Add parallel Print Page Options

Chapter 7

More than One Righteous Person among the People

How great is my misery!
    I have become like one who,
when the summer fruit has been gathered
    and the vines have been gleaned,
finds not a single cluster of grapes to eat,
    nor any of those early figs for which I long.
The faithful have vanished from the land;
    there is no honest person to be found.
They all lie in wait to shed blood;
    each one hunts his brother with a net.
Their hands are skilled in performing evil deeds;
    the ruler demands gifts,
the judge asks for a bribe,
    the powerful man follows his own desires.
The best of them is like a briar,
    the most upright like a thorn hedge.
The day of their punishment now approaches;
    now they will be seized by confusion.
Put no trust in a friend:
    have no confidence in a loved one.
Guard the portals of your mouth
    against her who lies in your embrace.
For a son maligns his father,
    a daughter rebels against her mother,
a daughter-in-law rises up against her mother-in-law;
    your enemies are to be found in your own household.
But as for me, I will look to the Lord.
    I place my hope in God my savior;
    my God will hear me.

Poems of Hope[a]

I Shall Rise Up

Do not gloat over me, O my enemy.
    Although I have fallen, I will arise.
Although I sit in darkness,
    the Lord is my light.
I must endure the anger of the Lord
    because I have sinned against him,
until he takes up my cause
    and forgives my wrongs,
until he brings me into the light
    and I will behold his saving justice.
10 When my enemies see this,
    they will be filled with shame,
those who said to me,
    “Where is the Lord, your God?”
My eyes will see their downfall
    as they are trampled underfoot
    like mud in the streets.

Read full chapter

Footnotes

  1. Micah 7:8 Because of their subjects and the events they recall, these canticles, which are liturgical in tone, seem not to date from Micah’s time; they are suited, rather, to the situation of the Jews who have returned from exile after the second half of the sixth century.