Micah 5:1-4 · A Promised Ruler from Bethlehem
A Promised Ruler from Bethlehem
Micah 5:1-4
Understanding Series
by Elizabeth Achtemeier
Loading...

The Future Messiah: In the previous chapter, 4:6–8 promised the return of a remnant to Zion, Yahweh’s rule over them, and the restoration of the Davidic throne. Then there followed with 4:9 a series of three oracles, each beginning with “now,” and each portraying Judah’s current desperate situation and Yahweh’s salvation yet to come. This passage, the third in the series, deals with the restoration of the Davidic throne in fulfillment of 2 Samuel 7:13.

5:1 The NIV has obscured the connection of this oracle with the two that precede it by omitting “now” at the beginning of verse 1. The word “now” is probably the only word that can be read with certainty from the Hebrew of verse 1a, however. The remainder of the line is obscure and has been variously emended (see the additional note), but the NIV reading of the line is probably as satisfactory as any. The wording is apparently a call to the inhabitants of Jerusalem to assemble their troops in order to turn back the attack of those who are already besieging them. In light of verse 3, which refers to exile (cf. 4:10), the Babylonian siege of Jerusalem in 588 BC is probably intended. However, the humiliation of the king mentioned in verse 1c–d probably has to do with the earlier treatment of the Davidic king, Jehoiachin, who was forced to surrender to Nebuchadnezzar of Babylonia and who was carried into exile in 597 BC (cf. 2 Kgs. 24:10–12). For the humiliating custom of striking on the cheek, see Job 16:10; Lam. 3:13; Matt. 26:67; and cf. Luke 22:64; John 18:22; 19:3.

The Davidic line has been humiliated, defeated, and seemingly cut off. But as in Isa. 11:1; Jer. 23:5–6; and Ezek. 34:23; 37:24–25, that is not God’s planned ending for the story (cf. the optimistic notice about Jehoiachin in 2 Kgs. 25:27–30). God promised there would always be a Davidic heir to sit upon the throne, and God always keeps his promises.

5:2 God will bring forth a new Davidic ruler who will be set to reign over God’s people, verse 2. That the new ruler will be of the Davidic line is shown by the fact that he will come from Bethlehem Ephrathah. David’s father was Jesse, a Bethlehemite (1 Sam. 16:1, 18), and David is called “the son of an Ephrathite of Bethlehem in Judah, named Jesse” in 1 Sam. 17:12 (cf. Ruth 1:2).

Ephrathah could be designated a place separated from Bethlehem, as in Psalm 132:6 and Genesis 35:16, so perhaps the name referred to a specific region or district. But in Genesis 35:19 and 48:7 (cf. Ruth 4:11), it is specifically identified with Bethlehem. Thus, perhaps Ephrathah was the district immediately surrounding Bethlehem of Judea. Later it becomes so closely identified with Bethlehem that Matthew 2:6, which quotes Micah 5:2, omits “Ephrathah.”

That this new Davidic ruler comes from God and not from the Jerusalem succession of Davidic kings is emphasized, however, by the statement that his tribe or clan, which designated an association of extended families, was one of the smallest in Israel, verse 2b. Similarly humble backgrounds are claimed for Saul (1 Sam. 9:21) and Gideon (Judg. 6:15). Repeatedly the Scripture emphasizes what the Apostle Paul put into words:

God chose what is weak in the world to shame the strong, God chose what is low and despised in the world, even things that are not, to bring to nothing things that are, so that no human being might boast in the presence of God. (1 Cor. 1:27–29 RSV)

More than that, the origins of this ruler promised in Micah 5:2 are from of old, from ancient times (verse 2e–f). Two meanings may be implied. First, the origin of the coming ruler is mysterious and beyond human comprehension, because he comes from God. Second, his appearance was planned long ago in the purpose and providence of God. He is not a sudden, spontaneous answer on God’s part to Israel’s need for rescue. Rather, his rule has been destined from the first in God’s plan for his world.

5:3–4 When will this Davidic ruler come forth? Verse 3 is intended to answer that question. First will come the tribulation, the punishment for Israel’s sins, as previous oracles have made clear. Judah will fall and go into exile (3:9–12). Continuing the figure of the woman in travail (4:10; see the commentary there), the inhabitants of Jerusalem and Judah will go forth, as from the womb, into captivity. Some scholars have speculated that the reference in verse 3b to a woman in labor has in view a specific woman, as in Isaiah 7:14, whose birth of a child will mark the end of Judah’s exile. But the meaning is the same as that found in 4:10, where the captured inhabitants of Jerusalem burst forth from the city, like a child bursting forth from the womb, to be gathered into groups for the trek to Babylonia. After the tribulation of the exile, then, the remnant of the people (cf. 4:7) will be returned to Judah, verse 3c–d, to be ruled over by God’s future Davidic king or Messiah.

The word “messiah” comes from the Hebrew māšîaḥ, which means “anointed.” Hebrew kings, along with priests, were anointed with oil for their office, and the Messiah or anointed one, in the OT, is consistently referred to as being of the house of David. When we speak of the Messiah, it is of that future Davidic, anointed ruler that we are speaking. Moreover, the nature of his rule is set forth in the royal psalms (Ps. 2, 18, 20, 21, 45, 72, 101, 110, 132, 144:1–11), which describe not a particular historical occupant of the Davidic throne but the nature of the office itself. Israel constantly looked forward to the coming of a king who would match the description given in the royal psalms, and the future ruler depicted in Micah 5:4 is consistent with that portrayal.

This future Messiah will stand, that is, his reign will endure (cf. Ps. 45:6; 72:5, 17; 89:36), just as the word of God is said in Isaiah 40:8 to “stand” forever. He will shepherd his people. “His flock” is missing in the Hebrew, but is clearly implied and so is added in most versions. Kings were always referred to in the ancient Near East as the “shepherds” of their people, and so the Messiah will shepherd his people, that is, he will provide for their necessities, guide them in the right paths (cf. Ps. 23:3), and protect them from all harm. But the Messiah will carry out his duties, not by his own strength, but by the strength given him by God (cf. Ps. 18:32–35; 20:6; 21:1; cf. Isa. 11:2), manifesting the lordship or majesty of his God over all.

Because God is Lord of the earth, the Messiah, who rules in the strength of God, will reign over a universal kingdom (Ps. 2:8; 18:43; 72:8; 89:25), and his people will live in security (Hebrew: “dwell”) in everlasting fulfillment of 2 Samuel 7:10.

Luke 2:4 and John 7:42 both understand Jesus’ birth in Bethlehem of Judea as a fulfillment of this prophecy, and Micah 5:2–4 is quoted from the LXX version in Matthew 2:6. Thus, the Christian church has always understood Jesus Christ to be this Messiah promised by the prophet. Certainly he is the one who rules over all in the power of God. He is the one who manifests the glory and majesty of God. He is the one whose kingdom will endure forever. And he is the one who can give his people that security which the world can neither give nor ever take away.

Additional Note

5:1 Marshall your troops, O city of troops: The line has been emended and read in a variety of ways: RSV [MT 4:14]: “Now you are walled about with a wall,” following Robinson’s emendation of titgēd e rî b e gādēr; Wellhausen, followed by many: “Now you are gashing yourself with gashes,” reading hitgōdēd titgōd e ; some read “Now gash yourself, daughter of marauders,” reading “troops” as “marauders.” Gashing was a funerary practice indicating deep lamentation (Jer. 16:6; 41:5). But in Canaanite practice it was used to bring about an ecstatic trance (cf.1 Kgs.18:28), and it is specifically forbidden in Deut.14:1. It is therefore doubtful that “gashing” is here the meaning.

 

Baker Publishing Group, Understanding the Bible Commentary Series, by Elizabeth Achtemeier