Malachi 1:6-7: A DIALOGUE WITH GOD
‘A son honoureth his father, and a
servant his master: if then I be a Father, where is Mine honour? and if I be
a master, where is My fear? saith the Lord of Hosts unto you, O priests,
that despise My Name. And ye say, Wherein have we despised Thy Name? 7. Ye
offer polluted bread upon Mine altar. And ye say, Wherein have we polluted
Thee?’— MALACHI 1:6, 7
A charactistic of this latest of the
prophets is the vivacious dialogue of which our text affords one example.
God speaks and the people question His word, which in reply He reiterates
still more strongly. The other instances of its occurrence may here be
briefly noted, and we shall find that they cover all the aspects of the
divine speech to men, whether He charges sin home upon them or pronounces
threatenings of judgment, or invites by gracious promises the penitent to
return. His charges of sin are repelled in our text and in the following
verse by the indignant question, ‘Wherein have we polluted Thee?’ And
similarly in the next chapter the divine accusation, ‘Ye have wearied the
Lord with your words,’ is thrown back with the contemptuous retort, ‘Wherein
have we wearied Him?’ And in like manner in the third chapter, ‘Ye have
robbed Me,’ calls forth no confession but only the defiant answer,’ Wherein
have we robbed Thee?’ And in a later verse, the accusation, ‘Your words have
been stout against Me,’ is traversed by the question, ‘What have we spoken
so much against Thee?’ Similarly the threatening of judgment that the Lord
will ‘cut off’ the men that ‘profane the holiness of the Lord’ calls forth
only the rebutting question, ‘Wherefore?’ ( ii. 14 ). And even the gracious
invitation, ‘Return unto Me, and I will return unto you,’ evokes not
penitence, but the stiff-necked reply, ‘Wherein shall we return?’ ( iii. 7
). In this sermon we may deal with the first of these three cases, and
consider, God’s Indictment, and man’s plea of ‘Not guilty.’
I. God’s Indictment.
The precise nature of the charge is to
be carefully considered. The Name is the sum of the revealed character, and
that Name has been despised. The charge is not that it has been blasphemed,
but that it has been neglected, or under-estimated, or cared little about.
The pollution of the table of the Lord is the overt act by which the
attitude of mind and heart expressed in despising His Name is manifested;
but the overt act is secondary and not primary—a symptom of a deeper-lying
disease. And herein our Prophet is true to the whole tenor of the Old
Testament teaching, which draws its indictment against men primarily in
regard to their attitude, and only as a manifestation of that, to their
acts. The same deed may be, if estimated in relation to human law, a crime:
if estimated in relation to godless ethics, a wrong; and if estimated in the
only right way, namely, the attitude towards God which it reveals, a sin.
‘The despising of His Name’ may be taken as the very definition of sin. It
is usual with men to-day to say that ‘Sin is selfishness’; but that
statement does not go deep enough unless it be recognised that self-regard
only becomes sin when it rears its puny self in opposition to, or in
disregard of, the plain will of God. The ‘New Theology,’ of course,
minimises, even where it does not, as it to be consistent should, deny the
possibility of sin: for, if God is all and all is God, there can be no
opposition, there can be no divine will to be opposed, and no human will to
oppose it. But the fact of sin certified by men’s own consciences is the
rock on which Pantheism must always strike and sink. A superficial view of
human history and of human nature may try to explain away the fact of sin by
shallow talk about ‘heredity’ and ‘environment,’ or about ‘ignorance’ and
‘mistakes’; but after all such euphemistic attempts to rechristen the ugly
thing by beguiling names, the fact remains, and conscience bears sometimes
unwilling witness to its existence, that men do set their own inclinations
against God’s commands, and that there is in them that which is ‘not subject
to the law of God, neither indeed can be.’ The root of all sin is the
despising of His Name.
And as sin has but one root, it has
many branches, and as working backwards from deed to motive, we find one
common element in all the various acts; so working outwards from motive to
deed, we have to see one common character stamped upon a tragical variety of
acts. The poison-water is exhibited in many variously coloured and tasted
draughts, but however unlike each other they may be, it is always the same.
The great effort of God’s love is to
press home this consciousness of despising His Name upon all hearts. The
sorrows, losses, and disappointments which come to us all are not meant only
to make us suffer, but through suffering to lead us to recognise how far we
have wandered from our Father, and to bring us back to His heart and our
home. The beginning of all good in us is the contrite acknowledgment of our
evil. Christ’s first preaching was the continuation of John’s message,
‘Repent ye, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand’; and His tenderest
revelation of the divine love incarnated in Himself was meant to arouse the
penitent confession, ‘I am no more worthy to be called Thy son,’ and the
quickening resolve, ‘I will arise and go to my Father.’ There is no way to
God but through the narrow gate of repentance. There is no true reception of
the gift of Christ which does not begin with a vivid and heart-broken
consciousness of my own sin. We can pass into, and abide in, the large room
of joyous acceptance and fellowship, but we must reach it by a narrow path
walled in by gloomy rocks and trodden with bleeding feet. The penitent
knowledge of oar sin is the first step towards the triumphant knowledge of
Christ’s righteousness as ours. Only they who have called out in the agony
of their souls, ‘Lord, save us, we perish,’ have truly learned the love of
God, and truly possess the salvation that is in Christ.
II. Man’s plea of ‘Not Guilty.’
That such an answer should be given to
such a charge is a strange, solemn fact, which tragically confirms the true
indictment. The effect of all sin is to make us less conscious of its
presence, as persons in an unventilated room are not aware of its closeness.
It is with profound truth that the Apostle speaks of being hardened by the
‘deceitfulness’ of sin. It comes to us in a cloud and enfolds us in obscure
mist. Like white ants, it never works in the open, but makes a tunnel or
burrows under ground, and, hidden in some piece of furniture, eats away all
its substance whilst it seems perfectly solid. The man’s perception of the
standard of duty is enfeebled. We lose our sense of the moral character of
any habitual action, just as a man who has lived all his life in a slum sees
little of its hideousness, and knows nothing of green fields and fresh air.
Conscience is silenced by being neglected. It can be wrongly educated and
perverted, so that it may regard sin as doing God’s service; and the only
judgment in which it can be absolutely trusted is the declaration that it is
right to do right, while all its other decisions as to what is right may be
biassed by self-interest; but the force with which it pronounces its only
unalterable decision depends on the whole tenor of the life of the man. The
sins which are most in accordance with our characters, and are therefore
most deeply rooted in us, are those which we are least likely to recognise
as sins. So, the more sinful we are, the less we know it; therefore there is
need for a fixed standard outside of us. The light on the deck cannot guide
us; there must be the lighthouse on the rock. This sad answer of the heart
untouched by God’s appeal prevents all further access of God’s love to that
heart. That love can only enter when the reply to its indictment is, ‘I have
despised Thy name.’
Let us not forget the New Testament
modification of the divine accusation. ‘In Christ’ is the Name of God fully
and finally revealed to men. For us who live in the blaze of the ineffable
brightness of the revelation, our attitude towards Him who brings it is the
test of our ‘hallowing of the Name’ which He brings. He Himself has varied
Malachi’s indictment when He said, ‘He that despiseth Me despiseth Him that
sent Me.’ Our sin is now to be measured by our under-estimate and neglect of
Him, and chiefly of His Cross. That Cross prevents our consciousness of sin
from becoming despair of pardon. Judas went out, and with bitter weeping,
himself ended his traitorous life. If God’s last word to us were, ‘Ye have
despised My Name,’ and it sank into our souls, there would be no hope for
any of us. But the message which begins with the universal indictment of sin
passes into the message which holds forth forgiveness and freedom as
universal as the sin, and ‘God hath concluded all in unbelief that He may
have mercy upon all.’
Malachi 1:8: BLEMISHED OFFERINGS
Offer it now unto thy governor; will
he be pleased with thee, or accept thy person? saith the Lord of Hosts.’—
MALACHI 1.8
A word of explanation may indicate my
purpose in selecting this, I am afraid, unfamiliar text. The Prophet has
been vehemently rebuking a characteristic mean practice of the priests, who
were offering maimed and diseased animals in sacrifice. They were probably
dishonest as well as mean, because the worshippers would bring sound beasts,
and the priests, for their own profit, slipped in a worthless animal, and
kept the valuable one for themselves. They had become so habituated to this
piece of economical religion, that they saw no harm in it, and when they
offered the lame and the sick and the blind for sacrifice they said to
themselves, ‘It is not evil.’ And so Malachi, with the sudden sharp thrust
of my text, tries to rouse their torpid consciences. He says to them: ‘Take
that diseased creature that you are not ashamed to lay on God’s altar, and
try what the governor’—the official appointed by the Persian Kings to rule
over the returned exiles—‘will think about it. Will an offering of that sort
be considered a compliment or an insult? Do you think it will smooth your
way or help your suit with him? Surely God deserves as much reverence as the
deputy of Artaxerxes. Surely what is not good enough for a Persian satrap is
not good enough for the Lord of Hosts. Offer it to the governor, will he be
pleased with it? Will he accept thy person?’
Now, it seems to me that this cheap
religion of the priests, and this scathing irony of the Prophet’s counsel
need little modification to fit us very closely. You will bear me witness, I
think, that I do not often speak to you about money. But I am going to try
to bring out something about the great subject of Christian administration
of earthly possessions from this text, because I believe that the Christian
consciousness of this generation does need a great deal of rousing and
instructing about this matter.
I. We note the startling and
strange contrast which the text suggests.
The diseased lamb was laid without
scruple or hesitation on God’s altar, and not one of these tricky priests
durst have taken it to Court in order to secure favour there. Generalise
that, and it comes to this—the gifts that we lavish on men are the
condemnation of the gifts that we bring to God; and further, we should be
ashamed to offer to men what we are not in the least ashamed to bring to
God. Let me illustrate in one or two points.
Let us contrast in our own
consciences, for instance, the sort of love that we give to one another with
the sort of love that we bring to Him. How strong, how perennially active,
how delighting in sacrifice and service, what a felt source of blessedness
is the love that knits many husbands and wives, many parents and children,
many lovers and friends together! And in dreadful contrast, how languid, how
sporadic and interrupted, how reluctant when called upon for service and
sacrifice, how little operative in our lives is the love we bring to God! We
durst not lay upon the altar of family affection, of wedded love, of true
friendship, a love of such a sort as we take to God and expect Him to he
satisfied with. It would be an insult if offered to ‘the governor,’ but we
think it good enough for the King of kings. Here a gushing flood, there a
straitened trickle coming drop by drop; here a glowing flame that fills life
with warmth and light, there a few dying embers. Measure and contrast the
love that is lavished by men upon one another, and the love that is coldly
brought to Him. And I think we must all bow our heads penitently.
Contrast the trust that we put in one
another, and the trust that we direct to Him. In the one case it is
absolute. ‘I am as sure as I am of my own existence that so-and-so will
always be as true as steel to me, and will never fail me, and whatever he,
or she, does, or fails to do, no shadow of suspicion, or mist of doubt, will
creep across the sunshine of our sky.’ And in contrast to the firm grasp
with which we clasp an infirm human hand, there is a tremulous touch,
scarcely a grasp at all, which we lay upon the one Hand that is strong
enough always to be outstretched for our defence and our blessing. Contrast
your confidence in men, and your confidence in God. Are we not all
committing the absurdity of absolutely trusting that which has no stability
or stay, and refusing so to trust that which is the Rock of Ages? God’s
faithfulness is absolute, our faith in it is tremulous. Men’s faithfulness
is uncertain, our faith in it is entire.
We might contrast the submission and
obedience with which we follow those who have secured our confidence and
evoked our love, as contrasted with the rebellion, the reluctance, the
self-will, which come in to break and mar our submission to God. Men that
will not take Jesus Christ for their Master, and refuse to follow Him when
He speaks, will bind themselves to some human teacher, and enrol themselves
as disciples in some school of thought or science or philosophy, with a
submission so entire, that it puts to shame the submission which Christians
render to the Incarnate Truth Himself.
And so I might go on, all round the
horizon of our human nature, and signalise the difference that exists
between the blemished sacrifices which each part of our being dares to bring
to God and expects Him to accept, and the sacrifices, unblemished and
spotless, which we carry to one another.
But let me say a word more directly
about the subject of which Malachi is speaking. It seems to me that we may
well take a very condemnatory contrast between what we offer to God in
regard to our administration of earthly good, and what we offer on other
altars. Contrast what you give, for directly beneficent and Christian
purposes, with what you spend, without two thoughts, on your own comfort,
indulgence, recreation, tastes—sometimes doubtful tastes—and the like.
Contrast England’s drink bill and England’s missionary contribution. We
spend ?10,000,000 on some wretched war, and some of you think it is cheap at
the price, and the whole contributions of English Christians to missionary
purposes in a twelvemonth do not amount to a tenth of that sum. You offer
that to the spread of Christ’s kingdom. ‘Offer it to your Government,’ and
try to compound for your share of the ten millions that you are going to
spend in shells and gunpowder by the amount you give to Christian missions,
and you will very soon have the tax-gatherer down on you. ‘Will he be
pleased with it?’
This one Missionary Society with which
we are nominally connected has an income of ?70,000 a year. I suppose that
is about a shilling per head from the members of our congregations. Of this
congregation there are many that never give us a farthing, except, perhaps,
the smallest coin in their pockets when the collecting-box comes round. I do
not suppose that there is one of us that applies the underlying principle in
our text, of giving God our best, to this work. I am not going to urge you.
It is my business now simply to state, as boldly and strongly as I can, the
fact; and I say with all sadness, with self-condemnation, as well as
bringing an indictment against my brethren, but with the clearest conviction
that I am not exaggerating in the smallest degree, that the contrast between
what we lavish on other things and what we give for God’s work in the world,
is a shameful contrast, like that other which the Prophet gibbeted with his
indignant eloquence.
II. And now let me come to another
point—viz., that we have here suggested and implied the true law and
principle on which all Christian giving of all sorts is to be regulated.
And that is—give the best. The
diseased animal was no more fit for the altar of God than it was for the
shambles of the viceroy. It was the entire and unblemished one that would be
accepted in either case. But for us Christian people that general principle
has to be expanded. Let me do it in two or three sentences.
The foundation of all is ‘the
unspeakable Gift.’ Jesus Christ has given Himself, God has given His Son.
And Jesus Christ and God, in giving, gave up that we might receive. Do you
believe that? Do you believe it about yourself? If you do, then the next
step becomes certain. That gift, truly received by any man, will infallibly
lead to a kindred (though infinitely inferior) self-surrender. If once we
come within the circle of the attraction of that great Sun, if I might so
say, it will sweep us clean out of our orbit, and turn us into satellites
reflecting His light. To have self for our centre is death and misery, to
have Christ for our centre is life and blessedness. And the one power that
decentralises a man, and sweeps him into an orbit around Jesus, is the
faithful acceptance of His great gift. Just as some little State will give
up its independence in order to be blessedly absorbed into a great Empire,
on the frontiers of which it maintains a precarious existence, so a man is
never so strong, never so blessed, never so truly himself, as when the might
of Christ’s sacrifice has melted down all his selfishness, and has made it
flow out in rivers of self-surrender, self-absorption, self-annihilation,
and so self-preservation. ‘He that loseth his life shall find it.’
Then the next step is that this
self-surrender, consequent upon my faithful acceptance of the Lord’s
surrender for me, changes my whole conception as to what I call my
possessions. If I, in the depths of my soul, have yielded myself to Jesus
Christ, which I shall have done if I have truly accepted Him as yielding
Himself for me, then the yielding of self draws after it, necessarily, and
without a question, a new relation between me and all that I have and all
that I can do. Capacities, faculties, means, opportunities, powers of brain
and heart and mind, and everything else—they all belong to Him. As in old
times a nobleman came and put his hands between the King’s hands, and
kneeling before him surrendered his lands, and all his property, to the
over-lord, and got them back again for his own, so we shall do, in the
measure in which we have accepted Christ as our Saviour and our Guide. And
so, because am His, I shall feel that I am His steward to administer what He
gives me, not for myself, but for men and for God.
Then there follows another thing, and
that is, that Christian giving, not of money only, but of money in a very
eminent degree, is only right and truly Christian when you give yourself
with your gift. A great many of us put our sixpence, or our half-crown, or
our sovereign, into the plate, and no part of ourselves goes with it, except
a little twinge of unwillingness to part with it. That is how they fling
bones to dogs. That is not how you have to give your money and your efforts
to God and God’s cause. Farmers nowadays sow their seed-corn out of a
machine with a number of little conical receptacles at the back of it and a
small hole in the bottom of each, and as the thing goes bumping along over
the furrows, out they fall. That drill does as well as, and better than, the
hand of the sower scattering the seed, but it does not do near as well in
the Christian agriculture in sowing the seed of the Kingdom. Machine-work
will not do there; we have to have the sower’s hand, and the sower’s heart
with his hand, as he scatters the seed. Brethren! apply the lesson to
yourselves, and let your sympathies and your prayers and your wishes to help
go along with your gifts, if you intend them to be of any good.
And there is another thing, and that
is that, somehow or other, if not in the individual gifts, at all events in
their aggregate, there must be present the fact of sacrifice. ‘I will not
offer unto the Lord burnt offerings of that which doth cost me nothing,’
said the old king. And we do not give as we ought, unless our gifts involve
some measure of sacrifice. From many a subscription list some of the biggest
donations would disappear, like the top-writing in one of those old
manuscripts where the Gospel has been half-erased and written over with some
foolish legend, which vanishes when the detergent liquid is applied to the
parchment, if that thought were brought to bear upon it. God asks how much
is kept, not how much is given.
Now, dear friends, these are all
threadbare, elementary, ‘A.B.C.’ truths. Are they the alphabet of our
stewardship and administration of our possessions?
III. One last suggestion I would make on this text is that it brings before
us the possible blessing and possible grave results of right or wrong
Christian giving.
‘Will he be pleased with it? Or will he accept thy person?’ Will the
governor think the hobbling creature, blind of an eye, and infected with
some sickness, to be a beautiful addition to his flock? Will it help your
suit with him? No!
It is New Testament teaching that our
faithfulness in the administration of earthly possessions of all sorts has a
bearing on our spiritual life. Remember our Lord’s triple illustration of
this principle, when He speaks about faithfulness ‘in that which is least,’
leading on to the possession of that which is the greatest; when He speaks
of faithfulness in regard to ‘the unrighteous Mammon’ leading on to being
intrusted with the true riches; when He speaks of faithfulness in our
administration of that which is another’s—alien to ourselves, and which may
pass into the possession of a thousand more—leading on to our firmer hold,
and our deeper and fuller possession of the riches which, in the deepest
sense of the word, are our own. One very important element in the
development and advance of the religious life is our right use of these
earthly things. I have seen many a case in which a man was far better when
he was a poor man than he was when a rich one, in which slowly, stealthily,
certainly, the love of wealth has closed round a man like an iron band round
a sapling, and has hindered the growth of his Christian character, and
robbed him of the best things. And, God be thanked! one has seen cases, too,
in which, by their Christian use of outward possessions, men have weakened
the dominion of self upon themselves, have learned the subordinate value of
the wealth that can be counted and detached from its possessor, and have
grown in the grace and knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Dear
friends, God has given all of us something in charge, the faithful use of
which is a potent factor in the growth of our Christian characters.
It is New Testament teaching that our
faithful administration of earthly possessions has a bearing on the future.
Remember what Jesus Christ said, ‘That when ye fail they may receive you
into everlasting habitations.’ Remember what His Apostle says, ‘Laying up in
store for themselves a good foundation against the time to come, that they
may lay hold on eternal life.’ Let no fear of imperilling the great truth of
salvation by faith lead us to forget that the faith which saves manifests
its vitality and genuineness, by its effects upon our lives, and that no
small part of our lives is concerned with the right acquisition and right
use of these perishable outward gifts. And let us take care that we do not,
in our dread of damaging the free grace of God, forget that although we do
not earn blessedness, here or hereafter, by gifts whilst we are living or
legacies when we are dead, the administration of money has an important part
to play in shaping Christian character, and the Christian character which we
acquire here settles our hereafter.
Brethren! we all need to revise our
scale of giving, especially in regard to missionary operations. And if we
will do that at the foot of the Cross, then we shall join the chorus,
‘Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to receive riches ,’ and we shall come to
Him ‘bringing our silver and our gold with us,’ rejoicing that He gives us
the possibility of sharing His blessedness, ‘according to the word of the
Lord Jesus which He spake, It is more blessed to give than to receive.’
Malachi 2:12, 14: A DIALOGUE WITH GOD
‘The Lord will cut off the man that
doeth this . . . out of the tents of Jacob, . . . 14. Yet ye say, Wherefore?
Because the Lord hath been witness between thee and the wife of thy youth.’—
MALACHI ii. 12, 14 (R.V.) .
It is obvious from the whole context
that divorce and foreign inter-marriage were becoming increasingly prevalent
in Malachi’s time. The conditions in these respects were nearly similar to
that prevailing in the times of Ezra and Nehemiah. It is these sins which
the Prophet is here vehemently condemning, and for which he threatens to cut
off the transgressors out of the tents of Jacob, and to regard no more their
offerings and simulated worship. They might cover ‘the altar of the Lord
with tears,’ but the sacrifice which they laid upon it was polluted by the
sins of their daily domestic life, and therefore was not ‘regarded by Him
any more.’ Malachi is true to the prophetic spirit when he denounces a
religion which has the form of godliness without its power over the
practical life. But his sharp accusations have their edge turned by the
question, ‘Wherefore?’ which again calls out from the Prophet’s lips a more
sharply-pointed accusation, and a solemner warning that none should ‘deal
treacherously against the wife of his youth,’ ‘for I hate putting away,
saith the Lord.’ We may dismiss any further reference to the circumstances
of the text, and regard it as but one instance of man’s way of treating the
voice of God when it warns of the consequences of the sin of man. Looked at
from such a point of view the words of our text bring before us God’s
merciful threatenings and man’s incredulous rejection of them.
I. God’s merciful threatenings.
The fact of sin affects God’s relation
to and dealings with the sinner. It does not prevent the flowing forth of
His love, which is not drawn out by anything in us, but wells up from the
depths of His being, like the Jordan from its source at Dan, a broad stream
gushing forth from the rock. But that love which is the outgoing of perfect
moral purity must necessarily become perfect opposition to its own opposite
in the sinfulness of man. The divine character is many-sided, and whilst ‘to
the pure’ it ‘shows itself pure,’ it cannot but be that ‘to the froward’ it
‘will show itself froward.’ Man’s sin has for its most certain and dreadful
consequence that, if we may so say, it forces God to present the stern side
of His nature which hates evil. But not merely does sin thus modify the fact
of the divine relation to men, but it throws men into opposition in which
they can see only the darkness which dwells in the light of God. To the eye
looking through a red tinted medium all things are red, and even the crystal
sea before the throne is ‘a sea of glass mingled with fire.’
No sin can stay our reception of a
multitude of good gifts appealing to our hearts and revealing the patient
love of our Father in heaven, but every sin draws after it as certainly as
the shadow follows the substance, evil consequences which work themselves
out on the large scale in nations and communities, and in the smaller
spheres of individual life. And surely it is the voice of love and not of
anger that comes to warn us of the death which is the wages of sin. It is
not God who has ordained that ‘the soul that sinneth it shall die,’ but it
is God who tells us so. The train is rushing full steam ahead to the broken
bridge, and will crash down the gulph and be huddled, a hideous ruin, on the
rocks; surely it is care for life that holds out the red flag of danger, and
surely God is not to be blamed if in spite of the flag full speed is kept up
and the crash comes.
The miseries and sufferings which
follow our sins are self-inflicted, and for the most part automatic.
‘Whatsoever a man soweth, that’—and not some other crop—‘will he also reap.’
The wages of sin are paid in ready money; and it is as just to lay them at
God’s door as it would be to charge Him with inflicting the disease which
the dissolute man brings upon himself. It is no arbitrary appointment of
God’s that ‘he that soweth to the flesh shall of the flesh reap corruption’;
nor is it His will acting as that of a jealous despot which makes it
inevitably true that here and hereafter, ‘Every transgression and
disobedience shall receive its just recompense of reward,’ and that to be
parted from Him is death.
If then we rightly understand the
connection between sin and suffering, and the fact that the sorrows which
are but the echoes of preceding sins have all a distinctly moral and
restorative purpose, we are prepared rightly to estimate how tenderly the
God who warns us against our sins by what men call threatenings loves us
while He speaks.
II. Man’s rejection of God’s merciful
threatenings.
It is the great mystery and tragedy of
life that men oppose themselves to God’s merciful warnings that all sin is a
bitter, because it is an evil, thing. He has to lament, ‘I have smitten your
children, and they have received no correction.’ The question ‘Wherefore?’
is asked in very various tones, but none of them has in it the accent of
true conviction; and there is a whole world of difference between the lowly
petition, ‘Show me wherefore Thou contendest with me,’ and the curt,
self-complacent brushing aside of God’s merciful threatenings in the text.
The last thing which most of us think of as the cause of our misfortunes is
ourselves; and we resent as almost an insult the word, which if we were
wise, we should welcome as the crowning proof of the seeking love of our
Father in heaven. We are more obstinate and foolish than Balaam, who
persisted in his purpose when the angel with the drawn sword in his hand
would have barred his way, not to the tree of life, but to death. The awful
mystery that a human will can, and the yet sadder mystery that it does, set
itself against the divine, is never more unintelligible, never so stupid,
and never so tragic as when God says, ‘Turn ye, turn ye, why will ye die?’
and we say, ‘Why need I die? I will not turn.’
The ‘Wherefore?’ of our text is widely
asked in the present day as an expression of utter bewilderment at the
miseries of humanity, both in the wide area of this disordered world and in
the narrower field of individual lives. There are whole schools of so-called
political and social thinkers who have yet to learn that the one thing which
the world and the individual need is not a change of conditions or
environment, but redemption from sin. Man’s sorrows are but a symptom of his
disease, and he is no more to be healed by tinkering with these than a
fever-stricken patient can be restored to health by treating the blotches on
his skin which tell of the disease that courses through his veins.
But sometimes the question is more
than an expression of bewilderment; it conceals an arraignment of God’s
justice, or even a denial that there is a God at all. There are men among us
who hesitate not to avow that the miseries of the world have rooted out of
their minds a belief in Him; and who point to all the ills under which
humanity staggers as conclusive against the ancient faith of a God of love.
They, too, forget that that love is righteousness, and that if there be sin
in the world and God above it, He must necessarily war against it and hate
it.
Our right response to God’s merciful
threatenings is to ask this question in the right spirit. We are not wise if
we turn a deaf ear to His warnings, or go on in a headlong course which He
by His providences declared to be dangerous and fatal. We use them as wise
men should, only if our ‘Wherefore?’ is asked in order to learn our evil,
and having learned it, to purge our bosoms of the perilous stuff by
confession and to seek pardon and victory in Christ. Then we shall ‘know the
secret of the Lord’ which is ‘with them that fear Him’; and the mysteries
that still hang over our own histories and the world’s destiny will have
shining down upon them the steadfast light of that love which seeks to make
men blessed by making them good.
Malachi 3:1-12: THE LAST WORD OF PROPHECY
Deep obscurity surrounds the person of
this last of the prophets. It is questioned whether Malachi is a proper name
at all. It is the Hebrew word rendered in verse 1 of our passage ‘My
messenger,’ and this has led many authorities to contend that the prophecy
is in fact anonymous, the name being only a designation of office. Whether
this is so or not, the name, if it is a name, is all that we know about him.
The tenor of his prophecy shows that he lived after the restoration of the
Temple and its worship, and the sins which he castigates are substantially
those with which Ezra and Nehemiah had to fight. One ancient Jewish
authority asserts that he was Ezra; but the statement has no confirmation,
and if it had been correct, we should not have expected that such an author
would have been anonymous. This dim figure, then, is the last of the mighty
line of prophets, and gives strong utterance to the ‘hope of Israel’! One
clear voice, coming from we scarcely know whose lips, proclaims for the last
time, ‘He comes! He comes!’ and then all is silence for four hundred years.
Modern critics, indeed, hold that the bulk of the Psalter is of later date;
but that contention has much to do before it can be regarded as established.
The first point worthy of notice in
this passage, then, is the concentration, in this last prophetic utterance,
of that element of forward-looking expectancy which marked all the earlier
revelation. From the beginning, the selectest spirits in Israel had set
their faces and pointed their fingers to a great future, which gathered
distinctness as the ages rolled, and culminated in the King from David’s
line, of whom many psalms sung, and in the suffering Servant of the Lord,
who shines out from the pages of the second part of Isaiah’s prophecy. This
Messianic hope runs through all the Old Testament, like a broadening river.
‘They that went before cried, Hosanna! Blessed is He that cometh.’
That hope gives unity to the Old
Testament, whatever criticism may have to teach about the process of its
production. The most important thing about the book is that one purpose
informs it all; and the student who misses the truth that ‘the testimony of
Jesus is the spirit of prophecy’ has a less accurate conception of the
meaning and inter-relations of the Old Testament than the unlearned who has
accepted that great truth. We should be willing to learn all that modern
scholarship has to teach about the course of revelation. But we should take
care that the new knowledge does not darken the old certainty that the
prophets ‘testified beforehand of the sufferings of Christ and of the glory
that should follow,’ Here, at the very end, stands Malachi, reiterating the
assurance which had come down through the centuries. The prophets, as it
were, had lit a beacon which flamed through the darkness. Hand after hand
had flung new fuel on it when it burned low. It had lighted up many a stormy
night of exile and distress. Now we can dimly see one more, the last of his
order, casting his brand on the fire, which leaps up again; and then he too
passes into the darkness, but the beacon burns on.
The next point to note is the clear
prophecy of a forerunner. ‘My messenger’ is to come, and to ‘prepare the way
before Me.’ Isaiah had heard a voice calling, ‘Prepare the way of the Lord,’
and Malachi quotes his words, and ascribes the same office to the
‘messenger.’ In the last verses of his prophecy he calls this messenger
‘Elijah the prophet.’ Here, then, we have a remarkable instance of a
historical detail set forth in prophecy. The coming of the Lord is to be
immediately preceded by the appearance of a prophet, whose function is to
effect a moral and religious reformation, which shall prepare a path for
Him. This is no vague ideal, but definite announcement of a definite fact,
to be realised in a historical personality. How came this half-anonymous
Jew, four hundred years beforehand, to hit upon the fact that the next
prophet in Israel would herald the immediate coming of the Lord? There ought
to be but one answer possible.
Another point to note is the peculiar
relation between Jehovah and Him who comes. Emphatically and broadly it is
declared that Jehovah Himself ‘shall suddenly come to His temple’; and then
the prophecy immediately passes on to speak of the coming of ‘the Messenger
of the covenant,’ and dwells for a time exclusively on his work of
purifying; and then again it glides, without conscious breach of continuity
or mark of transition, into, ‘And I will come near to you in judgment.’ A
mysterious relationship of oneness and yet distinctness is here shadowed, of
which the solution is only found in the Christian truth that the Word, which
was Grod, and was in the beginning with God, became flesh, and that in Him
Jehovah in very deed tabernacled among men. The expression ‘the Messenger
(or Angel) of the covenant’ is connected with the remarkable representations
in other parts of the Old Testament, of ‘the Angel of Jehovah,’ in whom many
commentators recognise a pre-incarnate manifestation of the eternal Word.
That ‘Angel’ had redeemed Israel from Egypt, had led them through the
desert, had been the ‘Captain of the Lord’s host.’ The name of Jehovah was
‘in Him.’ He it is whose coming is here prophesied, and in His coming
Jehovah comes to His temple.
We next note the aspect of the coming
which is prominent here. Not the kingly, nor the redemptive, but the
judicial, is uppermost. With keen irony the Prophet contrasts the professed
eagerness of the people for the appearance of Jehovah and their shrinking
terror when He does come. He is ‘the Lord whom ye seek’; the Messenger of
the covenant is He ‘whom ye delight in.’ But all that superficial and
partially insincere longing will turn into dread and unwillingness to abide
His scrutiny. The images of the refiner’s fire and the fullers’ soap imply
painful processes, of which the intention is to burn out the dross and beat
out the filth. It sounds like a prolongation of Malachi’s voice when John
the Baptist peals out his herald cry of one whose ‘fan was in His hand,’ and
who should plunge men into a fiery baptism, and consume with fire that
destroyed what would not submit to be cast into the fire that cleansed. Nor
should we forget that our Lord has said, ‘For judgment am I come into the
world.’ He came to ‘purify’; but if men would not let Him do what He came
for, He could not but be their bane instead of their blessing.
The stone is laid. If we build on it,
it is a sure foundation; if we stumble over it, we are broken. The double
aspect and effect of the gospel, which was meant only to have the single
operation of blessing, are clearly set forth in this prophecy, which first
promises purging from sin, so that not only the ‘sons of Levi’ shall offer
in righteousness, but that the ‘offerings of Judah and Jerusalem shall be
pleasant,’ and then passes immediately to foretell that God will come in
judgment and witness against evil-doers. Judgment is the shadow of
salvation, and constantly attends on it. Neither Malachi nor the Baptist
gives a complete view of Messiah’s work, but still less do they give an
erroneous one; for the central portion of both prophecies is His purifying
energy which both liken to cleansing fire.
That real and inward cleansing is the
great work of Christ. It was wrought on as many of His contemporaries as
believed on Him, and for such as did not He was a swift Witness against
them. Nor are we to forget that the prophecy is not exhausted yet; for there
remains another ‘day of His coming’ for judgment. The prophets did not see
the perspective of the future, and often bring together events widely
separated in time, just as, to a spectator on a mountain, distances between
points far away towards the horizon are not measurable. We have to allow for
foreshortening.
This blending of events historically
widely apart is to be kept in view in interpreting Malachi’s prediction that
the coming would result in Judah’s and Israel’s offerings being ‘pleasant
unto the Lord as in former years.’ That prediction is not yet fulfilled,
whether we regard the name of Israel and the relation expressed in it as
having passed over to the Christian Church, or whether we look forward to
that bringing in of all Israel which Paul says will be as ‘life from the
dead.’ But by slow degrees it is being fulfilled, and by Christ men are
being led to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God.
The more directly Messianic part of
this prophecy is closed in verse 6 by a great saying, which at once gives
the reason for the coming and for its severe aspect of witness against sin.
The unchangeableness of God, which is declared in His very name, guarantees
the continued existence of Israel. As Paul says in regard to the same
subject, ‘The calling of God is without change of purpose’ (on His part).
But it is as impossible that God should leave them to their sins, which
would destroy them, as that He should Himself consume them. Therefore He
will surely come; and coming, will deliver from evil. But they who refuse to
be so delivered will forfeit that title and the pledge of preservation which
it implies.
A new paragraph begins with verse 7 ,
which is not closely connected with the promises preceding. It recurs to the
prevailing tone of Malachi, the rebuke of negligence in attending to the
legal obligations of worship. That negligence is declared to be a reason for
God’s withdrawal from them. But the ‘return,’ which is promised on condition
of their renewed obedience, can scarcely be identified with the coming just
foretold. That coming was to bring about offerings of righteousness which
should be pleasant to the Lord. This section ( vs. 7-12 ) promises blessings
as results of such offerings, and a ‘return’ of Jehovah to His people
contingent upon their return to Him. If the two sections of this passage are
taken as closely connected, this one must describe the consequences of the
coming. But, more probably, this accusation of negligence and promise of
blessing on a change of conduct are independent of the previous verses. We,
however, may fairly take them as exhibiting the obligations of those who
have received that great gift of purifying from Jesus Christ, and are
thereby consecrated as His priests.
The key-word of the Christian life is
‘sacrifice’—surrender, and that to God. That is to be stamped on the inmost
selves, and by the act of the will, on the body as well. ‘Yield yourselves
to God, and your members as instruments of righteousness to Him.’ It is to
be written on possessions. Malachi necessarily keeps within the limits of
the sacrificial system, but his impetuous eloquence hits us no less. It is
still possible to ‘rob God.’ We do so when we keep anything as our own, and
use it at our own will, for our own purposes. Only when we recognise His
ownership of ourselves, and consequently of all that we call ‘ours,’ do we
give Him His due. All the slave’s chattels belong to the owner to whom he
belongs. Such thorough-going surrender is the secret of thorough possession.
The true way to enjoy worldly goods is to give them to God.
The lattices of heaven are opened, not
to pour down, as of old, fiery destruction, but to make way for the gentle
descent of God’s blessing, which will more than fill every vessel set to
receive it. This is the universal law, not always fulfilled in increase of
outward goods, but in the better riches of communion and of larger
possession in God Himself. He suffers no man to be His creditor, but more
than returns our gifts, as legends tell of some peasant who brought his king
a poor tribute of fruits of his fields, and went away from the
presence-chamber with a jewel in his hand.
Malachi 3:6: THE UNCHANGING LORD
‘I am the Lord, I change not;
therefore ye sons of Jacob are not consumed.’— MALACHI iii. 6 .
The scriptural revelations of the
divine Name are always the basis of intensely practical admonition. The
Bible does not think it worth while to proclaim the Name of God without
building on the proclamation promises or commandments. There is no ‘mere
theology’ in Scripture; and it does not speak of ‘attributes,’ nor give dry
abstractions of infinitude, eternity, omniscience, unchangeableness, but
lays stress on the personality of God, which is so apt to escape us in these
abstract conceptions, and thus teaches us to think of this personal God our
Father, as infinite, eternal, knowing all things, and never changing. There
is all the difference in our attitude towards the very same truth if we
think of the unchangeableness of God, or if we think that our Father God is
unchangeable. In our text the thought of Him as unchanging comes into view
as the foundation of the continuance of the unfaithful sons of Jacob in
their privileges and in their very lives. ‘I am the Lord,’ Jehovah, the
Self-existent, the Eternal whose being is not under the limitations of
succession and time. ‘Because I am Jehovah, I change not’; and because
Jehovah changes not, therefore our finite and mortal selves abide, and our
infinite and sinful selves are still the objects of His steadfast love.
Let us consider, first, the
unchangeable God, and second, the unchanging God as the foundation of our
changeful lives.
I. The unchangeable God.
In the great covenant-name Jehovah
there is revealed an existence which reverses all that we know of finite and
progressive being, or finite and mortal being, or finite and variable
nature. With us there are mutations arising from physical nature. The
material must needs be subject to laws of growth and decadence. Our
spiritual nature is subject to changes arising from the advancement in
knowledge. Our moral nature is subject to fluctuations; circumstances play
upon us, and ‘nothing continueth in one stay.’ Change is the condition of
life. It means growth and happiness; it belongs to the perfection of
creatures. But the unchangeableness of God is the negation of all
imperfection, it is the negation of all dependence on circumstances, it is
the negation of all possibility of decay or exhaustion, it is the negation
of all caprice. It is the assurance that His is an underived, self-dependent
being, and that with Him is the fountain of light; it is the assurance that,
raised above the limits of time and the succession of events, He is in the
eternal present, where all things that were and are, and are to come, stand
naked and open. It is the assurance that the calm might of His eternal will
acts, not in spasms of successive volitions preceded by a period of
indecision and equilibrium between contending motives, but is one continuous
uniform energy, never beginning, never bending, never ending; that the
purpose of His will is ‘the eternal purpose which He hath purposed in
Himself.’ It is the assurance that the clear vision of His infinite
knowledge, from the heat of which nothing is hid, has no stages of
advancement, and no events lying nebulous in a dim horizon by reason of
distance, or growing in clearness as they draw nearer, but which pierces the
mists of futurity and the veils of the past and the infinities of the
present, and ‘from the beginning to the end knoweth all things.’ It is the
assurance that the mighty stream of love from the heart of God is not
contingent on the variations of our character and the fluctuations of our
poor hearts, but rises from His deep well, and flows on for ever, ‘the river
of God’ which ‘is full of water.’ It is the assurance that round all the
majesty and the mercy which He has revealed for our adoration and our trust
there is the consecration of permanence, that we might have a rock on which
to build and never be confounded. Is there anywhere in the past an act of
His power, a word of His lip, a revelation of His heart which has been a
strength or a joy or a light to any man? It is valid for me, and is intended
for my use. ‘He fainteth not, nor is weary.’ The bush burns and is not
consumed. ‘I will not alter the thing that has gone out of my lips.’ ‘By two
immutable things in which it is impossible for God to lie, we have strong
consolation.’
II. The unchanging God as the
foundation of our changeful lives.
In the most literal sense our text is
true. Because He lives we live also. He is the same for ever, therefore we
are not consumed. The foundation of our being lies beyond and beneath all
the mutable things from which we are tempted to believe that we draw our
lives, and is in God. The true lesson to be drawn from the mutable phenomena
of earth is—heaven. The many links in the chain must have a staple. Reason
requires that behind all the fleeting shall be the permanent. There must be
a basis which does not partake of change. The lesson from all the mutable
creation is the immutable God.
Since God changes not, the life of our
spirits is not at the mercy of changing events. We look back on a lifetime
of changing scenes through which we have passed, and forward to a similar
succession, and this mutability is sad to many of us, and in some aspects
sad to all, so powerless we are to fix and arrest any of our blessings.
Which we shall keep we know not; we only know that, as certainly as buds and
blossoms of spring drop, and the fervid summer darkens to November fogs and
December frosts, so certainly we shall have to part with much in our passage
through life. But if we let God speak to us, the necessary changes that come
to us will not be harmful but blessed, for the lesson that the mutability of
the mutual is meant to impress upon us is, the permanency of the divine, and
our dependence, not on them, but on Him. We may look upon all the world of
time and chance and think that He who Himself is unchanging changeth all.
The eye of the tempest is a point of rest. The point in the heavens towards
which, according to some astronomers, the whole of the solar system is
drifting, is a fixed point. If we depend on Him, then change is not all sad;
it cannot take God away, but it may bring us nearer to Him. We cannot be
desolate as long as we have Him. We know not what shall be on the morrow. Be
it so; it will be God’s to-morrow. When the leaves drop we can see the rock
on which the trees grow; and when changes strip the world for us of some of
its waving beauty and leafy shade, we may discern more clearly the firm
foundation on which our hopes rest. All else changes. Be it so; that will
not kill us, nor leave us utterly forlorn as long as we hear the voice which
says, ‘I am the Lord; I change not; therefore ye are not consumed.’
God’s purposes and promises change
not, therefore our faith may rest on Him, notwithstanding our own sins and
fluctuations. It is this aspect of the divine immutability which is the
thought of our text. God does not turn from His love, nor cancel His
promises, nor alter His purposes of mercy because of our sins. If God could
have changed, the godless forgetfulness of, and departure from, Him of ‘the
Sons of Jacob’ would have driven Him to abandon His purposes; but they still
live—living evidences of His long-suffering. And in that preservation of
them God would have them see the basis of hope for the future. So this is
the confidence with which we should cheer ourselves when we look upon the
past, and when we anticipate the future. The sins that have been in our past
have deserved that we should have been swept away, but we are here still.
Why are we? Why do we yet live? Because we have to do with an unchanging
love, with a faithfulness that never departs from its word, with a purpose
of blessing that will not be turned aside. So let us look back with this
thought and be thankful; let us look forward with it and be of good cheer.
Trust yourself, weak and sinful as you are, to that unchanging love. The
future will have in it faults and failures, sins and shortcomings, but rise
from yourself to God. Look beyond the light and shade of your own
characters, or of earthly events to the central light, where there is no
glimmering twilight, no night, ‘no variableness nor shadow of turning.’ Let
us live in God, and be strong in hope. Forward, not backward, let us look
and strive; so our souls, fixed and steadied by faith in Him, will become in
a manner partakers of His unchangeableness; and we too in our degree will be
able to say, ‘The Lord is at my side; I shall not be moved.’
Malachi 3:7: A DIALOGUE WITH GOD
Return unto Me, and I will return unto
you, saith the Lord of Hosts. But ye say, Wherein shall we return?— MALACHI
3:7
In previous sermons we have considered
God’s indictment of man’s sin met by man’s plea of ‘not guilty,’ and God’s
threatenings brushed aside by man’s question. Here we have the climax of
self-revealing and patient love in God’s wooing voice to draw the wanderer
back, met by man’s refusing answer. These three divine utterances taken
together cover the whole ground of His speech to us; and, alas! these three
human utterances but too truly represent for the most part our answers to
Him.
I. God’s invitation to His
wandering child.
The gracious invitation of our text
presupposes a state of departure. The child who is tenderly recalled has
first gone away. There has been a breach of love. Dependence has been
unwelcome, and cast off with the vain hope of a larger freedom in the
far-off land; and this is the true charge against us. It is not so much
individual acts of sin but the going away in heart and spirit from our
Father God which describes the inmost essence of our true condition, and is
itself the source of all our acts of sin. Conscience confirms the
description. We know that we have departed from Him in mind, having wasted
our thoughts on many things and not having had Him in the multitude of them
in us. We have departed from Him in heart, having squandered our love and
dissipated our desires on many objects, and sought in the multiplicity of
many pearls—some of them only paste—a substitute for the all-sufficient
simplicity of the One of great price. We have departed from Him in will,
having reared up puny inclinations and fleeting passions against His calm
and eternal purpose, and so bringing about the shock of a collision as
destructive to us as when a torpedo-boat crashes in the dark against a
battleship, and, cut in two, sinks.
The gracious invitation of our text
follows, ‘I am the Lord, I change not; therefore ye sons of Jacob are not
consumed.’ Threatenings, and the execution of these in acts of judgment, are
no indication of a change in the loving heart of God; and because it is the
same, however we have sinned against it and departed from it, there is ever
an invitation and a welcome. We may depart from Him, but He never departs
from us. Nor does He wait for us to originate the movement of return, but He
invites us back. By all His words in His threatenings and in His
commandments, as in the acts of His providence, we can hear His call to
return. The fathers of our flesh never cease to long for their prodigal
child’s return; and their patient persistence of hope is but brief and
broken when contrasted with the infinite long-suffering of the Father of
spirits. We have heard of a mother who for long empty years has nightly set
a candle in her cottage window to guide her wandering boy back to her heart;
and God has bade us think more loftily of the unchangeableness of His love
than that of a woman who may forget, that she should not have compassion
upon the son of her womb.
II. Man’s answer to God’s
invitation.
It is a refusal which is half-veiled
and none the less real. There is no unwillingness to obey professed, but it
is concealed under a mask of desiring a little more light as to how a return
is to be accomplished. There are not many of us who are rooted enough in
evil as to be able to blurt out a curt ‘I will not’ in answer to His call.
Conscience often bars the way to such a plain and unmannerly reply; but
there are many who try to cheat God, and who do to some extent cheat
themselves, by professing ignorance of the way which would lead them to His
heart. Some of us have learned only too well to raise questions about the
method of salvation instead of accepting it, and to dabble in theology
instead of making sure work of return. Some of us would fain substitute a
host of isolated actions, or apparent moral or religious observance, for the
return of will and heart to God; and all who in their consciences answer
God’s call by saying, ‘Wherein shall we return?’ with such a meaning are
playing tricks with themselves, and trying to hoodwink God.
But the question of our text has often
a nobler origin, and comes from the depths of a troubled heart. Not seldom
does God’s loving invitation rouse the dormant conscience to the sense of
sin. The man, lying broken at the foot of the cliff down which he has
fallen, and seeing the brightness of God far above, has his heart racked
with the question: How am I, with lame limbs, to struggle back to the
heights above? ‘How shall man be just with God?’ All the religions of the
world, with their offerings and penances and weary toils, are vain attempts
to make a way back to the God from whom men have wandered, and that
question, ‘Wherein shall we return?’ is really the meaning of the world’s
vain seeking and profitless effort.
God has answered man’s question; for
Christ is at once the way back to God, and the motive which draws us to walk
in it. He draws us back by the magnetism of His love and sacrifice. We
return to God when we cling to Jesus. He is the highest, the tenderest
utterance of the divine voice; and when we yield to His invitation to
Himself we return to God. He calls to each of us, ‘Come unto Me, and I will
give you rest.’ What can we reply but, ‘I come; let me never wander from
Thee’?
Malachi 3:13-18, 4:1-6:
‘STOUT WORDS,’ AND THEIR CONFUTATION
This passage falls into three
parts,—the ‘stout words’ against God which the Prophet sets himself to
confute (Malachi 3:13-15 ); the prophecy of the day which will show their
falsehood (Malachi 3:16-4:3); and the closing exhortation and prediction
(Malachi 4:4-6).
I. The returning exiles had not had
the prosperity which they had hoped.
So many of them, even of those who had
served God, began to let doubts darken their trust, and to listen to the
whispers of their own hearts, reinforced by the mutterings of others, and to
ask: ‘What is the use of religion? Does it make any difference to a man’s
condition?’ Here had they been keeping God’s charge, and going in black
garments ‘before the Lord,’ in token of penitence, and no good had come to
them, while arrogant neglect of His commandments did not seem to hinder
happiness, and ‘they that work wickedness are built up.’ Sinful lives
appeared to have a firm foundation, and to rise high and palace-like, while
righteous ones were like huts. Goodness seemed to spell ruin.
What was wrong in these ‘stout words’?
It was wrong to attach such worth to external acts of devotion, as if these
were deserving of reward. It was wrong to suspend the duty of worship on the
prosperity resulting from it, and to seek ‘profit’ from ‘keeping his
charge.’ Such religion was shallow and selfish, and had the evils of the
later Pharisaism in germ in it. It was wrong to yield to the doubts which
the apparently unequal distribution of worldly prosperity stirred in their
hearts. But the doubts themselves were almost certain to press on Old
Testament believers, as well as on Old Testament scoffers, especially under
the circumstances of Malachi’s time. The fuller light of Christianity has
eased their pressure, but not removed it, and we have all had to face them,
both when our own hearts have ached with sorrow and when pondering on the
perplexities of this confused world. We look around, and, like the psalmist,
see ‘the prosperity of the wicked,’ and, like him, have to confess that our
‘steps had wellnigh slipped’ at the sight. The old, old question is ever
starting up. ‘Doth God know?’ The mystery of suffering and the mystery of
its distribution, the apparent utter want of connection between
righteousness and well-being, are still formidable difficulties in the way
of believing in a loving, all-knowing, and all-powerful God, and are stock
arguments of the unbeliever and perplexities of humble faith. Never to have
felt the force of the difficulty is not so much the sign of steadfast faith
as of scant reflection. To yield to it, and still more, to let it drive us
to cast religion aside, is not merely folly, but sin. So thinks Malachi.
II. To the stout words of the
doubters is opposed the conversation of the godly. ‘
Then they that feared the Lord spake
one with another,’ nourishing their faith by believing speech with
like-minded. The more the truths by which we believe are contradicted, the
more should we commune with fellow-believers. Attempts to rob us should make
us hold our treasure the faster. Bold avowal of the faith is especially
called for when many potent voices deny it. And, whoever does not hear, God
hears. Faithful words may seem lost, but they and every faithful act are
written in His remembrance and will be recompensed one day. If our names and
acts are written there, we may well be content to accept scanty measures of
earthly good, and not be ‘envious of the foolish’ in their prosperity.
Malachi’s answer to the doubters
leaves all other considerations which might remove the difficulty
unmentioned, and fixes on the one, the prophecy of a future which will show
that it is not all the same whether a man is good or bad. It was said of an
English statesman that he called a new world into existence to redress the
balance of the old, and that is what the Prophet does. Christianity has
taught us many other ways of meeting the doubters’ difficulty, but the sheet
anchor of faith in that storm is the unconquerable assurance that a day
comes when the righteousness of providence will be vindicated, and the
eternal difference between good and evil manifested in the fates of men. The
Prophet is declaring what will be a fact one day, but he does not know when.
Probably he never asked himself whether ‘the day of the Lord’ was near or
far off, to dawn on earth or to lie beyond mortal life. But this he
knew—that God was righteous, and that sometime and somewhere character would
settle destiny, and even outwardly it would be good to be good. He first
declares this conviction in general terms, and then passes on to a
magnificent and terrible picture of that great day.
The promise, which lay at the
foundation of Israel’s national existence, included the recognition of it as
‘a peculiar treasure unto Me above all people,’ and Malachi looks forward to
that day as the epoch when God will show by His acts how precious the
righteous are in His sight. Not the whole Israel, but the righteous among
them, are the heirs of the old promise. It is an anticipation of the
teaching that ‘they are not all Israel which are of Israel,’ And it bids us
look for the fulfilment of every promise of God’s to that great day of the
Lord which lies still before us all, when the gulf between the righteous and
the wicked shall be solemnly visible, wide, and profound. There have been
many ‘days which I make’ in the world’s history, and in a measure each of
them has re-established the apparently tottering truth that there is a God
who judgeth in the earth, but the day of days is yet to come.
No grander vision of judgment exists
than Malachi’s picture of ‘the day,’ lurid, on the one hand, with the fierce
flame, before which the wicked are as stubble that crackles for a moment and
then is grey ashes, or as a tree in a forest fire, which stands for a little
while, a pillar of flame, and then falls with a crash, shaking the woods;
and on the otherhand, radiant with the early beams of healing sunshine, in
whose sweet morning light the cattle, let out from their pent-up stalls,
gambol in glee. But let us not forget while we admire the noble poetry of
its form that this is God’s oracle, nor that we have each to settle for
ourselves whether that day shall be for us a furnace to destroy or a sun to
cheer and enlighten.
We can only note in a sentence the
recurrence in verse 1 of the phrases ‘the proud’ and they ‘that work
wickedness,’ from verse 15 of chapter iii. The end of those whom the world
called happy, and who seemed stable and elevated, is to be as stubble before
the fire. We must also point out that ‘the sun of righteousness’ means the
sun which is righteousness, and is not a designation of the Messiah. Nor can
we dwell on the picture of the righteous treading down the wicked, which
seems to prolong the previous metaphor of the leaping young cattle. Then
shall ‘the upright have dominion over them in the morning.’
III. The final exhortation and promise
point backwards and forwards, summing up duty in obedience to the law, and
fixing hope on a future reappearance of the leader of the prophets. Moses
and Elijah are the two giant figures which dominate the history of Israel.
Law and prophecy are the two forms in which God spoke to the fathers. The
former is of perpetual obligation, the latter will flash up again in power
on the threshold of the day. Jesus has interpreted this closing word for us.
John came ‘in the spirit and power of Elijah,’ and the purpose of his coming
was to ‘turn the hearts of the fathers to the children’ ( Luke i. 16, 17 );
that is, to bring back the devout dispositions of the patriarchs to the
existing generations, and so to bring the ‘hearts of the children to their
fathers,’ as united with them in devout obedience. If John’s mission had
succeeded, the ‘curse’ which smote Israel would have been stayed. God has
done all that He can do to keep us from being consumed by the fire of that
day. The Incarnation, Life, and Death of Jesus Christ made a day of the Lord
which has the twofold character of that in Malachi’s vision, for He is a
‘saviour of life unto life’ or ‘of death unto death,’ and must be one or
other to us. But another day of the Lord is still to come, and for each of
us it will come burning as a furnace or bright as sunrise. Then the universe
shall ‘discern between the righteous and the wicked, between him that
serveth God and him that serveth Him not.’
Malachi 4:6:
THE LAST WORDS OF THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENTS
‘Lest I come and smite the earth with
a curse.’— MALACHI iv. 6 .
‘The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be
with you all. Amen.’— REVELATION xxii. 21 .
It is of course only an accident that
these words close the Old and the New Testaments. In the Hebrew Bible
Malachi’s prophecies do not stand at the end; but he was the last of the Old
Testament prophets, and after him there were ‘four centuries of silence.’ We
seem to hear in his words the dying echoes of the rolling thunders of Sinai.
They gather up the whole burden of the Law and of the prophets; of the
former in their declaration of a coming retribution, of the latter in the
hope that that retribution may be averted.
Then, in regard to John’s words, of
course as they stand they are simply the parting benediction with which he
takes leave of his readers; but it is fitting that the Book of which they
are the close should seal up the canon, because it stands as the one
prophetic book of the New Testament, and so reaches forward into the coming
ages, even to the consummation of all things. And just as Christ in His
Ascension was taken from them whilst His hands were lifted up in the act of
blessing, so it is fitting that the revelation of which He is the centre and
the theme should part from us as He did, shedding with its final words the
dew of benediction on our upturned heads.
I venture, then, to look at these
significant closing words of the two Testaments as conveying the spirit of
each, and suggesting some thoughts about the contrast and the harmony and
the order that subsist between them.
I. I ask you, first, to notice the
apparent contrast and the real harmony and unity of these two texts.
‘Lest I come and smite the land with a
curse.’ That last awful word does not convey, in the original, quite the
idea of our English word ‘curse.’ It refers to a somewhat singular
institution in the Mosaic Law according to which things devoted, in a
certain sense, to God were deprived of life. And the reference historically
is to the judgments that were inflicted upon the nations that occupied the
land before the Israelitish invasion, those Canaanites and others who were
put under ‘the ban’ and devoted to utter destruction. So, says my text,
Israel, which has stepped into their places, may bring down upon its head
the same devastation; and as they were swept off the face of the land that
they had polluted with their iniquities, so an apostate and God-forgetting
Judah may again experience the same utter destruction falling upon them. If
instead of the word ‘curse’ we were to substitute the word ‘destruction,’ we
should get the true idea of the passage.
And the thought that I want to insist
upon is this, that here we have distinctly gathered up the whole spirit of
millenniums of divine revelation, all of which declare this one thing, that
as certainly as there is a God, every transgression and disobedience
receives, and must receive, its just recompense of reward.
That is the spirit of law, for law has nothing to say, except, ‘Do this, and
thou shalt live; do not this, and thou shalt die.’
And then turn to the other. ‘The grace
of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all.’ What has become of the thunder?
All melted into dewy rain of love and pity and compassion. Grace is love
that stoops; grace is love that foregoes its claims, and forgives sins
against itself. Grace is love that imparts, and this grace, thus stooping,
thus pardoning, thus bestowing, is a universal gift. The Apostolic
benediction is the declaration of the divine purpose, and the inmost heart
and loftiest meaning of all the words which from the beginning God hath
spoken is that His condescending, pardoning, self-bestowing mercy may fall
upon all hearts, and gladden every soul.
So there seems to emerge, and there
is, a very real and a very significant contrast. ‘I come and smite the earth
with a curse’ sounds strangely unlike ‘The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be
with you all.’ And, of course, in this generation there is a strong tendency
to dwell upon that contrast and to exaggerate it, and to assert that the
more recent has antiquated the more ancient, and that now the day when we
have to think of and to dread the curse that smites the earth is past,
‘because the true Light now shineth.’
So I ask you to notice that beneath
this apparent contrast there is a real harmony, and that these two
utterances, though they seem to be so diverse, are quite consistent at
bottom, and must both be taken into account if we would grasp the whole
truth. For, as a matter of fact, nowhere are there more tender utterances
and sweeter revelations of a divine mercy than in that ancient law with its
attendant prophets. And as a matter of fact, nowhere, through all the
thunderings and lightnings of Sinai, are there such solemn words of
retribution as dropped from the lips of the Incarnate Love. There is nothing
anywhere so dreadful as Christ’s own words about what comes, and must come,
to sinful men. Is there any depth of darkness in the Old Testament teaching
of retribution half as deep, half as black, and as terrible, as the gulf
that Christ opens at your feet and mine? Is there anything so awful as the
threatenings of Infinite Love?
And the same blending of the widest proclamation of, and the most perfect
rejoicing confidence in, the universal and all-forgiving love of God, with
the teaching of the sharpest retribution, lies in the writings of this very
Apostle about whose words I am speaking. There are nowhere in Scripture more
solemn pictures than those in that book of the Apocalypse, of the inevitable
consequences of departure from the love and the faith of God, and John, the
Apostle of love, is the preacher of judgment as none of the other writers of
the New Testament are.
Such is the fact, and there is a
necessity for it. There must be this blending; for if you take away from
your conception of God the absolute holiness which hates sin, and the rigid
righteousness which apportions to all evil its bitter fruits, you have left
a maimed God that has not power to love but is nothing but weak,
good-natured indulgence. Impunity is not mercy, and punishment is never the
negation of perfect love, but rather, if you destroy the one you hopelessly
maim the other. The two halves are needed in order to give full emphasis to
either. Each note alone is untrue; blended, they make the perfect chord.
II. And now, let me ask you to look
with me at another point, and that is, the relation of the grace to the
punishment.
Is it not love which proclaims
judgment? Are not the words of my first text, if you take them all,
merciful, however they wear a surface of threatening? ‘Lest I come.’ Then He
speaks that He may not come, and declares the issue of sin in order that
that issue may never need to be experienced by us that listen to Him.
Brethren! both in regard to the Bible and in regard to human ministrations
of the Gospel, it is all-important, as it seems to me at present, to insist
that it is the cruellest kindness to keep back the threatenings for fear of
darkening the grace; and that, on the other hand, it is the truest
tenderness to warn and to proclaim them. It is love that threatens; ‘tis
mercy to tell us that the wrath will come.
And just as one relation between the
grace and the retribution is that the proclamation of the retribution is the
work of the grace, so there is another relation—the grace is manifested in
bearing the punishment, and in bearing it away by bearing it. Oh! there is
no adequate measure of what the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ is except the
measure of the smiting destruction from which He frees us. It is because
every transgression receives its just recompense of reward, because the
wages of sin is death, because God cannot but hate and punish the evil, that
we get our truest standard of what Christ’s love is to every soul of us. For
on Him have met all the converging rays of the divine retribution, and burnt
the penal fire into His very heart. He has come between every one of us, if
we will, and that certain incidence of retribution for our evil, taking upon
Himself the whole burden of our sin and of our guilt, and bearing that awful
death which consists not in the mere dissolution of the tie between soul and
body, but in the separation of the conscious spirit from God, in order that
we may stand peaceful, serene, untouched, when the hail and the fire of the
divine judgment are falling from the heavens and running along the earth.
The grace depends for all our conceptions of its glory, its tenderness, and
its depth, on our estimate of the wrath from which it delivers.
So, dear brethren, remember, if you
tamper with the one you destroy the other; if there be no fearful judgment
from which men need to be delivered, Christ has borne nothing for us that
entitles Him to demand our hearts; and all the ascriptions of praise and
adoration to Him, and all the surrender of loving hearts, in utter
self-abandonment, to Him that has borne the curse for us, fade and are
silent. If you strike out the truth of Christ’s bearing the results of sin
from your theology, you do not thereby exalt, but you fatally lower the
love; and in the interests of the loftiest conceptions of a divine
loving-kindness and mercy that ever have blessed the world, I beseech you,
be on your guard against all teachings that diminish the sinfulness of sin,
and that ask again the question which first of all came from lips that do
not commend it to us—‘ Hath God said?’ or advance to the assertion—‘Ye shall
not surely die.’ If ‘I come to smite the earth with a curse’ ceases to be a
truth to you, ‘the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ’ will fade away for you
likewise.
III. Now, still further, let me ask
you to consider, lastly, the alternative which these texts open for us.
I believe that the order in which they
stand in Scripture is the order in which men generally come to believe them,
and to feel them. I am old-fashioned enough and narrow enough to believe in
conversion; and to believe further that, as a rule, the course through which
the soul passes from darkness into light is the course which divine
revelation took: first, the unveiling of sin and its issues, and then the
glad leaping up of the trustful heart to the conception of redeeming grace.
But what I seek briefly to suggest now
is, not only the order of manifestation as brought out in these words, but
also the alternative which they present to us, one branch or other of which
every soul of you will have to experience. You must have either the
destruction or the grace. And, more wonderful still, the same coming of the
same Lord will be to one man the destruction, and to another the
manifestation and reception of His perfect grace. As it was in the Lord’s
first coming, ‘He is set for the rise and the fall of many in Israel.’ The
same heat softens some substances and bakes others into hardness. A bit of
wax and a bit of clay put into the same fire—one becomes liquefied and the
other solidified. The same light is joy to one eye and torture to another.
The same pillar of cloud was light to the hosts of Israel, and darkness and
dismay to the armies of Egypt. The same Gospel is ‘a savour of life unto
life, or of death unto death,’ by the giving forth of the same influences
killing the one and reviving the other; the same Christ is a Stone to build
upon or a Stone of stumbling; and when He cometh at the last, Prince, King,
Judge, to you and me, His coming shall be prepared as the morning; and ye
‘shall have a song as when one cometh with a pipe to the mountain of the
Lord’; or else it shall be a day of darkness and not of light. He comes to
me, to you; He comes to smite or He comes to glorify.
Oh, brethren! do not believe that
God’s threatenings are wind and words; do not let teachings that sap the
very foundations of morality and eat all the power out of the Gospel
persuade you that the solemn words, ‘The soul that sinneth it shall die,’
are not simple verity.
And then, my brethren, oh! then, do
you turn yourselves to that dear Lord whose grace is magnified in this most
chiefly, that ‘He hath borne our sins and carried our sorrows’; and taking
Him for your Saviour, your King, your Shield, your All, when He cometh it
will be life to you; and the grace that He imparts will be heaven for ever
more.