However, on this day, the God of
Thunder seemed hesitant to respond with his namesake power.
After a few hours, Elijah decided to get into the act. "Shout
louder," Elijah cries. "Maybe he can't hear you." He continued
his taunts with, "Surely, he is a God?" You can almost hear the
sarcasm in his voice. Maybe he is deep in thought or busy. Maybe he is
traveling. Yell louder so that he can hear you. He might be asleep and needs to
be awakened."
The prophets of Ba'al danced and yelled even louder. But nothing
happened. Ba'al didn't come and consume the sacrifice. Finally, after these
prophets had worn themselves out, Elijah stepped up and built his altar. He
poured water on the wood of the altar until the water filled a trench that he
had constructed around the altar.
Then he prayed a simple prayer; no dancing was necessary, and God sent
fire to consume the altar. Where Ba'al might have been on vacation or at least
far from the scene of the battle, God was present and stood at the ready for
Elijah to make the ask.
Amos makes the same point. Regardless of what is happening, God is ready
to act. Whether the action is positive or negative. Amos sees a vision of an
event that has not yet happened and seems almost unimaginable; he stands at the
altar of the Temple and watches as it collapses all around him. But there is
another message that his audience needed to understand. On the day that the
Temple fell down, it would not fall because God was somehow absent. The
destruction of the Temple would not take place because God had fallen asleep or
was on vacation, visiting far-flung places in his universe. God would be
present at the destruction of the Temple. And he would orchestrate the
destruction because of his people's sin.
Tomorrow's Scripture Reading: Jonah 1 & 2