Hosea
Prophet of God's Unfailing Love
Description
Prophesying to the northern kingdom during its final decades before Assyrian conquest (c. 755-715 BC), Hosea son of Beeri received an extraordinary commission that transformed his personal life into a living parable of God's relationship with Israel. Commanded to marry Gomer, daughter of Diblaim, a woman of whoredoms, Hosea's subsequent experience of marital betrayal mirrored Israel's spiritual adultery in pursuing Baal worship.
He fathered three children whose prophetic names—Jezreel ('God sows'), Lo-ruhamah ('not pitied'), and Lo-ammi ('not my people')—proclaimed judgment upon the nation. When Gomer abandoned him for lovers, God commanded Hosea to redeem and restore her, dramatizing divine love that pursues the unfaithful beloved. This enacted prophecy gives Hosea's message unique emotional power, alternating between anguished accusations of Israel's harlotry and tender appeals for return.
The prophet exposes Israel's syncretistic Baal worship, political alliances with Egypt and Assyria, and empty ritual divorced from covenant faithfulness. Yet even in pronouncing judgment, Hosea reveals God's reluctant heart: 'How shall I give thee up, Ephraim?' The Hebrew word hesed—covenant love, lovingkindness, loyal mercy—appears repeatedly, describing God's enduring commitment despite Israel's faithlessness. Hosea's prophecy that God would call His son out of Egypt finds application in Matthew's gospel to Christ's return from Egyptian exile, while his promise of resurrection after two days prefigures Christ's rising on the third day.Hosea's marriage to Gomer raises interpretive questions: was she already immoral when he married her, or did she become unfaithful afterward? Did he actually marry a prostitute, or is the account purely allegorical? Most conservative scholars understand it as historical, God commanding Hosea to marry a woman with propensity toward unfaithfulness, whose subsequent adultery would mirror Israel's sin. His purchase price of fifteen pieces of silver and measures of barley to redeem her equals thirty pieces of silver total—the price of a slave, foreshadowing Christ's betrayal price.