College Press Bible Study Textbook Series
Micah 3:5-8
MERCENARY PROPHETS. Micah 3:5-8
RV. Thus saith Jehovah concerning the prophets that make my people to err; that bite with their teeth and cry, Peace; and whoso putteth not into their mouths, they even prepare war against him: therefore it shall be night unto you, that ye shall have no vision; and it shall be dark unto you, that ye shall not divine; and the sun shall go down upon the prophets, and the day shall be black over them. And the seers shall be put to shame, and the diviners confounded; yea, they shall all cover their lips; for there is no answer of God. But as for me, I am full of power by the Spirit of Jehovah, and of judgement, and of might, to declare unto Jacob his transgression, and to Israel his sin.
LXX. Thus saith the Lord concerning the prophets that lead my people astray, that bite with their teeth, and proclaim peace to them; and when nothing was put into their mouth, they raised up war against them: therefore there shall be night to you instead of a vision, and there shall be to you darkness instead of prophecy; and the sun shall go down upon the prophets, and the day shall be dark upon them. And the seers of night-visions shall be ashamed, and the prophets shall be laughed to scorn: and all the people shall speak against them, because there shall be none to hearken to them. Surely I will strengthen myself with the Spirit of the Lord, and of judgment, and of power, to declare to Jacob his transgressions, and to Israel his sins.
COMMENTS
As in the case of the arrogant misleaders (Micah 2:1-3) so with the unjust magistrates (Micah 3:1-4), the prophet relates their sin to false preachers.
(Micah 3:5) Here the accusation is direct. It is the false prophets who make my people err. By not denouncing sin, the false prophet encourages his hearers to sin. By flattering sinners in their sin and telling them that God is not really all that demanding, the false preacher leaves the impression desired by his hearers. Namely, that sin will not really be punished.
When these false prophets do denounce some action or inaction in their hearers it is not because of the righteous demands of God but because they do not feel their salaries are big enough. This reveals them to be part of the total picture of a decadent social order. They are as mercenary as those who lay awake nights figuring how to cheat someone of his possessions.
The agreeableness of the message of a false prophet was determined by the size of the bite placed in his mouth by his hearers. When the religious payola was sufficient they foretold peace and prosperity. When it was not, they sanctified war as a judgement against those who failed to feed them. In such pronouncements they sounded like the true prophet, but they would change their tune when the offerings were good. Such preaching is not calculated to bring about repentance on the part of the hearer.
(Micah 3:6) Micah's warning concerning such despicable practices on the part of those who claim to speak for God is that the light of God will be withheld from them. There will be no vision. The implication is clear, for where there is no vision, the people perish. (Proverbs 29:18)
The calamities which Micah has predicted for Israel and Judah will be shared by the false preachers as well as the social and official misleaders. When the calamity strikes they will no longer be able to claim to speak for God. When the judgements of God come, as they have promised His judgements will not come. when it is learned that God is not, after all, the tolerant benevolent benefactor the false teachers have made Him out to be, but rather the God of the covenant demanding faithful obedience to His will and His law, no one will listen any longer to those who made Him out to be what their hearers hoped He was.
(Micah 3:7) In that day of judgement, the false seers will be put to shame and confounded. Everything of which they have been warned will have come to pass. the laxity of judgement on the part of God which they have predicted will be shown for what it is. wishful thinking.
They will be put to shame. The covering of the lips may be explained in one of several figures. In the custom of the day, the moustache and beard were matters of great pride. The covering of them was an act expressing shame.
Another reference to the covering of the lips is found in Leviticus 13:45. There the command is that the leper is to cover his upper lip and cry unclean unclean. This was one of the laws of God pertaining to hygiene. In Micah 3:7 the implication seems to be that spiritual and moral infection being spread by the false prophet will finally be stopped when the calamity predicted by Micah finally stops their mouths.
In verse eight, Micah contrasts himself, as a true prophet to the false prophets he has just denounced. Three things characterize him. He has within himself the POWER of God's Spirit, without which no one can speak accurately and effectively concerning the will of God. (Cp. Acts 1:5; Acts 1:8)
He possesses JUDGEMENT, i.e. a sense of justice which moves him to speak the truth no matter how unpopular as opposed to the false prophet whose motivation was money.
He possesses MIGHT or courage to say what needs saying in the face of ridicule and even persecution. (Cp. 2 Timothy 1:7)
He possesses these three graces to declare unto Jacob his transgression, and unto Israel his sin. Jacob and Israel originally referred to the same individual. Jacob was his name before God confirmed to him the everlasting covenant. Israel was his covenant name. Micah apparently intends to distinguish here between the physical descendants of Jacob and the faithful covenant people among them to whom he refers by the covenant name, Israel.
Transgression is a specific term for the deliberate infraction of God's law. For these deliberate transgressions Micah has the power and the judgement and the might to speak out against those unfaithful to the covenant. Sin is a more general term. Even those who were faithful to the covenant were not free from sin completely. The prophet also has the power and the judgement and the might to speak to the covenant people whenever necessary.
One can scarcely read this denunciation of false and mercenary preachers without being aware of the present religious climate of our day. I have before me as I write the most recent publication of COCU (the Consultation On Church Unity). It is entitled A Plan of Union. Its authors make bold to claim that what they are doing in their eccumenical designs and ambitions is led by the Spirit of God. They claim the enlightenment of the Holy Spirit while they are denying the same to the writers of the Bible. They are teaching theology and proposing practices which are diametrically opposed to the Scriptural teaching and order of things in the church. One suspects their motivation, like that of those false prophets of whom Micah spoke, is something less than the selfless desire to see God's people do God's will.
One does not have to be a prophet of doom to foresee the possible collapse of our culture which is following the lead of such men. Just as those who misled the eighth century Jews into believing that God would not exact judgement against the followers of false teachers, so these twentieth century clergymen have denied the judgements of God. If our culture should collapse it will owe much of its failure to the teaching of these men. And, in that day as in the day of Judah's fall, the false prophet will be shown for what he is.
Chapter VIIIQuestions
Third Cycle
1.
Discuss Micah's concern for the covenant in light of his plea in Micah 3:1-4.
2.
Discuss the concept of absolute good and evil in contrast with modern situation ethics (new morality). Micah 2:1 -ff
3.
What is meant by pluch off their skin and flesh from their bones (Micah 2:2(b)-3)?
4.
Discuss the will of God as the only natural and proper standard of all that is right.
5.
Discuss ways to penetrate the layers of ignorance in modern philosophies with the truth of God's sovereignty.
6.
Are the prophetic warnings of the consequences of loving evil and hating good relevant to our current moral revolution?
7.
What three classes of people does Micah denounce? (Micah 2:1-3; Micah 3:1-5)
8.
What specific class of leaders are accused of making the people to err?
9.
What seems to have been the chief concern of the false prophets?
10.
What is God's warning to mercenary prophets?
11.
Comment on the idea that God is a tolerant benevolent benefactor.
12.
What is to be the fate of the false prophets in the day of the judgement against the wicked nations as pronounced by Micah?
13.
What three things characterize Micah as a true prophet as opposed to the false prophets?
14.
Compare the false prophet syndrome of Micah's day with our present religious climate in America.
15.
What is the relationship between false religious teaching and the cultural collapse of a civilization?
16.
What are the specific sins with which Micah charges the wealthy, the false prophet, the magistrates, the political officials?
17.
False teaching is always recognizable by its emphasis on the ____________ of God accompanied by a denial of His ____________.
18.
The term head of Jacob calls attention to ____________.
19.
Rulers of the house of Israel refers to ____________.