Verse 1
Malachi 3:1. Behold, &c. — To
silence the cavils of
unbelievers, spoken of in the
last verse of the preceding
chapter, the prophet here
foretels the coming of the
Messiah, who should set things
in order; and of his harbinger,
who should prepare men for his
reception. I will send my
messenger — It is God who speaks
here, for John the Baptist, who
is here intended, was God’s
messenger, and had his
commission from heaven and not
of men, Matthew 21:25-26; being
sent by the same divine
authority by which the prophets
were sent, and for the same
purposes, namely, to call men to
repentance and reformation; and
he shall prepare the way before
me — Before Jehovah, the fulness
of whose Godhead dwelt in Christ
bodily. Whoever compares this
verse with Isaiah 40:3, &c.,
will easily see that both
passages speak of the same
person. The messenger here
spoken of as sent to prepare the
way before the Lord, who is
described as coming immediately
after this his forerunner, is
represented in Isaiah as
preparing the way of the Lord,
who is spoken of as coming, and
his glory as just ready to be
revealed, Malachi 3:5-9. Both
passages, according to the
evangelists, were intended of
John the Baptist, and indeed are
applicable to no other person
whatever. He is promised under
the name of Elias in the
following chapter, whom all the
Jews, both ancient and modern,
expected should come as the
forerunner of the Messiah. This
messenger, or prophet, (see the
note on chap. Malachi 2:7,) here
represented as the Lord’s
harbinger, was to be as much
inferior to the Lord himself, as
servants are to a great person,
of whose arrival they give
notice. This John himself often
confessed, Matthew 3:11; John
1:26; John 3:28; and so much
appears by the following words.
Instead of the reading here,
which is the literal translation
of the Hebrew, we read in three
places of the New Testament,
(see the margin,) I send my
messenger before thy face to
prepare thy way before thee,
namely, before the Messiah, to
prepare his way before him; the
Messiah acting in the name of
his Father, the Father being in
him and he in the Father, John
14:10-11. John prepared the way
of Christ by calling men to the
practice of those duties which
would qualify them for the
reception of the blessings of
the Messiah’s kingdom; and by
taking them off from all
confidence in their relation to
Abraham as their father, which
they thought would ensure the
favour of God to them without a
Saviour; and by giving them
notice that the Messiah was now
at hand, and so raising their
expectation of him that they
might readily enter into his
measures for the setting up of
his kingdom in the world.
And the Lord, whom ye seek —
That promised Lord or Shiloh, of
whom you have such great
expectations, and whose coming
you so much desire; and who, if
you obey him, will bring the
greatest good to your state, and
will also make foreign nations
partakers of your blessings;
shall suddenly come — That is,
soon after the messenger, or
unawares, as Christ’s first
coming was, and second will be;
to his temple — The second
temple at Jerusalem, lately
built by Zerubbabel and Joshua.
All the Jews, before the birth
of Christ, firmly believed that
the Messiah was to come into
that very temple, according to
what the Prophet Haggai had
expressly declared, Haggai 2:8.
The word here rendered Lord,
אדון, is the same that is used
by David, Psalms 110:1, where he
calls the Messiah his Lord, and
properly means a basis, or
foundation, and also a
proprietor, and governor. It is
a term peculiarly proper to
Christ, who is at once the
foundation and governor of his
church, and was the Lord of that
temple in which he was to make
his appearance. Even the
messenger [or angel] of the
covenant — A phrase, says
Secker, found nowhere else in
Scripture. “It may mean the
person by whose intervention the
covenant is made, or by whom a
covenant proposed by one party
is sent to the other.” The same
person is meant who is termed
the angel of God’s presence,
Isaiah 63:9; who delivered the
law upon mount Sinai, as St.
Stephen speaks, Acts 7:38, and
as the apostle’s words imply,
Hebrews 12:25-26. He is both the
revealer and mediator of the new
covenant, which the prophets
foretold would take place under
the Messiah, Jeremiah 31:31;
Isaiah 42:6; Isaiah 55:3; even
that blessed one that was sent
from heaven to negotiate a peace
and settle a correspondence
between God and man;
commissioned from his Father to
bring man home to God by a
covenant of grace, who had
revolted from him by the
violation of the covenant of
innocence. By his mediation this
covenant is procured and
established; and though he is
the prince of the covenant, as
some read the clause here, yet
he condescended to be the
messenger of it, that we might,
upon his word, have the fullest
assurance of God’s goodwill to
man. Whom ye delight in — Whose
coming ye so much desire, the
time of it being the subject of
your earnest inquiry and
diligent search, and the
expectation of it your comfort
and delight. Behold, he shall
come — The promise is repeated,
and that in the name of the Lord
of hosts, to give the fullest
assurance of its accomplishment.
There were few among the Jews
who did not please themselves to
think of the Messiah’s coming,
though from various motives; the
pious among them doubtless
expecting spiritual blessings,
such as a further revelation of
God’s will, and larger
communications of his grace and
Spirit; but the great bulk of
the nation looking for mere
worldly advantages under a
temporal kingdom, which they
expected he would set up.
Verse 2
Malachi 3:2. But who may abide
the day of his coming — The LXX.
read, τις υωομενει ημεραν
εισοδου αυτου, who shall be able
to bear the day of his coming?
So also the Chaldee. “Quare
hoc?” “Why this?” says Grotius:
“Because he himself shall bear
the cross, that he may come to
the kingdom, and shall show the
same way to his followers.” The
day of his coming, with respect
to the Jews, includes all the
time from the beginning of his
preaching, to the total
destruction of their temple and
city by the Romans: and his
coming, here and in several
other places, comprehends all
the effects and consequences of
his coming, as well the
judgments which arose from it to
the disobedient, as the mercy
that flowed from it to the
obedient. So that the meaning of
the question is, Who shall be
able to stand under the weight
of those trials and tribulations
which at that time will fall on
all sorts of men? great crosses
being to be borne by the
believing and pious, and great
calamities to be endured by the
unbelieving and refractory. In
the same light John the Baptist
represents the effects of
Christ’s coming, Matthew 3:7-12,
Who hath warned you to flee from
the wrath to come? meaning,
primarily, the wrath about to
come on that rebellious people:
whose fan, he adds, is in his
hand, and he will thoroughly
purge his floor, and burn up the
chaff with unquenchable fire.
For he is like a refiner’s fire
— As if he had said, Some men
are like metals, mixed with much
dross, which nothing but a
fierce fire can purge away. Such
a fire shall the troubles of
these days be. The divine
judgments are often called a
fiery trial, such as separates
the pure metal from the dross,
purifying the former and
consuming the latter. See Isaiah
1:25; Isaiah 4:4; Zechariah
13:9. Our Lord is to be
understood in the same sense,
Luke 12:49, where he says, I am
come to send fire upon the
earth, namely, a fire of trial
and purgation, to try and purify
the hearts and reins of men, and
find out and separate the good
from the bad; like as the
refiner’s fire makes the dross
of the metal to appear and fly
off. And like fuller’s soap —
The word ברית, here rendered
soap, and Jeremiah 2:22,
according to St. Jerome, was an
herb growing in Palestine, which
the fullers used to take spots
out of clothes,
Verse 3-4
Malachi 3:3-4. And he shall sit
as a refiner — He shall be
diligently employed in his
office, in performing which he
shall resemble a refiner and
purifier of silver. And he shall
purify the sons of Levi — And
whereas the misconduct of the
sons of Levi has been very
great, (particularly of those
who have been taken notice of
and reproved in the foregoing
chapters,) the Messiah when he
comes will reform these abuses,
and purify the worship of God
from such corruptions. And purge
them as gold and silver — The
effect of this fiery trial, and
purifying furnace, shall be the
thorough cleansing of the
persons that are to pass through
it. Not all the sons of Levi,
says Houbigant, “for the
similitude is taken from gold
and silver, which being purified
there remains some dross behind.
So it happened after the
ministration of Jesus Christ: a
great company of the priests
were obedient to the faith, Acts
6:7. Of the other sons of Levi,
who did not believe in Christ,
it is just before said, Who may
abide the day of his coming,
when, the metal being purified,
he will cast the dross into the
fire.” But those who should
minister in holy things in the
Christian Church, instead of the
Levitical priests, are chiefly
intended: or rather, all real
Christians, who are made a holy
priesthood, and who, with hearts
and minds purified by faith,
offer up spiritual sacrifices
acceptable to God by Jesus
Christ, 1 Peter 2:5; yea, who
even offer themselves, their
souls and bodies, their
faculties and members, their
time and talents, all they are
and have, unto the Lord an
offering in righteousness. Then
shall the offering of Judah and
Jerusalem — The services and
duties of the Christian
ministry, and of the whole
Christian Church; be pleasant
unto the Lord — Acceptable and
even well pleasing to him. The
prophet describes the Christian
worship, and the various
services of the Christian
Church, and of its true members,
by expressions taken from the
Jewish service, being that with
which they were acquainted; as
in the days of old — As in the
purest ages of the patriarchal
or Mosaic dispensation, or, as
in the times of Abraham, Isaac,
Jacob, Samuel, David.
Verse 5
Malachi 3:5. And I will come
near to you to judgment — In
answer to their demand, Where is
the God of judgment? Malachi
2:17, God here tells them that
he will hasten the time of
judgment, and it shall come
speedily upon them, on account
of those sins that were general
among them: and that if they did
not repent, and reform their
conduct upon the preaching of
the gospel by the forerunner of
the Messiah, the Messiah
himself, and his apostles and
other servants, he would proceed
to the utter excision of their
nation. And I will be a swift
witness, &c. — It belongs to God
alone to be both witness and
judge; for he alone seeth all
the actions of men, and needeth
not that any should testify
against them, because he can
himself convict them of their
guilt, as having been present
and looking on when their most
secret sins were committed.
Against the sorcerers, and
against the adulterers, &c. —
The sins enumerated in this
verse were very prevalent in
Malachi’s time. Diviners,
dreamers, and such as consulted
oracles at the idols’ temples,
are reproved, Zechariah 10:2; as
are the false pretenders to
prophecy, Nehemiah 6:12-14.
False swearing and oppression
are complained of, Zechariah
5:4; Nehemiah 5:3, &c. Their
marrying strange women, and
putting away their former wives
to make room for them, was no
better than adultery, and a
breach of that solemn oath with
which they had bound themselves,
Nehemiah 10:29-30. And the same
sins seem to have been commonly
practised before and at the time
of Christ’s appearance, till the
destruction of Jerusalem. No
nation was more given to charms,
divinations, and
fortune-telling, than the Jews
were about that time, as Dr.
Lightfoot has shown out of their
own authors. Adulterers were
then so common, that the
Sanhedrim ordained that the
trial of an adulteress,
prescribed Numbers 5., should no
longer be put in practice, as
the same author observes out of
the Talmud. Josephus informs us
that magicians swarmed in Judea,
under the government of Felix,
and afterward. The denunciation
here, that God would come near
to judgment with all these, and
be a swift witness against them,
was fulfilled by that terrible
destruction which was made of
them by the Romans when
Jerusalem was taken, and such
havoc was made of the nation as
never happened to any people
before.
Verse 6
Malachi 3:6. I am the Lord —
Hebrew, Jehovah; I change not —
In my nature or perfections
there is no change, or shadow of
turning, and therefore I have
and always must have an
unchangeable hatred to all sin:
and my long- suffering also
changes not, and therefore ye
sons of Jacob are not consumed —
Are not destroyed and sent into
eternal misery in your sins.
God’s wisdom also changes not,
but remains the same to dispense
rewards to the good, and
punishments to the wicked, in
the fittest season, and
therefore neither the one nor
the other are consumed, but
preserved to the time appointed
of God. Or, the sense may be,
Because I am the same yesterday,
to-day, and for ever, as my name
Jehovah imports, and I am true
to my former promises, (see
Exodus 6:3-6,) therefore you
still continue a people, and are
not consumed, as your iniquities
deserve. And I will still
preserve a remnant of you to
fulfil to them the promises I
made to your fathers: see Romans
11:29.
Verse 7
Malachi 3:7. Even from the days
of your fathers, &c. — Here the
discourse is again addressed to
the wicked, and from hence to
the end of Malachi 3:12 the
people are reprehended for
slighting the institutions of
divine worship, and for
withholding the legal tithes and
oblations; are assured that they
are under a curse for these
violations of the law, and that
an opposite conduct would bring
on them the divine blessing. Ye
are gone away from mine
ordinances — Those which
directed you respecting my
worship, or your dealings one
with another. Return unto me —
Namely, by repentance, and
amendment of life; and I will
return to you — I will pardon
and accept you, and bestow my
blessings upon you. But ye said
— Or, ye say, Wherein shall we
return? — You persist to justify
yourselves, and inquire what it
is you are to repent of? as if
your crimes were not most
notorious and shameful. And your
words, or at least your actions,
show that you have no sense of,
nor remorse for, your former
sins, nor any purpose of
forsaking them.
Verse 8-9
Malachi 3:8-9. Will a man rob
God — Grotius reads, “Would any
one dare to rob his judges as ye
have robbed me?” the word
rendered God sometimes meaning
judges or magistrates. Some
others render the clause, Is it
right that God should be robbed
(or defrauded) by man? Here God
gives them an answer to their
question in the foregoing verse,
Wherein shall we return; or,
repent and amend? But ye have
robbed me — Notwithstanding it
is so unjust and presumptuous to
defraud God, that men in general
are afraid to do it, yet ye have
done it. Do you ask, wherein you
have robbed me? I answer, In
tithes and offerings — By this
seems to be meant the
first-fruits of their ground and
cattle, and other offerings
which were allotted to the
priests, Deuteronomy 18:4, out
of which revenue they were to
provide the daily sacrifices,
and also maintain the Levites,
who attended upon the service in
the temple. Ye are cursed with a
curse — Are greatly cursed, or,
you lie under a heavy curse, and
are likely still to do so, for
the curse shall continue upon
you while you continue in this
your sinful course. For ye have
robbed me, even this whole
nation — This has not been the
crime of a few only, but ye have
in general defrauded me, and
evil shall come upon you for it.
In a note on Romans 2:22, where
the apostle ranks sacrilege with
idolatry, Grotius observes, “Non
multum distat falsos deos colere
et verum spoliare.” There is
very little difference between
adoring false gods and robbing
the true God.
Verses 10-12
Malachi 3:10-12. Bring ye all
the tithes — Make a punctual and
full payment of all tithes: and
in this instance make good your
solemn engagement with Nehemiah,
mentioned Nehemiah 10:29. Into
the storehouse — This was one or
more large rooms built on
purpose for this use; that there
may be meat — That there may be
provision for the daily
sacrifices, and for the
maintenance of my ministers, the
priests and Levites, who attend
upon the service of my temple.
And prove me now herewith — Make
the experiment in this
particular. If I will not open
you the windows of heaven, &c. —
There is now a scarcity of the
fruits of the earth, and a
dearth, but take the advice
which I give you, and try
whether your plenty will not be
in proportion to the free-will
wherewith you bring in your
tithes and offerings; and
whether I will not immediately
send you plentiful showers of
rain, whereby the earth shall
bring forth its fruit in great
abundance. The dearth here
spoken of is mentioned Nehemiah
5:3 : compare 2 Chronicles
31:10. To open the windows of
heaven is a proverbial speech,
expressing God’s showering down
plenty, or giving great
abundance of the fruits of the
earth; (see 2 Kings 7:2;) as
shutting up heaven denotes
scarcity, Deuteronomy 11:17;
Haggai 1:10-11. And pour out a
blessing — First of rain to
water the earth, next a blessing
of corn, wine, and oil, and all
other products of the earth.
That there shall not be room,
&c. — Or, till there be enough;
or, till you shall say, There is
enough. And I will rebuke the
devourer for your sakes — All
kinds of devourers, the locusts,
the canker-worms, the
caterpillars, and all other
destructive insects, which,
though they may be in incredible
multitudes, yet, by a rebuke
from God, they will be checked
all at once, as if they were but
one insect. Neither shall your
vine cast her fruit — Neither
shall your vines, or other
fruit-trees, be blasted by
blighting winds, so as to make
their fruit fall off before it
comes to maturity, but they
shall carry it till it be fully
ripe. And all nations — All that
are near you; shall call you
blessed — Shall style you a
happy people. For ye shall be a
delightsome land — Your country
shall be again known by the name
of the pleasant land, as it was
formerly called. The revival of
religion in a land will make it
delightsome both to God and all
good men.
Verses 13-15
Malachi 3:13-15. Your words, &c.
— “From this verse to the end of
Malachi 4:3, the prophet
expostulates with the wicked for
their hard speeches; and
declares that God will make a
fearful distinction between them
and the righteous.” — Newcome.
Have been stout against me —
Your words have been
blasphemous, and void of all
reverence and duty. Ye have
spoken injuriously of me, and
have uttered such things as
dishonour me. Ye have even
arraigned my proceedings, and
spoken against them. Yet ye say,
What have we spoken, &c. — This
is to the same purport as their
words in Malachi 3:8, and some
other foregoing verses. They
impudently deny the charge,
therefore the prophet renews it
against them in the following
words; Ye have said — If not
with your lips, yet at least in
your hearts; It is vain to serve
God — We receive no advantage
from it, it is of no use to us.
That they should talk thus
impiously in the times of
Zerubbabel, when Malachi uttered
these reproofs and exhortations,
is not probable; but God, who
sees into the hearts of men,
saw, lurking in their hearts,
the seeds of that impiety which
broke out in the following age.
And what profit is it — What
benefit is it of to us; that we
have kept his ordinance — That
we have attended upon the
institutions of his worship, and
have governed our lives
according to his laws? And that
we have walked mournfully before
the Lord — Have humbled
ourselves before him with
fasting and prayer, sackcloth
and ashes. Their beholding the
prosperity of the wicked made
them conclude, that it was to no
purpose to walk according to the
laws of God, or to confess their
offences and express their
sorrow for them. And, or rather,
but, or therefore, now we call
the proud happy — Those who
behave themselves arrogantly
against God, the proud
contemners of his law. We can
now do no less than think them
happiest who do not concern
themselves about the observance
of God’s laws, but live
according to their pleasure, and
do every thing that their
inclination or profit prompts
them to do, without any fear of
God’s calling them to an account
for it. Yea, they that work
wickedness are set up — Are the
flourishing ones; are raised to
prosperity, as buildings are to
their height. Yea, they that
tempt God are even delivered —
Yea, they who, one would have
supposed, should have wearied
out God’s patience with their
provocations, who have seemed to
act as if they tried to provoke
him, even these men escape those
dangers and calamities which
other men are involved in. Those
who spake thus seem to have
expected an exact distribution
of temporal rewards and
punishments to be made to good
and bad men in this life.
Verse 16-17
Malachi 3:16-17. Then — When
contempt of God was grown to
such a height; they that feared
the Lord — Those that were truly
religious, that knew God’s
judgments to be a great deep,
and that his ways are as high
above our ways as heaven is
above the earth; spake often one
to another — Conversed together
about spiritual things the more
frequently: for though it is not
said what was the subject of
their conversation with each
other, yet we have reason to
believe it was as good
concerning God and his
providence as the discourse of
the wicked was evil. They spake
what was right concerning God’s
justice and mercy, his holiness,
forbearance, and long-suffering,
his wisdom and equity in his
government of the world in
general, and of his church and
the members of it in particular.
And by their pious discourse
they endeavoured to arm each
other against the impressions
which such wicked suggestions as
those above mentioned might
otherwise have made upon their
minds; and to confirm one
another in piety and virtue. And
the Lord hearkened and heard —
Took a special notice of what
these pious persons did and
said. And a book of remembrance
was written — It was as safely
laid up in his memory as if it
had been entered into a
register, in order to be
produced at the day of judgment
to their praise and honour: see
the margin. The words are a
beautiful allusion to the
records kept by kings, Esther
6:1. And they shall be mine — It
shall appear how dear they are
to me, when the time comes in
which I shall separate the
precious from the vile, the
vessels of honour from those of
dishonour, 2 Timothy 2:20. In
the day of the execution of my
judgments they shall be
distinguished and preserved
safe, as choice jewels are wont
to be. And I will spare them as
a man spareth his own son, &c. —
They shall be spared, pitied,
and loved, and I will preserve
them from those calamities which
shall fall upon the wicked and
unbelieving, with the same
tenderness which a father shows
to a dutiful son. The period
especially referred to may be
the Roman war under Titus. When
God should utterly cut off the
Jewish Church and nation for
their infidelity, the remnant
among them, that should be found
to believe his word, and having
waited for the Messiah, the
consolation of Israel, should
welcome him when he came; these,
being admitted into the
Christian Church, should become
a peculiar people to God, and
God would take care of them,
that they should not perish with
the unbelievers, but that they
should be hid in the day of the
Lord’s anger against that
nation. These pious ones should
have all the glorious privileges
of God’s Israel appropriated to
them, and centring in them. They
should be a peculiar treasure
unto him, when the rest were
rejected; should be vessels of
mercy and honour when the rest
should be made vessels of wrath
and dishonour. This, however, is
very applicable to all the
faithful people of God, and the
distinction he will put between
them and others, in the great
day of final accounts.
Verse 18
Malachi 3:18. Then shall ye — Ye
contemners of God and religion;
return and discern — See
clearly, and distinguish
perfectly; between the righteous
and the wicked — Between the
characters and the portion of
the truly righteous, and of
those who are not so. How
different the lot is, and to all
eternity will be, between the
former and the latter; between
him that serveth God — And makes
conscience of his duty to him,
and him that serveth him not —
But puts contempt upon his
service. You that now speak
against God, as making no
difference between the good and
bad, and therefore say, It is
vain to serve him, Malachi 3:14,
you shall be made to see your
error: and you that speak for
God, but know not what to say to
this, that there seems to be one
event to the righteous and the
wicked, and that all things come
alike to all, will then have the
matter set in a true light, and
will see to your everlasting
satisfaction the difference
between the holy and the
profane, the godly and the
ungodly. Then shall ye return —
That is, change your minds, and
come to a right understanding of
this most important matter. For
then every man’s character will
be both perfected and perfectly
discovered; and every man appear
in his true colours; and every
man’s condition, likewise, will
be both perfectly happy or
miserable, without mixture or
alloy, and everlastingly
determined. |