Text: Hosea 5:15
“Then I will return to my lair until they have borne their guilt and seek my face—in their misery they will earnestly seek me.”
In certain circumstances, God forsakes or turns away as a righteous, direct response to human sin. When man violates the relationship with Him, He pulls back, as seen when He predicted Israel's rebellion, stating that if they forsake the covenant, He will hide His face and depart from them.
We see the same principle applied when the Father's withdrawal from Jesus during the crucifixion happened, as the Eternal God laid on the Messiah the iniquity of all, making Him a substitute for sin.
This act proves that sin is diametrically opposed to what He is, even when His own Son becomes the representation of it.
Hosea prophesied to a people who had drifted far from God. They were religious—but not righteous. Active—but not aligned. Busy with ritual—but empty of relationship.
And into that condition, God speaks a striking word:
“I will return to my place… until they seek my face.”
He is not walking away—He is waiting.
Waiting for:
-Repentance of His people
-Surrender of His people
-Return of His people to Him
And throughout the Book of Hosea, we see that when the people return, God responds with mercy, restoration, and love.
This is a message not only for ancient Israel—it is a message for us.
1. When God Steps Back
“Then I will return to my place…”
In this verse, God says He will “return to His place.” This is not abandonment—it is intentional distance.
Throughout the Book of Hosea, God speaks to a people who have repeatedly turned away. Like a loving parent, He allows space—not out of cruelty, but to awaken awareness.
Sometimes, God’s silence is not absence—it is one of the ways He disciplines His people.
The psalmists cry out to God in times of struggles and isolation-
“Hide not your face from your servant, for I am in distress; make haste to answer me” (Psalm 69:17). The psalmist senses that God is distant, that God is hiding from him.
Or look at Psalm 143:7: “Answer me quickly, O Lord! My spirit fails! Hide not your face from me, lest I be like those who go down to the pit.”
Why does this happen? Our God is a compassionate and covenant keeping God. The Bible says, God loves to be with His children. He protects and provides for them.
In Hebrews 13:5, we read God speaking “I will never leave you nor forsake you.’”
In Deuteronomy 1:42, we read God speaking to a group of people who wanted to fight with their enemies without the help of God, trusting in their own strength and wisdom.
"Go not up, neither fight; for I am not among you; lest ye be smitten before your enemies".
And we know what happened. They were overpowered by the enemies. They needed the absence of God to understand, it was God who was giving them victory thus far.
In the New Testament we see, Jesus is called ‘Emmanuel’ means God be with us.
Jesus is living with us through His Holy Spirit- that’s the privilege we have now.
Then why do we fail? Why do we lack power?
We are not submitting to Him. He is our Lord and we don’t submit to His Lordship over our lives. He withdraws, leaving us alone, not abandoned.
He withdraws intentionally so that we must know His absence with us.
We see in Revelation 3:20, Christ speaks to the Church in Laodecea- He is knocking at the door. Where is He now? He is outside the Church.
He is the shepherd who is searching for the one lost sheep. He is like the woman who was searching for the lost coin. He is the loving Father who waits for the return of His son.
Do you feel His absence in your life?
When prayers feel unanswered
When life feels spiritually dry
When you feel stuck, empty, and alone
II. The Weight That Awakens
“…until they have borne their guilt…”
God does not ignore sin. He allows people to feel the weight of their wrong choices.
We see on the cross, when His Son was hanging- God turned His face away, there Jesus, being a man (though God eternally), felt the weight of the sins of the whole world on Him.
He cried out “ My Father, My Father, why have You forsaken me?”
This is what happens, when God withdraws from our life for a small season. We feel like we are crushed under the weight of sins and our wrong choices. We have none to comfort us, none to share our problems with.
The Psalmist says, there is no soundness in my bones. (Psalms 38:3)
In another psalms, Psalm 40:12: "For innumerable evils have compassed me about: mine iniquities have taken hold upon me, so that I am not able to look up; they are more than the hairs of mine head: therefore my heart faileth me".
We see in the life of Peter when he didn’t take the warning of the Lord seriously, God allowed him to fail. He failed the test and denied the Lord three times.
Peter experienced God’s absence at the time of his trial.
Luke 22:62-64 “ Peter went out and wept bitterly”
This is not punishment for punishment’s sake—it is conviction meant to lead to repentance.
We live in a culture that avoids ‘sorrow’, but Scripture shows that:
Godly sorrow can be a doorway to transformation.
Conviction of sin leads to genuine humility.
Humility prepares the heart for grace.
Sorrow, when it comes from God, is not condemnation—it is conviction.
Condemnation says: “You are hopeless.”
Conviction says: “You need to return.”
God allows us to feel the consequences of sin so that we will no longer be comfortable living in it.
Let me say it plainly:
If sin never feels heavy, repentance will never be felt necessary.
A drowning person doesn’t politely ask for help—they cry out with everything in them. That is the kind of seeking God responds to.
III. Seeking God’s face More Than His Hand
“…and seek my face…”
This is the turning point.
God does not say, “until they seek my blessings.”
He does not say, “until they seek my help.”
He says, “my face.”
There is a difference between:
Seeking God’s hand (what He can give)
And seeking God’s face (who He is)
Psalms 27:8 “My heart says of you, “Seek his face!” Your face, LORD, I will seek.”
Life of prophet Jonah
He sought the face of God from the bottom of the ocean.
God forgave him and provided a way out.
God forgave Peter and brought him back to the road with Him.
Judas could have come back, if he had repented and sought the face of God.
Too many people want:
-The healing, but not the Healer
-The provision, but not the Provider
-The rescue, but not the relationship
There is a difference between:
Seeking God’s help And seeking God Himself
God desires relationships, not just admirers
.
To “seek His face” means:
-Pursuing His presence, not just His provision
-Desiring intimacy, not just intervention
-Returning with sincerity, not superficiality
Luke 15:11-32 tells us the story of the prodigal son.
He left his father and with father’s wealth and lived a reckless life in a far away country. The father didn’t send people after him though he had servants. He didn’t even stop his son from leaving his house. He allowed his son to be away from him for a season. We know the struggles the son had to go through and finally came into his senses.
The end of the story reveals a great truth.
The father had been waiting for the return of his son. And the son is now a new being. A transformed man. He would never ever think of leaving his father now. He left his pride and willing to be considered as the servant of his father.
God, the Father, is waiting for His children to seek His face!
IV. The Gift of Misery
“…in their misery they will earnestly seek me.”
In the above story, the prodigal son, in his misery, was thinking about his father.
This may be the hardest truth of all:
Sometimes misery becomes the doorway to salvation.
Pain is a blessing to the body. Pain tells us there is something wrong in the body.
We know the outcome of leprosy. The patient loses the sensitivity hence no pain is felt.
We must feel the pain of sin in our consciousness. Those who have heartened hearts don't feel any conscious bite and they think they are okay when they are not okay in a million things. We should ask God to give us a sensitive heart.
That’s what God has promised- A fleshy heart in place of a stony heart.
Ezekiel 36:26
"I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit in you; I will remove from you your heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh."
When everything is going well, we can forget God.
But when life falls apart, suddenly we remember how to pray.
-When health fails, we seek Him.
-When relationships break, we seek Him.
-When plans collapse, we seek Him.
And notice the word: ‘earnestly’ (Hosea 5:15)
Not casually
Not occasionally
But desperately!!