Micah lived in a
small country town just outside of Jerusalem about 700 years before the time of
Christ. He lived in the same time period as Isaiah and Hosea and was actually a
good friend of Isaiah’s.
Jordan says, “Micah
lived close to the big city but he’s an old country boy. His nature—just his
mannerism as you read his book—he’s blunt. He’s direct. He’s terse. He’s a
plain-speaking kind of a guy. He’s a no-nonsense, straight-arrow kind of a
person and when you read his book, you read that. There’s not a lot of
flowery prose, not a lot of diversion. It’s, ‘Let’s get right to the point;
here’s the issue,’ and bang, bang, bang, there it is.
“Micah had one great
passion as you read his book; he was a lover of the common man. As I said, I
think about him as a country boy. He didn’t like high falutin kind of elitism.
He loved the common people of Israel.
“He hated religious
corruption. He hated the political corruption that engulfed his nation. He
hated people taking advantage of other people and, as you read through his
book, there’s a scathing denunciation of the political, economic and religious
corruption that gripped the nation Israel at the time.
“Micah lived in a
world of tremendous danger, filled with huge international problems. Sometimes
we think of ourselves as the only people who ever lived on the stage of
international history. It wasn’t true. Israel at that time lived in a world of
tremendous international tension. They actually lived in the midst of three
warring nations—Assyria to the east of them, Egypt to the south of them and the
Philistines to the west of them.
“And Israel had
entered into an unholy alliance, as it were, with the Assyrians. Israel had
become really a facile state paying tribute to Assyria in order to be protected
from the Philistines and the Egyptians, and there’s tremendous political
tension between the nations in that territory.
“As to the tremendous
religious corruption inside of the nation, Micah chides the priests taking
bribes. In chapter 3:11 is a classic verse: ‘The heads thereof judge for
reward, and the priests thereof teach for hire, and the prophets thereof divine
for money: yet will they lean upon the LORD, and say, Is not the LORD among us?
none evil can come upon us.’
“He’s saying, ‘The
political leaders, why they’ve just got their hands out for graft. The priests,
the prophets are willing to say anything anybody wants them to say if they give
them the money for it.’
“Money had corrupted
them, but they were all the time saying, ‘God’s with us; we’re God’s people.”
And, oh, how Micah went after that and denounced those things. But that’s the
world he lived in.
“It
was a world of moral chaos, which always follows the kind of things we just
described—people ripping off the poor, the leaders taking the bribes, cheating.
The merchants, the leaders and the priests; even people’s own family members
couldn’t be trusted to tell the truth and do what’s right.
“Micah warns them
about the judgment of God that’s going to come upon the nation and he doesn’t
pull any punches. Right in the middle of all this, though, because the book is
really sort of negative, is a delightful passage that is, when you study Old
Testament theology and doctrine, Micah 6, especially in verse 8, is held up as
the height of scriptural ethic; it’s sort of the heart of the divine ethic of
the scripture.”
*****
Verse 8 reads, “He
hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the LORD require of thee,
but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?”
Jordan says, “It’s a
fascinating study in the will and the desire of God expressed in human terms in
the nation Israel; the heart of what God was looking for when He created man to
be His image, His representative.
At the beginning of
chapter 6, Micah pleads with Israel, “Hear ye now what the LORD saith; Arise,
contend thou before the mountains, and let the hills hear thy voice.
[2] Hear ye, O mountains, the LORD's controversy, and ye strong foundations of the earth: for the LORD hath a controversy with his people, and he will plead with Israel.
[3] O my people, what have I done unto thee? and wherein have I wearied thee? testify against me.”
[2] Hear ye, O mountains, the LORD's controversy, and ye strong foundations of the earth: for the LORD hath a controversy with his people, and he will plead with Israel.
[3] O my people, what have I done unto thee? and wherein have I wearied thee? testify against me.”
Jordan explains, “The
Lord talks about the earth, and the mountains, and you know there’s that
sonic resonance in creation where everything has the ability to have a sound to
it. But when He talks about that, He’s talking more in metaphorical terms .
. . it’s like my dad used to say about talking to himself: ‘I like to have an
intelligent conversation every now and then.’
“When God talks to
mountains and the earth what He’s doing is—‘I have a purpose for the earth. I
have a purpose for creation and that purpose finds its channel of expression in
the nation Israel.’
“God’s purpose for
creation—God’s purpose for man in creation was to rule over creation; subdue it
and have dominion over it. His purpose for man . . . the seed of the woman
became the seed of Abraham which became the nation Israel and God’s purpose for
man is vested in the nation Israel as His representative of mankind in the
earth.
“And so the
controversy he’s having is, ‘Here’s my controversy about everything in creation
and it all focuses on Israel.’ So he gathers all of creation. I mean, the
rocks would know what they were created for if they had brains or a mind or a
will . . . He’s putting a personification to them in the sense He knows the
purpose, and Israel knows the purpose for them; in fact, the heathen were told
about it.
“You won’t remember
all those events, but Israel would. And what God’s saying is rather than being
grateful for all He’d done for them, they’d taken advantage of Him. They turned
their back on Him and walked in their own way; walked in their own wisdom.
“They turned away
from His Word which He gave them and chose their own words and the words of
other gods.
“And
God’s saying to them, ‘Did I insult you?! What did I do to make you hate me?!
What did I do to make you turn away from me?! All I’ve ever done for you is
good things.
I redeemed you, I brought you out of Egypt, delivered you from satanic
captivity, got you across the Red Sea. I blessed you, gave you my Word, gave
you leaders . . .
‘My grace is
abundantly provided for you. You’ve seen my righteousness in action. You’ve
seen how that when the enemy came in—when Balak hired Balaam to curse you, what
did I do? I said, no you can’t curse them, you can only bless them. You’ve
literally seen my righteousness working for you in every case. So what’s the
problem? Why’ve you turned your back on me?’
(Editor’s
Note: To be continued . . .)
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