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Chunks: The Book of Micah

chunks2micahheartacheandhope

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Chunks Bible Mini-Podcasts are designed to help you have a richer and more personal understanding of the teaching of Scripture. Each podcast focuses on a particular book or text, and each episode is only 5 to 10 minutes long, so you can listen whenever you have a few minutes to dig in. This podcast focuses on the Old Testament letter of Micah, and is entitled ”Heartache and Hope.” If you’ve ever wanted to understand a bit more about the Old Testament books of prophecy, Micah is a good and re ...
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In this final episode, I want to add one important qualification to what's been said in this podcast about God's covenant faithfulness. The teaching of the New Testament is that God initiated a new covenant in Jesus. Knowing the role of covenant faithfulness in books like Micah helps deepen our understanding and appreciation of this important fact!…
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Much of what Micah says presupposes that in their greed and wickedness, the people of Judah and Jerusalem have ceased to fear God as they should. By contrast, in chapter 7, the prophet envisions other nations coming to fear God, and by extension, his people. But we have to be careful here: the assumption is that the people have repented, and have r…
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What is hope? In one well-known description, a researcher describes it as "the will and the ways": a hopeful person is motivated to make something happen and can see a way to do it. Christian psychologist Everett Worthington calls these "willpower" and "waypower," and adds a third element: waitpower. Even if we possess the other two, can we truly h…
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We tend to think of tragedies and comedies as sad and funny respectively. And they often are. But in a classical sense, what makes a story a comedy is that there is a reversal of fortune, where a bad situation turns around. And in the final chapter of Micah, even with all the doom and gloom, the prophet still looks for an ultimate reversal of fortu…
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The oracle in Micah 6, in which God brings a lawsuit against his people, mentions two people who otherwise would be bit players in the Old Testament drama: "Balak, king of Moab" and "Balaam, son of Beor." Why these two men? It may be an echo of the story of Joshua--and a poignant reminder of how the people had promised to be faithful before.…
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"I will destroy..." The passage we've been examining over the last two episodes can be a disturbing one, particularly if we want to hold onto a one-dimensional view of God's love and grace. But we cannot soft pedal the wrath of God in this book or in this passage. Can we recognize the depth of God's anger at sin and still believe--and believe deepl…
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Security and trust point to a basic need we share as vulnerable humans. Even kings need reassurance sometimes... In the previous episode, we considered Micah 5:10-15, in which God vows to destroy Judah's disobedience and idolatry. This passage may be best read against the background of King Hezekiah's concern about the imminent invasion by Assyria.…
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The book of Micah assumes that God is a covenant God, a God who is faithful to the promises made to Abraham and others. It's because of this that the remnant will eventually destroy their enemies. But the people have been disobedient--which means that God must first destroy whatever stands in the way of their faithfulness to the covenant.…
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The beginning of Micah chapter 5 brings us to one of the best known passages from the book: the prophecy of the one who would come from Bethlehem to rule God's people, the prophecy cited by the advisors of Herod the Great in the gospel of Matthew. This episode begins our exploration of Micah's prophecy against the background of that New Testament s…
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Micah's oracle promises God's care for his flock, for the remnant of the people left after the exile. None of this would happen in Micah's lifetime. And although the people did return little by little when Persia defeated Babylon and ended their exile, the promise that Jerusalem's royal status would be restored still wasn't fulfilled. How long woul…
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We've already seen how the closing verses of chapter 2 uses the metaphor of God as the Shepherd-King. And we've seen how the opening verses of chapter 4 paint a beautiful picture of the eventual restoration of Jerusalem. That oracle of hope in chapter 4 continues in verses 6 to 8, again bringing in the metaphor of God as the shepherd who watches ov…
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In chapter 1, Micah already pronounced doom upon Samaria, the capital of the northern kingdom of Israel. Now, in 3:12, he uses similar language to predict the destruction of Jerusalem. This wouldn't happen in Micah's lifetime, but it would in Jeremiah's--and as we'll see in this episode, it was because of Micah's prophecy that Jeremiah was spared e…
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As we've seen, some of Micah's words portray God as the shepherd of his people, conveying a sense of comfort and protection. But the metaphor would have meant more than that to Micah and his audience. As we'll explore in this episode, the metaphor of God as shepherd in the Old Testament cannot be easily separated from image of God as king.…
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Perhaps the best-known, best-loved psalm is Psalm 23, the so-called Shepherd Psalm. We are the sheep for whom God as shepherd cares. The metaphor is used throughout the Old Testament to speak of God's covenant devotion to his people. And even despite the dire prediction of the punishment that is coming to the people of Judah and Jerusalem, Micah st…
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