Micah 6:16-7:5
Is there a sign that will tell us if we’re living in the end of the age? Witness the prophet Micah’s distress about the difficult judgments God calls him to proclaim against Israel.
Micah 6:8-15
In one of the most well-known passages in the Old Testament, Micah details the destruction of Israel because of her sins. Dr. McGee warns that our own nation is headed in the same direction.
Micah 6:6-8
How can you be saved? Learn from the Old Testament that a relationship, not rituals, is how God offers us redemption.
Micah 6:1-5
Jesus is our Advocate today. That’s the good news we’ll hear in Micah’s final message to the Israelites as he calls all nations to listen. Instead of lodging a charge against them, God asks them, “What am I guilty of?” and then reminds them of His care for them throughout history.
Micah 5:2-15
When Mary and Joseph arrived in Bethlehem, it was at the exact time and place prophesied by Micah some 700 years before. Examine this spectacular prophecy as Micah outlines Christ’s humility, deity, and care for His people in detail.
Micah 5:1-2
Future glory because of past promises. That’s what we learn about in this study of what Dr. McGee calls one of the most remarkable prophecies in the Old Testament. We’ll learn of the coming Messiah and His birth in Bethlehem.
Micah 4:6-13
“The Day of the Lord begins in darkness, but it ends in the light of a new day!” That’s the good news as we learn more about the coming battle of Armageddon and how the Lord will help Israel prevail.
Micah 4:1-5
The more you see your own flaws and sins, the more precious and amazing you see God’s mercy. Examine Micah’s prophesies of the last day and the millennial kingdom as we catch a glimpse of God’s unending mercy.
Micah 3:5-12
No matter what decade you live in, God is the only source of peace and our only hope in this world. See the prophet Micah take a stand, expose the idolatry of the leaders, and foretell the complete desolation of Jerusalem.
Micah 2:12-3:4
Micah has delivered some very strong messages of judgment. But at the end of chapter two, he speaks for God in a beautiful prophecy that tells us God doesn’t shy away from pointing out their sin, but He also isn’t shy about showing them mercy—not because of their worthiness or some fine character trait, but because of His own grace.