Micah 2:8,9 - The Biblical Illustrator

Bible Comments

My people is risen up as an enemy

Sin an antagonist

This chapter refers to the character and doings of Israel during the last nine years of Ahaz.

A very dark period in Israelitish history was this. “We are told in 2 Chronicles 28:24-25, that Ahaz shut up the doors of the temple and erected altars in every corner of Jerusalem. We may safely conclude, from the language of Micah (chap. 2) and Isaiah (chap. 11), that when he did so, abominations of every kind overran the land. A prophet like Micah was no longer permitted to speak. The testimony of Isaiah (chaps. 7, 8) had borne no fruit; the fruitlessness of invoking the aid of Assyria had taught him no better. Ahaz did not repent, like Manasseh, but persisted in his evil ways. What a melancholy course of conduct! Like Uzziah, Ahaz was denied honourable burial (2 Chronicles 28:27). The prophet here, in denouncing the sins which were then most prevalent in Judah and Ephraim, alludes expressly to the acts of oppression and violence then common, and tells them that for these they would be driven out of the land.” The verses lead us to look at sin in the aspect of an antagonist, and suggest--

I. That it is an antagonist to the Divine. “Even of late [marg., ‘yesterday’] My people has risen up as an enemy.” “It is not stated,” says Delitzsch, “against whom the people rise up as an enemy; but, according to the context, it can only be against Jehovah.” Sin is an antagonist to God; it lifts up the soul in hostility against its Maker. Unregenerated men say that they are not conscious of any enmity in their hearts towards their Maker; on the contrary, sometimes they feel a passing glow of gratitude and adoration for Him. But it is the conduct of a man that proves the settled state of his heart.

1. This enmity is most unjustifiable. Enmity sometimes admits of justification, but never in this case.

2. This enmity is most wicked. It is against reason and justice.

3. This enmity is most miserable. Enmity to God is the fountain of all the misery in the universe. The words suggest another idea concerning sin--

II. That it is an antagonist to the human. “Ye pull off the robe with the garment [marg., ‘over against the garment’] from them that pass by securely as men averse from war.” Not content with the outer garment, ye greedily rob passers-by of the ornamental robe fitting the body closely and flowing down to the feet; and this you do, not to enemies, but to friends, to those who are “averse from war.” More: “The women of My people have ye cast out from their pleasant houses.” The widows of the men slain by you in battle you have deprived of their homes. They “devoured widows’ houses.” This was not all. “From their children have ye taken away My glory for ever.” The orphan children you have despoiled. In all this there is the manifestation of sin, as an antagonist to human rights and human happiness. Sin puts man against his brother; hence the slanders, quarrels, litigations, wars that are rife in every human scene. (Homilist.)

Micah 2:8-9

8 Even of latec my people is risen up as an enemy: ye pull off the robe with the garment from them that pass by securely as men averse from war.

9 The womend of my people have ye cast out from their pleasant houses; from their children have ye taken away my glory for ever.