4/13/26

Fear and Reverence in Las Vegas (Malachi 1-4)

Malachi 1-4 

"I the Lord do not change...Return to me, and I will return to you,says the Lord Almighty." Malachi 3:6-7

Kim and I are celebrating 20 years of marriage this weekend in Las Vegas! We're taking a short trip to rest, eat good food, and have fun at our hotel. We're also studying the book of Malachi together from our Bible class, which makes it extra special.

Right outside our hotel is something amazing called the Sphere. It's a giant round building covered in lights and moving pictures. Right now it's showing the Wizard of Oz, with all its bright colors lighting up the night sky.

That got me thinking. In the Wizard of Oz, Dorothy does things wrong, gets lost far from home, and has to figure out how to get back. The whole story is really about going home.

The book of Malachi is kind of like that too. God shows His people the wrong things they've been doing things that might seem small or easy to ignore and lights them up in full color so they're impossible to miss. Like when Dorothy's world went from black and white to bright, beautiful color.

And just like Dorothy, God's people wanted to run away from their problems. But God says: running away isn't the answer. The real question is, "How do I get back home? How do I get back to the God I love?"

That's the heart of Malachi. And honestly? It's a pretty good question for all of us.

AIM: Fear and Reverence is the right response to who God is

His name reveals who He is. Fear of the Lord is the response to who He is. Reverence for His name is that same fear given expression in speech, worship, and life. One is the inward posture; the other is the outward testimony of the same reality.

Malachi 2:5 may be the single most powerful verse showing their unity, a man who truly fears the Lord will stand in awe of His name. They cannot be separated.

A) Lord provides covenantal law, yet God's people violate the law and are cursed (1-2:12)

B) Only the Lord can restore the Covenant, making our lives acceptable to the Lord (2:13-3:4)

C) Fear and reverence to the Lord is the way to return to Him (3:5-4:6)

1-5) Lord to Israel through Malachi, Love revealed in comparison, see Edomites curse

6-14) Honor system broken-vows/cheating/defiled sacrifice father/master/God's name 

  • "good will donations" - garbage not fit for use and quality gifts (I've done both), Malachi 1:14

2:1-6) Priest listen/resolve: honor/revere God's name - else blessings are cursed, Levi covenant: Life (reverence, instruction) + Peace (uprightness, turned many from sin)

  •  Lord help me listen and resolve to honor your name today, live in covenant

7-9) Priest preserve knowledge as messenger of Lord Almighty who people seek, violate Levi's covenant (partiality law): many stumble, humiliated

10-12) God created us, yet Judah unfaithful desecrated Lord sanctuary wives worship foreign god, remove him regardless of offering brought.

B) Only the Lord can restore the Covenant, making our lives acceptable to the Lord (2:13-3:4)
13-16) flood Lord's altar tears, not accepted because of unfaithfulness, divorce is violence, faithfulness protects.  (Malachi 2:13)
17) Wearied Lord w/words "all who do evil/good w/Lord, pleased w/them" "God's Justice?"
3:1-4) Messenger prepares, refiner's fire, so men offer righteousness, acceptable to Lord
C) Fear and reverence to the Lord is the way to return to Him (3:5-4:6)
5) Lord's trial against (relational sins from lack of reverence) sorcerers, adulterers, perjurers, defraud laborers, oppress widows/fatherless, deprive foreigners justice, no fear of Lord Almighty
6-12) Lord's consistent decree, "Return to me, and I will return to you" tithe, exponential blessing
13-15) Arrogant speech against God, grumbles about serving, envies evildoers
16-18) Fear God speech, Lord listened, restores eyes to see right from wicked, peaceful yoke
4:1-3) Day coming evildoers on fire, no root or branch/ revere God's name righteousness rises like the healing sun
  • Today is the day of repentance Hebrews 3-4
4-6) Remember Moses law, Elijah (John the Baptist), repent the kingdom is near!

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Exponential Blessings Upon Return to God (Malachi 3:6-12)

 I the Lord do not change...Return to me, and I will return to you,” says the Lord Almighty...Then all the nations will call you blessed (Malachi 3:6-7,12)

When God feels far away, we have to ask ourselves, "Who moved? Who changed?" 

If we're honest we'll be confronted with the reality that we are prone to wander. 

"Prone to wander" is a famous lyric from the 1758 hymn "Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing" by Robert Robinson, acknowledging a human tendency to drift spiritually. It signifies a susceptibility to distractions, temptation, and turning away from faith or personal convictions. The phrase is often used as a confession of spiritual weakness and a request for divine guidance. Chris Thomas

The Malachi 3 pattern has a clear structure: repentance → covenant renewal → overwhelming, overflowing blessing. Here are the strongest biblical parallels:


Old Testament Parallels

Deuteronomy 28:1-14 — The Blessing Cascade

The foundational "return" covenant text. God promises that obedience produces blessings that overtake the people — "all these blessings will come on you and accompany you" (v.2). The language is pursuit, not merely reward. Blessed in city, field, womb, crops, herds. Nations see and fear. The same national witness motif appears here as in Malachi 3:12 ("all nations will call you blessed").

Joel 2:18-27 — The Locust Restoration

The most structurally identical passage to Malachi 3. After a call to return ("rend your heart, not your garments" — Joel 2:13), God promises:

  • Grain, new wine, and olive oil restored (v.19)
  • The locust years repaid (v.25) — the same pest-protection promise in Mal. 3:11
  • "Never again will my people be shamed" (v.26)
  • The repayment is described as exponential — years of loss restored in abundance

2 Chronicles 7:14 — The Hinge Verse of the Temple

"If my people... will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and I will forgive their sin and will heal their land." The agricultural/national blessing in Malachi maps directly onto this. Land healing is covenant restoration made visible. Immigration, foreigners' and natives from the perspective of Holiness and Love (Lev 19, Matt 22:37-39, 2 Chron 7)

Leviticus 26:3-13 — Covenant Overflow

"I will send you rain in its season, and the ground will yield its crops... your threshing will continue until grape harvest and the grape harvest will continue until planting" (v.4-5). The threshing overlapping the harvest is a picture of blessing so abundant it cannot be processed before the next wave arrives — identical to Malachi's "no room enough to store it."

Isaiah 55:1-3, 10-13 — Return and the Word That Does Not Return Empty

The famous "return to the Lord" passage (v.7). The surrounding imagery is explicitly agricultural: rain and snow that water the earth producing seed and bread (v.10). The return of the exiles is accompanied by nature itself breaking into celebration — a cosmic, exponential response to human repentance.

Zechariah 8:11-13 — From Curse to Blessing

Strikingly close to Malachi (same post-exilic context, same audience). "I will save you, and you will be a blessing... Do not be afraid, but let your hands be strong." The nations that were a curse become a byword of blessing — the national witness theme again.


New Testament Parallels

Luke 15:11-32 — The Prodigal Son

The purest narrative expression of the Malachi 3:7 dynamic: "Return to me and I will return to you." The father runs, robes, rings, and feasts. The response to return is not proportional — it is extravagant and immediate. Jesus is showing the Father's character behind Malachi's promise.

Luke 6:38 — The Pressed-Down Measure

"Give, and it will be given to you. A good measure, pressed down, shaken together and running over, will be poured into your lap." Jesus uses identical grain-measuring imagery to Malachi 3:10. The "floodgates" become an overflowing lap. This is almost certainly a deliberate echo.

2 Corinthians 9:6-8 — The Sowing Principle

Paul applies the same exponential logic: "Whoever sows generously will also reap generously." The agricultural metaphor, the cheerful giver, God who "is able to bless you abundantly, so that in all things at all times, having all that you need, you will abound in every good work" (v.8). The Malachi tithe promise finds its New Covenant expression here.


The Unifying Pattern

ElementMalachi 3Parallel Texts
Call to return"Return to me" (v.7)Joel 2:13, Isa. 55:7, Luke 15
Present unfaithfulnessRobbery via tithesJoel 2:18, Deut. 28
Agricultural/material blessingFloodgates, crops, vinesLev. 26:4, Joel 2:25, 2 Cor. 9:8
Pest/enemy protection"I will prevent pests"Joel 2:25, Deut. 28:7
National witness"Nations will call you blessed"Deut. 28:10, Zech. 8:13

The theological core across all these texts is the same: God's response to genuine return is never merely proportional — it is overwhelmingly, visibly, publicly excessive. The abundance is itself a testimony. Malachi 3:12's "all nations will call you blessed" is the missional payoff — the overflow of blessing becomes the witness.

Among the weeds of my heart with the Master Gardener

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Lord's covenant lawsuit speech (Malachi 3:5)

“So I will come to put you on trial. 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 the foreigners among you of justice, but do not fear me,” says the Lord Almighty. - Malachi 3:5

The Malachi 3:5 list is a covenant lawsuit (rib) — the Lord serving as both witness and judge. It's notable that all six sins are relational and social, and the diagnosis is a single spiritual root: no fear of the Lord. This same structure appears in the prophetic tradition (Amos 2, Isaiah 1, Zechariah 7) and resurfaces in the NT especially in James 5.

"I will be a swift witness against..." (Malachi 3:5)

Sorcerers / Witchcraft

  • Mal 3:5 — primary text
  • Exod 22:18 — "Do not allow a sorceress to live"
  • Deut 18:10–12 — detestable practices list; divination, sorcery, witchcraft
  • Lev 19:26, 31; 20:6, 27 — prohibitions against mediums and spiritists
  • Rev 21:8; 22:15 — sorcerers excluded from the New Jerusalem

Adulterers

  • Mal 3:5
  • Exod 20:14; Deut 5:18 — seventh commandment
  • Lev 20:10 — death penalty prescribed
  • Prov 6:32 — destroys himself
  • Matt 5:27–28 — Jesus expands to heart adultery
  • Heb 13:4 — God will judge adulterers
  • 1 Cor 6:9–10 — adulterers will not inherit the kingdom

Perjurers / False Oaths

  • Mal 3:5
  • Exod 20:7; Deut 5:11 — misusing the name of the Lord
  • Lev 19:12 — do not swear falsely by God's name
  • Zech 5:3–4 — the flying scroll as judgment on those who swear falsely
  • Deut 19:16–19 — false witness receives the punishment intended for the accused
  • Prov 19:5, 9 — false witness will not go unpunished

Defrauding Laborers / Withholding Wages

  • Mal 3:5
  • Lev 19:13 — "Do not hold back the wages of a hired worker overnight"
  • Deut 24:14–15 — pay the same day; "it is a sin against you"
  • Jer 22:13 — woe to those who build by unrighteousness, using neighbors without pay
  • James 5:4 — wages held back cry out; the Lord Almighty has heard their cry
  • Prov 3:27–28 — do not withhold good from those to whom it is due

Oppressing Widows and the Fatherless

  • Mal 3:5 - who oppress the widows and the fatherless
  • Exod 22:22–24 — "Do not take advantage of a widow or orphan... my anger will be aroused"
  • Deut 10:18; 27:19 — God defends the fatherless and widow; cursed who withholds justice
  • Isa 1:17, 23 — learn to do right; seek justice; your rulers are rebels who do not defend the fatherless
  • Isa 10:1–2 — woe to those who make unjust laws, depriving the poor of their rights
  • Ps 68:5 — "Father to the fatherless, defender of widows"
  • Ps 146:9 — "The Lord watches over the foreigner and sustains the fatherless and widow"
  • Zech 7:10 — do not oppress the widow, fatherless, foreigner, or poor
  • James 1:27 — pure religion: look after orphans and widows in distress

Depriving Foreigners / Aliens of Justice

  • Mal 3:5 - deprive the foreigners among you of justice
  • Exod 22:21; 23:9 — do not mistreat or oppress a foreigner
  • Lev 19:33–34 — love the foreigner as yourself; "you were foreigners in Egypt"
  • Deut 10:18–19 — God loves the foreigner; you are to love them too
  • Deut 24:17 — do not deprive the foreigner or fatherless of justice
  • Deut 27:19 — cursed who withholds justice from the foreigner, fatherless, or widow
  • Zech 7:10 — do not oppress the foreigner
  • Ezek 22:7, 29 — Jerusalem's sins include mistreating the foreigner

No Fear of the Lord

  • Mal 3:5 — identified as the root cause of all the above
  • Prov 1:7 — "The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom"
  • Prov 8:13 — "To fear the Lord is to hate evil"
  • Prov 16:6 — "Through the fear of the Lord evil is avoided"
  • Deut 6:2, 13, 24 — fear the Lord your God; this is the covenant foundation
  • Ps 36:1–4 — "There is no fear of God before his eyes" leads to wickedness
  • Rom 3:18 (quoting Ps 36) — Paul's indictment of universal sin
  • Isa 8:13 — the Lord Almighty is the one to fear

Prophetic Tradition

Amos 2 — Oracle Against Israel

The covenant lawsuit against Israel for social sins:

  • Amos 2:6–8 — selling the righteous for silver and the needy for a pair of sandals; trampling the heads of the poor into the dust; a man and his father using the same woman; lying down beside every altar on garments taken in pledge; drinking wine taken as fines in the house of their god
  • Amos 2:4–5 — Judah's parallel indictment: rejecting the law of the Lord, not keeping his decrees, being led astray by false gods

Isaiah 1 — The Great Indictment

  • Isa 1:2–4 — opening accusation: a rebellious nation, children who have forsaken the Lord
  • Isa 1:10–17 — the Lord rejects their sacrifices and religious performance; the command: "Learn to do right; seek justice. Defend the oppressed. Take up the cause of the fatherless; plead the case of the widow" (v. 17)
  • Isa 1:21–23 — the faithful city become a prostitute; rulers are rebels and companions of thieves; they love bribes, chase after gifts; they do not defend the fatherless; the widow's case never comes before them

Zechariah 7 — The Fasting Question and the Covenant Response

  • Zech 7:9–10"Administer true justice; show mercy and compassion to one another. Do not oppress the widow or the fatherless, the foreigner or the poor. Do not plot evil against each other."
  • Zech 7:11–12 — they refused to pay attention, stubbornly turned their backs, stopped their ears, made their hearts as hard as flint so they could not hear the law or the words the Lord had sent
  • Zech 7:13"When I called, they did not listen; so when they called, I would not listen" — the judicial consequence of covenant rebellion

James 5 — NT Echo of Malachi 3:5

James 5 is arguably the closest NT parallel to Mal 3:5 — same sins, same divine title (Lord Almighty), same courtroom posture:

  • James 5:1–3 — woe to the rich who have hoarded wealth that will testify against them
  • James 5:4"The wages you failed to pay the workers who mowed your fields are crying out against you. The cries of the harvesters have reached the ears of the Lord Almighty." — direct echo of Mal 3:5 on defrauding laborers; unique use of Kyrios Sabaoth (Lord of Hosts/Almighty) in the NT
  • James 5:5–6 — you have fattened yourselves, condemned and murdered the innocent who were not opposing you (oppression of the powerless)
  • James 5:12"Do not swear — not by heaven or by earth or by anything else" — connects to the perjury/oath strand

The Common Thread

All four passages share the same covenant lawsuit structure:

ElementAmos 2Isa 1Zech 7James 5Mal 3:5
Social oppression indicted
Widow / fatherless
Foreign / poor
Wage theft
Lord as judge/witness
Root: spiritual unfaithfulness

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4/12/26

Jesus Fulfilling Malachi 2:17–3:5

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?” Malachi 2:17

This is one of the most explicitly fulfilled Messianic prophecies in all of Scripture, with Jesus himself confirming it. The passage contains multiple prophetic threads, each with clear New Testament fulfillments.

The whole passage is a tight prophetic unit that Malachi's original audience heard as a rebuke — "you asked 'where is the God of justice?'" — and God answered by describing exactly how that justice would arrive. The answer was more personal and more costly than anyone anticipated.


Thread 1: "I will send my messenger to prepare the way"

The most direct fulfillment — Jesus quotes this himself.

"This is the one about whom it is written: 'I will send my messenger ahead of you, who will prepare your way before you.'" — Matthew 11:10 (also Mark 1:2–4; Luke 7:27)

Jesus explicitly identified John the Baptist as the messenger of Malachi 3:1. Mark's Gospel actually opens with this Malachi quote, tying the entire Gospel narrative to its fulfillment. Luke 1:76 further confirms it when Zechariah prophesies that John "will go before the Lord to prepare the way for him."


Thread 2: "The Lord will suddenly come to his temple"

The Cleansing of the Temple is the dramatic, unmistakable fulfillment.

"Jesus entered the temple courts and drove out all who were buying and selling there..." — Matthew 21:12–13; Mark 11:15–17; Luke 19:45–46; John 2:13–17

This is not incidental. The covenant Lord entering his own temple in judgment is precisely what Malachi promised. John places a second cleansing at the beginning of Jesus's ministry (John 2), bookending his public work. The disciples remembered Psalm 69:9 — "Zeal for your house will consume me" — as they watched it unfold.

Luke 2:22–38 (the Presentation) offers an earlier, quieter fulfillment — Simeon and Anna recognizing the Lord's arrival in the temple.


Thread 3: "The messenger of the covenant"

Jesus is the mediator and fulfillment of the New Covenant he inaugurated.

"This cup is the new covenant in my blood, which is poured out for you." — Luke 22:20

Hebrews 8–9 and 12:24 develop this fully — Jesus as "the mediator of a new covenant, better than the old."


Thread 4: "Who can endure the day of his coming? Like a refiner's fire..."

This has a two-stage fulfillment:

In his First Coming — Jesus's presence was itself a refining test. His Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5–7) radically intensified the Law's demands, exposing the heart behind the deed. His confrontations with the Pharisees, the Rich Young Ruler, and the woman at the well all function as refining fire — drawing out what is truly in a person (John 2:24–25: "He knew what was in each person").

At his Return — Revelation 1:14–15 and 19:11–16 depict the returning Christ in imagery directly echoing Malachi's fire and judgment. The "day of his coming" finds its ultimate fulfillment eschatologically.


Thread 5: "He will purify the Levites"

The priestly purification Malachi envisioned finds New Covenant fulfillment in the priesthood of all believers.

"You are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation..." — 1 Peter 2:9

Hebrews 7 explains that Jesus's priesthood supersedes and fulfills the Levitical order. The purified Levites who offer acceptable sacrifices become, in Christ, all who offer themselves as "living sacrifices" (Romans 12:1).


Thread 6: "I will come to testify against sorcerers, adulterers, perjurers..."

Jesus's ministry directly confronted each category Malachi named:

  • Adulterers — John 8:1–11; Matthew 5:27–28 (raising the standard to the heart)
  • Those who defraud laborers — James 5:1–6 (the apostolic witness of Jesus's teaching); Luke 10:7
  • Oppressors of widows and the fatherless — Mark 12:40 ("who devour widows' houses")
  • Those who deprive foreigners of justice — Luke 10:25–37 (the Good Samaritan)

Summary Framework for Teaching

Malachi PromiseNT Fulfillment
Messenger to prepare the wayJohn the Baptist (Matt. 11:10; Mark 1:2)
Lord coming to his templeTemple Cleansing (Matt. 21; John 2)
Messenger of the covenantNew Covenant at the Last Supper (Luke 22:20; Heb. 8–9)
Refiner's fire (first coming)Sermon on the Mount; confrontations with sinners
Refiner's fire (second coming)Rev. 1:14–15; 19:11–16
Purified LevitesRoyal priesthood of believers (1 Pet. 2:9; Rom. 12:1)
Testimony against evildoersJesus's direct ministry confrontations
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God refuses compartmentalized religion (Jeremiah 7:9-11, Malachi 2:13,1 Peter 3:7)

Do you really think you can steal, murder, commit adultery, lie, and burn incense to Baal and all those other new gods of yours, and then come here and stand before me in my Temple and chant, “We are safe!”—only to go right back to all those evils again? Don’t you yourselves admit that this Temple, which bears my name, has become a den of thieves? Surely I see all the evil going on there. I, the Lord, have spoken! Jeremiah 7:9-11

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 doesn’t accept them with pleasure. Malachi 2:13

In the same way, you husbands must give honor to your wives. Treat your wife with understanding as you live together. She may be weaker than you are, but she is your equal partner in God’s gift of new life. Treat her as you should so your prayers will not be hindered. 1 Peter 3:7

Big idea: The altar cannot be a place of escape from covenant obligations, it exposes them.

The structural irony in Malachi 2:13: The tears at the altar were real grief but grief over the consequences of sin, not the sin itself. They mourned the closed heaven, not the broken covenant.

The progressive witness

  • Prophetic diagnosis (Isaiah 1:15, Jeremiah 7:9-11, Hosea 6:6)
  • Wisdom confirmation (Psalm 66:18, Proverbs 21:13)
  • Jesus's direct teaching (Matthew 5:23-24, 15:8-9)
  • Apostolic application (1 Peter 3:7, Ephesians 5:25-33)
  • Positive command structure (1 Corinthians 7:10-11)

The Jeremiah 7 passage adds a dimension the others don't: the presumption of ritual as cover for ongoing sin. "We are delivered, so we can continue" that's not just hypocrisy, it's weaponized religion.

Cain Builds His Name; Seth Brings Repentance to God's Name

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