“Come, let us return to the Lord,
for it is he who has torn, and he will heal us;
he has struck down, and he will bind us up.
After two days he will revive us;
on the third day he will raise us up,
that we may live before him.
Let us know, let us press on to know the Lord;
his appearing is as sure as the dawn;
he will come to us like the showers,
like the spring rains that water the earth.” (Hosea 6:1-3)
I found myself complaining the other day as one particular program on my computer, which had worked fine just the day before, stubbornly refused to do what I asked it to do. I tried all the standard things: restarting the program, rebooting the computer, reloading the files for the project, and so on. No luck. No success. After several hours' worth of delay and a very strong urge to throw my computer on the ground in frustration, the task was completed. But I found myself thinking out loud before the problem was resolved, "Maybe the lesson here is that nothing else I put my trust in will prove to be truly reliable, other than God. Maybe this is the reminder that only God can really be counted on."
I don't mean for that to sound cynical--I know that other people are often trustworthy to come through for me in a pinch, and that there are institutions and structures I place my trust in on a regular basis, from the bank I where deposit my paychecks to the insurance company that says they will cover us in case of a catastrophe. But I also know that none of those individuals, groups, or entities will be foolproof. At some point, they will each let me down, leave me hanging, or hold up some kind of loophole to excuse themselves from actually being there for me. The friend I need to pick me up at the airport might be out of town when I need a ride. The insurance policy might have some kind of fine print telling me that the water damage isn't really covered after all. The bank I count on to hold my savings might fail--it has happened before, after all (cue the famous scene from the movie It's a Wonderful Life). In other words, even the things and people I regard as most trustworthy and dependable will not always be reliable. And to some degree I need to live my life simultaneously ready for them to come through for me AND to bail out on me.
But the Scriptures claim, over and over again, that God really is different from all of them. Unlike your glitchy computer program, your possibly-out-of-town friend with the car, your fine-print-wielding insurance company, and your financial institutions, the voices of the Bible keep insisting that God is reliable. When God says something, God means it. When God makes a promise, God keeps it. And when God makes a commitment, God honors it. Ultimately, that's the only real reason we can keep going in this life of faith. For all the challenges, costs, and consternation that come with living as God's people (with our fickle faith and struggles with sin), it is worth it because God is faithful.
So here, in this short passage that many of us heard this past Sunday in worship, the prophet addresses people who have turned away from God--and God's priorities--yet again. The prophet Hosea has been calling them out on it, and has also told them that they've been trying to patch things up with God the wrong way by bribing God with sacrifices when what God really wants is for us to treat one another with mercy and compassion. The people feel like God has withdrawn from them in response, and they are not really sure if it is worth turning their lives around back toward God's ways. So the prophet Hosea basically says to them, "Come on already--the ONE thing you know about God is that God is faithful and reliable. Of course, God will show up for us--let's turn back to meet God!"
His way of saying it is a little more poetic: God's "appearing is as sure as the dawn" and "the spring rains that water the earth." In other words, as sure as you can count on the sun coming up, and as surely as you can trust that the rains will eventually come in their season, you can count on God to show up. God will prove reliable--and therefore, it is worth staking our lives on the promises God makes and orienting our hearts on the priorities God gives to us. We might not be able to guess how God will come through, and God's way of keeping promises might indeed surprise us, but God will prove faithful. Or, as the late theologian Douglas John Hall put it once, "The disciple community believes that God reigns, all contrary evidence notwithstanding. But God, as God is depicted in the continuity of the Testaments, is never quite predictable—or rather, only this is predictable about God: that God will be faithful.”
That's what Hosea has been trying to say: the one thing that is predictable about God is that God will be faithful--as sure as the sun comes up and the rain fall down, God is dependable. More than our flaky human tendencies, better than our oldest institutions, clearer than the muddy legalese of our corporate contract-writing, God can be counted on. That's why it's worth it for us to point our lives toward God--God won't let us down, when al is said and done.
There are plenty of other things and people you could center your life on, but at your own risk. Jobs change and companies let you go in the name of "downsizing" or "improving cost-effectiveness." Social institutions come and go, and empires eventually crumble under the weight of their own bloated decadence. Even the people in our lives whom we hold most closely will grow old move away, or give way to sickness, frailty, and death. But we as the people of God don't count on those things to be unchanging and certain; we count on God to be faithful, even when other things do change.
Where have we been placing our trust in uncertain and unreliable things or people, and what could be different if we centered our lives on the God who is faithful?
What could that look like today?
Lord God, be your faithful self among us today, and let us orient our lives on you.






