Good News, Great Joy
Noah Reber • December 23, 2025
“The Promised King and the Hope of Christmas” (Micah 1-7)
Micah is one of those books you may have heard of but never closely studied, which naturally raises the question: why talk about Micah during the Christmas season? The book of Micah contains prophecies about the coming of Christ that are unique within the Old Testament, and I believe it has something vital to say to us as we approach Christmas.
Micah is largely a book of judgment—filled with accusations and warnings against Israel for twisting the Word of God. This guilt did not rest only on everyday people; it extended to Israel’s leaders and prophets as well. The nation was marked by greed, corruption, and injustice. Leaders crafted laws that protected the wealthy while the poor were stripped of their land, dignity, and hope.
In response, Micah announces the judgment of the Lord. This judgment would come through oppression by foreign nations—first Assyria, and later Babylon—and would culminate in the destruction of the temple. Yet what is most striking about Micah is that even in the midst of judgment and the certainty of future suffering, God speaks words of hope. With each declaration of judgment, Micah also proclaims a promise of restoration and a future for God’s people:
- The first glimpse of hope appears in Micah 2:12–13. Here, God is portrayed as a shepherd who gathers the remnant of Israel, leads them back to good pasture, and reigns over them as their king.
- The second promise of hope is found in Micah 4:1–7. In this passage, God declares that He will exalt His temple and fill it with His presence, gathering the remnant of His people to Himself. Israel will become the meeting place of heaven and earth, and the nations will stream to Jerusalem as God establishes Himself as King over all.
- The next promise of hope emerges in Micah 5. After exile, the people will return, and from Bethlehem a new Messianic King will be born. He will rule in the restored Jerusalem over what was once only a remnant. That remnant will then become a blessing among the nations—a theme that should sound familiar.
- The final promise of hope appears in Micah 7, where Israel is personified as a suffering individual crying out for forgiveness and restoration. This figure clings to hope for two key reasons. First, there is confidence in the character of God—His mercy is abundant, and He delights in forgiveness. Second, there is remembrance of God’s promises: the covenant with Jacob still stands, and God’s steadfast love endures. This reaches back to the promise made to Abraham, that through his descendants all nations would be blessed. That ancient promise had not been forgotten. Yet for redemption to come, evil must be confronted and judged.
So, what does Micah teach us during the Christmas season? Some of these prophecies have already been fulfilled, while others await their completion. Still, we see that even in judgment, sin, and suffering, God has always intended to keep His promises. From the covenant with Abraham onward, God remained faithful. He sent the King—Jesus—who gathers His remnant and reigns even now.
The child in the manger was the answer to these promises. Through the birth, life, death, and resurrection of Jesus, we are given hope for the day when God will be King over all nations—when every knee will bow, and every tongue will confess that Jesus Christ is Lord. God was not obligated to give us this hope, yet He did, so that we might know Him.
Is this not the heart of Christmas? That we might know the living King who entered our world and became the promised blessing to the nations. But this blessing was never meant to stop with us.
As those who have been gathered by the Shepherd-King, we are now called to reflect His mercy and hope to others. Just as God preserved a remnant to be a blessing among the nations, He calls His people today to live as witnesses of His grace in a world marked by darkness, injustice, and despair. The hope we celebrate at Christmas is not merely something we receive—it is something we carry.
This Christmas season, remember that our God is a God of mercy and steadfast love. Even amid brokenness and uncertainty, He is faithful to His promises. As we look toward the future He has secured, may we live as people shaped by hope—extending forgiveness, practicing justice, and proclaiming the good news that the King has come. In doing so, we participate in God’s ongoing work of blessing the world, until the day when Christ reigns fully and finally overall.










