God’s plan is restoration, and it is clearly seen here where God commands Hosea to “Go again, love a woman who is loved by a lover and is committing adultery, just like the love of the LORD for the children of Israel, who look to other gods and love the raisin cakes of the pagans.” (v1)
This was not an easy thing for Hosea to do. Gomer was in an adulterous relationship with another, just as Israel was serving a false god and committing spiritual adultery. God shows His love, and he tells Hosea to display his character by wooing Gomer back. Hosea would even pay her lover to get her back (v2,3). The usual rate for a slave was thirty shekels of silver. Gomer was ‘going cheap’, Hosea bought her for fifteen shekels of silver and some barley.
God wanted wayward Israel to come back to him and was even going to pay the price. The same is true of us all and the price paid was the death of His Only Son, our Lord Jesus Christ. He still loved them even though they were living in sin, and also of us – Christ died for us even while we were yet sinners. This is real love. To love a person who has mistreated us so badly and been so unfaithful requires deep love and that is what God showed to Israel and has shown to us.
It required great forgiveness on the part of Hosea and, having been forgiven, it should also help us to forgive those who have wronged us.
Hosea didn’t have to pay to get his own wife back, but he did. He was buying her out of prostitution, and he said that she must stay with him.
The message from God through Hosea to Israel is now that they will have no king or prince, no sacrifice or sacred pillar, nor ephod nor teraphim (v4). No earthly leaders, no spiritual opportunities and no spiritual guidance. However, that would not be the end – v5, they would return and seek The LORD their God and David their king and fear The LORD and His goodness.
It is good to see that, even though we go away from The LORD we can return and seek Him and enjoy the restored relationship with him. It reminds me of the story Jesus told of the Prodigal Son in Luke 15.