Wednesday, December 9, 2015

World Religions

Sometimes the best way to study for me, is write about what I am studying.

The next series of Blog post will be about the Following World Religions:

  • Chinese Popular religions.
  • Islam
  • Judaism
  • Roman Catholicism
  • Eastern Orthodoxy

Saturday, December 5, 2015

Malachi: Conclusion and Applications



Recapitulation

The Lord is Faithful to his Covenant, while the people are not, but the Lord will remain faithful until the very end. The writing of Malachi is made up of six rebukes against the people of Israel in the post-exilic era. The first rebuke concerns the failure of Israel to see that God has loved them, and is being faithful to his covenant. Israel must only look to Edom to realize how God has loved them. Secondly, the priests are being rebuked for despising the name of the Lord by neglecting the offering and their task as ministers of the Law, they must repent. Thirdly, the people have acted treacherously against their wives by divorcing them and getting married to foreign women. The men must remain in a good disposition and not act treacherously towards their wives. The fifth rebukes concerns the tithe. The people have neglected the offering. They have not only robbed God, but the whole nation. The Lord invites them to test him, to see if he does not bless them, if they give him what he is due. In the sixth rebuke, the people are being corrected for putting into question the Lord’s justice.

Application

Six rebukes are being made in the writing of Malachi. Many applications can be drawn from them as they deal with a variety of topics. I think the rebukes can for the most part be explained by the fact that the people are not giving God their best.
1)      We must contemplate God’s love for us. Do we ever act like we forget that God loves us? Do we forget that while we were enemies of God, he sent his son to die for us? We can just look around us and see everything that is evil, all the misery and know that Christ was the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world, and the one who heals us by his stripes. We can rejoice, knowing that God loves, and that he is indeed great in the whole world.
2)      Leaders in the church must take their role seriously. We see that those in leadership were despising the name of the Lord. Can we expect that from our pastors today? There are so many scandals, pastors falling into sin patterns. Pastors will have to give an account for those they are leading. They must be examples to the flock. It was the role of the priests to examine the animals being sacrifices, it was their responsibility to correct people, rather than please them. Leaders of the church have the same responsibility to be deeply indwelt by the word of God, and guide the people in the Christian walks in ways that are pleasing to the Lord, and correct when necessary.
3)      We must offer proper worship to God. We need to be careful in our worship services that we are not simply going through the motions. The words that we sing are one thing, but God looks to the heart, we cannot fool him. While the burn offerings were completely pointless, if they are just a ritual, so is our singing at church.
4)      We must honor God, rather that do a list of tasks. In Malachi 2:2 we see that the end of the law was to honor God. We can think that some behavior is more “Christian” than other kinds of behaviors. Being a Christian is not at all about following certain patterns of behavior, it is first of all about seeking to please the Lord, which will lead into living in a specific way, but not the other way around. You can live in ways that might seem right, but God knows the intentions of our hearts, if we are not living for him, our religious lifestyle is not worth anything.
5)      Let the Word of God abide in you. The Priests were ministers of God’s Word. People were to go to them for instruction. Pastors among other things must be known for their knowledge of God’s word. Because we now have a priesthood of all believers, we must also train all Christians in the word of God, to be keepers of his word.
6)      Be generous in your offering. It is interesting to see that the tithe not only robs God but the whole nation. We are very quick to jump to sayings such as: “I do not have to do anything, because I am not under the law!” When people do not give to the church, it hurts the church. More missionaries could be sent out, more ministries could be available in the church, if there was more money. When we refuse to give, we are robbing the whole church.
7)      Serve God because he is God, rather than what you get out of it. Often it does seem like there is no blessing that comes from serving the Lord. It is those who do not believe who seem to be prospering, maybe even those we know who are evil. We can remain steadfast in our faith, knowing that God is just. When final judgment does come on the day of the Lord, he will spare us as a father spares his son serving him.
8)      Live in a way, remembering the past, and looking forward to the future. How we live as Christians can be informed in two ways but us looking back to scripture and seeing how it teaches us to live, but also looking forward, to the return of Christ which is still to come. We must live in a way, they he would find us at any time, living in a manner worthy of his calling on our lives.

Malachi 3:22-24 Canon Bridge



These final verses, not only end Malachi, they end the book of The Twelve, the prophets and connect the prophets to the third section of the Canonical Hebrew Bible, the Writings. This closing is twofold. It urges the people to look back to the Law of Moses, and also to look forward to a time when the Lord will send his messenger.

Malachi 3:22 Look back to the Law

The Lord urges the people to remember the instruction of Moses. This has been the theme throughout the Prophets. From Joshua 1:7 “to keep to doing all of the instruction that I commanded to Moses my servant” (לִשְׁמֹר לַעֲשׂוֹת כְּ‍כָל־הַתּוֹרָה אֲשֶׁר צִוְּךָ מֹשֶׁה עַבְדִּי) with very similar words in Malachi 3:22 (תּוֹרַת מֹשֶׁה עַבְדִּי אֲשֶׁר צִוִּיתִי אוֹתוֹ), closing the Prophets with an inclusio. In the Septuagint this verse is placed as the very last verse.

Malachi 3:23-24 Look forward to Elijah

The second element we have in this final section is a call to look forward to Elijah. This is a parallel to Malachi 3:1 where the Lord was warning of a time he would send his messenger. In BHS, the one being sent is “אֵלִיָּה הַנָּבִיא” (Elijah the Prophet) while the Septuagint has “Ηλιαν τὸν Θεσβίτην” (Elijah the Tishbite). It seems the Hebrew keep the identity of the prophet vague. The Septuagint narrows it down, but they might be going too far. The messenger to come might not be the exact same as “Elijah the Tishbite”. In the New Testament, John the Baptist is connected to Elijah. Jesus talking about John the Baptist, said that he was Elijah who was to come. (Matthew 11:14, 17:1-5).
We know the Elijah who is still to come before the coming of the great and feared day of the Lord. His ministry is described in the final verse with his purpose. The Elijah who was to come was going to turn the hearts of the fathers to the sons, and the hearts of the sons to the father, for the purpose of avoiding God’s wrath, the smiting of the land with a ban (וְהִכֵּיתִי אֶת־הָאָרֶץ חֵרֶם). וְהִכֵּיתִי אֶת־הָאָרֶץ חֵרֶם literally “I will smite the land (with) a ban”, to be understood as completely, if we see how the Septuagint reads it (ἄρδην).  In Luke 2:16-17 an angel of the Lord speaking to Zechariah and said concerning John the Baptist, that he would turn many people to the Lord, and going before the Lord, in the spirit and power of Elijah, he would turn the fathers hearts to the children, and connecting Malachi 3:24 to Malachi 3:1 he also mentions that he would prepare the people. 
The concluding paragraph speaks of the day of the Lord, and of what will happen before it. Two names are mentioned, Moses, and Elijah. Moses gave the Torah, and according to Deuteronomy 34:10 is the greatest prophet, at the coming of the Lord, Israel needs to be living according to this law. Before the day of the Lord, Elijah will also return, he did not die, was taken up to heaven, he will come as a messenger to precede the Lord and reconcile a father to his sons, so that they will not be subject to Judgment.[1]

Malachi 3 and Deuteronomy 34

As one of the two seals of the Old Testament, connecting the prophets to the writings, it is interesting to compare Malachi 3:22-24 to Deuteronomy 34:5-12, which is the other seal, as both have a lot in common. Deuteronomy 34 focuses on Moses who is the key prophet in the Torah, while the end of Malachi 3 focuses on Elijah, the key prophet in the Prophets. Both passages stress the role of Moses and the Law, both call Moses a servant of the Lord. The same way Malachi anticipates the coming if Elijah, in Deuteronomy 34, we see that when the Canon took its final form, we have in Deuteronomy 34:10 a comment implying that the prophet like Moses spoken about in Deuteronomy 18:15-18 had not yet come, and is still to be anticipated.[2]  


[1] Rendtorff, The Canonical Hebrew Bible, 311-12.
[2] John H. Sailhamer, The Canonical Approach to the OT: “Its effect on understanding Prophecy” Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society  30 no.3 (September 1987): 314.

Malachi 3:13-21 Rebuke 6: People not trusting in God justice over the wicked and the righteous.


In the final section of this writing, the Lord rebukes the people for not trusting in his justice. The Lord clearly shows the wicked will be separated from the righteous. This idea was already treated in Malachi 3:3-5, but also in the following chapter in the canonical Bible, Psalm 1.

Malachi 3:13-15 A wrong view of God’s justice

To lead into the subject of the separation of the righteous from the wicked, this section begins with some confusion over God’s justice. Those serving him do not understand the benefits and furthermore, they see that those who do evil are prospering. This misunderstanding is dealt with by the end of this section. The righteous will indeed be blessed, and the wicked will perish.
The rebuke begins with a sixth verbal exchange, between the Lord and the people. The Lord’s statement is: “Your words are hard against me.” The objection follows, but this time we have “מַה” instead of “בַּמֶּה”.  If it was the latter: “Ἐν τίνι”, the Septuagint could have a different vorlage or it could be that they are following the pattern of the rest of the text. The people object: “What have we said (נִּדְבַּרְנוּ) to one another concerning you?”  נִּדְבַּרְנוּ is a Niphal so the verb is reflexive, the people are talking among themselves.[1] The Lord tells them exactly what they said:  “it is vain to serve the Lord, what profit because we keep his charge and we walk (as) mourners before the Lord of Hosts.”, “and now we called blessed the insolent, the ones doing evil are established, also they test God and they escape (וַיִּמָּלֵטוּ)”. וַיִּמָּלֵטוּ  the waw is for sequence, they test the Lord and then they escape.  The people’s words are hard concerning the Lord because they have a skewed view of his justice. The proper perspective follows and it is attributed to those who fear the Lord.

Malachi 3:16-17 A right perspective on God’s Justice

In Malachi 3:16-17 we get a corrected view on how God deals with those fearing him. Those who fear the Lord know that the Lord attends and he listens and he writes a scroll of remembrance before him. The Lord confirms this in Malachi 3:17, adding that those fearing him will be a possession for the day of the Lord, they will be spared, as a son spares his son serving him.

Malachi 3:18 Truth will be seen on judgment day

In Malachi 3:7 there was a call to turn to the Lord, in 3:18 the Lord says that the will indeed turn and they will see, that there is indeed justice. They will see the difference between the righteous and the wicked, the one serving God and the one not serving God.

Malachi 3:19-21 The Day of the Lord

The Day of Judgment as we saw in section 4 has two sides to it, for the wicked it is judgment, and for the righteous it is cleansing.

Malachi 3:19 Judgment 

For the wicked the day of judgment is coming, burning like an oven and all the insolent and the wicked will be chaff and the coming day will blaze them. This is such a different picture than the false view of the Lord’s justice in Malachi 3:15 where this same group was being called blessed. This blazing will not leave them anything (שֹׁרֶשׁ וְעָנָף). שֹׁרֶשׁ וְעָנָף literally translates “a root and a branch”. It is a merism taking opposite ends, the root and the branch are the parts furthest away from each other in a tree to communicate totality. 
This message is really severe, there is nothing positive or comforting about this judgment, and this must be communicated when we talk about final judgment in our preaching.

Malachi 3:20 Healing

To talk about the positive side of the Day of the Lord, there is a change from the third person, to God addressing his people directly in the second person. The group receiving blessing is now call “יִרְאֵי שְׁמִי” (the ones fearing my name) rather than “יִרְאֵי יְהוָה” (the ones fearing the Lord). For them the sun of righteousness shall rise (שֶׁמֶשׁ צְדָקָה) and healing in her wings (וּמַרְפֵּא בִּכְנָפֶיהָ) and they will go out and the will spring about like calves from a stall (וִיצָאתֶם וּפִשְׁתֶּם כְּ‍עֶגְלֵי מַרְבֵּק). Verse 20 is very figurative and must be understood as a description of the blessing. First because it is related to those fearing God, whose destiny is going to be different from the wicked, who are destroyed.
The sun of righteousness is placed in contrast to the day burning like an oven for the insolent and those doing evil. This expression is only used here in the Bible. The sun being so pervasive, the image gives the idea that with the day of the Lord, righteousness will pervade.[2] “It’s wings” (בִּכְנָפֶיהָ) referring to the sun, agreeing with its feminine gender could be understood as the sun rays in the imagery.[3]
The main idea is that rather than being burned, it is healing (מַרְפֵּא) that they receive. The verse ends with a simile: the picture of those fearing the Lord’s name will be springing about as calves of a stall. It must be assumed that these calves have been let out from a stall, and are enjoying their freedom.

Malachi 3:21 the right order of things 

In verse 21, we have a real answer for those who think that it was vain to serve God, because it was the wicked who were being blessed. In this verse, the Lord tells the righteous that they will crush the wicked, and they will be ash under the soles of their feet. These things will happen on the coming day of the Lord.  


[1] Gesenius, Gesenius’ Hebrew Grammar, 137.
[2]Walvoord, Zuck, The Bible Knowledge Commentary, 1587.
[3]John Merlin Powis Smith and Julius August Bewer, A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on Haggai, Zechariah, Malachi and Jonah (New York: C. Scribner's sons, 1912), 80.

Malachi 3:6-12 Rebuke 5: The people are robbing God



The fifth section contains a rebuke of the people of Israel for robbing God.
The section begins with a statement about God’s faithfulness. Because the Lord does not change, the people of Israel will not perish. If he does not change, he will always be faithful to his promises. It is because of his faithfulness, that the sons of Jacob do not perish, even if they do deserve it. This was similar to Malachi 2:4, where because of the covenant, the punishment for despising the Lord was only a rebuke.
Since Israel has been God’s people, they have turned aside from his statutes. The Lord commands them to return (שׁוּבוּ qal imperative) and he will return to them. We find our fifth verbal exchange, this one again between the Lord and the people. As if they did not think they were doing anything wrong, they ask: “How can we return?” The Lord points out that they are robbing him, this is the fifth rebuke in Malachi. They still do not see what he means, and so the Lord tells that that they have robbed him by not paying the tithe and contribution.
The people have been cursed, and they have robbed the Lord, and the whole nation in neglecting their contribution. The Lord commands them to bring their tithe to the house of treasury and it will be food.  He commands them to test him, and he makes the promise that if they tithe he will bless them in abundance. The expressions used are “אֶפְתַּח לָכֶם אֵת אֲרֻבּוֹת הַשָּׁמַיִם” and “וַהֲרִיקֹתִי לָכֶם בְּרָכָה עַד־בְּלִי־דָי׃” the first literally God says: “I will open for you the window of heaven” and the second: “I will cause it to empty for you a blessing until there is not sufficiency.”
In verses 11-12 the promise of blessing continues. The Lord will rebuke the one eating (devouring) them and he will not ruin the fruit of his land and the vine will not be barren. All the nations will call them blessed because they will have a land of delight.

Malachi 2:17-3:5 Rebuke 4: The people are doubting the Lord is Just



Malachi 2:17 Fourth verbal exchange

The fourth section is a rebuke for the people’s lack of trust in the Lord. It begins with the fourth verbal exchange. The Lord’s statement against them is that they are causing him to become weary with their words. They object, by asking how that is so. They have wearied the Lord by saying “all doing evil are good in the eyes of the Lord and he delights in them”, or “where is the Lord of judgment?” Both these statements are going to be dealt with. First the second, with the coming of the Lord, and then with what really happens to the ones doing evil.

Malachi 3:1-2 The Lord’s Messenger, the Lord and the messenger of the Covenant

In response to the second statement, the Lord says that he is sending his messenger[1] and he will prepare (וּפִנָּה)[2] the way before him. Suddenly, the lord (הָאָדוֹן)[3] who the people are seeking will enter into his temple. The messenger of the covenant, in whom the people are delighting, will enter. Normally instead of הָאָדוֹן we have had יְהוָה. We have good reasons to believe that it refers to the same person. First because the Septuagint translates it κύριος and secondly, because the individual entering his temple (הֵיכָלוֹ) which can only be appropriate if it referred to the Lord himself.  
So far we have three people mentioned: the messenger who prepares the way, the Lord entering his temple, and the messenger of the covenant. The first two are definitely distinct, but who is the messenger of the covenant?
This messenger of the covenant is placed in parallel to the Lord. To connect these two we can look to Jeremiah 31 where the messenger of the covenant can be something in the future connected with Jesus’ prophetic ministry. It would seem from the following verse that only talks about the coming of one person, so the Lord and the messenger of the covenant are the same person.
The beginning of Malachi 3 connects well with other parts of the Bible. In Matthew 11, John the Baptist is seen as the one preparing the way for the Lord, “the Elijah who was to come (Mat 11:14). John the Baptist has a significant role in all the gospels he is doing the preparatory work. After him, the people are then waiting for the Lord. In Exodus 23:20 the Lord send his angel ahead of the people to bring them to a place he had prepared for them. In this case, the angel prepare the way for a new era, also talked about in Jeremiah 31, the prophetic era is coming to an end.

Malachi 3:3-5 Purifying and Cleansing

With the entering of the Lord, and the coming of the messenger of the covenant who are the same person, comes purifying and cleansing judgment. These are the same things John the Baptist says about Jesus in Matthew 3:11.The positive aspect of the refining is given in Malachi 3:3-4, and the negative aspect in verse 5.
The purifier will sit (וְיָשַׁב) and cleansing silver and he will cleanse the sons of Levi and he will purify them as gold and silver, and then will bringing an offering to the Lord in righteousness. The offering of Judah and Jerusalem will be pleasing to the Lord as they were before. A cleansing of the priests produces a trickle affect which then falls upon all of Judah and Jerusalem. 
In verse 5 we have the negative side of judgment. This verse shows what really happens to those doing evil. The Lord will draw closer to them and he will bear witness against sinners: sorcerers, adulterers, those who lie, those who extort the wages of their hired worker, those who oppress widows and orphans, and deal badly with the sojourner. The Lord is coming to judge, and they, they will not fear him.


[1] מַלְאָכִי « my messenger » has been translated as a name « Malachi » in Malachi 1:1, but here it is exactly the same and remains “my messenger”. In Malachi 2:7 the priests are called messengers of the Lord, and so we can see that there seems to be a connection between prophets, priests and messengers of the Lord. We see this also when we see that Jeremiah was a priest (Jer 1:1) and so was Ezekiel (Ezekiel 1:3). 
[2] In the piel means to make clear, free from obstacles, Brown, Driver, Briggs, The Brown-Driver-Briggs Hebrew and English Lexicon, 815.
[3] This is the first time this form appears in this writing.