And he shall judge among many people, and rebuke strong
nations afar off; and they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their
spears into pruninghooks: nation shall not lift up a sword against nation,
neither shall they learn war any more. (Micah 4:3)
Micah explains here more fully what I have before said, —
that the Gospel of Christ would be to the nations, as it were, a standard of
peace: as when a banner is raised up, soldiers engage in battle.
We here learn that there is not growing among us the real
fruit of the Gospel, unless we exercise mutual love and benevolence, and exert
ourselves in doing good. Though the Gospel is at this day purely preached among
us, when yet we consider how little progress we make in brotherly love, we
ought justly to be ashamed of our indolence. God proclaims daily that he is
reconciled to us in his Son; Christ testifies, that he is our peace with God,
that he renders him propitious to us, for this end, that we may live as
brethren together. We indeed wish to be deemed the children of God, and we wish
to enjoy the reconciliation obtained for us by the blood of Christ; but in the
meantime we tear one another, we sharpen our teeth, our dispositions are cruel.
If then we desire really to prove ourselves to be the
disciples of Christ, we must attend to this part of divine truth, each of us
must strive to do good to his neighbors. But this cannot be done without being
opposed by our flesh; for we have a strong propensity to self-love, and are
inclined to seek too much our own advantages. We must therefore put off these
inordinate and sinful affections, that brotherly kindness may succeed in their
place. (Commentaries)
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