Verses 1-4
Malachi 2:1-4. O ye priests,
this commandment is for you — Or
decree, rather, for properly
speaking no commandment is here
given to the priests, only
punishment is denounced upon
them if they did not repent. If
ye will not hear, &c., to give
glory unto my name — Which you
have despised and dishonoured,
by your irreverent performance
of my service, Malachi 1:6. I
will send a curse upon you — I
will send poverty and affliction
upon you, and you shall not
prosper in any thing. And I will
curse your blessings — I will
turn your blessings into curses,
or rather, remove your blessings
and send curses and calamities
in their stead; behold, I will
corrupt your seed — The seed
wherewith you sow your ground: I
will cause it to rot so that it
shall bring forth little or
nothing. And spread dung upon
your faces — I will make you as
contemptible and vile as if some
one had covered your faces with
filth and dung. And one shall
take you away with it — You
shall be cast out of the temple
as so many nuisances, only fit
to be removed out of sight. And
ye shall know that I have sent
this commandment unto you — By
the punishment which will follow
upon your neglecting to lay what
hath been said to heart, and to
give glory unto my name, as you
are here enjoined: see Malachi
2:1-2. That my covenant might be
with Levi —
That the covenant which I made
with the tribe of Levi, that
they should be mine, and
employed in my service, might
continue firm to their
posterity. Some render the
clause, Because my covenant was
with Levi, for the breach of
which you are accountable.
Verse 5-6
Malachi 2:5-6. My covenant was
with him — The prophet here
speaks of the succession of the
ancient priests, such as Aaron,
Eleazar, Phineas, and their
successors, as of one single
person, under the name of Levi,
(see Zechariah 11:16,) and says,
I gave him my covenant of life
and peace, or of happiness and
security; or I promised him a
secure enjoyment of his office
of the priesthood, on his due
administration of his office
before me. The words allude to
Numbers 25:12-13, where God says
concerning Phineas, Behold, I
give unto him my covenant of
peace, and he shall have it, and
his seed after him, even the
covenant of an everlasting
priesthood; because he was
zealous for his God, and made an
atonement, &c. Or, as it is here
expressed, For the fear
wherewith he feared me, and was
afraid before my name — Here God
declares what was the foundation
of the terms upon which he
entered into this covenant with
Phineas and his successors in
the priesthood, namely, an awful
reverence of him, and zeal for
his honour and service. The law
of truth, &c. — In this verse is
described how Phineas and
others, who were his successors
in piety as well as in the
priesthood, behaved in their
office: and 1st, The law of
truth was in his mouth — He
taught the people that which was
agreeable to the divine laws,
that is, Aaron, Eleazar, Phineas
did this; and every one of those
priests or Levites, in whatever
age they lived, who feared God
and were obedient to him. 2d,
Iniquity was not found in his
lips — He neither lived himself
in any known sin, nor did he mix
any thing with the instructions
he gave the people which was
false, and calculated to mislead
them, but declared to them the
pure word of God, or the divine
laws, without any false glosses
or comments. The words may also
mean, He judged, without respect
of persons, in all the causes
between man and man which came
before him. 3d, He walked with
me in peace and equity — He made
my word the rule, and my glory
the end of all his actions, and
discharged his duty with
fidelity and care, maintaining
peace with me, and endeavouring
to live peaceably with all men.
And, 4th, Did turn many away
from iniquity — He was not
content with being pious and
virtuous himself, but
endeavoured, by his instructions
and admonitions, to make others
pious and virtuous.
Verses 7-9
Malachi 2:7-9. For the priest’s
lips should keep knowledge —
Preserve and store up, so as to
distribute it. It is his duty to
understand the meaning of the
law of God: and people ought to
resort to him for instruction in
any difficulty that arises
concerning the sense of it. For
he is the messenger of the Lord
of hosts — He is appointed to
declare God’s will unto the
people, and to enforce upon them
obedience to it. But ye are
departed out of the way — Ye act
in a quite different manner from
that which was the original
design of your office, and which
those observed who were first
instituted into it. Ye have
caused many to stumble at the
law — You have either perverted
the sense of the law, or
encouraged others to break it by
your bad example; ye have
corrupted the covenant of Levi —
By your evil practices you have
broken or rendered void that
covenant: by your not performing
that part of the covenant which
the tribe of Levi was bound to
perform, you have disengaged me
from performing my part, or
fulfilling those promises which
I had engaged to make good to
them on the performance of
certain conditions on their
side. Therefore have I also made
— Or rather, will make, (a
future event being evidently
foretold,) you contemptible and
base — The indignities which the
priests were to receive in the
times of Antiochus, seem to be
here intended. According as ye
have not kept my ways — Have not
been careful to walk in them.
But have been partial in the law
— Or, accepted faces, or
persons, in the law, as the
Hebrew signifies, that is, have
wrested the sense of the law in
favour, or to please great men,
or to serve some unworthy design
of particular persons. When we
inquire into “the reasons of the
contempt of the clergy,” ought
we to forget this?
Verse 10
Malachi 2:10. Have we not all
one father? — Here a new section
begins, wherein the prophet
severely censures the
intermarriages of Israelites
with women of another country,
which Moses had forbidden,
Deuteronomy 7:3; and also
divorces, which seem to have
been multiplied for the purpose
of contracting these prohibited
marriages. The former of these
evils was much practised in
Ezra’s and Nehemiah’s time, who
expressed great detestation of
it: Ezra 9:1; Nehemiah 13:23.
The prophet begins his
expostulation with putting them
in mind that they were not only
descended from one progenitor,
Abraham, or Jacob, with whom God
made the covenant by which their
posterity were constituted a
peculiar people; but they owned
one God and Father, in
opposition to the idols of the
heathen, and therefore should
deal with one another as
brethren, being nearly allied by
a spiritual as well as fleshly
relation. Why do we deal
treacherously, &c., profaning
the covenant of our fathers? —
By these marriages with
strangers, we deal falsely and
injuriously with our countrymen
and brethren, by the ill
treatment of their daughters or
sisters, whom we took to
marriage, (see Malachi 2:14,)
and we violate that covenant
which God made with our fathers,
whereby he separated us from the
rest of the world, and, in order
to preserve that distinction,
forbade us to intermarry with
idolaters.
Verses 11-13
Malachi 2:11-13. Judah hath
profaned the holiness of the
Lord which he loved — As if he
had said, “This sin,” says
Lowth, “implies the profanation
of God’s holy people, which he
set apart for his own worship
and service; a profanation of
the temple, when the priests who
officiated there were guilty of
the same crime; (see Malachi
2:12;) and lastly, a profanation
of that covenant God made with
the Jews, Malachi 2:10; God hath
expressed a tender regard for
these three sorts of holiness,
and threatened severe
punishments to those that break
the laws made to preserve them.”
And hath married the daughter of
a strange god — That is, one who
worships a strange god. For as
gods were called fathers by
their worshippers, (Jeremiah
2:27,) therefore those who
worshipped them might properly
be called their children. The
Lord will cut off the man that
doeth this — Will take him away
by death; the master and the
scholar — Him that persuades and
instructs others that these
marriages are lawful, and him
that follows such advice. The
expression seems to comprehend
both the priest and the people.
The Hebrew is, he that wakes and
he that answers. An instructer
is described, (Isaiah 50:4,) as
one that wakeneth the ear of his
disciple. The meaning is, there
shall be left neither any to
teach nor any to learn. And him
that offereth an offering —
Although he should make great
offerings, yet that would avail
him nothing if he continued in
his sin, and did not put away
his strange wife. Perhaps this
might be intended chiefly of the
priests, many of whom were
guilty of this crime. And this
have ye done — Or, “This also
you have done: you have covered
the altar of the Lord with
tears, with weeping, and with
groanings; so that no respect is
now had to your offering, nor is
any thing accepted from your
hand. The priests not only had
married strange wives, but also
had divorced those of their own
country whom they had married;
with whose tears the altar was
imbued, when these wives offered
up their sacrifices to God,
entreating him to give their
husbands a better mind; whom God
heard so effectually, that he
would not accept the sacrifices
of their husbands on account of
the tears and just complaints of
their wives.” — Houbigant. The
complaints of the distressed, if
made known to God in prayer,
will be heard, and redress
granted.
Verse 14-15
Malachi 2:14-15. Yet ye say,
Wherefore — Ye will, perhaps,
still inquire wherefore God
regards not your offerings; if
so, the answer is ready, namely,
because the Lord hath been
witness between thee and the
wife of thy youth — Because the
Lord sees how you act toward
your wives; that when you have
enjoyed the flower of their
youth, and they begin to grow
old, you contemn them, and use
them ill. Yet is she thy
companion, and the wife of thy
covenant — Yet didst thou
thyself make choice of her to be
thy companion through life; and
didst enter into covenant or
contract with her, to live with
her in true love and affection.
And did not he make one, &c. —
“Among various interpretations
of the words,” says Lowth, “this
seems the most probable, that
the prophet puts the Jews in
mind of the first institution of
marriage in paradise, (as Christ
did afterward upon a like
occasion, Matthew 19:5,) and
tells them God made but one man
at first, and made the woman out
of him, when he could have
created more women if he had
pleased; to instruct men that
this was the true pattern of
marriage, ordained for true love
and undivided affection, and
best serving the chief end of
matrimony, namely, the religious
education of children, whereas
in polygamy, the children are
brought up with more or less
care in proportion to the
affection men bear to their
wives.” Therefore take heed to
your spirit — Do not give way to
an inordinate and irregular
passion.
Verse 16
Malachi 2:16. For the Lord God
of Israel saith that he hateth
putting away — He allowed the
Jews liberty of divorce only for
the hardness of their hearts,
Matthew 19:8, not that it was a
thing pleasing to him. For one
covereth violence with his
garment — Or, And when one puts
violence upon his garment, or
covers his garment with
violence, as Dr. Pocock
translates it, who hath given
the clearest sense of this
phrase, and showed, out of
several eastern writers, that
they usually call a wife by the
name of a garment; the
expression of Moses, Deuteronomy
22:30, agreeing with this way of
speaking. According to this
interpretation, the sense of the
text will be, that God hates
divorcing a former wife to take
in one of a strange nation: and
he hates that any should bring
into his family an illegitimate
wife, over and above one that he
had legally married before.
Verse 17
Malachi 2:17. Ye have wearied
the Lord with your words — You
have tired his patience by your
blasphemous speeches, charging
his providence with injustice.
Yet ye say — Ye persist to say;
Wherein have we wearied him? —
See on Malachi 1:6. When ye say
— When your discourse and
reasoning tend to overthrow (if
it were possible) all piety and
morality; while you affirm,
Every one that doeth evil is
good in the sight of God — A
repetition of the old objection
against providence, taken from
the prosperity of the wicked,
which implied, as they thought,
either that their works were
pleasing to God, or else that he
disregarded human affairs, and
would never call men to account
for their actions; and he
delighteth in them — As appears,
said these atheists, by his
prospering them. Or, Where is
the God of judgment? — If he is
in the world, judging and
governing it, why does he not
punish these men? |