Amos 5:2

"Listen to this word which I take up for a lamentation over you, O house of Israel:"

Key Reflection

This opening line sets a somber tone, indicating that God is about to deliver a prophetic message of judgment against the Israelites. The use of "lamentation" suggests a sense of sorrow and warns of impending doom, highlighting the seriousness of their spiritual condition and the gravity of the coming consequences.

From the Scholars: Barnes' Notes

She hath fallen, she shall rise no more, the virgin of Israel; she hath been dashed down upon her land, there is none to raise her up -Such is the dirge, a dirge like that of David over Saul and Jonathan, over what once was lovely and mighty, but which had perished. He speaks of all as past, and that, irremediably. Israel is one of the things which had been, and which would never again be. He calls her tenderly, “the virgin of Israel,” not as having retained her purity or her fealty to God; still less, with human boastfulness, as though she had as yet been unsubdued by man. For she had been faithless to God, and had been many times conquered by man.

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