Christian
Churches of God
No. 021F
Commentary on Micah
(Edition 1.0 20150107-20150107)
God used Micah and Isaiah to utter similar prophecies one following the other. Isaiah is followed by Micah some seventeen years later and the comparison is contained in the appendix. Thus Amos, Hosea and Isaiah precede Micah and the entire structure of the prophecies covers from the Assyrian captivity to the Last Days and the Messianic advent and the establishment of the Millennium.
Christian
Churches of God
E-mail: secretary@ccg.org
(Copyright © 2015 Wade
Cox)
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Commentary on Micah
The prophet Micah came
from the lowlands of the Shephelah near the Philistine border. He prophesied in
the reigns of Jotham, Ahaz and Hezekiah (739-693 BCE). He was the younger of his contemporaries
Hosea and Amos (cf. Soncino p. 153).
Micah has much in common with the two earlier prophets and we see from
the texts that he takes the condemnation of the structure and the priesthood
and its influences from the Baal Sun cults and the prophecies as to how God is
to deal with Israel. Isaiah is compared to Micah in the Appendix.
The Structure of the book
Micah, as in the other
prophets, contains the main structure of denunciation and threat on the one
hand and then comfort and promise on the other. Chapters 1-3 (except for two
verses) consist of denunciation of sin and proclamations of punishment. Chapter
4 and 5 contain words of hope and cheer and chapters 6-7 combine the two
elements. Modern critics allege that the work was grouped by the prophet or his
followers in a logical order rather than a chronological order and according to
their themes rather than the order in which they were delivered.
As we have seen from
the others of the Twelve prophets the order actually deals with the future
dealings of God with Israel and Judah and how God is to deal with the people
over the entire history to the Last Days and the Coming of the Messiah and in
some cases right up through the millennial system. Amos and Hosea are the
precursors to the subjugation and restoration of the nation. The Soncino
writers note that such explanations are not adequate and they ask, for example,
why there are abrupt transitions and changes of theme which would not be
expected in a systematic compilation. They ask, for example, why there is a
threat of exile in verses 9f. among the Messianic prophecies of chapter 4. We will see why this occurs as we progress.
Also they pose the
question as to why the denunciations in 6:9-7:6 were not grouped with the other
denunciations on chapters 1-3. The answer is that they relate to other times
and concentrate on other sins of the nation. God punished the nation on a
repeated and consecutive basis. However
the priests teach for hire as we see and they are condemned by God for it. The
order of the prophecies was arranged in the order God delivered them to the
prophet and refer to the sequence of the punishment and deliverances ahead in
the next twenty eight centuries.
The time of the prophecies
In the eighth century
BCE Israel emerged as a prosperous
nation from the foundations laid by Jeroboam II (783-743) in peace and security
for Israel and established by Uzziah (778-740 BCE) for Judah.
They ruled from
Damascus to the Red Sea and from the Mediterranean to the Desert and the Hebrews
then commanded the major trade routes of the time.
However, they were
corrupted by sin and disregard of the laws of God and of empathy, charity and
brotherly love. The Biblical land systems that ensured an egalitarian society were
disregarded and the society broke into the class divisions that the Bible
protected the people from becoming. The rich built up large estates with the
help of a corrupt judiciary. They built house on house and field on field as
they were forbidden to do and the society reflected all the evils that we see
in our societies now in the last days. There was no redress for the poor.
Cities built up and
the landless were forced into them in search of a living, as it is today. Wealth
and luxury lived side by side with sin and vice and the poor were exploited
because of it.
The trade system
brought with it the false gods of the pagans especially from the north and the
Assyro-Babylonian system and also from Egypt.
Baal and Ashtoreth (or Ishtar) invaded Israel and corrupted it all along
with the wealth the systems of trade delivered.
He saw that a society
built on tyranny, corruption and false and inequitable standards of wealth was
doomed by God to destruction and this was the message with which he was
entrusted. Micah is not directed against idolatry and political movements but
rather through Micah God condemns the demoralizing pursuit of wealth which
strikes at the very heart of the obligations placed on man by God from the
beginning. Micah is used by God to strike at the very fabric of a corrupt
society. Through Micah God condemns the
expropriation of houses and estates, the misuse of the law for the
expropriation of peasants, the misuse of the rights of creditors to exploit the
poor and the corruption of rulers and judges and the shocking condition of the
priests and prophets and their venality and obtaining wealth by flattery of the
rich.
Whereas God used Amos
and Hosea to outline the captivity of Israel and Judah and their idolatry and
perversion, He uses Micah to strike at the very corruption of their social fabric
by misuse of their social system and obligation under the laws of God. As it
was 28 hundred years ago it is now as bad or worse and Judah and Israel and
their social system is hopelessly corrupt and the wealthy exploit the
poor. Banks seize lands that they have
no right to seize under the laws of God. The wealthy own the vast majority of
the wealth of the people that were given the inheritance of Abraham, Isaac and
Jacob. They have seized it by stealth and dishonesty. The top 10% of the people
own up to 80% of the wealth as in the USA. As it was in the days of Micah so is
it now and what was said by God then through Micah is to be executed on the
heads of the nations today right up through the coming of the Messiah and the
people who say they are Jews but are not will be sent into captivity. However, Micah is given the vision of the end
of days and the brighter future of the nation when Messiah re-establishes it under
God and God’s laws for the millennial system.
We see that Micah
(abbreviated form of Micaiah meaning who is like unto God) was from the
town of Moresheth-gath (v. 14) (Mareshah v. 15) or was prophesying in the area
of Judea near the Shephelah firstly concerning Samaria and then Jerusalem.
[1] The word of the LORD that came
to Micah of Mo'resheth in the days of Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezeki'ah, kings of
Judah, which he saw concerning Sama'ria and Jerusalem.
The time of his calling was from Jotham and Ahaz to Hezekiah which was
from 739-693 BCE. His visions concern both Samaria and Jerusalem and their
punishments. Samaria was still capital of Israel and lasted until the captivity
in 722/1 BCE.
The punishment is to be inflicted on both Israel and Judah for the sins
of Samaria and Jerusalem. Micah sees them both in captivity firstly Samaria
which was made into a heap of ruins in 722 and then Jerusalem’s fate was also
pronounced (3:12) but did not occur until the Babylonians in 597 yet it was
nevertheless sure as we see from verse 9 below. It was pronounced over 100
years before it occurred. The fate of
Samaria was pronounced as a warning to Jerusalem but the fate of both was
pronounced and the prophecy then carried on concerning Judah and Jerusalem. Micah
is directed at all Israel in its various cities and the punishment that will ultimately
be inflicted on the whole earth because of the harlotry of Israel (cf. vv.
2-4). Thus the punishment is to take place over all the earth from the Assyrian
invasion to the Last Days under the Messiah.
[2] Hear, you peoples, all of
you; hearken, O earth, and all that is in it; and let the Lord GOD be a witness
against you, the Lord from his holy temple. [3] For behold, the LORD is coming
forth out of his place, and will come down and tread upon the high places of
the earth. [4] And the mountains will melt under him and the valleys will be
cleft, like wax before the fire, like waters poured down a steep place. [5] All
this is for the transgression of Jacob and for the sins of the house of Israel.
What is the transgression of Jacob? Is it not Sama'ria? And what is the sin of
the house of Judah? Is it not Jerusalem? [6] therefore I will make Sama'ria a
heap in the open country, a place for planting vineyards; and I will pour down
her stones into the valley, and uncover her foundations. [7] All her images
shall be beaten to pieces, all her hires shall be burned with fire, and all her
idols I will lay waste; for from the hire of a harlot she gathered them, and to
the hire of a harlot they shall return [8] For this I will lament and wail; I
will go stripped and naked; I will make lamentation like the jackals, and
mourning like the ostriches.
It is the idolatrous harlotry of Israel in Samaria as a commercial and
urban civilisation that is the wound inflicted in Judah as we now see, and the commercial
and idolatrous harlotry of the Assyro-Babylonians will destroy the world under
the wrath of God. Israel was placed
there to prevent the destruction and by its harlotry it failed. Jeremiah 4:23ff shows how God shows through
the prophets that the failure and harlotry of Israel is the cause of the catastrophes
of the earthquakes and destruction which reduces the whole earth (cf. vv. 4-5
above). Thus they allowed the development of the High Places as idolatrous
worship also.
From verse 9 the text is in prophetic perfects showing that it will come
to pass and nothing can stop it. Jerusalem is the gate of the people of Israel
and Judah as the seat of the Temple of God.
[9] For her wound is incurable; and
it has come to Judah, it has reached to the gate of my people, to Jerusalem. [10] Tell it not in
Gath, weep not at all; in Beth-le-aph'rah roll yourselves in the dust. [11]
Pass on your way, inhabitants of Shaphir, in
nakedness and shame; the inhabitants of
Za'anan do not come forth; the wailing of Beth-e'zel shall take away from you
its standing place. [12] For the inhabitants of Maroth wait anxiously for good,
because evil has come down from the LORD to the gate of Jerusalem. [13] Harness
the steeds to the chariots, inhabitants of Lachish; you were the beginning of
sin to the daughter of Zion, for in you were found the transgressions of
Israel. [14] Therefore you shall give parting gifts to Mo'resheth-gath; the
houses of Achzib shall be a deceitful thing to the kings of Israel. [15] I will
again bring a conqueror upon you, inhabitants of Mare'shah; the glory of Israel
shall come to Adullam. [16] Make yourselves bald and
cut off your hair, for the children of your delight; make yourselves as bald as
the eagle, for they shall go from you into exile.
This text abounds in Paronomasia or plays on words and is impossible to
reproduce in translation.
Tell it not in Gath is likened to a reference to 2Samuel 1:20. Gath
had been taken from the Philistines by Uzziah (2Chr. 26:6) and thus they were
no longer there and it must have been a current proverbial saying (cf. Soncino
fn.).
Weep not at all (Lit.
Weeping do not weep (Heb. Bacho al tibku);
the LXX suggests weep not on Acco.) The reference is probably a reference
to Balah (omitting ain) as referring to Baal the Sun God (cf. Soncino fn.) and
its coming destruction.
The name beth-le-aphrah means the
house of dust and is unknown. It probably refers to the temples of Baal and
Dagon of the Philistines. It is kethib hithpallashti or have I rolled myself but seems to be a
play on words referring to the Philistines.
Verse 11 says pass ye away
which is taken to mean into exile. This is both to Israel and Judah.
Nakedness is taken to mean in the
garb of a captive (cf. v. 8).
Zaanan is taken to mean Zenan in the Shephelah (Josh. 15:37). Not
come forth is a word play on the verb Yatsa
as go forth. Zaanan is
discouraged by the wailing from Beth-ezel (House of nearness) discourages them.
Maroth (v. 12) is bitterness
contrasted with good as help.
Bind the chariots (v. 13) is taken to mean prepare for flight.
However, it has a deeper meaning. Laish was a Canaanite centre in the north in
Dan near the descent of the demons on Hermon. Lachish is a city in Judah lying
midway between Jerusalem and Gaza but the word is also a play on Larechesh to the swift steeds. Judah was to rely
on Egypt for cavalry horses. It was a frontier fortress of strategic importance
between Judah and Egypt fortified by David and then by Rehoboam (2Chr. 11:9) and
Asa probably strengthened it (14:7).
Sennacherib made it his temporary HQ in 701 BCE. It may even look
forward to the binding of the demons. This is supported by the term beginning of sin which is regarded as an
obscure phrase by the commentators. The
beginning of sin came from the demons at Mt. Hermon. Jewish commentators
suggest that Lachish was the seat of an idolatrous form of worship (which we
know as the Golden Calf in Dan which was named from the Moon God Sin, as
Jericho is also Moon City). It is a very
old centre and was used in the Hyksos domination and is referred to a La-ti-sa
in the 18th Ahmosid Dynasty. It was under Egyptian and Hyksos
domination from the 12th to the 22nd dynasty.
Moresheth-Gath was in the Philistine territory and the unimportant town
of Achzib in the Shephelah (Josh. 15:44) is a play on words with a deceitful thing is achzab which is non
perennial stream (cf. Jer. 15:18). It is today a thorn in the side of Israel.
Micah is given this vision from his home town and sees far in advance through
the invasions to the Last Days. These cities mentioned here from verses 10-15
are not between Samaria and Jerusalem but between the gates of Jerusalem and
the coast of the sea plain of the Philistines. This was the route by which all
invaders of Judea have come from Sargon (719 BCE against Egypt and 711 against
Ashdod), and Sennacherib in 704-1 when he attacked the Shephelah simultaneously
with his invasion of Judea; on through the Egyptians and to the Romans under
Vespasian and through the Middle Ages under Saladin and Richard (G.A. Smith;
cf. Soncino fn). This prophecy shows Micah looking forward to all the invasions
and how they were to occur into the Last Days and finally to the Beast Power of
the King of the North in Daniel 11:40-44.
Chapter 2 is a further
denunciation of the sins that were never repented of in chapter 1. It refers to
the breaking of God’s laws regarding the Jubilees and the ownership of lands
and estates. Because of their sin God
sends them into captivity. They have none to serve in the Assembly of God by
lot. That also refers to the restoration of the lands by lot in the Jubilees.
For so also was the land of Canaan distributed amongst the tribes. However,
they disregarded God’s laws and did not restore the families and the servants
in the Sabbaths and Jubilees. To this day the churches of God disregard the Jubilees
and exploit the brethren of the churches of God and follow the false calendar
of modern Judah. For these sins they will be punished. The taunt song is a
dirge or lamentation taken up as we see also in Jeremiah 9:9; Amos 5:1. The
great estates unjustly acquired are to be split up and allocated to conquering
armies of sinner nations.
[1] Woe
to those who devise wickedness and work evil upon their beds! When the morning
dawns, they perform it, because it is in the power of their hand. [2] They
covet fields, and seize them; and houses, and take them away; they oppress a
man and his house, a man and his inheritance. [3] Therefore thus says the LORD:
Behold, against this family I am devising evil, from which you cannot remove
your necks; and you shall not walk haughtily, for it will be an evil time. [4]
In that day they shall take up a taunt song against you, and wail with bitter
lamentation, and say, "We are utterly ruined; he changes the portion of my
people; how he removes it from me! Among our captors he divides our
fields." [5] Therefore you will have none to cast the line by lot in the
assembly of the LORD.
Here we see the opposition to Micah’s prophecy coming from the corrupt
priests and prophets. They teach that disgrace will not overtake them but it is
God that accuses them not Micah. The pleasant houses are the happy families
they destroy. This is endemic today and
for that they will be sent into captivity and stripped of their wealth.
[6] "Do not preach" -- thus they
preach -- "one should not preach of such things; disgrace will not
overtake us." [7] Should this be said, O house of Jacob? Is the Spirit of
the LORD impatient? Are these his doings? Do not my words do good to him who
walks uprightly? [8] But you rise against my people as an enemy; you strip the
robe from the peaceful, from those who pass by trustingly with no thought of
war. [9] The women of my people you drive out from their pleasant houses; from
their young children you take away my glory for ever. [10] Arise and go, for
this is no place to rest; because of uncleanness that destroys with a grievous
destruction. [11] If a man should go about and utter wind and lies, saying,
"I will preach to you of wine and strong drink," he would be the preacher
for this people! [12] I will surely gather all of you, O Jacob, I will gather
the remnant of Israel; I will set them together like sheep in a fold, like a
flock in its pasture, a noisy multitude of men. [13] He who opens the breach
will go up before them; they will break through and pass the gate, going out by
it. Their king will pass on before them, the LORD at their head.
The hatching of evil
schemes of usury, foreclosure of mortgages, and subornation of witnesses and of
bribery in judgment are followed immediately by their implementation
The priests and
prophets preach lies to them and prophesy wealth and strong drink and they
misuse the women and the children and take the wealth, which is the Israel of
God, and misuse it.
Then in Chapter 3 we see
the evil done in Israel to the poor and needy.
[1] And I said: Hear, you heads of Jacob and rulers of the
house of Israel! Is it not for you to know justice? -- [2] you who hate the
good and love the evil, who tear the skin from off my people, and their flesh
from off their bones; [3] who eat the flesh of my people, and flay their skin
from off them, and break their bones in pieces, and chop them up like meat in a
kettle, like flesh in a caldron. [4] Then they will cry to the LORD, but he
will not answer them; he will hide his face from them at that time, because
they have made their deeds evil.
The religious teachers
and especially the prophets cry peace when they are well fed but declare war on
those who do not feed them because of their iniquity. So has the church of God
become over the last century of the Last Days. They declare of God’s prophets
in the churches of God that we are those of Revelation chapter 10 that make
prophecy as sweet as honey in the mouth but the stomachs shall be bitter
because of it. God will deal with these false teachers in the Last Days. Not
once in the twentieth century did these false prophets of the churches of God
get a prophecy correct and they were covered in darkness (see the paper False prophecy (No. 269)).
[5] Thus says the LORD concerning the prophets who
lead my people astray, who cry "Peace" when they have something to
eat, but declare war against him who puts nothing into their mouths. [6]
Therefore it shall be night to you, without vision, and darkness to you,
without divination. The sun shall go down upon the prophets, and the day shall
be black over them; [7] the seers shall be disgraced, and the diviners put to
shame; they shall all cover their lips, for there is no answer from God. [8]
But as for me, I am filled with power, with the Spirit of the LORD, and with
justice and might, to declare to Jacob his transgression and to Israel his sin.
[9] Hear this, you heads of the house of Jacob and rulers of the house of
Israel, who abhor justice and pervert all equity, [10] who build Zion with
blood and Jerusalem with wrong. [11] Its heads give judgment for a bribe, its
priests teach for hire, its prophets divine for money; yet they lean upon the
LORD and say, "Is not the LORD in the midst of us? No evil shall come upon
us." [12] Therefore because of you Zion shall be plowed as a field; Jerusalem
shall become a heap of ruins, and the mountain of the house a wooded height.
Corruption is now so rampant
in the nations of the world that the death penalty will have to be reintroduced
so that all politicians and bureaucrats and judges and corporation heads will
be put to death to stamp out this evil from among us.
Chapter 4 then goes on
to the Latter Days when the mountain of the house of the Lord is established in
Zion under the Messiah. The Laws of God will be restored and the whole world
will keep the sequence and the Feasts or they will be punished and get no rain
in due season and suffer the plagues of Egypt as God showed mankind through the
prophet Zechariah, and they killed him because of his prophecy. As a rule the priests and prophets of Israel
have been the source of the evil rather than the solution. It is they that have
killed the prophets that God has sent and persecuted the elect of the church of
God. Their worship is that of Baal and the Sun cults and not the laws and
Testimony of God.
This prophecy is millennial through the
sequence of the captivities.
[1] It
shall come to pass in the latter days that the mountain of the house of the
LORD shall be established as the highest of the mountains, and shall be raised
up above the hills; and peoples shall flow to it, [2] and many nations shall
come, and say: "Come, let us go up to the mountain of the LORD, to the
house of the God of Jacob; that he may teach us his ways and we may walk in his
paths." For out of Zion shall go forth the law, and the word of the LORD
from Jerusalem. [3] He shall judge between many peoples, and shall decide for
strong nations afar off; and they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and
their spears into pruning hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation,
neither shall they learn war any more; [4] but they shall sit every man under
his vine and under his fig tree, and none shall make them afraid; for the mouth
of the LORD of hosts has spoken. [5] For all the peoples walk each in the name
of its god, but we will walk in the name of the LORD our God for ever and ever.
[6] In that day, says the LORD, I will assemble the lame and gather those who
have been driven away, and those whom I have afflicted; [7] and the lame I will
make the remnant; and those who were cast off, a strong nation; and the LORD
will reign over them in Mount Zion from this time forth and for evermore. [8]
And you, O tower of the flock, hill of the daughter of Zion, to you shall it
come, the former dominion shall come, the kingdom of the daughter of Jerusalem.
[9] Now why do you cry aloud? Is there no king in you? Has your counselor
perished, that pangs have seized you like a woman in travail? [10] Writhe and
groan, O daughter of Zion, like a woman in travail; for now you shall go forth
from the city and dwell in the open country; you shall go to Babylon. There you
shall be rescued, there the LORD will redeem you from the hand of your enemies.
[11] Now many nations are assembled against you, saying, "Let her be
profaned, and let our eyes gaze upon Zion." [12] But they do not know the
thoughts of the LORD, they do not understand his plan, that he has gathered
them as sheaves to the threshing floor. [13] Arise and thresh, O daughter of Zion, for I
will make your horn iron and your hoofs bronze; you shall beat in pieces many
peoples, and shall devote their gain to the LORD, their wealth to the Lord of
the whole earth.
Thus Judah was told in
advance that it was to be sent into captivity and did not repent and then was
returned to establish the conditions for the Messiah and then the second
captivity and dispersion from 70 CE at the end of the 70 weeks of years of
Daniel 9:23-27 (see also the Sign of Jonah and the History of
the Reconstruction of the Temple (No. 013)).
Chapter 5 then goes on
to detail the coming of the Messiah and the place of his clan at Bethlehem Eph’ratah.
The prophecy then deals with the Messiah being given up (cf. Ps. 110:1ff) until
all his brethren, who are the elect of God (of Zech. 12:8) are brought forth
over the 40 Jubilees of the church in the wilderness in accordance with the
Sign of Jonah on a Jubilee for a year
basis.
[1] Now you are walled about with a wall; siege
is laid against us; with a rod they strike upon the cheek the ruler of Israel. [2]
But you, O Bethlehem Eph'rathah, who are little to be among the clans of Judah,
from you shall come forth for me one who is to be ruler in Israel, whose origin
is from of old, from ancient days. [3] Therefore he shall give them up until
the time when she who is in travail has brought forth; then the rest of his
brethren shall return to the people of Israel. [The First Resurrection] [4] And
he shall stand and feed his flock in the strength of the LORD, in the majesty
of the name of the LORD his God. And they shall dwell secure, for now he shall
be great to the ends of the earth. [5] And this shall be peace, when the
Assyrian comes into our land and treads upon our soil, that we will raise
against him seven shepherds and eight princes of men; [6] they shall rule the
land of Assyria with the sword, and the land of Nimrod with the drawn sword; and
they shall deliver us from the Assyrian when he comes into our land and treads
within our border.
Thus the Messiah was
to have been pre-existent and was to stand in the power of the Lord His God (as
we saw from Ps. 45:6-7; cf. also Ps. 72:7; Isa. 9:6-7; Zech: 9:10). See also
the paper Micah 5:2-3 (No.
121).
The Messiah is given
seven shepherds that destroy the Assyro-Babylonian system and also eight
princes of men. The fact is that there are seven angels of the Seven Churches
and seven eras of the churches of God. These destroy the religious system of
the Sun and Mystery cults. Also the
eight princes of men are the forces that are available from God’s people under
leadership in the Last Days. They form eight nations and eight armies. The
power of the Assyro-Babylonian system will be destroyed and relocated into the
Middle East again.
Then the remnant of
Jacob shall be used among the nations so that the Gentiles will be brought in
and of them Ephraim shall stand as the community of nations and in him shall
the Gentiles trust (Gen. 48:15-16).
[7] Then
the remnant of Jacob shall be in the midst of many peoples like dew from the
LORD, like showers upon the grass, which tarry not for men nor wait for the
sons of men. [8] And the remnant of Jacob shall be among the nations, in the
midst of many peoples, like a lion among the beasts of the forest, like a young
lion among the flocks of sheep, which, when it goes through, treads down and
tears in pieces, and there is none to deliver. [9] Your hand shall be lifted up
over your adversaries, and all your enemies shall be cut off. [10] And in that
day, says the LORD, I will cut off your horses from among you and will destroy
your chariots; [11] and I will cut off the cities of your land and throw down
all your strongholds; [12] and I will cut off sorceries from your hand, and you
shall have no more soothsayers; [13] and I will cut off your images and your
pillars from among you, and you shall bow down no more to the work of your
hands; [14] and I will root out your Ashe'rim from among you and destroy your
cities. [15] And in anger and wrath I will execute vengeance upon the nations
that did not obey.
The entire system will
be purified in the Wars of the Last Days and the
Vials of the Wrath of God (No. 141B).
The Sunday worshipping system of the Sun and Mystery cults of Christmas
and of Easter will be destroyed and every priest of that system will repent or
die. They will keep the Sabbaths and New Moons or die (Isa. 66:23-24). They
will keep the feasts of God or die (Zech. 14:16-19).
Every obelisk and
phallus on every church, cathedral, temple or mosque and every idol and icon
will be destroyed. No unrepentant priest, rabbi, imam, or sheik, abbot or monk
will be left alive.
Chapter 6 then is the
Lord appealing to Israel and reminding them of His intervention and His
salvation of them and they did not heed Him nor were they thankful.
[1] Hear what the LORD says: Arise, plead your case before the mountains, and
let the hills hear your voice. [2] Hear, you mountains, the controversy of the
LORD, and you enduring foundations of the earth; for the LORD has a controversy
with his people, and he will contend with Israel. [3] "O my people, what
have I done to you? In what have I wearied you? Answer me! [4] For I brought
you up from the land of Egypt, and redeemed you from the house of bondage; and
I sent before you Moses, Aaron, and Miriam. [5] O my people, remember what
Balak king of Moab devised, and what Balaam the son of Be'or answered him, and
what happened from Shittim to Gilgal, that you may know the saving acts of the
LORD." [6] "With what shall I come before the LORD, and bow myself
before God on high? Shall I come before him with burnt offerings, with calves a
year old? [7] Will the LORD be pleased with thousands of rams, with ten
thousands of rivers of oil? Shall I give my first-born for my transgression, the
fruit of my body for the sin of my soul?"
God has shown them
that He does not require massive sacrifice but He requires justice and kindness
and to walk humbly with our God. He
wants obedience not sacrifice as He said through the prophet Samuel.
[8] He has showed you, O man, what is good; and
what does the LORD require of you but to do justice, and to love kindness, and
to walk humbly with your God? [9] The voice of the LORD cries to the city -- and
it is sound wisdom to fear thy name: "Hear, O tribe and assembly of the
city! [10] Can I forget the treasures of wickedness in the house of the wicked,
and the scant measure that is accursed? [11] Shall I acquit the man with wicked
scales and with a bag of deceitful weights? [12] Your rich men are full of
violence; your inhabitants speak lies, and their tongue is deceitful in their
mouth.
God then condemns the
rulers and rich of Israel both of tribe and the city. They are fraudulent and
deceitful and their rich are full of violence.
False weights and measures are among them and false witness is rampant
among them. The God pronounces their fate. He has begun to smite them and He
will make them desolate because of their sins. He will strike us with hunger
and we will not be able to save and what we do will be put to the sword. All
over the Last Days will that increase so that if the Messiah were not sent
there would be no flesh left alive.
[13]
Therefore I have begun to smite you, making you desolate because of your sins. [14]
You shall eat, but not be satisfied, and there shall be hunger in your inward
parts; you shall put away, but not save, and what you save I will give to the
sword. [15] You shall sow, but not reap; you shall tread olives, but not anoint
yourselves with oil; you shall tread grapes, but not drink wine. [16] For you
have kept the statutes of Omri, and all the works of the house of Ahab; and you
have walked in their counsels; that I may make you a desolation, and your inhabitants a hissing; so you shall bear the
scorn of the peoples."
Note that they keep
the false statutes of the nations and of the Sun and Mystery cults of Ahab and
Jezebel but not the Laws of God. They
keep the Babylonian dictates and those of the Nations in Union but not of the
Laws of God. For that they will all be punished. Every aspect of the Sun and
Mystery cults will be wiped out.
In chapter 7 we see
that there are no godly men left on the earth of any note or quantity. There
are no upright men left. They lie in wait for blood and each hunts his brother
with a net. So is it now through the entire world and the Semites are turned to
barbarism. Uprightness and justice have fled from mankind. Bribery and
corruption rule over all the world.
Trust no one even she
at your bosom. Even in the churches of God we have seen sons treat fathers with
contempt and we have seen those die in their youth because of their heresy.
However the just shall
live by faith and they will be redeemed by God as we see here.
[1] Woe is me! For I have become as when the
summer fruit has been gathered, as when the vintage has been gleaned: there is
no cluster to eat, no first-ripe fig which my soul desires.
[2] The godly man has perished from the earth, and there is none upright among
men; they all lie in wait for blood, and each hunts his brother with a net. [3]
Their hands are upon what is evil, to do it diligently; the prince and the
judge ask for a bribe, and the great man utters the evil desire of his soul; thus
they weave it together [4] The best of
them is like a brier, the most upright of them a thorn hedge. The day of their
watchmen, of their punishment, has come; now their confusion is at hand. [5]
Put no trust in a neighbor, have no confidence in a friend; guard the doors of
your mouth from her who lies in your bosom; [6] for the son treats the father
with contempt, the daughter rises up against her mother, the daughter-in-law
against her mother-in-law; a man's enemies are the men of his own house. [7]
But as for me, I will look to the LORD, I will wait for the God of my
salvation; my God will hear me. [8] Rejoice not over me, O my enemy; when I
fall, I shall rise; when I sit in darkness, the LORD will be a light to me. [9]
I will bear the indignation of the LORD because I have sinned against him, until
he pleads my cause and executes judgment for me. He will bring me forth to the
light; I shall behold his deliverance.
Note that we are to
bear the indignation of the Lord because we have sinned all of us. Anyone who
says he is without sin is liar and the truth is not in him (1Jn. 1:8-10).
Through the love and
righteousness of the elect all mankind will be ashamed and they will return to
Israel from all over the world. The earth will be desolate because of their sin
but they will return to be restored and the miracles of God under the Messiah
will bring repentance to the nations.
[10] Then my enemy will see, and shame will
cover her who said to me, "Where is the LORD your God?" My eyes will
gloat over her; now she will be trodden down like the mire of the streets. [11]
A day for the building of your walls! In that day the boundary shall be far
extended. [12] In that day they will come to you, from Assyria to Egypt, and
from Egypt to the River, from sea to sea and from mountain to mountain. [13]
But the earth will be desolate because of its inhabitants, for the fruit of
their doings. [14] Shepherd thy people with thy staff, the flock of thy
inheritance, who dwell alone in a forest in the midst of a garden land; let
them feed in Bashan and Gilead as in the days of old. [15] As in the days when
you came out of the land of Egypt I will show them marvelous things. [16] The
nations shall see and be ashamed of all their might; they shall lay their hands
on their mouths; their ears shall be deaf; [17] they shall lick the dust like a
serpent, like the crawling things of the earth; they shall come trembling out
of their strongholds, they shall turn in dread to the LORD our God, and they
shall fear because of thee. [18] Who is a God like thee, pardoning iniquity and
passing over transgression for the remnant of his inheritance? He does not
retain his anger for ever because he delights in steadfast love. [19] He will again
have compassion upon us, he will tread our iniquities under foot. Thou wilt
cast all our sins into the depths of the sea. [20] Thou wilt show faithfulness
to Jacob and steadfast love to Abraham, as
thou hast sworn to our fathers from the days of old.
The millennial system is run from Jerusalem and using the sons of Jacob and the descendants of Abraham to provide leadership and guidance through the Messiah and the elect.
Appendix to Commentary on Micah
Micah is from around the same era as Isaiah son of Amos. Isaiah’s life in the book is supplemented in part by 2Kings esp. 18:13-20:21. It is assumed that he was born in Jerusalem about or before 760. His call came to him in the year that King Uzziah died (i.e. 742). He was married and refers to his wife as a prophetess (Isa. 8:3). His ministry extended over 40 years over the reigns of Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz and Hezekiah (Isa. 1:1). The last we hear of Isaiah is in Sennacherib’s threat to Jerusalem in 701 BCE.
He received his call in the Temple near the sanctuary.
He was reportedly sawn in half during the reign of Manasseh son of Hezekiah (687-642 BCE) (cf. Heb. 11:37 and 2Kgs. 21:16 and Jos. Antiq. x, 3.1). Manasseh was 12 when he became king and was subject to the Assyrian influence and restored Baal worship and the High Places. Undoubtedly he was opposed by Isaiah and the other prophets and reportedly had many of them killed.
Also Jeremiah quotes directly from Micah 26:16-19 and conjecture concerning some of the texts of Micah not being written by him are later spurious assumptions.
It appears that Isaiah and Micah were chosen by God to establish his judgment in the mouth of two witnesses (cf. Isa. 1:1 and Mic. 1:1).
We saw that Micah was from just before the end of Jotham’s reign in 735 from 739-693 BCE. So Isaiah was called and active from 742 BCE and Micah followed a few years afterwards and lasted some eight years after we last hear from Isaiah but probably only a few years after his death. Bullinger’s dates are incorrect in this regard. However he has made some useful comparisons in his texts to the Companion Bible.
Bullinger says that we can see “by comparing Mic. 4:10 with Isa 39:6, we have another case of similar words occurring in two different prophets; and some, having concluded that one prophet copied from another, have built upon this, certain theories as to dates, &c. But no valid argument can be based on such coincidences: for the simple reason that we are not dealing with the words of the Prophets, but with the words which God spake by them (Heb 1:1, &c). Surely God may speak the same message, even in identical words, by two, three, or more of His prophets. If the need were the same, why should not the words be the same?" As we saw the period covered by Micah and Isaiah was almost exactly the same. “It is no wonder that the circumstances did call for similar utterances, constituting a confirmation of the Word of Jehovah ‘by the mouth of two or three witnesses’. Both were independent, without any idea of ‘copying’ one from the other, as is alleged by the writer in The Encyclopedia Britannica, eleventh (Cambridge) edition, 1910, 1911, vol. xviii, p. 357, who says: ‘it is impossible that much, if any, of these chapters (Mic. 4-7) can be ascribed to Micah himself’. This is said in face of the fact that Jeremiah (Mic. 26:16-19) definitely quotes and refers to Micah.
The following texts form useful comparisons:
Mic
1:9-16, Isa 10:28-32.
Mic
2:1, Mic 2:2, Isa. 5:8.
Mic
2:6, Mic 2:11, Isa 30:10,11.
Mic
2:11, Isa 28:7.
Mic
2:12, Isa 10:20-23.
Mic
3:5-7, Isa 29:9-12.
Mic
3:12, Isa 32:14.
Mic 4:1, Isa 2:2.
Mic 4:4, Isa 1:20 .
Mic
4:7, Isa 9:7.
Mic
4:10, Isa 39:6.5.
Mic.
2-4, Isa 7:14.
Mic
5:6, Isa 14:25.
Mic
6:6-8, Isa 58:6, Isa 58:7.
Mic
7:7, Isa 8:17.
Mic
7:12, Isa 11:11.
Bullinger’s notes from the Companion Bible are as follows.
Destruction in Israel and Judah
Micah 1:1
The
word of the LORD. The only occurrence of this expression in this book: bidding
us to receive it from Jehovah, not Micah, and to note Micah's pen but Jehovah's
words.
the
LORD. Heb. Jehovah. Ap. 4.
Micah
= Who is like Jehovah? An abbreviated form of Micaiah (2Ch 18:7, &c.); it
is used in Jer 26:18 (in the Heb). Cp. 7:18.
Morasthite:
Mareshah (v. 15) or Moresheth-gath (v. 14); now Tel Sandahanna, in the
Shephelah, or plain, between Judea and Philistia. In the excavations at
Sandahanna the ancient name is seen as Marissa. Marissa was a Sidonian colony
(cent. 3 B. C), and was afterward used as the capital of Idumea by the Edomites
during the captivity of Judah (see Records of the Past, vol. iv, part x, pp.
291-306).
which
he saw. Cp. Isa 1:1. Oba 1:1. Nah 1:1.
concerning,
&c. This furnishes the subject.
Micah 1:2
Hear,
all ye people. Micah begins by taking up the concluding words of the other
Micah or Micaiah (1Ki 22:28), and recurs to them in 3:1, 9; 6:1, 2. Five times,
not three, as some say; and forms no part of the Structure of the whole book.
Ref. to Pent. (Deu 32:1). Ap. 92.
all
ye = ye peoples, all of them.
people
= peoples. Including ourselves.
all
that therein is = her fullness.
let
the Lord GOD be witness. Ref. to Pent. (Gen 31:50).
the
Lord. Heb. Adonai. Ap. 4.
GOD
Heb. Jehovah. Ap. 4.
the
LORD*. One of the 134 places where the Sopherim say they altered
"Jehovah" of the primitive text to "Adonai". See Ap. 32.
from
His holy temple. Cp. Psa 11:4. Jon 2:7. Hab 2:20.
holy.
See note on Exo 3:5.
Micah 1:4 the mountains, &c. This verse foretells the
calamities of 2Ki 17 and 25.
Micah 1:5
transgression
= rebellion. Heb. pasha'. Ap. 44.
sins.
Heb. chata'. Ap. 44. Aram, and Syr. read sing.
What
= Whose.
is
it not Samaria? = is it not Samaria's [idolatry]? Fig. Erotesis. Ap. 6.
high
places. Cp. 1Ki 12:31; 14:23. Eze 6:6. These existed in Jerusalem (Jer 32:35);
hence the mention of them in the further question. Fig. Erotesis. Cp. 2Ki 16:4.
are
they not Jerusalem? = is it not Jerusalem's [idol altars]?
Micah 1:6
discover,
&c. This has now recently (1911) been done in the unearthing of Ahab's
wine-cellars.
Micah 1:7
graven
images. Heb. pesilim. Ref. to Pent. (Exo 20:4). Ap. 92.
hires.
The technical Pentateuchal word for a harlot's hire, to which idolatry is
compared. Cp. Hos 8:9, 10; 9:1. Ref. to Pent. (Deu 23:18). Ap. 92.
they
shall return, &c.: i.e. the wealth gained by idolatry shall be taken away
by the Assyrian idolaters.
Micah 1:8
wail
= lament. Cp. the Structure above; and note weight of the prophetic
"burden".
dragons
= jackals.
owls.
Heb. daughters of a doleful cry.
Micah 1:9
wound
= stroke. Heb. makkah (fem.)
it.
Aram. and Syr. read "she". Referring to her stroke, which is fem.
he
= he, referring to some unnamed foe. Aram, and Syr. read "she",
referring to the "stroke" of judgment.
the
gate. Cp. Oba 1:11, 13.
Micah 1:11
Pass
ye away: i.e. go into exile.
Saphir,
having thy shame, &c. Here we have contrast. Saphir = Beautytown, with
beauty shamed; now es Suafir.
inhabitant
of Zaanan came not forth. Heb. not gone forth hath . . . Zaanan. Heb. Fig. Paronomasia
(Ap. 6): lo yatz'ah . . . tz'anan = not gone out [to weep] hath the inhabitant
of Outhouse.
in
the mourning . . . his standing. Commence a fresh sentence here; thus:
"The trouble of Beth-ezel (Neighbour-town) shall be a useless
neighbour". Gr. "the Bystander's house will, from you, get its
standing-room".
he
shall receive, &c. : or, he will take from you its support.
Micah 1:12
Maroth
waited carefully. The inhabitress of Bitter town bitterly grieved for her goods
[taken from her].
evil
= calamity. Heb. ra'a'. Ap. 44.
the
LORD. Heb. Jehovah. Ap. 4. Not by chance.
the
gate of Jerusalem. In Taylor's Cylinder, Sennacherib mentions his breaking of
this gate (col. iii, lines 22:23).
Micah 1:13
inhabitant
= inhabitress.
Lachish
. . . swift beast. Note the Fig. Paronomasia (Ap. 6). Heb. larekesh
. . . lakish = [bind the chariot] to the horse, O inhabitress of
Horse-town,
Lachish.
Now Ummtum Lakis, or Tell el Hesy. See notes on 2Ki 14:19; 19:8.
she.
Evidently Samaria. Cp. vv. 5:9; 6:16.
Micah 1:14
give
presents to = give up possessions at.
Achzib
. . . a lie. Note the Fig. Paronomasia, = the houses of False-town
('Akzib) shall prove false (iakzab).
Achzib.
Now es Zib (Jos 15:44; 19:29. Jdg 1:31).
Micah 1:15
an
heir . . . Mareshah. Heb. the possessor (hayyoresh) . . . O Possession (Mareshah).
The possessor whom Jehovah would bring was Assyria.
he
shall come, &c. The glory: i.e. the nobility (Isa 5:13) of Israel shall go
(or flee) unto [the cave] Adullam; as David had done (1Sa 22:1).
Micah 1:16
Make
thee bald, &c. The signs of mourning. Cp. Job 1:20. Isa 15:2; 22:12. Jer
7:29; 16:6; 47:5; 48:37). This is addressed to Judah. It was forbidden under
the law (Deu 14:1). Judah had become as the heathen: let them mourn as the
heathen.
children
= sons.
Woe to Oppressors Micah 2:1
iniquity.
Heb. 'aven. Ap. 44. Not the same word as in 3:10. Note the incrimination
in vv. 1, 2. See the Structure, p. 1253.
work
= plan.
evil
= wickedness. Heb. ra'a'. Ap. 44.
is
= exists. Heb. yesh. See note on Pro 8:21.
in
the power of their hand. A Pentateuchal idiom. Ref. to Pent. (Gen 31:29). Cp.
Pro 3:27. Neh 5:5. Does not occur elsewhere.
Micah 2:4
take
up a parable. Ref. to Pent. (Num 23:7, 18; 24:3, 15, 20, 23). Twice in Job (Job
27:1; 29:1); once in Isaiah (Isa 14:4); once in Habakkuk (Hab 2:6). Not
elsewhere. Ap. 92. Note the Fig Chleuasmos (Ap. 6).
lament
with a doleful lamentation. Note the Figs. Polyptoton and Paronomasia (Ap. 6),
for emphasis. Heb. venahah nehi nihyah = wail a wailing of woe.
changed
= changed [for the worse]. Heb. mur; not halaph = changed [for the better]. See
note on Lev 27:10.
turning
away = to a heathen: i.e. our enemy the Assyrian.
Micah 2:5
cast
a cord by lot. Referring to the custom, by which, round every village in
Palestine, the land was divided by lot every year to the various families;
hence, the expression in Psa 16:6, "cord" being put by Fig. Metonymy
(of Cause), Ap. 6, for the portion of land marked out by it. It therefore =
divide your inheritances. Ref. to Pent. (Num 26:55, 56). Ap. 92.
congregation = assembly. Cp. Deu 23:1-3, Deu 23:8.
Micah 2:6
Prophesy
= Do not sputter.
say
they to them that prophesy = so they sputter.
they
shall not prophesy. Not the usual word for prophesy, but Heb. nataph.
they:
i.e. these false prophets.
them
= as to these things: i.e. these doings of Jehovah.
that,
&c. Supply, "[saying], must He put away these suppressers".
Micah 2:7
Jacob.
See notes on Gen 32:28; 43:6; 45:26, 28.
is
the Spirit, &c. ? Ref. to Pent. (Num 11:23, the same word). Ap. 92.
Spirit.
Heb. ruach. Ap. 9.
do
not = are not?
My.
Sept. reads "His", as in preceding clause: or = are not My words
pleasant [saith Jehovah]?
do
good = pleasant.
Micah 2:8
Even
of late = Only yesterday, or recently: this highway robbery was a new and
recent evil.
Micah 2:10
Arise
ye, &c. Usually misquoted in a good sense; but the Structure shows it to be
part of the lamentation (p. 1253).
this
= this [land]. Ref. to Pent. (Deu 12:9). Ap. 92.
it:
i.e. this [land].
it
is polluted. Ref. to Pent. (Lev 18:27, 28, the same word). Ap. 92.
it
shall destroy. Ref. to Pent (Lev 18:28; 20:22; 26:38). Cp. Eze 36:12-14.
Micah 2:11
wine.
Heb. yayin. Ap. 27.
strong
drink. Heb. shekar. Ap. 27.
prophet
= sputterer; as in 2:6. Lit. dropper [of words].
Micah 2:12
I
will, &c. See the Structure, p. 1253.
Israel.
See note on Gen 32:28; 43:6; 45:26, 28.
of
Bozrah: or, with Sept., in tribulation. The member (vv. 12, 13) does not speak
of mercy, but of judgment, corresponding with the member (1:2-4). Not "a
complete change", and no "promise to a remnant" Cp. Isa 34:6.
Amo 1:12.
make
great noise = be in commotion.
men
= human beings. Heb 'adam. Ap. 14.
Micah 2:13
The
breaker = One making a breach. The Assyrian. Heb. paratz, as in Exo
19:22, 24; 2Sa 5:20. 1Ch 14:11; 15:13. Generally in a bad sense.
broken
up = broken in.
gone
out = gone forth . . . [into captivity].
shall
pass = hath passed through.
on
= at: for it is Jehovah's judgment. Cp. 1:2-4.
Rulers Denounced Micah 3:1
Hear.
This is no indication of Structure. It is a continuation of the threatening
against the rulers (3:1-4, p. 1253, corresponding with "-3", 3:9-12,
below).
princes
= judges.
Micah 3:3 chop them in pieces, as for the pot = spread them
out, as flesh for the pot.
Micah 3:5
err
= go astray.
bite
with their teeth. Alluding to the idolatrous practices of the heathen round the
altars of Baal, biting an olive in their mouths and crying "peace",
of which the olive was the symbol (Gen 8:11). Cp. Zec 9:7.
and
he, &c. = but against him that putteth not [the olive] into his mouth they
declare war.
war
= crusade.
Micah 3:6 that ye shall not divine. Ref.
to Pent. (Deu 18:10,14. Num 22:7; 23:23). Ap. 92.
Micah 3:10 iniquity = deceit. Heb. 'aval.
Ap. 44. Not the same word as in 2:1.
Micah 3:12
Zion.
See Ap. 68.
be
plowed as a field. This is true of the site on Ophel, but not true of the
traditional site south-west of Jerusalem. See Ap. 68. Cp. 1:6. Jer 26:18.
Jerusalem.
The city proper, on Mount Moriah.
heaps
= ruins. Note the Fig. Paronomasia (Ap. 6). Heb. yirushalaim 'iyyin.
Cp. 1:6.
the
mountain of the house. Moriah and the Temple. See Ap. 68.
the high places of the forest. = a height of a jungle.
Companion Bible Notes, 1909
Micah 4:
Peaceful Latter Days
Micah 4:1
in
the last days = at the end of the days. Here we are carried forward to a yet
future day. Ref. to Pent. (Gen 49:1, the same phrase. Num 24:14). Ap. 92. Cp.
Isa 2:2, &c. Eze 38:8, 16. Hos 3:5
the
mountain, &c. Cp. 3:12; and see Isa 2:2-4. Both prophecies are independent,
and complementary (see Psa 24:3. Eze 28:16).
the
LORD. Heb. Jehovah. Ap. 4.
established:
abidingly: not merely for a time.
people
= peoples.
Micah 4:8
tower
of the flock. Heb. tower of 'Eder. Ref. to Pent. (Gen 35:21; nowhere
else). Used here of Bethlehem (cp. Gen 35:19 with 5:2); coupled here with
"Ophel" in next clause, "David's birth-place" and
"David's city".
the
stronghold. Heb. 'Ophel. See Ap. 68. and Ap. 54, line 21,
"citadel", p. 78. See note on 2Ch 27:3.
first
= former. For this rendering cp. Exo 34:1 (tables). Num 21:26 (kings). Deu 4:32; 10:10,
&c. (days). 2Ch
9:29; 16:11; 20:34 (acts).
Micah 4:9
why
dost thou Cry. ? This refers to the birth-pangs of the new nation which will be
brought forth in that day and at that time. Cp. Isa 13:8; 21:3, &c.
Micah 4:10
now
= mean-while: i.e. before that day. Cp. 4:11 and 5:1.
even
to = as far as. Cp. Isa 39:7; 43:14.
Babylon.
May "not have been on Micah's political horizon", but it was on Jehovah's.
Cp. Amo 5:25-27. Act 7:42, 43.
there
. . . there. Note the repetition for emphasis: i.e. there and then in that
future day.
redeem
= redeem [as a kinsman]. Heb. ga'al. See note on Exo 6:6.
Micah 4:11
Now
= Meanwhile: as in 4:10; 5:1. Referring to the then immediately impending
hostility.
many
nations. Cp. Isa 33:3. Lam 2:16. Oba 1:11-13.
eye.
So some codices, with two early printed editions, Aram., Syr., and Vulg.; but
Heb. text reads "eyes". Cp. Psa 54:3.
Micah 4:12
they
know not. Cp. Isa 55:8. Jer 29:11.
thoughts
= purposes, or plans: i.e. for Israel in purging him of idolatry by his
tribulation.
counsel:
i.e. with regard to themselves. The reason follows.
for:
or, that.
floor
= threshing-floor.
Micah 4:13
thresh
= tread as oxen.
horn
. . . hoofs. Referring to the strength of the oxen, and to the completeness of
the destruction. Ref. to Pent. (Deu 25:4). Ap. 92. Cp. Isa 41:15. Jer 51:33.
I
will. Aram., Sept., Syr., and Vulg. read "thou shalt".
consecrate
= devote; as in Jos 6:19, 24. Cp. Zec 14:14. Ref. to Pent. (Lev 27:28).
THE
LORD. Heb. 'Adon. The Divine title, relating to dominion in the earth.
See Ap. 4.
Micah 5:
Birth of the King in Bethlehem
Micah 5:1
Now
= Meanwhile; as in 4:10, 11. Showing that 5:1 relates to the interval between
the then present time and "that day" of 4:1, 6.
gather
thyself, &c.: or, thou shalt have sore tribulation [for thy sins], thou
daughter of affliction.
he:
i.e. the enemy. The Assyrian.
us.
The prophet includes himself.
the
judge. Gr. the then ruler (cp. 1Ki 22:24. Lam 3:30; 4:20; 5:8, 12), who would
thus be the type of the Messiah (Mat 27:30).
rod
= sceptre. Heb. shebet = the club (of defence), as in 7:14; hence, of
office; not matteh, the rod or staff (of support), as in 6:9. See note on Psa 23:4.
Micah 5:2
But
thou. This marks out the Structure. Cp. 4:8 with 5:2. Quoted in Mat 2:5, 6. Joh
7:42.
Beth-lehem
Ephratah. The full name given, as in Gen 35:19, thus connecting Gen 35:21 with
4:8.
little
= too little [to rank among]. Cp. 1Co 1:27-29.
thousands
= districts (1Sa 23:23). Like our old English divisions, called
"hundreds". Cp. Exo 18:25. Ref. to Pent. (Exo 18:25).
come
forth. Note the difference between Heb. here (yatza) and bo' =
come unto, in Zec 9:9. All the events between these two make up the period we
call "the first Advent", and thus are typical of the "second
Advent"; the coming forth being 1Th 4:16, and the coming unto being 1Th
5:2, 3, and 2Th 2:8, the former being in grace, the latter in judgment. A
similar period may elapse in the antitypical comings as in the typical comings
of 5:2, and Zec 9:9.
unto
= for.
everlasting.
Cp. Psa 90:2. Pro 8:22, 23. Joh 1:1, 2.
Micah 5:3
until
the time: i.e. the end of the "meanwhile" (v. 1).
she
which travaileth. Cp. 4:9, 10-, above. and note there; also Joh 16:21, 22, and
Rev 12:1-6.
children
= sons.
Micah 5:4
He:
i.e. the Shepherd of Israel. Ref to Pent. (Gen 49:24). Ap. 92. Cp. Psa 80:1.
Jer 31:10. Eze 34:23.
feed
= tend, or shepherd (as a flock). Cp. 7:14. Isa 40:11; 49:10.
the
LORD. Heb. Jehovah. Ap. 4.
God.
Heb. Elohim. Ap. 4.
they.
Israel, His flock.
shall
abide. In everlasting security.
shall
He be great. Cp. Psa 22:27; 72:8; 98:1. Isa 49:5, 7; 52:13. Zec 9:10.
Luk 1:32. Rev 11:15.
Micah 5:5
this
Man, &c. = this [great Shepherd of Israel]. Cp Psa 72:7.
Isa 9:6, 7. Zec 9:10.
Assyrian. This is emphatic in Heb.
when,
&c. Cp. Isa 7:20 8:7-10; Isa 37:31-36.
then,
&c. Cp. Isa 44:28; 59:19. Zec 1:18-21; Zec 9:13; 10:3; 12:6.
seven
shepherds . . . men. When that time comes the meaning of this will be seen.
men.
Heb. 'adam. Ap. 14.
Micah 5:8
shall
be, &c. This refers to restored Israel "in that day"; not to any
other people now.
people.
Heb. = peoples.
as
a lion, &c. Ref. to Pent. (Num 23:24; 24:9). Ap. 92.
Micah 5:9
shall
be out off. Note the Fig. Anaphora (Ap. 6), in the repetition, "cut
off", four times in vv. 9-13. All this refers eventually to restored
Israel.
Micah 5:10
in
that day. The Structure connects 5:10-14 with 4:6 -- 5:8, and shows it to be
the same, and yet future time, called in 4:1 "the last days".
saith
the LORD = [is] Jehovah's oracle.
I
will cut off, &c. See note on 5:9. Ref. to Pent. (Deu 17:16). Ap. 92. Cp.
Isa 2:7. Zec 9:10.
Micah 5:12
witchcrafts
= sorceries. Ref. to Pent. (Exo 22:18. Lev 19:26. Deu 18:10). Ap. 92.
hand.
Some codices, with Sept., and Syr., read "hands".
soothsayers:
i.e. users of secret or occult arts.
Micah 5:14
pluck
up = root up, or tear down.
thy
groves = thine 'Asherahs. Ap. 42. Ref. to Pent. (Exo 34:13. Deu 7:5;
12:3).
thy
cities. Ginsburg thinks "thine idols". A. V. marg. suggests
"enemies".
Micah 6:
God's Indictment of His People
Micah 6:4
I
brought thee up, &c. Ref. to Pent. (Exo 12:51; 14:30; 20:2. Deu 4:20). Ap.
92.
and
redeemed thee. Ref. to Pent. (Exo 6:6; 13:13-16).
house
of servants = house of bondage. Ref. to Pent. (Exo 13:3, 14; 20:2. Deu 5:6;
6:12; 7:8).
I
sent before . . . Miriam. Ref. to Pent. (Exo 15:20, 21. Num 12:4, 10, 15;
20:1; 26:59). Miriam
not mentioned after Deu 24:9, except 1Ch 6:3.
Micah 6:5
remember
now, &c. Ref. to Pent. (Num 22:5; 23:7; 24:10, 11; 25:1; 31:16. Deu 23:4,
5). Ap. 92.
Balak.
Not mentioned since Jdg 11:25.
Balaam.
Not mentioned since Jos 24:9, 10, except in Neh 13:2. Cp. 2Pe 2:15, and Jud
1:11. Rev 2:14.
righteousness
= righteous acts.
Micah 6:8
man.
Heb. 'adam. Ap. 14.
mercy
= lovingkindness, or grace.
walk
humbly. The Heb. expression (hatzene' leketh) occurs only here. This
verse embodies the principles governing Jehovah's administration under the Law,
but not under the Gospel. Now, He requires faith in the Substitute Whom He has
provided for the sinner; and His righteousness must be imputed in grace. See
Ap. 63. IX: and 72. Cp. also Rom 3:23, 24. Eph 2:3-9. Tit 3:5-8, &c.
Micah 6:9
city.
Put by Fig. Metonymy (of the Subject), Ap. 6, for the inhabitants.
the
man of wisdom shall see Thy name = [such as would have] true stability (or
safety) will regard Thy name. The Mugah Codex, quoted in the Massorah (Ap. 30),
reads: "such as revere".
wisdom.
Heb. tushiyah. See note on Pro 2:7.
Thy.
The Sept. reads: "and He (the LORD) will save such as revere His
name".
rod.
Heb. matteh = staff (for support or chastisement). Not the same word as in 5:1;
7:14. Either put by Fig. Metonymy (of Cause), Ap. 6, for the
chastisement inflicted, or supply the Ellipsis thus: "hear ye the
rod, and [Him] Who hath appointed [the chastisement]."The suffix of the
verb, "it", is fem.; while "rod" is masc. Therefore we may
supply "chastisement "(Heb. tokahath), which is fem.
Micah 6:10
wickedness
. . . wicked = lawlessness . . . lawless. Heb. rasha'.
the
scant measure, &c. Note the word "abominable" below. In this
form, only in Pro 22:14.
measure
= ephah. See Ap. 51.
abominable.
Ref. to Pent. Out of six words thus rendered, Heb. za'am is chosen in
Num 28:7, 8, 8, "defied" = abhorred. It occurs only eight times
elsewhere. Ap. 92.
Micah 6:14
Thou
shalt eat, &c. Ref. to Pent. (Lev 26:26).
thy
casting down = thy dissatisfaction or emptiness. Heb. yeshach. Occurs
only here.
shall
be in the midst of thee = [shall remain] in thee.
take
hold. Some codices, with one early printed edition (Rabbinic, marg), read
"take possession".
Micah 6:16
the
statutes. Heb. hukkoth = in a religious sense (Lev 20:8. 2Ki 17:34. Jer
10:3).
of
Omri. Cp. 1Ki 16:31, 32, as to the worship of Baal.
kept
= strictly kept. Cp. Hos 5:4.
the
house of Ahab. Cp. 1Ki 16:30. &c.; 21:25, 26. See Ap. 65.
that
I should make, &c. Ref. to Pent. (Deu 28:37).
Micah 7:
Prophet Acknowledges Israel's
Misery
Micah 7:3
evil.
Heb. ra'a'. Ap. 44.
asketh
= asketh [for a reward]. Ref. to Pent. (Deu 16:19). Ap. 92. Cp. 3:11. Hos 4:18.
the
judge asketh = the judge [judgeth], &c. Fig. complex Ellipsis. Cp.
3:11. Isa 1:23.
reward
= bribe.
his
mischievous desire = the mischief of his soul. Heb. nephesh. Ap. 13. Cp.
3:9-11.
they:
i.e. the prince and the judge.
wrap
it up = weave it together. Occurs only here.
it.
Heb. suffix is fem., so we must supply a fem. noun: e. g. zimmah =
wicked purpose, or mischievous device. Isa 32:7.
Micah 7:4
the
day of thy watchmen. Put by Fig. Metonymy (of Adjunct), Ap. 6:. the day
[of punishment] foretold by thy watchmen.
Micah 7:5
Trust
ye not = Put ye no faith in. Heb. 'aman. See Ap. 69.
put
ye not confidence in. Heb. batah. See Ap. 69. So the Western Massorites.
The Eastern, with three early printed editions, Sept., Syr., and Vulg, read
"neither put", &c. Quoted in Mat 10:35, 36; Luk 12:53.
Micah 7:6
dishonoureth,
&c. Ref. to Pent. (Exo 20:12. Deu 5:16). Ap. 92.
man’s.
Heb. ‘ish. Ap. 14. II.
men.
Heb. pl. of 'enosh. Ap. 14. III. Verse 6 does not end
"abruptly", nor does there "yawn a century". Verse 7 gives
the true remedy in contrast with the vain remedies of vv. 5, 6.
Micah 7:8
when
I fall: i.e. into calamity; not into sin. Lit. I have fallen, I have arisen;
though I should sit in darkness, Jehovah, &c.
Micah 7:11
decree
= prescribed limit or boundary. So the Oxford Gesenius, p. 349. Cp. Job
26:10; 38:10. Pro 8:29. Isa 24:5. Jer 5:22. Heb. chok.
be
far removed = become distant: i.e. extended. See the Oxford Gesenius, p.
935. Heb. rachak, as in Isa 26:15. Note the Fig. Paronomasia (Ap.
6), yir'chok.
Micah 7:12
he
= one. But a special various reading called Sevir (Ap. 34), reads
"they": i.e. thine exiles. come = come home; as in 1Sa 11:5. Psa
45:15. Pro 2:10, or, into blessing; as in Psa 69:27. Nothing has "fallen
out" of the text!
Assyria.
See the "enemy", 7:10.
the
fortified cities = the cities of Matzor (i.e. the fortress) put for Egypt. Cp.
Isa 19:6; 37.
Micah 7:14
Feed,
&c. Note here, the prayer of Micah. Supply the Ellipsis: "[Then
Micah prayed, and said: O Jehovah] Feed Thy People", &c.
Feed
= shepherd Thou (masc).
rod.
Heb. shebet, as in 5:1; not as in 6:9. Here it is the token of rule.
which
dwell, &c. = dwell thou (fern.): i.e. the "flock". Heb. tz'on
(com. gender).
solitarily
= alone. Ref. to Pent. (Num 23:9. Deu 33:28). Ap. 92.
as
in the days of old = as in the age-past times: so shall be the yet future day
of Israel's consolation; not Micah's day, when Israel was in possession of
Bashan, &c. No ground, therefore, for dating this prayer in "the
latest period of Israel's history, the days of Haggai and Zechariah", as
alleged.
Micah 7:15
According,
&c. Verses 15-17 are Jehovah's answer as to the subjugation of Israel's
enemies. Ref. to Pent. See note on 6:4. Ap. 92. Not the continuation of Micah's
prayer.
will
I shew unto him. Ref. to Pent. (Exo 34:10).
Micah 7:16
lay
their hand, &c Put by Fig Metonymy (of Adjunct), Ap. 6, for silence,
of which it was the token their ears. Some codices, with four early printed and
sign. See Job 21:5; 29:9; 40:4.
their
ears. Some codices, with lour early printed editions, read "and
their".
Micah 7:17
lick
the dust. Put by Fig. Metonymy (of Adjunct), for the utmost humiliation,
as in Gen 3:14. Cp. Psa 72:9. Isa 49:23.
move
= come quaking.
holes
= fastnesses. Heb. misgereth.
worms.
Ref. to Pent. (Deu 32:24, the same word). Occurs only in these two places.
Micah 7:20
Thou
wilt perform, &c. Quoted in Luk 1:72, 73.
sworn
unto our fathers. Ref. to Pent. (Gen 50:24. &c.) Ap. 92. See Psa 105:9, 10,
42,
q