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ESV Global Study Bible :: Introduction to Malachi

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INTRODUCTION TO
MALACHI

Timeline

Timeline

Author and Date

The prophet Malachi (whose name means "my messenger") probably lived at the same time as Ezra and Nehemiah, around 460 b.c.

Theme

Malachi's fellow Israelites were guilty of corrupt worship and unethical behavior. He called the people to renewed covenant obedience.

Purpose, Occasion, and Background

Malachi's ministry took place nearly a hundred years after the decree of Cyrus in 538 b.c., which ended the Babylonian captivity and allowed the Jews to return to their homeland and rebuild the temple (2 Chron. 36:23). This was some 80 years after Haggai and Zechariah encouraged the rebuilding of the temple. Those two earlier prophets had said that the rebuilding of the temple would result in peace, prosperity, the conversion of people from other nations, and the return of God's own glorious presence (see Haggai 2; Zech. 1:16-17; 2:1-13; 8:1-9:17). To the discouraged people of Malachi's day, these predictions must have seemed a cruel mockery. In contrast to the glowing promises, they faced economic difficulties due to drought and crop failure (Mal. 3:11). They remained an insignificant territory, no longer an independent nation and no longer ruled by a Davidic king. Worst of all, despite the promise of God's presence, they experienced only spiritual decline.

The Setting of Malachi

c. 460 b.c.

Malachi likely prophesied several decades after the first Jewish exiles had returned from Babylon to Judea and had rebuilt the temple. Edomites had migrated northwest from their traditional homeland just south of Moab into the area immediately south of Judea, which was now called Idumea. Territory that once belonged to the northern kingdom of Israel had been divided into several minor provinces, including Samaria.

The Setting of Malachi

Key Themes and Outline: Malachi's Sixfold Wake-up Call to Renewed Covenant Obedience

The book of Malachi describes six disputations between God and Israel. There is a common pattern in each dispute: (1) God charges his people with bad behavior; (2) he then envisages the people's response to the charge ("But you say" 1:2; 6; 7; 13; 2:14; 17; 3:7; 8; 13); (3) God then replies to their presumed response and expands the charge. The chart below shows the subject of each dispute and God's response to it.

Malachi's Sixfold Wake-up Call to Renewed Covenant Obedience

Disputation
Reference
Summary
Focus
Disputation 1
Malachi defends God's love for Israel. The proper response to his love is covenantal obedience and sincere worship.
Israel must remember the Law of Moses (4:4).
Disputation 2
Malachi exposes offenses related to worship and criticizes the priests for allowing them.
 
Disputation 3
Malachi condemns marriage to an unbeliever as unfaithfulness to Israel's covenant with God. He also condemns unjust divorce as a violation of the marriage covenant between husband and wife, to which the Lord is witness.
 
Disputation 4
Malachi promises that God will demonstrate his justice. He will do so when "the messenger of the covenant" comes to judge the wicked and purify his people.
Israel must remember the promise of Elijah and the coming day of the Lord (4:5-6).
Disputation 5
Malachi returns to the subject of Israel's wicked offerings. The difficulties the people are experiencing are punishment for their sin.
 
Disputation 6
Malachi assures the people that evildoers, who seem to escape divine justice, will be judged. The Lord will deliver his people.
 
Summary
Malachi summarizes the main points of his prophecy: keep God's law (the focus of disputes 1-3), and remember the promise of a coming prophet like Elijah and the coming day of the Lord (the focus of disputes 4-6).
 
ESV

The ESV Global Study Bible
Copyright © 2012 by Crossway.
All rights reserved.
Used by permission.

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The Blue Letter Bible ministry and the BLB Institute hold to the historical, conservative Christian faith, which includes a firm belief in the inerrancy of Scripture. Since the text and audio content provided by BLB represent a range of evangelical traditions, all of the ideas and principles conveyed in the resource materials are not necessarily affirmed, in total, by this ministry.