Verse 1-2
Micah 6:1-2. Hear now what the
Lord saith — Here begins a new
discourse, respecting the causes
of the evils which hung over the
Jewish nation. Arise — This is
God’s command to Micah; contend
thou before the mountains —
Argue the case between God and
thy people; and speak as if thou
wouldest make the mountains hear
thee, to testify for me. Hear, O
ye mountains — God often appeals
to inanimate creatures for the
justice of his proceedings,
thereby to upbraid the stupidity
of men; the Lord’s controversy —
Or the Lord’s cause or matter of
complaint. Here the prophet
begins to execute what he had
been commanded in the preceding
verse. And ye strong foundations
of the earth — He alludes to a
fabric raised on immoveable
foundations, but, strictly
speaking,
“The earth self-balanced on her
centre hangs.”
For the Lord hath a controversy
with his people — He will enter
into judgment with them, for
their impieties, as being
injurious to his honour, and for
which his justice demands
satisfaction.
Verse 3-4
Micah 6:3-4. O my people, what
have I done unto thee? — What
injustice or unkindness? Wherein
have I wearied thee? — What
grievous, burdensome impositions
have I laid upon thee? Or, what
have I done, or said, or
enjoined, to cause thee to be
weary of me? The words allude to
the forms of courts of justice,
wherein actions are tried
between man and man. God allows
his people to offer any plea
which they could in their own
behalf. For I brought thee out
of Egypt, &c. — Here, on the
other hand, God puts them in
mind of the great favours he had
bestowed upon them in delivering
them out of the Egyptian
bondage, by the conduct of Moses
and Aaron, and Miriam their
sister, who is here mentioned as
having been endued with the
spirit of prophecy, and raised
up to be an assistant to her
brothers, and an example and
counsellor to the women.
Verse 5
Micah 6:5. O my people,
remember, &c. — Call to
remembrance what Balaam said in
answer to Balak, when he
consulted him, namely, that
there was no enchantment against
Jacob, &c., nothing that could
be done against them, nothing
that could overthrow them but
their own sins; that they were
blessed, and it could not be
reversed by any thing but their
own forsaking God and his
service, under whose particular
protection they were. From
Shittim unto Gilgal — From the
encampment at Shittim, Numbers
25:1, on the way to that at
Gilgal, Joshua 4:19. Balaam gave
different answers in the
interval between those places.
But some think this sentence
should not be connected with
what goes before, but that it
begins a new sentence, the
purport of which is, Remember, O
my people, from Shittim unto
Gilgal; that is, what things I
did, what benefits I bestowed
upon you, from the time you were
at Shittim till you came to
Gilgal. God had indeed before
bestowed upon them great
benefits, but at this particular
time they received more than
ordinary instances of his
kindness toward them,
particularly in causing the
waters of Jordan to run back, to
let them pass through; and in
the fall of the walls of
Jericho. That ye may know the
righteousness of the Lord — His
mercy, justice, truth, and
faithfulness.
Verse 6-7
Micah 6:6-7. Wherewith shall I
come before the Lord — After the
preceding reproof of the
people’s ingratitude, they are
here introduced as anxiously
inquiring how they may
propitiate God’s displeasure,
and avert his judgments. They
intimate that they are ready to
offer any expiatory sacrifices,
though never so costly, for that
purpose. Shall I come before him
with burnt-offerings, &c. — Will
God accept of the ordinary
sacrifices, such as we have
offered on other occasions, as
an atonement for sin? Will the
Lord be pleased with thousands
of rams, &c. — With a prodigious
number; or ten thousands of
rivers of oil — Were it possible
to give them? Doth he expect
more costly sacrifices than
ordinary? We are ready, if that
will appease him, to offer up to
him multitudes of rams, and to
add meat-offerings, prepared
with oil, in proportion, though
it should cost us an
immeasurable quantity of that
article. Shall I give my
firstborn, &c. — The dearest of
my offspring, or any other of my
children, to Jehovah, by way of
atonement for my transgression?
It is well known that the
Phenicians, and their
descendants the Carthaginians,
sacrificed their children to
Saturn or Molech, and in their
great dangers they were wont to
offer the dearest of them. And
some of the idolatrous Jews and
Israelites imitated this horrid
practice: see note on Leviticus
18:21, where God in a solemn
manner prohibits it, as he
frequently does elsewhere. These
two verses give us an exact
description of the character of
hypocrites and habitual sinners,
who hope to obtain God’s favour
by performing certain external
ceremonies; and are willing to
purchase their own pardon upon
any terms, except that of
reforming their lives.
Verse 8
Micah 6:8. He hath showed thee,
O man, what is good — He hath
showed thee that there is no
forgiveness without repentance,
and that repentance is but a
name, unless there be a ceasing
to do evil, and learning to do
well: and that this implies the
practice of every branch of
piety and virtue; the
performance of every duty that
we owe to God, our neighbour,
and ourselves; 1st, To do justly
— To render to all their dues,
to superiors, equals, inferiors;
to be true and just to all, and
to oppress none, in their
persons, property, or
reputation; in our dealings with
others to carry a chancery in
our own breasts, and to act
according to equity. 2d, To love
mercy — Not to use severity, or
exercise malice, envy, revenge,
enmity, or hatred toward any,
but to be compassionate,
merciful, forgiving, kind, and
beneficent toward all, according
to our ability. And, 3d, To walk
humbly with thy God — To humble
thyself before the holy and just
God, under a deep sense of thy
past guilt and present
unworthiness, renouncing all
high thoughts of thyself, and
all dependance on thy own
righteousness for justification
before him, but relying solely
on his mercy, through the
Mediator. The words imply, too,
that we should keep up constant
communion with God, by the
exercise of an humble, holy,
loving, and obedient faith,
serving the Lord, as the apostle
says of himself, in all humility
of mind, and with continual
reverence and godly fear. “See
here the true spirit of the
divine law! See here what makes
a true Israelite! a truth which
the carnal Jews could never
comprehend: in vain did their
legislator and their prophets
inculcate it upon every
occasion. They always had
recourse to their gross
conceptions, their attachment to
sacrifices, and merely external
services: herein they imagined
their perfection to consist;
while they neglected the more
essential duties of man, and the
practice of the most solid
virtues, justice, benevolence,
and piety.”
Verse 9
Micah 6:9. The Lord’s voice
crieth — Either by his
judgments, each of which is his
voice, or by his prophets; unto
the city — To every city in
Israel and Judah, but
principally to Jerusalem and
Samaria. The man of wisdom —
Every wise man; shall see thy
name — Will perceive God in that
cry. Hear ye the rod, and who
hath appointed it — Who hath
chosen it out, and strikes with
it; that is, Hear ye the voice
of God in the punishments he is
now sending. Or, Hear what
severe judgments are threatened
against you, and who it is that
threatens them, and is able to
put them in execution.
Verses 10-12
Micah 6:10-12. Are there yet the
treasures of wickedness, &c. —
Notwithstanding all the express
laws, the exhortations and
reproofs given you upon this
subject, and so many examples of
punishment set before you; still
are there many that use unjust
and fraudulent means to enrich
themselves? who keep scant
measures to sell their goods by,
which the law of God often
declares to be an abomination to
him? The reproof is the same
with that of Amos 8:5, where see
the note. Shall I count them
pure with the wicked balances,
&c. — Shall I approve or acquit
them, as if they were righteous?
For the rich men thereof —
Namely, of the city, spoken of
Micah 6:9; are full of violence
— Not only of fraud and
injustice, but oppression,
tyranny, and cruelty. And the
inhabitants have spoken lies —
Have gone aside from truth,
integrity, and fidelity, and
have deceived each other by
falsehood.
Verses 13-15
Micah 6:13-15. Therefore will I
make thee sick in smiting thee —
Therefore, upon account of these
thy sins, I will, ere long, so
smite thee, O Israel, that the
strokes shall reach thy heart,
and make thee sick unto death of
thy wounds. Or, the punishment
wherewith I will afflict thee
shall waste thy strength like a
consuming sickness which preys
upon the vitals. Thou shalt eat,
but not be satisfied — See note
on Hosea 4:10. And thy casting
down shall be in the midst of
thee — Thou shalt be depressed
within thee, or have no courage,
or spirits, left to support
thee. Thou shalt take hold, but
not deliver, &c. — Thou shalt
lay hold on things to secure
them to thee, but thou shalt not
be able to save them from the
enemy. All the advantages that
thou hast made by any means
shall become a prey to them.
Archbishop Newcome translates
it, Thou shalt take hold, but
shalt not carry away; contrary
to what is said of thy enemies,
Isaiah 5:29; They shall lay hold
of the prey, and carry it away
safe, and none shall deliver it,
or retake it. Thou shalt sow,
but shalt not reap — Thou shalt
not enjoy the fruit of thy
labour: a curse often threatened
for disobedience.
Verse 16
Micah 6:16. For the statutes of
Omri are kept — An idolatrous
king, of whom it is said, 1
Kings 16:25, that he did worse
than all that were before him,
and therefore we may judge of
the corruption of the people who
imitated the example, and
followed the institutions of
such a one. By his statutes,
seem to be intended some
idolatrous rites, which he
instituted while he was king of
Israel. And all the works of the
house of Ahab, &c. — Ahab was
the son of Omri, and exceeded
his father and all his
predecessors in impiety. He did
more (it is said, 1 Kings 16:33)
to provoke the Lord God than all
the kings of Israel that were
before him. For he not only
walked in the sins of Jeroboam,
who instituted the worship of
the golden calves, under which
idolatrous representation
Jehovah was worshipped, but he
also went and served Baal, a
false god, and built a house, or
temple, and erected an altar for
him in Samaria, &c., 1 Kings
16:30-33. But, impious as Ahab
was, he found imitators, not
only in Israel, where he had
power to command, but also in
Judah. It is said, The works of
the house of Ahab, because all
his posterity followed his
example in idolatry. And we
learn, 2 Kings 21:3, that even
the king of Judah, Manasseh,
reared up an altar for Baal, and
made a grove, as did Ahab king
of Israel. That I should make
thee a desolation — The event
will be, that the country and
city shall be laid desolate; and
the inhabitants thereof a
hissing — That is, a subject of
scorn and derision to their
enemies. Therefore ye shall bear
the reproach of my people — This
is addressed to the rich men,
spoken of Micah 6:12, and the
meaning is, that the people in
general should reproach them
with being the principal cause
of their calamities and
desolation. |