CHAPTER 1
Mic 1:1-16.
GOD'S
WRATH AGAINST
SAMARIA AND
JUDAH; THE
FORMER
IS TO
BE
OVERTHROWN;
SUCH
JUDGMENTS IN
PROSPECT
CALL FOR
MOURNING.
2. all that therein is--Hebrew, "whatever fills it."
Micaiah, son of Imlah, our prophet's namesake, begins his prophecy
similarly, "Hearken, O people, every one of you." Micah designedly uses
the same preface, implying that his ministrations are a continuation of
his predecessor's of the same name. Both probably had before their
mind Moses' similar attestation of heaven and earth in a like case
(De 31:28; 32:1;
compare
Isa 1:2).
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God be witness against you--namely, that none of you can say, when the
time of your punishment shall come, that you were not forewarned. The
punishment denounced is stated in
Mic 1:3,
&c.
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from his holy temple--that is, heaven
(1Ki 8:30;
Ps 11:4;
Jon 2:7;
compare
Ro 1:18).
3. tread upon the high places of the earth--He shall destroy the
fortified heights (compare
De 32:13; 33:29)
[GROTIUS].
4. Imagery from earthquakes and volcanic agency, to describe the
terrors which attend Jehovah's coming in judgment (compare
Jud 5:5).
Neither men of high degree, as the mountains, nor men of low degree, as
the valleys, can secure themselves or their land from the judgments of
God.
-
as wax--
(Ps 97:5;
compare
Isa 64:1-3).
The third clause, "as wax," &c., answers to the first in the
parallelism, "the mountains shall be molten"; the fourth, "as the
waters," &c., to the second, "the valleys shall be cleft." As wax melts
by fire, so the mountains before God, at His approach; and as waters
poured down a steep cannot stand but are diffused abroad, so the
valleys shall be cleft before Jehovah.
5. For the transgression of Jacob is all this--All these terrors
attending Jehovah's coming are caused by the sins of Jacob or Israel,
that is, the whole people.
-
What is the transgression of Jacob?--Taking up the question often in
the mouths of the people when reproved, "What is our transgression?"
(compare
Mal 1:6, 7),
He answers, Is it not Samaria? Is not that city (the seat of the
calf-worship) the cause of Jacob's apostasy
(1Ki 14:16;
15:26, 34; 16:13, 19, 25, 30)?
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and what are the high places of Judah?--What city is the cause of the
idolatries on the high places of Judah? Is it not Jerusalem (compare
2Ki 18:4)?
6. Samaria's punishment is mentioned first, as it was to fall before
Jerusalem.
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as an heap of the field--
(Mic 3:12).
Such a heap of stones and rubbish as is gathered out of fields, to
clear them
(Ho 12:11).
Palestine is of a soil abounding in stones, which are gathered out
before the vines are planted
(Isa 5:2).
-
as plantings of a vineyard--as a place where vines are planted.
Vineyards were cultivated on the sides of hills exposed to the sun. The
hill on which Samaria was built by Omri, had been, doubtless, planted
with vines originally; now it is to be reduced again to its original
state
(1Ki 16:24).
-
pour down--dash down the stones of the city into the valley
beneath. A graphic picture of the present appearance of the ruins,
which is as though "the buildings of the ancient city had been thrown
down from the brow of the hill"
[Scottish Mission of Inquiry, pp. 293,294].
-
discover the foundations--destroy it so utterly as to lay bare its
foundations
(Eze 13:14).
Samaria was destroyed by Shalmaneser.
7. all the hires--the wealth which Israel boasted of receiving from
her idols as the "rewards" or "hire" for worshipping them
(Ho 2:5, 12).
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idols . . . will I . . . desolate--that is, give them up to the foe
to strip off the silver and gold with which they are overlaid.
-
she gathered it of the hire of an harlot, and they shall return to the
hire of an harlot--Israel gathered (made for herself) her idols from
the gold and silver received from false gods, as she thought, the "hire"
of her worshipping them; and they shall again become what they had been
before, the hire of spiritual harlotry, that is, the prosperity of the
foe, who also being worshippers of idols will ascribe the acquisition to
their idols [MAURER].
GROTIUS explains it,
The offerings sent to Israel's temple by the Assyrians, whose idolatry
Israel adopted, shall go back to the Assyrians, her teachers in
idolatry, as the hire or fee for having taught it. The image of a
harlot's hire for the supposed temporal reward of spiritual
fornication, is more common in Scripture
(Ho 9:1).
8. Therefore I will wail--The prophet first shows how the coming
judgment affects himself, in order that he might affect the minds of his
countrymen similarly.
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stripped--that is, of shoes, or sandals, as the Septuagint translates. Otherwise "naked" would be a tautology.
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naked--"Naked" means divested of the upper garment
(Isa 20:2).
"Naked and barefoot," the sign of mourning
(2Sa 15:30).
The prophet's upper garment was usually rough and coarse-haired
(2Ki 1:8;
Zec 13:4).
-
like the dragons--so JEROME. Rather, "the
wild dogs," jackals or wolves, which wail like an infant when in
distress or alone [MAURER]. (See on
Job 30:29).
-
owls--rather, "ostriches," which give a shrill and long-drawn,
sigh-like cry, especially at night.
9. wound . . . incurable--Her case, politically and
morally, is desperate
(Jer 8:22).
-
it is come--the wound, or impending calamity (compare
Isa 10:28).
-
he is come . . . even to Jerusalem--The evil is no longer limited to
Israel. The prophet foresees Sennacherib coming even "to the gate" of
the principal city. The use of "it" and "he" is appropriately distinct.
"It," the calamity, "came unto" Judah, many of the inhabitants of which
suffered, but did not reach the citizens of Jerusalem, "the gate" of
which the foe ("he") "came unto," but did not enter
(Isa 36:1;37:33-37).
10. Declare ye it not at Gath--on the borders of Judea, one of the
five cities of the Philistines, who would exult at the calamity of the
Hebrews
(2Sa 1:20).
Gratify not those who exult over the falls of the Israel of God.
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weep ye not at all--Do not betray your inward sorrow by outward
weeping, within the cognizance of the enemy, lest they should exult at
it. RELAND translates, "Weep not in Acco," that is, Ptolemais, now
St. Jean d'Acre, near the foot of Mount Carmel; allotted to Asher, but
never occupied by that tribe
(Jud 1:31);
Acco's inhabitants would, therefore, like Gath's, rejoice at Israel's
disaster. Thus the parallelism is best carried out in all the three
clauses of the verse, and there is a similar play on sounds in each, in
the Hebrew Gath, resembling in sound the Hebrew for
"declare"; Acco, resembling the Hebrew for "weep"; and
Aphrah, meaning "dust." While the Hebrews were not to expose
their misery to foreigners, they ought to bewail it in their own
cities, for example, Aphrah or Ophrah
(Jos 18:23;
1Sa 13:17),
in the tribe of Benjamin. To "roll in the dust" marked deep sorrow
(Jer 6:26;
Eze 27:30).
11. Pass ye away--that is, Thou shall go into captivity.
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inhabitant of Saphir--a village amidst the hills of Judah, between
Eleutheropolis and Ascalon, called so, from the Hebrew word for
"beauty." Though thy name be "beauty," which heretofore was thy
characteristic, thou shalt have thy "shame" made "naked." This city
shall be dismantled of its walls, which are the garments, as it were, of
cities; its citizens also shall be hurried into captivity, with persons
exposed
(Isa 47:3;
Eze 16:37;
Ho 2:10).
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the inhabitant of Zaanan came not forth--Its inhabitants did not
come forth to console the people of Beth-ezel in their mourning, because
the calamity was universal; none was exempt from it (compare
Jer 6:25).
"Zaanan" is the same as Zenan, in Judah
(Jos 15:37),
meaning the "place of flocks." The form of the name used is made like
the Hebrew for "came forth." Though in name seeming to imply
that thou dost come forth, thou "camest not forth."
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Beth-ezel--perhaps Azal
(Zec 14:5),
near Jerusalem. It means a "house on the side," or "near." Though so
near, as its name implies, to Zaanan, Beth-ezel received no succor
or sympathy from Zaanan.
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he shall receive of you his standing--"he," that is, the foe; "his
standing," that is, his sustenance
[PISCATOR]. Or, "he shall be caused a
delay by you, Zaanan." He shall be brought to a stand for a time in
besieging you; hence it is said just before, "Zaanan came not forth,"
that is, shut herself up within her walls to withstand a siege. But it
was only for a time. She, too, fell like Beth-ezel before her
[VATABLUS].
MAURER construes thus: "The inhabitant of Zaanan came not
forth; the mourning of Beth-ezel takes away from you her shelter."
Though Beth-ezel be at your side (that is, near), according to her
name, yet as she also mourns under the oppression of the foe, she cannot
give you shelter, or be at your side as a helper (as her name might
lead you to expect), if you come forth and be intercepted by him from
returning to Zaanan.
12. Maroth--possibly the same as Maarath
(Jos 15:59).
Perhaps a different town, lying between the previously mentioned towns
and the capital, and one of those plundered by Rab-shakeh on his way to
it.
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waited carefully for good--that is, for better fortune, but in vain
[CALVIN].
GESENIUS translates, "is grieved for her goods," "taken
away" from her. This accords with the meaning of Maroth, "bitterness,"
to which allusion is made in "is grieved." But the antithesis favors
English Version, "waited carefully (that is, anxiously) for
good, but evil came down."
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from the Lord--not from chance.
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unto the gate of Jerusalem--after the other cities of Judah have been
taken.
13. "Bind the chariot to the swift steed," in order by a hasty
flight to escape the invading foe. Compare Note, see on
Isa 36:2,
on "Lachish," at which Sennacherib fixed his headquarters
(2Ki 18:14, 17;
Jer 34:7).
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she is the beginning of the sin to . . . Zion--Lachish was the first
of the cities of Judah, according to this passage, to introduce the
worship of false gods, imitating what Jeroboam had introduced in Israel.
As lying near the border of the north kingdom, Lachish was first to be
infected by its idolatry, which thence spread to Jerusalem.
14. shalt thou give presents to Moresheth-gath--that its inhabitants
may send thee help.
MAURER explains it, "thou shalt give a writing of
renunciation to Moresheth-gath," that is, thou shalt renounce all claim
to it, being compelled to yield it up to the foe. "Thou," that is,
Judah. "Israel" in this verse is used for the kingdom of Judah, which
was the chief representative of the whole nation of Israel.
Moresheth-gath is so called because it had fallen for a time under the
power of the neighboring Philistines of Gath. It was the native town
of Micah
(Mic 1:1).
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Achzib--meaning "lying." Achzib, as its name implies, shall prove a
"lie to . . . Israel," that is, shall disappoint Israel's hopes of
succor from her (compare
Job 6:15-20;
Jer 15:18).
Achzib was in Judah between Keilah and Mareshah
(Jos 15:44).
Perhaps the same as Chezib
(Ge 38:5).
15. Yet will I bring an heir unto thee--rather, "the heir." As
thou art now occupied by possessors who expelled the former inhabitants,
so will I bring "yet" again the new possessor, namely, the
Assyrian foe. Other heirs will supplant us in every inheritance but that
of heaven. There is a play upon the meaning of Mareshah, "an
inheritance": there shall come the new heir of the inheritance.
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Adullam the glory of Israel--so called as being superior in
situation; when it and the neighboring cities fell, Israel's glory was
gone. MAURER, as the Margin, translates,
"the glory of Israel" (her chief citizens: answering to "thy delicate
children,"
Mic 1:16)
"shall come in flight to Adullam." English Version better
preserves the parallelism, "the heir" in the first clause answering to
"he" in the second.
16. Make thee bald, &c.--a token of deep mourning
(Ezr 9:3;
Job 1:20).
Mourn, O land%%