Verses 1-3
Malachi 1:1-3. The burden of the
Lord — The word burden is here,
as often elsewhere, equivalent
to prophecy; to Israel — To
those of all the tribes that
were returned from captivity. I
have loved you, saith the Lord —
That is, in a particular and
extraordinary degree; not only
as men, but above the rest of
men, and above the other
posterity, both of Abraham and
Isaac. Yet ye say, Wherein hast
thou loved us? — That is,
wherein does thy particular love
to us appear? What proofs hast
thou given of loving us in an
extraordinary degree? Us, who
have been captives, and have
groaned under the miseries of
captivity, and bondage all our
days till of late? Is this a
proof of thy love to us?
Was not Esau Jacob’s brother?
saith the Lord — Did not one
father beget them, and one
mother bear them? Yet I loved
Jacob — Namely, more than Esau;
I preferred him to the honour
and privileges of the
birthright, and this of free
love. I loved his person and his
posterity. Here God is
introduced as answering the
question, which, in the
preceding clause, they are
represented as asking, namely,
wherein his particular regard to
them appeared. But it must be
well observed, that Jacob and
Esau, as elsewhere Israel and
Edom, are put to signify the
whole posterity arising from
these two persons, namely, the
Israelites and Idumeans. And in
asking, Was not Esau Jacob’s
brother? God reminds them that
the Idumeans, as they themselves
very well knew, were descended
from Abraham as well as they,
and from a progenitor who was
own brother to their progenitor
Jacob. And I hated Esau — I
loved not Esau’s posterity as I
loved Jacob’s. By hating here is
only meant, having a less degree
of love, for in this sense the
expression is frequently used.
Thus, Genesis 29:31, Jacob’s
loving Leah less than Rachel is
termed hating her; and Luke
14:26, the loving father and
mother, wife and children, less
than we love Christ, is termed
the hating of them. That this is
the meaning of the expression
hating, there, is evident from
the parallel text, Matthew
10:37-38, where we read, He that
loveth father or mother MORE
than me, is not worthy of me,
&c. From these, and other
passages that might be produced,
it is evident that the
expression, hating, is
frequently used to signify no
more than loving in a less
degree, or showing less regard
or favour to one than another.
Indeed, as it may be further
added, it would be doing a high
dishonour to the nature of God
to suppose that the expression,
as here applied to Jacob and
Esau, is to be taken in the
strict sense of the word hating.
And laid his mountains and his
heritage waste — In these words
the Lord shows in what sense he
had hated Esau, that is, his
posterity; he had given him a
lot inferior to that which he
had conferred on Jacob. Idumea
had been laid waste by the arms
of Nebuchadnezzar, five years
after the taking of Jerusalem;
and whereas Jacob’s captivity,
or that of the Israelites, were
restored to their own land, and
their cities rebuilt, Esau’s
never were. For the dragons of
the wilderness — Creatures which
delight in desolate places, by
which the utter desolation of
Idumea is signified. The Hebrew
word תנם, or תנות, here rendered
dragons, signifies any large
creature of the creeping kind,
whether by land or sea. In this
place it is taken for a great
serpent, such as are commonly
found in deserts and desolate
places.
Verse 4-5
Malachi 1:4-5. Edom saith, We
are empoverished, [or, brought
low,] but we will return and
build the desolate places — This
they accordingly did, as we
learn from the history of those
times; and undoubtedly thought
to become a flourishing people
again, and to continue so. But
God had determined otherwise, as
is here declared. Thus saith the
Lord, They shall build, but I
will throw down — This was
accordingly done by God’s giving
success, first to the arms of
Judas Maccabæus, and afterward
to those of Hyrcanus, by whom
Edom was spoiled and laid waste
again. And they shall call them,
The border of wickedness — They
shall be called, or accounted by
others, a wicked nation, or a
country of wicked men, and
therefore deservedly laid waste.
And ye shall say, The Lord will
be magnified — Or, rather, Let
the Lord be magnified; from the
border of Israel — Namely, from
that border which extended even
to Idumea.
Verse 6
Malachi 1:6. A son honoureth his
father, &c. — Since it is
evident I am not only your Lord,
and have a right to govern and
command you by my creation of
you, but also may be esteemed
your Father, on account of the
extraordinary benefits I have
bestowed upon you, where are
those proper dispositions which
I might expect to find in you in
return? namely, reverence for
me, and fear of offending me, as
your Lord and Master, and love
and honour toward me as your
Father. Unto you, O priests, &c.
— What is here said is addressed
in particular to you priests,
because, being chosen and
appointed, according to your
office, to honour and glorify
me, you ought to have been the
first and most forward to do it;
but, instead of that, you have
been the first to dishonour me.
Had undutifulness been found
among the ignorant people, it
might have been, in some
measure, excusable; but you,
whose calling and business it is
to know, love, and serve me, are
without excuse, because, like
Eli’s sons, you have despised me
yourselves, and made others do
so too. The prophet adds, that
perhaps they would have the
assurance to pretend they had
not done it, and to ask in what
particular such a charge could
be alleged against them? if so,
he would enumerate the
particulars to them, which he
does accordingly in the
following verses.
Verse 7-8
Malachi 1:7-8. Ye offer polluted
bread upon mine altar — By this
seems to be meant, the
bread-offering, or the cake of
fine flour, which was to be
offered with the continual
sacrifice in the morning and
evening of every day. By being
polluted is to be understood,
that it was not such as the law
required. They diminished
something, either in the quality
or quantity of what the law
commanded them to offer; either
the bread was not made of good
flour, or mixed with the
required quantity of good oil.
And ye say, Wherein have we
polluted thee? — Or dishonoured,
or had thee in contempt? The
answer is ready, In that ye say,
The table of the Lord is
contemptible — You pretend, as a
cover for your avarice, that the
table or altar of the Lord is
despised among the people, and
that therefore they do not bring
to it, by way of offering, that
quantity of flour and oil which
they should. Or the meaning is,
By your actions you declare how
little value you have for the
worship of God, since you care
not in how slight and
contemptuous a manner it is
performed. And if ye offer the
blind for sacrifice, is it not
evil? — The beasts to be offered
were required to be perfect and
without blemish, Leviticus
22:21-22. Offer it now to thy
governor; will he be pleased
with thee? — Wilt thou be
acceptable or welcome unto him,
bringing him such a worthless
present? It argues a great
contempt of Almighty God, when
men are less careful in
maintaining the decencies of his
worship than they are in giving
proper respect to their
superiors.
Verse 9-10
Malachi 1:9-10. And now, I pray
you, beseech God, &c. — And now
I beseech you, (for you cannot
deny that ye have done as I have
said,) that you would supplicate
God to pardon the nation in
general, as well as yourselves,
for what offences have been
committed against his laws; for
ye have been the principal cause
of them, by the disregard you
had for God’s service. Will he
regard your persons? — This
ought rather to be rendered, If,
perhaps, he may regard your
persons. Who among you would
shut the doors for naught? — All
those pretences which you make
use of to excuse yourselves, for
presenting unto God improper and
worthless offerings, are quite
vain, for it is plain that a
general avarice prevails, and is
practised among you; for even
the officers, or ministers,
whose duty it is to open and
shut the doors of the temple,
and to kindle fire on the altar,
will not perform their office
without making a gain of it, or
receiving fees for it. I have no
pleasure in you, saith the Lord
— I cannot take pleasure in men
so intent upon their own profit
as ye are; and under the gospel
I will put an end both to your
priesthood and the sacrifices
which you offer. This is implied
in the next verse.
Verse 11
Malachi 1:11. For from the
rising of the sun, &c., my name
shall be great among the
Gentiles — You may perhaps
think, if I will not accept an
offering from your hands, that I
shall have none; but in this you
err greatly; for know that my
name shall be great, or highly
reverenced, among all the
nations of the earth, who will
worship me, not as you do, as if
it were a labour for which they
ought to be paid; but with pure
minds, inflamed with love toward
me and zeal for my glory. And in
every place incense shall be
offered to my name — Prayers and
praises shall be presented
before me as incense. For here
the prophet describes the
Christian sacrifice of praise
and thanksgiving by the outward
rites of the Jewish worship: see
note on Zechariah 14:16. Indeed,
incense was considered by the
Jews themselves as a figure or
emblem of prayer and praise: see
Psalms 141:2; Luke 1:10. This
spiritual service, the prophet
says, shall be offered in every
place, whereas the Jewish
worship was confined to the
temple. The words of Christ,
John 4:21-22, are a good
commentary upon this text; where
to worship in spirit is opposed
to the carnal ordinances of the
Jewish service, such as meats
and drinks and bloody
sacrifices, or to mere external
worship; and in truth, to the
types and ceremonies of the
Mosaic law, which were only
shadowy representations of
things to come. And a pure
offering — Namely, the offering
of prayer and praise, of faith,
love and obedience, of the heart
and life, the body and soul, to
be dedicated to and employed for
God. Such, also are the
oblations of real Christians for
the support of God’s worship,
the maintenance of a gospel
ministry, or the relief of the
poor. Thus, in this verse, two
important points of our religion
are declared in the fullest
manner: the abolition of the
sacrifices and ceremonies of the
ancient law, and the pure and
spiritual nature of the
Christian worship and service.
Verse 12-13
Malachi 1:12-13. But ye — O
priests, and the people, by your
example; have profaned it —
Namely, my great name. You have
used it as a common thing, and
as of no importance or
consideration. In that ye say —
Namely, by your deportment; The
table of the Lord is polluted —
Not a sacred thing, or a thing
to be revered; and the fruit
thereof, his meat, is
contemptible — Either the meat
which fell to the priests’
share, or the portion which was
laid upon the altar. They were
neither pleased with that which
the Lord reserved for himself,
nor with that which he gave to
them, but they found fault with
both; the latter, in particular,
they termed contemptible, a
poor, sordid allowance, scarce
fit for meaner persons and less
service. Ye said also — To the
sins before mentioned, the
priests chiefly, and the people
with them, added this also, that
they openly complained of God’s
service. Behold what a weariness
— What a toil and drudgery is it
to observe every point of the
law! Ye have complained of the
constant attendance upon my
altar as a wearisome employment.
And ye have snuffed — Have
expressed your disgust, at it.
And ye have brought that which
was torn — Ye have brought into
the temple, for victims, that
which had been torn by wild
beasts, &c. It was forbidden
even to eat in common that which
had been torn, Exodus 22:31, and
therefore nothing could show
higher contempt than to bring
such things for offerings to
God.
Verse 14
Malachi 1:14. But cursed be the
deceiver — The hypocrite, that
deceives man, and seems as if he
would be glad to deceive God;
the false heart, that intends
one thing and pretends another,
would appear to offer a
sacrifice of the best, but puts
God off with the worst. Which
hath in his flock a male — A
perfect male, such as God
requireth; and sacrificeth unto
the Lord a corrupt thing — Such
as the Lord hath declared he
will not accept. The former
reproofs related only to the
priests; here the prophet
reproves those in general who
showed a contempt of God by
vowing unto him, upon any
occasion, the worst of their
flock. It seems to be spoken of
such offerings as any of the
people, of their own accord,
vowed to God: see Leviticus
22:19. And if they did not think
fit to vow such things as God
directed, they would have done
less dishonour to him not to
have vowed at all. For I am a
great King, saith the Lord, and
my name is, or shall be,
dreadful — As God is the great
King over all the earth, and
will be acknowledged as such
among the Gentiles under the
gospel, (Malachi 1:11,) so men’s
religious services ought to be
performed with a reverence
suitable to the greatness of his
majesty. |