Micah 3
Haydock CMicah 3:1
I. Hebrew and Septuagint, “He, the Lord, said;” or, Micheas addressed the princes of both kingdoms, under Ezechias, ver. 12., and Jeremias xxvi. 18. — To know and practice, Osee vi. 3. (Calmet) — Both rich and poor strove to extort from each other. (Worthington)
Micah 3:2
Skins. When some exhorted Tiberius to lay on more taxes, he replied: “a good shepherd must shear the flock, and not tear off the skin.” (Suetorius xxxii.)
Micah 3:5
Peace. They pretend goodness, while they do the greatest mischief. — Prepare. Literally, “sanctify,” (Haydock) or denounce war. (Calmet) — False prophets seek their private lucre. (Worthington)
Micah 3:6
Vision. Impostors shall skulk through fear, when the people shall see that they were not sent, ver. 7.
Micah 3:8
Spirit. I am no impostor, chap. ii. 11.
Micah 3:10
Iniquity. You offer victims unjustly procured, or build your palaces with what belongs to the poor.
Micah 3:11
Hire. It is not lawful to refuse instruction to those who have nothing; nor must priests act solely for a temporal reward, though reason shews that they should be supported by those whom they have to teach, Matthew x. 8, 10., Galatians vi. 6., and 1 Timothy v. 18. (Calmet) — The judges grew rich by other people’s quarrels; and, as all ranks offended, they were justly involved in ruin, ver. 12. (Worthington)
Micah 3:12
Forests, after its destruction by Nabuchodonosor. (Calmet) — In the space of three years’ neglect, shrubs were growing in the courts of the temple, 1 Machabees iv. 38. (Haydock) — Rufus ploughed up the spot where the temple had stood, after the Romans had burnt it down. (St. Jerome; Josephus, Jewish Wars vii. 20.) — This prediction made a deep impression on the minds of the people. It caused them to refrain from killing Jeremias, ver. 1. (Calmet)
Micah 3:13
CHAPTER III.
