Chronological Notes relative to this Book
Year from the Creation, according to Archbishop Usher, 3607.
Year from the vocation of Abram, 1524.
Year since the destruction of Troy, 787.
Year since the commencement of the kingdom of Israel by the
Divine
appointment of Saul to the regal dignity, 698.
Year from the division of Solomons monarchy into the kingdoms
of
Israel and Judah, 578.
Fourth year of the ninety-fifth Olympiad.
Year from the building of Rome, according to the Varronian
computation, 356.
Year before the vulgar era of Christs nativity, 397.
Cycle of the Sun, 5.
Cycle of the Moon, 4.
This chapter begins with showing the great and free favor which
God
had manifested to the Israelites, above what he had done to the
Edomites,
who are threatened with farther marks of the Divine displeasure;
alluding, perhaps, to the calamities which they suffered from
Judas
Maccabeus and John Hyrcanus, (see 1 Macc. 5:65,
and Josephus
Antiq. 13:9,)
1-5.
God then reproaches his people, and especially their
priests, for their ungrateful returns to his distinguished
goodness, 6. They
are particularly charged with sacrificing the refuse of beasts,
7-9,
for
which God threatens to reject them, 10,
and choose other nations who
will show more reverence to his name and worship, 11-14.
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Notes on Chapter 1
Verse 1. The burden of
the word of the Lord to Israel by Malachi.
This prophet is undoubtedly the last of the Jewish prophets. He
lived
after Zechariah and Haggai; for we find that the temple, which
was begun
in their time, was standing complete in his. See chap. 3:10.
Some have
thought that he was contemporary with Nehemiah; indeed, several
have
supposed that Malachi, is no other than Ezra under the feigned
name of
angel of the Lord, or my angel. John the Baptist was the link
that
connected Malachi with Christ. According to Abp. Usher he
flourished
B.C. 416, but the authorized version, which we have followed in
the
margin, states this event to have happened nineteen years later.
Both the
Hebrew language and poetry had declined in his days.
Israel. Here means the Jewish people in general.
Verse 2. Was not Esau
Jacobs
brother? Have I not shown a greater
partiality to the Israelites than I have to the Edomites?
I loved Jacob My love to Jacob has been proved by
giving him greater
privileges and a better inheritance than what I have given to
Esau.
Verse 3. And I hated Esau
I have shown him less love; Genesis 29:30,
31. I comparatively hated him by giving him an inferior lot. And
now, I
have not only laid waste the dwelling-place of the Edomites, by
the
incursions of their enemies; but ( ver. 4) they shall remain the
perpetual
monuments of my vengeance. On the subject of loving Jacob and
hating
Esau, see the notes on Genesis xxvii., and Romans 9:13. Let it
be
remembered, 1. That there is not a word spoken here concerning
the
eternal state of either Jacob or Esau. 2. That what is spoken
concerns
merely their earthly possessions. And, 3. That it does not
concern the two
brothers at all, but the posterity of each.
Verse 4. They shall build,
but I will throw down We have
already seen
enough of the wickedness of the Edomites to justify the utmost
severity
of Divine justice against them. The pulling down predicted here
was by
Judas Maccabeus; see 1 Mac. 5:65; and by John Hyrcanus; see
Josephus Antiq., lib. 13:c. 9. s. 1.
They shall call them, The border of wickedness A wicked
land. Among
this people scarcely any trace of good could ever be noted.
Verse 5. Your eyes
Ye Israelites shall see, in your succeeding
generations, that:
The Lord will be magnified By his kindness in Israel,
and his
judgments beyond.
Verse 6. A son honoreth
his father I am your Father-where,
then, is
my honor? Where your filial obedience?
If I be a master,
where is my fear? The respect due to me.
Verse 7. Ye offer
polluted bread The priests,
probably to ingratiate
themselves with the people, took the refuse beasts, etc., and
offered them
to God; and thus the sacrificial ordinances were rendered
contemptible.
Verse 8. Offer it now
unto thy governor
tjp
pechath, a word
signifying a lieutenant, or viceroy, among the Chaldeans,
Syrians, and
Persians; for neither at this time, nor ever after, was there a
king in Israel.
Verse 9. Beseech God
There were evident marks of Gods displeasure
in the land, and it was occasioned by these pollutions through
the priests.
And now he exhorts them to pray to God that they may be
pardoned: for,
if this practice be persisted in, God will not accept any
offering made by
them.
Verse 10. Who is-among
you From this we learn that there was not
one sincere or honest priest among them. They were selfish and
worldly;
and so basely so, that not one of them would even kindle a fire
on the
hearth of the altar unless he were paid for it.
Verse 11. From the rising
of the sun The total abolition of
the Mosaic
sacrifices, and the establishment of a spiritual worship over
the whole
earth, is here foretold. The incense of praise, and the pure
offering of the
Lamb without spot, and through him a holy, loving heart, shall
be
presented everywhere among the Gentiles; and the Jews and their
mock
offerings shall be rejected.
Verse 12. Ye have
profaned it Ye have desecrated
Gods worship; is it
any wonder that God should cast you off, and follow you with his
judgments?
Verse 13. Ye have snuffed
at it A metaphor taken from cattle
which do
not like their fodder. They blow strongly through their nose
upon it; and
after this neither they nor any other cattle will eat it.
Ye brought that which was torn, and the lame, and the sick There had
never been such abominations in the Divine worship before. What
was of
no worth in itself, and what could not be used by its owner, was
brought
to Gods altar, and offered for sacrifice! Was not the
punishment of these
wretches less than their crimes?
Verse 14. Cursed be the
deceiver Those who act thus, as
they cannot
elude Gods notice, so neither shall they escape his curse.
And voweth,
and sacrificeth-a corrupt
thing The history of Ananias
and Sapphira, Acts 5:1, etc., is a complete comment on this. It
was high
time to break up this corrupt service; and after this time God
does not
appear to have paid any regard to it, for he sent them no other
prophet. |