Hebrew Key Terms:
Context: Amos 8:4-6 is the prophet's merciless exposé of northern Israel's economic injustice under the thin veneer of religious observance. The greedy merchants are quoted directly: "When will the new moon be over (wəyaʿăbōr haḥōdeš), that we may sell grain (wənašbîrāh šeber)? And the Sabbath, that we may open (pitḥāh) the wheat stores — to make the ephah small and the shekel great, and to cheat with false balances?" The wordplay is devastating: the merchants resent the Sabbath (šabbāt) because they cannot break out / sell grain (nišbərāh / našbîrāh / šeber — all from the root š-b-r). The very cessation the calendar imposes — the day-of-rest / new-moon that interrupts commerce — is experienced as an intolerable commercial delay. They outwardly observe (they don't sell on new moon / Sabbath), but inwardly they resent the observance and spend it plotting economic oppression of the poor (false scales, underweight ephahs, overcharged shekels, buying the poor for silver, v. 6). Amos's indictment is structurally identical to Isaiah 1:13-14 and Hosea 2:11: the new-moon institution is kept externally but corrupted internally, and the LORD will not tolerate it (v. 7: "the LORD has sworn by the pride of Jacob: Surely I will never forget any of their deeds"). The judgment falls hard in vv. 9-10: cosmic darkening, mourning, sackcloth, bitter day. The new-moon/Sabbath rhythm that should have shaped a people of justice has become the very marker of the injustice it indicts.
Connections:
Christological Connection: Amos 8:5 exposes the most revealing diagnostic of the New Moon's inadequacy: the heart can observe the institution outwardly while resenting the God who gave it. The merchants do not break the law technically — they wait until the new moon is "over" before they reopen their scales — but their impatience with the sacred interruption discloses that the calendar has no purchase on their hearts. The external observance is cover for internal rebellion. This is precisely the condition Christ came to expose and redeem. In Matthew 23:23 Jesus reiterates Amos's indictment against the Pharisees: scrupulous about tithing the smallest herbs, but neglecting "the weightier matters of the law: justice and mercy and faithfulness." He does not abolish the tithe (cf. "these you ought to have done"); He exposes the hollowness of observance without heart-righteousness — the very Amos-8 dynamic. Christ accomplishes what Amos's merchants proved impossible: He is the one who "delights to do your will, O God" (Hebrews 10:7, citing Ps 40:8), whose internal disposition matches His external obedience perfectly. Where the merchants' calendar-keeping concealed oppression of the poor, Christ's Sabbath-keeping disclosed mercy to the poor (Luke 4:18-21 — the Nazareth sermon inaugurating the Jubilee year of the Lord's favor). Where they schemed to make the ephah small and the shekel great, Christ was made "poor, so that you by his poverty might become rich" (2 Corinthians 8:9) — the reverse economics of the gospel. Where they resented the new moon's cessation because it interrupted gain, believers in Christ are free from the resentment — not because the calendar is abolished but because the substance has come and the heart is remade. James's echo of Amos in the NT ("the wages of the laborers who mowed your fields… cry out to the Lord of hosts," James 5:4) shows that the Amos 8 critique remains operative against new-covenant hypocrisy — the calendar is gone, but the heart-idolatry of wealth against justice persists, and Christ judges it still. The Christological resolution is not liturgical observance substituted for calendar observance, but a new heart (Jer 31; Ezek 36) that delights in the substance the new moon only shadowed. The test of genuine new-covenant worship is precisely what Amos 8:5 tests: is the commercial-economic life integrated with God-centered worship, or does observance serve as mask for injustice? Christ's substance demands and produces the integration the shadow could never secure.
Connection Method(s): Contrast — The merchants' resentment of the new moon's sabbatical cessation reveals that the shadow-institution cannot produce the heart-worship it signals; external observance masks internal rebellion. Also Typology (Forward-Looking) — the prophetic indictment anticipates Christ's own exposure of hypocritical calendar-keeping (Matt 23:23) and the new-covenant heart (Jer 31; Ezek 36) that integrates economic justice with worship.
Trajectory Table: 110 - New Moons (Renewal and Rest)
Related Trajectory Tables: TT 134 — Sabbath; TT 135 — Sabbatical Year; TT 174 — Year of Jubilee