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Amos 1:1-2; 5:14-15, 21-24, Amos: Justice Rolls Down

Narrative Lectionary Key Verse for Today

I hate, I despise your festivals, and I take no delight in your solemn assemblies. Take away from me the noise of your songs; I will not listen to the melody of your harps. But let justice roll down like waters, and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream.
— Amos 1:21,23-24

NL Daily Devotion for Sunday, November 14, 2021

by Dr. Kimberly Leetch, Clergy Stuff


Main Idea: We are called to live in the tension between the world we live in and the world we dream of.

Does God really despise our festivals and solemn assemblies? No, this is not what Amos was trying to say. The people of Israel had focused all their energy on the show of worship without actually living the tenets of faith. They were more concerned with their rituals, their sacrifices, and their gatherings than for justice, peace, and love. Worship without the work of justice and peace is empty, and God would have none of it.

I recently re-read George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four. One of the things that’s fascinating me with this dystopian mural is how very empty the life of the protagonist Winston Smith seems. In the party’s attempt to make everything perfect, there has been a fundamental loss of the spark of life. Perfection is an illusion; the lies and doublethink fog the truth so that Winston does not even believe his own memory.

As I watch TV, surf the net, and scroll through my social media, I am struck by the tension between the perfect life many desire and the reality of the struggles we all face. On the one hand, there are images of sunny beaches on expensive vacations, the nervous smiles and hopeful expectations of prom photos, baby’s first Instagram, and homes flipped from condemned to luxurious in the blink of an eye. On the other hand, I also see images of drug addicts passed out in cars with their toddlers in the back seat, black men killed by police officers, children covered in blood in war-torn Syria. There is a tension between the perfection we desire and the messiness of real life.

God knows this is our reality. God knows that our world is broken, that justice is fleeting, that peace is elusive. God also knows that we need our rituals, our worship, our music, our words of wisdom to give us hope that life can be more—more just, more peaceful, more loving. It is not our rituals that God despises, it is the giving up of the hope that we can contribute to making this world more like the world God intended—God’s reign on earth.

So, go ahead and dance your dances, post photos of your princesses online, sing your songs. But then go out and fight for justice. Fight for peace. And love unconditionally.