Worship Without Justice, Justice Without Worship

Amos’ Call to a Whole Covenant Life (Amos 5:18-6:14)

1. The Day of the Lord: Privilege Turned to Judgment

  • Israel longed for light, but Amos declares it will be darkness (Amos 5:18–20).
  • Election is not exemption but responsibility (Exodus 19:5–6).
  • God applies the same justice to His people as to the nations (Amos 3:2).

2. Worship and Justice: Two Sides of One Covenant

3. The River of Righteousness

  • Righteousness must flow continually, like a river from God (Amos 5:24, John 7:38).
  • Rituals measured by human effort cannot replace a life shaped by God’s justice.
  • Pride is dismantled: all righteousness is God’s gift (Jeremiah 2:13).

4. Complacency and Pride: False Security Exposed

Questions for Application and Reflection

  1. In what ways can the church today risk treating election (being God’s people) as exemption rather than responsibility?
  2. How can we hold worship and justice together so neither becomes empty or distorted?
  3. What does it look like for “righteousness to roll on like a river” in our everyday lives?
  4. Where do we see complacency and pride in our own culture of wealth and security?
  5. How do Amos’ words about reversal challenge our ideas of privilege and success today?