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Chapter 8

The Vision of the Fruit Basket.[a] This is what the Lord God showed me: a basket of ripe fruit. He asked, “What do you see, Amos?” I replied, “A basket of ripe fruit.” Then the Lord said to me:

The time is ripe for my people Israel;
    I will never again pardon their offenses.
The songs of the temple shall become wailings on that day;
    there will be corpses strewn everywhere.
    Be silent! Thus says the Lord God.

Listen, You Who Crush the Poor

Hear this, you who crush the needy
    and trample upon the poor of the land.
“When will the new moon be over,” you ask,
    “so that we may sell our grain,
and the Sabbath,
    so that we may market our wheat?
Then we can make the bushel measure smaller
    and increase the shekel-weight
    by adjusting the scales fraudulently.
We can buy the poor man for silver
    and the needy for a pair of sandals;
    we can even sell the refuse of the wheat.”
The Lord has sworn by the pride of Jacob:
    Never will I forget any of their deeds.
Will not the land tremble because of this?
    Will not everyone mourn who dwells in it?
The whole earth will rise like the Nile,
    swelling and then subsiding
    like the River of Egypt.

I Will Turn Your Feasts into Mourning

On that day, says the Lord God,
    I will make the sun go down at noon
    and darken the earth in broad daylight.
10 I will turn your feasts into mourning,
    and all your songs into lamentation.
I will make you cover your loins with sackcloth
    and shave your heads.
I will make it like mourning for an only son
    and the end of it like a bitter day.[b]
11 The days are surely coming, says the Lord God,
    when I will send a famine upon the land,
not a hunger for bread or a thirst for water,
    but for hearing the word of the Lord.
12 People will stagger from sea to sea
    and wander from north to east,
in search of the word of the Lord,
    but they will not find it.
13 On that day, fair maidens and young men
    will faint from thirst.
14 Those who swear by the shameful idol of Samaria
    and say, “As your god lives, O Dan,”
and, “By the sacred path to Beer-sheba,”
    will all fall and never rise again.[c]

Footnotes

  1. Amos 8:1 In Hebrew there is a play on words between ripe fruit and “ripe time.”
  2. Amos 8:10 The wearing of sackcloth and the shaving of the head were rites of mourning; mourning was especially solemn at the death of an only son, since this meant the end of the family line.
  3. Amos 8:14 A reference to illegitimate or pagan practices, an oath, being also a profession of religious faith.