MICAH

MICAH
MICAH (Heb. מִיכָה), the sixth book in the collection known as the Twelve Minor Prophets within the subdivision "Later Prophets" of the second division of the Hebrew Bible (the Prophets). In the Septuagint translation, where the order varies, Micah usually comes immediately after Hosea and Amos. It is possible that the prophet's name is a hypocoristic of a name formulated as a rhetorical question. Mi-ka-yahu, "who is like YHW(H)" or Mi-ka-El, "Who is like God / El." An ostracon from Jerusalem from the late eighth or early seventh century attests the name Mk(y)hw (Ahituv, 23). -The Content of the Book The title (1:1) specifies the name, country, and date (in the days of Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah, kings of Judah in the eighth century) of Micah's prophecy "concerning Jerusalem and Samaria." This is followed by a diatribe against Israel and Samaria (1:2–7). Critics have suggested that verse 1:5b, dealing with the "cult places" (bamot) of Judah – which are hardly a concern of Micah – is a gloss inspired by 3:12. Others emend bamot to ḥattot, "sins." In the succeeding lamentation (1:8–16), over the birthplace of the prophet and the neighboring towns, misfortune strikes at the gates of Jerusalem (12) but does not pass beyond them. The prophetic "I" makes its first appearance in verse 15. In verse 16, as the form of the Hebrew verb shows, a female person is addressed; no doubt Daughter-Zion of verse 13, or, following the reading of some manuscripts of the Septuagint, "Fair Israel." In fact the "kings of Israel" did suffer a reverse at Achzib, as verse 14 indicates. In 2:1 the threat is no longer directed against cities but against those who, having dispossessed others and defrauded them of their holdings, shall themselves be dispossessed. This section of chapter 2 may be dealing with social injustices (8–12) or, like Hosea 5:9–11, with a territorial dispute between tribes. Note that it is a clan (mishpaḥah, 2:3), which has angered the Lord and it is a stranger who reaps the benefit of the vengeful spoliation, without right of repurchase. The key phrase is in verse 7: the Lord does not abandon Israel. The sense of the passage becomes clearer if the prophet is assumed to be warning the ministers of Judah, who wish to expand at the expense of Israel. From this the conclusion can be drawn that the Lord, the sole King, steps into the breach and gathers His people together despite Judah's policy. In a new soliloquy (3:1) the prophet personally attacks the "leaders" and "magistrates" of Israel (without any mention of kings) who ignore the law and devour each other in quarrels, which the prophet depicts figuratively as cannibalism, through which the people suffer. The prophets for their part mislead the people. In punishment, the Lord no longer provides them visions. Chapter 3 culminates in a prediction of the destruction of Jerusalem, corresponding to that of Samaria in 1:6. According to Jeremiah 26:18, this text had great repercussions, reaching the ear of Hezekiah and perhaps precipitating his reforms. The allusion to Jerusalem and Zion is followed by the insertion of the famous passage, "from Zion shall come forth Torah/ teaching/ law and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem," which appears also in Isaiah (2:2–4). The passage predicts the universal reign of peace, with the Lord issuing instructions on Mount Zion and settling disputes so that war will be unnecessary. (On the relation between the Micah and Isaiah oracles, Andersen and Freedman (413–25) cite no fewer than seven options.) After the profession of faith in 4:5 ("We walk in the name of the Lord, our God"), a new oracle announces the reign of the Lord, who assembles the crippled. Daughter-Zion regains her former sovereignty (vs. 8). Her present pangs are pangs of birth that augur well for the future when YHWH will redeem her. The section (5:1–5:5) on Beth-Lehem-Ephrathah appears to be a unity. Though the area is too small to be a fighting unit, from there the leader (moshel, the term "king" is avoided) of Israel will arise (cf. the Christian reading of this passage in Matt. 2:5–6). The allusion to a Davidide is clear, inasmuch as his wellsprings, or origins, can be traced from ancient times (5:1). The schism between Israel and Judah is compared to the abandonment of the Israelites by this Davidide until the day when she, presumably Daughter-Zion (4:10), who is destined to give birth does so. The leader presides over the ingathering, but here this is presented as a return of Judah to Israel (cf. Deut. 33:7). This shepherd is capable of organizing a coalition against Assyria of seven shepherds and eight nesikhim ("princes") and of assuring peace. This passage is therefore linked with the preceding one, as B. Renaud pointed out. It likewise is connected with the following verses: 6–8, where the remnant of Israel is seen as present in the midst of the nations as a sign of the Lord's blessing or curse. In contrast, chapter 5:9–14 returns to the theme of the extermination of idols (as in 1:7 against Samaria; cf. Isa. 2:6–22) with an allusion to the cities of the country (as in 1:10–15). This passage is linked associatively with chapter 6 by the repetition of the verb shama, "hear" (cf. 5:14) in 6:1. Here the presentation is in the form of a complaint (riv). The Lord recalls his acts of salvation, citing the exodus from Egypt led by Moses, Aaron, and Miriam (the only non-genealogical reference to Miriam outside the Pentateuch), and the plot of Balak and Balaam, which YHWH foiled. No response of the people has survived. The verses that follow are arguably among the most famous in the Bible. In vss. 6–7 we have a question modeled on the liturgy of entrance: "With what shall I come before YHWH, bow down to the god on high? Shall I come before him with burnt offerings, with calves sons of a year? Will YHWH be pleased with thousands of rams, with myriads of streams of oil? Shall I give my first born for my transgression, the fruit of my belly for my own sin?" Verse 8 replies that it has already been revealed to humans what is required of them: justice, mercy, and humility before the Lord. Chapter 6:9–16 is a new soliloquy to an unnamed town, and probably to a tribe. The resemblance to Amos 8:4–5 and the allusion in verse 16 to Omri and the house of Ahab make it probable that the passage alluded (at least originally) to Samaria. The tribe may be Ephraim, since in the oracles of Hosea and Isaiah the kingdom of the North dismembered by tiglath-pileser iii is called Ephraim (Isa. 9:7 (8).   The prophetic "I" again appears in 7:1 in a lamentation on civil discord (cf. 3:3; Isa. 10:17ff.). This "I" reappears from verse 7 onward where the prophet speaks in the name of Israel, which reproaches its "enemy" for having rejoiced at its downfall. It is probable that (as in 2:8) the enemy is in this case Judah, since the question raised by the "enemy": "Where is your God?" is the reproach of the Judahites against the Israelites who did not recognize the choice of the sanctuary at Zion. Verse 10b is reminiscent of 3:12 on the ruin of Jerusalem. Chapter 7:14–20 is a prayer imploring the Lord to become the shepherd of His people once again (the geographical terms are of the North, Carmel, Bashan, and Gilead, alienated in 733 B.C.E.) as He promised to Jacob and Abraham. This rare reference probably aimed at encompassing both Judah and Israel in the same gathering. -Composition The book is composed of independent but more or less connected sections. Ordinarily, these sections are re-divided into three: chapters 1–3 speak of condemnation, 4–5 of consolation, and 6–7 of a mixture of condemnation and consolation. The visions of consolation are generally attributed to the years following the Exile and are assumed to have been added to the original oracles of Micah at the time when the book was put together (Renaud). There are two objections to this view: (1) It disregards the importance of the kingdom of the North and its downfall in 722 in the religious thought of Israel. This strain in Micah was given great emphasis by F.C. Burkitt, O. Eissfeldt, and J.T. Willis; (2) It neglects the influence of the cultural traditions in the sanctuaries (including Jerusalem) on the prophetic oracles. E. Hammershaimb and B. Reicke have stressed this fact. In the ancient Orient, as at the beginning of the monarchy, prophecy announced good tidings rather than misfortune. But as Willis' survey of the numerous theories about Micah demonstrates, the history of the book's composition is far from settled. The unity, coherence, and attribution to the prophet are all debated. Where some scholars see artful redactional unity, others (e.g., Hillers) find no meaningful structure. Willis himself enumerates areas that need to be addressed. Among these are the text, which swarms with philological difficulties, and the criteria for the dating of passages. It is impossible to speak meaningfully about the theology of the book, if indeed it has one or several, apart from the questions of composition, arrangement, and redaction. There is general agreement though that the present book has a historical core in the eighth century, and that at least some of the prophecies are those of the prophet Micah referred to in Jeremiah 26:16–19, and confused with Michaiah son of Imlah in I Kings. 22–28. -The Prophet and His Time R. Weil emphasized the importance of historical events known from II Kings 20–22 for an understanding of Micah. His birthplace, Moresheth-Gath, near Lachish, is known as far back as the El-Amarna period (tablet 335:7). This region had suffered since the days of the Syro-Ephraimite war against Judah, which commenced under jotham (II Kings 15:37; cf. Micah 1:1 and probably 1:13) and continued up to the time of the Assyrian campaign against Gath and Ashdod in 733, 720 (the five nesikim of Micah 5:4 are reminiscent of the five Aramean "sheikhs" (Akkadian: nāsikāti) mentioned by the Assyrian king Sargon II (Fuchs, 147), and 712 (cf. Isa. 20). Meanwhile Samaria had fallen. Hezekiah, who had probably been associated in the kingship from 729/7, became in any case the sole king after 716/5. He shared the views of Micah (Jer. 26:18), who attacked the leaders of Jerusalem (but never the king), and his political activities disturbed Sargon. Perhaps it was at this time that the mission of Merodach-Baladan took place and the oracles on the deliverance of daughter-Zion were delivered, but this mission probably dates from 703, the time of the general revolt against Sennacherib which was to end in 701 with a new occupation of Lachish and the region. The rabbis held that Micah's prophecies were redacted and canonized by the Men of the Great Assembly (BB 15a; see great synagogue ). -The Theological Problem Micah 5 regards it as the will of YHWH that all Israel unite around the dynasty that issued from Beth-Lehem, where David was born. There are similarities in the theological teachings found in Micah and Isaiah: the fidelity of the Lord endures despite his "wrath" (Micah 7:9; Isa. 9:11, 16); He remains the light of the faithful (Micah 7:8; Isa. 10:17); He is King of Israel (Micah 4:7; Isa. 6:1); and He has chosen the Davidic dynasty for the salvation of the people (Micah 5:1; Isa. 7:1–9; 9:6). Finally, the theology of the book of Micah shares points in common with that of Hosea and deuteronomy when speaking of ḥesed ("mercy"; 7:18, 20), "the love of ḥesed" (6:8), and when it places mercy and humble submission to God above sacrifices (6:8; cf. Hos. 6:6). This prophet who, unlike the others, reveals himself as "full of strength, the spirit of YHWH, and justice and valor" takes on his shoulders the burden that the descendants of David should have assumed (Isa. 11:2–3). There are numerous word plays in the book: be-gat al taggidu …be-bet le-aprah apar … (1:10); akziv le-akzav (1:14); ha-yoresh … moreshah; ad adullam (1:15); titgodedi bat-gedud (4:14). The text of the book has not been well-preserved, with some passages unintelligible (e.g., 1:10–16; 2:6–11; 7:11–12). (Henri Cazelles / S. David Sperling (2nd ed.) -In the Aggadah According to one opinion, Micah was a contemporary of Isaiah (SOR 20; and Pes. 87b); according to another, he was one of the post-Exilic prophets (PdRK 16, 128b). The verse: "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?" (Micah 6:8) is a quintessence of the 613 commandments of the Bible (Mak. 24a). -BIBLIOGRAPHY: F.C. Burkitt, in: JBL, 45 (1926), 159–61; K. Elliger, in: ZDPV, 57 (1934), 81–152; R. Weil, in: RHR (1940), 146–61; H.L. Ginsberg, in: Eretz Israel, 3 (1954), 84; idem, in: JAOS, 88 (1968), 47–49; Pritchard, Texts, 286–7; H. Tadmor, in: Journal of Cuneiform   Studies, 12 (1958), 80–83; O. Eissfeldt, in: ZDMG, 112 (1962), 259–68; idem, Einleitung in das Alte Testament (19643, rev. ed.); B. Renaud, Structure et attaches littéraires de Michée IV–V (1964); E. Hammershaimb, Some Aspects of Old Testament Prophecy (1966); B. Reicke, in: HTR, 60 (1967), 349–67; C. Cazelles, in: Fourth World Congress of Jewish Studies, 1 (1967), 87–89; J.T. Willis, in: VT, 18 (1968), 529–41; Kaufmann Y., Religion, 395–8. IN THE AGGADAH: Ginzberg, Legends, index; I. Ḥasida, Ishei ha-Tanakh (1964), 260. ADD. BIBLIOGRAPHY: H. Woolf, Micah: A Commentary (1981); R. Smith, Micah-Malachi (Word; 1984), 1–60; D. Hillers, Micah (Hermeneia; 984); idem, in: ADB, 4:817–10; P. King, Amos, Hosea, MicahAn Archaeological Commentary (1988); S. Ahituv, Handbook of Ancient Hebrew Inscriptions (1992); A. Fuchs, Die Inschriften Sargons II. aus Khorsabad (1993); J.Willis, in: DBI, 2:150–52; F. Andersen and D. Freedman, Micah (AB; 2000), 33–99, extensive bibl.

Encyclopedia Judaica. 1971.

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  • Micah — 1 Micah 2 Micah 3 Micah 4 Micah 5 Micah 6 Micah 7 …   The King James version of the Bible

  • Micah — ist eine Form von Micha und der Vorname von: Micah Jenkins (1835–1864), amerikanischer Brigadegeneral im Sezessionskrieg Micah Richards (* 1988), englischer Fußballspieler Diese Seite ist eine Begriffsklärung …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Micah — m Biblical: Hebrew name meaning ‘who is like (Yahweh)?’, and thus a doublet of MICHAEL (SEE Michael). This was the name of a prophet, author of the book of the Bible that bears his name, and which dates from the late 8th century BC …   First names dictionary

  • Micah — masc. proper name, sixth of the Old Testament prophets, from Heb. Mikhah, short for Mikhayah, lit. who is like the Lord? First element identical to that in MICHAEL (Cf. Michael), for second element, see JAH (Cf. Jah) …   Etymology dictionary

  • Micah — [mī′kə] n. [Heb mīkhā(yah), lit., who is like (God)?] Bible 1. a Hebrew prophet of the 8th cent. B.C. 2. the book of his prophecies: abbrev. Mic or Mi …   English World dictionary

  • Micah — This article is about the given name. For other uses, see Micah (disambiguation). Micah (  /ˈmaɪ …   Wikipedia

  • Micah — This interesting surname derives from the hebrew male given name Micah meaning who is like the Lord , and was an alternative form of Michael which is ultimately from the Hebrew Micha el , the war cry of the Archangel Michael, meaning Who is like… …   Surnames reference

  • Micah — /muy keuh/, n. 1. a Minor Prophet of the 8th century B.C. 2. a book of the Bible bearing his name. Abbr.: Mic. 3. a male given name. * * * flourished 8th century BC One of the 12 Minor Prophets in the Bible, traditional author of the book of… …   Universalium

  • Micah — noun /ˈmʌɪkə/ a) A book of the Old Testament of Bible, and of the Tanakh. The word of the LORD that came to Micah the Morasthite in the days of Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah, kings of Judah, which he saw concerning Samaria and Jerusalem. b) Any of… …   Wiktionary

  • Micah — noun 1. a minor Hebrew prophet (8th century BC) • Syn: ↑Micheas • Instance Hypernyms: ↑prophet 2. an Old Testament book telling the prophecies of Micah foretelling the destruction of Jerusalem • Syn: ↑Micheas, ↑Book of Micah …   Useful english dictionary

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