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Today we will be covering the
last book of the Old Testament. This has been a fun journey through
the Old Testament, and I'm going to read from Malachi 3, verses
1 through 7. Behold, I send my messenger,
and he will prepare the way before me. And the Lord, whom you seek,
will suddenly come to his temple, even the messenger of the covenant,
in whom you delight. Behold, he is coming, says the
Lord of hosts. But who can endure the day of
his coming? And who can stand when he appears?
For he is like a refiner's fire and like launderer's soap. He
will sit as a refiner and a purifier of silver. He will purify the
sons of Levi and purge them as gold and silver that they may
offer to the Lord an offering in righteousness. Then the offering
of Judah and Jerusalem will be pleasant to the Lord as in the
days of old, as in former years. And I will come near you for
judgment I will be a swift witness against sorcerers, against adulterers,
against perjurers, against those who exploit wage earners, and
widows and orphans, and against those who turn away an alien,
because they do not fear me, says the Lord of hosts. For I
am the Lord. I do not change. Therefore you
are not consumed, O sons of Jacob. Yet from the days of your fathers
who have gone away from my ordinances and have not kept them, return
to me and I will return to you, says the Lord of hosts. But you
said, in what way shall we return? Let's pray. Father God, though
we are not gathered in one place this morning, we thank you that
we can gather before your throne and be united in that. And I
pray that as I preach this, your word, that I would do so faithfully
and that you would quicken the word to our hearts. Please, Lord,
open the eyes of our understanding that we might Uh, continue to
worship you, to grow in you, to be sanctified by your word.
We commit this preaching to you in Jesus name. Amen. Well, the book of Malachi is
generally considered to have been written after Nehemiah second
trip back to Jerusalem. And Nehemiah was so discouraged
at how quickly things had degenerated that he wept. Malachi reacts
to God's revelation of Israel's compromises by calling his revelation
a burden in verse one. And we can identify with those
two men. We look around us and see legalized murder in the form
of abortion. We see perversion celebrated
in libraries. We see government theft via socialist
programs as being a human right. We see all the things in the
church that Malachi and Nehemiah saw, and it makes us weep. It burdens us. It is a deeply
distressing thing. So let me highlight just four
of the social conditions that tie the books of Malachi and
Nehemiah together. Both books deal with marriage
to unbelievers. being unequally yoked was becoming
a commonplace and the antithesis between God's kingdom and the
world was being evaporated. And we're seeing the same evaporation
of antithesis through government education and politics today.
Both books deal with neglecting to pay tithes. The kingdom was
not being funded. And statistics show that the
average Christian today has no interest in funding the kingdom.
Both books deal with breaking the Sabbath. It was the sign
of the covenant and people treated it as lightly as Christians do
today. And God was burdened. Both books
deal with an astonishing corruption of the priesthood. And my understanding
of this is that when Eliashib, the high priest, wormed his way
into the office of high priest, he surrounded himself with corrupt
priests. These were pastors who were hirelings
with no interest in sacrificing everything for the kingdom. And
by the way, most commentaries say that the corrupted priesthood,
who by the way were in a temple that's been around for some time,
but this corrupted priesthood means that this is in the time
of Nehemiah's second trip. And so Nehemiah 13 forms the
background to the book of Malachi. And both books deal with some
of the same social evils. And this backslidden state of
Israel in Nehemiah 13 is very cleverly brought out in this
book by God interacting with six of the most burning questions
of Malachi's day. Now God has his own questions.
There are a total of 19 questions in 55 verses, and this makes
Malachi feel like a fast paced conversation between God's questioners
and the prophet. Now let me quickly outline the
six major questions that God answers. Chapter one, verses two through
five deals with the question about God's love. Does God really
love them? God affirmed it. the people doubted
it. Chapter 1, verse 6, all the way
up to chapter 2, verse 9, deals with the question of what it
means to honor God. Then verses 10 through 16 of
the same chapter handles the issue of what constitutes faithfulness. But the people get snarkier and
snarkier as the book progresses. Chapter two, verse 17, all the
way up to chapter three, verse six, deals with the people really
questioning God's justice. Then verses seven through 12
with repentance, and the jeering contradiction of God by the people
in the last section that answers a question, that's chapter three,
verse 13, to chapter four, verse three, is over the top. And interestingly,
God doesn't bother to answer them. He just starts comforting
the remnant. Now all of this, unfaithfulness
is contrasted with God's faithful love. You can see that by the
heart of the chiasm that's on your outlines, which you can
download from the web. The illustration of a marriage
covenant is what God uses there. And you can see that central
theme by the very first question in this book. It is God's spurned
love that gets the cycle of questions going. Now you could summarize
the central theme of this book in chapter one, verse two, the
phrase, I have loved you. I have loved you. If God is speaking
his love to his people, why does verse one begin by saying that
this was a burden? And the answer is that Malachi's
heart burden was a prophetic heart burden that reflects God's
heart burden. It is a vision of a God who has
been hurt by love spurned. God loved Israel, but Israel
either took his love for granted, spurned it, or denied it. For
example, the immediate response of some of the people in verse
two is, in what way have you loved us? That's the first question
out of their mouth. I mean, God has bestowed unbelievable
love upon his people, and they say, in what way have you loved
us? That question shows astonishing
blindness. Walter Kaiser in his commentary
says that God would even condescend to answer such brashness is an
illustration of God's incredibly patient love. He starts the exposition
of his love by looking at Jacob and Esau. Verse two again. Was
not Esau Jacob's brother, says the Lord. Yet Jacob I have loved,
but Esau I have hated. Now Paul quotes that verse as
a proof of sovereign unconditional election of one and sovereign
unconditional reprobation of the other. This is not just that
he loved Jacob more, the text says that he hated Esau. Psalm 5 verse 5 says of God,
you hate all workers of iniquity. And so it's really no surprise
that Esau was hated. The surprise is that God could
love Jacob at all. They were two brothers who grew
up in the same home and had the same privileges, but one was
elect and the other was reprobate. As Paul, uh, words that this
happened before they were born or had done good or evil. Unregenerate
people hate, they absolutely hate this doctrine of election,
but those of us who have been plucked out of the fires of hell
stand in awe of God's sovereign love. They know they don't deserve
it. A woman once said to Charles
Spurgeon, I cannot understand why God should say that he hated
Esau. That Spurgeon replied is not
my difficulty, madam. My trouble is to understand how
God could love Jacob. And I say, amen. How could God
love me? It's not because of anything
in me. Malachi defines God's love as a free love. And by that,
I mean that it was not earned by Jacob. It is also a sovereign
love that could not be demanded by Jacob. It is an unconditional
love that loved the unlovable. And if you are unlovable today,
I can assure each of you who have put your trust in Jesus,
that God has deep desires of love for you, a central meaning
of that Hebrew word, ahav. Though Jesus said in John six,
no one can come to me unless the father who was sent me draws
him. He had earlier said, All that the father gives me will
come to me and the one who comes to me, I will by no means cast
out. Ultimately, if God's love for
us depends upon us, we could never be secure since we are
so changeable. But since his love for us rests
on his sovereign election, those who put their faith in him are
totally secure. It really is a wonderful doctrine.
But then God chose his love by bringing desolation to their
mortal enemy, Edom. He says, and laid waste his mountains
and his heritage for the jackals of the wilderness. God's protection
of his bride shows love. God's vengeance against his bride's
enemies shows love. The third way he had showed Israel
his love was by promising that Edom would not rise to be a threat
again in the future. Verse four. Even though Edom
has said we have been impoverished, but we will return and build
the desolate places. Thus says the Lord of hosts,
they may build, but I will throw down. They shall be called the
territory of wickedness and the people against whom the Lord
will have indignation forever. Again, that's an appeal to God's
sovereign election of one and his reprobation of the other.
It is a sovereign love. The fourth way that God had shown
his love to Israel was by repeatedly promising that he would bless
them way beyond the borders of Israel. He would grow them. He
would prosper them. Verse five, your eyes shall see,
and you shall say the Lord is magnified beyond the border of
Israel. What wonderful responses to Israel's
doubts about God's love. Those first five verses form
a fantastic introduction to the whole book. He anchors that love
in God himself, rather than man. He shows the enduring nature
of that love by showing that it was from eternity past, was
sovereign, unconditional and personal. And he takes them to
the future to show that his steadfast love endures forever. But in
the rest of the book, God shows how this electing grace cuts
down through the covenant itself. Not all Israel was Israel and
the actions of priests like Eliashiv showed that they were not truly
his people. Is the church of today full of wolves and sheep's
clothing? It is. We can learn from Malachi
not to get our sense of hope from the church. We get our sense
of hope from God's love and that God-centered focus enables us
to love the unlovable and to serve even when others mock us. If your sense of satisfaction
came from what humans think of you, you will forever be on a
roller coaster of emotions. But if you anchor your vision
in God's love, it will take you through the troubles of Malachi
and the troubles of today. And so the second section of
the book, chapter one verse six through chapter two verse nine,
deals with the question about God's honor. It's a test of whether
we are true sons or fake sons, whether we are Jacob's or Esau's. God states the obvious in verse
six. A son honors his father and a servant his master. If
then I am the father, where is my honor? And if I am a master,
where is my reverence, says the Lord of hosts, to you priests
who despise my name? This is the first reference to
the priests in the book, priests who showed more concern about
their own comfort and building their own empire than they did
about God's sheep or about God himself. And yet as obvious as
the application should have been to these priests, they respond
in the last clause of verse six with total cluelessness. They
show a veil upon their minds. Yet you say, in what way have
we despised your name? They don't see their sin. This
is one of the dividing markers between a Jacob and an Esau or
between a Joshua, the high priest and an Eliash of the high priest
Jacobs recognize their sins and repent of them. We saw Joshua,
the high priest recognized his sins and repented of them and
Zachariah chapter three, didn't we? And so God explains to these
blind priests why it was obvious to him that they had indeed despised
him and had indeed refused to truly honor him. Verse seven. You offer defiled food on my
altar, but say, in what way have we defiled you? By saying, the
table of the Lord is contemptible. These priests claimed to honor
God, but they dumped rotten food on the altar for God. According to the law, defiled
sacrifices defiled the altar and the temple. Why? Because
it ruined the topology pointing to Christ. Only a perfect sacrifice
could portray our perfect Savior. But you know what, even beyond
that, they showed no honor for God. When they put sick animals
on the altar, they seem to think, Hey, who cares? It's going to
get burned up anyway. What difference does it make?
But God said it revealed a heart that was not into honoring him
and bringing him the best. And because they're so dense,
he documents his accusation in verse eight. And when you offer
the blind as a sacrifice, is it not evil? And when you offer
the lame and sick, is it not evil? Offer it then to your governor. Would he be pleased with you?
Would he accept you favorably says the Lord of hosts? Obviously
not. They wouldn't dare offer such
an animal to the governor. And so why were they doing it
to God? And so the whole book of Malachi is in a similar conversational
style where God interacts back and forth with various segments
of Israel, helping them to see whether they are Jacob's with
a regenerate heart or Esau's who are deceived. But you will
notice that these priests know how to play the grace card. They
in effect say, well, we've asked for forgiveness and God will
forgive us even while we are doing these things. This is so
brash. It reminds me of the Godfather
movie. that documented the early history of the mafia in America. Michael Carleone has already
paid several hitmen to kill his competitors, and while they're
out doing their dirty work, he is pledging allegiance to God
in a baptism, acting as a godfather to a baby. And between each statement
in the church that he makes, the camera goes back and forth
between his hitmen killing his competitors and Michael hypocritically
making his vows. The priest asked, do you believe
in God the Father, maker of heaven and earth? And he answers, I
do. And there's killing. Do you believe in Jesus Christ,
his only son, our Lord? And he answers, I do, with more
killing in the background. Do you believe in the Holy Ghost,
the Holy Catholic Church? I do. Michael Francis Rizzi,
do you renounce Satan? And while his men are murdering,
he says, I do renounce him. And all his works? I do renounce
them. And all his pomps? I do renounce
them. Will you be baptized? I will.
Go in peace, and may the Lord be with you. Amen. Well, we have a similar kind
of blindness going on here. They're not good Roman Catholics.
Instead, they're good Jewish priests who are committing crimes
against God's law and thinking God's grace will forgive them.
Now, you may not do this on such a grand scale, but it is worth
asking yourself, do I find my heart making excuses such as,
well, I know it is a sin, but I'll just ask for forgiveness.
Jude calls that the heresy of turning the grace of God into
lasciviousness. Malachi calls it acting like
Esau. He is questioning their salvation. But the dialogue gets even more
intense. The next verse indicates that God is so sick of their
worship He'd rather that someone closed the doors of the temple
and stopped at all. You can imagine that the priests,
um, that Malachi is talking to are not very thrilled with him.
Malachi says, who is there even among you who would shut the
doors so that you would not Kindle fire on my altar in vain. I have
no pleasure in you says the Lord of foes, nor will I accept an
offering from your hands. He is saying this to priests
who professed to be evangelicals, so to speak. He is saying this
to people who claimed to believe in grace. We have churches like
that today that show no discernment or evidence of regeneration.
The whole revoice conference movement is just as much of a
stench in God's nostrils as the sacrifices of these priests were
in Omaha. We have evangelical churches
that justify government theft via socialism in the name of
God. They justify an overthrow of
male-female roles in the name of God. They justify rejection
of the regulative principle of worship in the name of God and
think that their worship is a pleasing aroma when God calls it sickening. Proverbs 15, eight says the sacrifice
of the wicked is an abomination to the Lord, but the prayer of
the upright is his delight. Isaiah 1, 13 says, bring no more
futile sacrifices. Incense is an abomination to
me. I cannot endure iniquity and
the sacred meeting. Anyway, this systemic exposure
of their lack of honor and their worship goes all the way up to
chapter two, verse nine. I'll just highlight a few. In
verse 12, this is chapter two, yeah, verse 12, they turned up
their noses at the Lord's table. They're thinking, ah, do we really
have to do this? This is so boring. It was exposing
their heart. In verse 13, they could hardly
wait for worship to end and said, oh, what a weariness. That's chapter one, verse 13.
What a weariness. Are you able to focus on God
and not the distractions? Are you able to sing praise to
God with your whole heart? In verse 14, the priests allowed
the Jews to offer substandard worship, thus bringing a bad
testimony to the Gentiles. And you know what? All across
the evangelical world, we have people who have rejected the
fundamentals of the regulative principle of worship, the regulative
principle of government, who failed to preach God's law, and
for sure, failed to use God's word to tear down the chief idols
and the high things that have exalted themselves against God
in this nation. They are priests who are derelict
in their duty. In chapter two, he says that
he will curse their blessings because they have made such a
bad testimony to God's name. Now later he'll explain that
their husband-wife relationships and the relationships to their
kids blaspheme God's name. The New Testament says exactly
the same thing about the feministic paradigms of today. Anytime you
see the New Testament saying that God's name is being blasphemed,
wow, you better pay close attention. Even in reconstruction of circles,
God's name is being blasphemed by overturning God's authority
structures. And verses five through six,
he says that they are not like Levi who feared God and treated
his name with reverence. Levi knew the law and spoke the
law. He turned away from iniquity and followed Shalom and equity. And so the implication is that
these priests have none of those things that characterized Levi. A lawless church is a church
that is in danger of evidencing the Esau character and not the
Jacob character. In verse 7, he condemns them
for preaching in a way that was man-centered rather than God-centered.
In verse 8, he says that their bad testimony has led many to
stumble into sin. In verse 9, he basically says
that they were a bad testimony to everyone. And people didn't
really want to go to the temple anymore because of their evil.
Well, actually God didn't want to go to the temple anymore.
It was just like the church of Laodicea with Christ knocking
on the door of the church. He's outside. What's the point
of going to church if God is on the outside. Now in the third
section, God starts with some questions of his own. Third section
is chapter two, uh, verses 10 through 16. And let's read verse
10. God says, have we not all one
father? Has not one God created us? Now this verse has been horribly
abused by liberals to teach the universal brotherhood of mankind
and that all are saved, but that misses the immediate context,
the we and the us is not referring to some fake brotherhood of all
mankind. It's referring to the professing
believers of that day. Now, in light of the fact that
they all have one father, that they're all created by God, they
have responsibilities to treat each other well. But verse 10
goes on to ask, why do we deal treacherously with one another
by profaning the covenant of the fathers? That's Malachi's
question. How do they profane the covenant?
Well, verses 11 through 12 says that they married unbelievers,
something also documented in Nehemiah. And so God promises
to bring a curse on them, something also documented in Nehemiah. But in verses 13 through 16,
he says that adultery and divorce among believers was just as abominable
as the marriage to unbelievers that was discussed earlier. The
people ask why God does not listen to their prayers. And God's answer
is, they have treated their wives treacherously. A word that can
refer to adultery, unfaithfulness, mistreatment, or even divorce.
They were not treating their wives as God's children and God's
property. First Peter 3.7 says very similar
words. He says, husbands, likewise dwell
with them with understanding, giving honor to the wife as to
the weaker vessel, and as being heirs together of the grace of
life, that your prayers may not be hindered. Their prayers were
hindered because they dealt treacherously with their wives. They mistreated
them. In verse 15, he gave his purpose
for having a spirit-filled marriage that is spiritually unified,
What's the purpose that they would produce godly offspring. Godly offspring doesn't just
happen on its own. It takes spirit filled husbands
and wives who were devoted to God's purposes for the family.
Anyway, that whole section is a section that speaks just as
powerfully to the modern church. But let's move on to the fourth
section, which is chapter two, verse 17 through chapter three,
verse six. Chapter 2, verse 17 says, you
have wearied the Lord with your words, yet you say, in what way
have we wearied him? And now he explains how he was
wearied, in that you say, everyone who does evil is good in the
sight of the Lord, and he delights in them. Or where is the God
of justice? That's an astonishing parallel
to the modern carnal Christian theory. The carnal Christian
theory claims you can accept Christ as Savior, but reject
him as Lord, and even though you're living like an unbeliever,
you'll get a ticket to heaven, no problems. They get that doctrine
from a misinterpretation of 1 Corinthians 3, verses three through four,
which says this. For you are still carnal. For where there are envy, strife,
and divisions among you, are you not carnal and behaving like
mere men? For when one says, I am of Paul
and another, I am of Apollos, are you not carnal? Paul is not
okay with carnality. He's not dividing up true believers
into two legitimate classes, one class of carnal Christians
and another class of spiritual Christians. No, he is questioning
whether they are truly saved, whether they are truly Christian.
He says, you're acting like mere men, like the world. There have
always been Esau's in the church who despise their birthright,
who are wearied by devotions and worship, who ignore God's
law and who justify their sins. Well, what's God's answer. His
answer is to point out that anyone should know. that the coming
Messiah will purge and purify the church. Anybody who's read
their Bible knows this is going to be the Messiah's passion.
Christ illustrates that their carnal Christian theory was completely
bogus. This is chapter three, Malachi
chapter three. Behold, I send my messenger and
he will prepare the way before me. Now this first messenger
with a small M is John the Baptist. And Jesus, God, the son is the
one who is the me that John the Baptist is preparing for. But
the text goes on to talk about another messenger, a divine big
M messenger, the messenger of the Lord. This is Jesus, or it's
often translated as the angel of the Lord. It says, and the
Lord whom you seek will suddenly come to his temple, even the
messenger of the covenant. In other words, the Lord God
is being called the messenger of the covenant here in whom
you delight. Behold, he is coming, says the
Lord of hosts. Now this refers to Christ's first
coming, but Christ will also come in judgment upon Israel
within that generation. Verses two through six. But who
can endure the day of his coming? And who can stand when he appears?
For he is like a refiner's fire and like launderer's soap. He
will sit as a refiner and a purifier of silver. He will purify the
sons of Levi and purge them as gold and silver that they may
offer to the Lord an offering in righteousness. Then the offering
of Judah and Jerusalem will be pleasant to the Lord as in the
days of old, as in former years, and I will come near you for
judgment. I will be a swift witness against sorcerers, against adulterers,
against perjurers, against those who exploit wage earners, and
widows and orphans, and against those who turn away an alien,
because they do not fear me, says the Lord of hosts. For I
am the Lord, I do not change. Therefore you are not consumed,
O sons of Jacob. So there are certain people in
Israel who are consumed. They are the Esau's and there
are others called sons of Jacob who were loved like Jacob and
who were not consumed. And since this God who brings
judgment against all of these sinners does not change, we can
expect the same judgments to come against Esau's today. He
allows them into the church, but those Esau's will eventually
have an end. And as we are coming off of an
end abortion now weekend, this is such an important passage
to think about. Too many pro-lifers misrepresent
God's love when they make it a promiscuous love that does
not distinguish between those who are repentant and those who
are not. God's vengeance comes against
all, all, all, who exploit wage earners, widows, orphans, and
other helpless people. His wrath against them is an
evidence of his true love for his own. And the safest thing
to do is to call all people to repentance and faith in Jesus
Christ, in whom alone we can escape the judgments of hell.
But the God who defends the weak and the helpless and, uh, who
takes vengeance on the wicked wants magistrates to properly
represent him. Romans 13 calls them to be ministers
of God, inflicting his vengeance on criminals. And that would
include murderers of babies. We cannot take vengeance into
our own hands. Romans 12 is for the private
citizen. Romans 13 is for the magistrate. We must keep the
division between those two chapters clear, but The ministers in civil
government must be ministers of vengeance. But then in chapter
three, verse seven comes to the next question. God calls for
returning a word that refers to repentance. And they asked
the question in what way shall we return? Now he's already told
them. but the unregenerate have a veil
on their minds and they don't tend to recognize their sins.
The regenerate are sometimes too sensitive to their own failings,
aren't they? But the unregenerate have a hard
time seeing themselves as sinners. So God exposes their sins in
chapter three, verses eight through 12. Will a man rob God? Yet you have robbed me. But you
say, in what way have we robbed you? in tithes and offerings. You are cursed with a curse,
for you have robbed me, even this whole nation. Bring all
the tithes into the storehouse, that there may be food in my
house, and try me now in this, says the Lord of hosts, if I
will not open for you the windows of heaven, and pour out for you
such blessing, that there will not be room enough to receive
it. And I will rebuke the devourer for your sakes, so that he will
not destroy the fruit of your ground. Nor shall the vine fail
to bear fruit for you in the field, says the Lord of hosts,
and all nations will call you blessed for you will be a delightful
land, says the Lord of hosts. Wow. God curses people who cheat
on their tithes and offerings, and he blows open the windows
of heaven in blessing those who give. And the mention of tithes
and offerings shows that tithing is the beginning of the joyful
privilege of funding God's kingdom. Offerings can never be a substitute
for tithing. It's tithes and offerings. But
how does this answer the question of repentance? Isn't that the
question he started with? Well, it's simply an illustration
of the three parts of true repentance. If repentance is not fake, it
involves the mind, the emotions or affections, and the will.
There is no true repentance if a person confesses the sin of
not tithing, for example, but fails to follow through with
action. Repentance is a gift of God that comes from hearing
the Bible, So the mind must be engaged, it's the flip side of
faith. Faith turns to God, but repentance turns from something,
but the turning starts in the mind when it recognizes, like
the prodigal did, that our lives are out of accord with God's
word. Now here, God takes away ignorance of their sin by exposing
their sin and calling it sin. If they are willing to call it
sin, that would be the first step of repentance. Second, repentance
involves the affections being turned to God. We should be grieved
with the knowledge that we have robbed God and our heart should
be turned to pleasing him. So that's a realignment of our
affections. Third, repentance involves the will engaging in
action. We make a plan, we implement
the plan. This is true for all sins. Malachi's
point was that it wasn't enough for these people to confess their
sin and to continue to not tithe. There is a, there is a reversal
of action. The reason Christ is at the heart
of this book is that such repentance and faith is impossible apart
from God's grace. And Esau only turns into a Jacob
when God gives a new heart. Now, the last question that this
book answers is in chapter three, verse 13. and goes up to chapter
four, verse three. This is a very long and impudent
question. By this time, the people have
gotten really mad. God had said, test me now in this issue of
tithing and see if I won't bless you, right? Malachi says that
they've contradicted God. And they respond in verse 13,
what have we spoken against you? But God knows their inward thoughts
and he exposes their hypocrisy. Here's what he says is going
on in their hearts. In verses 14 through 15, he says, you have
said it is useless to serve God. What profit is it that we have
kept his ordinance and that we have walked as mourners before
the Lord of hosts? So now we call the proud blessed. For those who do wickedness are
raised up. They even tempt God and go free. Wow. I mean, these
ethos in the camp are so bold that they claim, at least in
their hearts, they claim the opposite of what God promised,
that it's the wicked that will be blessed. And in verses 16
and following, God basically turns away from them as a hopeless
cause and he starts describing his humble remnant. This remnant
constitute the current day Jacob's whom God loved. And these verses
show that God is going to shower his love on them and turn from
the Esau's who have been given their chance. Beginning to read
at verse 16. Then those who feared the Lord spoke to one another,
and the Lord listened and heard them. So a book of remembrance
was written before him for those who fear the Lord and who meditate
on his name. They shall be mine, says the
Lord of hosts, on the day that I make them my jewels, and I
will spare them as a man spares his own son who serves him. Then
you shall again discern between the righteous and the wicked,
between one who serves God and the one who does not serve him.
This antithesis between right and wrong, between the wicked
and the righteous, is a product of God's grace, and it flows
from the grace that will be obtained from the coming Messiah, Jesus.
He told the remnant that because they were willing to cling to
the coming Messiah and to love him, God's love would be showered
upon them, and he would treat them as precious, as jewels. Let's move to chapter four. where God once again speaks of
Messiah, distinguishing between the Esau's and the Jacob's in
the first century. So this is a prophecy of the
first century. For behold, the day is coming, burning like an
oven, and all the proud, yes, all who do wickedly will be stubble. And the day which is coming shall
burn them up says the Lord of hosts that will leave them neither
root nor branch. But to you who fear my name,
the son of righteousness shall arise with healing in his wings
and you shall go out and grow fat like stole fed calves. You
shall trample the wicked for they shall be ashes under the
soles of your feet on the day that I do this says the Lord
of hosts. Now there is debate. about when
this is fulfilled was some saying that it's at the end of history
and others saying that it's in the first century. Um, many church
fathers said that it applied to the first coming of Christ.
Uh, one said the Lord came in the evening to a world in decline
when the course of life was almost run. But when the son of justice
came, he gave new life and began a new day for those who believed
in him. In other words, His focus was
that the problems of constant apostasy would be reversed by
Jesus in the new covenant, and that the son of righteousness,
that's the title of Jesus, would eventually shine worldwide as
the noonday. Matthew Poole, a Puritan commentator,
he applies the judgment section to AD 70, and he says of the
ashes under the feet of the righteous, these comments. This treading
seems to be intended of those who, after the sacking and burning
of Jerusalem, should return either to view the ruins or to dwell
there. And so should, in going up and down, tread upon the wicked,
either buried in the ruins or consumed to ashes, for they shall
be ashes unto the soles of your feet. By this it appears that
these preserved ones did not barbarously tread upon the entire
bodies of the wicked but upon the ashes of those bodies by
the fire consumed and turned into ashes and mixed with the
ashes of their houses and goods. In the day that I shall do this,
burn Jerusalem and the temple with the citizens and the priests
whose carcasses were slain by the sword or their persons surprised
with the flames shall be burnt up. And so both this and much
of the first verse may be literally understood and was so fulfilled
by Titus and his soldiers, 80, 73, end of quote. And I think that he and other
commentators like him are probably correct on that. But either way,
I won't be dogmatic, either way, God will carry through his promise
of antithesis between the Esau's of the covenant and the Jacob's
of the covenant. And God concludes the book with
a promise of what the new covenant will look like. First, verse
four says that it will be a time when they remember the law of
Moses and all its statutes and judgments. Keep that in mind.
Do you remember the law of Moses and all of its statutes and judgments?
That's supposed to be a new covenant promise. Second, it will be a
time when Elijah the prophet comes before the previous judgment
day. If the previous judgment day
was 8070, then Elijah the prophet must have come sooner. John denied
that he fulfilled the false ideas of Elijah that the Pharisees
had. But Jesus makes clear, John was this Elijah that was prophesied. In Matthew 11, 13 through 15,
he says, for all the prophets and the law prophesied until
John, and if you're willing to receive it, he is Elijah who
is to come. He who is ears to hear, let him
hear. In Matthew 17, verse 11, Jesus said, but I say to you,
that Elijah has come already, and they did not know him, but
did to him whatever they wished. Likewise, the Son of Man is also
about to suffer at their hands. So John the Baptist is this prophesied
Elijah. And what was the commission for
Elijah, or the commission for John the Baptist? Well, Malachi
tells us, and John the Baptist affirms it for himself. It says,
and he will turn the hearts of the fathers to the children,
and the hearts of the children to their fathers, lest I come
and strike the earth with a curse. Now, apparently John the Baptist
was not completely successful because God did indeed come and
strike the Eretz land with a curse and wiped Israel off the face
of the map. So that that's really the broad
overview of the book. I just want to add a few take-home
applications in addition to the ones that we've already covered. First. The questions of the Israelites
show how easy it is for us to forget God's amazing benefits
in our lives. It seems easy to remember what
has gone wrong and very hard to remember the blessings. So
we really need to work at reversing that trend by daily praising
God for his blessings and asking him to open our eyes. The negative
thinking of Esau must be replaced with faith, hope, and love. And if you're a negative person
who just can't see anything good happening in your life, that
is a dangerous, dangerous place to be in. God has showered you
with blessings. Don't be blind to them. Second,
The questions that God asks in response shows how effective
question asking can be in the teaching process. It's a learning
technique. Chapter two, verse 13 shows how
deep emotion in worship is not necessarily a sign of true worship. These Esau's had deep emotion,
even weeping over the altar in prayer, but God measured these
people by their mistreatment of their wives and rejected the
worship that they gave as mere show. I remember a Buddhist who
attended our worship and Went to Christian concerts with our
family. He lived with us for a while. He was an exchange student. And he would raise his hands
while singing songs and have a face beaming with the best
of the Christians that were out there, but he wasn't one. And
it struck me powerfully how easy it is to fool ourselves with
emotionalism and miss the deeper things of the law. Fourth. Chapter 2, verse 15 speaks to
how critically important it is that we raise up godly seed rather
than Esau's. Don't think that Esau's are the
norm in the covenant, especially in the new covenant times. It
really should be different. If the parents are spirit filled
and we are using the scriptural blueprints to train our children,
we should be able to expect godly offspring. The ESV translates
that verse. Did he not make them one with
a portion of the spirit and their union? And what was the one God
seeking? Godly offspring. So guard yourselves
in your spirit and let none of you be faithless to the wife
of your youth. The point is that godly offspring
is the promise of godly marriages and godly upbringing. May it
be so for each of our families. And then finally, chapter three,
verses 13 through 18, speaks of God's people as being characterized
by several things that others might think of as being contradictory,
but it's not. For example, the remnant then
feared Yehovah, yet are so filled with joy that they dance like
frisky calves let out of the stall. The fear of God and the
joy of the Holy Spirit do coexist. Indeed, the more we fear God,
the more our joy should grow, because the things that tend
to take away our joy in this world grow strangely dim and
become like little molehills when we see the greatness or
the bigness of the God that we fear, right? So because we realize
how awesome it is that we are friends and loved by the God
of the universe, It creates great joy. We have many reasons to
reverence God and to rejoice in, in him, and even to dance
before the Lord. May each of us long to be a Jacob,
not perfect, but clinging to God, not letting go and longing
to be more and more like him. Amen. Let's pray. Oh, Father,
what an amazing book and what conviction this book brings to
us and to the church at large. And I pray that you would bring
that deep conviction by your Holy Spirit, that you would bring
genuine repentance, that we would turn to you, love your law, love
you with all of our heart, soul, strength, and mind, and reflect
back the incredible, faithful love that you have displayed
toward us. I pray Lord that, uh, the, uh,
sermon that we have just heard the, the scriptures we have just
interacted with would sanctify us, purify us, enable us, uh,
to, uh, grow in you in every area of our lives. And we pray
this in the strong name of Jesus Christ, our Lord and savior.
Amen.
Malachi
Series Bible Survey
This sermon shows how the contrast between Esau and Jacob at the beginning of the book is a theme woven throughout the rest of the theological discourse
| Sermon ID | 31820201291003 |
| Duration | 47:06 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday Service |
| Bible Text | Malachi 1:1 |
| Language | English |
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