Micah 4:1-13
Welcome! Today we will have a shorter
message followed by a time of communion and then a sharing time. We have been
studying the book of Micah over the past several weeks, and this week we will
explore one of my favorite chapters, Chapter 4.
This chapter is in many ways a break from the first three chapters,
which are prophecy and judgement against the people of Israel and Judah. In
Chapter 1, Micah, speaking the words of the Lord, pronounces the coming
destruction and laments that it is to be. In Chapters 2 and 3, Micah explains
further the reasons for the coming destruction; in Chapter 2 the focus is on
the acts of the people, on the Israelite society, and in Chapter 3 the focus is
primarily on the actions of the leaders of the people. The foretold destruction
did come to pass; first, the northern kingdom (Israel) fell to the Assyrians,
and later, the southern kingdom (Judah) fell to the Babylonians.
But Micah Chapter 4 looks beyond these
events into what was for Micah’s hearers a distant future. Micah wrote this
before Christ came and died for our sins and rose from the dead. What future is
Micah writing about? Well, I think the things he says don’t find their ultimate
completion until Christ’s return, “soon and very soon,” as the song we sang
puts it, but there is a degree to which these things are to be for us now as well. The Kingdom of God is
coming, but the Kingdom of God is here. It is both “now” and “not yet.” Let’s
look at the first several verses.