Bringing God's Word to the Nations

Julian Spriggs
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Introduction to the Book of Micah
 
Julian Spriggs, M.A.


Micah the prophet

His name is the abbreviated form of "who is like Yahweh", which is the man theme of his message. He was from Moresheth-Gath, twenty-five miles south-west of Jerusalem in the Shephelah, near Gath on the Philistine border. He was a prophet of the countryside, preoccupied with the sufferings of the common people and the peasant farmers, speaking with a countryman's directness and a great indignation. Micah had no access to the court, in contrast to his contemporary, Isaiah, who was a prophet of the city and royal court.

His message concerned Samaria and Jerusalem (1:1), but only 1:2-8 refers to Samaria and
Israel. His interest in Judah and Jerusalem is more extensive, so he is normally included as one of
the prophets to the southern kingdom, Judah. He was a contemporary with Hosea, who was
prophesying to the northern kingdom and with Isaiah to the southern kingdom.

Historical background

Micah's ministry covered the reigns of the following kings of Judah, spanning fifty-five years:
  Jotham (742 - 735 BC)
  Ahaz (735 - 715 BC)
  Hezekiah (715 - 687 BC)
The description of the corruption and immorality in Judah given in Micah fits well with what we know about the reign of Ahaz and the early years of Hezekiah's reign. After Jeremiah’s famous temple sermon, the elders recalled Micah’s message in the time of Hezekiah, by quoting Micah 3:12 (Jer 26:18-19)

Syro-Ephraimite War

Assyria was expanding southward under Tiglath-pileser III. Pekah of Israel and Rezin of
Damascus formed an anti-Assyrian coalition and tried to force Judah to join them. Ahaz of Judah appealed to Tiglath-pileser for help, against Isaiah's advice (Is 7). Assyria crushed the coalition and Judah became a vassal of Assyria, involving the payment of heavy tribute and accepting Assyrian gods. This lead to a loosening of moral and social standards which Micah spoke against.

Literary Style

Micah frequently uses play on words, especially in 1:10-15, where the predictions of doom fit the names of the towns. This is particularly seen in the Moffat translation:
    Gath (= Tear-town) weep not at all
    Beth-leaphrah (= House of dust) roll yourselves in the dust
    Shaphir (= Beauty-town) pass in nakedness and shame
    Zaanan (= Going-forth town) do not come forth
    Beth-ezel (= House of taking away) shall remove the support from you
    Maroth (= Bitter-town) wait anxiously for good
    Lachish (= Horse-town) harness steeds to chariots
    Achzib (sounds like deception) shall be a deception

Theology of Micah

Uniqueness of Yahweh

Micah's name means "Who is like Yah(weh)?". His message ends with the same question,
"Who is a God like you - pardoning iniquity and passing over the transgression of the remnant of your possession?" (7:18). Yahweh is the Lord of the whole earth (4:13).

God appearing in historical events

His prophecy begins with a description of the coming of the Lord, a Theophany (1:3-4). The
appearance of God was an intervention in history to cause destruction of Samaria, which was
actually caused by Assyrian army (1:6), but Micah sees the invasion as a direct result of Yahweh's response to Israel's disobedience. This destruction is a witness against the nations (1:2). The destruction of Samaria (1:6), and Jerusalem (3:12) is a witness that God punishes sin, even in his own people, so he will also punish sin of other nations (5:15).

This Lord is coming to bring both judgement and salvation

There are three sections of the book: Micah's summons to the people (ch 1-2), Micah's summons to the leaders (ch 3-5), and Micah's summons to the mountains (ch 6-7). Each section begins, "Hear, you ...." (1:2, 3:1, 6:1), and each contain oracles of judgement and oracles of hope for the faithful remnant.
  Section 1:   People - judgement (1:2-2:11), hope (2:12-13)
  Section 2:   Leaders - judgement (3:1-12), hope (4:1-5:15)
  Section 3:   Mountains - judgement (6:1-7:7), hope (7:8-20)

The Shepherd King

The Messianic Shepherd King is mentioned in all three hope sections:
  Section 1: The survivors of Israel will be set together like a sheep in a fold, and the "one who
                   breaks out" will go up before them, their king (2:12-13).
  Section 2:  To you, O tower of the flock, the former dominion shall come (4:8). The king / ruler
                   shall come from Bethlehem (5:2-4). He shall stand and feed his flock in the strength
                   of the Lord.
  Section 3:  Shepherd your people with your staff, the flock that belongs to you (7:14)

When the wise men came to King Herod, the scribes identified these as predictions of the Messiah:
“And you, Bethlehem, in the land of Judah, are by no means least among the rulers of Judah; for from you shall come a ruler who is to shepherd my people Israel” (Mt 2:5).

The Lawsuit theme

Through their idolatry, Judah had broken the covenant, so God was bringing a lawsuit against them.

  1. Initial summons of nation (1:2-7)
      v2 Summons of people by Lord
      v3-4 Coming of the Lord
      v5 Charge against Israel and Judah
      v6-7 Judgement against Samaria and Jerusalem

  2. Lawsuit against landowners (2:1-5)
      v1-2 Charge against the oppressing landowners
      v3-5 Judgement - capture, exile, loss of fields

  3. Three lawsuits against the leadership of the nation (3:1-12)
      v1-3 Charge against the unjust rulers
      v4 Judgement - Lord will hide from them
      v5 Charge against false prophets
      v6-7 Judgement - disgrace, no visions, no revelation
      v9-11 Charge against presumptuous leaders
      v12 Judgement - Jerusalem ploughed like a field

  4. A full legal case is brought against Judah, with the Lord acting as the plaintiff, Micah as his
      messenger, the mountains as the witnesses, and Judah as the defendant (6:1-8)
      v1b Lord calls Micah to plead his case before the mountains
      v2 Micah summons the mountains to hear the controversy of the Lord, "Hear you
           mountains ..."
      v3 Case for Prosecution - Lord's case against Judah
          1) What fault do they find with the Lord?

     v4-5 Accusation defended - what the Lord has done
            v4 Lord brought them up out of Egypt under great leaders
            v5 a) Lord turned Balaam's curse into blessing
                 b) Lord led them across the Jordan

      v6-8 Case for the Defense - Judah defending themselves
           2) What sacrifice would Lord be pleased with ever increasing sacrifices?
           3) What does Lord require?
               - to do justice, to live kindness and to walk humbly with your God

  5. Another case is brought and judgment declared (6:10-16)
       v12 Accusation 1 - injustice
       v13-15 Sentence 1 - famine
       v16a Accusation 2 - idolatry from Ahab
       v16b Sentence 2 - desolation, exile

The mountain / high places theme

Micah uses the common understanding of holy mountains, or high places, which were places
of worship for pagan idolatry, but God also had his holy mountain in Jerusalem. “The Lord will
come down and tread on the high places of the earth”
(1:3), “the mountains will melt ... like wax in the fire” (1:4), because of the transgression of Israel. The transgression of Israel was Samaria, where the golden calves were worshipped, and the high place of Judah is Jerusalem (1:5).

He predicts that Jerusalem will become a heap of ruins, the mountain of the house a wooded
height (3:12), and calls the people to “Rise, plead your case before the mountains” (6:1), calling the mountains as witnesses against the people. Micah creates a picture of Yahweh coming and treading across the mountains, crushing the pagan sanctuaries under his feet.

After the judgement, he promises hope, that, “The mountain of the Lord's house shall be
established ... People and nations shall stream to it, saying: "Come, let us go up to the mountain of the Lord ..."
(4:1). The former dominion shall come to the hill of daughter Zion (4:8), and their boundary will be far extended, from mountain to mountain (7:12).

Message of the book

Micah is preoccupied with the sufferings of his fellow countrymen in the agricultural areas who are being exploited by the rich landed nobility (6:12). He was not particularly concerned with the political situation. His message was to the common people, dealing with social injustice and
personal religion. He cries for social justice (as Amos 5:24), and he pleads for steadfast love (as Hosea 6:6).

No class of people were exempt from his prophetic word. Rulers, priests, prophets and people were all shown to be the cause of the religious, social and moral decay which had affected the heart of the nation (2:2,8-9,11, 3:1-3,5,11). Carnal judges, corrupt priests and false prophets, who oppressed the poor, were all condemned under God's coming judgement (3:12, 4:10, 6:16). Hating false religiosity, he exposed the futility of the religious observances which continued through all the corruption, injustice and inhumanity (6:7-8). Through all this, Micah still brings the hope of restoration and the coming of the Shepherd-King Messiah from Bethlehem.

This is the heart of his message: "He has shown you, O man, what is good, and what does the Lord require of you but to do justice, and to love kindness (mercy), and to walk humbly with your God". (6:8)