Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Micah 2:11
If a man walking in the spirit and falsehood do lie, [saying], I will prophesy unto thee of wine and of strong drink; he shall even be the prophet of this people.
11. If a man walking in the spirit and falsehood, &c.] Who is the popular prophet? He who walks in a spirit of falsehood (Micah’s phrase is perhaps a hendiadys), and promises material blessings of the most palpable kind (represented by ‘wine and strong drink’). It was not merely his reference to temporal goods which made such a man a ‘false prophet,’ but his assurance of the divinely ordained connexion between righteousness and prosperity. For ‘in the spirit and falsehood,’ it is simpler to render, after wind and falsehood. (Dathe thinks Mic 2:11 is misplaced, and should come after Mic 2:6.)
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
If a man walking in the spirit and falsehood – Literally, in spirit (not My Spirit) and falsehood, that is, in a lying spirit; such as they, whose woe Ezekiel pronounces Eze 13:3, Woe unto the foolish prophets who walk after their own spirit and what they have not seen Eze 13:2, Eze 13:17; prophets out of their own hearts, who prophesied a vision of falsehood, and a destruction and nothingness; prophesied falsehood; yea, prophets of the deceit of their hearts. These, like the true prophets, walked in spirit; as Isaiah speaks of walking in righteousness Isa 33:15. Their habitual converse was m a spirit, but of falsehood. If such an one do lie, saying, I will prophesy unto thee of wine and strong drink. Mans conscience must needs have some plea in speaking falsely of God. The false prophets had to please the rich men, to embolden them in their self-indulgence, to tell them that God would not punish. They doubtless spoke of Gods temporal promises to His people, the land flowing with milk and honey. His promises of abundant harvest and vintage, and assured them, that God would not withdraw these, that He was not so precise about His law. Micah tells them in plain words, what it all came to; it was a prophesying of wine and strong drink.
He shall even be the prophet of this people – Literally and shall be bedewing this people. He uses the same words, which scorners of Israel and Judah employed in forbidding to prophesy. They said, drop not; forbidding Gods word as a wearisome dropping. It wore away their patience, not their hearts of stone. He tells them, who might speak to them without wearying, of whose words they would never tire, who might do habitually what they forbade to God, – one who, in the Name of God, set them at ease in their sensual indulgences. This is the secret of the success of everything opposed to God and Christ. Man wants a God. God has made it a necessity of our nature to crave after Him. Spiritual, like natural, hunger, debarred from or loathing wholesome food, must be stilled, stifled, with what will appease its gnawings. Our natural intellect longs for Him; for it cannot understand itself without Him. Our restlessness longs for Him; to rest upon.
Our helplessness longs for Him, to escape from the unbearable pressure of our unknown futurity. Our imagination craves for Him; for, being made for the Infinite, it cannot be content with the finite. Aching affections long for Him; for no creature can soothe them. Our dissatisfied conscience longs for Him, to teach it and make it one with itself. But man does not want to be responsible, nor to owe duty; still less to be liable to penalties for disobeying. The Christian, not the natural man, longs that his whole being should tend to God. The natural man wishes to be well-rid of what sets him ill at ease, not to belong to God. And the horrible subtlety of false teaching, in each age or country, is to meet its own favorite requirements, without calling for self-sacrifice or self-oblation, to give it a god such as it would have, such as might content it. : The people willeth to be deceived, be it deceived, is a true proverb. Men turn away their ears from the truth 2Ti 4:4 which they dislike; and so are turned unto fables which they like. They who receive not the love of the truth, – believe a lie 2Th 2:11-12. If men will not retain God in their knowledge, God giveth them over to an undistinguishing mind Rom 1:28. They who would not receive our Lord, coming in His Fathers Name, have ever since, as He said, received them who came in their own Joh 5:43. Men teach their teachers how they wish to be mistaught, and receive the echo of their wishes as the Voice of God.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Mic 2:11
If a man walking in the spirit and falsehood do lie,. . .he shall even be the prophet of this people
Israels popular preacher
This is Micahs idea of the kind of prophet (or, as we should say, pulpit) the men of Israel would willingly and unanimously accept.
The sketch is marked by two things which always tend to make a preacher generally acceptable to thoughtless men in every age.
I. By emptiness of mind. He has nothing in his mind but wind, vain conceits, vapid notions–no deep thought, no rich store of information, no well-digested belief or profound conviction.
II. By ministering to please. I will prophesy unto thee of wine and of strong drink. These prophets would accommodate themselves to their tastes and habits, and sanction their indulgences. They would not disturb their consciences nor strike against their prejudices, but talk to them in such a way as to leave them satisfied with themselves. (Homilist.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 11. If a man walking in the spirit and falsehood] The meaning is: If a man who professes to be Divinely inspired do lie, by prophesying of plenty, &c., then such a person shall be received as a true prophet by this people. It not unfrequently happens that the Christless worldling, who has got into the priest’s office for a maintenance, and who leaves the people undisturbed in their unregenerate state, is better received than the faithful pastor, who proclaims the justice of the Lord, and the necessity of repentance and forsaking sin, in order to their being made partakers of that holiness without which no man shall see God.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
This people were weary of true prophets, and silenced them, Mic 2:6, but they were fondly taken with the false prophets, and what these promised them; and these, as here described, are by a dreadful judgment on this people permitted, or left to deceive them.
If a man walking in the Spirit and falsehood; a prophet that pretends to walk in the Spirit, i.e. to have the Spirit of prophecy, and on that pretence takes the boldness to promise pleasing things in Gods name, whereas he never received such promises of good from God.
Do lie, against God, and to the people.
I will prophesy unto thee of wine and of strong drink: Micah, and his real-contented brethren, foretell scarcity, war, dismal calamities, and an Assyrian captivity of all for ever; I tell you these are idle dreams, you shall have plenty, and good days, and may eat, drink, and be merry; such times of evil you shall never see.
He shall even be the prophet, by a just and dreadful judgment from God, as well as by an unhappy and fatal choice of the people, 1Ki 22:6,10-12, with 1Ki 22:34; Eze 13:3,10.
Of this people; doomed to unparalleled misery by God for their sins, and pulling it upon themselves by their obstinate impenitence and blindness.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
11. walking in the spiritTheHebrew means also “wind.” “If a man professingto have the ‘spirit’ of inspiration (Eze13:3; so ‘man of the spirit,’ that is, one claiming inspiration,Ho 9:7), but really walking in’wind’ (prophecy void of nutriment for the soul, and unsubstantial asthe wind) and falsehood, do lie, saying (that which ye like tohear), I will prophesy,” c., even such a one, however false hisprophecies, since he flatters your wishes, shall be your prophet(compare Mic 2:6 Jer 5:31).
prophesy . . . of winethatis, of an abundant supply of wine.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
If a man walking in the spirit and falsehood do lie,…. Who pretends to be a prophet, and a spiritual man, and to be under the inspiration and influence of the Spirit of God, but utters nothing but lies and falsehoods; or who is actuated by a spirit of falsehood and lying; or, as in the margin, “walks with the wind, and lies falsely” u; is full of wind and vanity; “after the wind” w; and follows the dictates of his vain mind, and coins lies, and speaks false things:
[saying], I will prophesy unto thee of wine and of strong drink; or “drop [a word] unto thee” x; that there will be good times, and nothing but good eating and drinking; and that men need not fear such dismal things befalling them as the prophets of the Lord spoke of; but may be cheerful and merry, and drink wine and strong drink, and not be afraid of their evil tidings: or, for wine and strong drink y, so Kimchi; and the meaning is, that if they would give him a cup of wine, or a draught of strong drink, he would prophesy good things to them; the reverse of what is before said, as that they should continue in their land, and not depart from it; that this should be their rest, and they should remain therein, and not be destroyed in it, or cast out of it:
he shall even be the prophet of this people; a “dropper” z to them; see Mic 2:6; such an one shall be acceptable to them; they will caress him, and prefer him to the true prophets of the Lord; which is mentioned to show the temper of the people, and how easily they were imposed upon, and their disrespect to the prophets of the Lord, as in Mic 2:6; to which subject the prophet here returns, as Kimchi observes.
u “qui ambulat cum vento et falsitate mentiatur”, Piscator; “ambulantem cum vento et fasitate mendacem”, Cocceius. w So Hillerus in Burkius. x “stillabo tibi”, Pagninus, Montanus, Junius & Tremellius, Piscator, Burkius. y “pro vino”, Pagninus, Montanus, Junius & Tremellius, Piscator, Drusius. z “stillator”, Junius & Tremellius, Piscator, Drusius, Cocceius.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
The Prophet points out here another vice by which the people were infected — that they wished to be soothed with flatteries: for all the ungodly think that they are in a manner exempt from God’s judgment, when they hear no reproof; yea they think themselves happy, when they get flatterers, who are indulgent to their vices. This is now the disease which the Prophet discovers as prevailing among the people. Jerome sought out a meaning quite different here, as in the former verses; but I will not stop to refute him, for it is enough to give the real meaning of the Prophet. But as before he rendered women, princes, and thus perverted entirely the meaning, so he says here, I would I were a vain Prophet, that is, walking in vanity, and mendacious; as though Micah said “I wish I were false in denouncing on you the calamities of which I speak; for I would rather announce to you something joyful and favorable: but I cannot do this, for the Lord commands what is different.” But there is nothing of this kind in the words of the Prophet. Let us then return to the text.
If a man walks in the spirit, and deceitfully lies, (90) etc. Almost all interpreters agree in this, — that to walk in the spirit, is to announce any thing proudly and presumptuously; and they take spirit for wind or for deceits. But I doubt not, but that to walk in the spirit was then a common mode of speaking, to set forth the exercise of the prophetic office. When therefore any one was a Prophet, or one who discharged that office, or sustained the character of a teacher, he professed himself to have been sent from above. The Prophets were indeed formerly called the men of the spirit, and for this reason, because they adduced nothing from themselves or from their own heads; but only delivered faithfully, as from hand to hand, what they had received from God. To walk in the spirit then means, in my view, the same thing as to profess the office of a teacher. When therefore any one professed the office of a teacher, what was he to do? “If I,” says Micah, “being endued with the Spirit, and called to teach, wished to ingratiate myself with you, and preached that there would be an abundant increase of wine and strong drink, all would applaud me; for if any one promises these things, he becomes the prophet of this people.”
In short, Micah intimates that the Israelites rejected all sound doctrine, for they sought nothing but flatteries, and wished to be cherished in their vices; yea, they desired to be deceived by false adulation to their own ruin. It hence appears that they were not the people they wished to be deemed, that is, the people of God: for the first condition in God’s covenant was, — that he should rule among his people. Inasmuch then as these men would not endure to be governed by Divine power, and wished to have full and unbridled liberty, it was the same as though they had banished God far from them. Hence, by this proof, the Prophet shows that they had wholly departed from God, and had no intercourse with him. If there be then any man walking in the spirit, let him, he says, keep far from the truth; for he will not otherwise be borne by this people. — How so? Because they will not have honest and faithful teachers. What is then to be done? Let flatterers come, and promise them plenty of wine and strong drink, and they will be their best teachers, and be received with great applause: in short, the suitable teachers of that people were the ungodly; the people could no longer bear the true Prophets; their desire was to have flatterers who were indulgent to all their corruptions.
(90) Perhaps a more literal rendering would be thus,—
If a man, the follower of the spirit and of deception, Speaks falsely, “I will prophesy to thee of wine and of strong drink,” He then becomes the prophet of this people.
To walk after, or to follow, “the wind,” as some render רוח, seems by no means proper. The phrase means the same as “the man of the spirit” in Hos 9:7 Newcome changes the whole form of the passage, though not the meaning, except in one instance. Guided by the Syriac version, Houbigant and the Septuagint, without the sanction of any MS., he gives this version, —
If a man, walking in the spirit of falsehood and lies, Prophesy unto thee for wine and for strong drink, He shall be the prophet of this people.
He puts “ for wine,” etc., and not “ of wine:” but the latter rendering is much more suitable to the context. — Ed.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
CRITICAL NOTES.]
Mic. 2:11. Spirit] Lit. walk in the wind, sig. what is vain or worthless (Isa. 26:18; Isa. 41:29); some, the man of spirit, i.e. claiming inspiration. Prophesy] Soothe you in gluttony and drunkenness; he would be listened to because he flattered you.
Mic. 2:12.] A sudden transition from judgment to joy. The remnant of Israel after sifting shall be gathered together, multiplied, and governed by Jehovah as their king. Bozrah] Rich in pastures and flocks.
Mic. 2:13. Breaker] A traditional Messianic expression, will break a way for them in every hindrance and enemy. Cyrus delivering from Babylon is an eminent type of Christ redeeming from sin. Gate] of the city of captivity. Before] them, as in going up out of Egypt (Exo. 13:21; Deu. 1:30; Deu. 1:33), to lead the way. The fulfilment of this prophecy commenced with the gathering together of Israel to its God and King by the preaching of the Gospel, and will be completed at some future time when the Lord shall redeem Israel, which is now pining in dispersion, out of the fetters of its unbelief and life of sin [Keil].
HOMILETICS
THE MINISTRY OF FALSE TEACHERS.Mic. 2:11
Predictions of judgment were unwelcome to corrupt men. They opposed the true, but would listen to false prophets who flattered them in sin and declared lies. The ministry of such is here described.
I. It is lying in its nature. Falsehood and lies. It misrepresents God and his Word, the gospel and its claims. It is not purity, light, and power, but false and misleading. It ignores or sacrifices truth, and springs not from the Spirit of God, but the spirit of man. They pretend inspiration, but walk in delusion and believe a lie. Woe unto the foolish prophets that follow their own spirit and have seen nothing.
II. It is sensual in its purpose. Its great design is to minister to the sensual enjoyments of the people. I will prophesy unto thee of wine and of strong drink. The false prophets pleased the rich and emboldened the self-indulgence of all by promising abundant harvests and rich vintage. The promises of God are often emphasized, but the conditions of those promises are forgotten. Congregations are assured that without exception and without penitence they will be free from judgment and sure of salvation. False teachers pander to vitiated tastes, sanction sinful customs, and disturb not the consciences of the people. But true ministers strike the prejudices, condemn the carnal gratifications, and seek to save the souls of men. They handle not the Word of God deceitfully, but by manifestation of the truth commend themselves to every mans conscience in the sight of God.
III. It is pleasing to the people in its method. Unwelcome truths would not be heard, but a prophet of lies would be popular. He shall even be the prophet of this people. Spiritual appetites crave for food, conscience is dissatisfied, and the heart restless. Men want rest and God. If any come in Gods name to set them at ease in sensual pleasures, him will they receive with joy (Jer. 5:31). All they desire is freedom from reproof and licence to sin. They teach their teachers how they wish to be mistaught, says a writer, and receive the echo of their wishes as the voice of God. The prophets prophesy falsely, and the priests bear rule by their means; and my people love to have it so; and what will ye do in the end thereof?
IV. It is disappointing in its results. It is walking in the spirit, or walking with the wind, as the margin gives.
1. There is no nutriment for the soul. It is a ministry empty and unsubstantial as the wind, mixed with error and falsehood, not sound speech that cannot be condemned.
2. There is no efficacy in the word. It is not truth spoken in tenderness, love, and concern for the hearers. None are enlightened in mind, quickened in conscience, and converted from sin. The words are mere echoes of the wind, devoid of results in heart and life, barren to God and man. Ephraim feedeth on wind, and followeth after the east wind; he daily increaseth lies and desolation.
THE GLORIOUS FUTURE OF ISRAEL.Mic. 2:12-13
There is now a sudden transition from threatening to promise. Mercy is the end of all punishment to the penitent. A remnant shall be delivered and gathered together, increased and governed by Jehovah their Shepherd and King.
I. Israel shall be delivered. The captivity threatened will come; but, as of old, they shall be delivered from it. Babylon, no more than Egypt, can detain them in slavery. Iron gates and massive walls will give way before the Breakers power. An entrance will be made into the city. The Conqueror will go in, and the captives go out through it into liberty and joy. The prison shall open and set them free. This deliverance from earthly Babylon is a type and pledge of redemption from spiritual bondage, by Christ Jesus. Men are bound in ignorance, prejudice, and sin. Christ gives light and redemption to the soul, and opens the prison to them that are bound. He redeemed them from the hand of the enemy.
II. Israel shall be united again. I will surely assemble Jacob. They shall be gathered together in tenderness and care, in families and social privileges. God will bring his people from the greatest distance, and gather them into his fold. Public calamities and vicissitudes of fortunes hide not his face nor obliterate his covenant. Under the law believers could foresee, and under the gospel we may enjoy, this promise.
1. This gathering is certain. I will surely gather.
2. It is constant. The repetition indicates the progressive and persistent nature of the work.
3. It is extensive. Though Gods people are a remnant, yet all shall be gathered, and not one forgotten. All of thee.
III. Israel shall be increased. Not a small number, but the multitude of men. God can turn remnants into multitudes, and multiply his people as a flock. In the Church it shall be said, The place is too strait for me: give place to me that I may dwell, &c. (Isa. 49:20). At last angels will gather the elect from the four winds into that great multitude which no man could number, of all nations, and people, and tongues.
IV. Israel shall be defended. They will not be united and left to themselves or to others. God will possess them and rule them by his love.
1. They will be secured as a flock. As the flock in the midst of the fold, in perfect peace and safety.
2. They will be guided as a people. Their king shall pass before them. As in olden time, his presence shall go with them and make an easy passage through death and the grave to eternal life.
3. They will be governed as a nation. The Lord on (at) the head of them. As a captain and conqueror to lead and rule them; to overcome all opposition, to break in pieces the gates of brass, and cut in sunder the bars of iron.
HOMILETIC HINTS AND SUGGESTIONS
The Breaker. Notice
1. The object in view. To set free.
2. The opposition to Gods work.
3. The destruction of this opposition. Complete and utter ruinBreaker.
The words present Christ as
1. The Redeemer.
2. The Guide.
3. The Defender of his people. A magnificent transition from Cyrus to Christ, as in Isa. 40:1-5. The Prophet sees the conqueror Cyrus breaking into Babylon, smiting asunder the bars which kept Israel captive, as in a prison; and how they went forth, after the issuing of his decree, in joy and triumph to their own land. And from this prophetical view of Cyrus and his victory, and its blessed consequences, he passes on by a rapid prophetic flight to speak of the Divine Cyrus, Jesus Christ, and of his triumph over death and the grave [Wordsworth]. There is no passing on, nor going forth, without Christ our King, who is both King and Lord [Jerome].
Broken up. The three verbsthey break through, they march through, they go outdescribe in a pictorial manner progress which cannot be stopped by any human power [Hengstenberg].
ILLUSTRATIONS TO CHAPTER 2
Mic. 2:11. The horrible subtlety of false teaching in each age or country is to meet its own favourite requirements, without calling for self-sacrifice or self-oblation, to give it a god, such as it would have, such as might content it. The people willeth to be deceived, be it deceived, is a true proverb [Pusey].
Mic. 2:12-13. As the flock. Now the sheep are scattered in all lands; but the shepherd shall search them out and bring them into the fold, where they shall be (a) constantly supplied, and (b) eternally safe from beasts of prey. Breaker. The image is not of conquest, but deliverance. They break through, not to enter in, but to pass through the gate, and go forth. The wall of the city is ordinarily broken through in order to make an entrance, or to secure to a conqueror the power of entering in at any time, or by age and decay. But here the object is expressed to go forth. Plainly they were confined before, as in a prison; and the gate of the prison was burst open to set them free (Cf. Isa. 43:6; Isa. 48:20; Isa. 52:11-12 [Pusey].
Fuente: The Preacher’s Complete Homiletical Commentary Edited by Joseph S. Exell
(11) If a man walking in the spirit and falsehoodi.e., in a lying spirit, speaking smooth and pleasant things, such as the people loved to hear, after the fashion of Zedekiah, the son of Chenaanahhe will be a fit prophet for this people. So also Jeremiah spake: The prophets prophesy falsely. . . . and my people love to have it so; and what will ye do in the end thereof? (Jer. 5:31).
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
11. In Mic 2:6-7 the listeners had expressed their unwillingness to accept the kind of preaching Micah was giving them. The opposition did not silence the prophet, it only stimulated him to new efforts; he pointed out that the present demanded the message he was delivering, and reiterated the announcement of judgment. Mic 2:11 presents the close of the threat; in it the prophet gives a description of the kind of prophet the people would like to hear, one who has always a message of peace and prosperity, and who at all times heaps flattery upon the self-righteous sinners.
In the spirit and falsehood R.V., “in a spirit of falsehood.” A.V. gives a literal rendering of the original, except that before “spirit” the definite article should not be used. But “a spirit,” standing by itself, is not equivalent to “a false spirit,” and the context makes it impossible to think of the Spirit of God. Hence it is better to follow R.V. margin and read “in wind and falsehood.” “Wind” is a picture of the vain and worthless things after which such a false prophet chases; “falsehood” has reference to the purpose for which he delivers his message; he purposes to deceive the people in order that he may serve his own personal interests.
Lie In seeking to deliver an acceptable message, he announces peace and prosperity when the message of Jehovah is one of calamity and judgment.
Wine and strong drink To be understood in a wider sense of all “earthly blessings and sensual enjoyments.” This is what they like, and the prophet knows that any man who preaches such a gospel will be received with open arms.
Return of a purified remnant, 12, 13.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Mic 2:11. If a man, &c. If a man, walking after the wind, or pursuing vanity and falsehood, do lie, saying, I will prophesy unto thee for wine and for strong drink, &c.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Here is a very awful scripture. The Lord alone knows in how many instances it may be daily fulfilling. Alas! when false teachers are given to a people of a deluded mind, what a state must that people be in!
Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Mic 2:11 If a man walking in the spirit and falsehood do lie, [saying], I will prophesy unto thee of wine and of strong drink; he shall even be the prophet of this people.
Ver. 11. If a man, walking in the spirit, &c. ] Si vir ventosus, so Junius rendereth it, if a windy and false man lie, saying, &c. Let a man but feed them with vain hopes and frothy fancies; let him but make fair weather before them when the storm of God’s wrath is ready to break out upon them; let him promise them plenty of all things, and prophesy to them of wine and strong drink, as the Popish priests in Gerson’s time publicly preached to the people, that if any one would hear a mass he should not on that day be struck blind, nor die suddenly, nor want sufficient sustenance, &c. These call themselves the spirituality, or men of the Spirit (as Hosea hath it), as if all others to them were carnal, and destitute of the Spirit. They also, after the manner of those false prophets of old, take to themselves big swollen titles, and as they increase in their pretended holiness, so they proceed in their titles from Padre benedicto to Padre Angels, then Archangels, Cherubino, and lastly Serephino, which is the top of perfection. But what is all this more than a light flask, or a pillar of smoke, which the higher it mounteth the sooner it vanisheth? And what are all such vain boasters but gloriae animalia, popularis aurae mancipia vilia, animals of reknown, cheap slaves of the breeze of popularity, as Jerome calls Crates the philosopher? may it not fitly be said of them, as Hos 9:7 , “The prophet is a fool, the spiritual man is mad,” and as Eze 13:3 . Surely these are “foolish prophets, that follow their own spirit, and have seen nothing. O Israel, thy prophets are like the foxes in the deserts,” &c. “A wonderful and horrible thing is committed in the land. The prophets prophesy falsely, and the priests bear rule by their means, and my people love to have it so: and what will ye do in the end thereof?” Jer 5:31 . All will be naught, no doubt. There is not a more dangerous creature than a parasitical prophet. Ezekiel calleth them the devil’s dirt daubers, Eze 13:10 , his upholsterers, for they sew pillows, &c. And these are prophets for this people, fit lettuce for such lips, dignum patella operculum, a singular plague of God upon the men of this world, who deserve to be deceived; for what reason? they have desired it, and it best pleaseth their vitiated palates. Most people, having first flattered themselves, are well content to be soothed up by others; and I cannot but accord him that saith, If there were judges ordained for flattery they would have no doings, there being so very few that will complain that they are flattered.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
wine. Hebrew. yayin. App-27.
strong drink. Hebrew. shekar. App-27.
prophet = sputterer; as in Mic 2:6. Literally dropper [of words].
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
a man: 1Ki 13:18, 1Ki 22:21-23, 2Ch 18:19-22, Isa 9:15, Jer 14:14, Jer 23:14, Jer 23:25, Jer 23:32, Jer 27:14, Jer 27:15, Jer 28:2, Jer 28:3, Jer 28:15, Jer 29:21-23, Eze 13:3-14, Eze 13:22, 2Co 11:13-15, 2Th 2:8-10, 2Pe 2:1-3, 1Jo 4:1, Rev 16:13, Rev 16:14
walking in the spirit and falsehood do lie: or, walk with the wind and lie falsely
I will: Mic 3:5, Mic 3:11, 1Ki 22:6, Jer 6:13, Jer 6:14, Jer 8:10, Jer 8:11, Jer 23:17, Rom 16:18, Phi 3:19, 2Pe 2:13-19
he shall: Isa 30:10, Isa 30:11, Jer 5:31, 2Th 2:11
Reciprocal: 1Sa 4:5 – all Israel 1Ki 22:8 – good 1Ki 22:13 – Behold now 2Ch 18:5 – Go up 2Ch 18:12 – Behold Isa 28:7 – erred Isa 32:7 – instruments Jer 5:12 – have belied Jer 20:6 – thy friends Jer 23:16 – a vision Jer 23:31 – use Jer 29:8 – your dreams Lam 2:14 – prophets Eze 13:4 – like Eze 13:10 – others Eze 21:2 – and drop Hos 4:12 – for Hos 7:14 – assemble Hos 9:7 – the prophet Zep 3:4 – light Zec 13:2 – cause Luk 6:26 – when 2Th 2:2 – by spirit 1Ti 3:3 – Not given to wine 2Ti 4:3 – but 1Jo 4:5 – and 1Jo 4:6 – and
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Mic 2:11. True prophets were required to make predictions about the false ones or otherwise describe them. In this verse Micah describes the kind of prophet that the people of Israel were willing to accept. Jeremiah 5; Jeremiah 31 also records a description of this conspiracy between the people and the false prophets.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Mic 2:11. If a man walking in the spirit and falsehood If a man falsely pretending to have the spirit of prophecy, do lie Speak things very false, and utter pretended predictions of events that shall never take place. Saying, I will prophesy unto thee of wine and strong drink I will discourse to you of sensual enjoyments: or, I will give you assurance of peace, prosperity, and plenty. You shall live long, eat, drink, and be merry. He shall even be the prophet of this people Such as they like and choose, a man perfectly to their minds. Some render the clause, I will prophesy unto thee for wine and strong drink, understanding Micah (who here speaks in his own person) as telling them, if he were one who would prophesy lies unto them, and bring them pleasing tidings, however false, for the sake of having his belly filled with wine and strong drink; that then they would extol him, and look upon him as a choice prophet; for that such a one only as spoke smooth things unto them, with whatever selfish views it was apparent he did it, was a prophet to their liking; and that, therefore, if he had been a false prophet, he should have prophesied so as to get wine and strong drink of them instead of reproaches.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
2:11 If a man {m} walking in the spirit and falsehood do lie, [saying], {n} I will prophesy unto thee of wine and of strong drink; he shall even be the prophet of this people.
(m) That is, show himself to be a prophet.
(n) He shows what prophets they delight in, that is, in flatterers, who tell them pleasant tales, and speak of their benefits.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
Micah bemoaned the fact that the Israelites had become so responsive to the false prophets that if one of them even spoke out (cf. Mic 2:6) promising alcohol galore they would follow him. Any prophet who preached greater affluence and prosperity would have a receptive audience. In contrast, Micah’s message of doom was unpopular. God’s people would follow anyone whose prophetic fantasies blew with the wind, in contrast to being led by the Spirit (Mic 2:7), or who lied to them by speaking falsehood.
"But we today need to deal with our sins of covetousness, selfishness, and willingness to believe ’religious lies.’ We must abandon ’soft religion’ that pampers our pride and makes it easy for us to sin. Why? Because ’our God is a consuming fire’ (Heb 12:29), and ’The Lord shall judge His people’ (Heb 10:30). Remember, judgment begins in the house of the Lord (1Pe 4:17)." [Note: Wiersbe, p. 393.]
"Unfortunately the evangelical church today is too closely associated with the business establishment, too usually motivated by serving self, not others, and too little concerned with the oppressed and needy, in spite of the clear teaching of the NT on this subject (Mat 25:31-46; Mar 12:31; Act 4:32-37; 1Th 4:9-10; 1Jn 1:6; 1Jn 2:10; 1Jn 3:16-18)." [Note: Waltke, in The Minor . . ., p. 649.]