Context Counts
One of the dangers of familiar Bible verses is that we can learn to quote them without really hearing them.Micah 6:8 is one of those verses.“He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the LORD require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?”It is short, memorable, and powerful. It sounds simple enough to put on a sign, a journal cover, or a social media graphic. But the danger with a verse like this is that it can become a slogan before it becomes a searchlight.That is what I wanted to deal with in this week’s episode of Context Counts.Micah 6:8 was not originally spoken as a soft inspirational thought for decent religious people. It comes in the middle of a courtroom scene. The LORD has a controversy with His people. He calls the mountains and hills as witnesses and pleads His case before Israel.That setting matters.God is not speaking to people who have never heard His name. He is not speaking to strangers who know nothing of His works. He is speaking to His own covenant people, a people who had received mercy, deliverance, instruction, leadership, protection, and repeated evidence of His faithfulness.And that is what makes the passage so searching. The problem in Micah 6 was not that the people lacked religion. They knew how to talk about offerings. They knew how to speak the language of sacrifice. They knew how to imagine giving more, bringing more, doing more outwardly.But God was not asking for a larger religious performance.He was asking for a life that matched the worship.That is where Micah 6:8 presses on us.It is possible to know the right words and still miss the weight of them. It is possible to maintain religious habits while our hearts grow cold toward obedience. It is possible to care deeply about public worship while becoming careless in private dealings, personal mercy, and humble submission to God.The people in Micah’s day asked, in effect, “What shall we bring?” Burnt offerings? Calves? Thousands of rams? Ten thousands of rivers of oil?But God had already shown them what was good.Do justly. Love mercy. Walk humbly with thy God.Those three phrases are not a replacement for faith. They are not a man-made plan of salvation. They are not a ladder by which sinners climb up to God. They are the kind of life that ought to flow from a people who know the Lord and have received His mercy.And they belong together.Justice without mercy becomes hard and severe. Mercy without justice becomes shallow and sentimental. Justice and mercy without humility become self-righteous. But when a man walks humbly with God, he begins to see other people through truth, compassion, and reverence.Do JustlyTo “do justly” is more than admiring fairness in the abstract. It is more than being upset when other people are dishonest. It is a call to live truthfully before God in ordinary places.Biblical justice begins with God Himself. Deuteronomy 32:4 says, “He is the Rock, his work is perfect: for all his ways are judgment: a God of truth and without iniquity, just and right is he.” Justice is not a passing cultural concern. It is rooted in the character of a holy God.That means justice is not merely public. It is personal. It reaches into the way we speak, the way we judge, the way we handle money, the way we treat people who cannot benefit us, and the way we respond when telling the truth costs us something.Proverbs 11:1 says, “A false balance is abomination to the LORD: but a just weight is his delight.” That verse speaks directly to dishonest dealings, but the principle reaches farther. A false balance is not only something a man can hold in his hand. It can be something he carries in his heart.We use a false balance when we judge ourselves by our intentions and others by their failures. We use a false balance when we tell only the part of the story that makes us look innocent. We use a false balance when we expect patience from others but refuse to extend it ourselves.Micah 6:8 does not let us keep rigged scales.To do justly means we tell the truth. We keep our word. We refuse partiality. We do not take advantage of weakness, ignorance, grief, poverty, or trust. We do not use people and then hide behind religious language.This is one reason the prophets often sound so severe. God’s people could sing, sacrifice, gather, and speak spiritually while still tolerating crookedness in daily life. Amos 5 records the LORD saying, “Take thou away from me the noise of thy songs,” and then calling for judgment to “run down as waters, and righteousness as a mighty stream.”The issue was not that songs were wrong. The issue was that worship had become disconnected from obedience.That warning still needs to be heard.Love MercyMicah does not only say to show mercy. He says to love mercy.That is a much deeper command. A man may show mercy reluctantly because he has no other choice. He may show mercy because people are watching. He may show mercy because withholding it would damage his reputation. But to love mercy is to have the heart shaped by the mercy of God.Micah 7:18 says of the LORD, “he retaineth not his anger for ever, because he delighteth in mercy.” That phrase is remarkable. God does not merely dispense mercy coldly. He delights in mercy. His people, then, should not treat mercy as an inconvenience.Mercy is not weakness. It is not pretending that sin does not matter. It is not refusing to make moral distinctions. Biblical mercy never requires us to call evil good. But mercy does mean that we move toward people with compassion instead of pride, patience instead of harshness, and a desire for restoration instead of a secret pleasure in punishment.This is where many of us are searched.It is possible to be technically right and spiritually cruel. It is possible to defend truth with a heart that has become cold. It is possible to talk about righteousness while enjoying the thought of someone else being crushed.But Ephesians 4:32 says, “And be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God for Christ's sake hath forgiven you.”That last phrase is the key: “even as God for Christ's sake hath forgiven you.”Forgiven people ought to become forgiving people. Recipients of mercy ought to become instruments of mercy. The mercy we refuse to give may be the mercy we have forgotten we received.So the question is not only, “Have I been right?” Sometimes the better question is, “Have I been merciful?”Who am I keeping in debt emotionally because I enjoy holding the record? Who do I want punished more than restored? Where have I confused firmness with hardness? Where have I used truth as a weapon because my spirit was not governed by love?Micah 6:8 will not let us be content with cold correctness.Love mercy.Walk HumblyThe third phrase is the foundation beneath the first two: “walk humbly with thy God.”Humility is often misunderstood. It is not uncertainty about truth. It is not weakness. It is not refusing to speak when God has spoken. Biblical humility is the honest posture of a man who knows that God is God and he is not.Isaiah 66:2 says, “but to this man will I look, even to him that is poor and of a contrite spirit, and trembleth at my word.”That is the humble man. He trembles at God’s word. He does not edit it to fit himself. He does not stand over it as judge. He receives it, bows before it, and lets it correct him.Micah says to walk humbly. That means humility is not a momentary feeling during a sermon or a temporary emotion during a hard season. It is a daily path.We walk humbly when we confess quickly. We walk humbly when we obey plainly. We walk humbly when we pray dependently. We walk humbly when we receive correction without immediately defending ourselves.Pride says, “I know better.” Humility says, “Speak, LORD; for thy servant heareth.”Pride says, “I can handle my sin.” Humility says, “Search me, O God.”Pride says, “I do not need correction.” Humility receives the rebuke that comes from Scripture and says, “The LORD is right.”James 4:6 gives both warning and promise: “God resisteth the proud, but giveth grace unto the humble.”That should make us tremble. It is a fearful thing to have God resist us. But it is a gracious thing to know that He gives grace to the humble.Pride turns God’s hand against us. Humility brings us under His grace.The Verse That Exposes UsMicah 6:8 is beautiful, but it is also exposing.Have we always done justly? No.Have we always loved mercy? No.Have we always walked humbly with our God? No.We have used false balances. We have been partial. We have defended ourselves. We have withheld mercy. We have excused what God condemned. We have been more concerned with how things looked than whether they were right before the Lord.So Micah 6:8 is not a verse that should make us proud of ourselves. It is a verse that should drive us to the mercy of God.And this is where we must look to Christ.The Lord Jesus Christ did justly. He loved mercy. He walked humbly with His God. He was righteous in all His ways. He showed compassion to the sick, the sinful, the grieving, and the outcast. He humbled Himself and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross.He is not merely our example. He is our Saviour.By His grace, He forgives sinners. And by that same grace, He changes the people He forgives. Titus 2 says that “the grace of God that bringeth salvation” teaches us to deny ungodliness and worldly lusts and to live soberly, righteously, and godly.Grace does not teach us to ignore Micah 6:8.Grace teaches us to live it.A Better QuestionMaybe the better question is not, “Do I like Micah 6:8?”Most of us like it.The better question is, “Am I living it?”Am I doing justly in the places where dishonesty would benefit me?Am I loving mercy toward the people who have disappointed me?Am I walking humbly with God when His word corrects my attitude, my speech, my priorities, or my private life?True worship is not less than what we do when we gather. But it is more than that. True worship is meant to shape the way we live when the service is over, when the conversation is private, when the decision is costly, and when nobody is clapping.Micah 6:8 is not a slogan.It is a summons.Do justly. Love mercy. Walk humbly with thy God.May the Lord make us a people who do not merely quote it, but live it. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit nathanbrowning.substack.com [https://nathanbrowning.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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