The writer told us nothing about Micah's background except that he originally lived in the Hill Country of Ephraim with or near his mother (vv. 1-2). Micah's name means "Who is like Yahweh."As is true of so many details in this story, Micah's name is ironic. He was anything but like Yahweh. The fact that Micah's mother blessed him in the name of Yahweh creates a positive impression, but other features of the story demonstrate that her veneer of orthodox Yahwism was extremely thin.
Micah was a thief who stole a fortune from his own mother. This amount of money could have sustained one person for a lifetime in Israel (cf. v. 10). Apparently he confessed his theft because he feared his mother's curse (v. 2). Instead of cursing him she blessed him, a very unusual reaction in view of the amount of money involved. Perhaps she believed that her blessing would undo her previous curse.310Micah's mother then claimed to dedicate all 1,100 pieces of the recovered silver to Yahweh. However she gave only 200 pieces to a silversmith to make an image.311She stole from God as her son had stolen from her. Micah had learned dishonesty at home.
The "graven image"(Heb. pesel) was apparently the idol and the "molten image"(massekah) its base. Both of these words occur at the head of the list of curses (Deut. 27:15) to describe what the law forbade making for idolatrous purposes. The Hebrew word that describes the graven image occurs almost exclusively in relation to the golden calves that Aaron made (Exod. 32:4) and King Jeroboam made (1 Kings 12:28-30). Micah's mother evidently intended this image to represent either Yahweh or the animal on which pagan people visualized gods standing.312
"The gods were often depicted as standing, or more rarely sitting, on the back of a bull, which by its strength and power of fertility well represented the essence of the nature cults."313
Obviously Micah and his mother were either ignorant of, or more probably chose to disregard, God's law against making graven images (Exod. 20:4, 23; Deut. 4:16). They also seem to have been unaware of, or unconcerned about, Israel's tragic experience with the golden calf at Mt. Sinai (Exod. 32:19-35).
"Micah and his mother are sharply distinguished from Samson and his mother [and even more from Samuel and his mother] by their materialism and idolatry. Here there is no evidence of the presence or call of the Spirit in their lives."314
God commanded the Israelites not to multiply sanctuaries in Canaan, but Micah built one in or near his house (v. 5). He did not need to do this because he lived close to Shiloh, where the tabernacle stood (cf. v. 1; 18:31). In his convenient shrine Micah kept an ephod that he had made, probably for divination. This was evidently an imitation of the high priest's ephod (cf. 8:27). He also kept household gods that probably had some connection with ancestor veneration and divination (cf. Gen. 31:19).315He also disregarded the Aaronic priesthood by ordaining his son as the family priest.
"The by-passing of the Levitical priesthood by Micah may be due either to a breakdown in the distribution of the Levites amongst the community or to an overlooking, wilful [sic] or ignorant, of the provisions of the law."316
The writer explained editorially that there was no king in Israel at this time and everyone did as he pleased (v. 6). That is the reason Micah could get away with such flagrantly disobedient behavior. Even though there was not yet a human king, Yahweh reigned as Israel's monarch from heaven. Since His people paid no attention to His authority by disregarding His Law, Israel was practically without a king. Kings enforce standards, but in Israel the people were setting their own standards.