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10 “I will not overlook,[a] O sinful house, the dishonest gain you have hoarded away[b]
or the smaller-than-standard measure I hate so much.[c]
11 I do not condone the use of rigged scales,
or a bag of deceptive weights.[d]
12 The city’s wealthy people readily resort to violence;[e]
her inhabitants tell lies;
their tongues speak deceptive words.[f]

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Footnotes

  1. Micah 6:10 tn The meaning of the first Hebrew word in the line is unclear. Possibly it is a combination of the interrogative particle and אִשׁ (ʾish), an alternate form of יֵשׁ (yesh, “there is/are”). One could then translate literally, “Are there treasures of sin [in] the house of the sinful?” The translation assumes an emendation to הַאֶשֶּׁה (haʾesheh, from נָשָׁא, nashaʾ, “to forget”), “Will I forget?” The rhetorical question expects an answer, “No, I will not forget.”
  2. Micah 6:10 tn Heb “the treasures of sin”; NASB “treasures of wickedness”; NIV “ill-gotten treasures.”
  3. Micah 6:10 tn Heb “the accursed scant measure.”sn Merchants would use a smaller than standard measure so they could give the customer less than he thought he was paying for.
  4. Micah 6:11 tn Heb “Do I acquit sinful scales, and a bag of deceptive weights?” The rhetorical question expects an answer, “No, I do not,” and has been translated as a declarative statement for clarity and emphasis.sn Merchants also used rigged scales and deceptive weights to cheat their customers. See the note at Amos 8:5.
  5. Micah 6:12 tn Heb “are full of violence.”
  6. Micah 6:12 tn Heb “and their tongue is deceptive in their mouth.”