Seek good and not evil,
that you may live,
and so the Lord, the God of hosts, will be with you,
just as you have said.
Amos 5:14
One of the greatest distinctions between the Bible and other religious texts is that the Bible calls the followers of God to seek life. Deuteronomy 30:15-20 encapsulates this idea for us to build upon. “See, I have set before you today life and prosperity, death and adversity…” This passage is a dramatic covenantal choice: obedience leads to life and blessing, disobedience to death and curse. Verse 19 urges, “Choose life so that you and your descendants may live.”
Amos reaffirms this principle and expands it. Whereas Deuteronomy could be seen as calling just to personal piety, Amos 5 takes it into the public sphere. Amos 5:14 is not a vague moralism but a public summons. It challenges Israel’s elite to abandon exploitative systems and pursue justice in concrete ways. The prophet’s call is not about personal virtue alone—it’s about structural transformation.
Too often the church is satisfied with our personal piety, even pious views about what should happen in society. We retreat to our rituals and the security of our traditions thinking that this alone will bring God’s favor to us.
Amos proclaims that ritual and conformity alone is not the reason God promises life. It is an ordered society with the principles of God’s law as the societal norm. When we have that then—” But let justice roll down like water and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream.”
Pastor Greg





