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the Week of Proper 25 / Ordinary 30
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Read the Bible

New Living Translation

Micah 7:16

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Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Fear of God;  

Dictionaries:

- Bridgeway Bible Dictionary - Exodus;   Fear;   Charles Buck Theological Dictionary - Atonement;   Fausset Bible Dictionary - Micah;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Deafness;   Micah, Book of;   Remnant;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - Micah, Book of;   The Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary - Heritage;  

Encyclopedias:

- International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Deaf;   Hand;   Micah (2);   Mouth;  

Contextual Overview

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

nations: Micah 5:8, Psalms 126:2, Isaiah 26:11, Isaiah 66:18, Ezekiel 38:23, Ezekiel 39:17-21, Zechariah 8:20-23, Zechariah 12:9, Revelation 11:18

lay: Job 21:5, Job 29:9, Job 29:10, Job 40:4, Isaiah 52:15, Romans 3:19

Reciprocal: Judges 18:19 - lay thine Nehemiah 2:10 - it grieved Proverbs 14:19 - General Proverbs 30:32 - lay Jeremiah 33:9 - fear Jeremiah 46:22 - voice Micah 4:3 - and rebuke Zephaniah 3:15 - he hath Zechariah 10:6 - I will strengthen Zechariah 12:8 - he Zechariah 14:12 - the plague wherewith Acts 13:17 - and with

Cross-References

Gill's Notes on the Bible

The nations shall see and be confounded at all their might,.... The Chaldeans or Babylonians, when they shall see the wonderful things done by the Lord in the deliverance of his people out of their hands, shall be ashamed of their own power and might, in which they trusted, and of which they boasted; but now shall be baffled and defeated, and not able to stop the progress of the arms of Cyrus, or detain the Jews any longer their captives; or they shall be confounded at the power and strength the Jews will have to repossess their land, rebuild their city and temple, under the encouragement and protection of the king of Persia; and as this may refer to a further accomplishment in Gospel times, it may respect the confusion the Gentile world would be in at the mighty power and spread of the Gospel, in the conversion of such multitudes by it, and in the abolition of the Pagan religion. Kimchi interprets this of the nations that shall be gathered together with Gog and Magog against Jerusalem in the latter day; see

Ezekiel 38:15;

they shall lay [their] hand upon [their] mouth: be silent, and boast no more of themselves; nor blaspheme God and his word; nor insult his people; nor oppose his Gospel, or open their mouths any more against his truths and his ordinances:

their ears shall be deaf; hearing so much of the praises of God, of the success of his interest, and of the happiness of his peopled dinned in their ears, they will be stunned with it, and scarce know what they hear; become deaf with the continual noise of it, which will be disagreeable to them; and will choose to hear no more, and therefore through envy and grief will stop their ears at what is told them.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

The nations shall see - God had answered, what He would give to His own people, to see. Micah takes up the word, and says, what effect this sight should have upon the enemies of God and of His people. The world should still continue to be divided between the people of God and their adversaries. Those who are converted pass from the one to the other; but the contrast remains. Assyria, Babylon, Egypt, pass away or become subject to other powers; but the antagonism continues. The nations are they, who, at each time, waste, oppress, are arrayed against, the people of God. When the Gospel came into the world, the whole world was arrayed against it. These then, he says, “shall see”, that is, the marvelous works of God, which God should shew His people, and be ashamed at, that is, “because of all their might”, their own might. They put forth their whole might, and it failed them against the marvelous might of God. They should array might against might, and be ashamed at the failure of “all their might”.

The word all is very emphatic; it implies that they had put forth all, and that all had failed them, and proved to be weakness. So the pagan might was often put to shame and gnashed its teeth, when it could avail nothing against the strength to endure which God gave to His martyrs. Its strength to inflict and to crush was baffled before the hidden might of God’s Spirit. “They shall lay their hand upon their mouth”, in token that they were reduced to silence, having no more to say ; for He promised, “I will give you a mouth and wisdom, which all your adversaries shall not be able to gainsay nor resist” (Luke 21:15, compare Acts 5:29); and they had to own, “indeed a notable miracle hath been done by them, and we cannot deny it. Their ears shall be deaf” Acts 4:16; they shall be silent, as though they had heard nothing, as if they were both dumb and deaf .

Yet it seems too that they are willfully deaf, shutting their ears out of envy and hatred, that they might not hear what great things God had done for His people, nor hear the voice of truth and be converted and healed. Rup.: “The nations and the Emperors of the nations saw, Jews and Gentiles saw, and were ashamed at all their might, because their might, great as it was accounted, upheld by laws and arms, could not overcome the mighty works, which the Good Shepherd did among His people or flock by His rod, that is, by His power, through weak and despised persons, the aged, or oftentimes even by boys and girls. They were then ashamed at all their might which could only touch the “earthen vessels” 2 Corinthians 4:7, but could not take away the treasure which was in them. What shall I say of the wisdom of those same nations? Of this too they were ashamed, as he adds, “They shall put their hands upon their mouths”. For, in comparison with the heavenly wisdom, which spake by them and made their tongues eloquent, dumb was all secular eloquence, owning by its silence that it was convicted and confounded.”

Clarke's Notes on the Bible

Verse Micah 7:16. The nations shall see and be confounded — Whether the words in these verses (Micah 7:15-17) be applied to the return from the Babylonish captivity, or to the prosperity of the Jews under the Maccabees, they may be understood as ultimately applicable to the final restoration of this people, and their lasting prosperity under the Gospel.


 
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