Amos challenges the reader with strong critiques of social injustice and complacency, urging a reconsideration of ethical responsibilities and the consequences of moral decay.
Translation by Richard Challoner, 1752, now in the public domain.
Original translation commissioned by King James, 1611, now in the public domain.
Translation by The Jewish Publication Society of America, 1917, now in the public domain.
Translation by the American Revision Committee, 1901, now in the public domain.
Translation by Robert Young, 1862, now in the public domain.