Today's Scripture Reading (April 14, 2026): Hosea 9
I like the
idea of repurposing some buildings. There was an old grocery store not far from
where I live that remained empty for a long time. The problem, admittedly, was
the price the owners wanted for the building and the cost of recreating
something different within it. I thought the property would have made a good
church. It had ample parking, which is often the nemesis of any church, and I
often wished I were wealthy enough to buy the property and donate it to a
church organization.
Churches are
often forced to move to the suburbs and outskirts because undeveloped land is
available there, and it is often cheaper to build on. But the flip side is that
it leaves inner-city neighborhoods without nearby churches. Churches in the
suburbs are often driven to rather than walked to. Admittedly, that is another
problem of the contemporary church. We are creating churches that serve a
particular niche rather than a community. I think the best solution to the
problem is to repurpose buildings in the inner city. A local example is an
inner-city theater that has been transitioned to a city-center church. It can
be done, but it is never easy.
But that is
not the situation about which Hosea is speaking. The threshing floor and
winepresses have been repurposed into churches; however, these worship spaces were
dedicated to honoring false gods. The problem was that there was a purpose to
worship on the threshing floor. The hope was that the worship service on the
threshing floor or winepress would increase the harvest. Maybe in contemporary
times, it would be like holding a spring church service in your barn, hoping
the worship would translate into a better harvest the next fall.
I have to
admit that holding a worship service in a barn might be fun, but it would not guarantee
a good harvest, even if the God of Israel were the one being worshiped. Jesus
spoke directly to this situation in his "Sermon on the Mount."
But I tell you,
love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, that you may be children of your Father in heaven. He causes his
sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the
unrighteous (Matthew 5:44-45).
Hosea's
concern is the purpose of these worship events. It was not Yahweh who was being
worshiped, but instead, the local false gods. As far as Hosea was concerned,
they might as well have hosted a local hootenanny or dance, because that would
probably at least encourage the neighborhood. But worshiping false gods would
not increase the harvest, even if the worship was taking place on the local threshing
floors and winepresses.
Tomorrow's
Scripture Reading: Hosea 10