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주석[매튜 헨리] — 미가 3장 · 지도자들의 부패

요약
매튜 헨리 주석 · 섹션 3개 · 한국어 번역 있음(한국어 우선) · 본문 보기
아래 주석은 원문(및 번역문) 그대로입니다.

1~7절 카드 ↗

The Crimes of the Princes and Prophets. . 1 And I said, Hear, I pray you, O heads of Jacob, and ye princes of the house of Israel; Is it not for you to know judgment? 2 Who hate the good, and love the evil; who pluck off their skin from off them, and their flesh from off their bones; 3 Who also eat the flesh of my people, and flay their skin from off them; and they break their bones, and chop them in pieces, as for the pot, and as flesh within the caldron. 4 Then shall they cry unto the LORD , but he will not hear them: he will even hide his face from them at that time, as they have behaved themselves ill in their doings. 5 Thus saith the LORD concerning the prophets that make my people err, that bite with their teeth, and cry, Peace; and he that putteth not into their mouths, they even prepare war against him. 6 Therefore night shall be unto you, that ye shall not have a vision; and it shall be dark unto you, that ye shall not divine; and the sun shall go down over the prophets, and the day shall be dark over them. 7 Then shall the seers be ashamed, and the diviners confounded: yea, they shall all cover their lips; for there is no answer of God. Princes and prophets, when they faithfully discharge the duty of their office, are to be highly honoured above other men; but when they betray their trust, and act contrary to it, they should hear of their faults as well as others, and shall be made to know that there is a God above them, to whom they are accountable; at his bar the prophet here, in his name, arraigns them. I. Let the princes hear their charge and their doom. The heads of Jacob, and the princes of the house of Israel, are called upon to hear what the prophet has to say to them, Micah 3:1 ; Micah 3:1 . The word of God has reproofs for the greatest of men, which the ministers of that word ought to apply as there is occasion. The prophet here has comfort in the reflection upon it, that, whatever the success was, he had faithfully discharged his trust: And I said, Hear, O princes! He had the testimony of his conscience for him that he had not shrunk from his duty for fear of the face of men. He tells them, 1. What was expected from them: Is it not for you to know judgment? He means to do judgment, for otherwise the knowledge of it is of no avail. "Is it not your business to administer justice impartially, and not to know faces " (as the Hebrew phrase for partiality and respect of persons is), "but to know judgment, and the merits of every cause?" Or it may be taken for granted that the heads and rulers are well acquainted with the rules of justice, whatever others are; for they have those means of knowledge, and have not those excuses for ignorance, which some others have, that are poor and foolish ( Jeremiah 5:4 ); and, if so, their transgression of the laws of justice is the more provoking to God, for they sin against knowledge. "Is it not for you to know judgment? Yes, it is; therefore stand still, and hear your own judgment, and judge if it be not right, whether any thing can be objected against it." 2. How wretchedly they had transgressed the rules of judgment, though they knew what they were. Their principle and disposition are bad: They hate the good and love the evil; they hate good in others, and hate it should have any influence on themselves; they hate to do good, hate to have any good done, and hate those that are good and do good; and they love the evil, delight in mischief. This being their principle, their practice is according to it; they are very cruel and severe towards those that are under their power, and whoever lies at their mercy will find that they have none. They barbarously devour those whom they should protect, and, as unfaithful shepherds, fleece the flock they should feed; nay, instead of feeding it, they feed upon it, Ezekiel 34:2 . It is fit indeed that he who feeds a flock should eat of the milk of the flock ( 1 Corinthians 9:7 ), but that will not content them: They eat the flesh of my people. It is fit that they should be clothed with the wool, but that will not serve: They flay the skin from off them, Micah 3:3 ; Micah 3:3 . By imposing heavier taxes upon them than they can bear, and exacting them with rigour, by mulcts, and fines, and corporal punishments, for pretended crimes, they ruined the estates and families of their subjects, took away from some their lives, from others their livelihoods, and were to their subjects as beasts of prey, rather than shepherds. "They break their bones to come at the marrow, and chop the flesh in pieces as for the pot. " This intimates that they were, (1.) Very ravenous and greedy for themselves, indulging themselves in luxury and sensuality. (2.) Very barbarous and cruel to those that were under them, not caring whom they beggared, so they could but enrich themselves; such evil is the love of money the root of. 3. How they might expect that God should deal with them, since they had been thus cruel to his subjects. The rule is fixed, Those shall have judgment without mercy that have shown no mercy ( Micah 3:4 ; Micah 3:4 ): " They shall cry to the Lord, but he will not hear them, in the day of their distress, as the poor cried to them in the day of their prosperity and they would not hear them." There will come a time when the most proud and scornful sinners will cry to the Lord, and sue for that mercy which they once neither valued nor copied out. But it will then be in vain; God will even hide his face from them at that time, that time when they need his favour, and see themselves undone without it. At another time they would have turned their back upon him; but at that time he will turn his back upon them, as they have behaved themselves ill in their doings. Note, Men cannot expect to do ill and fare well, but may expect to find, as Adoni-bezek did, that done to them which they did to others; for he is righteous who takes vengeance. With the froward God will show himself froward, and he often gives up cruel and unmerciful men into the hands of those who are cruel and unmerciful to them, as they themselves have formerly been to others. This agrees with Proverbs 21:13 , Whoso stoppeth his ears at the cry of the poor, he shall cry himself and shall not be heard; but the merciful have reason to hope that they shall obtain mercy. II. Let the prophets hear their charge too, and their doom; they were such as prophesied falsely, and the princes bore rule by their means. Observe, 1. What was their sin. (1.) They made it their business to flatter and deceive the people: They make my people err, lead them into mistakes, both concerning what they should do and concerning what God would do with them. It is ill with a people when their leaders cause them to err, and those draw them out of the way that should guide them and go before them in it. "They make them to err by crying peace, by telling them that they do well, and that all shall be well with them; whereas they are in the paths of sin, and within a step of ruin. They cry peace, but they bite with their teeth, " which perhaps is meant of their biting their own lips, as we are apt to do when we would suppress something which we are ready to speak. When they cried peace their own hearts gave them the lie, and they were just ready to eat their own words and to contradict themselves, but they bit with their teeth, and kept it in. They were not blind leaders of the blind, for they saw the ditch before them, and yet led their followers into it. (2.) They made it all their aim to glut themselves, and serve their own belly, as the seducers in St. Paul's time ( Romans 16:18 ), for their god is their belly, Philippians 3:19 . They bite with their teeth, and cry peace; that is, they will flatter and compliment those that will feed them with good bits, will give them something to eat; but as for those that put not into their mouths, that are not continually cramming them, they look upon them as their enemies; to them they do not cry peace, as they do to those whom they look upon as their benefactors, but they even prepare war against them; against them they denounce the judgments of God, but as they are to them, as the crafty priests of the church of Rome, in some places, make their image either to smile or frown upon the offerer according as his offering is. Justly is it insisted on as a necessary qualification of a minister ( 1 Timothy 3:3 ; Titus 1:7 ) that he be not greedy of filthy lucre. 2. What is the sentence passed upon them for this sin, Micah 3:6 ; Micah 3:7 . It is threatened, (1.) That they shall be involved in troubles and miseries with those to whom they had cried peace: Night shall be upon them, a dark cold night of calamity, such as they, in their flattery, led the people to hope would never come. It shall be dark unto you, darker to you than to others; the sun shall go down over the prophets, shall go down at noon; all comfort shall depart from them, and they shall be deprived of all hope of it. The day shall be dark over them, in which they promised themselves light. Nor shall they be surrounded with outward troubles only, but their mind shall be full of confusion, and they shall be brought to their wits' end; their heads shall be clouded, and their own thoughts shall trouble them; and that is trouble enough. They kept others in the dark, and now God will bring them into the dark. (2.) That thereby they shall be silenced, and all their pretensions to prophecy for ever shamed. They never had any true vision; and now, the event disproving their predictions of peace, it shall be made to appear that they never had any, that there never was an answer of God to them, but it was all a sham, and they were cheats and impostors. Their reputation being thus quite sunk, their confidence would of course fail them. And, their spirits being ruffled and confused, their invention would fail them too; and by reason of this darkness, both without and within too, they shall not divine, they shall not have so much as a counterfeit vision to produce, they shall be ashamed, and confounded, and cover their lips, as men that are quite baffled and have nothing to say for themselves. Note, Those who deceive others are but preparing confusion for their own faces. return to ' Top of Page ' <a name="verses-8-12" class="com-number"

Pericope (part_of)

절 (explains)

bible-text/mic-3-1, bible-text/mic-3-2, bible-text/mic-3-3, bible-text/mic-3-4, bible-text/mic-3-5, bible-text/mic-3-6, bible-text/mic-3-7

Source

> 내가 말하였다. "야곱의 지도자들과 이스라엘 집의 통치자들아, 부디 들으라. 공의를 아는 것이 너희가 마땅히 할 일이 아니냐? 너희는 선한 것을 미워하고 악한 것을 사랑하며, 사람들의 살가죽을 벗기고 그 뼈에서 살을 발라내는구나. 너희는 또 내 백성의 살을 먹고 그 가죽을 벗기며 그 뼈를 꺾고 토막을 내니, 마치 솥에 넣을 고기처럼, 가마솥 안에 담을 살점처럼 다루는구나. 그때에 그들이 여호와께 부르짖어도 그분은 응답하지 않으시리라. 그들이 악한 일을 행하였으므로, 그때에 그분은 그들에게서 얼굴을 숨기시리라." (미 3:1-4)

**I. 방백들이 고발을 받는다.**

1. **그들에게 기대되는 바가 무엇인가.** "공의를 아는 것이 너희가 마땅히 할 일이 아니냐?" 지도자들은 공의의 규칙들을 알고 있다. 그들은 다른 이들보다 지식의 수단을 더 많이 가지고 있다. 그러므로 그들이 공의의 법을 어기는 것은 더욱 하나님을 분노케 한다—지식을 거슬러 죄를 짓기 때문이다(렘 5:4).

2. **그들이 얼마나 비참하게 이 규칙들을 어겼는가.** 그들의 원칙이 나쁘다—선한 것을 미워하고 악한 것을 사랑한다. 그 실천도 그에 따라 잔인하다. 그들은 보호해야 할 자들을 잔인하게 삼켜 버렸다. 부실한 목자처럼 양 떼를 먹이기는커녕 양 떼를 먹어 버린다(겔 34:2). 그들은 자신들의 탐욕을 채우기 위해 과중한 세금을 부과하고 가혹하게 징수하며, 백성들의 재산과 목숨을 빼앗았다. 이것은 다음을 보여 준다. (1) 그들이 스스로에게는 매우 탐욕스러웠다. (2) 그들 아래 있는 자들에게는 매우 야만적이고 잔인했다—누구를 빈곤하게 만들든 개의치 않았다.

3. **그러한 취급을 받은 뒤 그들이 기대할 수 있는 것.** "그들이 여호와께 부르짖어도 그분은 응답하지 않으시리라." 자비 없이 행한 자들은 자비 없이 심판받는다. 그들이 번성하던 날에 가난한 자들이 그들에게 부르짖어도 들어주지 않았던 것처럼, 고통받는 날에 그들이 부르짖어도 하나님이 들어주지 않으실 것이다. 하나님의 얼굴을 피해 그들이 달아나던 자들처럼, 하나님도 그들에게서 얼굴을 숨기실 것이다(잠 21:13).

**II. 선지자들도 고발을 받는다.** 거짓으로 예언하고 방백들이 통치를 계속할 수 있게 돕는 자들이다.

1. **그들의 죄.** (1) 그들은 백성을 그릇된 길로 인도하는 것을 업으로 삼았다—"평안하다"라고 외치며, 그들이 죄의 길에 있고 파멸의 한 걸음 앞에 있음에도 잘 될 것이라 말한다. (2) 그들은 배를 채우는 것만을 목적으로 삼았다(롬 16:18; 빌 3:19; 딤전 3:3; 딛 1:7). 먹을 것을 주는 자에게는 "평안하다"라고 하지만, 자기 입에 채워 주지 않는 자에게는 전쟁을 선포한다.

2. **그들에게 선고된 형벌(미 3:6-7).** (1) 그들도 재난에 휩쓸릴 것이다—해가 선지자들 위에서 지고, 낮이 그들 위에서 캄캄해질 것이다. (2) 그들은 침묵하게 되고, 모든 예언의 주장이 영원히 부끄러움을 당할 것이다. 하나님으로부터 어떤 응답도 없고, 그들의 예언이 사건들에 의해 거짓임이 드러나, 그들은 입을 가리게 될 것이다. 주목하라. 다른 사람들을 속이는 자들은 자기 얼굴에 수치를 준비하는 것이다.

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원주석

1~12절 카드 ↗

M I C A H. CHAP. III. What the apostle says of another of the prophets is true of this, who was also his contemporary--"Esaias is very bold," Romans 10:20 . So, in this chapter, Micah is very bold in reproving and threatening the great men that were the ringleaders in sin; and he gives the reason ( Micah 3:8 ) why he was so bold, because he had commission and instruction from God to say what he said, and was carried out in it by a higher spirit and power than his own. Magistracy and ministry are two great ordinances of God, for good to his church, but these were both corrupted and the intentions of them perverted; and upon those that abused them, and so abused the church with them, the prophet is very severe, and justly so. I. He gives them their lesson severally, reproving and threatening princes ( Micah 3:1-4 ) and false flattering prophets, Micah 3:5-7 . II. He gives them their lesson jointly, putting them together, as acting in conjunction for the ruin of the kingdom, which they should see the ruins of, Micah 3:9-12 . return to ' Top of Page ' <a name="verses-1-7" class="com-number"

Pericope (part_of)

절 (explains)

Source

사도의 또 다른 선지자에 대한 말씀이 이 선지자에게도 해당한다: "이사야는 매우 담대하다"(롬 10:20). 이 장에서 미가는 죄의 주동자들인 지도자들을 책망하고 위협하는 데 있어 매우 담대하다. 그가 그토록 담대할 수 있었던 이유는 미 3:8에 나온다—그는 하나님으로부터 위임과 지시를 받았고, 자신의 것이 아닌 더 높은 영과 능력으로 이끌림을 받았기 때문이다. 행정과 사역은 하나님의 교회를 위해 세우신 두 가지 위대한 제도이지만, 둘 다 부패하여 그 목적이 왜곡되었다. 선지자는 이 둘을 각각 따로(미 3:1-4, 5-7), 그리고 함께(미 3:9-12) 심하게 꾸짖는다.

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원주석

8~12절 카드 ↗

The Crimes of the Princes and Prophets. . 8 But truly I am full of power by the spirit of the LORD , and of judgment, and of might, to declare unto Jacob his transgression, and to Israel his sin. 9 Hear this, I pray you, ye heads of the house of Jacob, and princes of the house of Israel, that abhor judgment, and pervert all equity. 10 They build up Zion with blood, and Jerusalem with iniquity. 11 The heads thereof judge for reward, and the priests thereof teach for hire, and the prophets thereof divine for money: yet will they lean upon the LORD , and say, Is not the LORD among us? none evil can come upon us. 12 Therefore shall Zion for your sake be plowed as a field, and Jerusalem shall become heaps, and the mountain of the house as the high places of the forest. Here, I. The prophet experiences a divine power going along with him in his work, and he makes a solemn profession and protestation of it, as that which would justify him, and bear him out, in his plain dealing with the princes and rulers. He would not, he durst not, make thus bold with the great men, but that he was carried out to do it by a prophetical impulse and impression. It was not he that said it, but God by him, and he could not but speak the word that God put into his mouth. It comes in likewise by way of opposition to the false prophets, who were full of shame when they lived to see themselves proved liars, and who never had courage to deal faithfully with the people, but flattered them in their sins; they were sensual, not having the Spirit, but truly (says Micah) I am full of power by the Spirit of the Lord, Micah 3:8 ; Micah 3:8 . Having in himself an assurance of the truth of what he said, he said it with assurance. Compare him with those false prophets, and you will say, There is no comparison between them. What is the chaff to the wheat? Jeremiah 23:28 . What is painted fire to real fire? Observe here, 1. What the qualifications were with which this prophet was endured: He was full of power, and of judgment, and of might; he had an ardent love to God and to the souls of men, a deep concern for his glory and their salvation, and a flaming zeal against sin. He had likewise courage to reprove it and witness against it, not fearing the wrath either of great men or of great multitudes; whatever difficulties or discouragements he met with, they did not deter him nor drive him from his work; none of these things moved him. And all this was guided by judgment and discretion; he was a man of wisdom as well as courage; in all his preaching there was light as well as heat, and a spirit of wisdom as well as of zeal. Thus was this man of God thoroughly furnished for every good word he had to say, and every good work he had to do. Those he preached to could not but perceive him to be full both of power and judgment, for they found both their understandings opened and their hearts made to burn within them, with such evidence and demonstration, and with such power, did the word come from him. 2. Whence he had these qualifications, not from and of himself, but he was full of power by the Spirit of the Lord. Knowing that it was indeed the Spirit of the Lord that was in him, and spoke by him, that it was a divine revelation that he delivered, he spoke it boldly, and as one having authority, set his face as a flint, knowing he should be justified and borne out in what he said, Isaiah 50:7 ; Isaiah 50:8 . Note, Those who act honestly may act boldly; and those who are sure that they have a commission from God need not be afraid of opposition from men. Nay, he had not only a Spirit of prophecy, which was the ground of his boldness, but the Spirit of sanctification endued him with the boldness and wisdom which were requisite for him. It was not in any strength of his own that he was strong; for who is sufficient for these things? but in the Lord, and in the power of his might; for from him all our sufficiency is. Are we full of power at any time, for that which is good? It is purely by the Spirit of the Lord, for of ourselves we are weak as water; it is the God of Israel that gives strength and power both to his people and to his ministers. 3. What use he made of these qualifications--this judgment and this power; he declared to Jacob his transgression and to Israel his sin. If transgression be found in Jacob and Israel, they must be told of it, and it is the business of God's prophets to tell them of it, to cry aloud and not to spare, Isaiah 58:1 . Those who come to hear the word of God must be willing to be told of their faults, and must not only give their ministers leave to deal plainly and faithfully with them, but take it kindly, and be thankful; but, since few have meekness enough to receive reproof, those have need of a great deal of boldness who are to give reproofs, and must pray for a spirit both of wisdom and might. II. The prophet exerts this power in dealing with the heads of the house of Jacob, both the princes and the prophets, whom he had drawn up a high charge against in the former part of the chapter. He repeats the summons of their attendance and attention ( Micah 3:9 ; Micah 3:9 ), the same that we had Micah 3:1 ; Micah 3:1 , directing himself to the princes of the house of Israel, yet he means those of Judah; for it appears ( Jeremiah 26:18 ; Jeremiah 26:19 , where Micah 3:12 ; Micah 3:12 is quoted) that this was spoken in Hezekiah's kingdom; but, the ten tribes being gone into captivity, Judah is all that is now left of Jacob and Israel. The prophet speaks respectfully to them ( hear, I pray you ) and gives them their titles of heads and princes. Ministers must be faithful to great men in reproving them for their sins, but they must not be rude and uncivil to them. Now observe here, 1. The great wickedness that these heads of the house of Jacob were guilty of, princes, priest, and prophets; in short, they were covetous and prostituted their offices to their love of money. (1.) The princes abhorred all judgment; they would not be governed by any of its laws, either in their own practice or in passing sentence upon appeals made to them; they perverted all equity, and scorned to be under the direction or correction of justice, when it could not be made pliable to their secular interests. When, under pretence of doing right, they did the most palpable wrongs, then they perverted equity, and made it serve a purpose contrary to the intention of the founder of magistracy and fountain of power. It is laid to their charge ( Micah 3:10 ; Micah 3:10 ) that they build up Zion with blood. "They pretend, in justification of their extortion and oppressions, that they build up Zion and Jerusalem; they add new streets and squares to the holy cities, and adorn them; they establish and advance the public interests both in church and state, and think that therein they do God and Israel good service. But it is with blood and with iniquity, and therefore it cannot prosper; nor will their intentions of good to the city of God justify their contradictions to the law of God." Those mistake who think that a burning zeal for holy church, and the propagating of the faith, will serve to consecrate robberies and murders, massacres and depredations; no, Zion's walls owe those no thanks that build them up with blood and iniquity. The sin of man works not the righteousness of God. "The office of the princes is to judge upon appeals made to them; but they judge for reward ( Micah 3:11 ; Micah 3:11 ); they give judgment on the side of those that give the bribe; the most righteous cause shall not be carried without a fee, and for a fee the most unrighteous cause shall be carried." Miserable is the people's case when the judge's enquiry upon a cause is not, "What is to be done in it?" but, "What is to be got by it?" (2.) The priests' work was to teach the people, and for that the law had provided them a very honourable comfortable maintenance; but that will not content them, they teach for hire over and above, and will be hired to teach anything, as an oracle of God, which they know will please and gain them an interest. (3.) The prophets, it should seem, had honorary fees given them by way of gratuity ( 1 Samuel 9:7 ; 1 Samuel 9:8 ); but these prophets governed themselves in their prophesying by the prospect of temporal advantage and that was the main thing they had in their eye: They divine for money. Their tongues were mercenary; they would either prophesy or let it alone, according as they found it most for their advantage; and a man might have what oracle he would from them if he would but pay them for it. Thus they were fit successors of Balaam, who loved the wages of unrighteousness. Note, Though that which is wicked can never be consecrated by a zeal for the church, yet that which is sacred may be, and often is, desecrated, by the love of the world. When men do that which in itself is good, but do it for filthy lucre, it loses its excellency, and becomes an abomination both to God and man. 2. Their vain presumption and carnal confidence, notwithstanding: They lean upon the Lord, and because they are, in profession, his people, they think there is neither harm nor danger in these their wicked practices. Faith builds upon the Lord, rests in him, and relies upon him, as the soul's foundation; presumption only leans upon the Lord as a prop, makes use of him to serve a turn, while still the world is the foundation that is built upon. They speak with a great deal of confidence, (1.) Of their honour: " Is not the Lord among us? Have we not the tokens of his presence with us, his temple, his ark, his lively oracles?" They are haughty because of the holy mountain and its dignities ( Zephaniah 3:11 ), as if their church-privileges would palliate the worst of practices, or as if God's presence with them were intended to make the priests and people rich with the sale of their performances. It was true that the Lord was among them by his ordinances, and this puffed them up with pride; but, if they imagined that he was among them by his favour and love, they were mistaken: but it is a cheat the children of men often put upon themselves to think they have God with them, when they have by their sin provoked him to depart from them. (2.) They are confident of their own safety: No evil can come upon us. Many are rocked asleep; in a fatal security by their church-privileges, as if those would protect them in sin, and shelter them from punishment, which are really, and will be, the greatest aggravations both of their sin and of their punishment. If men's having the Lord among them will not restrain them from doing evil, it can never secure them from suffering evil for so doing; and it is very absurd for sinners to think that their impudence will be their impunity. 3. The doom passed upon them for their real wickedness, notwithstanding their imaginary protection ( Micah 3:12 ; Micah 3:12 ): Therefore shall Zion for your sake be ploughed as a field. This is that passage which is quoted as a bold word spoken by Micah ( Jeremiah 26:18 ), which yet Hezekiah and his princes took well, though in another reign it might have gone near to cost him his head; nay, they repented and reformed, and so the execution of this threatening was prevented, and did not come in those days. (1.) It is the ruin of holy places that is here foretold, places that had been highly honoured with the tokens of God's presence and the performances of his worship; it is Zion that shall be ploughed as a field, the building burnt to the ground and levelled with it. Some observe that this was literally fulfilled in the destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans, when the ground on which the city stood was ploughed up in token of its utter desolation, and that no city should be built upon that ground without the emperor's leave. Even Jerusalem, the holy city, shall become heaps of ruins, and the mountain of the house, on which the temple is built, shall be overgrown with briars and thorns, as the high places of the forest. If sacred places be polluted by sin, they must expect to be wasted and ruined by the judgments of God. (2.) It is the wickedness of those who preside in them that brings the ruin: "It is for your sake that Zion shall be ploughed as a field; you pretend to build up Zion, but, doing it by blood and iniquity, you pull it down." Note, The sin of priests and princes is often the ruin of states and churches. Delirant reges, plectuntur Achivi -- The kings act foolishly and the people suffer for it. return to ' Top of Page ' Micah Mic 2 Micah Mic Micah Mic 4 Footnotes: Copyright Statement These files are public domain and are a derivative of an electronic edition that is available on the Christian Classics Ethereal Library Website. Bibliographical Information Henry, Matthew. "Complete Commentary on Micah 3". 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Pericope (part_of)

절 (explains)

bible-text/mic-3-8, bible-text/mic-3-9, bible-text/mic-3-10, bible-text/mic-3-11, bible-text/mic-3-12

Source

> 그러나 나로 말하면, 나는 여호와의 영으로 능력과 공의와 힘이 충만하여, 야곱에게 그의 거역함을, 이스라엘에게 그의 죄를 선포하노라. 공의를 미워하고 모든 바른 것을 굽게 하는 야곱 집의 지도자들과 이스라엘 집의 통치자들아, 부디 이 말을 들으라. 그들은 피로 시온을 세우고 불의로 예루살렘을 쌓는구나. 그 지도자들은 뇌물을 받고 재판하며, 그 제사장들은 삯을 받고 가르치며, 그 선지자들은 돈을 위해 점을 치면서도, 여호와를 의지한다며 "여호와께서 우리 가운데 계시지 않느냐? 재앙이 우리에게 닥치지 않으리라" 말하는구나. 그러므로 너희 때문에 시온은 밭처럼 갈아엎어지고, 예루살렘은 폐허 더미가 되며, 성전이 있는 산은 숲의 산당처럼 되리라. (미 3:8-12)

**I. 선지자가 자신의 사역에서 하나님의 능력을 체험한다(미 3:8).** 그는 이것을 엄숙히 고백하는데, 이것이 그를 담대하게 지도자들과 맞서게 한다. 이것은 또한 거짓 선지자들과의 대조로 나온다—그들은 결국 드러날 때 수치를 당할 것이지만, 미가는 참으로 "나는 여호와의 영으로 충만하다"라고 말할 수 있다.

1. **그가 갖춘 자질.** 하나님과 사람들의 영혼에 대한 뜨거운 사랑, 그분의 영광과 그들의 구원에 대한 깊은 관심, 죄에 대한 불타는 열심. 또한 어려움이나 낙담에도 물러서지 않는 용기, 지혜와 분별력.

2. **이 자질들의 출처.** 그 자신에게서가 아니라 "여호와의 영"으로—사람이 어떤 때에 선을 위해 능력으로 충만하다면, 그것은 순전히 여호와의 영으로 말미암은 것이다.

3. **이 자질들을 어떻게 사용했는가.** 야곱의 거역함과 이스라엘의 죄를 선포하는 데 사용했다. 하나님의 백성에게서 죄가 발견되면 그들에게 알려 주어야 한다. 하나님의 말씀을 전하는 자들에게는 이 용기와 지혜의 영이 필요하다(사 58:1).

**II. 선지자가 이 능력을 방백들에 대한 심판에 사용한다.** 방백, 제사장, 선지자 모두 자기 직분의 사랑을 오직 돈에 대한 사랑으로 대체했다.

1. **그들의 큰 악(미 3:9-11).**

- 방백들은 공의를 미워하고 모든 바른 것을 굽힌다. 뇌물로 재판하고, 가장 불의한 소송도 뇌물이 있으면 이긴다.

- 제사장들은 삯을 받고 가르친다—자기들에게 이익이 되는 어떤 것이든 마치 하나님의 신탁처럼 가르친다.

- 선지자들은 돈을 위해 점을 친다—그들의 혀가 용병처럼 움직인다.

- 그들은 피로 시온을 세운다—착취와 압제의 수익으로 거룩한 성을 짓는다고 주장하지만, 그것이 하나님의 법을 어기는 수단으로 되어서는 안 된다(미 3:10).

2. **그들의 헛된 자신감과 육적 확신(미 3:11).** 그들은 "여호와께서 우리 가운데 계시지 않느냐?"라고 말하며 신앙고백을 내세운다. 믿음은 하나님을 영혼의 기초로 삼지만, 교만은 그분을 단지 버팀목으로 삼는다. 교회 특권들이 최악의 행위들을 완화해 주거나 심판으로부터 피신처가 되어 줄 것이라는 착각이다.

3. **그들의 죄에 대한 선고(미 3:12).** "그러므로 너희 때문에 시온은 밭처럼 갈아엎어지고"—이것은 예레미야가 담대한 말로 인용한 구절이다(렘 26:18). 히스기야와 그의 신하들은 이것을 잘 받아들여 회개하고 개혁했고, 그래서 그 시대에 그 위협의 집행이 막혔다. 거룩한 성읍들이 오염되면 황폐해지기를 기대해야 한다. 통치자들의 죄가 종종 나라와 교회의 파멸을 가져온다.

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