Micah 6:15 - Exposition
Here is another judgment in accordance with the threatenings of the Law ( Deuteronomy 28:33 , Deuteronomy 28:38 , etc.; comp. Amos 5:11 ; Zephaniah 1:13 ; Haggai 1:6 ). Shalt not reap. The effect may be owing to the judicial sterility of the soil, but more likely to the incursions of the enemy. Trochon quotes Virgil, ' Eel.,' 1:70—
" Impius haec tam culta novalia miles habebit?
Barbarus has segetes? en, quo discordia cives
Produxit miseros! his nos consevimus agros! "
Tread the olives. Olives were usually pressed or crushed in a mill, in order to extract the oil; the process of treading; was probably adopted by the poor. Gethsemane took its name from the oil presses there. The oil was applied to the person for comfort, luxury, and ceremony, and was almost indispensable in a hot country. Sweet wine. Thou shalt tread the new wine of the vintage, but shalt have to leave it for the enemy (comp. Amos 5:11 ). The Septuagint has here an interpolation, καὶ ἀφανισθήσεται νόμιμα λαοῦ μου , "And the ordinances of my people shall vanish away," which has arisen partly from a confusion between Omri, the proper name in the next verse, and ammi, "my people."
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