NOTES ON The Book of MALACHI
Tho' Malachi be the last of the prophets, and in him prophecy ceased: yet the spirit of
prophecy shines as clear, as strong, as bright, in him, as in any that went before. The
Jews call him the seal of prophecy, because in him the succession of prophets came to a
period: God wisely ordering, that prophecy should cease, some ages before the Messiah
came, that he might appear the more conspicuous, and be the more welcome. Haggai and
Zechariah were sent to reprove the people, for delaying to build the temple: Malachi to
reprove them for their neglect of it, now it was built, and for their profanation of the
temple - service. And the sins he reproves, are those complained of by Nehemiah, with whom
he is supposed to have been cotemporary. And now prophecy was to cease, he speaks more
clearly of the Messiah, than any other of the prophets had done.
Chapter I
The prophet reproves the Jews for their ingratitude to God, ver. 1 - 5. For their
neglect of his institutions, ver. 6 - 14.
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Loved you - Both personally considered and relatively, in progenitors. Us - Who have
been captives, and groaned under it all our days 'till of late. Was not Esau - Did not one
father beget them, and one mother bear them? I loved Jacob - I preferred him to the
birthright, and this of free love. I loved his person, and his posterity. |
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I hated - I loved not Esau's posterity as I loved Jacob's. His heritage - Mount Seir
with the neighbouring mountains. Waste - By Nebuchadnezzar's arms five years after the
sacking of Jerusalem, and whereas Jacob's captivity returned, and their cities were
rebuilt, Esau's never were. The dragons - Creatures which delight in desolate places, by
which the utter desolation of Esau is signified. |
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Throw down - So he did in the times of the Maccabees. The border of wickedness - They
will be a most wicked people, and so notorious, that all their neighbours shall brand them
for it. Hath indignation - They will so highly provoke God, that his indignation will be
kindled against them for ever. |
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From the border of Israel - Let Israel from all his borders give God praise. |
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O priests - Had undutifulness been found among the ignorant people, it might have been
a little excusable. But you, O priests, whose business is to know me, have like Eli's sons
despised me yourselves, and made others do so too. |
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Bread - Either the meal - offerings, or rather in a more large sense, all sacrifices
and oblations. Ye say - Perhaps in words; at least your deeds speak your thoughts. The
table - This comprehends all that was offered to God. |
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Evil - Is it not against the express command of God. |
| 9 |
I pray you - O priests. Beseech - Intercede with God for his sinful people. This -
This contempt of God. |
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Incense - A law term for a gospel duty, and under this type are contained the prayers
and praises, nay, the whole gospel - worship. A pure offering - Both sincere, in
opposition to hypocrisy, and holy, in opposition to impurity, superstition and idolatry. |
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But ye - O priests! And the people by your examples. Ye say - By your deportment. Is
polluted - Not a sacred thing. His meat - Either the meat which fell to the priest's
share, or the portion which was laid upon the altar. |
| 13 |
What a weariness - What a toil and drudgery to observe every point of the law. This -
With such minds snuffing at my service, and with such sacrifices, unfit for mine altar. |
| 14 |
The deceiver - The hypocrite that would seem to offer a sacrifice of the best, but
puts God off with the worst. A male - A perfect male, such as God requireth. |
Chapter II
The priests reproved for profaning the holy things of God, ver. 1 - 9. The priests
and people for various abuses with regard to marriage, ver. 10 - 17.
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I have cursed them - I have already sent out the curse, and it is in part upon you. |
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I will corrupt - I will take away the prolific virtue and strength of it, that it
shall bring forth no fruit. Spread dung - It is an expression of the greatest contempt. Of
your solemn feasts - Your most solemn days and feasts, shall be as loathsome to me as
dung, and shall make you, who offer them as unclean, and loathsome, as if I had thrown the
dung of those sacrifices into your faces. Take you away - You shall be taken away with it,
removed as equally unclean with the dung itself, equally fit to be cast out to the
dunghill. |
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My covenant - If you will not confirm, and keep Levi's covenant among you, I will make
it firm on my part, by punishing the violators of it. |
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With him - With Levi. Peace - Of long life, and prosperous, assured to the Levites in
their due ministrations before God. Before my name - Behaved himself with reverence before
God. |
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Was in his mouth - He taught to the people. Aaron, Eleazar, Phineas, every one of
those priests or Levites, in what age soever they lived; who feared God, and were humble.
Iniquity is not found - He judged not with respect of persons, or for bribes. He walked -
His whole life was a continual walking with God; he lived with God, and to him. In peace -
With God, and it was his aim to live peaceably with others. |
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Should keep knowledge - It is this that their office binds them to; it is the duty of
all God's people to know his law, but the priest's duty to know it more than others. And
they - The people. |
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But ye - Priests. Stumble at the law - By your false expositions of it. Have corrupted
- You have violated it, have contradicted the great intentions of it, and done what in you
lay, to defeat them. |
| 9 |
Have been partial - You have perverted the law to please great men, or to serve some
unworthy design. When we inquire into "the reasons of the contempt of the
clergy," ought we to forget this? |
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One father - Abraham, or Jacob, with whom God made the covenant by which their
posterity were made a peculiar people. Created us - The prophet speaks of that great and
gracious work of God, creating them to be a chosen people. And so we Christians are
created in Christ Jesus. |
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Hath profaned - Profanely violated the law, confining Israel to marry within
themselves, and not to endanger themselves, by contracting affinity with idolaters. Which
he loved - Which he, Judah, once loved. The daughter - Idolatresses. Even tho' they had
wives before, whom they now cast off. |
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The master and the scholar - There shall be left neither any to teach nor any to
learn. Him that offereth - The priests. |
| 13 |
And this - Beside that first fault, you have committed another, you misuse, and
afflict your Jewish wives, whom alone you should have cherished. With tears - Your
despised wives fly to the temple, weep and cry to God for redress. With weeping - This is
added to shew the abundance of their tears. He - The Lord. |
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The wife of thy covenant - To whom thou art so firmly bound, that while she continues
faithful, thou canst not be loosed. |
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One - But one man, and one woman. Yet - Yet he could have made more. Wherefore one -
One couple, and no more. A godly seed - A holy seed born to God in chaste wedlock, and
bred as they were born, in the fear of God. Take heed - Keep your heart from wandering
after strange wives. |
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Putting away - Divorce, such as these petulant Jews used to make way for some new
wives, which God hates as much as putting away. |
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Your words - Your perverse reasoning, and impious quarrellings against God. Is good -
This wicked inference they drew, from their prosperity in the world. He delighteth in them
- As appears (say these atheists) by his prospering them. Where is the God of judgment -
If he is there, judging and governing the world, why does he not punish these men? |
Chapter III
A promise of the coming of the Messiah, and of his fore - runner, ver. 1 - 6. A
reproof of the Jews, and charge to amend, ver. 7 - 12. A description of the wicked, ver.
13 - 15. And of the righteous, ver. 16 - 18.
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I - The Messiah. My messenger - John the Baptist. The Lord - The Messiah. Whom ye seek
- Whom ye, who truly fear God, long and wait for. Suddenly come - After the coming of his
fore - runner. To his temple - That which was the second temple at Jerusalem, lately built
by Zerubbabel and Joshua. The messenger - The angel of the covenant, the Messiah, in whose
blood the covenant between God and man was confirmed. Whom ye delight in - You Jews, among
whom, few there are, who do not please themselves to think of his coming, tho' from
various motives. |
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Abide - Who shall be able to stand under the weight of those crosses which in that
day, will fall on all sorts of men? The day - This day was from his preaching, 'till the
utter destruction of Jerusalem, about seventy years after the birth of Christ. A refiner's
fire - Some are like metals, which nothing but a fierce fire can purge, such fire shall
the troubles of these days be. Fuller's soap - As boiling waters, into which, spotted
cloaths are thrown, and as the rubbing of them with soap; so that day will prove to all, a
day of great trial, to purge and refine. |
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He shall fit - As resolved to attend his work and finish it. He shall purify - The
effect of this fiery trial, shall be the thorough cleansing of the persons that are to
pass through it. Sons of Levi - Either the Jewish Levites, or all Christians, who are made
priests unto God. In righteousness - That they may offer themselves, their souls and
bodies to God, in righteousness and true holiness. |
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The offerings - The services and duties of the whole Christian church. Pleasant - Well
pleasing to him. |
| 5 |
I will come near - You have spoken as if you thought I was far off, but you shall see
I am near. To you - O Jews, not those very persons Malachi preached to, but those who were
living when the Messiah came. |
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I change not - I have an unchangeable hatred to sin: and my long suffering also
changeth not, therefore you are not consumed in your sins. Not consumed - God is the same
in his wisdom to order the rewards of good and bad in the fittest season, therefore
neither the one nor the other are consumed, but preserved to the season appointed of God. |
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From mine ordinances - Which either directed my worship, or your dealings one with
another. |
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Cursed with a curse - Are greatly cursed. |
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Bring ye - Make a punctual and full payment of all tithes; about this did Nehemiah
contend with the rulers, and made them comply, and then all Judah obeyed and did the like,
Nehem 13:10 - 13. To the store - house - This was one or more large rooms,
built on purpose for this use. That there may be meat - For the priests and Levites to
live upon. Prove me - Make the experiment. The windows of heaven - A kind of proverbial
speech, to express great abundance. A blessing - First of rain to water the earth, next a
blessing of corn, wine and oil, and all other products of the earth. |
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The devourer - All kind of devourers, the locusts, the canker - worm, and the
caterpillar, which though they are in incredible multitudes, yet a rebuke from God will
check them all at once, as if they were but one. For your sakes - For your good. Your vine
- Your vine shall carry their fruit 'till they are fully ripe. |
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All nations - All that are about you. A delightsome land - The revival of religion in
a land, will make it delight - some, both to God, and to all good men. |
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And now - You say, we see before our eyes, that the proud contemners of God and his
law, are the flourishing ones. Delivered - Escape all punishment. |
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Then - When contempt of God was grown so high. That feared the Lord - Those that were
truly religious. Spake often - Conversed together the more frequently. And a book - All
this is spoken after the manner of men. For them - On their behalf. |
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Make up my jewels - This shall be fully made good in the last great day, and in heaven
to eternal ages. I will spare them - In the mean time they shall be spared, pitied,
preserved, and loved. |
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Ye - Ye contemners of God and religion, return to your reason, forced by the
convincing power of God's judgments. Discern - Clearly see the happiness of the righteous,
and your own misery, who perish in your wickedness. |
Chapter IV
The approaching misery of the wicked, and happiness of the righteous, ver. 1 - 3. A
direction to keep to the law, and to expect Elijah, that is, John the Baptist, the fore -
runner of the Messiah, ver. 4 - 6.
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Cometh - Tho' it be at a distance from you, yet it is coming and will overtake you and
overwhelm you too. As an oven - The refiner's fire, chap. 3:2, is now
represented as a fire, burning more dreadfully, as it did indeed when Jerusalem and the
temple were on fire, when the fire raged every where, but most fiercely where the arched
roofs made it double itself, and infold flames with flames. And this may well be an emblem
of the day of judgment. |
| 2 |
The sun of righteousness - Christ, who is fitly compared to the sun, being the
fountain of light, and vital heat to his church. And of mercy and benignity; for the
Hebrew word imports both. With healing - His beams shall bring health and strength, with
delight and joy, safety and security. Go forth - Go out of Jerusalem, before the fatal
siege. Grow up - In strength, vigour and spiritual stature. Of the stall - Where they are
safe guarded and well ordered. |
| 3 |
Tread down the wicked - When believers by faith overcome the world, when they suppress
their corrupt appetites and passions, and when the God of peace bruises Satan under their
feet, then they indeed tread down the wicked. |
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Remember - Now take leave of prophecy, for you shall have no more 'till the great
prophet, 'till Shiloh come, but attend ye diligently to the law of Moses. For all Israel -
So long as they should be a people and church. Statutes and judgments - Be not partial;
statutes and judgments, that is, the whole law must you attend to, and remember it as God
requires. |
| 5 |
Behold I will send - Though the spirit of prophecy cease for four hundred years, yet
at the expiring of those years, you shall have one sent, as great as Elijah. Elijah -
Namely John the Baptist, who came in the spirit and power of Elijah, Luke 1:17,
and therefore bears his name. Before - That is, immediately before; so he was born six
months before Christ, and began his preaching a few years before Christ began to exercise
his publick office. The great and dreadful day of the Lord - This literally refers to the
times of vengeance upon the Jews, from the death of Christ to the final desolation of the
city and temple, and by accommodation, to the end of the world. |
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And he - John the Baptist. Shall turn the heart - There were at this time many great
and unnatural divisions among the Jews, in which fathers studied mischief to their own
children. Of the children - Undutiful children estranged from their fathers. With a curse
- Which ends in utter destruction; leaving Jerusalem a desolate heap, and a perpetual
monument of God's displeasure. Some observe, that the last word of the Old Testament is a
curse: whereas the New Testament ends with a blessing, yea, the choicest of blessings, The
grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with us all! Amen. Dec. 24, 1766. |
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