Read Malachi 1
Malachi
prophesied sometime after the Hebrew people returned from captivity in Babylon
and after the second temple was built.
Unlike other prophets who looked forward to destruction at the hands of
the Babylonians; this was history for Malachi.
These
Hebrews from Jerusalem—Jews—had come home and worship in the temple had
resumed, but unlike when Ezra and Nehemiah summoned all of God’s people to hear
his holy word read aloud once more; the people of Malachi's day had become apathetic.
They were on
fire when God’s words were first read again in their own land. Those days and that passion had passed.
Now idolatry
and apostasy were not big issues. The
captivity had cleansed them of most of that, but apathy and malaise had become
the norm. Worship and sacrifice were
items on a list to be checked off. They were
no longer central in the lives of God’s Chosen People.
The people
had become lethargic. They were
indifferent. There was an attitude of it
just doesn’t pay to play God’s way.
The people wanted to blame God for their difficulties.
Malachi
takes a series of interrogatives to discern that it was not God’s indifference
but the lackluster effort of his own people that resulted in a drought of
blessings.
As we
navigate this short book of prophecy, we will come across many things
familiar. They will add context and
antecedent to many things that we know from the gospels.
Blemished
sacrifices
were offered to the Lord.
For the
lips of a priest ought to preserve knowledge, because he is the messenger of
the Lord Almighty and people seek instruction from his mouth.
I hate
divorce.
A Day of
Judgment.
I will
send my messenger who will prepare the way before me.
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.
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 there will not be room enough to
store it.
I will send
my prophet Elijah before the Great and Terrible Day of the Lord.
There is
much in Malachi that will sound familiar.
Let’s dive into the first chapter.
The people
were showing contempt for the Lord.
How? They offered imperfect
animals for sacrifices.
Really, if
you are just going through the motions, why would you give your best lamb to
the Lord? Cut that blind runt out of
the flock and send it to the priest for sacrifice.
The Lord
noted that a son honors his father and a servant honors his master, but who
honors God?
Try paying
taxes to the governor with your rejects and see how far that gets you. You know what the law that was given through
Moses requires and you know that your stunts wouldn’t pass muster with human
authorities; yet you try them with your God.
God through
the prophet told his people that he would rather they shut down this whole
offering and sacrifice business than to do it in the perfunctory manner with which they had grown comfortable.
God doesn’t like lukewarm.
God isn’t fooled by what is going on externally.
God sees the heart.
God chose
Jacob over Esau even though both were from the line of Abraham, but Jacob’s
line was blind to the blessing.
God’s Chosen
People saw only the burdens
and not the blessings.
His people
saw only regulations that required compliance, not
divine directives to be embraced for the fullness of life.
His people
saw a God who could be outsmarted, not one who was feared
among all the nations.
The people
had brought themselves to their present predicament. Only God could deliver them once more, but
they were just going through the motions in their relationship with God.
I think the counsel
from our Lord to the Church in Ephesus (Revelation
2) would have fit in here.
Consider
the height from which you have fallen and repent!
Let’s
examine our world. Do we ever just go
through the motions?
Do we give
God our leftovers?
Have we abandoned
our first love?
Is the body
of Christ truly connected?
Do we have those within the body of Christ who feel like outsiders?
How do we
live in a world that says one god is as good as another?
How do we
preach life in Christ in a world that demands tolerance of all religions and
all beliefs? Do we still bring passion
with good news? Are we afraid that the truth might offend someone?
I have some
good news for you. Every time we have a
food offering, our people bring mostly new food. Sometimes, people buy specifically for the
food offering.
When there
is a community food drive, that’s something different. I wonder how many cans
of something will be more than 10 years expired. How many will be 15 years expired?
It’s been a
couple of years since I received anything that expired in the previous millennium.
I understand
what’s going on when the community gives food.
Sometimes, it’s just cleaning out, but what if God’s own people did the
same thing?
What if
those desiring to be blessed because they thought they lived in faith,
practiced these offerings of contempt? What if our practice was to give God our
leftovers?
I think that
most here are saying to themselves, that’s not me. I think when you give your time, money, or
treasures, you know that you are making an offering to the one true God and
your heart desires to please him and not slip in something contemptible while
he isn’t looking.
I can tell
you that you understand making an offering to God out of the best that you
have. It is not a duty. It is not a
burden. I can see that, but you have to
inspect the other areas of your life to see if you are just giving God your
leftovers.
Only you and God can know for sure.
Sometimes
your leftovers are good. I like some leftovers
better than the original serving, but when it comes to making an offering to
God we must ask: Am I giving this to God
so I can keep something better for myself?
Is God first in all things and in all parts of my life?
But seek
first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to
you as well.
The
challenge for us today is to ask if we are consistently giving God our first
things or just throwing a few leftovers his way now and then.
Malachi
admonished his own people for the latter.
In the King James and New King James Versions, the introductory text
reads:
The burden
of the word of the Lord to Israel by Malachi.
This was not
going to be an enjoyable message. It was
admonishment and even reprimand. Our
times are different but our counsel is the same.
In these
days where the gods of apathy and ambivalence reign in the world, are we giving
God our leftovers or are we still keeping God first in all things?
This is not
something that we say, when it’s all said and done, I think God will come
out first in my life. This is not
something to be left to happenstance.
This is our
choice. God is first in all things. He is first in my mind when I awaken. He is first in my heart. He is first in my time, talents, and
treasures. He is first.
Keep God
first in all things!
Amen.
No comments:
Post a Comment