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												Verse 1Micah 1:1. In the days of Jotham, 
												Ahaz, and Hezekiah — Micah is 
												thought to have prophesied about 
												sixteen years in Jotham’s time, 
												as many under Ahaz, and fourteen 
												under Hezekiah: in all, 
												forty-six years. And he survived 
												the captivity of Israel ten 
												years, which he lamented as well 
												as foretold. Which he saw 
												concerning Samaria and Jerusalem 
												— Concerning both the kingdoms 
												of Israel and Judah, whereof 
												Samaria and Jerusalem were the 
												capital cities. It is said, 
												Which he saw, &c., because the 
												prophets having the general name 
												of seers, every kind of 
												prophecy, in whatever way 
												delivered, seems to have been 
												generally called a vision.
 
 Verses 2-4
 Micah 1:2-4. Hear, all ye people 
												— All ye of Israel and Judah. 
												Hearken, O earth — Or, O land, 
												[of Israel:] and all that 
												therein is — That is, all its 
												inhabitants. Let the Lord be 
												witness against you — “I call 
												him to witness, that I have 
												forewarned you of the judgments 
												that hang over your heads, 
												unless you speedily repent. And 
												he himself will become a witness 
												against you, and convince you of 
												your sins in such a manner that 
												you shall not be able to deny 
												the charge.” The Lord from his 
												holy temple — Heaven, his holy 
												habitation. The Lord cometh 
												forth out of his place — God is 
												said, in Scripture, to come out 
												of his place, or heaven, when he 
												makes his judgments or mercies 
												to be remarkably conspicuous, by 
												visible effects on the earth. 
												And will tread upon the high 
												places of the earth — He will 
												cause places of the greatest 
												strength to be destroyed, and 
												men of the highest rank to be 
												brought down. And the mountains 
												shall be molten under him, &c. — 
												An allusion to God’s coming down 
												upon mount Sinai, when thunder 
												and lightning shook the 
												mountain, and violent rains, 
												which accompanied this tempest, 
												made the hills look as if they 
												were melted down. Or the words 
												may be referred to the general 
												judgment, of which all 
												particular judgments are an 
												earnest, when the heavens and 
												the earth shall be dissolved at 
												Christ’s appearing.
 
 Verse 5
 Micah 1:5. For the transgression 
												of Jacob — That is, of the sons 
												of Jacob; for the many 
												transgressions committed among 
												them; is all this — All these 
												many, great, and irresistible 
												judgments of God foretold and 
												executed. What is the 
												transgression of Jacob — Where 
												is the chief cause of Israel’s 
												sin and apostacy? Is it not 
												Samaria — Is it not in that 
												city, the chief seat of the 
												kingdom, the residence of the 
												king and his princes, who have 
												set up the idolatry of the 
												golden calves, and made it the 
												established religion of the 
												kingdom? What are the high 
												places of Judah, &c. — Doth not 
												the idolatrous worship, 
												practised in the high places of 
												Judah, receive its chief 
												encouragement from the city of 
												Jerusalem, even from Ahaz, and 
												the great men who there join 
												with him in that idolatry?
 
 Verse 6-7
 Micah 1:6-7. Therefore I will 
												make Samaria as a heap — A heap 
												of ruins. And as plantings of a 
												vineyard — As in planting 
												vineyards men dig the earth, and 
												cast it up in hillocks, so shall 
												they make this city. The Vulgate 
												reads, I will make Samaria as a 
												heap of stones in a field, when 
												a vineyard is planted. I will 
												pour down the stones thereof, 
												&c. — The stones of it shall be 
												tumbled down, from the lofty 
												eminence on which it is 
												situated, into the valley 
												beneath, and shall leave the 
												foundations thereof naked and 
												bare. All this, and what 
												follows, was fulfilled by 
												Shalmaneser, who made a conquest 
												of Samaria. And all the graven 
												images thereof — Whether made of 
												gold, silver, brass, wood, or 
												stone; shall be beaten to pieces 
												— Shall be pulled out of their 
												chapels, shrines, or 
												repositories, by their 
												conquering enemies, and shall be 
												trampled upon and broken, either 
												out of contempt, or that the 
												rich materials of which they are 
												made may be carried away. And 
												all the hires thereof shall be 
												burned with fire — The rich 
												gifts, given for the honour and 
												service of the idols by the 
												deceived idolaters, shall be 
												consumed. This seems to be 
												spoken of the gifts sent to 
												their temple by the Assyrians, 
												whose worship they imitated. For 
												she gathered it of the hire of a 
												harlot, &c. — She got it by the 
												gifts of idolaters, and it shall 
												return to those idolaters again.
 
 Verse 8-9
 Micah 1:8-9. Therefore I will 
												wail and howl — I will mourn and 
												lament. I will go stripped and 
												naked — That is, without an 
												upper garment; or with garments 
												rent and torn. This would fitly 
												denote the naked condition to 
												which the ten tribes were to be 
												reduced by their enemies. I will 
												make a wailing like dragons — 
												The word rendered dragons, 
												according to Pocock on the 
												place, may “signify a kind of 
												wild beast like a dog, between a 
												dog and a fox, or a wolf and a 
												fox, which the Arabians, from 
												the noise which they make, call 
												Ebn Awi, (filius Eheu,) and our 
												English travellers jackals; 
												which, abiding in the fields and 
												waste places, make in the night 
												a lamentable, howling noise:” 
												see Encycl. Brit. And mourning 
												as the owls — Or rather, 
												ostriches: see note on Job 
												30:29. “It is affirmed by 
												travellers of good credit,” says 
												Pocock, “that ostriches make a 
												fearful, screeching, lamentable 
												noise.” Shaw also observes, that 
												“during the lonesome part of the 
												night, they often make a very 
												doleful and hideous noise;” and 
												that he had “often heard them 
												groan, as if they were in the 
												greatest agonies.” For her wound 
												is incurable — The wound of 
												Samaria and Israel, namely, 
												their own sins and God’s just 
												displeasure: the calamities 
												coming upon them will end in 
												their destruction: nothing can 
												prevent it. It is come even unto 
												Judah — The contagion of her 
												sins, and the indignation of God 
												against them, have reached to 
												Judah also, yea, to Jerusalem. 
												This was accordingly fulfilled: 
												for a few years after the 
												Assyrians had destroyed Samaria, 
												and spoiled all the land of 
												Israel, their conquering army, 
												led by Sennacherib, entered the 
												kingdom of Judah, and took all 
												the fenced cities; and a part of 
												it, termed a great host, was 
												sent up to the gates of 
												Jerusalem, as is related, 2 
												Kings 18:17.
 
 Verses 10-12
 Micah 1:10-12. Declare ye it not 
												in Gath — Lest the Philistines 
												triumph. The words seem to be 
												taken out of David s lamentation 
												over Saul and Jonathan, 2 Samuel 
												1:20, where see the note. Weep 
												ye not at all — Or, weep ye not 
												with loud weeping, as Archbishop 
												Newcome renders it. Do not make 
												any loud lamentations, lest the 
												evil tidings be spread. In the 
												house of Aphrah roll thyself in 
												the dust — Or, wallow in the 
												ashes, as was commonly practised 
												in times of great mourning. The 
												word Aphrah signifies dust; and 
												the prophet, it is likely, puts 
												it here for Ophrah, a town in 
												the tribe of Benjamin, that the 
												name might better suit their 
												present condition. Pass ye away, 
												thou inhabitant of Saphir — 
												Houbigant says that Eusebius 
												places this city, the name of 
												which signifies fair, or 
												elegant, in the tribe of Judah, 
												between Eleutheropolis and 
												Askelon. Some think, however, 
												that Saphir is not a proper 
												name, and that there was no 
												place so called in Judea; but 
												that the clause ought to be 
												rendered, Pass away, thou 
												inhabitant of a delightful 
												place, that is, Samaria, which 
												was very pleasantly situated. 
												The prophet here threatens the 
												inhabitants of that place that 
												they should go into captivity, 
												in a way very unsuitable to 
												their former softness and 
												luxury, even stripped by the 
												conquering enemy, and without so 
												much as a covering to hide their 
												nakedness. The inhabitant of 
												Zaanan — A place in the tribe of 
												Judah, called Zenan, Joshua 
												15:37; came not forth in the 
												mourning of Beth-ezel — “There 
												was no burial of her dead with 
												solemn mourning out of the 
												precincts of her city, but she 
												was besieged and put to the 
												sword.” — Newcome. Or, the 
												meaning may be, the inhabitants 
												of Zaanan were so much concerned 
												to provide for their own safety, 
												that they took no notice of the 
												mournful condition of their near 
												neighbour Beth-ezel, which seems 
												to have been a place near 
												Jerusalem, termed Azal, 
												Zechariah 14:5. Grotius, 
												however, supposes Zaanan to 
												denote Zion, and Beth-ezel to 
												signify Beth-el, called here by 
												another name, importing the 
												house of separation, because it 
												was the principal seat of 
												idolatrous worship. He shall 
												receive of you his standing — 
												The standing, or encamping of an 
												army against the city; that is, 
												the enemy shall encamp among 
												you, shall stand on your ground, 
												so that you will have no 
												opportunity of coming out to the 
												help of your neighbours. For the 
												inhabitant of Maroth — A town in 
												Judea, (the same probably that 
												is called Maarath, Joshua 
												15:59,) waited, &c. — Or rather, 
												as the words may be translated, 
												Although the inhabitant of 
												Maroth waited for good, yet evil 
												came, &c., unto the gate of 
												Jerusalem — Such a calamity as 
												stopped not at Maroth, but 
												reached even to Jerusalem. By 
												Maroth, which signifies 
												bitterness, or trouble, Grotius 
												understands Ramah, or, expressed 
												as it often is in the plural, 
												Ramoth, a place in the tribe of 
												Benjamin, near Beth-lehem, and 
												not far from Jerusalem.
 
 Verses 13-15
 Micah 1:13-15. O thou inhabitant 
												of Lachish — This was a strong 
												fortress in the tribe of Judah: 
												see Joshua 15:39. Bind the 
												chariot to the swift beast — In 
												order to flee from the 
												approaching enemy. Lachish was 
												one of the first cities that 
												Sennacherib besieged, when he 
												invaded Judea. She is the 
												beginning of the sin to the 
												daughter of Zion — She was the 
												first among the cities of Judah 
												which practised those idolatries 
												which the kings and people of 
												Israel had begun. Therefore 
												shalt thou give presents to 
												Moresheth-gath — Or, to 
												Moresheth of Gath; that is, to 
												the Philistines of that country, 
												either to defend thee against 
												the enemy, or to receive thee 
												under their protection. The 
												houses of Achzib shall be a lie 
												to the kings of Israel — The 
												word Achzib signifies a lie. 
												There was a town of that name in 
												the tribe of Judah, mentioned 
												Joshua 15:44. This place, the 
												prophet here foretels, will 
												answer its name, and disappoint 
												the kings of Israel that 
												depended upon its strength and 
												assistance: see 2 Chronicles 
												21:3; and 2 Chronicles 28:19. 
												Israel is sometimes used for 
												Judah, and so it may probably be 
												taken here. Yet will I bring an 
												heir unto thee, O inhabitant of 
												Mareshah — This was another town 
												belonging to Judah, mentioned 
												Joshua 15:44. The name signifies 
												an inheritance; so here, by way 
												of allusion, it is said, that a 
												new heir or master should come 
												and take possession of it, 
												namely, a conquering enemy. He 
												shall come unto Adullam the 
												glory of Israel — Or, The glory 
												of Israel shall come to Adullam; 
												the Assyrians, whom Israel once 
												gloried in as their ally, shall 
												come to Adullam. This was a town 
												in Judah not far from Lachish: 
												see Joshua 15:35. Some think the 
												meaning of this clause is, that 
												the chief men of Israel should 
												be forced to hide themselves 
												from their enemies in the cave 
												of Adullam, as David did when he 
												fled from Saul, 1 Samuel 23.
 
 Verse 16
 Micah 1:16. Make thee bald — O 
												Judah and Israel, tear off thy 
												hair; and poll thee — Shave what 
												thou canst not tear off; for thy 
												delicate children, &c. — For the 
												loss of them, some being slain, 
												others starved or swept away by 
												pestilence, and the residue 
												carried into captivity. Cutting 
												the hair, or shaving it close, 
												were expressions of mourning and 
												lamentation anciently used among 
												most nations. Enlarge thy 
												baldness as the eagle — When she 
												moults her feathers; for they 
												are gone into captivity, &c. — 
												By these phrases the prophet 
												signifies, that the calamity 
												would be so great as to deserve 
												the strongest expressions of 
												grief.
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