Joel 1 summons a whole nation to see devastation as God’s wake-up call and to gather in fasting and prayer. The chapter trains churches to lament honestly and hope steadfastly in the Lord who restores.
Bible Themes and Doctrines
Welcome to my blog! My name is Brother Woody Brohm. I’m blessed to be married, the father of two wonderful daughters, and the grandfather of five incredible grandchildren. As the son of a pastor, I’ve had the joy of knowing Christ for most of my life. Though I haven’t pursued seminary or pastoral ministry as a vocation, I’ve been privileged to teach in churches and serve as a missionary at various times. My heart’s desire is to follow Jesus Christ faithfully, and I affirm the truth of salvation by grace alone. This blog is a reflection of my passion for studying Scripture and sharing the truths I’ve discovered. May it serve to encourage and equip you as we grow together in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.
Joel 1 summons a whole nation to see devastation as God’s wake-up call and to gather in fasting and prayer. The chapter trains churches to lament honestly and hope steadfastly in the Lord who restores.
Hosea 14 hands us words for return and a God who answers with free love and morning-dew renewal. As roots deepen and shade spreads, praise rises as the fruit he himself gives.
Hosea 13 traces Israel’s fall from honor to idol-kissing and shows how the Helper becomes the One they resist. In the ruins, God declares, “No Savior except me,” and promises redemption stronger than the grave.
Ephraim chases the east wind while scales tilt in the market. Hosea 12 answers with Jacob’s story and a clear summons: return to God, keep love and justice, and wait for him always.
Hosea 11 remembers first steps and stubborn refusals, then surprises with mercy: the Holy One’s compassion rises, and his roar calls children home. This chapter anchors judgment inside love and points to a future settling under God’s faithful care.
Hosea 10 traces how prosperity fed idolatry and how courts filled with poisonous weeds. Into the ruins, God calls his people to plow hard ground, sow righteousness, and seek him until he showers his righteousness like rain.
Hosea 9 shuts down counterfeit joy and exposes worship that has become “bread of mourners.” With harvest failing and exile near, the chapter calls God’s people to return in truth and learn again to live before his face.
Hosea 8 exposes a nation that forgot its Maker and traded trust for idols and alliances. The Lord answers with a trumpet blast and a proverb—sow wind, reap whirlwind—so that the field is cleared for true return and future gathering under his faithful rule.
Hosea 7 exposes Israel’s decline through vivid images—oven, unturned loaf, dove, faulty bow—and summons the people to call on the Lord. The God who remembers intends to heal, longing to redeem as hearts return to him in truth.
Hosea 6 invites a wounded people to return to the Lord who heals and revives. He desires mercy and living knowledge of him more than ritual, promising presence as sure as the dawn and as gentle as the spring rains.
Hosea 5 summons priests, people, and palace to face God’s verdict and calls them to seek his face. Its staged discipline—moth, rot, and lion—aims not to destroy but to restore hearts to covenant faithfulness.
Hosea 4 brings God’s lawsuit against Israel: no knowledge of God has hollowed worship and ethics, and the land mourns. The cure begins where the charge lands—return to the Lord, reform teaching and worship, and live under the faithful Shepherd who restores truth and love.
Hosea 3 compresses the gospel arc into five verses: love pays a price, sets healing boundaries, and leads a people to return with reverent joy. The “many days” of deprivation end in trembling before the Lord and his goodness under the promised King.
Hosea 2 moves from lawsuit to love. God frustrates false lovers, speaks tenderly in the wilderness, and betroths his people forever. Names once marked by shame become songs of belonging as creation itself answers the Lord who plants his people in joy.
Hosea 1 turns a prophet’s home into a living parable. Names that sound like verdicts—Jezreel, Not Loved, Not My People—become seeds of restoration as God promises a countless family called children of the living God under one Leader.