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Malachi 3
The book
of Malachi was written 2400 years ago to a handful of Israelites
who had returned to the Promised Land in hopes of restoring the
majesty and glory that was once there. Nevertheless, this book
is just as appropriate in our time and our country as it was in
Malachi’s day.
In the
first two chapters alone, Malachi has addressed the people’s
lack of reverence for God, the poor leadership coming from their
own priests, and the Israelites’ unfaithfulness to their spouses
and running after idolatrous foreigners. The report concerning
the Israelites is disheartening at best.
The people
of Malachi’s day had every reason to be following God closely.
They were the descendents of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob – they
were God’s chosen people. They had seen how throughout their
history God had consistently been with them and when trouble
fell upon them, it was not because God forgot about them or
didn’t care, it was because the people had forgotten about God
and didn’t care.
Likewise
we are part of the church, the body of Christ. The church has
been chosen by God to be a shining light to the world around
us. We too can look back at our own history and see how God has
been with the church and how God has not given up on us even
when it appeared the world had all but given up on God. And
still these problems have been just as prevalent today as they
were in Malachi’s day.
Starting
in Malachi 2:17, we see God has yet another charge against the
people. “You have wearied the Lord with your words. ‘How have
we wearied him?’ you ask. By saying, ‘All who do evil are good
in the eyes of the Lord, and he is pleased with them,’ or ‘Where
is the God of justice?’”
I imagine
we’ve all felt this way at some point in time. I know I
certainly have. As a Christian, life isn’t always a cake walk.
Things don’t always go our way or even turn out remotely like we
hope they would. Worse yet life kicks us when we’re already
down. Our car breaks down one week then the next the furnace
needs to be fixed. We catch a cold only to have something worse
come along right after.
When we’re
down, we look around at everyone else and it seems like we’re in
horrible shape. Worse yet our neighbor who has never set foot
inside a church appears to have it all. A nice new car, green
grass, a high paying job. Why does God allow me to suffer when
a person who couldn’t care less about God is prospering next to
me? Or what about your friend who you know routinely cheats on
their taxes or even their spouse and never gets caught. If God
is a God of justice, why doesn’t he do something about it? Why
doesn’t he punish the wicked and reward those who have been
following him for so long a time?
The
Israelites had this problem. They were surrounded by enemies.
There idols to foreign gods to their right and to their left.
While they struggled to live everyone else appeared to be
prospering. They were awaiting a Messiah who would come and
punish their enemies and establish the kingdom of Israel
forever. But the Messiah was nowhere to be found. There
appeared to be no justice.
We get
very discouraged when it appears that God has forgotten our
faithfulness. We get frustrated when it appears that liars,
cheaters, cruel people, and thieves get away with everything.
We can start to question whether we made a poor decision
somewhere along the line. Did I marry the wrong person? Did I
choose the wrong career? Did I raise my children the way they
should have been raised?
Instead of
looking to the past or worrying about the future, when we are
faced with times like these, we need to evaluate ourselves in
the present. What are we doing and why are we doing it? If we
are following God, why? What made you become a Christian and
devote your life to serving the Lord? Were you promised that
everything would be easier and come out the way you wanted? Or
did you choose to follow because you knew that there was a hole
inside of you that only God could fill. Was it the knowledge
that you are a sinner and that only God could forgive you your
sins?
When we
find ourselves in frustrating circumstances and we begin to
question why God seems to ignore us and yet bless the wicked, we
need to remember why we follow God. Then, we can look at
history and realize that God does bless his children. Sometimes
it is not in the ways that we would want and often it is in ways
that we don’t realize. Likewise, God does not ignore the
wickedness of those around us who appear to prosper.
In chapter
3, Malachi goes on to give the people hope that they are not
worshipping God in vain and that those who do evil will see
justice. “’See, I will send my messenger, who will prepare the
way before me. Then suddenly the Lord you are seeking will come
to his temple; the messenger of the covenant, whom you desire,
will come,’ says the Lord Almighty. But who can endure the day
of his coming? Who can stand when he appears? For he will be
like a refiner’s fire or a launderer’s soap. He will sit as a
refiner and purifier of silver; he will purify the Levites and
refine them like gold and silver. Then the Lord will have men
who will bring offerings in righteousness, and the offerings of
Judah and Jerusalem will be acceptable to the Lord, as in days
gone by, as in former years.
‘So I will
come near to you for judgment. I will be quick to testify
against sorcerers, adulterers and perjurers, against those who
defraud laborers of their wages, who oppress the widows and the
fatherless, and deprive aliens of justice, but do not fear me,’
says the Lord Almighty.”
This isn’t
the type of thing that we like to hear in church. We don’t like
fire and brimstone messages and don’t respond well to them. We
like to hear about the love of God. We like the image of God as
the father welcoming the return of the prodigal son. We shudder
to think of God as the one who has a sword coming out of his
mouth that will strike his enemies dead. The two images seem
totally incongruous and a wrathful and vengeful God is
politically incorrect in today’s day and age.
God’s
justice is something that we should celebrate however. God’s
justice is something we should look forward to. In the book of
Psalms, David wrote some very horrible sounding things about
God’s justice. Psalm 55:15, “Let death take my enemies by
surprise; let them go down alive to the grave for evil finds
lodging among them.” Psalm 68 begins, “May God arise, may his
enemies be scattered; may his foes flee before him. As smoke is
blown away by the wind, may you blow them away; as wax melts
before the fire, may the wicked perish before God.” And Psalm
35:7-9 “Since they hid a net for me without cause and without
cause dug a pit for me, may ruin overtake them by surprise – may
the net they hid entangle them, may the fall into the pit, to
their ruin. Then my soul will rejoice in the Lord and delight
in his salvation.”
If God did
not judge the wicked, what would the point of salvation be? Why
would anyone desire to follow God if they could live as they
wanted and expect no consequences from their actions? There are
many people who believe that there will be no judgment and no
consequences for their actions. There are even people who call
themselves Christians who will not accept the fact that God is a
God of justice. Some believe that all will go to heaven
regardless of the life they have lived. That God loves us all
so much that he can look the other way in regard to our
unforgiven sins. These people who call themselves Christians
and believe that God will not judge the wicked, I simply ask one
thing. “Who among them expects to have the room in heaven next
to Adolf Hitler?” God’s judgment is a good thing, even if we
try to ignore it.
“’I the
Lord do not change. So you, O descendants of Jacob are not
destroyed. Ever since the time of your forefathers you have
turned away from my decrees and have not kept them. Return to
me, and I will return to you,’ says the Lord Almighty.”
Have you
ever tried to play a game where the rules kept changing? What
about a game that you haven’t played in a long time and half way
through remember you forgot a rule? When the rules change we
get confused a frustrated quickly. God hasn’t changed the rules
on us however. God gave the Israelites rules to live by a
thousand years beforehand. He had made promises to the
Israelites that he intended to keep. If God changed the rules
he would have likely destroyed the Israelites for their
unfaithfulness. It wasn’t that the people were unfaithful, they
were unfaithful generation after generation with only a remnant
of truly God fearing people left. God would have had every
reason to wipe out the unfaithful Israelites and start over
again but he had made a promise. Still he calls for the people
to return to him.
“But you
ask, ‘How are we to return?’ ‘Will a man rob God? Yet you rob
me.’ ‘But you ask, “How do we rob you?” In tithes and
offerings. You are under a curse – the whole nation of you –
because you are robbing me. Bring the whole tithe into the
storehouse, that there may be food in my house. Test me in
this,’ says the Lord Almighty, ‘and see if I will not throw open
the floodgates of heaven and pour out so much blessing that you
will not have enough room for it. I will prevent pests from
devouring your crops, and vines in your fields will not cast
their fruit,’ says the Lord Almighty. ‘Then all the nations
will call you blessed, for yours will be a delightful land,’
says the Lord Almighty.”
In the
first chapter of Malachi, the Israelites were condemned because
of their half hearted worship. The people were bringing
worthless sacrifices to God and keeping the best for
themselves. They believed that going through the motions of
worship was better than nothing at all. God tells them that
they couldn’t be more wrong and instead would sooner see the
temple doors closed altogether rather than witness worthless
sacrifices.
Once again
the Israelites are told about their offerings. The sacrifices
had to do with the people’s worship and belief that repetition
of ceremony was all that mattered. This deals with the people’s
faith and trust in God. Everything that is belongs to God. He
is Jehovah Jireh, God my Provider. The giving of the tithe is
an acknowledgement that God is the one who provided all of the
harvest and all that the people had. The Israelites were to
trust God that he would provide for their needs with whatever
was left.
I have
spoken on this passage before and do not feel a need to dwell in
this area. We know the financial situation of the church. I am
capable of doing the math as well as you are and determine that
not everyone tithes 10%. Certainly some of you do give 10% and
even beyond that.
Recognize
what God says however, the entire nation was under a curse
because some did not give back a portion of what God had given
them. Certainly there were some that gave what was asked of
them and they too were under a curse because the majority did
not. Could this be the case in this church, or in any church?
Are we being held back because the actions of some are not
honoring to God?
I can’t
answer this question. I only know that this was the case with
the people of Malachi’s day because God said it was. If it is
the case in our church, we need to be praying that our attitudes
would be straightened out and that God would be merciful to us
because there are some here who are serious about following God
and doing what he asks of us.
And if we
are faithful to do what God has asked us to do, he will be
faithful to us as well and we will be overwhelmed with
blessings. God has promised it right here in his word and that
is all the proof that I need to believe that it is true. The
more God blesses us, the more chances we get to bless other
people with what God has given us.
Just last
week I got to hear Rick Warren talk about how God has blessed
him and how he in turn was able to bless others in return. God
is faithful and will provide for all of our needs if we trust
him to do so. |