2. Beth-lehem Ephratah--
(Ge 48:7),
or, Beth-lehem Judah; so called to distinguish it from Beth-lehem in
Zebulun. It is a few miles southwest of Jerusalem. Beth-lehem means
"the house of bread"; Ephratah means "fruitful": both names
referring to the fertility of the region.
though thou be little among--though thou be scarcely large enough to be reckoned among, &c. It
was insignificant in size and population; so that in
Jos 15:21,
&c., it is not enumerated among the cities of Judah; nor in the list in
Ne 11:25,
&c. Under Rehoboam it became a city:
2Ch 11:6,
"He built Beth-lehem."
Mt 2:6
seems to contradict Micah, "thou art not the least," But really
he, by an independent testimony of the Spirit, confirms the prophet,
Little in worldly importance, thou art not least (that is, far
from least, yea, the very greatest) among the thousands, of
princes of Judah, in the spiritual significance of being the birthplace
of Messiah
(Joh 7:42).
God chooses the little things of the world to eclipse in glory its
greatest things
(Jud 6:15;
Joh 1:46;
1Co 1:27, 28).
The low state of David's line when Messiah was born is also implied
here.
thousands--Each tribe was divided into clans or
"thousands" (each thousand containing a thousand families: like our old
English division of counties into hundreds), which had their
several heads or "princes"; hence in
Mt 2:6
it is quoted "princes," substantially the same as in Micah, and
authoritatively explained in Matthew. It is not so much this thousand
that is preferred to the other thousands of Judah, but the Governor or
Chief Prince out of it, who is preferred to the governors of all the
other thousands. It is called a "town" (rather in the Greek,
"village"),
Joh 7:42;
though scarcely containing a thousand inhabitants, it is ranked among
the "thousands" or larger divisions of the tribe, because of its being
the cradle of David's line, and of the Divine Son of David. Moses
divided the people into thousands, hundreds, fifties, and tens, with
their respective "rulers"
(Ex 18:25;
compare
1Sa 10:19).
unto me--unto God the Father
(Lu 1:32):
to fulfil all the Father's will and purpose from eternity. So the Son
declares
(Ps 2:7; 40:7, 8;
Joh 4:34);
and the Father confirms it
(Mt 3:17; 12:18,
compare with
Isa 42:1).
God's glory is hereby made the ultimate end of redemption.
ruler--the "Shiloh," "Prince of peace," "on whose shoulders the
government is laid"
(Ge 49:10;
Isa 9:6).
In
2Sa 23:3,
"He that ruleth over men must be just," the same Hebrew
word is employed; Messiah alone realizes David's ideal of a ruler. Also
in
Jer 30:21,
"their governor shall proceed from the midst of them"; answering
closely to "out of thee shall come forth the ruler," here
(compare
Isa 11:1-4).
goings forth . . . from everlasting--The plain antithesis of this
clause, to "come forth out of thee" (from Beth-lehem), shows that
the eternal generation of the Son is meant. The terms convey the
strongest assertion of infinite duration of which the Hebrew language is capable (compare
Ps 90:2;
Pr 8:22, 23;
Joh 1:1).
Messiah's generation as man coming forth unto God to do His will on
earth is from Beth-lehem; but as Son of God, His goings forth
are from everlasting. The promise of the Redeemer at first was
vaguely general
(Ge 3:15).
Then the Shemitic division of mankind is declared as the quarter in
which He was to be looked for
(Ge 9:26, 27);
then it grows clearer, defining the race and nation whence the
Deliverer should come, namely, the seed of Abraham, the Jews
(Ge 12:3);
then the particular tribe, Judah
(Ge 49:10);
then the family, that of David
(Ps 89:19, 20);
then the very town of His birth, here. And as His coming drew nigh, the
very parentage
(Mt 1:1-17;
Lu 1:26-35; 2:1-7);
and then all the scattered rays of prophecy concentrate in Jesus, as
their focus
(Heb 1:1, 2).
JFB.
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