Summary[i]
Hosea was a contemporary of Amos
in Israel, and of Isaiah and Micah in Judah, and his ministry continued after
the first, or Assyrian, captivity of the northern kingdom 2Ki_15:29. His style is abrupt, metaphorical,
and figurative.
Israel is Jehovah's adulterous
wife, repudiated, but ultimately to be purified and restored. This is Hosea's
distinctive message, which may be summed up in his two words, Lo-ammi,
"not my people," and Ammi, "my people." Israel is not merely
apostate and sinful--that is said also; but her sin takes its character from
the exalted relationship into which she has been brought.
The book is in three parts:
1. The dishonoured wife (Hosea 1:1 - 3:5).
2. The sinful people (Hosea 4:1 - 13:8).
3. The ultimate blessing and glory of Israel
(Hosea 13:9 - 14:9).
The events recorded in Hosea cover a period of 60 years (Ussher).