Hebrew Key Terms:
Context: Amos 9:11-12 is the hinge of the book's closing oracle of hope — the only sustained word of restoration in a book otherwise devoted to judgment against the northern kingdom (ca. 760-750 BC). After the vision of YHWH standing beside the altar to destroy (9:1-4) and the verdict on "the sinful kingdom" (9:8), the sieve-image of 9:9-10 preserves a remnant, and "in that day" (9:11) pivots from judgment to rebuilding. The object to be raised is striking: not the "house" (bayit) of David — the dynastic term of 2 Samuel 7 — but the sukkâ, the harvest-season hut, a deliberately humble image: by the time of fulfillment the proud Davidic house will have collapsed into a sagging field-booth. YHWH himself will "raise up" (ʾāqîm) this fallen booth, "repair its gaps, restore its ruins, and rebuild it as in the days of old" — and the purpose clause of v. 12 gives the reason for the rebuilding: "that they may possess the remnant of Edom and all the nations that bear My name." The Davidic dwelling is rebuilt in order that the nations may be incorporated under YHWH's name. The name-formula ("over whom My name is called," cf. Deut 28:10; 2 Sam 12:28) is ownership language: these Gentiles already belong to YHWH. Amos thereby fuses the two earlier streams of the Shem trajectory — the Davidic narrowing of 2 Samuel 7 and the dwelling-structure image of Genesis 9:27 ("let him dwell in the tents of Shem") — into a single prophetic picture: the blessed line's dwelling rebuilt for the nations' entry.
Text-Critical Note (MT/LXX): The MT of v. 12 reads "that they may possess (יִירְשׁוּ, yîrəšû) the remnant of Edom (אֱדוֹם)"; the LXX reads "that the remnant of mankind (τῶν ἀνθρώπων) may seek out (ἐκζητήσωσιν) [the Lord]" — reflecting a Hebrew text or reading tradition with יִדְרְשׁוּ (yidrəšû, "seek") for יִירְשׁוּ and אָדָם (ʾādām, "mankind") for אֱדוֹם (ʾĕdôm, identical consonants apart from a vowel-letter). James cites the LXX form at the Jerusalem Council (Acts 15:17). The two readings converge rather than compete: in the MT, Israel possesses nations already marked by YHWH's name; in the LXX, those nations themselves seek the LORD. Either way, the rebuilt Davidic dwelling exists for Gentile incorporation — the LXX makes explicit the direction of movement that the MT's name-formula already implies.
OT-to-OT Development: Amos is itself reusing earlier Scripture: the verb "I will raise up" (ʾāqîm) echoes the Davidic covenant verbatim ("I will raise up your offspring after you," 2 Sam 7:12), so that the raising of the booth is the keeping of the 2 Samuel 7 promise after the dynasty's collapse. Later prophets extend the same expectation: Hosea 3:5 foresees Israel returning to "seek the LORD their God and David their king" in the latter days; Isaiah 11:10 makes the "root of Jesse" a banner to which "the nations will seek"; Jeremiah 12:15-16 promises that uprooted Gentile neighbors who learn YHWH's ways will be "built up in the midst of My people"; Zechariah 8:22 anticipates "many peoples and strong nations" coming to seek the LORD in Jerusalem. Amos 9:11-12 stands at the head of this chain — the first prophetic text to make the rebuilt Davidic dwelling the explicit mechanism of Gentile inclusion.
Connections:
Christological Connection: In its own horizon, Amos 9:11-12 teaches that the Davidic covenant survives the dynasty's collapse — not because the house of David deserves preservation (the booth is fallen), but because YHWH's verbal commitment of 2 Samuel 7 cannot fail. And it teaches that the covenant's survival has a purpose beyond Israel: the rebuilt dwelling exists "that they may possess... all the nations that bear My name." The oracle thus discloses what the Genesis-9 trajectory had implied from the beginning — the blessed line of Shem is preserved and its royal dwelling rebuilt for the sake of the peoples outside it. The nations are not an afterthought to the Davidic promise; they are its stated goal.
In Christ, the fallen booth is raised. The NT locates the rebuilding not in a restored political dynasty but in the resurrection and enthronement of David's greater Son: Peter argues at Pentecost that God's oath to seat David's descendant on his throne was fulfilled when God raised Jesus and exalted Him to His right hand (Acts 2:30-36), and Paul in Antioch reads the resurrection as the granting of "the holy and sure blessings of David" (Acts 13:33-37). On that basis James cites Amos 9:11-12 at the Jerusalem Council as the prophetic warrant for what God was visibly doing: because the booth of David has been raised in Jesus' resurrection, "the remnant of men" now "seek the Lord, and all the Gentiles who are called by My name" (Acts 15:16-17). The escalation is from architecture to person: not a hut of poles and branches, nor even a restored palace, but the risen Messiah Himself is the rebuilt dwelling of David into which the nations are incorporated.
Already/not-yet: the already is the raised booth — Christ risen and enthroned — and the present ingathering of Gentiles "called by His name" into the covenant community without becoming Jews (Acts 15:19; Rom 11:17; Eph 2:19). The not-yet is the consummation of the dwelling-image: "Behold, the dwelling place of God is with man" (Rev 21:3), when the multinational multitude of Revelation 7:9-10 stands before the throne and the booth of David shelters every tribe, tongue, people, and nation forever.
Connection Method(s): Promise-Fulfillment (primary) — Amos 9:11-12 is a first-person divine promise ("I will raise up... I will rebuild") with a stated purpose (Gentile incorporation), and the NT explicitly cites it as fulfilled: James's Acts 15:16-18 citation treats the rebuilding of David's booth and the Gentile ingathering as accomplished and underway in Christ. Also Redemptive-Historical Progression — the oracle is the prophetic-epoch stage of the Shem trajectory, fusing the Davidic narrowing (Stage 6) with the Genesis-9 dwelling image and setting up the apostolic ratification (Stage 10). Anti-default note: this is not typology. The booth of David is a prophetic image inside a verbal promise, not a historical institution prefiguring Christ by analogical correspondence and escalation; the NT's use of the text is citation-as-fulfillment ("the words of the prophets agree with this, as it is written," Acts 15:15), not typological correspondence. Promise-Fulfillment is the precise classification.
Trajectory Table: 145 - Shem (Blessed Line of YHWH)