You Reap What You Sow | Hosea 8
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The storm you're asking God to stop… might be the one you planted.
Summary:
Hosea 8 delivers a hard truth: you don't just experience storms—you often sow them. Israel planted rebellion through empty religion, self-made authority, idolatry, compromise, and forgetfulness of God, and the consequences returned with greater force. The same principle still applies today—what is sown privately will eventually surface publicly. Yet the chapter also offers hope: if destructive seeds grow, so can seeds of repentance, truth, and obedience.
Reflection & Small Group Discussion Questions:
1. Why do people often ask God to remove consequences instead of changing behavior?
2. What does "they sow the wind and reap the whirlwind" (Hosea 8:7) teach about cause and effect?
3. How can someone practice "empty religion" while still appearing spiritually active?
4. What are examples of "self-made authority" in a person's life today?
5. Why are modern idols harder to recognize than ancient ones?
6. What does it mean that idols begin in the heart before appearing in actions?
7. How does compromise slowly gain control over a person's life?
8. Why is forgetting God described as the root of all other storms?
9. What storm in your life might be the result of seeds planted over time?
10. What is one "good seed" you can begin sowing today that leads toward restoration?