Verse 1
Micah 5:1. Now gather thyself,
&c. — It seems this verse ought
to be joined to the foregoing
chapter, as it evidently belongs
to it, and not to this, which is
upon a quite different subject.
Thus considered, after the
promises given of a restoration
from the captivity into which
they should be carried, and of
victory over their surrounding
enemies, the prophecy concludes
with bidding them first expect
an enemy to come against them,
who should lay siege to their
chief city, and carry their
insolence so far as to treat the
judge of Israel in the most
indignant and despiteful manner,
such as striking him on the
cheek, or face, with a rod, or
stick. This, it is likely, was
fulfilled on Zedekiah, who was
treated in a contumelious manner
by the Chaldeans, as if he had
been a common captive, 2 Kings
25:6-7. And as the singular
number is often used for the
plural, by the judge of Israel
may be meant the judges of
Israel, including their
principal men, as well as the
king, for they doubtless were
treated no better than he was;
nay, probably, still more
indignantly.
Verse 2
Micah 5:2. But thou, Beth-lehem
Ephratah — Here we have
evidently the beginning of
another subject, quite different
from any thing that the first
verse can relate to, and with
which it seems to have no
connection. The word Ephrah, or
Ephratah, is here added, to
distinguish Beth-lehem in the
tribe of Judah, from another
Beth-lehem in the tribe of
Zebulun. It is called Ephratah,
from the fruitfulness of the
land where it stood: the word
whence that term is derived
importing fruitfulness. Though
thou be little —
The word though is not in the
Hebrew, but supplied by our
translators. And the sense of
the sentence, it seems, is
unnecessarily altered by its
introduction. Many interpreters
render the clauses
interrogatively, thus; Art thou
little among the thousands of
Judah? The expression, the
thousands of Judah, seems to
have been used in allusion to
the first division of the
people, into thousands,
hundreds, and other subordinate
divisions. The rendering of the
clause thus, Art thou little,
&c., which implies the contrary,
thou art not little, is
certainly the right way of
rendering it, because St.
Matthew understood it, and
quotes it, in this sense, chap.
Micah 2:6, And thou Beth-lehem,
in the land of Judah, art not
the least among the princes of
Judah. Bishop Newcome’s
translation of the clause
accords still more exactly with
St. Matthew’s, “Thou, Bethlehem
Ephratah, art thou too little to
be among the leaders of Judah?
Out of thee shall come, &c.,”
the word אלפו, rendered
thousands, often signifying
heads of thousands. Yet out of
thee, &c. — The word yet also is
not in the Hebrew; and if the
preceding clause be rendered, as
is here proposed,
interrogatively, it is not
necessary to complete the sense
of the verse; indeed, it would
only obscure it. Out of thee
shall come forth, &c., that is
to be ruler in Israel — This
prophecy can be applied, with no
propriety, to any other but the
Messiah. The words must be very
much wrested and changed from
their natural meaning, or
deprived of their full force or
signification, before they can
be applied to any other person.
The Jews, even the most learned
ones, before and at our
Saviour’s time, understood this
to be spoken of the Messiah; for
St. Matthew informs us, Matthew
2:5-6, that when Herod inquired
of the chief priests and
scribes, assembled together, to
give him information where
Christ should be born, they
agreed unanimously that it was
in Beth- lehem of Judea,
alleging these very words as a
certain and undeniable proof of
it. And so did the generality of
the Jews of that age, who speak
of it as an undoubted truth,
that Christ was to come of the
seed of David, and of the town
of Beth-lehem, where David was,
John 7:42. The Chaldee agrees
with their sentiments, and
expressly applies the prophecy
to the Messiah; and our Lord was
born at Beth-lehem by an
especial act of Providence, that
this prophecy might plainly be
fulfilled in him: see Luke 2:4.
The expression, come forth, is
the same as to be born. Whose
goings forth have been of old
from everlasting — Hebrew, מימי
עולם מקדם, rendered by the LXX.,
απ αχης, εξ ημεων αιωνος; and
exactly in the same sense by the
Vulgate, ab initio, a diebus
æternitatis, from the beginning,
from the days of eternity. So
these Hebrew expressions must of
necessity signify in divers
places of Scripture, being used
to signify the eternity of God:
see Psalms 55:19; Psalms 90:2;
Proverbs 8:23; Habakkuk 1:12.
The words naturally import an
original, distinct from the
birth of Christ mentioned in the
foregoing sentence, which
original is here declared to be
from all eternity.
Verse 3
Micah 5:3. Therefore will he
give them up — The particle
לכןrendered therefore, should
rather be here rendered,
nevertheless. The meaning is,
Notwithstanding the promise of
so great a blessing, God would
give up his people into the
hands of their enemies, or leave
them to be exercised with
troubles and afflictions, till
the appointed time of their
deliverance should come. Until
the time that she which
travaileth hath brought forth —
Until the daughter of Zion,
compared here to a woman in
travail, shall be delivered out
of captivity. Or rather, till
the church of God, of which the
daughter of Zion was a type,
shall bring forth spiritual
children of Jew and Gentile
extraction unto God, by the
preaching of the gospel: see
Galatians 4:27. This prophecy
will be more fully completed in
the general conversion and
restoration of the Jewish nation
in the latter days: see Isaiah
66:7-11. Then the remnant of his
brethren — The brethren of the
Messiah, those of Judah and
Benjamin especially, who were
carried captive; shall return
unto the children of Israel —
Or, be converted with the
children of Israel. Then the
remnant of the dispersed Jews,
upon their conversion, shall
join themselves to the true
Israelites, and make one church
with them. Both the LXX. and
Chaldee read, the remnant of
their brethren: but if we follow
the present Hebrew, we may
understand it of the believers
that were to be added to the
church; for Christ vouchsafes to
call all believers his brethren:
see Hebrews 2:11; Matthew 12:50.
Verse 4
Micah 5:4. And he shall stand
and feed — Or rule as the word
רעה, here rendered feed, often
signifies: that is, he shall go
on, he shall continue to rule,
or feed, his people. Christ
shall diligently perform the
office of a shepherd, or
governor, over his church. In
the strength of the Lord, in the
majesty of the name of the Lord
— God, or the indwelling Deity,
strengthening and exalting his
human nature. The expression,
the name of the Lord his God,
might be intended to signify the
Messiah’s acting by commission
from the Father, in whose name
he came, preached, wrought
miracles, and instituted his
gospel church. And they shall
abide — His church, made up of
converted Jews and Gentiles,
shall continue; the gates of
hell shall not prevail against
it. For now shall he be great
unto the ends of the earth —
Some interpret this as
signifying the making the true
God known over all the earth:
but it seems rather to be
intended of the Messiah; for the
angel, who foretold his
conception to his virgin mother,
as is related Luke 1:32-33,
seems plainly to allude to this
prophecy, saying, He shall be
great, and shall be called the
Son of the Highest, &c. And he
is dignified with such titles as
were never given to any
creature, as the apostle proves
at large, Hebrews 1:4-14.
Verse 5
Micah 5:5. This man shall be the
peace — Christ is our peace as a
priest, making atonement for
sin, and reconciling us to God:
he is our peace as a king,
conquering our enemies,
protecting us against their
attacks, and preserving our
minds in peace and tranquillity.
In this latter sense the
expression seems to be taken
here: as if he had said, The
Messiah, in all ages, whether
before or after his incarnation,
secures the peace and welfare of
his church and people, against
all the attempts of his and
their enemies. When the
Assyrian, &c. — After the
illustrious prophecy relating to
the Messiah, in the foregoing
verses, the prophet passes on to
the subversion of the Assyrian
empire, and, under the type of
that ancient enemy of God’s
people, foretels the overthrow
of all their enemies, especially
of the antichristian powers
which should attack his church
in the latter days. Shall come
into our land — As Sennacherib
did with an overwhelming army,
within a few years after this
prophecy was delivered, when, by
the power and authority of the
Messiah, the Son of God, in his
pre-existent state, (see Micah
5:2,) the Assyrian army was
defeated, and Judea’s peace
secured. When he shall tread in
our palaces — Which Sennacherib
did in all the cities or Judah,
except Jerusalem, against which
he could not prevail, because
Immanuel was with Hezekiah and
that city, as foretold Isaiah
8:8-10; Isaiah 37:32-35, where
see the notes. Then shall we
raise against him — Namely,
Hezekiah, and with him the
prophets and people, by prayer
shall prevail with God to send
deliverance. This seems
primarily to refer to the
deliverance of Hezekiah and his
kingdom from the Assyrian army
who invaded them. Seven
shepherds and eight principal
men — Or, seven rulers and eight
princes of men, as Archbishop
Newcome renders it, who thinks
the prophet means the chiefs of
the Medes and Babylonians, the
prefects of different provinces,
who, some time after the fall of
Sennacherib, took Nineveh,
overthrew the Assyrian empire,
and thereby delivered the Jews
from that oppressive power.
Their number, he thinks, may
have been what is here
specified. Or, seven and eight
may stand for an indefinite
number, as similar expressions
often do.
Verse 6
Micah 5:6. And they — The seven
shepherds and eight principal
men; or, the rulers and princes
of men, mentioned in the
preceding clause; those great
and successful instruments of
God’s revenge, and his church’s
deliverance, shall waste the
land of Assyria with the sword —
Which the Medes and Babylonians
did, under the conduct of
Merodach-baladan, king of
Babylon, who, taking advantage
of the weakness of the Assyrian
kingdom, humbled partly by the
great destruction of
Sennacherib’s army, and the
murder of that mighty monarch,
and partly by the civil wars
which ensued between the
regicides and Esar-haddon, took
arms, and succeeded in the
attempt of subduing the Assyrian
kingdom, with much slaughter and
bloodshed. This Merodach-baladan
was the person who sent the
congratulatory letter and
embassy to Hezekiah, lately
cured by a miracle of his
otherwise mortal disease, and
delivered from the Assyrian
power, Isaiah 39:1-2. And the
land of Nimrod — The same with
the land of Assyria. In the
entrances thereof — The
fortified frontiers, the
garrisons, which kept all the
entrances of the kingdom. Or, by
the land of Nimrod, the
Babylonish empire may be
understood, which afterward by
Nebuchadnezzar’s hand destroyed
the Jews, Jerusalem, and the
temple, and was overthrown by
the Medes and Persians, whom God
raised up to punish Babylon, and
release the Jews. Thus shall he
deliver us from the Assyrian —
Whether considered literally as
the present enemies of God’s
people, or as types of all their
other and future enemies.
Verse 7
Micah 5:7. And the remnant of
Jacob — Those who remained after
the Assyrian invasion in the
days of Hezekiah and Josiah, in
whose reigns a considerable
reformation was effected; and
the remnant that should be
carried captive into Babylon,
who during their captivity
should contribute to spread the
knowledge of the one true God
among the Chaldeans; (see Daniel
2:47; Daniel 3:29; Daniel 4:34;
Daniel 6:26;) and more
especially those that should
return from captivity under
Zerubbabel; shall be in the
midst of many people as the dew,
&c. — Shall multiply, and become
numerous as the drops of dew. Or
rather, as the dew refreshes and
fertilizes the earth, so shall
they be a blessing to all around
them that use them friendly. The
remnant, however, here
principally meant, is that
spoken of by Joel 2:32, the
remnant which the Lord should
call, on which the Spirit should
be poured out, and which should
be saved, (Romans 9:27,) namely,
the Jewish converts to
Christianity, among whom were
the apostles, evangelists, and
other first ministers of the
word. These, dispersed through
divers countries, like the drops
of dew, or showers of rain
scattered over the face of the
earth, and refreshing and
fertilizing the vegetable
creation, shall, by their
doctrine, example, exhortations,
and prayers, refresh and render
fruitful, in piety and virtue,
the formerly barren nations, and
make them grow in grace and
goodness, like the grass that
tarrieth not for man, but
flourishes in places on which
man bestows no culture, only by
the divine blessing. Thus shall
God, by the gospel of his grace,
and the influence of his Spirit,
unaided by human wisdom or
power, render the barren deserts
of the Gentile world fruitful to
his praise, in a large increase
of spiritual worshippers, and
holy faithful servants to him.
Verse 8
Micah 5:8. And the remnant of
Jacob shall be among the
Gentiles as a lion — For
strength and courage, which the
beasts of the forest dare not
oppose, and cannot resist. This
seems to be a prediction of what
was to be effected in the times
of the Maccabees, and those
following them, when the Jewish
people gained great advantages
over the Idumeans, Moabites,
Ammonites, Samaritans, &c. Or,
as the former verse describes
the benefits which the converted
Jews should bring to those
Gentiles that were disposed to
embrace the gospel; this shows
us what the enemies and opposers
of the truth had to expect: see
notes on Psalms 2:5; Psalms 2:9;
Isaiah 60:12.
Verse 10-11
Micah 5:10-11. And in that day —
Namely, in that time when the
threatenings against the
enemies, and the promises to the
people of God shall be made
good; I will cut off thy horses,
&c. — Not in judgment, but in
mercy, for there shall be no
need of them, nor shall the
church of God any more rely on
them. And will destroy thy
chariots — Chariots prepared for
war. And I will cut off the
cities, &c. — Cut off the
occasion of fortifying thy
cities: thou shalt need no other
defence than what I will be to
thee. And throw down all thy
strong holds — Demolish thy
forts, watch- towers, and
garrisons. In the preceding
verse, offensive preparations
for annoying the enemy are
intended; here, means of defence
against the assaults of the
enemy; in both which Israel had
too much trusted. But in that
time of peace and safety here
spoken of, as there would be no
enemy to invade the Israel of
God, or put them on their
defence; so neither should they
have any need to make an attack
upon any enemies.
Verses 12-15
Micah 5:12-15. And I will cut
off witchcrafts, &c. — Here is
foretold the downfall of all
unlawful arts and devices, which
had been used by the Jews in
former ages, to obtain the
knowledge of future events: that
God would, in mercy to his
people, take away these
occasions of sinning. Thy graven
images also will I cut off — I
will abolish every species of
idolatry. This was effected,
even among the Jews, by that
severe judgment the Babylonish
captivity, from which time they
have abhorred the use of images
in divine worship, and indeed
have been kept from worshipping
any false god. And I will pluck
up thy groves — The usual scenes
of idolatrous worship. It is
justly observed by Mr. Scott
here, that though the
reformation of the Jews, after
their return from Babylon, might
be alluded to in this passage,
yet the purification of the
Christian Church from all
antichristian corruptions of
faith and worship, and all
idolatry and superstition, seems
more immediately to be
predicted. “The reliance on
human merits for justification,
the external pomp used in
worship, and the oppressive
exercise of human authority in
mere matters of conscience, will
be entirely destroyed by the
clear light of divine truth, and
the power of divine grace; and
simplicity and purity in
doctrine, worship, and practice,
will prevail, when the enemies
of the church shall be
destroyed.” And I will execute
vengeance in anger, &c. — When I
have purged my people from their
corruptions, I will severely
vindicate their cause, to the
utter destruction of all their
unbelieving enemies. Such as
they have not heard — In an
unprecedented manner. God will
give his Son either the hearts
or necks of his enemies, and
make them either his friends or
his footstool. |