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Woe is me! for I am as when they have gathered the summer fruits, as the grape gleanings of the vintage: there is no cluster to eat; my soul desires the first-ripe fig.
Verse Takeaways
1
A Land Stripped of Goodness
Commentators explain that Micah uses a powerful agricultural metaphor to describe the moral state of his society. The nation is like a vineyard after the harvest, completely picked over. The prophet, searching for a righteous person ('a cluster to eat'), finds none. Scholars note that Micah even personifies the land itself, crying out in shame over its spiritual barrenness and lack of 'good fruit' (godly people).
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Micah
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6
18th Century
Presbyterian
Woe is me! For I am as when they have gathered the summer fruits, as the grape-gleanings of the vintage. “The vineyard of the Lord of ho…
19th Century
Anglican
Woe is me! —Micah gives here a fearful picture of the demoralised state of society in Judah which had called down the vengeance of…
Baptist
It is a terrible thing for a good man to find good men growing very scarce, and to see wicked men becoming more wicked than ever. It makes him feel…
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16th Century
Protestant
The meaning of the first verse is somewhat doubtful: some refer what the Prophet says to punishment, and others to the wickedness of the people. Th…
17th Century
Reformed Baptist
Woe is me ! &c.] Alas for me unhappy man that I am, to live in such an age, and among such a people, as I do!
this…
The prophet laments that he lived among a people swiftly ripening for ruin, a situation in which many good people would suffer. People found no com…
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