Micah 7:7

Micah 7:7

Therefore I will look unto the LORD; I will wait for the God of my salvation: my God will hear me.

King James Version (KJV)

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Context

The seventh chapter opens with Micah lamenting the moral decay of his society -- honesty gone, leaders corrupt, families divided. Against that grim backdrop the prophet shifts to personal confession of trust, then to a larger hope of restoration that closes the book with God's mercy.

What Does Micah 7:7 Mean?

Micah 7:7 is the prophet's resolve to keep looking to God even when everyone around him has failed. The verses just before describe a society in collapse -- the good man perished, neighbors hunting one another, even family members untrustworthy. In the middle of that bleakness, Micah turns his eyes upward with a deliberate "therefore." Precisely because the world cannot be relied upon, he will look to the Lord. The verb "look" suggests watching expectantly, the way a sentry scans the horizon for the first sign of dawn. "I will wait for the God of my salvation" adds patience to that watching; Micah does not demand instant rescue but settles in to wait on God's timing, confident that deliverance belongs to God alone. The closing phrase, "my God will hear me," is the foundation that makes the waiting possible. Micah is not hoping into empty space; he speaks to a God who listens. The threefold movement -- look, wait, and trust to be heard -- becomes a pattern of faith for anyone surrounded by disappointment.

What makes this verse so durable is its honesty. Micah does not pretend the situation is fine; he names the corruption plainly and then chooses faith anyway. He claims God personally -- "my God," "the God of my salvation" -- refusing to let the failure of people around him define his relationship with the Lord. This is the posture of someone who has decided that God's character is more certain than his circumstances. Salvation, in the prophet's mouth, is the rescue that God works for those who cannot rescue themselves. For believers today, Micah 7:7 offers a script for the days when trust feels scarce: lift your eyes, hold steady in waiting, and rest in the assurance that the God you call your own truly hears. Faith is not the absence of trouble but the choice to look to the Lord in the midst of it.

In the Original Language

The Hebrew "tsaphah" (look, watch) pictures keeping watch expectantly, like a lookout. "Yachal" (wait) means to wait with hope. "Yesha" (salvation) is deliverance or rescue that comes from God.

Application

When the people and systems around you let you down, follow Micah's pattern: lift your eyes to the Lord, settle into patient waiting, and rest in the truth that God hears you. Make His character, not your circumstances, the ground of your hope. Faith is the deliberate choice to keep watching for God in the dark.

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Keep Studying Micah 7

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