Hosea 3:2
Hosea's purchase of Gomer for fifteen shekels of silver and a homer and lethek of barley (approximately the price of a slave) represents his redemption of her from slavery or prostitution, enacting symbolically Israel's future redemption from exile and idolatrous bondage. The modest price—less than the thirty shekels of blood money mentioned in Exodus 21:32—suggests that Gomer's redemption cost Hosea a genuine sacrifice, reflecting the price of Israel's restoration from the bondage of covenant violation. This redemption act foreshadows the theological reality that Israel's restoration will require God's costly intervention, as God redeems a people who have sold themselves into slavery to false gods.