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In the MT there is a closed parsha break between the verses that are numbered in Christian editions as Micah 5:1 and 5:2. The Jews adopted the Christian chapter breaks in the printed editions of the MT except when theythe Christian chapter breaks split a parsha within three verses of the beginning or end of a parsha, in which case the printed MT editions move the chapter break forward a verse or two to match the parsha break. There are a number of such occurrences, for example see this post regarding the end of Genesis 32.

In the MT there is a closed parsha break between the verses that are numbered in Christian editions as Micah 5:1 and 5:2. The Jews adopted the Christian chapter breaks in the printed editions of the MT except when they split a parsha within three verses of the beginning or end of a parsha, in which case the printed MT editions move the chapter break forward a verse or two to match the parsha break. There are a number of such occurrences, for example see this post regarding the end of Genesis 32.

In the MT there is a closed parsha break between the verses that are numbered in Christian editions as Micah 5:1 and 5:2. The Jews adopted the Christian chapter breaks in the printed editions of the MT except when the Christian chapter breaks split a parsha within three verses of the beginning or end of a parsha, in which case the printed MT editions move the chapter break forward a verse or two to match the parsha break. There are a number of such occurrences, for example see this post regarding the end of Genesis 32.

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In the MT there is a closed parsha breakparsha break between the verses that are numbered in Christian editions as Micah 5:1 and 5:2. The Jews adopted the Christian chapter breaks in the printed editions of the MT except when they breaksplit a parsha within three verses of the beginning or end of a parsha, in which case the printed MT editions move the chapter break forward a verse or two to match the parsha break. There are a number of such occurrences, for example see this post regarding the end of Genesis 32.

In the MT there is a closed parsha break between the verses that are numbered in Christian editions as Micah 5:1 and 5:2. The Jews adopted the Christian chapter breaks in the printed editions of the MT except when they break a parsha within three verses of the beginning or end of a parsha, in which case the printed MT editions move the chapter break forward a verse or two to match the parsha break. There are a number of such occurrences.

In the MT there is a closed parsha break between the verses that are numbered in Christian editions as Micah 5:1 and 5:2. The Jews adopted the Christian chapter breaks in the printed editions of the MT except when they split a parsha within three verses of the beginning or end of a parsha, in which case the printed MT editions move the chapter break forward a verse or two to match the parsha break. There are a number of such occurrences, for example see this post regarding the end of Genesis 32.

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user17080
user17080

In the MT there is a closed parsha break between the verses that are numbered in Christian editions as Micah 5:1 and 5:2. The Jews adopted the Christian chapter breaks in the printed editions of the MT except when they break a parsha within three verses of the beginning or end of a parsha, in which case the printed MT editions move the chapter break forward a verse or two to match the parsha break. There are a number of such occurrences.