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Micah, a contemporary of the prophets Isaiah and Hosea, wrote this message about the year 750 b.c. What most people do not understand is that the primary emphasis in this book is on God’s own Church. This message, over 2,500 years old, gives us more understanding about the end-time Laodicean and Philadelphian churches. The greatest catastrophe in this end time is occurring inside God’s Church! Many members are losing their eternal lives. No crisis exceeds this one. Micah makes this very clear.
The name Micah means “who is like unto our God.” That meaning is interwoven with the theme of the entire book. We must have a proper love, respect and awe for the great Eternal God.
Micah’s primary message is to His Church and the nations of Israel which do not have this respect for God. It also speaks of another end-time church that does love, respect and revere God, and which consequently receives His revelation.
“The word of the Lord that came to Micah the Morasthite in the days of Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah, kings of Judah, which he saw concerning Samaria and Jerusalem” (Micah 1:1). Micah did not have a dream or vision. Revelation from God simply came into his mind. That may sound commonplace to some people, but it is very rare. If you want to find God’s very elect today, they will be the people receiving this revelation.
Chapter 1: | Hear This | Read |
Chapter 2: | Who Is the Breaker? | Read |
Chapter 3: | Who Is Like Unto Our God? | Read |
Gerald Flurry
is the presenter of the Key of David television program and the editor in chief of the Philadelphia Trumpet newsmagazine. He is the founder and pastor general of the Philadelphia Church of God, chancellor of Herbert W. Armstrong College and chairman of the Armstrong International Cultural Foundation.
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