What Is Truth?
Opening Prayer
Mighty God, You’ve given me this day, and You lay out my future before me. My times are in Your hands.
Read Micah 2:6-3:12
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Scripture taken from the THE HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION, NIV Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.® Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.
Reflect
When we are struggling through trials, we do well to remember that God’s character does not change and his promises remain true. This brings us assurance and hope.
Micah’s message that the Lord is bringing disaster upon his people is contested by other prophets, who insist that the Lord is doing no such thing (2:6,7). Micah sees such prophets as corruptly telling people what they want to hear (2:11; 3:5). The fitting consequence of their misusing their calling to speak truthfully for God will be utter darkness: God will be far from them (3:6,7). Micah, in contrast, memorably articulates his own role in terms of his responsibility, enabled by God, to tell God’s people the painful truth that they wish to conceal (3:8).
The concluding section (3:9-12) epitomizes true prophecy. Micah addresses leaders, those with responsibility for public life (9a), and exposes them as corrupt and oppressive (9b,10). Specifically, the leadership, both temporal and spiritual, is venal: everything has its price (11a). Yet these people are confident that God is on their side: God is in the Temple in Jerusalem, and so will protect his people, as in the psalm they no doubt sang, “The Lord Almighty is with us; the God of Jacob is our fortress” (Psa. 46:7,11). So Micah tells them that the opposite will happen: Jerusalem will be destroyed and all that is left of the Temple will be rubble and scrub (12). Why? The point is that they cannot ignore God’s will and at the same time expect God’s protection; complacency and corruption means that the God to whom they appeal will come in judgment, not in blessing.
Roughly one hundred years later the Temple was still standing, and yet this passage was appealed to as a true prophecy. Why? Because Micah’s words moved Jerusalem’s leaders, including Hezekiah, to turn to God (Jer. 26:17-19). Prophetic messages of disaster are not absolute predictions but are warnings, whose outworking depends on how people respond.
Apply
Words about God’s presence and protection, as in Psalm 46, become false if one’s life does not accord with what one professes. Is there any unconfessed sin in your life?
Closing prayer
Heavenly Father, may Your words of truth change not only the way I think, but also the way I live. Lord, help me to live faithfully for You.
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