"I the Lord do not change...Return to me, and I will return to you,” says the Lord Almighty." Malachi 3:6-7
Through Malachi, God expressed love to Israel but also spoke His rebuke and discipline to wayward priests and people. Their disregard for God, demonstrated through lackluster sacrifices and disobedience in marriage, led to God’s just judgment. Even so, God persevered in love and called Israel to return to Him - promising He would return to them
A covenant is a binding promise that God initiates. In Malachi 2:4–5, God refers to His covenant with Levi as a relationship marked by “life and peace.” This shows that a covenant is not just a contract. It is relational. God gives life, peace, and purpose. Often there is a sign or structure that represents it, but the core is trust between God and His people.
Next, the human side. Malachi 2:8 and 2:10 show failure. The priests and the people “turned aside” and “broke faith.” In Malachi 2:14, even marriage is described as a covenant, and breaking it reflects a deeper spiritual problem. We see a pattern. God keeps His promises, but people do not.
- This is where conditional covenants come into focus. God says, in effect, if you walk with me, there is blessing. If you turn away, there are consequences. The issue is not that God fails. The issue is that people do.
Then comes the critical insight. Even when people break covenant, God does not abandon His promises. This is where unconditional covenant appears. Malachi 3:1 points forward to a coming messenger and ultimately the Messiah. This connects to God’s earlier promise to Abraham that through his offspring all people would be blessed. That promise does not depend on human perfection. It depends on God’s character.
So the doctrine reduces to a clear principle. God makes promises based on His love and character. Some require human response. All depend on His faithfulness. People often break their side. God never breaks His.
"Draw near to God, and he will draw near to you" is a famous Bible verse (James 4:8) promising that as people take steps towards God through repentance, prayer, and devotion, He actively responds with His presence, forgiveness, and love. It is an invitation to deepen a relationship with God, often interpreted as a call to turn away from distractions and align one’s heart with Him.
How are you responding to God's promises this week? What a favorite promise that reminds your heart to abide in Christ?
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