|
Malachi 2
Last week
we looked at the book of Malachi and were introduced to the
Israelites as they were around 430 BC. The Israelites had
returned to the Promised Land after the Babylonian captivity.
While there were 50,000 that left with Zerubabbel to return to
Jerusalem, this was in fact a small percentage of the Israelites
who were in Babylon.
The small
number of people interested in returning to the land of their
heritage and the area that was absolutely central to their
worship reflects the overall attitude of the people. Since that
time, a century had passed. Ezra and Nehemiah had lead smaller
groups back to the Promised Land and the walls around the city
had been rebuilt as well as the temple in Jerusalem.
The time
period that Malachi lived in should have been one of Israelite
renaissance. The people were back in the land God had given to
their ancestors. The temple had been rebuilt and worship had
been resumed. The people were no longer being held in captivity
in the idolatrous land
of Babylon.
Nevertheless, the people struggled in their faith. The people
saw that they were surrounded by enemies and they had become
discouraged. The people saw that they were small in number and
they did not possess nearly the amount of land that God had
promised them. And worst of all, the people were awaiting their
Messiah to come and rescue them from their enemies and it wasn’t
happening.
This
frustration quickly became reflected in their worship. The
people were half hearted in their worship and they presented
worthless sacrifices to God. This didn’t go unnoticed and God
told them that it would be better for them to close the doors of
the temple and stop offering sacrifices altogether than to offer
worthless ones. Worthless sacrifices simply made God angry.
Chapter
two of Malachi lays out two more problems that the Israelites of
this day. One problem was with their leaders. The other
problem was with the rest of the people.
1 "Listen, you
priests; this command is for you! 2 Listen to me and take it to
heart. Honor my name," says the LORD Almighty, "or I will bring
a terrible curse against you. I will curse even the blessings
you receive. Indeed, I have already cursed them, because you
have not taken my warning seriously. 3 I will rebuke your
descendants and splatter your faces with the dung of your
festival sacrifices, and I will add you to the dung heap.
Not only
had the people failed to honor the name of God, the priests had
likewise failed to honor God in their worship. As a nation’s
leaders go, so go the people. We can understand why the people
are offering worthless sacrifices. Their leadership is not
showing them any better of an example.
In my
senior year of college, somehow I ended up involved in student
government as the class chaplain. Don’t be impressed because it
had nothing to do with having the respect of my peers and more
with having to show up for chapel at the end of the semester
because I had already skipped too many times. Fortunately, the
position was largely just ceremonial.
Nevertheless, I declared myself to be the spiritual advisor for
my dorm. As the spiritual advisor, I handled such difficult
questions as, “Mike, should I go to class today?”
“You
should stay back at the dorm and play video games with me in the
lounge,” was typically the response. Also as the spiritual
advisor it was my duty to stay up late at night and let everyone
one else hang out in my room because their roommates actually
went to bed before 1 AM.
Fortunately my position held no actual significance. The
position of priest was obviously a much more important position
and the priests were setting a very bad example. And God had
declared that he would curse them because they had already been
warned and had not taken the warning seriously.
Not only
would the priests be cursed, they would be made unclean in the
eyes of God. God declares that he will splatter their faces
with what many translations translate as offal. This was part
of the intestinal tract of the sacrifice. It was a part that
was taken outside of the camp and disposed of because it was
unclean. It contained feces. God declared that because the
priests had failed to honor him, he would splatter this on their
faces and take them outside of the camp and place them in the
heap with the rest of it.
This
sounds disgusting and it absolutely is. Even worse was that for
an Israelite, this would have obviously made them unclean. As a
priest, this was even worse.
4 Then at last you
will know it was I who sent you this warning so that my covenant
with the Levites may continue," says the LORD Almighty. 5 "The
purpose of my covenant with the Levites was to bring life and
peace, and this is what I gave them. This called for reverence
from them, and they greatly revered me and stood in awe of my
name. 6 They passed on to the people all the truth they received
from me. They did not lie or cheat; they walked with me, living
good and righteous lives, and they turned many from lives of
sin. 7 The priests' lips should guard knowledge, and people
should go to them for instruction, for the priests are the
messengers of the LORD Almighty. 8 But not you! You have left
God's paths. Your 'guidance' has caused many to stumble into
sin. You have corrupted the covenant I made with the Levites,"
says the LORD Almighty. 9 "So I have made you despised and
humiliated in the eyes of all the people. For you have not
obeyed me but have shown partiality in your interpretation of
the law."
The
priests of Malachi’s day were not only poor leaders in the
example that they set, they gave bad advise as well. The
priests were descended from Levi and were among the Levites.
God had made a special covenant with them at the debacle of the
golden calf because they did not fall into sin and instead stood
with Moses. The Levites of Moses day revered God’s name. They
taught the people the truth that God had revealed to them. They
turned people away from sin.
Instead
the priests of this day had given bad advice to the Israelites.
As the dorm’s spiritual advisor, I am probably responsible for
some grade point averages being slightly lower than they might
have been. The priests are guilty of causing the Israelites to
fall into sin.
The
priests most likely saw the sacrifices that the Israelites were
offering and turned a blind eye to what was going on. Worse
yet, they may have even encouraged it saying, “It matters more
that you present a sacrifice if you can’t present an unblemished
one. It’s better to give something rather than nothing.”
Now here’s
where the correlation starts with everyone listening. As
Christians, we are called to be a kingdom of priests. We are
called to be witnesses to God. Everything that theses priests
were responsible for doing, we need to be doing as well.
Likewise,
my position as pastor is a lot more serious than that of the
dorm’s spiritual advisor. I should not turn a blind eye if the
people come to present worthless sacrifices to the Lord. This
has been going on far too much in churches across America
today.
In many
churches, the people have been offering worthless worship for
week after week, year after year, and the pastor does nothing
and says nothing. Either the pastor is too busy with the day to
day operations of the church or doesn’t care or is blind to the
spiritual condition of the church. As a leader it is the
pastor’s responsibility to stop the people from offering
worthless sacrifices.
In
Malachi’s day the priest must have reasoned that it was better
to offer any sacrifice even if it wasn’t what God had asked
for. Today, pastors make the mistake of believing that it is
more important for the people to be in the pew, even if they
aren’t worshipping God the way he has asked.
Pastors
should not be looking for pew fillers and look upon this as
worship. The “something is better than nothing” approach can’t
be tolerated. God didn’t tolerate this approach and pastors
should not be accepting of it either. When the church assembles
to worship God, that is what the people need to be doing. If
the people assemble to do anything other than worship, they need
to get out. The pastor should not allow the people to bring
worthless worship before God.
The second
half of Malachi chapter two is an unpopular portion of
scripture. It addresses marriage and divorce and obviously this
affects fully one half of the people in the United States
directly and even more indirectly because odds are good that
someone in your family is divorced.
10 Are we not all
children of the same Father? Are we not all created by the same
God? Then why are we faithless to each other, violating the
covenant of our ancestors? 11 In Judah, in Israel, and in
Jerusalem there is treachery, for the men of Judah have defiled
the LORD's beloved sanctuary by marrying women who worship
idols. 12 May the LORD cut off from the nation of Israel every
last man who has done this and yet brings an offering to the
LORD Almighty. 13 Here is another thing you do. You cover the
LORD's altar with tears, weeping and groaning because he pays no
attention to your offerings, and he doesn't accept them with
pleasure. 14 You cry out, "Why has the LORD abandoned us?" I'll
tell you why! Because the LORD witnessed the vows you and your
wife made to each other on your wedding day when you were young.
But you have been disloyal to her, though she remained your
faithful companion, the wife of your marriage vows. 15 Didn't
the LORD make you one with your wife? In body and spirit you are
his. And what does he want? Godly children from your union. So
guard yourself; remain loyal to the wife of your youth. 16 "For
I hate divorce!" says the LORD, the God of Israel. "It is as
cruel as putting on a victim's bloodstained coat," says the LORD
Almighty. "So guard yourself; always remain loyal to your wife."
Malachi
first addresses the situation of men and women who were
unequally yoked. The men had married women who worshipped other
gods. This is a very common problem in the history of Israel.
If not the root of the problem, certainly the best known example
of this is none other than King Solomon.
Solomon
had a multitude of foreign wives but polygamy wasn’t the main
issue. It was the fact that Solomon was lead astray by his
wives that lead to the problem. Despite building the
magnificent temple to the Lord, Solomon was also persuaded by
some of his wives to build temples to their gods as well.
While I
don’t believe that anything of this magnitude was happening
here, the men were nevertheless being led astray. Perhaps it
was their idolatrous wives that questioned why they sacrificed a
perfectly good lamb while there was a crippled one that was
likely to die that they could sacrifice.
These
things always start off simply enough, often even with good
intentions. The situation I constantly run across with
teenagers is the well intentioned girl who begins dating in
hopes of leading him to the Lord. Good intentions, but it
rarely works. One in a thousand times does this actually
happen. An illustration often used is a Christian standing on a
chair and a non-Christian standing on the floor. While the
Christian is trying to pull the non-Christian up, it is far
easier for them to be pulled off of the chair.
Whatever
the reasoning, the Israelites had fallen for it. The people had
taken foreign spouses and they were making foolish compromises.
The worst
part about this situation isn’t even the idolatrous spouses
though. It is the fact that the Israelites had left their godly
spouses to chase after the ungodly ones. The people were
flooding the Lord’s altar with tears, wanting to know why God
would not accept their sacrifices. They wanted to know why God
didn’t answer their prayers. It was because they had broken a
covenant they had made with their spouse.
Today,
most wedding vows end with something to the effect of, “what God
has joined together, let no man separate.” Marriage is
recognized as a union by God. God declared early on in Genesis
that the two would become one flesh. They would be united.
The
Israelites had taken a similar oath with God as a witness and
they had turned away from it. They had broken their oath. This
obviously did not make God happy.
Now, I’ll
back off here for a moment. Obviously there are a lot of people
who have broken their marriage vows. God isn’t thrilled about
this. I’m not going to sugarcoat that. There are usually
mitigating circumstances surrounding a divorce. On several
occasions I’ve been asked what to do if a woman is in an abusive
marriage. I’ve been asked about deadbeat husbands on drugs.
I’ve been asked about unfaithful spouses. Usually someone
doesn’t wake up one day and decide they are tired of being
married and get divorced.
I am not
passing judgment on anyone because it’s not my job. Where there
is sin, God will judge it accordingly. Divorce is not something
that God favors, but the Israelites had compounded their problem
greatly because of their remarriage.
It is one
thing to be a part of a divorce where you are the one who is
left. It is another thing to be the instigator of the divorce
as it appears the Israelite men were. They had grown tired of
their wives’ nuances, or their inability to cook, or maybe they
were just growing old, or didn’t look as good as they did ten
years before. So they went after someone who could cook,
someone who was younger, someone who was prettier, whatever the
case was.
This makes
God’s blood boil. You want to make God mad, this is the way.
God hates the divorce, He knows that nothing good is going to
come out of it. He’s mad because the couple made a vow before
Him that they would love one another and that nothing would
separate them. But what really made God angry at the Israelites
of Malachi’s day was that the people had left their wives for
simple foolish pleasures.
The King
James Version says in vs 16 that God hates, “one
(that) covereth violence with his garment”. The New
International version translates it in much the same way. This
didn’t make much sense to me until I read the New Living
Translation. It says, "For I hate
divorce!" says the LORD, the God of Israel. "It is as cruel as
putting on a victim's bloodstained coat."
The
picture I get is that it is not just the divorce that God hates,
but is the remarriage that is really detestable. It is horrible
to kill someone but it is despicable to then take the person’s
blood stained coat as well.
A lot more
can be said about divorce and remarriage. I’ve dwelt on it long
enough. If you haven’t before, I suggest reading Paul’s take on
divorce and remarriage in 1 Corinthians. The best advice on
marriage is quite possibly the simplest that God gives at the
end of verse 16. “Always be loyal to your spouse!” |