1000 lines
73 KiB
XML
1000 lines
73 KiB
XML
<div2 id="Mal.iv" n="iv" next="Mal.v" prev="Mal.iii" progress="98.97%" title="Chapter III">
|
||
<h2 id="Mal.iv-p0.1">M A L A C H I.</h2>
|
||
<h3 id="Mal.iv-p0.2">CHAP. III.</h3>
|
||
<p class="intro" id="Mal.iv-p1" shownumber="no">In this chapter we have, I. A promise of the
|
||
coming of the Messiah, and of his forerunner; and the errand he
|
||
comes upon is here particularly described, both the comfort which
|
||
his coming brings to his church and people and the terror which it
|
||
will bring to the wicked, <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:Mal.3.1-Mal.3.6" parsed="|Mal|3|1|3|6" passage="Mal 3:1-6">ver.
|
||
1-6</scripRef>. II. A reproof of the Jews for their corrupting
|
||
God's ordinances and sacrilegiously robbing him of his dues, with a
|
||
charge to them to amend this matter, and a promise that, if they
|
||
did, God would return in mercy to them, <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Mal.3.7-Mal.3.12" parsed="|Mal|3|7|3|12" passage="Mal 3:7-12">ver. 7-12</scripRef>. III. A description of the
|
||
wickedness of the wicked that speak against God (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Mal.3.13-Mal.3.15" parsed="|Mal|3|13|3|15" passage="Mal 3:13-15">ver. 13-15</scripRef>), and of the righteousness of
|
||
the righteous that speak for him, with the precious promises made
|
||
to them, <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Mal.3.16-Mal.3.18" parsed="|Mal|3|16|3|18" passage="Mal 3:16-18">ver. 16-18</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<scripCom id="Mal.iv-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:Mal.3" parsed="|Mal|3|0|0|0" passage="Mal 3" type="Commentary"/>
|
||
<scripCom id="Mal.iv-p1.6" osisRef="Bible:Mal.3.1-Mal.3.6" parsed="|Mal|3|1|3|6" passage="Mal 3:1-6" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Mal.iv-p1.7">
|
||
<h4 id="Mal.iv-p1.8">Evangelical Predictions; The Advent of
|
||
Christ Predicted. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Mal.iv-p1.9">b. c.</span> 400.)</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Mal.iv-p2" shownumber="no">1 Behold, I will send my messenger, and he shall
|
||
prepare the way before me: and the Lord, whom ye seek, shall
|
||
suddenly come to his temple, even the messenger of the covenant,
|
||
whom ye delight in: behold, he shall come, saith the <span class="smallcaps" id="Mal.iv-p2.1">Lord</span> of hosts. 2 But who may abide the
|
||
day of his coming? and who shall stand when he appeareth? for he
|
||
<i>is</i> like a refiner's fire, and like fullers' soap: 3
|
||
And he shall sit <i>as</i> a refiner and purifier of silver: and he
|
||
shall purify the sons of Levi, and purge them as gold and silver,
|
||
that they may offer unto the <span class="smallcaps" id="Mal.iv-p2.2">Lord</span> an
|
||
offering in righteousness. 4 Then shall the offering of
|
||
Judah and Jerusalem be pleasant unto the <span class="smallcaps" id="Mal.iv-p2.3">Lord</span>, as in the days of old, and as in former
|
||
years. 5 And I will come near to you to judgment; and I will
|
||
be a swift witness against the sorcerers, and against the
|
||
adulterers, and against false swearers, and against those that
|
||
oppress the hireling in <i>his</i> wages, the widow, and the
|
||
fatherless, and that turn aside the stranger <i>from his right,</i>
|
||
and fear not me, saith the <span class="smallcaps" id="Mal.iv-p2.4">Lord</span> of
|
||
hosts. 6 For I <i>am</i> the <span class="smallcaps" id="Mal.iv-p2.5">Lord</span>, I change not; therefore ye sons of Jacob
|
||
are not consumed.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p3" shownumber="no">The first words of this chapter seem a
|
||
direct answer to the profane atheistical demand of the scoffers of
|
||
those days which closed the foregoing chapter: <i>Where is the God
|
||
of judgment?</i> To which it is readily answered, "Here he is; he
|
||
is just at the door; the long-expected Messiah is ready to appear;
|
||
and he says, <i>For judgment have I come into this world,</i> for
|
||
that judgment which you have so impudently bid defiance to." One of
|
||
the rabbin says that the meaning of this is, That God will raise up
|
||
a righteous King, to set things in order, even <i>the king
|
||
Messiah.</i> And the <i>beginning of the gospel of Christ</i> is
|
||
expressly said to be the accomplishment of this promise, with which
|
||
the Old Testament concludes, <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p3.1" osisRef="Bible:Mark.1.1-Mark.1.2" parsed="|Mark|1|1|1|2" passage="Mk 1:1,2">Mark i.
|
||
1, 2</scripRef>. So that by this the two Testaments are, as it
|
||
were, tacked together, and made to answer one another. Now here we
|
||
have,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p4" shownumber="no">I. A prophecy of the appearing of his
|
||
forerunner John the Baptist, which the prophet Isaiah had foretold
|
||
(<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p4.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.40.3" parsed="|Isa|40|3|0|0" passage="Isa 40:3"><i>ch.</i> xl. 3</scripRef>), as the
|
||
<i>preparing</i> of the <i>way of the Lord,</i> to which this seems
|
||
to have a reference, for the words of the latter prophets confirmed
|
||
those of the former: <i>Behold, I will send my messenger,</i> or
|
||
<i>I do send him,</i> or <i>I am sending</i> him. "I am determined
|
||
to send him; he will now shortly come, and will not come unsent,
|
||
though to a careless generation he comes unsent for." Observe, 1.
|
||
He is <i>God's messenger;</i> that is his office; he is
|
||
<i>Malachi</i> (so the word is), the same with the name of this
|
||
prophet; he is <i>my angel,</i> my <i>ambassador.</i> John Baptist
|
||
had his commission <i>from heaven, and not of men.</i> All held
|
||
John Baptist for a prophet, for he was God's messenger, as the
|
||
prophets were, and came on the same errand to the world that they
|
||
were sent upon—to call men to repentance and reformation. 2. He is
|
||
Christ's harbinger: He <i>shall prepare the way before me,</i> by
|
||
calling men to those duties which qualify them to receive the
|
||
comforts of the Messiah and his coming, and by taking them off from
|
||
a confidence in their relation to Abraham <i>as their father</i>
|
||
(which, they thought, would serve their turn without a saviour),
|
||
and by giving notice that the Messiah was now at hand, and so
|
||
raising men's expectations of him, and making them readily to go
|
||
into the measures he would take for the setting up of his kingdom
|
||
in the world. Note, God observes a method in his work, and, before
|
||
he comes, takes care to have his way prepared. This is like the
|
||
giving of a sign. The church was told, long before, that the
|
||
Messiah would come; and here it is added that, a little before he
|
||
appears, there shall be a signal given; a great prophet shall
|
||
arise, that shall give notice of his approach, and call to the
|
||
everlasting gates and doors to <i>lift up their heads</i> and give
|
||
him admission. The accomplishment of this is a proof that <i>Jesus
|
||
is the Christ,</i> is he that <i>should come,</i> and we are to
|
||
<i>look for no other;</i> for there was such a messenger sent
|
||
before him, who <i>made ready a people prepared for the Lord,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p4.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.1.17" parsed="|Luke|1|17|0|0" passage="Lu 1:17">Luke i. 17</scripRef>. The Jewish
|
||
writers run into gross absurdities to evade the conviction of this
|
||
evidence; some of them say that this messenger is the <i>angel of
|
||
death,</i> who shall take the wicked out of this life, to be sent
|
||
into hell torments; others of them say that it is Messiah the son
|
||
of Joseph, who shall appear before Messiah the son of David;
|
||
others, this prophet himself; others, an angel from heaven: such
|
||
mistakes do those run into that will not receive the truth.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p5" shownumber="no">II. A prophecy of the appearing of the
|
||
Messiah himself: "<i>The Lord, whom you seek, shall suddenly come
|
||
to his temple,</i> even <i>the God of judgment,</i> who, you think,
|
||
has forsaken the earth, and you <i>wot not what has become of
|
||
him.</i> The Messiah has been long called <i>he that should
|
||
come,</i> and you may assure yourselves that now shortly he will
|
||
come." 1. He is <i>the Lord—Adonai,</i> the basis and foundation
|
||
on which the world is founded and fastened, the ruler and governor
|
||
of all, that one <i>Lord over all</i> (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p5.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.10.36" parsed="|Acts|10|36|0|0" passage="Ac 10:36">Acts x. 36</scripRef>) that has all power committed to
|
||
him (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p5.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.28.18" parsed="|Matt|28|18|0|0" passage="Mt 28:18">Matt. xxviii. 18</scripRef>) and
|
||
is to <i>reign over the house of Jacob for ever,</i> <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p5.3" osisRef="Bible:Luke.1.33" parsed="|Luke|1|33|0|0" passage="Lu 1:33">Luke i. 33</scripRef>. 2. He is the <i>Messenger
|
||
of the covenant,</i> or the <i>angel of the covenant,</i> that
|
||
<i>blessed one</i> that was <i>sent</i> from heaven to negotiate a
|
||
peace, and settle a correspondence, between God and man. He is the
|
||
<i>angel,</i> the <i>archangel,</i> the Lord of the angels, who
|
||
received commission from the Father to bring man home to God by a
|
||
covenant of grace, who had revolted from him by the violation of
|
||
the covenant of innocency. Christ is the <i>angel of this
|
||
covenant,</i> by whose mediation it is brought about and
|
||
established as God's covenant with Israel was made by the
|
||
<i>disposition of angels,</i> <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p5.4" osisRef="Bible:Acts.7.53 Bible:Gal.3.19" parsed="|Acts|7|53|0|0;|Gal|3|19|0|0" passage="Ac 7:53,Ga 3:19">Acts vii. 53; Gal. iii. 19</scripRef>. Christ, as
|
||
a prophet, is the <i>messenger</i> and <i>mediator</i> of the
|
||
covenant; nay, he is <i>given for a covenant,</i> <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p5.5" osisRef="Bible:Isa.49.8" parsed="|Isa|49|8|0|0" passage="Isa 49:8">Isa. xlix. 8</scripRef>. That covenant which is
|
||
all our <i>salvation began to be spoken by the Lord,</i> <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p5.6" osisRef="Bible:Heb.2.3" parsed="|Heb|2|3|0|0" passage="Heb 2:3">Heb. ii. 3</scripRef>. Though he is the <i>prince
|
||
of the covenant</i> (as some read this) yet he condescended to be
|
||
the <i>messenger of it,</i> that we might have full assurance of
|
||
God's good-will towards man, upon his word. 3. He it is <i>whom you
|
||
seek, whom you delight in,</i> whom the pious Jews expect and
|
||
desire, and whose coming they think of with a great deal of
|
||
pleasure. In looking and waiting for him, they <i>looked for
|
||
redemption in Jerusalem</i> and <i>waited for the consolation of
|
||
Israel,</i> <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p5.7" osisRef="Bible:Luke.2.25 Bible:Luke.2.38" parsed="|Luke|2|25|0|0;|Luke|2|38|0|0" passage="Lu 2:25,38">Luke ii. 25,
|
||
38</scripRef>. Christ was to be the <i>desire of all nations,</i>
|
||
desirable to all (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p5.8" osisRef="Bible:Hag.2.7" parsed="|Hag|2|7|0|0" passage="Hag 2:7">Hag. ii.
|
||
7</scripRef>); but he was <i>the desire</i> of the Jewish nation
|
||
actually, because they had the promise of his coming made to them.
|
||
Note, Those that seek Jesus shall find pleasure in him. If he be
|
||
our heart's desire he will be our heart's delight; and we have
|
||
reason to delight in him who is the <i>messenger of the
|
||
covenant,</i> and to bid him welcome who came to us on so kind an
|
||
errand. 4. He <i>shall suddenly come;</i> his coming draws nigh,
|
||
and we see it not at so great a distance as the patriarchs saw it
|
||
at. Or, He shall come immediately after the appearing of John
|
||
Baptist, shall even tread on the heels of his forerunner; when that
|
||
<i>morning-star</i> appears, believe that the <i>Sun of
|
||
righteousness</i> is not far off. Or, He <i>shall come
|
||
suddenly,</i> that is, he shall come when by many he is not looked
|
||
for; as his second coming will be, so his first coming was, <i>at
|
||
midnight,</i> when some had done looking for him, for <i>shall he
|
||
find faith on the earth?</i> <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p5.9" osisRef="Bible:Luke.18.8" parsed="|Luke|18|8|0|0" passage="Lu 18:8">Luke
|
||
xviii. 8</scripRef>. The Jews reckon the Messiah among the things
|
||
that come <i>unawares;</i> so Dr. Pocock. And the coming of the Son
|
||
of man in his day is said to be <i>as the lightning,</i> which is
|
||
very surprising, <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p5.10" osisRef="Bible:Luke.17.24" parsed="|Luke|17|24|0|0" passage="Lu 17:24">Luke xvii.
|
||
24</scripRef>. 5. He <i>shall come to his temple,</i> this temple
|
||
at Jerusalem, which was lately built, that <i>latter house</i>
|
||
which he was to be the glory of. It is his temple, for it is <i>his
|
||
Father's house,</i> <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p5.11" osisRef="Bible:John.2.16" parsed="|John|2|16|0|0" passage="Joh 2:16">John ii.
|
||
16</scripRef>. Christ, at forty days old, was presented in the
|
||
temple, and thither Simeon went <i>by the Spirit,</i> according to
|
||
the direction of this prophecy, to see him, <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p5.12" osisRef="Bible:Luke.2.27" parsed="|Luke|2|27|0|0" passage="Lu 2:27">Luke ii. 27</scripRef>. At twelve years old he was in the
|
||
temple <i>about his Father's business,</i> <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p5.13" osisRef="Bible:Luke.2.49" parsed="|Luke|2|49|0|0" passage="Lu 2:49">Luke ii. 49</scripRef>. When he rode in triumph into
|
||
Jerusalem, it should seem that he went directly <i>to the
|
||
temple</i> (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p5.14" osisRef="Bible:Matt.21.12" parsed="|Matt|21|12|0|0" passage="Mt 21:12">Matt. xxi. 12</scripRef>),
|
||
and (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p5.15" osisRef="Bible:Mal.3.14" parsed="|Mal|3|14|0|0" passage="Mal 3:14"><i>v.</i> 14</scripRef>) thither
|
||
the <i>blind and the lame came to him to be healed;</i> there he
|
||
often preached, and often disputed, and often wrought miracles. By
|
||
this it appears that the Messiah was to come while <i>that
|
||
temple</i> was standing; that, therefore, being long since
|
||
destroyed, we must conclude that he has come, and we are to look
|
||
for no other. Note, Those that would be acquainted with Christ and
|
||
obtain his favour must meet him in his temple, for there he
|
||
<i>records his name</i> and there he will bless his people. There
|
||
we must receive his oracles and there we must pay our homage. 6.
|
||
The promise of this coming is repeated and ratified: <i>Behold, he
|
||
shall come, saith the Lord of hosts;</i> you may depend upon his
|
||
word, who cannot lie, he <i>shall come,</i> he <i>will come,</i> he
|
||
<i>will not tarry.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p6" shownumber="no">III. An account given of the great ends and
|
||
intentions of his coming, <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p6.1" osisRef="Bible:Mal.3.2" parsed="|Mal|3|2|0|0" passage="Mal 3:2"><i>v.</i>
|
||
2</scripRef>. He is one whom they seek, and one whom they delight
|
||
in; and yet <i>who may abide the day of his coming?</i> It is a
|
||
thing to be thought of with great seriousness, and with a holy awe
|
||
and reverence; for who <i>shall stand when he appears,</i> though
|
||
he comes not to condemn the world, but that the world through him
|
||
might have life? This may refer,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p7" shownumber="no">1. To the terrors of his appearance. Even
|
||
in the days of his flesh there were some emanations of his glory
|
||
and power, such as none could stand before, witness his
|
||
transfiguration, and the prodigies that attended his death; and we
|
||
read of some that trembled before him, as <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p7.1" osisRef="Bible:Mark.5.33" parsed="|Mark|5|33|0|0" passage="Mk 5:33">Mark v. 33</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p8" shownumber="no">2. To the troublous times that should
|
||
follow soon after. The Jewish doctors speak of the <i>pangs</i> or
|
||
<i>griefs</i> of the Messiah, meaning (they say) the great
|
||
afflictions that should be to Israel at the time of his coming; he
|
||
himself speaks of great tribulation then approaching, <i>such as
|
||
was not since the beginning of the world, nor ever shall be,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p8.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.24.21" parsed="|Matt|24|21|0|0" passage="Mt 24:21">Matt. xxiv. 21</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p9" shownumber="no">3. To the trial which his coming would make
|
||
of the children of men. <i>He shall be like a refiner's fire,</i>
|
||
which separates between the gold and the dross by melting the ore,
|
||
or <i>like fuller's soap,</i> which with much rubbing fetches the
|
||
spots out of the cloth. Christ came to discover men, <i>that the
|
||
thoughts of many hearts might be revealed</i> (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p9.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.2.35" parsed="|Luke|2|35|0|0" passage="Lu 2:35">Luke ii. 35</scripRef>), to distinguish men, to separate
|
||
between the precious and the vile, for <i>his fan in his hand</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p9.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.3.12" parsed="|Matt|3|12|0|0" passage="Mt 3:12">Matt. iii. 12</scripRef>), to <i>send
|
||
fire on the earth, not peace, but rather division</i> (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p9.3" osisRef="Bible:Luke.12.49 Bible:Luke.12.51" parsed="|Luke|12|49|0|0;|Luke|12|51|0|0" passage="Lu 12:49,51">Luke xii. 49, 51</scripRef>), to <i>shake
|
||
heaven and earth,</i> that the <i>wicked</i> might be <i>shaken
|
||
out</i> (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p9.4" osisRef="Bible:Job.38.13" parsed="|Job|38|13|0|0" passage="Job 38:13">Job xxxviii. 13</scripRef>)
|
||
and <i>that the things which cannot be shaken might remain,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p9.5" osisRef="Bible:Heb.12.27" parsed="|Heb|12|27|0|0" passage="Heb 12:27">Heb. xii. 27</scripRef>. See what the
|
||
effect of the trial will be that shall be made by the gospel.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p10" shownumber="no">(1.) The gospel shall work good upon those
|
||
that are disposed to be good, to them it shall be a savour of life
|
||
unto life (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p10.1" osisRef="Bible:Mal.3.3" parsed="|Mal|3|3|0|0" passage="Mal 3:3"><i>v.</i> 3</scripRef>):
|
||
<i>He shall sit as a refiner.</i> Christ by his gospel shall purify
|
||
and reform his church, and by his Spirit working with it shall
|
||
regenerate and cleanse particular souls; for to this end he gave
|
||
himself for the church, <i>that he might sanctify and cleanse it
|
||
with the washing of water by the word</i> (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p10.2" osisRef="Bible:Eph.5.26" parsed="|Eph|5|26|0|0" passage="Eph 5:26">Eph. v. 26</scripRef>) and <i>purify to himself a
|
||
peculiar people,</i> <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p10.3" osisRef="Bible:Titus.2.14" parsed="|Titus|2|14|0|0" passage="Tit 2:14">Tit. ii.
|
||
14</scripRef>. Christ is the great refiner. Observe, [1.] Who they
|
||
are that he will purify—<i>the sons of Levi,</i> all those that
|
||
are devoted to his praise and employed in his service, as the tribe
|
||
of Levi was, and whom he designs to make unto our God spiritual
|
||
priests (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p10.4" osisRef="Bible:Rev.1.6" parsed="|Rev|1|6|0|0" passage="Re 1:6">Rev. i. 6</scripRef>), a
|
||
<i>holy priesthood,</i> <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p10.5" osisRef="Bible:1Pet.2.5" parsed="|1Pet|2|5|0|0" passage="1Pe 2:5">1 Pet. ii.
|
||
5</scripRef>. Note, All true Christians are sons of Levi, set apart
|
||
for God, to do the service of his sanctuary, and to <i>war the good
|
||
warfare.</i> [2.] How he will purify them; he will <i>purge them as
|
||
gold and silver,</i> that is, he will sanctify them inwardly; he
|
||
will not only wash away the spots they have contracted from
|
||
without, but will take away the dross that is found in them; he
|
||
will separate from them their indwelling corruptions, which
|
||
rendered their faculties worthless and useless, and so make them
|
||
like gold refined, both valuable and serviceable. <i>He will purge
|
||
them</i> with fire, <i>as gold and silver are purged,</i> for <i>he
|
||
baptizes with the Holy Ghost and with fire</i> (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p10.6" osisRef="Bible:Matt.3.11" parsed="|Matt|3|11|0|0" passage="Mt 3:11">Matt. iii. 11</scripRef>), with the Holy Ghost working
|
||
like fire. He will purge them by <i>afflictions and manifold
|
||
temptations,</i> that the <i>trial of their faith</i> may be
|
||
<i>found to praise and honour,</i> <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p10.7" osisRef="Bible:1Pet.1.6-1Pet.1.7" parsed="|1Pet|1|6|1|7" passage="1Pe 1:6,7">1
|
||
Pet. i. 6, 7</scripRef>. He will purge them so as to make them a
|
||
precious people to himself. [3.] What will be the effect of it:
|
||
<i>That they may offer unto the Lord an offering in
|
||
righteousness,</i> that is, that they may be in sincerity converted
|
||
to God and consecrated to his praise (hence we read of the
|
||
<i>offering up,</i> or <i>sacrificing, of the Gentiles</i> to God,
|
||
when they were <i>sanctified by the holy Ghost,</i> <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p10.8" osisRef="Bible:Rom.15.16" parsed="|Rom|15|16|0|0" passage="Ro 15:16">Rom. xv. 16</scripRef>), and that they may in a
|
||
spiritual manner worship God according to his will, may <i>offer
|
||
the sacrifices of righteousness,</i> (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p10.9" osisRef="Bible:Ps.4.5" parsed="|Ps|4|5|0|0" passage="Ps 4:5">Ps. iv. 5</scripRef>), the offering of prayer, and praise,
|
||
and holy love, that they may be the <i>true worshippers,</i> who
|
||
<i>worship the Father in spirit and in truth,</i> <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p10.10" osisRef="Bible:John.4.23-John.4.24" parsed="|John|4|23|4|24" passage="Joh 4:23,24">John iv. 23, 24</scripRef>. Note, We cannot
|
||
offer unto the Lord any right performances in religion unless our
|
||
persons be justified and sanctified. Till we ourselves be refined
|
||
and purified by the grace of God, we cannot do any thing that will
|
||
redound to the glory of God. God had respect to Abel first, and
|
||
then to his offering; and <i>therefore</i> God purges his people,
|
||
that they may offer their offerings to him in righteousness,
|
||
<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p10.11" osisRef="Bible:Zeph.3.9" parsed="|Zeph|3|9|0|0" passage="Zep 3:9">Zeph. iii. 9</scripRef>. He makes the
|
||
tree good that the fruit may be good. And then it follows
|
||
(<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p10.12" osisRef="Bible:Mal.3.4" parsed="|Mal|3|4|0|0" passage="Mal 3:4"><i>v.</i> 4</scripRef>), <i>The
|
||
offering of Judah and Jerusalem shall be pleasant unto the
|
||
Lord.</i> It shall no longer be offensive, as it has been, when, in
|
||
the former days, they worshipped other gods with the God of Israel,
|
||
or when, in the present days, they brought the torn, and the lame,
|
||
and the sick, for sacrifice; but it shall be <i>acceptable;</i> he
|
||
will be pleased with the offerers, and their offerings, <i>as in
|
||
the days of old and as in former years,</i> as in the primitive
|
||
times of the church, as when God had respect to Abel's sacrifice
|
||
and smelled a savour of rest from Noah's, and when he kindled
|
||
Aaron's sacrifice with fire from heaven. When the Messiah comes,
|
||
<i>First,</i> He will, by his grace in them, make them acceptable;
|
||
when he has purified and refined them, then they shall offer such
|
||
sacrifices as God requires and will accept. <i>Secondly,</i> He
|
||
will, by his intercession for them, make them accepted; he will
|
||
recommend them and their performances to God, so that their
|
||
prayers, being perfumed with the incense of his intercession, shall
|
||
be pleasant unto the Lord; for he has <i>made us accepted in the
|
||
Beloved,</i> and in him is well pleased with those that are in him
|
||
(<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p10.13" osisRef="Bible:Matt.3.17" parsed="|Matt|3|17|0|0" passage="Mt 3:17">Matt. iii. 17</scripRef>) and bring
|
||
forth fruit in him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p11" shownumber="no">(2.) It shall turn for a testimony against
|
||
those that are resolved to go on in their wickedness, <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p11.1" osisRef="Bible:Mal.3.5" parsed="|Mal|3|5|0|0" passage="Mal 3:5"><i>v.</i> 5</scripRef>. This is the direct answer
|
||
to their challenge, "<i>Where is the God of judgment?</i> You shall
|
||
know where he is, and shall know it to your terror and confusion,
|
||
for <i>I will come near to you to judgment;</i> to you that set
|
||
divine justice at defiance." To them the gospel of Christ will be a
|
||
<i>savour of death unto death;</i> it will bind them over to
|
||
condemnation and will judge them in the great day, <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p11.2" osisRef="Bible:John.12.48" parsed="|John|12|48|0|0" passage="Joh 12:48">John xii. 48</scripRef>. Let us see here, [1.]
|
||
Who the sinners are that must appear to be judged by the gospel of
|
||
Christ. They are the <i>sorcerers,</i> who died in spiritual
|
||
wickedness, that forsake the oracles of the God of truth to consult
|
||
the father of lies; and the <i>adulterers,</i> who wallow in the
|
||
lusts of the flesh, those adulterers who were charged with
|
||
<i>dealing treacherously</i> (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p11.3" osisRef="Bible:Mal.2.15" parsed="|Mal|2|15|0|0" passage="Mal 2:15"><i>ch.</i> ii. 15</scripRef>); and the <i>false
|
||
swearers,</i> who profane God's name and affront his justice, by
|
||
calling him to witness to a lie; and the oppressors, who
|
||
barbarously injure and trample upon those who lie at their mercy,
|
||
and are not able to help themselves: they <i>defraud the hireling
|
||
in his wages</i> and will not give him what he agreed for; they
|
||
crush <i>the widow and fatherless,</i> and will not pay them their
|
||
just debts, because they cannot prove them, or have not wherewithal
|
||
to sue for them; the poor <i>stranger</i> too, who has no friend to
|
||
stand by him and is ignorant of the laws of the country, they
|
||
<i>turn aside from his right,</i> so that he cannot keep or cannot
|
||
recover his own. That which is at the bottom of all this is,
|
||
<i>They fear not me, saith the Lord of hosts.</i> The
|
||
<i>transgression of the wicked</i> plainly declares <i>that there
|
||
is no fear of God before his eyes.</i> Where no fear of God is no
|
||
good is to be expected. [2.] Who will appear against them: <i>I
|
||
will come near,</i> says God, <i>and will be a swift witness
|
||
against</i> them. They justify themselves, and, their sins having
|
||
been artfully concealed, hope to escape punishment for want of
|
||
proof; but God, who sees and knows all things, will himself be
|
||
witness against them, and his omniscience is instead of a thousand
|
||
witnesses, for to it the sinner's own conscience shall be made to
|
||
subscribe, and so <i>every mouth shall be stopped.</i> He will be a
|
||
swift witness; though they reflect upon him as slow and dilatory,
|
||
and ask, <i>Where is the God of judgment,</i> and where the promise
|
||
of his coming? they will find that <i>he is not slack</i>
|
||
concerning his threatenings any more than he is concerning his
|
||
promises. Judgment against those sinners shall not be put off for
|
||
want of evidence, for he will be a swift witness. His judgment
|
||
shall overtake them, and it shall be impossible for them to outrun
|
||
it. <i>Evil pursues sinners.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p12" shownumber="no">IV. The ratification of all this (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p12.1" osisRef="Bible:Mal.3.6" parsed="|Mal|3|6|0|0" passage="Mal 3:6"><i>v.</i> 6</scripRef>): <i>For I am the Lord; I
|
||
change not; therefore you sons of Jacob are not consumed.</i> Here
|
||
we have, 1. God's immutability asserted by Himself, and glorified
|
||
in: "<i>I am the Lord; I change not;</i> and therefore no word that
|
||
I have spoken shall fall to the ground." Is God a just revenger of
|
||
those that rebel against him? Is he the bountiful rewarder of those
|
||
that diligently seek him? In both these he is unchangeable. Though
|
||
the sentence passed against evil works (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p12.2" osisRef="Bible:Mal.3.5" parsed="|Mal|3|5|0|0" passage="Mal 3:5"><i>v.</i> 5</scripRef>) be not executed speedily, yet it
|
||
will be executed, for he is <i>the Lord;</i> he <i>changes not;</i>
|
||
he is as much an enemy to sin as ever he was, and impenitent
|
||
sinners will find him so. There needs no <i>scire facias—a writ
|
||
calling one to show cause,</i> to revive God's judgment, for it is
|
||
never antiquated, or out of date, but against those that go on
|
||
still in their trespasses the curse of his law still remains <i>in
|
||
full force, power, and virtue.</i> 2. A particular proof of it,
|
||
from the comfortable experience which the people of Israel had had
|
||
of it. They had reason to say that he was an unchangeable God, for
|
||
he had been faithful to his covenant with them and their fathers;
|
||
if he had not adhered to that, they would have been consumed long
|
||
ago and cut off from being a people; they had been false and fickle
|
||
in their conduct to him, and he might justly have abandoned them,
|
||
and then they would soon have been consumed and ruined; but because
|
||
he <i>remembered his covenant,</i> and would not violate that, nor
|
||
alter the thing that had gone forth out of his lips, they were
|
||
preserved from ruin and recovered from the brink of it. It was
|
||
purely because he would be as good as his word, <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p12.3" osisRef="Bible:Deut.7.8 Bible:Lev.26.42" parsed="|Deut|7|8|0|0;|Lev|26|42|0|0" passage="De 7:8,Le 26:42">Deut. vii. 8; Lev. xxvi. 42</scripRef>. Now as
|
||
God had kept them from ruin, while the covenant of peculiarity
|
||
remained in force, purely because he would be faithful to that
|
||
covenant, and would show that <i>he is not a man that he should
|
||
lie</i> (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p12.4" osisRef="Bible:Num.23.19" parsed="|Num|23|19|0|0" passage="Nu 23:19">Num. xxiii. 19</scripRef>),
|
||
so, when that covenant should be superseded and set aside by the
|
||
New Testament, and they, by rejecting the blessings of it, lay
|
||
themselves open to the curses, he will show that in the
|
||
determinations of his wrath, as well as in those of his mercy,
|
||
<i>he is not a man, that he should repent,</i> but will then be as
|
||
true to his threatenings as hitherto he had been to his promises;
|
||
see <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p12.5" osisRef="Bible:1Sam.15.29" parsed="|1Sam|15|29|0|0" passage="1Sa 15:29">1 Sam. xv. 29</scripRef>. We may
|
||
all apply this very sensibly to ourselves; because we have to do
|
||
with a God that <i>changes not,</i> therefore it is that <i>we are
|
||
not consumed,</i> even <i>because his compassions fail not; they
|
||
are new every morning; great is his faithfulness,</i> <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p12.6" osisRef="Bible:Lam.3.22-Lam.3.23" parsed="|Lam|3|22|3|23" passage="La 3:22,23">Lam. iii. 22, 23</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Mal.iv-p12.7" osisRef="Bible:Mal.3.7-Mal.3.12" parsed="|Mal|3|7|3|12" passage="Mal 3:7-12" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Mal.iv-p12.8">
|
||
<h4 id="Mal.iv-p12.9">The Sins of the People; Encouragements to
|
||
Repentance. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Mal.iv-p12.10">b. c.</span> 400.)</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Mal.iv-p13" shownumber="no">7 Even from the days of your fathers ye are gone
|
||
away from mine ordinances, and have not kept <i>them.</i> Return
|
||
unto me, and I will return unto you, saith the <span class="smallcaps" id="Mal.iv-p13.1">Lord</span> of hosts. But ye said, Wherein shall we
|
||
return? 8 Will a man rob God? Yet ye have robbed me. But ye
|
||
say, Wherein have we robbed thee? In tithes and offerings. 9
|
||
Ye <i>are</i> cursed with a curse: for ye have robbed me,
|
||
<i>even</i> this whole nation. 10 Bring ye all the tithes
|
||
into the storehouse, that there may be meat in mine house, and
|
||
prove me now herewith, saith the <span class="smallcaps" id="Mal.iv-p13.2">Lord</span> of hosts, if I will not open you the
|
||
windows of heaven, and pour you out a blessing, that <i>there
|
||
shall</i> not <i>be room</i> enough <i>to receive it.</i> 11
|
||
And I will rebuke the devourer for your sakes, and he shall not
|
||
destroy the fruits of your ground; neither shall your vine cast her
|
||
fruit before the time in the field, saith the <span class="smallcaps" id="Mal.iv-p13.3">Lord</span> of hosts. 12 And all nations shall
|
||
call you blessed: for ye shall be a delightsome land, saith the
|
||
<span class="smallcaps" id="Mal.iv-p13.4">Lord</span> of hosts.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p14" shownumber="no">We have here God's controversy with the men
|
||
of that generation, for deserting his service and robbing
|
||
him—wicked servants indeed, that not only run away from their
|
||
Master, but run away with their Master's goods.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p15" shownumber="no">I. They had run away from their Master, and
|
||
quitted the work he gave them to do (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p15.1" osisRef="Bible:Mal.3.7" parsed="|Mal|3|7|0|0" passage="Mal 3:7"><i>v.</i> 7</scripRef>): <i>You have gone away from my
|
||
ordinances and have not kept them.</i> The ordinances of God's
|
||
worship were the business which as servants they must mind, the
|
||
talents which they must trade with, and the trust which was
|
||
committed to them to keep; but they went away from them, grew weary
|
||
of them, and withdrew their neck from that yoke; they deviated from
|
||
the rule that God had prescribed to them, and betrayed the trust
|
||
lodged with them. They had revolted from God, not only in worship,
|
||
but in conversation; they had not <i>kept his ordinances.</i> This
|
||
disobedience they were chargeable with, and had been guilty of,
|
||
even <i>from the days of their fathers;</i> either as in the days
|
||
of their fathers of old, who were sent into captivity for their
|
||
disobedience, or, "Now, for some generations past, you have fallen
|
||
off from what you were, when first you came back out of captivity."
|
||
Ezra owns it in one particular instance: <i>Since the days of our
|
||
fathers have we been in a great trespass unto this day,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p15.2" osisRef="Bible:Ezra.9.7" parsed="|Ezra|9|7|0|0" passage="Ezr 9:7">Ezra ix. 7</scripRef>. Now observe, 1.
|
||
What a gracious invitation God gives them to return and repent:
|
||
"<i>Return unto me,</i> and to your duty, return to your service,
|
||
return to your allegiance, return as a traveller that has missed
|
||
his way, as a soldier that has run his colours, as a treacherous
|
||
wife that has gone away from her husband; return, thou backsliding
|
||
Israel, return to me; and then <i>I will return unto you</i> and be
|
||
reconciled, will remove the judgments you are under and prevent
|
||
those you fear." This had been of old the burden of the song
|
||
(<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p15.3" osisRef="Bible:Zech.1.3" parsed="|Zech|1|3|0|0" passage="Zec 1:3">Zech. i. 3</scripRef>), and is still.
|
||
2. What a peevish answer they return to this gracious invitation:
|
||
"<i>But you said</i> with disdain, said it to the prophets that
|
||
called you, said it to one another, said it to your own hearts, to
|
||
stifle the convictions you were under; you said, <i>Wherein shall
|
||
we return?</i>" Note, God takes notice what returns our hearts make
|
||
to the calls of his word, what we say and what we think when we
|
||
have heard a sermon, what answer we give to the message sent us.
|
||
When God calls us to <i>return,</i> we should answer as those did
|
||
<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p15.4" osisRef="Bible:Jer.3.22" parsed="|Jer|3|22|0|0" passage="Jer 3:22">Jer. iii. 22</scripRef>, <i>Behold, we
|
||
come.</i> But not as these here, <i>Wherein shall we return?</i>
|
||
(1.) They take it as an affront to be <i>told of their faults,</i>
|
||
and called upon to amend them; they are ready to say, "What ado do
|
||
these prophets make about returning and repenting; why are we
|
||
disgraced and disturbed thus, our own consciences and our
|
||
neighbours stirred up against us?" It is ill with those who thus
|
||
count reproofs reproaches, and <i>kick against the pricks.</i> (2.)
|
||
They are so ignorant of themselves, and of the strictness, extent,
|
||
and spiritual nature, of the divine law, that they see nothing in
|
||
themselves to be repented of, or reformed; they are pure in their
|
||
own eyes, and think they need no repentance. (3.) They are so
|
||
firmly resolved to go on in sin that they will find a thousand
|
||
foolish frivolous excuses to shift off their repentance, and turn
|
||
away the calls that are given them to repent. They seem to speak
|
||
only as those that wanted something to say; it is a mere evasion, a
|
||
banter upon the prophet, and a challenge to him to descend to
|
||
particulars. Note, Many ruin their own souls by baffling the calls
|
||
that are given them to repent of their sins.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p16" shownumber="no">II. They had robbed their Master, and
|
||
embezzled his goods. They had asked, "<i>Wherein shall we
|
||
return?</i> What have we done amiss?" And he soon tells them.
|
||
Observe, 1. The prophet's high charge exhibited, in God's name,
|
||
against the people. They stand indicted for robbery, for sacrilege,
|
||
the worst of robberies: <i>You have robbed me.</i> He expostulates
|
||
with them upon it: <i>Will a man</i> be so daringly impudent as to
|
||
<i>rob God?</i> Man, who is a weak creature, and cannot contend
|
||
with God's power, will he think to rob him <i>vi et
|
||
armis—forcibly?</i> Man, who lies open to God's knowledge, and
|
||
cannot conceal himself from that, will he think to rob him <i>clam
|
||
et secreto</i>—<i>privily?</i> Man, who depends upon God, and
|
||
derives his all from him, will he rob him that is his benefactor?
|
||
This is ungrateful, unjust, and unkind, indeed; and it is very
|
||
unwise thus to provoke him from whom our judgment proceeds. <i>Will
|
||
a man do violence to God?</i> so some read it. <i>Will a man do
|
||
violence to God?</i> so some read it. <i>Will a man stint or
|
||
straiten him?</i> so others read it. Robbing God is a heinous
|
||
crime. 2. The people's high challenge in answer to that charge:
|
||
<i>But you say, Wherein have we robbed thee?</i> They plead <i>Not
|
||
guilty,</i> and put God upon the proof of it. Note, Robbing God is
|
||
such a heinous crime that those who are guilty of it are not
|
||
willing to own themselves guilty. They rob God, and know not what
|
||
they do. They rob him of his honour, rob him of that which is
|
||
devoted to him, to be employed in his service, rob him of
|
||
themselves, rob him of sabbath-time, rob him of that which is given
|
||
for the support of religion, and give him not his dues out of their
|
||
estates; and yet they ask, <i>Wherein have we robbed thee?</i> 3.
|
||
The plain proof of the charge, in answer to this challenge; it is
|
||
<i>in tithes and offerings.</i> Out of these the priests and
|
||
Levites had maintenance for themselves and their families; but they
|
||
detained them, defrauded the priests of them, would not pay their
|
||
tithes, or not in full, or not of the best; they brought not the
|
||
offerings which God required, or brought the torn, and lame, and
|
||
sick, which were not fit for use. They were all guilty of this sin,
|
||
even <i>the whole nation,</i> as if they were in confederacy
|
||
against God, and all combined to rob him of his dues and to stand
|
||
by one another in it when they had done. For this they were
|
||
<i>cursed with a curse,</i> <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p16.1" osisRef="Bible:Mal.3.9" parsed="|Mal|3|9|0|0" passage="Mal 3:9"><i>v.</i>
|
||
9</scripRef>. God punished them with famine and scarcity, through
|
||
unseasonable weather, or insects that ate up the fruits of the
|
||
earth. God had thus punished them for neglecting to build the
|
||
temple (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p16.2" osisRef="Bible:Hag.1.10-Hag.1.11" parsed="|Hag|1|10|1|11" passage="Hag 1:10,11">Hag. i. 10, 11</scripRef>),
|
||
and now for not maintaining the temple-service. Note, Those that
|
||
deny God his part of their estates may justly expect a curse upon
|
||
their own part of them: <i>"You are cursed with a curse</i> for
|
||
robbing me, and yet you go on to do it." Note, It is a great
|
||
aggravation of sin when men persist in it notwithstanding the
|
||
rebukes of Providence which they are under for it. Nay, it should
|
||
seem, because God had punished them with scarcity of bread, they
|
||
made that a pretence for robbing him-that now, being impoverished,
|
||
they could not afford to bring their tithes and offerings, but must
|
||
save them, that they might have bread for their families. Note, It
|
||
argues great perverseness in sin when men make those afflictions
|
||
excuses for sin which are sent to part between them and their sins.
|
||
When they had but little they should have done the more good with
|
||
that little, and that would have been the way to make it more; but
|
||
it is ill with the patient when that which should cure the disease
|
||
serves only to palliate it, and prevent its being searched into. 4.
|
||
An earnest exhortation to reform in this matter, with a promise
|
||
that if they did the judgments they were under should be quickly
|
||
removed. (1.) Let them take care to do their duty (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p16.3" osisRef="Bible:Mal.3.10" parsed="|Mal|3|10|0|0" passage="Mal 3:10"><i>v.</i> 10</scripRef>): <i>Bring you all the
|
||
tithes into the storehouse.</i> They had brought some; but, like
|
||
Ananias and Sapphira, had <i>kept back part of the price,</i>
|
||
pretending they could not spare so much as was required, and
|
||
<i>necessity has no law;</i> but even necessity must have this law,
|
||
and it would redress the grievance of their necessity: "Bring in
|
||
the full tithes to the utmost that the law requires, <i>that there
|
||
may be meat in God's house</i> for those that serve at the altar,
|
||
whether there be meat in your houses or no." Note, God must be
|
||
served in the first place, and our quota must be contributed for
|
||
the support of religion in the place where we live, that God's name
|
||
may be sanctified, and his kingdom may come, and his will be done,
|
||
even before we provide our daily bread; for the interests of our
|
||
souls ought to be preferred before those of our bodies. (2.) Let
|
||
them then trust God to provide for them and their comfort "Let God
|
||
be first served, and then <i>prove me herewith, saith the Lord of
|
||
hosts, whether I will not open the windows of heaven.</i>" They
|
||
said, "Let God give us our plenty again, as formerly, and try us
|
||
whether we will not then bring him his tithes and offerings, as we
|
||
did formerly." "No," says God, "do you first bring in all your
|
||
tithes as they become due, and all the arrears of what is past, and
|
||
try me, whether I will not then restore you your plenty." Note,
|
||
Those that will deal with God must deal upon trust; and we may all
|
||
venture to do so, for, though many have been losers for him, never
|
||
any were losers by him in the end. It is fit that we should venture
|
||
first, for <i>his reward</i> is <i>with him,</i> but <i>his work is
|
||
before him;</i> we must first do the work which is our part, and
|
||
then try him and trust him for the reward. Elijah put the widow of
|
||
Zarephath into this method when he said (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p16.4" osisRef="Bible:1Kgs.17.13" parsed="|1Kgs|17|13|0|0" passage="1Ki 17:13">1 Kings xvii. 13</scripRef>), "<i>Make me a little cake
|
||
first,</i> and then prove me whether there shall not be enough
|
||
afterwards <i>for thee and thy son.</i>" That which discourages
|
||
people from the expenses of charity is the weakness of their faith
|
||
concerning the gains and advantages of charity; they cannot think
|
||
that they shall get by it. But it is a reasonable demand that God
|
||
here makes: "<i>Prove me now;</i> is any thing to be got by
|
||
charity? <i>Come and see;</i>" Nothing venture, nothing win. Trust
|
||
upon honour, "And you shall find," [1.] "That, whereas the heavens
|
||
have been shut up, and there has been no rain, now God will
|
||
<i>open</i> to you <i>the windows of heaven,</i> for in his hand
|
||
the key of the clouds is, and you shall have seasonable rain." Or
|
||
the expression is figurative; every good gift coming from above,
|
||
thence God will plentifully pour out upon them the bounties of his
|
||
providence. Very sudden plenty is expressed by <i>opening the
|
||
windows of heaven,</i> <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p16.5" osisRef="Bible:2Kgs.7.2" parsed="|2Kgs|7|2|0|0" passage="2Ki 7:2">2 Kings vii.
|
||
2</scripRef>. We find the <i>windows of heaven opened,</i> to pour
|
||
down a deluge of wrath, in Noah's flood, <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p16.6" osisRef="Bible:Gen.7.11" parsed="|Gen|7|11|0|0" passage="Ge 7:11">Gen. vii. 11</scripRef>. But here they are opened to
|
||
<i>pour down blessings,</i> to such a degree that there should not
|
||
be <i>room enough to receive</i> them. So plentifully shall their
|
||
ground bring forth that they shall be tempted to <i>pull down their
|
||
barns and build greater,</i> for want of room, <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p16.7" osisRef="Bible:Luke.12.18" parsed="|Luke|12|18|0|0" passage="Lu 12:18">Luke xii. 18</scripRef>. Or, as Dr. Pocock explains it,
|
||
"I will pour out on you such a blessing as shall be not <i>enough
|
||
only,</i> and such as shall be sufficient, but <i>more and more
|
||
than enough;</i>" that is, a great addition. The oil that is
|
||
multiplied shall not be stayed as long as there are vessels to
|
||
receive it, <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p16.8" osisRef="Bible:2Kgs.4.6" parsed="|2Kgs|4|6|0|0" passage="2Ki 4:6">2 Kings iv. 6</scripRef>.
|
||
Note, God will not only be reconciled to sinners that repent and
|
||
reform, but he will be a benefactor, a bountiful benefactor, to
|
||
them. We are never straitened in him, but often straitened in our
|
||
own bosoms. God has blessings ready to bestow upon us, but, through
|
||
the weakness of our faith and narrowness of our desires, we have
|
||
not room to receive them. [2.] That, whereas the fruits of their
|
||
ground had been eaten up by locusts and caterpillars God would now
|
||
remove that judgment (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p16.9" osisRef="Bible:Mal.3.11" parsed="|Mal|3|11|0|0" passage="Mal 3:11"><i>v.</i>
|
||
11</scripRef>): <i>"I will rebuke the devourer for your sakes,</i>
|
||
and will check the progress of those destroying animals, that they
|
||
shall no more destroy the products of the earth and the fruits of
|
||
the trees." God has all creatures at his beck, can command them and
|
||
remand them at his pleasure. <i>Neither shall the vine cast her
|
||
fruit before the time;</i> it shall not be blasted or blown off.
|
||
Or, as some read it, <i>Neither shall the devourer make your vine
|
||
barren,</i> as the locusts did, <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p16.10" osisRef="Bible:Joel.1.7" parsed="|Joel|1|7|0|0" passage="Joe 1:7">Joel i.
|
||
7</scripRef>. [3.] That, whereas their neighbours had upbraided
|
||
them with their scarcity, and they had lain under the <i>reproach
|
||
of famine,</i> which was the more grievous because their country
|
||
used to be boasted of for its plenty, now <i>all nations shall call
|
||
them blessed,</i> shall speak honourably of them, and own them to
|
||
be a happy people. [4.] That whereas their sin had made their land
|
||
unpleasing to God (even their temple, and altars, and offerings
|
||
were so, <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p16.11" osisRef="Bible:Mal.2.13" parsed="|Mal|2|13|0|0" passage="Mal 2:13"><i>ch.</i> ii.
|
||
13</scripRef>), and whereas his judgments had made their land
|
||
unpleasant to them, and very melancholy, "Now <i>you shall be a
|
||
delightsome land,</i> your country shall be acceptable to God and
|
||
comfortable to yourselves." Note, The reviving of religion in a
|
||
land will make it indeed a delightsome land both to God and to all
|
||
good people; he will say, It is <i>my rest for ever; here will I
|
||
dwell;</i> and they will say the same, <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p16.12" osisRef="Bible:Isa.62.4 Bible:Deut.11.12" parsed="|Isa|62|4|0|0;|Deut|11|12|0|0" passage="Isa 62:4,De 11:12">Isa. lxii. 4; Deut. xi. 12</scripRef>. It
|
||
should seem that this charge to bring in the tithes had its good
|
||
effect, for we find (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p16.13" osisRef="Bible:Neh.13.12" parsed="|Neh|13|12|0|0" passage="Ne 13:12">Neh. xiii.
|
||
12</scripRef>) that <i>all Judah did bring in their tithe into the
|
||
treasuries,</i> and, no doubt, they had the benefit of these
|
||
promises, in the return of their plenty, immediately upon their
|
||
return to their duty, that they might plainly discern for what
|
||
cause the evil had been upon them (for when the cause was removed
|
||
the evil was removed), and that they might see how perfectly
|
||
reconciled God was to them upon their repentance, and how their
|
||
transgression was remembered no more, for the curse was not only
|
||
taken away, but turned into an abundant blessing.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Mal.iv-p16.14" osisRef="Bible:Mal.3.13-Mal.3.18" parsed="|Mal|3|13|3|18" passage="Mal 3:13-18" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Mal.iv-p16.15">
|
||
<h4 id="Mal.iv-p16.16">Wicked Conversation Reproved; Evil Maxims of
|
||
Sinners; Pious Converse Commended; Promises to the
|
||
Godly. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Mal.iv-p16.17">b.
|
||
c.</span> 400.)</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Mal.iv-p17" shownumber="no">13 Your words have been stout against me, saith
|
||
the <span class="smallcaps" id="Mal.iv-p17.1">Lord</span>. Yet ye say, What have we
|
||
spoken <i>so much</i> against thee? 14 Ye have said, It
|
||
<i>is</i> vain to serve God: and what profit <i>is it</i> that we
|
||
have kept his ordinance, and that we have walked mournfully before
|
||
the <span class="smallcaps" id="Mal.iv-p17.2">Lord</span> of hosts? 15 And now
|
||
we call the proud happy; yea, they that work wickedness are set up;
|
||
yea, <i>they that</i> tempt God are even delivered. 16 Then
|
||
they that feared the <span class="smallcaps" id="Mal.iv-p17.3">Lord</span> spake
|
||
often one to another: and the <span class="smallcaps" id="Mal.iv-p17.4">Lord</span>
|
||
hearkened, and heard <i>it,</i> and a book of remembrance was
|
||
written before him for them that feared the <span class="smallcaps" id="Mal.iv-p17.5">Lord</span>, and that thought upon his name. 17
|
||
And they shall be mine, saith the <span class="smallcaps" id="Mal.iv-p17.6">Lord</span> of hosts, in that day when I make up my
|
||
jewels; and I will spare them, as a man spareth his own son that
|
||
serveth him. 18 Then shall ye return, and discern between
|
||
the righteous and the wicked, between him that serveth God and him
|
||
that serveth him not.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p18" shownumber="no">Among the people of the Jews at this time,
|
||
though they all enjoyed the same privileges and advantages, there
|
||
were men of very different characters (as ever were, and ever will
|
||
be, in the world and in the church), like Jeremiah's figs, some
|
||
very good and others very bad, some that plainly appeared to be the
|
||
children of God and others that as plainly discovered themselves to
|
||
be the children of the wicked one. There are tares and wheat in the
|
||
same field, chaff and corn in the same floor; and here we have an
|
||
account of both.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p19" shownumber="no">I. Here is the angry notice God takes of
|
||
the impudent blasphemous talk of the sinners in Zion and his just
|
||
resentments of it. Probably there was a club of them that were in
|
||
league against religion, that set up for wits, and set their wits
|
||
on work to run it down and ridicule it, and herein strengthened one
|
||
another's hands. Here is,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p20" shownumber="no">1. An indictment found against them, for
|
||
treasonable words spoken against the King of kings: <i>Your words
|
||
have been stout against me, saith the Lord.</i> They spoke
|
||
<i>against God,</i> in reflection upon him, in contradiction to
|
||
him, as their fathers <i>in the wilderness</i> (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p20.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.70.19" parsed="|Ps|70|19|0|0" passage="Ps 70:19">Ps. lxx. 19</scripRef>); <i>yea, they spoke against
|
||
God.</i> What he said, and what he designed, they opposed, as if
|
||
they had been retained of counsel against him and his cause. Their
|
||
words against God were <i>stout;</i> they came from their pride,
|
||
and haughtiness, and contempt of God. What they said against God
|
||
they spoke loudly, as if they cared not who heard them; they were
|
||
not themselves ashamed to say it, and they desired to propagate
|
||
their atheistical notions and to infect the minds of others with
|
||
them. They spoke it boldly, as those that were resolved to stand to
|
||
it, and were in no fear of being called to an account. They spoke
|
||
it proudly, and with insolence and disdain, scorning to be under
|
||
the divine check and government. They <i>strengthened
|
||
themselves;</i> they would be valiant <i>against the Almighty,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p20.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.15.25" parsed="|Job|15|25|0|0" passage="Job 15:25">Job xv. 25</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p21" shownumber="no">2. Their plea to this indictment. They
|
||
said, <i>What have we spoken so much against thee?</i> They deny
|
||
the words, and put the prophet to prove them; or, if they spoke the
|
||
words, they did not design them against God, and therefore will not
|
||
own there was any harm in them; at least they extenuate the matter:
|
||
<i>What have we spoken so much against thee,</i> so much that there
|
||
needs all this ado about it? They cannot deny that they have spoken
|
||
against God, but they make a light matter of it, and wonder it
|
||
should be taken notice of: "<i>Words</i>" (say they) "<i>are but
|
||
wind;</i> others have said more and done worse; if we are not so
|
||
good as we should be, yet we hope we are not so bad as we are
|
||
represented to be." Note, It is common for sinners that are
|
||
unconvinced and unhumbled to deny or extenuate the faults they are
|
||
justly charged with, and to insist upon their own justification,
|
||
against the reproofs of the word and of their own consciences. But
|
||
it will be to no purpose.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p22" shownumber="no">3. The words themselves which they are
|
||
charged with. God keeps an account of what men say, as well as of
|
||
what they do, and will let them know that he does so. We quickly
|
||
forget what we have said, and are ready to deny what we have said
|
||
amiss; but God can say, <i>You have said</i> so and so. They had
|
||
said it as their deliberate judgment.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p23" shownumber="no">(1.) That there is nothing to be got in the
|
||
service of God, thought it is a service that subjects men to labour
|
||
and sorrow. They said, <i>It is vain to serve God,</i> or, "<i>He
|
||
is vain that serves God,</i> that is, he labours in vain and to no
|
||
purpose; he has his labour for his pains, and therefore is a fool
|
||
for his labour. <i>What profit is it that we have kept his
|
||
ordinance,</i> or <i>his observation,</i> that we have observed
|
||
what he has appointed us to observe?" <i>What mammon,</i> or
|
||
<i>wealth,</i> have we gained, says the Chaldee, intimating (says
|
||
Dr. Pocock) that it was for mammon's sake only that they served
|
||
God, and so indeed not God at all, but mammon. "We have walked
|
||
<i>mournfully,</i> or <i>in black,</i> with great gravity and great
|
||
grief, <i>before the Lord of hosts,</i> have afflicted our souls at
|
||
the times appointed for that purpose, and yet we are never the
|
||
better." Perhaps this comes in as a reason why they would not trust
|
||
God to prosper them upon their <i>bringing in the tithes</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p23.1" osisRef="Bible:Mal.3.10" parsed="|Mal|3|10|0|0" passage="Mal 3:10"><i>v.</i> 10</scripRef>); "For," say
|
||
they, "we have tried him in other things, and have lost by him."
|
||
This is a very unjust and unreasonable reflection upon the service
|
||
of God, and we can call witnesses enough to confront the slander.
|
||
[1.] They would have it thought that they had served God and had
|
||
kept his ordinances, whereas it was only the external observance of
|
||
them that they had kept up, while they were perfect strangers to
|
||
the inward part of the duty, and therefore might say, It is <i>in
|
||
vain.</i> God says so (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p23.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.9" parsed="|Matt|15|9|0|0" passage="Mt 15:9">Matt. xv.
|
||
9</scripRef>), <i>In vain do those worship me</i> whose <i>hearts
|
||
are far from me</i> while they <i>draw near with their mouth;</i>
|
||
but whose fault is that? Not God's, who is the rewarder of those
|
||
that seek him diligently, but theirs who seek him carelessly. [2.]
|
||
They insisted much upon it that they had <i>walked mournfully</i>
|
||
before God, whereas God had required them to serve him with
|
||
gladness, and to walk cheerfully before him. They by their own
|
||
superstitions made the service of God a task and drudgery to
|
||
themselves, and then complained of it as a hard service. The yoke
|
||
of Christ is easy; it is the yoke of antichrist that is heavy. [3.]
|
||
They complained that they had got nothing by their religion; they
|
||
were still in poverty and affliction, and behindhand in the world.
|
||
This is an old piece of impiety. <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p23.3" osisRef="Bible:Job.21.14-Job.21.15" parsed="|Job|21|14|21|15" passage="Job 21:14,15">Job xxi. 14, 15</scripRef>, <i>What profit shall we
|
||
have if we pray unto him?</i> Elihu charges Job with saying
|
||
something like this. <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p23.4" osisRef="Bible:Job.34.9" parsed="|Job|34|9|0|0" passage="Job 34:9">Job xxxiv.
|
||
9</scripRef>, <i>It profits a man nothing that he should delight
|
||
himself with God.</i> The enemies of religion do but set up against
|
||
it the old cavils that have been long since answered and exploded.
|
||
Perhaps this refers to the errors of the sect of the Sadducees,
|
||
which was the scandal of the Jewish church in its latter days; they
|
||
denied a future state, and then said, It is <i>vain to serve
|
||
God,</i> which has indeed some colour in it, for, <i>if in this
|
||
life only we had hope in Christ, we were of all men most
|
||
miserable,</i> <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p23.5" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.15.19" parsed="|1Cor|15|19|0|0" passage="1Co 15:19">1 Cor. xv.
|
||
19</scripRef>. Note, Those do a great deal of wrong to God's honour
|
||
who say that religion is either an unprofitable or an unpleasant
|
||
thing; for the matter is not so: wisdom's <i>ways are
|
||
pleasantness,</i> and wisdom's gains better than that of <i>fine
|
||
gold.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p24" shownumber="no">(2.) They maintained that wickedness was
|
||
the way to prosperity, for they had observed that the <i>workers of
|
||
wickedness</i> were set up in the world, and those that <i>tempted
|
||
God</i> were <i>delivered,</i> <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p24.1" osisRef="Bible:Mal.3.15" parsed="|Mal|3|15|0|0" passage="Mal 3:15"><i>v.</i> 15</scripRef>. The outward prosperity of
|
||
sinners in their sins, as it has weakened the hands of the godly in
|
||
their godliness (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p24.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.13" parsed="|Ps|73|13|0|0" passage="Ps 73:13">Ps. lxxiii.
|
||
13</scripRef>), so it has strengthened the hands of the wicked in
|
||
their wickedness. Note, [1.] Those that work wickedness tempt God
|
||
by presumptuous sins; they do, as it were, try God, whether he can
|
||
and will punish them as he has said in his word, and, in effect,
|
||
challenge him to do his worst, by provoking him in the highest
|
||
degree. [2.] Those that tempt God by their wicked works are many
|
||
times both delivered out of the adversity into which they were
|
||
justly brought and advanced to the prosperity which they were
|
||
utterly unworthy of. They are not only set up once, but when we
|
||
thought their day had come to fall, and they were in trouble, they
|
||
were delivered and set up again; so strangely did Providence seem
|
||
to smile upon them. [3.] Though it be thus, yet it will not warrant
|
||
us to <i>call the proud happy.</i> For they may be delivered and
|
||
set up for a while, but it will appear that God resists them, and
|
||
that their pride is a preface to their fall; and, if so, they are
|
||
truly miserable, and it is folly to call them happy, and to bless
|
||
those whom the Lord abhors. Wait awhile, and you shall see <i>those
|
||
that work wickedness set up</i> as a mark to the arrows of God's
|
||
vengeance, and <i>those that tempt God delivered</i> to the
|
||
tormentors. Judge of things as they will appear shortly, when the
|
||
doom of these proud sinners (which follows here, <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p24.3" osisRef="Bible:Mal.4.1" parsed="|Mal|4|1|0|0" passage="Mal 4:1"><i>ch.</i> iv. 1</scripRef>) comes to be executed to the
|
||
utmost.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p25" shownumber="no">II. Here is the gracious notice God takes
|
||
of the pious talk of the saints in Zion, and the gracious
|
||
recompence of it. Even in this corrupt and degenerate age, when
|
||
there was so great a decay, nay, so great a contempt, of serious
|
||
godliness, there were yet some that retained their integrity and
|
||
zeal for God; and let us see,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p26" shownumber="no">1. How they distinguished themselves, and
|
||
what their character was; it was the reverse of theirs that spoke
|
||
so much against God; for, (1.) They <i>feared the Lord</i>—that is
|
||
the beginning of wisdom and the root of all religion; they
|
||
reverenced the majesty of God, submitted to his authority, and had
|
||
a dread of his wrath in all they thought and said; they humbly
|
||
complied with God, and never spoke any stout words against him. In
|
||
every age there has been a remnant that feared the Lord, though
|
||
sometimes but a little remnant. (2.) They <i>thought upon his
|
||
name;</i> they seriously considered and frequently mediated upon
|
||
the discoveries God has made of himself in his word and by his
|
||
providences, and their <i>mediation of him</i> was <i>sweet</i> to
|
||
them and influenced them. They <i>thought on his name;</i> they
|
||
consulted the honour of God and aimed at that as their ultimate end
|
||
in all they did. Note, Those that know the name of God should often
|
||
think of it and dwell upon it in their thoughts; it is a copious
|
||
curious subject, and frequent thoughts of it will contribute very
|
||
much to our communion with God and the stirring up of our devout
|
||
affections to him. (3.) They <i>spoke often one to another</i>
|
||
concerning the God they feared, and that name of his which they
|
||
thought so much of; for out of the abundance of the heart the mouth
|
||
will speak, and a good man, out of a <i>good treasure</i> there,
|
||
will <i>bring forth good things. Those that feared the Lord</i>
|
||
kept together as those that were company for each other; they spoke
|
||
kindly and endearingly one to another, for the preserving and
|
||
promoting of mutual love, that that might not <i>wax cold</i> when
|
||
<i>iniquity</i> did thus <i>abound.</i> They spoke intelligently
|
||
and edifyingly to one another, for the increasing and improving of
|
||
faith and holiness; they <i>spoke one to another</i> in the
|
||
language of those that fear the Lord and think on his name—the
|
||
language of Canaan. When profaneness had come to so great a height
|
||
as to trample upon all that is sacred, <i>then</i> those that
|
||
feared the Lord <i>spoke often one to another.</i> [1.] Then, when
|
||
iniquity was bold and barefaced, the people of God took courage,
|
||
and stirred up themselves, <i>the innocent against the
|
||
hypocrite,</i> <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p26.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.17.8" parsed="|Job|17|8|0|0" passage="Job 17:8">Job xvii. 8</scripRef>.
|
||
The worse others are the better we should be; when vice is daring,
|
||
let not virtue be sneaking. [2.] Then, when religion was reproached
|
||
and misrepresented, its friends did all they could to support the
|
||
credit of it and to keep it in countenance. It had been suggested
|
||
that the ways of God are melancholy unpleasant ways, solitary and
|
||
sorrowful; and therefore then those that feared God studied to
|
||
evince the contrary by their cheerfulness in mutual love and
|
||
converse, that they might <i>put to silence the ignorance of
|
||
foolish men.</i> [3.] Then, when seducers were busy to deceive and
|
||
to possess unwary souls with prejudices against religion, those
|
||
that feared God were industrious to arm themselves and one another
|
||
against the contagion by mutual instructions, excitements, and
|
||
encouragements, and to strengthen one another's hands. As evil
|
||
communication corrupts good minds and manners, so good
|
||
communication confirms them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p27" shownumber="no">2. How God dignified them, and what further
|
||
honour and favour he intended for them. Those who spoke stoutly
|
||
against God, no doubt looked with disdain and displeasure upon
|
||
those that feared him, hectored and bantered them; but they had
|
||
little reason to regard that, or be disturbed at it, when God
|
||
countenanced them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p28" shownumber="no">(1.) He took notice of their pious
|
||
discourses, and was graciously present at their conferences: <i>The
|
||
Lord hearkened and heard it,</i> and was well pleased with it. God
|
||
says (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p28.1" osisRef="Bible:Jer.8.6" parsed="|Jer|8|6|0|0" passage="Jer 8:6">Jer. viii. 6</scripRef>) that he
|
||
<i>hearkened and heard</i> what bad men would say, and they
|
||
<i>spoke not aright;</i> here he hearkened and heard what good men
|
||
did say, for they spoke aright. Note, The gracious God observes all
|
||
the gracious words that proceed out of the mouths of his people;
|
||
they need not desire that men may hear them, and commend them; let
|
||
them not seek praise from men by them, nor affect to be taken
|
||
notice of by them; but let it satisfy them that, be the conference
|
||
ever so private, God sees and hears in secret and will <i>reward
|
||
openly.</i> When the two disciples, going to Emmaus, were
|
||
discoursing concerning Christ, he hearkened and heard, and joined
|
||
himself to them, and made a third, <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p28.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.24.15" parsed="|Luke|24|15|0|0" passage="Lu 24:15">Luke xxiv. 15</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p29" shownumber="no">(2.) He kept an account of them: <i>A book
|
||
of remembrance was written before him.</i> Not that the Eternal
|
||
Mind needs to be reminded of things by books and writings, but it
|
||
is an expression after the manner of men, intimating that their
|
||
pious affections and performances are kept in remembrance as
|
||
punctually and particularly as if they were written in a book, as
|
||
if journals were kept of all their conferences. Great kings had
|
||
books of remembrance written, and read before them, in which were
|
||
entered all the services done them, when, and by whom, as <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p29.1" osisRef="Bible:Esth.2.23" parsed="|Esth|2|23|0|0" passage="Es 2:23">Esther ii. 23</scripRef>. God, in like manner,
|
||
remembers the services of his people, that, in the review of them,
|
||
he may say, <i>Well done; enter thou into the joy of thy Lord.</i>
|
||
God has a book for the sighs and tears of his mourners (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p29.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.56.8" parsed="|Ps|56|8|0|0" passage="Ps 56:8">Ps. lvi. 8</scripRef>), much more for the
|
||
pleadings of his advocates. Never was any good word spoken of God,
|
||
or for God, from an honest heart, but it was registered, that it
|
||
might be recompensed in the resurrection of the just, and in no
|
||
wise lose its reward.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p30" shownumber="no">(3.) He promises them a share in his glory
|
||
hereafter (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p30.1" osisRef="Bible:Mal.3.17" parsed="|Mal|3|17|0|0" passage="Mal 3:17"><i>v.</i> 17</scripRef>):
|
||
<i>They shall be mine, saith the Lord of hosts, in that day when I
|
||
make up my jewels.</i> When God utterly cuts off the Jewish church
|
||
and nation for their infidelity, the remnant among them, that
|
||
believed his word, and, having waited for the consolation of
|
||
Israel, welcome him when he comes, shall be admitted into the
|
||
Christian church, and shall become a peculiar people to God; God
|
||
will take care of them, that they <i>perish not with those that
|
||
believe not;</i> but that they be <i>hidden in the day of the
|
||
Lord's anger</i> against that nation. <i>They shall be my
|
||
segullah—my peculiar treasure</i> (it is the word used, <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p30.2" osisRef="Bible:Exod.19.5" parsed="|Exod|19|5|0|0" passage="Ex 19:5">Exod. xix. 5</scripRef>), <i>in the day when I
|
||
make</i> or <i>do</i> what I have said and designed to do; so some
|
||
read it. These pious ones shall have all the glorious privileges of
|
||
God's Israel appropriated to them and centering in them; they shall
|
||
now be his peculiar treasure, when the rest are rejected; they
|
||
shall now be the vessels of mercy and honour, when the rest are
|
||
made vessels of wrath and dishonour, vessels in which is no
|
||
pleasure. This may be applied to all the faithful people of God,
|
||
and the distinction he will put between them and others in the
|
||
great day. Note, [1.] The saints are God's jewels; they are highly
|
||
esteemed by him and are dear to him; they are comely with the
|
||
comeliness that he puts upon them, and he is pleased to glory in
|
||
them; they are a <i>royal diadem</i> in his hand, <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p30.3" osisRef="Bible:Isa.62.3" parsed="|Isa|62|3|0|0" passage="Isa 62:3">Isa. lxii. 3</scripRef>. He looks upon them as
|
||
his own proper goods, his choice goods, his treasure, laid up in
|
||
his cabinet, and the furniture of his closet, <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p30.4" osisRef="Bible:Ps.135.4" parsed="|Ps|135|4|0|0" passage="Ps 135:4">Ps. cxxxv. 4</scripRef>. The rest of the world is but
|
||
lumber, in comparison with them. [2.] There is a day coming when
|
||
God will <i>make up his jewels.</i> They shall be gathered up out
|
||
of the dirt into which they are now thrown, and gathered together
|
||
from all places to which they are now scattered; he shall <i>send
|
||
forth his angels</i> to <i>gather his elect,</i> who are his
|
||
jewels, <i>from the four winds of heaven</i> (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p30.5" osisRef="Bible:Matt.24.31" parsed="|Matt|24|31|0|0" passage="Mt 24:31">Matt. xxiv. 31</scripRef>), to gather his jewels into
|
||
his jewel-house, as the wheat from several fields into the barn.
|
||
All the saints will then be gathered to Christ, and none but
|
||
saints, and saints made perfect; then God's jewels will be made up,
|
||
as stones into a crown, as stars into a constellation. [3.] Those
|
||
who now own God for theirs, he will then own for his, will publicly
|
||
confess them before angels and men: "<i>They shall be mine;</i>
|
||
their sanctification shall be completed, and so they shall be
|
||
perfectly and entirely mine, without any remaining interests of the
|
||
world and the flesh." Their relation to God shall be acknowledged,
|
||
and his property in them. He will separate them from those that are
|
||
not his, and give them their portion with those that are his; for
|
||
to them it shall be said, <i>Come, you blessed of my Father,
|
||
inherit the kingdom prepared for you.</i> They were in doubt,
|
||
sometimes, whether they were belonging to God or no; but the matter
|
||
shall then be put out of doubt. God himself will say unto them,
|
||
<i>You are mine. Now</i> their relation to God is what they are
|
||
reproached with, but it will then be gloried in; God himself will
|
||
glory in it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p31" shownumber="no">(4.) He promises them a share in his grace
|
||
now: <i>I will spare them as a man spares his own son that serves
|
||
him.</i> God had promised to own them as his and take them to be
|
||
with him; but it might be a discouragement to them to think that
|
||
they had offended God, and that he might justly disown them, and
|
||
cast them off; but, as to that, he says, "<i>I will spare them;</i>
|
||
I will not deal with them as they deserve. <i>I will rejoice over
|
||
them</i>" (so some expound it) "as the bridegroom over his bride,"
|
||
<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p31.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.62.5 Bible:Zeph.3.17" parsed="|Isa|62|5|0|0;|Zeph|3|17|0|0" passage="Isa 62:5,Zep 3:17">Isa. lxii. 5; Zeph. iii.
|
||
17</scripRef>. But the word usually signifies to spare with
|
||
commiseration and compassion, <i>as a father pities his
|
||
children,</i> <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p31.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.103.13" parsed="|Ps|103|13|0|0" passage="Ps 103:13">Ps. ciii.
|
||
13</scripRef>. Note, [1.] It is our duty to serve God with the
|
||
disposition of children. We must be his sons, must by a new birth
|
||
partake of a divine nature, must consent to the covenant of
|
||
adoption and partake of the spirit of adoption. And we must be his
|
||
servants; God will not have his children trained up in idleness;
|
||
they must do him service, and they must do it from a principle of
|
||
love, with cheerfulness and delight, and as those that are therein
|
||
serving their own true interest, and this is serving as <i>a son
|
||
with the father,</i> <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p31.3" osisRef="Bible:Phil.2.22" parsed="|Phil|2|22|0|0" passage="Php 2:22">Phil. ii.
|
||
22</scripRef>. [2.] If we serve God with the disposition of
|
||
children, he will spare us with the tenderness and compassion of a
|
||
Father. Even God's children that serve him stand in need of sparing
|
||
mercy, that mercy to which we owe it that we are not consumed, that
|
||
mercy which keeps us out of hell. Nehemiah, when he had done much
|
||
good, yet, knowing there is not a <i>just man on earth,</i> that
|
||
<i>does good and sins not,</i> and that every sin deserves God's
|
||
wrath, prays, <i>Lord, spare me according to the greatness of thy
|
||
mercy;</i> see <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p31.4" osisRef="Bible:Neh.13.22" parsed="|Neh|13|22|0|0" passage="Ne 13:22">Neh. xiii.
|
||
22</scripRef>. And God, as a Father, will show them this mercy. He
|
||
will not be extreme to mark what we do amiss, but will make the
|
||
best of us and our poor performances; he will mitigate the
|
||
afflictions his children are exercised with, and save them from the
|
||
ruin they deserve. The father continues to spare the son, and does
|
||
it with complacency, because he is his own; thus God will spare
|
||
humble penitents and petitioners, <i>as a man spares his son that
|
||
serves him,</i> though we do him so little service, nay, though we
|
||
do him so much disservice.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Mal.iv-p32" shownumber="no">3. How they will thus be distinguished from
|
||
the children of this world (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p32.1" osisRef="Bible:Mal.3.18" parsed="|Mal|3|18|0|0" passage="Mal 3:18"><i>v.</i>
|
||
18</scripRef>): "<i>Then shall you return, and discern between the
|
||
righteous and the wicked,</i> between sinners and saints, between
|
||
those that <i>serve God</i> and make conscience of their duty to
|
||
him and those that <i>serve him not,</i> but put contempt upon his
|
||
service. You that now speak against God as making no difference
|
||
between good and bad, and therefore say, <i>It is in vain to serve
|
||
him</i> (<scripRef id="Mal.iv-p32.2" osisRef="Bible:Mal.3.14" parsed="|Mal|3|14|0|0" passage="Mal 3:14"><i>v.</i> 14</scripRef>), you
|
||
shall be made to see your error; you that would speak for God, but
|
||
know not what to say as to this, that there seems to be <i>one
|
||
event to the righteous and to the wicked,</i> and <i>all things
|
||
come alike to all,</i> will then have the matter set in a true
|
||
light, and will see, to your everlasting satisfaction, the
|
||
difference between the righteous and the wicked. Then <i>you shall
|
||
return,</i> that is, you shall <i>change you mind,</i> and come to
|
||
a right understanding of the thing." This primarily respects the
|
||
manifest difference that was made by the divine Providence between
|
||
the believing Jews and those that persisted in their infidelity, at
|
||
the time of the destruction of Jerusalem, and of the Jewish church
|
||
and nation, by the Romans. But it is to have its full
|
||
accomplishment at the second coming of Jesus Christ, and on that
|
||
great discriminating day when it shall be easy enough to <i>discern
|
||
between the righteous</i> and <i>the wicked.</i> Note, (1.) All the
|
||
children of men are either righteous or wicked, either such as
|
||
serve God or such as serve him not. This is that division of the
|
||
children of men which will last for ever, and by which their
|
||
eternal state will be determined; all are going either to heaven or
|
||
to hell. (2.) In this world it is often hard to <i>discern between
|
||
the righteous and the wicked.</i> They are mingled together, good
|
||
fish and bad in the same net. The righteous are so distempered, and
|
||
the wicked so disguised, that we are often deceived in our opinions
|
||
concerning both the one and the other. There are many who, we
|
||
think, serve God, who, having not their hearts right with him, will
|
||
be found none of his servants; and, on the other hand, many will be
|
||
found his faithful servants, who, because they followed not with
|
||
us, did not, as we thought, serve him. But that which especially
|
||
raised the difficulty here was that the divine Providence seemed to
|
||
make no difference between the righteous and the wicked; you could
|
||
not know wicked men by God's frowning upon them, for they commonly
|
||
prospered in the world, nor righteous men by his smiling upon them,
|
||
for they were involved with others in the same common calamity.
|
||
None now knows God's <i>love or hatred</i> by <i>all that is before
|
||
him,</i> <scripRef id="Mal.iv-p32.3" osisRef="Bible:Eccl.9.1" parsed="|Eccl|9|1|0|0" passage="Ec 9:1">Eccl. ix. 1</scripRef>. (3.) At
|
||
the bar of Christ, in the last judgment, it will be easy to
|
||
<i>discern between the righteous and the wicked;</i> for then every
|
||
man's character will be both perfected and perfectly discovered,
|
||
every man will then appear in his true colours, and his disguises
|
||
will be taken off. Some men's sins indeed go beforehand, and you
|
||
may now tell who is wicked, but others follow after; however, in
|
||
the great day, we shall see who was righteous and who wicked. Every
|
||
man's condition likewise will be both perfected and everlastingly
|
||
determined; the righteous will then be perfectly happy and the
|
||
wicked perfectly miserable, without mixture or allay. When the
|
||
righteous are all set on the right hand of Christ, and invited to
|
||
come for a blessing, and all the wicked on his left hand, and are
|
||
told to depart with a curse, then it will be easy to discern
|
||
between them. As to ourselves, therefore, we are concerned to think
|
||
among which we shall have our lot, and, as to others, we must
|
||
<i>judge nothing before the time.</i></p>
|
||
</div></div2> |