Canonical Reading Plan for Oct 1, Mal 1-4
Today's readings
are Mal 1-4.
Malachi brings
the Old Testament to a close and sets the stage for the coming of Christ and
the advent of the New Testament.
Malachi is, most
likely, a contemporary of Ezra and Nehemiah. His book is dated somewhere around
460 B.C.
The people are
backsliding, once again. Malachi is a wake-up call for a return to fidelity and
obedience to God. There are three primary sections to the book:
1. The people should honor Yahweh (Mal 1:1-2:9)...they're not honoring Him. Nonetheless they are loved by God. 2. God is faithful even when they are not (2:10-3:6)3. They should return to God and remember His goodness (3:7-4:6). He is sending a "messenger".
Throughout the Old Testament, we've witnessed
the grace of God in how He relates to His people. We've seen their weakness and
fickleness. Malachi describes a familiar scene. The people have allowed self-interests
to shuffle their commitment to God off to the side. We've seen this all before
in things like the squabbling between Jacob and Esau, the rivalry between the
twelve sons of Jacob, the complaints in the wilderness, the golden calf, the
in-fighting in the Promised Land, the general darkness of the days of Judges
and the falling away that led to captivity by the Assyrians, then the
Babylonians, then the Persians.
God redeemed
every one of those situations. God was steadfast and true. His redemption
always occurred by His grace alone. This is a reminder of how God operates. He
functions through unmerited favor toward those who have done nothing to earn
it. He is patient with those He has chosen. He loves those He has chosen based
on who He is, not who they are, based on what He does, not what they do.
He's about to
present the Messiah to the same people He delivered from slavery in Egypt and
ushered into the Promised Land. Even though they fell and were swept away into
captivity, by His grace, He brought them back. Once they were back in their
homeland, they fell away again and again. God remained faithful throughout, so
completely faithful that He sends Malachi to tell them the promised Messiah is
on His way, in spite of their unfaithfulness.
What an awesome
God! What an awesome Old Testament! Every book, every page, every verse has
prepared God’s people for His incarnation. By Malachi’s time, God has been
revealing Himself, His character and nature, one step at a time for nearly four
thousand years. In Malachi, He tells them their Redeemer is coming and to
prepare for Him.
The New Testament
will tell the rest of the Redeemer’s story.
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